e1000e-dkms-debian
realtek-r8125-dkms
e1000e-dkms-debian | realtek-r8125-dkms | |
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3 | 12 | |
68 | 306 | |
- | - | |
0.0 | 6.5 | |
almost 2 years ago | 11 days ago | |
C | C | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 only | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
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For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
e1000e-dkms-debian
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PXE provisioning issues with new hardware that requires specific drivers!
Hello, Our hardware vendor stopped selling the previous models of our standard desktops and laptops and possess sent the newest models in our latest purchase. Unfortunately, when installing Ubuntu on these machines the NICs are not recognized by the OS and need manual intervention to be updated, which I was able to get going by downloading the appropriate e1000e driver onto a USB and installing from that. Our standard workflow was provisioning the system with Foreman, and configuring it with ansible after the OS was installed. The manual steps now required between these steps have caused delays in setting up new equipment. Getting this hardware to allow PXE in the first place was a pain, I had to take the initrd.gz that foreman provides for the PXE environment, unpack it and replace the e1000e network driver with the very latest one to even allow the PXE process to start. But because the archive foreman uses for Ubuntu is the standard Canonical hosted Ubuntu archive, the OS is again missing that version of the driver and it needs to get updated again. Does anyone have recommendations on how to get around this? * I tried using HWE but it seems to not include this very latest version of e1000e so had no luck there * Could this process be included in the preseed file/provisioning template to handle the driver? * Our foreman install has Katello, but I have been having a hell of a time getting deb repos hosted. Even if that gets set up properly, it seems pretty hacky again to insert a kernel with the correct driver version. (GPG issues? idk) * Foreman/Katello docs are lackluster and havent seen anything related to this kind of problem * FYI the desktop is a Dell Precision Tower 3650 and installing Ubuntu 18.04 I was hired as a Junior Sys Admin 2 years and now find myself as the sole IT in the company, this has been driving me nuts as my previous provisioning workflow was pretty solid but dont have anyone internal to turn to for advice. Would really appreciate any thoughts or ideas you all have or any resources you know of I can look into. Thanks! EDIT: Thanks for the replies everyone, I ended up getting this resolved by using DKMS. https://github.com/koljah-de/e1000e-dkms-debian was a good starting point, I built a deb from that and placed it on my tftp server. Then in Foreman's finish template I included the following lines: tftp -m binary tftp.example.com -c get e1000e-dkms.deb dpkg -i e1000e-dkms.deb That worked for me, after the installation process the NIC was usable. Plus this has the added benefit of not needing to tweak the drivers after upgrading the kernel at a later date.
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7-zip 22.00 – APFS, Posix TAR, high precision timestamps
Intel out-of-tree NIC drivers too; https://sourceforge.net/projects/e1000/ - But there are not many!
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Intel NIC drivers confusion
[1] qemu/hw/net/e1000.c [2] Devices supported by Linux's e1000 [3] e1000 from Intel
realtek-r8125-dkms
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Proxmox cluster traffic over wifi, ceph over wired?
You can buy any nic on the same chipset it's a Realtek 8152. And it's very important, in proxmox with default kernel you need this https://github.com/awesometic/realtek-r8125-dkms , without this package Linux uses wrong drivers and it's causing disconnecting on heavy-load and high latency. With this dkms modules it works flawlessly, god bless its author!
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Still no r8125b Driver in truenas scale?
Did you try this one? https://github.com/awesometic/realtek-r8125-dkms
- 2.5G Ethernet LINUX driver r8125 for kernel up to 5.19
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People complaining about Linux
What exactly did you do that needed two thumb drives and android phone? Quick google search revealed this https://github.com/awesometic/realtek-r8125-dkms it has three different ways to installs all involving 2 or less than two commands that you need to copy paste. I’m not trying to bash you or anything I’m genuinely interested how thumb drives and android phone got involved in this.
- RTL8125 NIC support
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New Proxmox Build update and dpkg question
Still, I'd like to get the realtek LAN working. I had the same problem for a recent linux build and was able to install a deb and get it working. Trying to follow the same instructions in Proxmox doesn't work. I get a dependency error that aren't resolved by install --fix-broken and I can't add a repository.
- Aorus B550 Realtek r8125 2.5Gb Linux module/driver not working after update
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Proxmox isn't showing the Realtek RTL8125B any love. Any ideas?
Now you just need the dkms driver someone nicely maintains on github (use curl or wget to grab it): https://github.com/awesometic/realtek-r8125-dkms/releases/tag/9.003.05-1
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Ethernet not working on Ubuntu
Currently you can install a driver from here: https://github.com/awesometic/realtek-r8125-dkms
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H2+ NIC driver - sudo dpkg -i fails
https://github.com/awesometic/realtek-r ... _amd64.deb
What are some alternatives?
ntfs3 - ntfs3 Linux kernel module by Paragon Software
RTL8125-Driver-for-Proxmox-VE5-6-and-debian - RTL8125 Driver for Proxmox virtual environment and debian
asus-fan - Kernel module to get/set (both) fan speed(s) on ASUS Zenbooks
r8125 - Linux device driver for Realtek Ethernet controllers (unofficial mirror) https://www.realtek.com/en/component/zoo/category/network-interface-controllers-10-100-1000m-gigabit-ethernet-pci-express-software
rapiddisk - An Advanced Linux RAM Drive and Caching kernel modules. Dynamically allocate RAM as block devices. Use them as stand alone drives or even map them as caching nodes to slower local disk drives. Access those volumes locally or export them across an NVMe Target network. Manage it all from a web API.
pipewire-debian - Upstream Version of pipewire, wireplumber, roc-toolkit & blueman for debian/ubuntu
daemon - turns other processes into daemons
ipt-netflow - Netflow iptables module for Linux kernel (official)
bcm5719-fw - BCM5719 firmware reimplementation
realt....05-1
88x2bu - Linux Driver for USB WiFi Adapters that are based on the RTL8812BU and RTL8822BU Chipsets
dkms - Dynamic Kernel Module Support