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From: | Jakob Bohm |
Subject: | Re: [Qemu-discuss] Modern Network Interface Card emulation |
Date: | Thu, 17 Dec 2015 16:49:35 +0100 |
User-agent: | Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 6.3; WOW64; rv:38.0) Gecko/20100101 Thunderbird/38.4.0 |
On 17/12/2015 05:06, Wink Saville
wrote:
If it is still being built into systems, it is probably as part of a larger chip/chipset such as a "northbridge", where it shares the silicon with stuff like the SATA controllers and the USB2/3 host controller. I have not specific ideas as to which Ethernet programming interface is in which of the modern chipsets. One of the best ways to find out would probably be to look in the e1000 driver files in Linux, those usually contain a list of PCI IDs of compatible adapters, which you can then lookup online to see the names of the chipsets (if not already mentioned in that list). On a similar note, I wonder if the "PC" model in qemu is still stuck emulating a now historic base chipset that originally didn't support PCIe. Enjoy Jakob -- Jakob Bohm, CIO, Partner, WiseMo A/S. https://www.wisemo.com Transformervej 29, 2860 Søborg, Denmark. Direct +45 31 13 16 10 This public discussion message is non-binding and may contain errors. WiseMo - Remote Service Management for PCs, Phones and Embedded |
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