NAME
re
—
Realtek
8139C+/8169/816xS/811xS/8168/810xE 10/100/Gigabit Ethernet device
SYNOPSIS
re* at pci?
re* at cardbus?
eephy* at mii?
rgephy* at mii?
rlphy* at mii?
DESCRIPTION
The re
driver provides support for various
NICs based on the Realtek RTL8139C+, RTL8169, RTL816xS, RTL811xS, RTL8168
and RTL810xE PCI and PCI Express Ethernet controllers, including the
following:
- Alloy Computer Products EtherGOLD 1439E 10/100 (8139C+)
- Buffalo LGY-PCI-GT (8169S)
- Compaq Evo N1015v Integrated Ethernet (8139C+)
- Corega CG-LAPCIGT (8169S)
- D-Link DGE-528T (8169S)
- D-Link DGE-530T C1 (8169/8110SB)
- D-Link DGE-660TD (8169/8110SB)
- Gigabyte 7N400 Pro2 Integrated Gigabit Ethernet (8110S)
- LevelOne GNC-0105T (8169S)
- Linksys EG1032v3 (8169S)
- Netgear GA311 (8169S)
- Netgear GA511 PC Card (8169)
- PLANEX COMMUNICATIONS Inc. GN-1200TC (8169S)
- Surecom EP-320G-TX1 (8169S)
- TTTech MC322 (8139C+)
- US Robotics USR997902 (8169S)
- Xterasys XN-152 10/100/1000 NIC (8169)
NICs based on the 8139C+ and 810xE are capable of 10 and 100Mbps speeds over CAT5 cable. NICs based on the 8169, 816xS, 811xS and 8168 are capable of 10, 100 and 1000Mbps operation.
All re
NICs support IPv4 transmit/receive
IP/TCP/UDP checksum offload, VLAN tag insertion and stripping, and use a
descriptor-based DMA mechanism. The 8102E(L), 8103E(L), 8168C/8111C,
8168D/8111D, 8168DP/8111DP and 8168E/8111E chips also support IPv6 receive
TCP/UDP checksum offload.
The 8139C+ is a single-chip solution combining both a 10/100 MAC and PHY. The 8169 is a 10/100/1000 MAC only, requiring a GMII or TBI external PHY. The 8169S, 8110S, 8111B and 8168 are single-chip devices containing both a 10/100/1000 MAC and 10/100/1000 copper PHY. Standalone 10/100/1000 cards are available in both 32-bit PCI and 64-bit PCI models. The 8110S and 8111B are designed for embedded LAN-on-motherboard applications.
The 8168, 8169, 8169S and 8110S also support jumbo frames.
The re
driver additionally supports Wake
on LAN (WoL). See arp(8) and
ifconfig(8) for more details.
The re
driver supports the following media
types:
- autoselect
- Enable autoselection of the media type and options. The user can manually override the autoselected mode by adding media options to the appropriate hostname.if(5) file.
- 10baseT/UTP
- Set 10Mbps operation. The
ifconfig(8)
mediaopt
option can also be used to select either full-duplex or half-duplex modes. - 100baseTX
- Set 100Mbps (Fast Ethernet) operation. The
ifconfig(8)
mediaopt
option can also be used to select either full-duplex or half-duplex modes. - 1000baseT
- Set 1000baseT operation over twisted pair. The Realtek GigE chips support 1000Mbps in full-duplex mode only.
The re
driver supports the following media
options:
- full-duplex
- Force full duplex operation.
- half-duplex
- Force half duplex operation.
For more information on configuring this device, see ifconfig(8).
SEE ALSO
arp(4), eephy(4), ifmedia(4), intro(4), netintro(4), pci(4), rgephy(4), rlphy(4), hostname.if(5), ifconfig(8)
Realtek Semiconductor RTL8139C+, RTL8169, RTL8169S and RTL8110S datasheets, http://www.realtek.com.tw.
HISTORY
The re
device driver first appeared in
OpenBSD 3.6.
AUTHORS
The re
driver was written by
Bill Paul
<wpaul@windriver.com>
and ported to OpenBSD by Peter
Valchev
<pvalchev@openbsd.org>.
BUGS
The Xterasys XN-152 32-bit PCI NIC, which uses the RTL8169 MAC and Marvell 88E1000 PHY, has a defect that causes DMA corruption if the board is plugged into a 64-bit PCI slot. The defect lies in the board design, not the chip itself: the PCI REQ64# and ACK64# lines should be pulled high, but they are not. The result is that the 8169 chip is tricked into performing 64-bit DMA transfers even though a 64-bit data path between the NIC and the bus does not actually exist.
Unfortunately, it is not possible to correct this problem in software. The user should ensure the NIC is installed in a 32-bit PCI slot to avoid this problem.