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Supported Intel® Gigabit Desktop Adapters

This driver and software are designed to operate with the following Intel® Gigabit desktop adapters:

Product Name Board ID # Controller
Intel® Ethernet Connection I218-LM n/a I218
Intel® Ethernet Connection I218-V n/a I218
Intel® Ethernet Connection I217-LM n/a I217
Intel® Ethernet Connection I217-V n/a I217
Intel® Gigabit CT2 Desktop Adapter E98157-xxx 82574L
Intel® 82579LM Gigabit Network Connection n/a 82579LM
Intel® 82579V Gigabit Network Connection n/a 82579V
Intel® 82578DM Gigabit Network Connection n/a 82578DM
Intel® 82578DC Gigabit Network Connection n/a 82578DC
Intel® 82567V-4 Gigabit Network Connection n/a 82567V
Intel® 82567V-3 Gigabit Network Connection n/a 82567V
Intel® 82567LM-4 Gigabit Network Connection n/a 82567LM
Intel® 82567LF-3 Gigabit Network Connection n/a 82567LF
Intel® 82567LM-3 Gigabit Network Connection n/a 82567LM
Intel® Gigabit CT Desktop Adapter E25867-xxx 82574L
Intel® 82574L Gigabit Network Connection n/a 82574L
Intel® 82567LM-2 Gigabit Network Connection n/a 82567LM
Intel® 82567LF-2 Gigabit Network Connection n/a 82567LF
Intel® 82567V-2 Gigabit Network Connection n/a 82567V
Intel® 82567LM Gigabit Network Connection n/a 82567LM
Intel® 82567LF Gigabit Network Connection n/a 82567LF
Intel® 82567V Gigabit Network Connection n/a 82567V
Intel® 82566DC-2 Gigabit Network Connection n/a 82566DC-2
Intel® 82566DM-2 Gigabit Network Connection n/a 82566DM-2
Intel® 82562V-2 10/100 Network Connection n/a 82562V-2
Intel® 82562G-2 10/100 Network Connection n/a 82562V-2
Intel® 82562GT-2 10/100 Network Connection n/a 82562V-2
Intel® 82562GT 10/100 Network Connection n/a 82562V
Intel® 82562V 10/100 Network Connection n/a 82562V
Intel® 82566DC Gigabit Network Connection n/a 82566DC
Intel® 82566DM Gigabit Network Connection n/a 82566DM
Intel® PRO/1000 PT Desktop Adapter C89516-xxx
D36739-xxx
82572EI
Intel® PRO/1000 PT Network Connection n/a 82572EI
Intel® PRO/1000 PF Network Connection n/a 82572EI
Intel® PRO/1000 PM Network Connection n/a 82573E
Intel® PRO/1000 PL Network Connection
n/a 82573L
Intel® PRO/1000 GT Desktop Adapter C80235-xxx 82541PI
Intel® PRO/1000 CT Network Connection n/a 82547GI
Intel® PRO/1000 T Desktop Adapter A62947-xxx

82544

Intel® PRO/1000 MT Desktop Adapter A78408-xxx
C91016-xxx
C39226-xxx
A95833-xxx

82540, 82541

Intel® PRO/1000 T Network Connection n/a 82544GC
Intel® PRO/1000 MT Network Connection n/a 82541GI
Intel® PRO/1000 MT Desktop Connection n/a 82541EI
Intel® PRO/1000 Network Connection n/a 82541ER

Board ID # = A 6-digit code with a 3-digit extension; printed on barcode sticker on the front of the card.

Also see the Adapter & Driver ID Guide: http://support.intel.com/support/go/network/adapter/home.htm

A "Network Connection" or "LAN Connect" is a networking feature built in to the motherboard, as opposed to a plugged-in adapter.

Compatibility Notes

The following devices are not supported by Windows Server 2008 R2 or Windows Server 2012:

  • Intel® PRO/1000 CT Network Connection
  • Intel® PRO/1000 T Desktop Adapter
  • Intel® PRO/1000 T Network Connection
  • Intel® PRO/1000 XT Network Connection
  • Intel® PRO/1000 XF Network Connection
  • Intel® PRO/1000 XT Desktop Adapter

The following devices are not supported by Microsoft* Windows Server* 2008:

  • Intel® Ethernet Connection I217-LM
  • Intel® Ethernet Connection I217-V
  • Intel® Ethernet Connection I218-LM
  • Intel® Ethernet Connection I218-V
  • Intel® PRO/1000 CT Network Connection
  • Intel® PRO/1000 T Desktop Adapter
  • Intel® PRO/1000 T Network Connection
  • Intel® PRO/1000 XT Network Connection
  • Intel® PRO/1000 XF Network Connection
  • Intel® PRO/1000 XT Desktop Adapter

The following devices are not supported by Microsoft Windows Server 2003:

  • Intel® Ethernet Connection I217-LM
  • Intel® Ethernet Connection I217-V
  • Intel® Ethernet Connection I218-LM
  • Intel® Ethernet Connection I218-V

The following devices are not supported by Microsoft Windows Vista*, Windows* 7 or Windows 8:

  • Intel® PRO/1000 CT Network Connection
  • Intel® PRO/1000 T Desktop Adapter
  • Intel® PRO/1000 T Network Connection
  • Intel® PRO/1000 XT Network Connection
  • Intel® PRO/1000 XF Network Connection
  • Intel® PRO/1000 XT Desktop Adapter

The following devices are not supported by Microsoft Windows XP or Vista:

  • Intel® Ethernet Connection I217-LM
  • Intel® Ethernet Connection I217-V
  • Intel® Ethernet Connection I218-LM
  • Intel® Ethernet Connection I218-V

Last modified on 8/04/10 9:07p Revision

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Intel® Active Management Technology

Intel® Active Management Technology (Intel® AMT) is a hardware-based solution that uses out-of-band communication for management access to networked client computers. Even when the client computer is powered down or has a non-operational OS, Intel AMT enables you to access and manage the system over the network. You can easily get accurate platform information, and can perform remote updating, diagnostics, debugging, and repair of a system, regardless of the state of the OS and the power state of the system. For example, if an OS has failed, you can establish a remote-control session to the failed system and then remotely reboot the failed system to a known good OS image on a remote drive. After the system reboots, you can remotely manage the reinstallation of the OS or repair.

For more information on Intel AMT features, see the documentation that came with your system.

NOTEIntel Active Management Technology drivers are installed as part of the base driver installation on Intel AMT capable systems.
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Attach the RJ45 Network Cable

Insert the twisted pair, RJ45 network cable as shown.

Use one of the following types of network cabling, depending on your adapter and the intended use: 
  • For 1000 Mbps operation (1000BaseT), use Category 5 or better (must be 4-pair wiring). Make sure you use Category 5 cable that complies with the TIA-568 wiring specification. For more information on this specification, see the Telecommunications Industry Association's website: www.tiaonline.org.

Note: To insure compliance with CISPR 24 and the EUs EN55024, devices based on the 82576 controller should be used only with CAT 5E shielded cables that are properly terminated according to the recommendations in EN50174-2.
  • For 100 Mbps operation (100BaseTX), use Category 5 wiring or better. 

  • For 10 Mbps operation (10BaseT), use Category 3 wiring or better. 

Caution: If using less than 4-pair cabling, you must manually configure the speed and duplex setting of the adapter  and the link partner. In addition, with 2- and 3-pair cabling the adapter can only achieve speeds of up to 100Mbps.
  • If you are using this adapter in a residential environment (at any speed), use Category 5 or better wiring. If the cable runs between rooms or through walls and/or ceilings, it should be plenum-rated for fire safety.

In all cases:

  • Segment length is limited to 100 meters (328 feet, 1 inch).

  • The adapter must be connected to a compatible link partner, and may be set to auto-negotiate speed and duplex.

  • Intel® Gigabit Network Adapters using copper connections automatically accommodate either MDI or MDI-X connections. The auto-MDI-X feature of Intel Gigabit Network adapters allows you to directly connect two adapters without using a cross-over cable. 


Single-port models


Dual-port models

 



Last modified on 6/24/08 9:27a Revision

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ALL ** ** RIGHTS RESERVED. NO PART OF THIS PROGRAM OR PUBLICATION MAY ** ** BE REPRODUCED, TRANSMITTED, TRANSCRIBED, STORED IN A ** ** RETRIEVAL SYSTEM, OR TRANSLATED INTO ANY LANGUAGE OR COMPUTER ** ** LANGUAGE IN ANY FORM OR BY ANY MEANS, ELECTRONIC, MECHANICAL, ** ** MAGNETIC, OPTICAL, CHEMICAL, MANUAL, OR OTHERWISE, WITHOUT ** ** THE PRIOR WRITTEN PERMISSION OF : ** ** ** ** INTEL CORPORATION ** ** ** ** 2200 MISSION COLLEGE BOULEVARD ** ** ** ** SANTA CLARA, CALIFORNIA 95052-8119 ** ** ** **********************************************************************/ var Results = new Array(); var URLTarget = "_blank"; var Document = document; var PathDiv = "\\"; var SearchList = new Array(); var ExcludeList = new Array(); var CurEntries = new Array(); function Search() { if (arguments.length == 0) return; if (typeof Array.prototype.splice == "undefined") Array.prototype.splice = Splice_Fcn; if (typeof navigator.userAgent != "undefined") { var browser = navigator.userAgent.toLowerCase(); if ((browser.indexOf("netscape") == -1) && (browser.indexOf("firefox") == -1) && (browser.indexOf("gecko") == -1)) URLTarget="_self"; } if (typeof window.location.pathname != "undefined") { var nIdx = window.location.pathname.indexOf('/'); if (nIdx != -1) PathDiv = "/"; } ClearArrays(); var Exclude_Warning = ""; var FrameCnt = top.frames.length; if (FrameCnt != 0) Document = top.frames[FrameCnt-1].document; for (i=0; i < arguments.length; i++) { if (arguments[i].toString().indexOf(" ") == -1) AddToSearchArray(arguments[i].toString()); else { var arg_array = arguments[i].toString().split(" "); for (j=0; j < arg_array.length; j++) { var current = arg_array[j]; if (current == "") continue; if ((current == "+") || (current == "-")) { var next = arg_array[++j]; while ((next == "") && (j < arg_array.length+1)) next = arg_array[++j]; current = current + next; } AddToSearchArray(current); } } } Document.close(); Document.write(""); Document.write(""); Document.write(""); Document.write(""); Document.write(""); Document.write(""); Document.title = "Search Results"; Document.write("

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DESKTOP/drivers.htm0000755000000000000000000000613111710302354011245 0ustar Install the Drivers

Intel Network Drivers for Microsoft* Windows* Operating Systems


Install the Drivers in Microsoft Windows

NOTE: This will update the drivers for all supported Intel® network adapters in your system.

Before installing or updating the drivers, insert your adapter(s) in the computer and plug in the network cable. When Windows discovers the new adapter, it attempts to find an acceptable Windows driver already installed with the operating system. 

If found, the driver is installed without any user intervention. If Windows cannot find the driver, the Found New Hardware Wizard window is displayed.

Regardless of whether or not Windows finds the driver, it is recommended that you follow the procedure below to install the driver. Drivers for all Intel adapters supported by this software release are installed.

  1. If you are installing drivers from the Product CD, insert the CD. If you do not have the Product CD, download drivers from the support website and transfer them to the system.

  2. If the Found New Hardware Wizard screen is displayed, click Cancel.

  3. Start the autorun located on the CD. If you downloaded the software package from the support website, the autorun automatically runs after you have extracted the files.

  4. Click Install Drivers and Software.

  5. Follow the instructions in the install wizard.


Uninstalling the Driver

These instructions uninstall the drivers for all Intel network adapters in a system.

  1. From the Control Panel, double-click Add/Remove Programs

  2. Select Intel(R) Network Connections Drivers.

  3. Click Add/Remove

  4. When the confirmation dialog displays, click OK


Last modified on 6/05/09 11:38a Revision

DESKTOP/dupwindm.htm0000755000000000000000000001156512001223204011413 0ustar Configuring Speed and Duplex in Windows*

Set Up Speed and Duplex

In addressing speed and duplex configuration issues, you need to distinguish between copper-based adapters and fiber-based adapters.

In the default mode, an Intel® Network Adapter using copper-based connections will attempt to auto-negotiate with its link partner to determine the best setting. If the adapter cannot establish link with the link partner using auto-negotiation, you may need to manually configure the adapter and link partner to identical settings to establish link and pass packets. This should only be needed when attempting to link with an older switch that does not support auto-negotiation or one that has been forced to a specific speed or duplex mode. Your link partner must match the setting you choose.

CAUTION: Only experienced network administrators should force speed and duplex manually. The settings at the switch must always match the adapter settings. Adapter performance may suffer or your adapter may not operate if you configure the adapter differently from your switch.

An Intel® Network Adapter using fiber-based connections, however, will not attempt auto-negotiate with its link partner since those adapters operate only in full duplex, and only at their native speed.

 

Configuring Speed and Duplex in Microsoft* Windows*

By default, auto-negotiation is enabled. Change this setting only to match your link partner.

  1. Navigate to the Device Manager.
  2. Open Properties on the adapter you would like to configure.
  3. Click the Link Speed tab.
  4. Select the appropriate speed and duplex from the Speed and Duplex pull down menu.
  5. Click OK.

Intel® Gigabit Network Adapter Considerations

Per the IEEE specification, gigabit speed is available only in full-duplex.

The settings available when auto-negotiation is disabled are:

  • 10 Mbps or 100 Mbps Full duplex (requires a full duplex capable link partner set to full duplex). The adapter can send and receive packets at the same time. You must set this mode manually.

  • 10 Mbps or 100 Mbps Half duplex (requires a link partner set to half duplex). The adapter performs one operation at a time; it either sends or receives. You must set this mode manually.

  • Auto-Negotiation 1000 Mbps. The adapter only advertises gigabit speed at full duplex.

Intel® 10 Gigabit Network Adapter Considerations

Intel® 10 Gigabit adapters that support 1 gigabit speed allow you to configure the Speed setting. If this option is not present, your adapter only runs at its native speed.

If the adapter cannot establish link with the gigabit link partner using auto-negotiation, set the adapter to 1 Gbps Full duplex.

Intel 10 gigabit fiber-based adapters and SFP direct-attach devices operate only in full duplex, and only at their native speed. Multi-speed 10 gigabit SFP+ fiber modules support full duplex at 10 Gbps and 1 Gbps.

Intel® PRO/100 Network Adapter Considerations

The settings available when auto-negotiation is disabled are:

  • 10 Mbps or 100 Mbps Full duplex (requires a full duplex capable link partner set to full duplex). The adapter can send and receive packets at the same time. You must set this mode manually.

  • 10 Mbps or 100 Mbps Half duplex (requires a link partner set to half duplex). The adapter performs one operation at a time; it either sends or receives. You must set this mode manually.


Last modified on 12/30/09 3:51p Revision DESKTOP/hotwin.htm0000755000000000000000000000352311656603624011116 0ustar PCI Hot Plug Support for Microsoft Windows

PCI Hot Plug Support for Microsoft* Windows* Operating Systems

Intel® network adapters are enabled for use in selected servers equipped with PCI Hot Plug support and running Microsoft* Windows* operating systems. For more information on setting up and using PCI Hot Plug support in your server, see your hardware and/or Hot Plug support documentation for details. PCI Hot Plug only works when you hot plug an identical Intel network adapter.

 

NOTES:
  • The MAC address and driver from the removed adapter will be used by the replacement adapter unless you remove the adapter from the team and add it back in. If you do not remove and restore the replacement adapter from the team, and the original adapter is used elsewhere on your network, a MAC address conflict will occur.
  • For SLA teams, ensure that the replacement NIC is a member of the team before connecting it to the switch.

 


Last modified on 9/03/07 4:49p Revision

DESKTOP/hyperv.htm0000755000000000000000000002750312137735164011127 0ustar Creating Virtual NICs in Hyper-V

Microsoft* Hyper-V* Overview

Microsoft* Hyper-V* makes it possible for one or more operating systems to run simultaneously on the same physical system as virtual machines. This allows you to consolidate several servers onto one system, even if they are running different operating systems. Intel® Network Adapters work with, and within, Microsoft Hyper-V virtual machines with their standard drivers and software.

Notes:

Using Intel® Network Adapters in a Hyper-V Environment

When a Hyper-V Virtual NIC (VNIC) interface is created in the parent partition, the VNIC takes on the MAC address of the underlying physical NIC. The same is true when a VNIC is created on a team or VLAN. Since the VNIC uses the MAC address of the underlying interface, any operation that changes the MAC address of the interface (for example, setting LAA on the interface, changing the primary adapter on a team, etc.), will cause the VNIC to lose connectivity. In order to prevent this loss of connectivity, Intel® PROSet will not allow you to change settings that change the MAC address.

Notes:

  • If Fibre Channel over Ethernet (FCoE)/Data Center Bridging (DCB) is present on the port, configuring the device in Virtual Machine Queue (VMQ) + DCB mode reduces the number of VMQs available for guest OSes.
  • When sent from inside a virtual machine, LLDP and LACP packets may be a security risk. The Intel® Virtual Function driver blocks the transmission of such packets.
  • The Virtualization setting on the Advanced tab of the adapter's Device Manager property sheet is not available if the Hyper-V role is not installed.
  • While Microsoft supports Hyper-V on the Windows* 8 client OS, Intel® Ethernet adapters do not support virtualization settings (VMQ, SR-IOV) on Windows 8 client.
  • ANS teaming of VF devices inside a Windows 2008 R2 guest running on an open source hypervisor is supported.

The Virtual Machine Switch

The virtual machine switch is part of the network I/O data path. It sits between the physical NIC and the virtual machine NICs and routes packets to the correct MAC address. Enabling Virtual Machine Queue (VMQ) offloading in Intel(R) ProSet will automatically enable VMQ in the virtual machine switch. For driver-only installations, you must manually enable VMQ in the virtual machine switch.

Using ANS VLANs

If you create ANS VLANs in the parent partition, and you then create a Hyper-V Virtual NIC interface on an ANS VLAN, then the Virtual NIC interface *must* have the same VLAN ID as the ANS VLAN. Using a different VLAN ID or not setting a VLAN ID on the Virtual NIC interface will result in loss of communication on that interface.

Virtual Switches bound to an ANS VLAN will have the same MAC address as the VLAN, which will have the same address as the underlying NIC or team. If you have several VLANs bound to a team and bind a virtual switch to each VLAN, all of the virtual switches will have the same MAC address. Clustering the virtual switches together will cause a network error in Microsoft’s cluster validation tool. In some cases, ignoring this error will not impact the performance of the cluster. However, such a cluster is not supported by Microsoft. Using Device Manager to give each of the virtual switches a unique address will resolve the issue. See the Microsoft Technet article Configure MAC Address Spoofing for Virtual Network Adapters for more information.

Virtual Machine Queues (VMQ) and SR-IOV cannot be enabled on a Hyper-V Virtual NIC interface bound to a VLAN configured using the VLANs tab in Windows Device Manager.

Using an ANS Team or VLAN as a Virtual NIC

If you want to use a team or VLAN as a virtual NIC you must follow these steps:

Note: This applies only to virtual NICs created on a team or VLAN. Virtual NICs created on a physical adapter do not require these steps.
  1. Use Intel® PROSet to create the team or VLAN.
  2. Open the Network Control Panel.
  3. Open the team or VLAN.
  4. On the General Tab, uncheck all of the protocol bindings and click OK.
  5. Create the virtual NIC. (If you check the "Allow management operating system to share the network adapter." box you can do the following step in the parent partition.)
  6. Open the Network Control Panel for the Virtual NIC.
  7. On the General Tab, check the protocol bindings that you desire.
    Note: This step is not required for the team. When the Virtual NIC is created, its protocols are correctly bound.

Command Line for Microsoft Windows Server* Core

Microsoft Windows Server* Core does not have a GUI interface. If you want to use an ANS Team or VLAN as a Virtual NIC, you must use the prosetcl.exe utility, and may need the nvspbind.exe utility, to set up the configuration. Use the prosetcl.exe utility to create the team or VLAN. See the prosetcl.txt file for installation and usage details. Use the nvspbind.exe utility to unbind the protocols on the team or VLAN. The following is an example of the steps necessary to set up the configuration.

Note: The nvspbind.exe utility is not needed in Windows Server 2008 R2 or later.
  1. Use prosetcl.exe to create a team.
      prosetcl.exe Team_Create 1,2,3 TeamNew VMLB
    (VMLB is a dedicated teaming mode for load balancing under Hyper-V.)
  2. Use nvspbind to get the teams GUID
      nvspbind.exe -n
  3. Use nvspbind to disable the teams bindings
      nvspbind.exe -d aaaaaaaa-bbbb-cccc-dddddddddddddddd *
  4. Create the virtual NIC by running a remote Hyper-V manager on a different machine. Please see Microsoft's documentation for instructions on how to do this.
  5. Use nvspbind to get the Virtual NICs GUID.
  6. Use nvspbind to enable protocol bindings on the Virtual NIC.
      nvspbind.exe -e tttttttt-uuuu-wwww-xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx ms_netbios
      nvspbind.exe -e tttttttt-uuuu-wwww-xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx ms_tcpip
      nvspbind.exe -e tttttttt-uuuu-wwww-xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx ms_server
     

Virtual Machine Queue Offloading

Enabling VMQ offloading increases receive and transmit performance, as the adapter hardware is able to perform these tasks faster than the operating system. Offloading also frees up CPU resources. Filtering is based on MAC and/or VLAN filters. For devices that support it, VMQ is enabled in the host partition on the adapter's Device Manager property sheet, under Virtualization on the Advanced Tab.

Each Intel® Ethernet Adapter has a pool of queues that are split between the various features, such as VMQ Offloading, SR-IOV, Data Center Bridging (DCB), and Fibre Channel over Ethernet (FCoE). Increasing the number of queues used for one feature decreases the number available for other features. On devices that support it, enabling DCB reduces the total pool available for other features to 32. Enabling FCoE further reduces the total pool to 24. Intel PROSet displays the number of queues available for virtual functions under Virtualization properties on the device's Advanced Tab. It also allows you to set how the available queues are distributed between VMQ and SR-IOV.

Teaming Considerations

  • If VMQ is not enabled for all adapters in a team, VMQ will be disabled for the team.
  • If an adapter that does not support VMQ is added to a team, VMQ will be disabled for the team.
  • Virtual NICs cannot be created on a team with Receive Load Balancing enabled. Receive Load Balancing is automatically disabled if you create a virtual NIC on a team.
  • If a team is bound to a Hyper-V virtual NIC, you cannot change the Primary or Secondary adapter.

SR-IOV (Single Root I/O Virtualization)

SR-IOV lets a single network port appear to be several virtual functions in a virtualized environment. If you have an SR-IOV capable NIC, each port on that NIC can assign a virtual function to several guest partitions. The virtual functions bypass the Virtual Machine Manager (VMM), allowing packet data to move directly to a guest partition's memory, resulting in higher throughput and lower CPU utilization. SR-IOV also allows you to move packet data directly to a guest partition's memory. SR-IOV support was added in Microsoft Windows Server 2012. See your operating system documentation for system requirements.

For devices that support it, SR-IOV is enabled in the host partition on the adapter's Device Manager property sheet, under Virtualization on the Advanced Tab.

 

Notes:

  • SR-IOV is not supported with ANS teams.
  • You must enable VMQ for SR-IOV to function.

 


Last modified on 6/01/11 2:12p Revision

DESKTOP/index.htm0000755000000000000000000000102411656603434010706 0ustar Intel® Gigabit Desktop Network Adapters /html> DESKTOP/insert.htm0000755000000000000000000000534011656750064011112 0ustar Insert the Adapter

Insert the PCI Adapter in the Computer

  1. If your computer supports PCI Hot Plug, see your computer documentation for special installation instructions.

  2. Shut down the operating system (if it's running).

  3. Turn off and unplug your computer. Then remove the cover.

  4. CAUTION: Turn off and unplug the power before removing the computer's cover. Failure to do so could endanger you and may damage the adapter or computer.

  5. Remove the cover bracket from a 32-bit or 64-bit PCI (2.2 or later) bus master slot. If you have configuration problems, see your computer's documentation to determine if the PCI slots are bus master-enabled. 

  6. Insert the adapter in a compatible PCI slot. If you install a 64-bit adapter in a 32-bit slot, the adapter will still function, but the end of the edge connector will be exposed and not connected. If this is the case, make sure the exposed contacts do not touch anything that would cause an electrical problem. Push the adapter into the slot until the adapter is firmly seated. 

  7. Secure the adapter bracket with a screw, if required.

  8. Repeat steps 4 through 6 for each additional adapter to be installed.

  9. Replace the computer cover and plug in the power cord.

  10. Turn the power on and start your operating system. 
    If you get a PCI or PCI-X configuration error, select Troubleshooting in the Table of Contents.


Last modified on 4/06/06 3:42p Revision

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Intel® I/O Acceleration Technology

Intel® I/O Acceleration Technology (Intel® I/OAT) is an Intel platform network technology that accelerates, optimizes and seamlessly scales enterprise servers on Microsoft Windows Server* and Linux* operating systems.

  • Acceleration moves networking data to applications faster.

  • Optimization allows you to increase the load on your servers without increasing power consumption.

  • Seamless multiple port scaling gives you increased networking throughput from teaming along with reliable server and application availability.

Implementing Intel I/OAT requires no change to your existing network configuration or existing security implementations.

System Requirements

This is a platform-level solution for data movement. Thus, several ingredients are necessary for a system to be Intel I/OAT capable:

Platform The platform must be based on a server chipset and BIOS that are Intel I/OAT capable.
Operating System
  • Microsoft Windows Server 2008 or later
  • Linux: Enabled in the kernel only as of kernel version 2.6.33
Network Connectivity Hardware Intel I/OAT is supported on specific server adapters and network connections available from Intel and other vendors. If you have multiple network adapters in your system, Intel I/OAT will operate automatically on the compatible models, while non-compatible adapters will pass traffic normally.
Drivers and Connectivity Software Intel I/OAT becomes active when all required software support is loaded & enabled.
  • Windows: The IOATDMA driver and NDIS miniport driver version 9.3.31.0, or greater, must be installed.
  • Linux: The Intel ioatdma module must be loaded. I/OAT support must be enabled in the kernel.

NOTES: 
  • At least one Intel I/OAT-capable port must be enabled when your system starts up. If no Intel I/OAT-capable ports are enabled at system startup, the IOATDMA driver will not register with NDIS and Intel I/OAT-capable ports enabled after system startup will show no DMA activity. Enable an Intel I/OAT-capable port and reboot to resolve this issue.

Tuning Your System

Memory

Your system memory channels should be fully populated. Intel recommends a minimum of 4 GB of system memory or 1 GB per channel. Refer to your system guide for specific information regarding memory channels.

Windows Adapter Settings

In a Windows environment, the following advanced settings must be enabled (see the Intel® PROSet link in the left pane):

  • RSS
  • Offload Receive IP Checksum
  • Offload Receive TCP Checksum

Last modified on 4/24/13.

DESKTOP/ipsecoff.htm0000755000000000000000000000366112037014300011364 0ustar IP Security Offloading

IP Security Offloading

Internet Protocol (IP) Security (IPSec) is a set of protocols used to help secure the exchange of IP data. IP Security offloading is the assignment of algorithm computations from software to hardware. Generally, CPU utilization decreases and network performance increases when offloading takes place.

On Intel devices that support IPSec offloading features, you can configure those features through Intel® PROSet. For more information, select Intel PROSet in the Table of Contents (left pane) of this window.

NOTE:  Large Send Offload (LSO) and IPSec Offload are not compatible. LSO is automatically disabled when IPSec Offload is enabled. This may reduce the performance of non-IPSec traffic. Confining all of your IPSec traffic to one port and enabling IPSec Offload only on that port may mitigate this issue. On Microsoft Windows 8/Server 2012 and later, devices based on the 82576, 82599, and X540 controllers are not affected by this issue.

 


Last modified on 8/28/08 3:57p Revision

DESKTOP/jumbo_dm.htm0000755000000000000000000001363011656603624011402 0ustar Jumbo Frames

Jumbo Frames

Jumbo frames are Ethernet frames that are larger than 1518 bytes. You can use Jumbo Frames to reduce server CPU utilization and increase throughput. However, additional latency may be introduced. 

NOTES:
  • Jumbo Frames are supported at 1000 Mbps and 10Gbps. Using Jumbo Frames at 10 or 100 Mbps is not supported and may result in poor performance or loss of link.

  • End-to-end network hardware must support this capability; otherwise, packets will be dropped.

Jumbo Frames can be implemented simultaneously with VLANs and teaming.

To configure Jumbo Frames at the switch, consult your network administrator or switch user's guide.

Restrictions:

  • Jumbo frames are not supported in multi-vendor team configurations.

  • Supported protocols are limited to IP (TCP, UDP).

  • Jumbo frames require compatible switch connections that forward Jumbo Frames. Contact your switch vendor for more information.

  • When standard sized Ethernet frames (64 to 1518 bytes) are used, there is no benefit to configuring Jumbo Frames.

  • The Jumbo Frames setting on the switch must be set to at least 8 bytes larger than the adapter setting for Microsoft* Windows* operating systems, and at least 22 bytes larger for all other operating systems.

  • The Intel® PRO/1000 PL Network Connection supports jumbo frames in Microsoft* Windows* operating systems only when Intel® PROSet for Windows Device Manager is installed.

  • The following devices do not support jumbo frames larger than 4096 bytes:

    • Intel® 82577LM Gigabit Network Connection

    • Intel® 82578DM Gigabit Network Connection.

  • The following devices do not support jumbo frames:

    • Intel® 82567V-4 Gigabit Network Connection
    • Intel® 82578DC Gigabit Network Connection
    • Intel® 82577LC Gigabit Network Connection
    • Intel® 82567LF-3 Gigabit Network Connection
    • Intel® 82567V-2 Gigabit Network Connection
    • Intel® 82567LF-2 Gigabit Network Connection
    • Intel® 82567V Gigabit Network Connection
    • Intel® 82567LF Gigabit Network Connection
    • Intel® PRO/1000 Gigabit Server Adapter
    • Intel® PRO/1000 PM Network Connection
    • Intel® PRO/1000 PM Network Connection
    • Intel® 82562V 10/100 Network Connection
    • Intel® 82562GT 10/100 Network Connection
    • Intel® 82566DM Gigabit Network Connection
    • Intel® 82566DC Gigabit Network Connection
    • Intel® 82566DC-2 Gigabit Network Connection
    • Intel® 82562V-2 10/100 Gigabit Network Connection
    • Intel® 82562G-2 10/100 Gigabit Network Connection
    • Intel® 82562GT-2 10/100 Gigabit Network Connection
    • Intel® 82552 10/100 Network Connection

Setting Up Jumbo Frames in Microsoft* Windows*

NOTE: Jumbo frames are not supported in multi-vendor team configurations.
  1. Open Microsoft* Windows* Device Manager.

  2. Open Properties on your adapter.

  3. Click the Advanced tab.

  4. Select Jumbo Frames from the list of advanced features.

  5. Set your desired packet size (based on network capability).

  6. Click OK to apply the changes. 

All equipment on the network must also support the larger frame size. When setting up Jumbo Frames on other network devices, be aware that different network devices calculate Jumbo Frame size differently. Some devices include the header information in the frame size while others do not. Intel adapters do not include header information in the frame size. When configuring Jumbo Frames on a switch, set the frame size four bytes higher for CRC, plus four bytes if you are using VLANs or QoS packet tagging.


Last modified on 8/01/11 3:59p Revision

DESKTOP/lbracket.htm0000755000000000000000000000424111656750064011374 0ustar Attach the Low-Profile Bracket

Attaching the Low Profile Bracket (Optional)

Some adapter models come with a small bracket in the product package, to be used in a low profile slot. If you need to install the adapter in a low-profile slot, follow these instructions. 

  1. Before handling the adapter, ground yourself to dissipate any static charge.

  2. Remove the two screws securing the standard bracket to the back side of the adapter.

  1. Slide the bracket away from the adapter.

  1. Slide the low profile bracket onto the adapter.

  1. Attach the low profile bracket to the adapter using the screws you removed in step 2.

  1. Carefully tighten the screws until they are seated. Do not over tighten.

You may re-attach the standard sized bracket in the future if necessary. 


Last modified on 8/31/05 3:41p Revision

DESKTOP/legaldis.htm0000755000000000000000000000165612110653010011353 0ustar Legal Information

Copyright and Legal Disclaimers

Copyright © 2002 - 2013 Intel Corporation. All rights reserved.

Intel Corporation, 5200 N.E. Elam Young Parkway, Hillsboro, OR 97124-6497 USA

Intel Corporation assumes no responsibility for errors or omissions in this document. Nor does Intel make any commitment to update the information contained herein.

Intel, Itanium, and Pentium are trademarks of Intel Corporation in the U.S. and other countries.

*Other names and brands may be claimed as the property of others.

Warranty Information

Software License

 


DESKTOP/license.htm0000755000000000000000000003756411736273470011245 0ustar Software License

INTEL SOFTWARE LICENSE AGREEMENT

IMPORTANT - READ BEFORE COPYING, INSTALLING OR USING.

Do not copy, install, or use this software and any associated materials (collectively, the “Software”) provided under this license agreement (“Agreement”) until you have carefully read the following terms and conditions.

By copying, installing, or otherwise using the Software, you agree to be bound by the terms of this Agreement. If you do not agree to the terms of this Agreement, do not copy, install, or use the Software.

LICENSES:

Please Note:

  • If you are a network or system administrator, the “Site License” below shall apply to you.
  • If you are an end user, the “Single User License” shall apply to you.
  • If you are an original equipment manufacturer (OEM), the “OEM License” shall apply to you.

SITE LICENSE: You may copy the Software onto your organization’s computers for your organization’s use, and you may make a reasonable number of back-up copies of the Software, subject to these conditions:

  1. This Software is licensed for use only in conjunction with (a) physical Intel component products, and (b) virtual (emulated) devices designed to appear as Intel component products to a Guest operating system running within the context of a virtual machine. Any other use of the Software, including but not limited to use with non-Intel component products, is not licensed hereunder.
  2. Subject to all of the terms and conditions of this Agreement, Intel Corporation ("Intel") grants to you a non-exclusive, non-assignable, copyright license to use the Software.
  3. You may not copy, modify, rent, sell, distribute, or transfer any part of the Software except as provided in this Agreement, and you agree to prevent unauthorized copying of the Software.
  4. You may not reverse engineer, decompile, or disassemble the Software.
  5. The Software may include portions offered on terms differing from those set out here, as set out in a license accompanying those portions.

SINGLE USER LICENSE: You may copy the Software onto a single computer for your personal use, and you may make one back-up copy of the Software, subject to these conditions:

  1. This Software is licensed for use only in conjunction with (a) physical Intel component products, and (b) virtual (emulated) devices designed to appear as Intel component products to a Guest operating system running within the context of a virtual machine. Any other use of the Software, including but not limited to use with non-Intel component products, is not licensed hereunder.
  2. Subject to all of the terms and conditions of this Agreement, Intel Corporation ("Intel") grants to you a non-exclusive, non-assignable, copyright license to use the Software.
  3. You may not copy, modify, rent, sell, distribute, or transfer any part of the Software except as provided in this Agreement, and you agree to prevent unauthorized copying of the Software.
  4. You may not reverse engineer, decompile, or disassemble the Software.
  5. The Software may include portions offered on terms differing from those set out here, as set out in a license accompanying those portions.

OEM LICENSE: You may reproduce and distribute the Software only as an integral part of or incorporated in your product, as a standalone Software maintenance update for existing end users of your products, excluding any other standalone products, or as a component of a larger Software distribution, including but not limited to the distribution of an installation image or a Guest Virtual Machine image, subject to these conditions:

  1. This Software is licensed for use only in conjunction with (a) physical Intel component products, and (b) virtual (emulated) devices designed to appear as Intel component products to a Guest operating system running within the context of a virtual machine. Any other use of the Software, including but not limited to use with non-Intel component products, is not licensed hereunder.
  2. Subject to all of the terms and conditions of this Agreement, Intel Corporation ("Intel") grants to you a non-exclusive, non-assignable, copyright license to use the Software.
  3. You may not copy, modify, rent, sell, distribute or transfer any part of the Software except as provided in this Agreement, and you agree to prevent unauthorized copying of the Software.
  4. You may not reverse engineer, decompile, or disassemble the Software.
  5. You may only distribute the Software to your customers pursuant to a written license agreement. Such license agreement may be a "break-the-seal" license agreement. At a minimum such license shall safeguard Intel's ownership rights to the Software.
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GOVERNMENT RESTRICTED RIGHTS. The enclosed Software and documentation were developed at private expense, and are provided with RESTRICTED RIGHTS. Use, duplication, or disclosure by the Government is subject to restrictions as set forth in FAR 52.227-14 and DFARS 252.227-7013 et seq. or its successor. The use of this product by the Government constitutes acknowledgement of Intels proprietary rights in the Software. Contractor or Manufacturer is Intel.

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Last modified on 4/02/12 10:56p Revision

DESKTOP/lights.htm0000755000000000000000000000750711656603434011105 0ustar Indicator Lights

Indicator Lights

The Intel® PRO/1000 PT Desktop Adapter have the following indicator lights:

 Label

Indication Meaning
 ACT/LNK Green on The adapter is connected to a valid link partner.
Green flashing Data activity
Off No link.
   
10=OFF
100=GRN
1000=YLW
Off 10 Mbps
Green 100 Mbps
Yellow 1000 Mbps
Orange flashing Identity. Use the "Identify Adapter" button in Intel® PROSet to control blinking. See Intel PROSet Help for more information.

The Intel® Gigabit CT2, Gigabit CT, PRO/1000 T, and PRO/1000 MT Desktop Adapters have the following indicator lights:

 Label

Indication Meaning
 ACT/LNK Green on The adapter is connected to a valid link partner.
Green flashing Data activity
Off No link.
Yellow flashing Identity. Use the "Identify Adapter" button in Intel® PROSet to control blinking. See Intel PROSet Help for more information.
10=OFF
100=GRN
1000=YLW
Off 10 Mbps
Green 100 Mbps
Yellow 1000 Mbps


Last modified on 8/04/10 9:07p Revision

DESKTOP/manage.htm0000755000000000000000000002516212106666030011030 0ustar Remote Wake-Up

Remote Wake-Up and Wake on LAN*


About Remote Wake-Up

The ability to remotely wake computers is an important development in computer management. This feature has evolved over the last few years from a simple remote power-on capability to a complex system interacting with a variety of device and operating system (OS) power states.

NOTES:
  • Not all systems support every wake setting. There may be BIOS or Operating System settings that need to be enabled for your system to wake up. In particular, this is true for Wake from S5 (also referred to as Wake from power off).

 The following adapters do not support Wake on LAN* (WoL) operations

  • Intel® PRO/1000 MT Quad Port Server adapter
  • Intel® Gigabit VT Quad Port Server Adapter
  • Intel® Ethernet Server Adapter X520-2
  • Intel® Ethernet Server Adapter X520-1
  • Intel® Ethernet Server Adapter X540-T1
  • Intel® Ethernet Converged Network Adapter X540-T2
  • Intel® Ethernet Converged Network Adapter X540-T1

Wake on Magic Packet

In early implementations of Remote Wake-up, the computer could be started from a power-off state by sending a Magic Packet. A Magic Packet is an Ethernet packet that contains an adapters MAC address repeated 16 times in the data field. When an adapter receives a Magic Packet containing its own MAC address, it activates the computers power. This enables network administrators to perform off-hours maintenance at remote locations without sending a technician out.

This early implementation did not require an OS that was aware of remote wake-up. However, it did require a computer that was equipped with a standby power supply and had the necessary circuitry to allow the remote power control. These computers were typically equipped with a feature named Advanced Power Management (APM). APM provided BIOS-based power control.

Advanced Configuration and Power Interface

Newer computers feature Advanced Configuration and Power Interface (ACPI), which extends the APM concept to enable the OS to selectively control power. ACPI supports a variety of power states. Each state represents a different level of power, from fully powered up to completely powered down, with partial levels of power in each intermediate state. Power states include:
Power State  Description
S0 On and fully operational
S1 System is in low power mode (sleep mode). The CPU clock is stopped, but RAM is powered on and being refreshed.
S2 Similar to S1, but power is removed from the CPU.
S3 Suspend to RAM (standby mode). Most components are shutdown. RAM remains operational.
S4 Suspend to disk (hibernate mode). The memory contents are swapped to the disk drive and then reloaded into RAM when the system is awakened.
S5 Power off

Not all systems support being awakened from a powered-off state.

Remote wake-up can be initiated by a variety of user selectable packet types and is not limited to the Magic Packet format. For more information about supported packet types, see the operating system settings section.

Wake Up Address Patterns

The wake up capability of Intel gigabit adapters is based on patterns that are sent by the OS. You may configure the driver to the following settings using Intel® PROSet:

  • OS Controlled - Accept all the patterns sent to the OS.

  • Directed Packets - Accepts only patterns containing the Adapter's Ethernet address in the Ethernet Header or containing the IP address, assigned to the adapter, in the IP header.

  • Magic Packets - Accept only patterns containing 16 consecutive repetitions of the adapter's MAC address.

  • Directed & Magic - Accepts the patterns of both directed packets and magic packets.

Choosing "Directed Packets" will also accept patterns of the Address Resolution Protocol (ARP) querying the IP address assigned to the adapter. Upon configuring multiple IP addresses to one adapter, the OS may request to wake up on ARP patterns to all of the configured addresses. The adapter will only awaken in response to ARP packets querying the first IP address in the list.


Physical Installation Issues

Wake on LAN Cable

For computers with a PCI 2.1 compliant bus

A Wake on LAN cable is required on all remote wake-up capable adapters when used in older WoL-capable computers. These computers are generally equipped with a PCI 2.1 complaint bus and the BIOS is typically designed for APM compliant power management.
NOTE:  Remote Wake-Up from power-off (S5) is not supported on the following adapters in computers using the PCI 2.1 bus. To use Remote Wake-Up on any of the adapters listed below, the computer must have a PCI 2.2 compliant bus.
  • Intel PRO/100+ PCI adapter (PILA8460BN)
  • Intel PRO/100 M Desktop adapter (PILA8460F)
  • Intel PRO/1000 T Desktop adapter (PWLA8390T)
  • Intel PRO/1000 XT Server adapter (PWLA8490XT)

For computers with a PCI 2.2 compliant bus

The Wake on LAN cable is not usually required for computers equipped with a PCI 2.2 compliant bus, as the wake up signal is routed through the PCI bus. This is done through the PCI connector pin defined as PME (Power Management Event).

Many of the newer ACPI computers also have a connector for the 3-pin Wake on LAN cable for backwards compatibility with older WOL capable adapters. In this type of computer, the WOL cable is still required for older 82558-based Intel® PRO/100+ Management adapter model numbers PILA8900 and PILA8461.

Slot

Some motherboards only support remote wake-up (or remote wake-up from S5 state) in a particular slot. For example, the Intel® Desktop Board D815EPEA2 only supports remote wake-up from a powered off (S5) state if the adapter is plugged into PCI slot 2. It does, however, support remote wake-up from standby from any slot. See the documentation that came with your system or motherboard for details on remote wake-up support.

Power

Early versions of the Intel PRO/100+ Management adapter are +5 volt only. These models must have the 3-pin cable attached for the remote wake-up function to work. These adapters are equipped with 3 LEDs on the adapter bracket, whereas the PCI 2.2 compliant PRO/100 models have 2 LEDs on the adapter bracket. The older +5 volt model adapters are not compliant to the PCI 2.2 specification and do not fit in a 3-volt only PCI slot due to the slot being keyed differently.

Newer Intel network adapters are 3.3 volt, but work in a 5-volt slot also. They are keyed to fit either type of slot.

If your computer requires the 3-pin cable, the +5 volt standby power supply must supply at least 0.2 amps at +5 volts for each adapter installed. For older PCI 2.1 compliant management adapters, the power supply must supply at least .6 amps. This value is usually listed on the power supply label as +5SB, +5VSB or +5AUX. 

If your remote wake-up enabled computer is compliant to PCI specification 2.2, it does not require the 3-pin cable for remote wake-up. In these computers, the 3.3 volt standby power supply must provide at least 0.2 amps for each adapter installed. You may need to contact your computer manufacturer to verify the standby current rating. Turning off the remote wake up capability on the adapter by using the IBAUTIL utility reduces the power draw to around 50 milliamps (.05 amps) per adapter.


BIOS Settings

You may need to configure various settings in the computer BIOS so that remote wake-up will work.

Many ACPI computers can be configured to work in APM mode. Check your BIOS settings to determine which mode you are operating in.

In both APM and ACPI computers, you may find settings for Wake on LAN under the Power Control area and titled "Wake on LAN" and/or Wake on PME". Wake on LAN setting refers to wake up events received through the 3-pin header cable. Wake on PME refers to wake up events received through the PCI bus. To enable remote wake-up, you should enable the setting that corresponds to your adapter connection. For example, set Wake on LAN to enable if you are using the WOL cable.

In ACPI computers operating in ACPI mode and using an ACPI aware OS, look for an ACPI specific setting. If you want to power up the system from a power off state, set an ACPI specific setting such as "Wake on LAN from S5" to enable.


Last modified on 7/12/11 11:31p Revision DESKTOP/mang_win.htm0000755000000000000000000001732112135717324011402 0ustar Power Management

Power Management

The Intel® PROSet Power Management tab replaces the standard Microsoft* Windows* Power Management tab in Device Manager. It includes the Power Saver and Wake on LAN* (WoL*) options that were previously included on the Advanced tab. The standard Windows power management functionality is incorporated on the Intel PROSet tab.

NOTES:
  • The options available on the Power Management tab are adapter and system dependant. Not all adapters will display all options.
  • The following adapters support WoL only on Port A:
    • Intel® Ethernet Server Adapter I350-T2
    • Intel® Ethernet Server Adapter I350-T4
    • Intel® Ethernet Server Adapter I340-T2
    • Intel® Ethernet Server Adapter I340-T4
    • Intel® Ethernet Server Adapter I340-F4
    • Intel® Gigabit ET2 Quad Port Server Adapter
    • Intel® PRO/1000 PF Quad Port Server Adapter
    • Intel® PRO/1000 PT Quad Port LP Server Adapter
    • Intel® PRO/1000 PT Quad Port Server Adapter
    • Intel® PRO/1000 PT Dual Port Network Connection
    • Intel® PRO/1000 PT Dual Port Server Connection
    • Intel® PRO/1000 PT Dual Port Server Adapter
    • Intel® PRO/1000 PF Dual Port Server Adapter
    • Intel® Gigabit PT Quad Port Server ExpressModule
  • The following adapters do not support WoL:
    • Intel® PRO/1000 MT Quad Port Server adapter
    • Intel® Gigabit VT Quad Port Server Adapter
    • Intel® Ethernet Server Adapter X520-2
    • Intel® Ethernet Server Adapter X520-1
    • Intel® Ethernet Server Adapter X540-T1
    • Intel® Ethernet Converged Network Adapter X540-T2
    • Intel® Ethernet Converged Network Adapter X540-T1

NOTE: If your system has a Manageability Engine, the Link LED may stay lit even if WoL is disabled.

Power Options

The Intel PROSet Power Management tab includes several settings that control the adapter's power consumption. For example, you can set the adapter to reduce its power consumption if the cable is disconnected.

If Reduce speed during standby is enabled,  then Wake on Magic Packet and/or Wake on directed packet must be enabled. If both of these options are disabled, power is removed from the adapter during standby. Wake on Magic Packet from power off state has no effect on this option.

Energy Efficient Ethernet

The Energy Efficient Ethernet (EEE) feature allows a capable device to enter Low Power Idle between bursts of network traffic. Both ends of a link must have EEE enabled for any power to be saved. Both ends of the link will resume full power when data needs to be transmitted. This transition may introduce a small amount of network latency.

NOTES:

  • Both ends of the EEE link must automatically negotiate link speed.
  • EEE is not supported at 10Mbps.

 

Intel® Auto Connect Battery Saver

The Intel® Auto Connect Battery Saver (ACBS) feature turns off the adapter when link is down or the network cable is disconnected. After a timeout period, the adapter will power off. When the network cable is reconnected and link is restored, the NIC powers up and functionality is fully restored.

ACBS only functions when the system is on battery power. If the power cable is connected, ACBS will be automatically disabled. If ACBS is active, the adapter will appear to be powered off. If you have Intel® PROSet installed, on the Link Speed tab, the Link Status will indicate Speed: Not connected. Power off.

NOTE: ACBS will not function on an adapter if the adapter has forced speed or duplex settings. ACBS will only function if the adapter is set to auto-detect or auto-negotiate.

Intel® System Idle Power Saver

The Intel® System Idle Power Saver feature sets the adapter to negotiate the lowest possible speed setting when the system and network are idle. When the system activity is detected, the link will be negotiated to a higher speed.

To support this feature, the adapter must be

  • configured to Auto Detect speed and
  • connected to a link partner that can auto-negotiate speed

Remote Wake-Up and Wake on LAN*

The ability to remotely wake computers is an important development in computer management. This feature has evolved over the last few years from a simple remote power-on capability to a complex system interacting with a variety of device and operating system power states. More details are available here.

Windows Vista*, Windows 7, Windows Server 2008, and Windows Server 2008 R2 are ACPI-capable. These operating systems do not support wake from a power-off (S5) state, only from standby (S3) or hibernate (S4). When shutting down the system, they shutdown ACPI devices, including Intel adapters. This disarms the adapters remote wake up capability. However, in some ACPI-capable computers, the BIOS may have a setting that allows you to override the operating system and wake from an S5 state anyway. If there is no support for wake from S5 state in your BIOS settings, you are limited to Wake From Standby when using these operating systems in ACPI computers.

For some adapters, the Power Management tab in Intel PROSet includes a setting called Wake on Magic Packet from power off state. Enable this setting to explicitly allow wake up with a Magic Packet* from shutdown under APM power management mode.

In ACPI-capable versions of Windows, the Intel PROSet Power Management tab includes Wake on Magic Packet and Wake on directed packet settings. These controls the type of packets that wake up the system from standby.

Wake on Intel® Ready Access

Intel® Ready Access keeps your network connection active when the rest of your system is in sleep or standby mode, so that content on your system is readily accessible. Requests from other computers will wake up your computer.


Last modified on 4/24/13.

DESKTOP/note.gif0000755000000000000000000000073211651742220010516 0ustar GIF89a!1J!Z)c1sRR{{{{Z{9sssBBssR99JJfffZZZ))ZZ9ZZ)RRRRRBJJJBBB333)))!!!!,@pH,  f!:(3z<H\! E@S$bQ/G2~C $.$G(c%Gz',sE!rrC $M*L ( +UMG&MBCN#L}G ,ȻB+KB)Yt(E # B*$#һ+s-N#m@@465֘ 09!.(*@ 1A ;DESKTOP/overview.htm0000755000000000000000000000535511656603434011460 0ustar Overview

Overview

Welcome to the User's Guide for the Intel® Gigabit family of desktop adapters. This guide covers hardware and software installation, setup procedures, and troubleshooting tips for these adapters. 

NOTE: This guide refers only to drivers and features available on IA-32-based computer platforms and platforms based on the Intel® 64 Architecture.

For Itanium®-based computers, see the Itanium user guides.

To select a topic, click a link in the table of contents column to the left.

Installing the Network Adapter

If you are installing a network adapter, follow this procedure. 
If you are upgrading the driver software, start with step 5.

  1. Make sure that you are installing the latest driver software for the adapter you are installing. For a list of supported adapters, click here.

  2. Review system requirements.

  3. Insert the adapter(s) in the computer.

  4. Attach the network cable(s).

  5. Install the network drivers.

  6. For Windows systems, install the Intel® PROSet software.

If you have any problems with basic installation, see Troubleshooting.

Once you have installed the network adapter(s), you can set other advanced features. The available features and the configuration process varies with the adapter and your operating system.


Last modified on 11/22/10 4:01p Revision

DESKTOP/pro1000c.gif0000755000000000000000000001342111656750064011026 0ustar GIF87a.+,@>?202:8:  }{y{wuwPOPONO}|}:8;DDFkknZZ\**+rrtBBC||}ttuccd[[\ѻ>?Bjkn`bfhjn|}x{PRTXZ\bcdfghpsu8:;HJKȿ "# 422VSSB@@#""wttfdddbbb``^\\/..wuuussKJJDCClkkhgg[ZZù!,@H*\ȰCŋ3jȱǏy#ȣ!Al(\ɲ˗/c@N Lh 6 J >SK!hMXjh҇RBJ:6Fl*r]˶mKI tQxu`Ia]r/kfA *"-)F N8i<^ͺ55&7g۾ K o*@Q0;!9P/ŹT@ݼ#fpΛ@4{V ֬5׏ M=$Mvf+ag߁Ѱ߂ @`-a$hT o hRwWIաAIJ A`,'#fI@PH&Q@8 ~>VY"fWց\dZ'Q^ uRFwVƹ ? ᥒ%Í*ԈaTD ]r@y rFZryi *%Ч.ڨ(Q*Цm h%\fzVWX`A `,QlY5"Zr JQ(]HP H Kba'X,l1gyF!/_ ڐn5GX![Bp↳ZkZ-$#KyiIdg,bڮ(doAsm{L#Քpg\Z!ӢX'j\^V9ZDYâ)iI, qW}&u drq`2=ٰD)IKˆ(}˛aYkŽ ^h6Y/y6D:28k!7NLB|`g-6QPuCF eHYt޺iB⧬UM%ba<  JMZ34']zY6Yv(XᘏZxi9cdi7[;籐bZ4adž'a]Ó5s!"CsC嘒,g%~0%nnaq7)_y[ = !]I]3T?iVڵUDlfa7] ["10-SOR9QJ\^" 7of(SeR,=A<&8i>y.qʳ% 2E_ WF10C 8*m 9 YeFY+aDBp)vBC8Aya Alɜ@PB@ҹt6-#xjӉ[#ahL}&Abႜ&.3by~(^#1f ? h(@v. s RNF{6DAheFbF$ bifA&jcZ]d) %Q(bEP jz`3gqV/Hf5Zk'ң?ʋ[9`-"k,Ԥa *jpjbCƉ7>DVa0C[9^ZM ;:XK6V0jzu`#D&q_c5y6<6h(¨L 3 jxޢcBE@zڢjm.(|Q!^j bJʫVVSecjs %݃jՊbtUEVi4uwʢaL7vU*B}80L? vWE,2F6 zA Anoz*Cl %V.Ɖ6b.][?~*jR`XLpu(p|:ƥ"voo+ +p|G.gczoN[@%@u{Waf a 'I'I+lik~AFrnqZkrp)H[_Mksg'DEfHR'FwדppJyG0wMQ3?19H${-79 k?~U@:\ sPz tamֆs:'VrKf&`Nq:c!q'?uMĶ L79ۻ; O`}|f֛=̼FXxtq %X;$+?cM@S1A2A hKɕ\̓1-Ck!\P&x9YPXA%CJλ[7NqrA^EH 3ON1ޗQ/1llXdN jN0(̂="0|rD{8ݬB10/Ox1EQrfzP26QP3Hu7i(n,V@CWQ!l GhVY,W(mSN}",p#sQP "@|R5} :R/5Zw{2T$KA J\mptN#K1-F/!P<" ?%2ڜ 2P;=EMYW 'BCMPSx4NP4SMuhCm`4x8pU-Aܰ.Zxf cm0*}X*U@ކyS pU8wjeEm}16 (l~+z{^0.`J&B>dߤf}^' JKIѱq( s`!l췾8S9~q̎-ɛ>ՂhnJ=ḧ>qn y_/~n5WQ;;DESKTOP/prosetdm.htm0000755000000000000000000000472411714043510011432 0ustar Using PROSet

Intel® PROSet for Windows* Device Manager

Intel® PROSet for Windows* Device Manager is an extension to the Windows Device Manager. When you install the Intel PROSet software, additional tabs are automatically added to Device Manager.

NOTE:  You must have administrator rights to install or use Intel PROSet for Windows Device Manager.

Installing Intel PROSet for Windows Device Manager

Intel PROSet for Windows Device Manager is installed from the Product CD with the same process used to install drivers. You can select Intel PROSet for Windows Device Manager and Advanced Network Services from the Install Options dialog.

Removing Intel PROSet for Windows Device Manager

Use Add/Remove programs from the Control Panel to uninstall Intel PROSet for Windows Device Manager.

Changing Intel PROSet Settings Under Windows Server Core

You can use the command line utility prosetcl.exe to change most Intel PROSet settings under Windows Server Core. Please refer to the help file prosetcl.txt located in the \Program Files\Intel\DMIX\CL directory. For iSCSI Crash Dump cofiguration, use the CrashDmp.exe utility and refer to the CrashDmp.txt help file.

Compatibility Notes

The following devices do not support Intel PROSet for Windows Device Manager

  • Intel® 82552 10/100 Network Connection
  • Intel® 82567V-3 Gigabit Network Connection

Last modified on 8/04/10 8:12p Revision DESKTOP/pushinst.htm0000755000000000000000000000243211744272404011455 0ustar Microsoft* Windows* Push Install Instructions

Microsoft* Windows* Push Install Instructions

A "Push," or unattended, installation provides a means for network administrators to easily install the drivers on systems that have similar equipment. The following document provides instructions for a basic unattended installation of Microsoft* Windows* that includes the installation of drivers for Intel® Network Adapters.

For 32-bit Microsoft Windows operating systems, see the Push32.txt file in the APPS\SETUP\PUSH\WIN32 directory on the Product CD or in the download directory.

For x64 Microsoft Windows operating systems, see the Pushx64.txt file in the APPS\SETUP\PUSH\WINX64 directory on the Product CD or in the download directory.


Last modified on 2/22/10 4:47p Revision

DESKTOP/qos.htm0000755000000000000000000000400112145155630010371 0ustar Quality of Service (QoS)

Quality of Service

Quality of Service (QoS) allows the adapter to send and receive IEEE 802.3ac tagged frames. 802.3ac tagged frames include 802.1p priority-tagged frames and 802.1Q VLAN-tagged frames. In order to implement QoS, the adapter must be connected to a switch that supports and is configured for QoS. Priority-tagged frames allow programs that deal with real-time events to make the most efficient use of network bandwidth. High priority packets are processed before lower priority packets.

Under Microsoft Windows Vista*, Windows 7, Windows 8, Windows Server 2012, Windows Server 2008, and Windows Server 2008 R2, tagging is enabled using the "Priority/VLAN Tagging" setting on the Advanced tab in Intel® PROSet. 

Once QoS is enabled in Intel PROSet, you can specify levels of priority based on IEEE 802.1p/802.1Q frame tagging.

The supported operating systems have a utility for 802.1p packet prioritization. For more information, see the Windows system help and Microsoft's knowledge base.

NOTE: The first generation Intel® PRO/1000 Gigabit Server Adapter (PWLA 8490) does not support QoS frame tagging.

 


Last modified on 4/24/13.

DESKTOP/reg1000d.htm0000755000000000000000000001363411656750444011037 0ustar Regulatory

Regulatory Compliance Statements

  • Intel® Gigabit CT Desktop Adapter
  • Intel® PRO/1000 GT Desktop Adapter
  • Intel® PRO/1000 PT Desktop Adapter

Safety Compliance

  • UL 60950-1 Second Edition
  • CAN/CSA-C22.2 No 60950-1-07 Second Edition
  • EN 60950-1:2006 +A11:2009 (European Union)
  • IEC 60950-1:2005 Second Edition (International)
  • EU LVD Directive 2006/95/EC

EMC Compliance

  • FCC Part 15 Radiated & Conducted Emissions (USA)
  • ICES-003 Radiated & Conducted Emissions (Canada)
  • CISPR 22 Radiated & Conducted Emissions (International)
  • EN55022:2006 Radiated & Conducted Emissions (European Union)
  • EN55024:1998 +A1:2001 +A2:2003 Immunity (European Union)
  • EU EMC Directive 2004/108/EC
  • VCCI Radiated & Conducted Emissions (Japan)
  • CNS13438 Radiated & Conducted Emissions (Taiwan)
  • AS/NZS CISPR 22 Radiated & Conducted Emissions (Australia/New Zealand)
  • KCC notice 1997-41, EMI and KCC notice 1997-42 EMS (Korea)

Regulatory Compliance Markings

When required these products are provided with the following Product Certification Markings:

  • UL Recognition Mark for USA and Canada
  • CE Mark
  • FCC markings 
  • VCCI marking
  • Australian C-Tick Mark
  • Korea KCC mark
  • Taiwan BSMI mark
  • People's Republic of China "EFUP" mark

Electromagnetic Compatibility Notices

FCC Declaration of Conformity Statement

The Intel Gigabit CT Desktop Adapter, PRO/1000 PT and PRO/1000 GT Desktop Adapter have been tested to Comply with FCC Standards for Home or Office Use.

Intel Corporation
5200 N.E. Elam Young Parkway
Hillsboro, OR 97124-6497
Phone 1-800-628-8686

This equipment has been tested and found to comply with the limits for a Class B digital device pursuant to Part 15 of the FCC rules. These limits are designed to provide reasonable protection against harmful interference in a residential installation. This equipment generates, uses and can radiate radio frequency energy and, if not installed and used in accordance with the instructions, may cause harmful interference to radio communications. However, there is no guarantee that interference will not occur in a particular installation.

If this equipment does cause harmful interference to radio or television reception, which can be determined by turning the equipment off and on, the user is encouraged to try to correct the interference by one or more of the following measures:

  • Reorient or relocate the receiving antenna.
  • Increase the separation between the equipment and receiver.
  • Connect the equipment into an outlet on a circuit different from that to which the receiver is connected.
  • Consult the dealer or an experienced radio/TV technician for help.

CAUTION: If the device is changed or modified without permission from Intel, the user may void his or her authority to operate the equipment.

NOTE: This device complies with Part 15 of the FCC Rules. Operation is subject to the following two conditions: (1) this device may not cause harmful interference, and (2) this device must accept any interference received, including interference that may cause undesired operation.

Canadian Compliance (Industry Canada)

CANADA ICES-003 CLASS B / CANADA NMB-003 CLASSE B

Manufacturer Declaration
European Community

Manufacturer Declaration

Intel Corporation declares that the equipment described in this document is in conformance with the requirements of the European Council Directive listed below:

Low Voltage Directive 2006/95/EC
EMC Directive 2004/108/EC

EN 55022:2006 +A1:2007 (CISPR 22 Class B) RF Emissions Control.
EN 55024:1998 +A1:2001 +A2:2003 (CISPR 24) Immunity to Electromagnetic Disturbance.
EN 60950-1:2006 +A11:2009 Information Technology Equipment- Safety-Part 1: General Requirements.

VCCI Class B Statement (Japan)

China RoHS Declaration

KCC Notice Class B (Republic of Korea Only)

End-of-Life / Product Recycling

Product recycling and end-of-life take-back systems and requirements vary by country.

Contact the retailer or distributor of this product for information about product recycling and/or take-back.

 

Intel Corporation, Mailstop JF3-446
5200 N.E. Elam Young Parkway
Hillsboro, OR 97124-6497


Last modified on 11/02/10 3:03p Revision

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System Requirements

Before installing the network adapter, check your system for the following minimum configuration requirements for Intel® Gigabit Network Adapters.

Hardware Compatibility - Gigabit Adapters

  • The latest BIOS for your computer
  • One of the following slot types, depending on your adapter:
    • One open PCI bus master slot, 32-bit or 64-bit, operating at 33 or 66 MHz
    • One open PCI-X slot operating at 66, 100 or 133 MHz(recommended)
    • One open PCI-Express slot (v1.0a or newer), 4x, 8x or 16x.
  • 64 MB of system memory

Supported 32-bit Operating Systems

Basic software and drivers are supported on the following operating systems:

  • DOS

Advanced software and drivers are supported on the following operating systems:

  • Microsoft Windows* XP, with latest service pack installed
  • Microsoft Windows Vista*, with latest service pack installed
  • Microsoft Windows 7, with latest service pack installed
  • Microsoft Windows 8
  • Microsoft Windows Server* 2003, with latest service pack installed
  • Microsoft Windows Server 2008, with latest service pack installed
  • Linux*, v2.4 kernel or higher
  • Novell* NetWare*  5.1 SP7, 6.0 SP5, 6.5 SP2

Intel® 64 Architecture Platform Requirements

Intel supplies 64-bit drivers for the following operating systems:

  • Microsoft Windows XP, with latest service pack installed
  • Microsoft Windows Vista, with latest service pack installed
  • Microsoft Windows 7, with latest service pack installed
  • Microsoft Windows 8
  • Microsoft Windows Server 2003, with latest service pack installed
  • Microsoft Windows Server 2008, with latest service pack installed
  • Microsoft Windows Server 2008 R2, with latest service pack installed
  • Microsoft Windows Server 2008 Hyper-V*, with latest service pack installed
  • Microsoft Hyper-V Server 2008, with latest service pack installed
  • Microsoft Windows Server 2012
  • Red Hat Linux
  • SUSE Linux

A platform that supports the Intel® 64 Architecture will run in either 64-bit mode or 32-bit compatibility mode. In order for it to run in 64-bit mode, the following requirements must be met:

  • The system must have a 64-bit BIOS that takes advantage of the Intel 64 Architecture
  • One of the supported 64-bit operating systems must be installed

Last modified on 11/22/10 4:16p Revision

DESKTOP/run.gif0000755000000000000000000000014111654256224010356 0ustar GIF89aE Save and Restore

Saving and Restoring an Adapter's Configuration Settings

The Save and Restore Command Line Tool is a VBScript (SavResDX.vbs) that allows you to copy the current adapter and team settings into a standalone file (such as on a USB drive) as a backup measure. In the event of a hard drive failure, you can reinstate most of your former settings.

The system on which you restore network configuration settings must have the same configuration as the one on which the save was performed.

NOTES:
  • You must have Administration privileges to run scripts. If you do not have Administration privileges, you will not receive an error, the script just will not run.
  • Only adapter settings are saved (these include ANS teaming and VLANs). The adapter's driver is not saved.
  • Restore using the script only once. Restoring multiple times may result in unstable configuration.
  • The Restore operation requires the same OS as when the configuration was Saved.

Command Line Syntax

cscript SavResDX.vbs save|restore [filename] [/bdf]

SavResDX.vbs has the following command line options:

save Saves adapter and team settings that have been changed from the default settings.  When you restore with the resulting file, any settings not contained in the file are assumed to be the default.
restore Restores the settings.
filename

The file to save settings to or restore settings from.  If no filename is specified, the script default to WmiConf.txt.

Note: The static IP address and WINS configuration are saved to separate files (StaticIP.txt and WINS.txt). You cannot choose the path or names for these files. If you wish restore these settings, the files must be in the same directory as the SavResDX.vbs script.

/bdf

If you specify /bdf during a restore, the script attempts to restore the configuration based on the PCI Bus:Device:Function:Segment values of the saved configuration. If you removed, added, or moved a NIC to a different slot, this may result in the script applying the saved settings to a different device.

Notes:

  • If the restore system is not identical to the saved system, the script may not restore any settings when the /bdf option is specified.
  • Virtual Function devices do not support the /bdf option.

Examples

Save Example

To save the adapter settings to a file on a floppy diskette, do the following.

  1. Open a Windows Command Prompt.
  2. Navigate to the directory where SavResDX.vbs is located (generally c:\Program Files\Intel\DMIX).
  3. Type the following:
  4. cscript SavResDX.vbs save e:\settings.txt

Restore Example

To restore the adapter settings from a file on a floppy diskette, do the following:

  1. Open a Windows Command Prompt.
  2. Navigate to the directory where SavResDX.vbs is located (generally c:\Program Files\Intel\DMIX).
  3. Type the following:
  4. cscript SavResDX.vbs restore e:\settings.txt


Last modified on 2/10/10 3:18p Revision

DESKTOP/setbd_dm.htm0000755000000000000000000003167612135720000011356 0ustar Unattended Installation

Installing the Base Driver and Intel® PROSet via the Command Line

Installation Methods

Installing with DxSetup.exe

Using SetupBD.exe to Install Base Drivers on Windows Server* Core Operating Systems

Uninstalling Drivers and Intel PROSet


Installation Methods

DxSetup.exe is the preferred installation method. You can use it to install the Windows base drivers and Intel® PROSet for Windows* Device Manager. DxSetup.exe detects the system's language, searches for the appropriate transform file, and applies it to MSI package. The transform file translates the installation instructions to the language associated with your operating system.

NOTES: 
  • Intel® 10GbE Network Adapters do not support unattended driver installation.
  • Intel PROSet cannot be installed with msiexec.exe. You must use DxSetup.exe.

You can use the base driver install utility (SetupBD.exe) to install Microsoft Windows base drivers from a command line. If you use SetupBD.exe to install base drivers, you will not be able to use the advanced features in Intel PROSet.


Installing with DxSetup.exe

DxSetup.exe is a setup utility used for installing Intel PROSet. It detects the system language, searches for the appropriate transform file in the same folder, and then launches PROSETDX.msi in the language specific to the operating system. The transform file translates the installation instructions to the language associated with your operating system.

DxSetup.exe also takes the install options from the command line and applies them to the PROSETDX.msi command line installation.

DxSetup.exe command line switches:

Switch Description
/q[r|n] silent install options.

r Reduced GUI Install
n Silent install
/l[i|w|e|a] log file option.
i log status messages.
w log non-fatal warnings.
e log error messages.
a log the start of all actions.
/uninstall
/x
uninstalls Intel PROSet and drivers.

DxSetup.exe Public Properties

Property Definition
BD "0", do not install base drivers.

"1", install the base drivers (default).

NOTE: BD should only be set to 0 if the Base Drivers have already been installed prior to running DxSetup.exe

DMIX "0", do not install Intel PROSet.

"1", install Intel PROSet (default). The DMIX property requires BD=1.

ANS "0", do not install ANS.

"1", select ANS (default). The ANS property requires DMIX=1.

FCOE "0", do not install Fibre Channel Over Ethernet (FCoE) using DCB (default).

"1", install FCoE using DCB. The FCOE property requires DMIX=1.

ISCSI "0", do not install iSCSI using DCB (default).

"1", install iSCSI using DCB. The ISCSI property requires DMIX=1.

SNMP "0", do not install the SNMP Agent (default).

"1", install the SNMP Agent. The SNMP property requires BD=1.

 

NOTES:
  • If you specify a path for the log file, the path must exist. If you do not specify a complete path, the install log will be created in the current directory.
  • You do not need to specify default values. To install the base drivers, Intel PROSet, and ANS, the following examples are equivalent:

    DxSetup.exe

    DxSetup.exe BD=1 DMIX=1 ANS=1

  • The ANS property should only be set to ANS=1 if DMIX=1 is set. If DMIX=0 and ANS=1, the ANS=1 is ignored and only the base driver will be installed.
  • Even if FCOE=1 is passed, FCoE using DCB will not be installed if the operating system and installed adapters do not support it.
  • Even if ISCSI=1 is passed, iSCSI using DCB will not be installed if the operating system and installed adapters do not support it.
  • Public properties are not case sensitive. No white space is allowed between characters. For example:

DxSetup.exe /qn DMIX=1

Any white space in "DMIX=1" makes the setting invalid.

Modify and Upgrade

You can use DxSetup.exe to modify or upgrade your drivers and software. If a feature is already installed, the public property for that feature will default to 1 and if a feature is not installed, the public property for that feature will default to 0. Running DxSetup.exe without specifying properties will upgrade all installed software. You can remove installed software (except for base drivers) by setting the property to 0. If you uninstall PROSet (DMIX=0), all features that rely on PROSet will also be removed.

Command line examples

You can modify the paths for different operating systems and CD layouts and apply the command line examples.

  1. The following launches a typical install silently:

    DxSetup.exe /qn /liew install.log

    NOTE: BD, ANS and DMIX are selected by default.
  2. How to install components but deselect ANS. Set the ANS=0 in the command line:

    DxSetup.exe /qn ANS=0 /liew install.log


Using SetupBD.exe to Install Base Drivers on Windows Server* Core Operating Systems

NOTE: If you want to use prosetcl.exe to configure your adapters, you must use DxSetup.exe to install drivers and Intel PROSet. SetupBD.exe only installs the base drivers.

Command Line Options

SetupBD.exe supports the following command line switches. 

NOTE: You must include a space between switches.
Switch Description
/s silent install
/r force reboot (must be used with the /s switch)
/nr no reboot (must be used with the /s switch. This switch is ignored if it is included with the /r switch)

Examples:

Option Description
SetupBD

Installs and/or updates the driver(s) and displays the GUI.

SetupBD /s Installs and/or updates the driver(s) silently.
SetupBD /s /r Installs and/or updates the driver(s) silently and forces a reboot.
SetupBD /s /r /nr Installs and/or updates the driver(s) silently and forces a reboot (/nr is ignored).

Other information

NOTES:
  • If you install drivers on a system based on a server chipset and BIOS that are Intel I/OAT capable, the /s switch (silent install) forces a reboot without the /r switch. If you do not want the system to reboot, use the /nr switch.
  • For Intel® I/O Acceleration Technology to function properly, you must reboot after driver installation.

You can use the /r and /nr switches only with a silent install (i.e. with the "/s" option).


Uninstalling Drivers and Intel PROSet

Intel recommends you use Add/Remove Programs to uninstall Intel PROSet and the base drivers. If your operating system does not have a GUI installed, you can use DxSetup.exe to uninstall the base drivers and Intel PROSet.

If you only installed base drivers, you can use the PROUnstl.exe utility to remove them.

NOTE: PROUnstl.exe only removes the base drivers. Do not use this utility if Intel PROSet is installed on your system. Removing the base drivers without removing Intel PROSet will result in system instability.

PROUnstl.exe supports the following command line switch:

Switch Description
/nogui silent uninstall.

Last modified on 4/24/13.

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Simple Network Management Protocol

The Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMP) is a network protocol used to manage TCP/IP networks. SNMP-compliant devices (agents) communicate with management applications (consoles) to send alerts and updates and allow configuration changes.

The Intel® SNMP Agent translates event notices from the adapter and sends them to specified SNMP management stations. The SNMP agent provides information on Intel® network adapters as well as information about advanced features, such as teaming and VLANs.

Using the Intel SNMP Agent

  • Before you install the Intel SNMP Agent on a computer, you must install SNMP on the computer. See your operating system documentation for more information.

  • To use the Intel SNMP Agent with an SNMP management application, you must first compile the Intel MIB (Management Information Base) into the management application's database. This allows the management application to recognize and support the adapter.

Look in the Table of Contents for information on installing the SNMP agent on your operating system.


Last modified on 9/03/07 4:49p Revision

DESKTOP/snmpwin.htm0000755000000000000000000000441211656603624011277 0ustar Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMP)

Simple Network Management Protocol

The Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMP) is a network protocol used to manage TCP/IP networks. SNMP-compliant devices (agents) communicate with management applications (consoles) to send alerts and updates and allow configuration changes.

The Intel® SNMP Agent translates event notices from the adapter and sends them to specified SNMP management stations. The SNMP agent provides information on Intel® network adapters as well as information about advanced features, such as teaming and VLANs.

Using the Intel SNMP Agent

  • Before you install the Intel SNMP Agent on a computer, you must install SNMP on the computer. See your operating system documentation for more information.

  • To use the Intel SNMP Agent with an SNMP management application, you must first compile the Intel MIB (Management Information Base) into the management application's database. This allows the management application to recognize and support the adapter.

Installing the SNMP Agent on Microsoft* Windows* Operating Systems

This utility should only be employed by experienced network administrators. Additional software/services must be installed on your network prior to installing the Intel® SNMP Agent.

To install the SNMP Agent, start the autorun menu from the Product CD or download directory and click Install Drivers and Software. Follow the instructions on the screen.


Last modified on 9/03/07 4:49p Revision

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H.6i1-yx@ތ=mq&)8nӡ"vw0555KVfh.pRqk ߴ 610 Ca('H4#H4K÷r/O>1䕾Z" s%SQ3&ssqCЍ&`.I =M6)q7I/tLDF^f^FJc=8QSg%[G#AdiWcJkM?vd>V!f^n2bfw0Tߟ˔hn]dt*\\vISDMvye!N8뱺-(7Eb`'xWxbHׅC-pE @`#B+dy@^óSzy/AFV7x->35 G??. ЀH+}dryz,yJym!p&5Wj]8>upB8zݔ4fgZz{zE,"b~3rs9?cxf̲?{ȟF5x3$8J̸{?pz,v[goqvT/@{/yHI(5`Uͤw6v~W,_'| >1t^Ǐ;F9AxJxIc45 Y,h „ 2l!Ĉ'RH^={7jc= a$Ɣ3ڋ'0u=4(1E*ib)l\ =ŬZ꒰K.ZQEjײm-ܸrureǒOQ]ѣČÆMlhC&ĦJ {ңIXͥ"aٱ M6ܺw[};I)%x2@>$ǐ!7(MpUXӂuCӯo>~=N2U 7.8=ƆQ4\$ ZJV<0 L,"@]4NSV'.E4 HtAxD#œKKYŕWx->fbXR@"'(j\ Yc"fl}oJ5qQ<2ua]CC(p)\p#`*).D H^AѨM=`1c4("Lϐ90K,K*cd80qriK A-Z{c*2Pr^sjf{/guJ,bD/@FD1DFxZ0sN` K8*vmKU}6ib?b$4]>L 0@ZK9oPrl3t|j1ߵԬԉ|]"@<'Fd2ġCu#hu(zuCcU4*"Nc(:NٌX {8EHfBǕ(څLlGRt&ArN 6L}*T*թRV*Vխr^*X*ֱf=+X/qMLuЄTrQ Vjj_:Vj]JվO(d#+Y)qI,[TrOeٵ-jSڸL)!.Z;DESKTOP/support.htm0000755000000000000000000000206611651742220011312 0ustar Intel Customer Support

Customer Support

Intel support is available on the web or by phone. Support offers the most up-to-date information about Intel products, including installation instructions, troubleshooting tips, and general product information.

Web and Internet Sites

Support: http://www.intel.com/support

Corporate Site for Network Products: http://www.intel.com/products/ethernet/overview.htm

 


Last modified on 5/12/10 3:26p Revision

DESKTOP/team_dm.htm0000755000000000000000000006044712135720644011217 0ustar Teaming

Advanced Network Services Teaming

Advanced Network Services (ANS) Teaming, a feature of the Advanced Network Services component, lets you take advantage of multiple adapters in a system by grouping them together. ANS teaming can use features like fault tolerance and load balancing to increase throughput and reliability. Before you can set up ANS teaming in Microsoft* Windows*, you must install Intel® PROSet software. For more information, select Intel PROSet in the Table of Contents (left pane) of this window.

NOTES:

  • Be sure to use the latest available drivers on all adapters.
  • NDIS 6.2 introduced new RSS data structures and interfaces. Because of this, you cannot enable RSS on teams that contain a mix of adapters that support NDIS 6.2 RSS and adapters that do not.
  • If a team is bound to a Hyper-V virtual NIC, you cannot change the Primary or Secondary adapter.
  • Intel adapters that do not support Intel PROSet may still be included in a team. However, they are restricted in the same way non-Intel adapters are. See Multi-Vendor Teaming for more information.
  • To assure a common feature set, some advanced features, including hardware offloading, are automatically disabled when an adapter that does not support Intel PROSet is added to a team.
  • Hot Plug operations in a Multi-Vendor Team may cause system instability. We recommended that you restart the system or reload the team after performing Hot Plug operations with a Multi-Vendor Team.
  • Spanning tree protocol (STP) should be disabled on switch ports connected to teamed adapters in order to prevent data loss when the primary adapter is returned to service (failback). Alternatively, an activation delay may be configured on the adapters to prevent data loss when spanning tree is used. Set the Activation Delay on the advanced tab of team properties.
  • ANS teaming of Virtual Function devices inside a Windows 2008 R2 guest running on an open source hypervisor is supported.
  • Fibre Channel over Ethernet/Data Center Bridging will be automatically disabled when an adapter is added to a team with non-FCoE/DCB capable adapters.

Supported Adapters

Teaming options are supported on Intel® PRO/100, Intel® Gigabit, and Intel® 10GbE adapters. Selected adapters from other manufacturers are also supported.

Conditions that may prevent you from teaming a device

During team creation or modification, the list of available team types or list of available devices may not include all team types or devices. This may be caused by any of several conditions, including:

  • The operating system does not support  the desired team type.
  • The device does not support the desired team type or does not support teaming at all.
  • The devices you want to team together use different driver versions.
  • You are trying to team an Intel PRO/100 device with an Intel  10GbE device.
  • TOE (TCP Offload Engine) enabled devices cannot be added to an ANS team and will not appear in the list of available adapters.
  • You can add Intel® Active Management Technology (Intel® AMT) enabled devices to Adapter Fault Tolerance (AFT), Switch Fault Tolerance (SFT), and Adaptive Load Balancing (ALB) teams. All other team types are not supported. The Intel AMT enabled device must be designated as the primary adapter for the team.
  • The device's MAC address is overridden by the Locally Administered Address advanced setting.
  • Fibre Channel over Ethernet (FCoE) Boot has been enabled on the device.
  • The device has “OS Controlled” selected on the Data Center tab.
  • The device has a virtual NIC bound to it.
  • The device is part of a Microsoft* Load Balancing and Failover (LBFO) team.

Microsoft* Load Balancing and Failover (LBFO) teams

Intel ANS teaming and VLANs are not compatible with Microsoft's LBFO teams. Intel® PROSet will block a member of an LBFO team from being added to an Intel ANS team or VLAN. You should not add a port that is already part of an Intel ANS team or VLAN to an LBFO team, as this may cause system instability. If you use an ANS team member or VLAN in an LBFO team, perform the following procedure to restore your configuration:

  1. Reboot the machine
  2. Remove LBFO team. Even though LBFO team creation failed, after a reboot Server Manager will report that LBFO is Enabled, and the LBFO interface is present in the ‘NIC Teaming’ GUI.
  3. Remove the ANS teams and VLANS involved in the LBFO team and recreate them. This is an optional (all bindings are restored when the LBFO team is removed ), but strongly recommended step

NOTE: If you add an Intel AMT enabled port to an LBFO team, do not set the port to Standby in the LBFO team. If you set the port to Standby you may lose AMT functionality.

ANS Teaming Types

  • Adapter Fault Tolerance (AFT) - provides automatic redundancy for a server's network connection. If the primary adapter fails, the secondary adapter takes over. Adapter Fault Tolerance supports two to eight adapters per team. This teaming type works with any hub or switch. All team members must be connected to the same subnet.
  • Switch Fault Tolerance (SFT) - provides failover between two adapters connected to separate switches. Switch Fault Tolerance supports two adapters per team. Spanning Tree Protocol (STP) must be enabled on the switch when you create a SFT team.  When SFT teams are created, the Activation Delay is automatically set to 60 seconds.  This teaming type works with any switch or hub. All team members must be connected to the same subnet.
  • Adaptive Load Balancing (ALB) - provides load balancing of transmit traffic and adapter fault tolerance. In Microsoft* Windows* operating systems, you can also enable or disable receive load balancing (RLB) in ALB teams (by default, RLB is enabled).
  • Virtual Machine Load Balancing (VMLB) - provides transmit and receive traffic load balancing across Virtual Machines bound to the team interface, as well as fault tolerance in the event of switch port, cable, or adapter failure. This teaming type works with any switch.
  • Static Link Aggregation (SLA) - provides increased transmission and reception throughput in a team of two to eight adapters. This team type replaces the following team types from prior software releases: Fast EtherChannel*/Link Aggregation (FEC) and Gigabit EtherChannel*/Link Aggregation (GEC). This type also includes adapter fault tolerance and load balancing (only routed protocols). This teaming type requires a switch with Intel Link Aggregation, Cisco* FEC or GEC, or IEEE 802.3ad Static Link Aggregation capability.

    All adapters in a Link Aggregation team running in static mode must run at the same speed and must be connected to a Static Link Aggregation capable switch. If the speed capability of adapters in a Static Link Aggregation team are different, the speed of the team is dependent on the lowest common denominator.

  • IEEE 802.3ad Dynamic Link Aggregation - creates one or more teams using Dynamic Link Aggregation with mixed-speed adapters. Like the Static Link Aggregation teams, Dynamic 802.3ad teams increase transmission and reception throughput and provide fault tolerance. This teaming type requires a switch that fully supports the IEEE 802.3ad standard. 
  • Multi-Vendor Teaming (MVT) - adds the capability to include adapters from selected other vendors in a team. If you are using a Windows-based computer, you can team adapters that appear in the Intel PROSet teaming wizard.
IMPORTANT:
  • Be sure to use the latest available drivers on all adapters.
  • Before creating a team, adding or removing team members, or changing advanced settings of a team member, make sure each team member has been configured similarly. Settings to check include VLANs and QoS Packet Tagging, Jumbo Frames, and the various offloads. These settings are available in Intel PROSet's Advanced tab. Pay particular attention when using different adapter models or adapter versions, as adapter capabilities vary.
  • If team members implement Advanced features differently, failover and team functionality will be affected. To avoid team implementation issues:
    • Create teams that use similar adapter types and models.
    • Reload the team after adding an adapter or changing any Advanced features. One way to reload the team is to select a new preferred primary adapter. Although there will be a temporary loss of network connectivity as the team reconfigures, the team will maintain its network addressing schema.

NOTES:

  • Hot Plug operations for an adapter that is part of a team are only available in Windows Server 2008 and Windows Server 2008 R2.
  • For SLA teams, all team members must be connected to the same switch. For AFT, ALB, and RLB teams, all team members must belong to the same subnet. The members of an SFT team must be connected to a different switch.
  • Teaming only one adapter port is possible, but provides no benefit.

Primary and Secondary Adapters

If the primary adapter fails, another adapter will take over its duties. If you are using more than two adapters, and you want a specific adapter to take over if the primary fails, you must specify a secondary adapter. If an Intel AMT enabled device is part of a team, it must be designated as the primary adapter for the team.

There are two types of primary and secondary adapters:

  • Default primary adapter: If you do not specify a preferred primary adapter, the software will choose an adapter of the highest capability (model and speed) to act as the default primary. If a failover occurs, another adapter becomes the primary. The adapter will, however, rejoin the team as a non-primary.
  • Preferred Primary/Secondary adapters: You can specify a preferred adapter in Intel PROSet. Under normal conditions, the Primary adapter handles all non-TCP/IP traffic. The Secondary adapter will receive fallback traffic if the primary fails. If the Preferred Primary adapter fails, but is later restored to an active status, control is automatically switched back to the Preferred Primary adapter.

To specify a preferred primary or secondary adapter

  1. From Device Manager, open the properties of a team.

  2. Click the Settings tab.

  3. Click the Modify Team button.

  4. Select the adapter you want to be the primary adapter and click the Set Primary button.

The adapter's preferred setting appears in the Priority column.

Failover and Failback

When a link fails, either because of port or cable failure, team types that provide fault tolerance will continue to send and receive traffic. Failover is the initial transfer of traffic from the failed link to a good link. Failback occurs when the original adapter regains link. You can use the Activation Delay setting (located on the Advanced tab of the team's properties in Device Manager) to specify a how long the failover adapter waits before becoming active. If you don't want your team to failback when the original adapter gets link back, you can set the Allow Failback setting to disabled (located on the Advanced tab of the team's properties in Device Manager).

Adapter Fault Tolerance

Adapter Fault Tolerance (AFT) provides the safety of an additional backup link between the server and switch. In the case of switch port, cable, or adapter failure, network connectivity is maintained.

Adapter Fault Tolerance is implemented with a primary adapter and one or more backup, or secondary adapters. During normal operation, the backup adapters are in standby. If the link to the primary adapter fails, the link to the secondary adapter automatically takes over. For more information, see Primary and Secondary Adapters.

To use Adapter Fault Tolerance all adapters must be connected to the same subnet.

Switch Fault Tolerance

Switch Fault Tolerance (SFT) teaming allows you to connect each of two teamed adapters to a separate switch.

Switch Fault Tolerance can detect failures when they occur:

  • on either teamed adapter
  • on either cable connecting the teamed adapter to its switch
  • on switch ports connected to the adapters, if link is lost

In SFT teams, one adapter is the primary adapter and one adapter is the secondary adapter. During normal operation, the secondary adapter is in standby. In standby, the adapter is inactive and waiting for failover to occur. It does not transmit or receive other network traffic. If the primary adapter loses connectivity, the secondary adapter automatically takes over.

In SFT teams, each adapter in the team can operate at a different speed than the other.

Configuration Monitoring

You can set up monitoring between an SFT team and up to five IP addresses. This allows you to detect link failure beyond the switch. You can ensure connection availability for several clients that you consider critical. If the connection between the primary adapter and all of the monitored IP addresses is lost, the team will failover to the secondary adapter.

Adaptive Load Balancing

Adaptive Load Balancing (ALB) uses software to balance routable traffic among a team of two to eight adapters or LOMs (the team must include at least one server adapter) connected to the same subnet. The software analyzes the send and transmit loading on each adapter and balances the rate across the adapters based on destination address. Adapter teams configured for ALB also provide the benefits of fault tolerance.

NOTES:
  • ALB does not load balance non-routed protocols such as NetBEUI and some IPX* traffic.
  • You can create an ALB team with mixed speed adapters. The load is balanced according to the lowest common denominator of adapter capabilities and the bandwidth of the channel.
  • On Windows systems, Receive Load Balancing is enabled by default.
  • Receive Load Balancing is not supported on Microsoft Hyper-V*.

Virtual Machine Load Balancing

Virtual Machine Load Balancing (VMLB) provides transmit and receive traffic load balancing across Virtual Machines bound to the team interface, as well as fault tolerance in the event of switch port, cable, or adapter failure.

The driver analyzes the transmit and receive load on each member adapter and balances the traffic across member adapters. In a VMLB team, each Virtual Machine is associated with one team member for its TX and RX traffic.

If only one virtual NIC is bound to the team, or if Hyper-V is removed, then the VMLB team will act like an AFT team.

NOTES:
  • VMLB does not load balance non-routed protocols such as NetBEUI and some IPX* traffic.
  • VMLB supports from two to eight adapter ports per team.
  • You can create an VMLB team with mixed speed adapters. The load is balanced according to the lowest common denominator of adapter capabilities and the bandwidth of the channel.
  • You cannot use an Intel AMT enabled adapter in a VMLB team.

Static Link Aggregation

Static Link Aggregation (SLA) is a performance technology developed by Cisco to increase throughput between switches. This team type works with:

  • Cisco EtherChannel-capable switches with channeling mode set to 'ON'
  • Intel switches capable of Link Aggregation
  • Other switches capable of static 802.3ad

The transmission speed will never exceed the adapter base speed to any single address (per specification). Teams can contain two to eight adapters, but must match the capability of the switch. Adapter teams configured for Static Link Aggregation also provide the benefits of fault tolerance and load balancing.

NOTES
  • You cannot use an Intel AMT enabled adapter in an SLA team

IEEE 802.3ad Dynamic Link Aggregation

802.3ad is an adopted IEEE standard. Teams can contain two to eight adapters, and you can have a maximum of two IEEE 802.3ad dynamic teams per server. You must use 802.3ad switches (in dynamic mode, aggregation can go across switches). Adapter teams configured for IEEE 802.3ad also provide the benefits of fault tolerance and load balancing. Under 802.3ad, all protocols can be load balanced.

Dynamic mode supports multiple aggregators. Aggregators are formed by port speed connected to a switch. For example, a team can contain adapters running at 1 Gbps and 10 Gbps, but two aggregators will be formed, one for each speed. Also, if a team contains 1 Gbps ports connected to one switch, and a combination of 1Gbps and 10Gbps ports connected to a second switch, three aggregators would be formed. One containing all the ports connected to the first switch, one containing the 1Gbps ports connected to the second switch, and the third containing the 10Gbps ports connected to the second switch.

NOTES:
  • Once you choose an aggregator, it remains in force until all adapters in that aggregator lose link.
  • In some switches, copper and fiber adapters cannot belong to the same aggregator in an IEEE 802.3ad configuration. If there are copper and fiber adapters installed in a system, the switch might configure the copper adapters in one aggregator and the fiber-based adapters in another. If you experience this behavior, for best performance you should use either copper or fiber-based adapters in a system.
  • If multiple switches are used, all team members connected to the same switch must operate at the same speed.
  • You cannot use an Intel AMT enabled adapter in a DLA team.

Before you begin

  • Verify that the switch fully supports the IEEE 802.3ad standard.
  • Check your switch documentation for port dependencies. Some switches require pairing to start on a primary port.
  • Check your speed and duplex settings to ensure the adapter and switch are running at full duplex, either forced or set to auto-negotiate. Both the adapter and the switch must have the same speed and duplex configuration. The full duplex requirement is part of the IEEE 802.3ad specification: http://standards.ieee.org/

    If needed, change your speed or duplex setting before you link the adapter to the switch. Although you can change speed and duplex settings after the team is created, Intel recommends you disconnect the cables until settings are in effect. In some cases, switches or servers might not appropriately recognize modified speed or duplex settings if settings are changed when there is an active link to the network.

  • If you are configuring a VLAN, check your switch documentation for VLAN compatibility notes. Not all switches support simultaneous dynamic 802.3ad teams and VLANs. If you choose to set up VLANs, configure teaming and VLAN settings on the adapter before you link the adapter to the switch. Setting up VLANs after the switch has created an active aggregator affects VLAN functionality.

Multi-Vendor Teaming

MVT allows teaming with a combination of Intel adapters that support Intel PROSet, Intel adapters that do not support Intel PROSet, and non-Intel adapters. This feature is currently available under Windows Server 2008 and Windows Server 2008 R2. All adapters that appear in the Intel PROSet teaming wizard can be included in a team.

MVT Design Considerations

  • In order to activate MVT, you must have at least one Intel adapter or integrated connection that supports Intel PROSet in the team. That adapter or connection must be designated as the primary adapter. 
  • A multi-vendor team can be created for any team type. 
  • All members in a MVT must operate on a common feature set (lowest common denominator). 
  • Manually verify that the frame setting for all adapters in the team is the same.
  • Verify that the RSS settings for all adapters in the team are the same.

Last modified on 4/24/13.

DESKTOP/test_dm.htm0000755000000000000000000000343011656750064011243 0ustar Test the Adapter

Test the Adapter from Microsoft Windows*

Intel® PROSet allows you to run several diagnostic tests, including:

  • Connection Test: Tests the adapter's connection to the network. If the adapter connects below its maximum speed, the connection test reports the reason for this lower speed. If the adapter has link but does not have an IP address, the test reports whether the adapter can communicate with the link partner. If the adapter has link and has an IP address, ping tests are performed.

  • Link Test: Tests the link speed and duplex capabilities of the link partner and reports the optimum settings.

  • Cable Tests: Provide information about cable properties.

  • Hardware Tests: Determines if the adapter is functioning properly.

To access these tests, select the adapter in Windows* Device Manager, click the Link Speed tab, and click Diagnostics. A Diagnostics window displays tabs for each type of test. Click the tab and run the test.

The availability of these tests is dependent on the adapter and operating system.


Last modified on 4/20/06 3:48p Revision

DESKTOP/toc_dm.htm0000755000000000000000000001333212110652334011036 0ustar
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Overview

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Supported Adapters

Intel® Active Management Technology

Hardware Installation

Insert the Adapter

Attaching a Low-Profile Bracket

Attach the Network Cable

Microsoft* Windows* Setup

Install the Drivers

Intel® PROSet

Setup Speed & Duplex

Command Line Install for Base Drivers and Intel PROSet

Windows Unattended Installs & Updates

Microsoft Windows Advanced Features

Jumbo Frames

Teaming

VLANs

Power Management

Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMP)

Quality of Service (QoS)

Save & Restore

Hot Plug

Windows Management Instrumentation (WMI)

IPSecurity Offloading

Setting up Microsoft Hyper-V* virtual NICs on teams and VLANs

Linux Setup and Features

Install Drivers and Features

FreeBSD Setup and Features

Install the Drivers

Setup Speed & Duplex

Jumbo Frames

Netware Setup and Features

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Installing DOS Drivers

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Intel® Gigabit Desktop Adapter Guide

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DESKTOP/trbl_dm.htm0000755000000000000000000003512412063561130011217 0ustar Configuration and Troubleshooting

Configuration and Troubleshooting


Common Problems and Solutions

There are many simple, easy-to-fix problems related to network problems. Review each one of these before going further.

  • Check the cable. Use the best available cabling for the intended data rate.

    • Check that the cable is securely attached at both points.

    • For copper connections, make sure the cable is a 4-pair Category-5 or better.

    • Make sure the cable length does not exceed specifications.

    • Perform a cable test.

    • Replace the cable.

  • Check the link partner (switch, hub, etc.).

    • Make sure the link partner is active and can send and receive traffic.

    • Make sure the adapter and link partner settings match one another, or are set to auto-negotiate.

    • Make sure the port is enabled.

    • Re-connect to another available port or another link partner.

  • Look for adapter hardware problems.

    • Re-seat the adapter.

    • Insert the adapter in another slot.

    • Check for conflicting or incompatible hardware devices and settings.

    • Replace the adapter.

  • Check the driver software.

    • Make sure you are using the latest appropriate drivers for your adapter from the Intel support website.

    • Disable (or unload), then re-enable (reload) the driver or adapter.

    • Check for conflicting settings. Disable advanced settings such as teaming or VLANs to see if it corrects the problem.

    • Re-install the drivers.

  • Check for recent changes to hardware, software or the network, that may have disrupted communications.

  • Check the adapter release notes (readme.txt).

    • The Known Issues section may have specific troubleshooting information for your configuration.

  • Check the Intel support website for possible documented issues.

    • Select your adapter from the adapter family list.

    • Check the Frequently Asked questions section.

    • Check the Knowledge Base.

  • Check your process monitor and other system monitors.

    • Check to see that there is sufficient processor and memory capacity to perform networking activity.

    • Look for any unusual activity (or lack of activity).

    • Use network testing programs to check for basic connectivity.

  • Check your BIOS version and settings.

    • Use the latest appropriate BIOS for your computer.

    • Make sure the settings are appropriate for your computer.

  • Reboot the computer.

The following troubleshooting table assumes that you have already reviewed the common problems and solutions.
 
Problem Solution

Your computer cannot find the adapter

Make sure your adapter slots are compatible for the type of adapter you are using:

  • PCI Express v1.0 (or newer)

  • PCI-X v2.0

  • PCI slots are v2.2 

Diagnostics pass but the connection fails

Make sure the cable is securely attached, is the proper type and does not exceed the recommended lengths. 

Try running the Sender-Responder diagnostic Test.

Make sure the duplex mode and speed setting on the adapter matches the setting on the switch.

Another adapter stops working after you installed the Intel® Network Adapter

Make sure your PCI BIOS is current. See PCI / PCI-X / PCI Express Configuration.

Check for interrupt conflicts and sharing problems. Make sure the other adapter supports shared interrupts. Also, make sure your operating system supports shared interrupts.

Unload all PCI device drivers, then reload all drivers.

Adapter unable to connect to switch at correct speed. Gigabit adapter connects at 100 Mbps and 10 gigabit adapter connects at 1000 Mbps.

This is applicable only to copper-based connections.

Make sure the adapter and the link partner are set to auto-negotiate.  

Verify that you are running the latest operating system revision for your switch and that the switch is compliant with the proper IEEE standard:

  • IEEE 802.3ad-compliant (gigabit over copper) 

  • IEEE 802.3an-compliant (10 gigabit over copper)

The device does not connect at the expected speed.

When Gigabit Master/Slave mode is forced to "master" mode on both the Intel adapter and its link partner, the link speed obtained by the Intel adapter may be lower than expected.

The adapter stops working without apparent cause

Run the adapter and network tests described under "Test the Adapter".

The Link indicator light is off

Run the adapter and network tests described under "Test the Adapter".

Make sure the proper (and latest) driver is loaded.

Make sure that the link partner is configured to auto-negotiate (or forced to match adapter)

Verify that the switch is IEEE 802.3ad-compliant.

The link light is on, but communications are not properly established

Make sure the proper (and latest) driver is loaded. 

Both the adapter and its link partner must be set to either auto-detect or manually set to the same speed and duplex settings.  

NOTE: The adapter's link indicator light may be on even if communications between the adapter and its link partner have not been properly established. Technically, the link indicator light represents the presence of a carrier signal but not necessarily the ability to properly communicate with a link partner.  This is expected behavior and is consistent with IEEE's specification for physical layer operation.
RX or TX light is off

Network may be idle; try creating traffic while monitoring the lights.

The diagnostic utility reports the adapter is "Not enabled by BIOS"

The PCI BIOS isn't configuring the adapter correctly. See PCI / PCI-X / PCI Express Configuration.

The computer hangs when the drivers are loaded

Try changing the PCI BIOS interrupt settings. See PCI / PCI-X / PCI Express Configuration.

The Fan Fail LED of the 10 Gigabit AT Server Adapter is on (red) The fan cooling solution is not functioning properly. Contact customer support for further instructions.


Multiple Adapters

When configuring a multi-adapter environment, you must upgrade all Intel adapters in the computer to the latest software.

If the computer has trouble detecting all adapters, consider the following:

  • If you enable Wake on LAN* (WoL) on more than two adapters, the Wake on LAN feature may overdraw your systems auxiliary power supply, resulting in the inability to boot the system and other unpredictable problems. For multiple desktop/management adapters, it is recommended that you install one adapter at a time and use the IBAUtil utility (ibautil.exe in \APPS\BOOTAGNT) to disable the WoL feature on adapters that do not require WoL capabilities. On server adapters, the WoL feature is disabled by default.

  • Adapters with Intel Boot Agent enabled will require a portion of the limited start up memory for each adapter enabled. Disable the service on adapters that do not need to boot Pre-Boot Execution Environment (PXE).


PCI / PCI-X / PCI Express Configuration

If the adapter is not recognized by your OS or if it does not work you may need to change some BIOS settings. Try the following only if you are having problems with the adapter and are familiar with BIOS settings. 

  • Check to see that the "Plug-and-Play" setting is compatible with the operating system you are using.

  • Make sure the slot is enabled.

  • Install the adapter in a bus-master slot.

  • Configure interrupts for level-triggering, as opposed to edge-triggering.

  • Reserve interrupts and/or memory addresses. This prevents multiple buses or bus slots from using the same interrupts. Check the BIOS for IRQ options for PCI / PCI-X / PCIe.

Here are some examples of BIOS parameters:

PCI / PCI-X / PCIe slot #: Slot where the adapter is installed
Master: ENABLED
Slave: ENABLED
Latency timer: 40 - 80
Interrupt: Choose any one of several that the BIOS provides.
Edge-level: Level

The exact wording of the parameters varies with different computers.


Other Performance Issues

Attaining the best speed requires that many components are operating at peak efficiency. Among them are the following:

  • Cable quality and length - Do not exceed the maximum recommended length for your cable type. Shorter lengths often provide better results. Check for loose or damaged connectors. Check the cable for kinked or damaged sections. 

  • Bus speed and traffic - The PCI bus speed accommodates the slowest PCI card installed. Check to see if you have a card that is slowing down your system.

  • Processor and Memory - Check your performance monitoring programs to see if traffic is being affected by your processor speed, available memory or other processes.

  • Transmission frame size - Your network performance may be enhanced by adjusting or maximizing the transmission frame size. Operating systems, switches and adapters will impose varying limits on maximum frame size. See the discussion on Jumbo Frames for your OS.

  • Operating System - Networking feature implementation will vary by operating system version, such as offloading and multiprocessor threading.


Last modified on 8/21/08 11:09a Revision DESKTOP/trbl_win.htm0000755000000000000000000000433312144717460011423 0ustar Troubleshooting

Microsoft* Windows*-Specific Issues

Use the information in this table after you have reviewed common problems and solutions.
 
Problem Solution
Event viewer message: A device attached to the system is not functioning If there is a BIOS setting for "Plug and Play OS", it should be set to "NO" for all versions of Microsoft* Windows*. 
After upgrading operating systems, Intel® PROSet is no longer available

If you are upgrading a Microsoft Windows operating system and you have Intel PROSet software installed, it will be deleted in the process. You will need to reinstall Intel PROSet.

Terminal Server support

When using Terminal Server, make sure only one session of Intel PROSet is open at any one time. Simultaneous sessions are not supported in Intel PROSet.

Non-volatile memory integrity check fails Hardware diagnostics verify the authenticity of the non-volatile memory (NVM), and return a "Pass/Fail" message. If the test fails, contact Intel Customer Support.

 


Last modified on 4/24/13.

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Virtual LANs

The term VLAN (Virtual Local Area Network) refers to a collection of devices that communicate as if they were on the same physical LAN. Any set of ports (including all ports on the switch) can be considered a VLAN. LAN segments are not restricted by the hardware that physically connects them.

VLANs offer the ability to group computers together into logical workgroups. This can simplify network administration when connecting clients to servers that are geographically dispersed across the building, campus, or enterprise network.

Typically, VLANs consist of co-workers within the same department but in different locations, groups of users running the same network protocol, or a cross-functional team working on a joint project. 

 

By using VLANs on your network, you can:

  • Improve network performance

  • Limit broadcast storms

  • Improve LAN configuration updates (adds, moves, and changes)

  • Minimize security problems

  • Ease your management task

Other Considerations

  • To set up IEEE VLAN membership (multiple VLANs), the adapter must be attached to a switch with IEEE 802.1Q VLAN capability.

  • A maximum of 64 VLANs per network port or team are supported by Intel software.

  • VLANs can co-exist with teaming (if the adapter supports both). If you do this, the team must be defined first, then you can set up your VLAN.

  • The Intel PRO/100 VE and VM Desktop Adapters and Network Connections can be used in a switch based VLAN but do not support IEEE Tagging.

  • You can set up only one untagged VLAN per adapter or team. You must have at least one tagged VLAN before you can set up an untagged VLAN.

CAUTION: When using IEEE 802 VLANs, settings must match between the switch and those adapters using the VLANs.

Microsoft* Load Balancing and Failover (LBFO) teams

Intel ANS VLANs are not compatible with Microsoft's LBFO teams. Intel® PROSet will block a member of an LBFO team from being added to an Intel ANS VLAN. You should not add a port that is already part of an Intel ANS VLAN to an LBFO team, as this may cause system instability.

 

In Microsoft* Windows*, you must use Intel® PROSet to set up and configure VLANs. For more information, select Intel PROSet in the Table of Contents (left pane) of this window.

Notes:
  • If you change a setting under the Advanced tab for one VLAN, it changes the settings for all VLANS using that port.
  • In most environments, a maximum of 64 VLANs per network port or team are supported by Intel PROSet.
  • ANS VLANs are not supported on adpaters and teams that have VMQ enabled. However, VLAN filtering with VMQ is supported via the Microsoft Hyper-V VLAN interface. For more information see Microsoft Hyper-V virtual NICs on teams and VLANs.
  • You can have different VLAN tags on a child partition and its parent.  Those settings are separate from one another, and can be different or the same.  The only instance where the VLAN tag on the parent and child MUST be the same is if you want the parent and child partitions to be able to communicate with each other through that VLAN. For more information see Microsoft Hyper-V virtual NICs on teams and VLANs.


Last modified on 6/17/09 9:47p Revision

DESKTOP/warranty.htm0000755000000000000000000001374712135233534011456 0ustar Limited Lifetime Hardware Warranty

Limited Lifetime Hardware Warranty

Returning a defective product

From North America:

All other locations:

Intel Adapter Money-back Guarantee (North America Only)

Limitation of Liability and Remedies


Last modified on 9/17/12 10:42a

DESKTOP/wminicdm.htm0000755000000000000000000000763511656603624011425 0ustar WMI NIC Provider

Intel® Network Adapters WMI Provider


Overview

The Intel® Network Adapters Windows Management Instrumentation (WMI) Provider enables WMI-based management applications such as Intel® PROSet for Windows Device Manager to monitor and configure the status of PCI network adapters. Intel Network Adapters WMI Provider uses WMI, a user-level instrumentation technology for the Microsoft Windows* platform.

WMI is a middleware layer that allows measurement and instrumentation information to be collected from kernel mode data providers. This information can then be provided to local or remote user-mode data consumers through the use of a common set of interfaces (Web-based Enterprise Management called WBEM). WMI is a data-independent pipeline between the data consumer and the data provider that makes no assumptions about the format of the data.

A guide is available on this distribution, which contains detailed information on the Intel Network Adapters WMI Provider, also referred to as Network Configuration Services (NCS2) WMI Providers. This guide is located in \APPS\WMI\DOCS. The technical reference paper describes the external view of NCS2 WMI providers so WMI-based management applications could use it to manage the network configuration for the Intel adapters.


System Requirements

  • Any Intel® PRO/100, Intel® Gigabit Network Adapter, or Intel® 10GbE Network Adapter

  • related driver software

  • a supported Microsoft* Windows* operating system. Please refer to the System Requirements page for a list of supported operating systems.

The Intel Network Adapters WMI Provider supports all Intel PRO/100, Gigabit, and 10GbE network adapters.


Installation

The Intel Network Adapters WMI Provider are installed as part of Intel® PROSet for Windows Device Manager software installation. See the Installing Intel PROSet for Windows Device Manager section for more information on how to install Intel PROSet for Windows Device Manager.

Intel PROSet for Windows Device Manager Typical Setup Type registers the Intel Network Adapters WMI Provider into the root\IntelNCS2 namespace.


Supported Standards

The Intel Network Adapters WMI Provider supports the standards based CIM 2.6 specification.


Known Issues

DMI-SNMP Instrumentation

This Intel Network Adapters WMI Provider cannot jointly operate with the Intel® DMI-SNMP instrumentation.

Missing Instances under Microsoft Windows Vista*

You must elevate (i.e., embed a manifest file) in your application in order to access all of the Intel WMI classes.


Last modified on 6/05/09 11:26a Revision

Configuring VLANs in Microsoft* Windows*