Intel I217LM ethernet controller not detected

Intel I217LM ethernet controller not detected

Solution

The Linux* e1000e driver supports PCI Express* Gigabit Network Connections except the 82575, 82576, 82580, and I350.

Download e1000e
Overview
Building and installation
For information concerning driver configuration details, refer to the Read Me file in the Download Center.


Overview

The Linux* base drivers support the 2.4.x and 2.6.x kernels. They include support for Itanium® 2-based systems.

The drivers are only supported as a loadable module. We don't supply patches against the kernel source to allow for static linking of the drivers. For questions related to hardware requirements, see the documentation supplied with your Intel® Gigabit Network Adapter. All hardware requirements listed apply for use with Linux.

Features now available in supported kernels:

Native VLANs
Channel Bonding (teaming)
SNMP
Find Channel Bonding documentation in the Linux kernel source: /documentation/networking/bonding.txt

This release doesn't support the driver information previously displayed in the /proc file system. You can also use ethtool (version 1.6 or later), lspci, and ifconfig to get the same information. Find instructions on updating ethtool in the additional configurations section.

Note The Intel® 82562v 10/100 Network Connection only provides 10/100 support.
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Building and installation

To build a binary RPM* package of this driver, run rpmbuild -tb e1000e.tar.gz.

Notes
For the build to work properly, the currently running kernel must match the version and configuration of the installed kernel sources. If you have just recompiled the kernel, reboot the system.

RPM functionality was only tested in Red Hat distributions.

Download current e1000e package from Download Center or SourceForge. Move the base driver tar file to the directory of your choice. For example, use "/home/<USERNAME>/e1000e" or "/usr/local/src/e1000e".

Untar/unzip the archive, where <x.x.x> is the version number for the driver tar file:

tar zxf e1000e-<x.x.x>.tar.gz
Change to the driver src directory, where <x.x.x> is the version number for the driver tar:

cd e1000e-<x.x.x>/src/
Compile the driver module:

# make install
The binary installs as:

/lib/modules/<KERNEL VERSION>/kernel/drivers/net/e1000e/e1000e.[k]o
The install location listed above is the default. Location may differ for various Linux distributions.

Load the module using either the insmod or modprobe command:

modprobe e1000e insmod e1000e
Note that you can use the insmod command for 2.6 kernels if you specify the full path to the driver module. For example:

insmod /lib/modules/<KERNEL VERSION>/kernel/drivers/net/e1000e/e1000e.ko
With 2.6 based kernels, make sure that older e1000e drivers are removed from the kernel before you load the new module:

rmmod e1000e; modprobe e1000e
Assign an IP address to the interface by entering the following, where <x> is the interface number:

ifconfig eth<x> <IP_address>
Verify that the interface works. Enter the following, where <IP_address> is the IP address for another machine on the same subnet as the interface you are testing:

ping <IP_address>

Note
Some systems have trouble supporting MSI and/or MSI-X interrupts. If your system must disable this style of interrupt, build and install the driver with the command:

# make CFLAGS_EXTRA=-DDISABLE_PCI_MSI install
Normally the driver generates an interrupt every two seconds If you're no longer seeing interrupts in cat /proc/interrupts for the ethX e1000e device, then this workaround may be necessary.

Reference :
Intel site

Your boot partition is on a disk using the GPT partitioning scheme but this machine cannot boot using GPT

Your boot partition is on a disk using the GPT partitioning scheme but this machine cannot boot using GPT

Following error after telling anaconda to install on pre-existing partitions (with GPT label):


On Partitioning screen, press Ctrl + Alt + F2 to get to a shell prompt.

$ parted /dev/sda -s mklabel msdos

Press Ctrl + Alt + F6 to return to the partitioning screen