Bob Tracy <[email protected]> reported that the addition of support
for Aculab E1/T1 cPCI carrier cards broke detection of vanilla natsemi
cards. This patch fixes that: the problem is that the driver-specific
ta in the PCI device table is an index into a second table and this
had not been updated for the vanilla cards.
This patch fixes the problem minimally.
Signed-Off-By: Mark Brown <[email protected]>
--- linux.orig/drivers/net/natsemi.c 2007-02-23 11:13:03.000000000 +0000
+++ linux/drivers/net/natsemi.c 2007-02-23 11:12:00.000000000 +0000
@@ -260,7 +260,7 @@
static const struct pci_device_id natsemi_pci_tbl[] __devinitdata = {
{ PCI_VENDOR_ID_NS, 0x0020, 0x12d9, 0x000c, 0, 0, 0 },
- { PCI_VENDOR_ID_NS, 0x0020, PCI_ANY_ID, PCI_ANY_ID, 0, 0, 0 },
+ { PCI_VENDOR_ID_NS, 0x0020, PCI_ANY_ID, PCI_ANY_ID, 0, 0, 1 },
{ } /* terminate list */
};
MODULE_DEVICE_TABLE(pci, natsemi_pci_tbl);
--
"You grabbed my hand and we fell into it, like a daydream - or a fever."
Mark Brown wrote:
> Bob Tracy <[email protected]> reported that the addition of support
> for Aculab E1/T1 cPCI carrier cards broke detection of vanilla natsemi
> cards. This patch fixes that: the problem is that the driver-specific
> ta in the PCI device table is an index into a second table and this
> had not been updated for the vanilla cards.
>
> This patch fixes the problem minimally.
>
> Signed-Off-By: Mark Brown <[email protected]>
applied