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FreeBSD Moves Ahead With Deprecating Some Of Their 10/100 Network Drivers

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  • #11
    Originally posted by NateHubbard View Post

    You should look over the list of drivers. Some of them I recognize as ISA era network cards. One of those was even for a DEC chip, and DEC hasn't even been in business for 20 years.
    If you really want to run ancient hardware, you're probably going to have to just bite the bullet and run ancient software too.
    I really don’t care about the list of drivers per say, what I care about is Ethernetin general and the apparent abandonment of the older standards. This isn’t Wangnet or some other failed solution it is rather the most widely used form of networking.

    As for running ancient hardware sadly sadly I know exactly what that is like. I still have DOS based machines running a few interferometers because there are no upgrade paths that make sense. And yes part of the issue is ISA cards that no replacements exist for.

    Im of the opinion that some drivers will need to be maintained for decades or longer if FreeBSD expects traction outside of the data center. Some interfaces will seemingly never die.

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    • #12
      Originally posted by wizard69 View Post

      The removal of drivers can be understandable in some cases but if support is still there they need to stay in the kernel. If you work in industries where hardware is expected to work for years, even decades, it is extremely frustrating to see common network drivers being pulled.

      I mentioned RS232 because it is similarly needed for long term support. In fact in industrial settings I don’t see RS232 and related serial interfaces ever going away 100%. People always say “upgrade” but that is never easy and may require stringent validations to be done. A validation can blow out the cost of a computer replacement by 10 or even a 100 times.

      In any event it is decisions like this that means FeeBSD can never be suggested as a solution where long term support is expected. Dropping Ethernet support just isn’t rational considering how wide spread it is. It might make sense in a constantly updated data center but out in the larger world it just looks like a dick move.
      They are marking them as deprecated, this isn't a surprise removal at all. Did you read the mailing list? If they find out that they are still in use before FreeBSD 13 (which is likely to be in the 2020s) they will not remove them. You are truly in the realm of hyperbole when removing 20 year old ISA-era ethernet drivers is equivalent to abandoning all but "constantly updated data centers".

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      • #13
        Originally posted by monraaf

        How do you know? Do FreeBSD users have to register with the website?
        It's ancient crap.

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        • #14
          Originally posted by wizard69 View Post
          That is a bit odd and short sighted if you ask me. It is sort of like RS232 support, most people don’t have a need anymore but when you do you really need the port.
          the thing is that ports like LPT, RS232 and PS/2 are still there on pretty much every mainboard nowadays. However you can hardly find a PCMCIA or ISA slot on a 15-year-old laptop or desktop

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          • #15
            I don't know what boards you're looking at phuclv, but they're certainly not modern. Mass market x86 boards have none of those ports, and haven't for years. Enthusiast boards sometimes still have at least one PS/2 port, server boards commonly have a serial port as well. I haven't seen a parallel port on any board since around 2005..

            You can, however, find a PCMCIA slot on a 15 year old laptop. The Thinkpad X61 (2007) is the last X series Thinkpad to have a Cardbus type 2 slot, which will also accept PCMCIA cards. For desktop (non industrial) boards you'd struggle, some Socket A boards may still have been sold in 2003..

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            • #16
              I'm not surprised they're dropping support for these cards, but it has to be said, some of these cards are almost the "platonic ideal" of network cards. The DEC Tulip, 3Com Etherlink, and NE-2000 were all super common cards, and have been supported by everything. Back in the day you could buy any of these cards and know that ANY OS you threw at them would have support. Early Linux, Windows, OS/2, OpenServer, BeOS, pretty much everything. In a way, it's sad to see them go. Ah well, we'll always have NetBSD.

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              • #17
                Originally posted by ynari View Post
                I don't know what boards you're looking at phuclv, but they're certainly not modern. Mass market x86 boards have none of those ports, and haven't for years. Enthusiast boards sometimes still have at least one PS/2 port, server boards commonly have a serial port as well. I haven't seen a parallel port on any board since around 2005..

                You can, however, find a PCMCIA slot on a 15 year old laptop. The Thinkpad X61 (2007) is the last X series Thinkpad to have a Cardbus type 2 slot, which will also accept PCMCIA cards. For desktop (non industrial) boards you'd struggle, some Socket A boards may still have been sold in 2003..
                The majority of ATX mainboards nowadays still have PS/2 port. And 2 years ago it was still everywhere. It's certainly a lot easier to find a board with PS/2 support than PCMCIA. Same to finding a PS/2 device vs PCMCIA card. No one will complain if there's no driver for PCMCIA

                Serial and parallel ports may disappear gradually on many newer consumer mainboards but on other segments they're still there, at least the serial port, because it's extremely easy to program with and still being used extensively by electronics engineers. Some examples:

                - https://www.msi.com/Motherboard/H310M-PRO-VL.html
                - https://www.asus.com/us/Commercial-S...ons/P10S-V-4L/
                - https://www.asus.com/us/Commercial-S...ations/P10S-X/
                - https://www.gigabyte.com/Motherboard...-DS2-rev-10#sp
                - https://www.gigabyte.com/Motherboard...-DS2-rev-10#sp

                All the workstations my company bought in the last 2 years still have the serial port and they're definitely not old. Removing support for those ports would result in catastrophe

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