The PLX PCI9052 is a generic bridge chip used by a lot of manufactures for
many different cards. What the card does is determined by other chips on
the board not the PCI interface. We use the PLX PCI9052 to build multiport
intelligent synchronous comms cards that are reported as "Communication
controller". The PLX chip does not determine the type of device.
> No idea why the PCI type ID says it's a network controller, it certainly
> isn't. The whole package is sold as a Dynalink wireless LAN L11H, a PCI
> PCICIA controller with one slot and a PCMCIA card based on a PrismII
> chipset.
Well the manufacturer ID 0x1638 belongs to Eumitcom Technology Inc and
their website (http://www.eumitcom.com/) shows the WL11000P combo to be a
IEEE 802.11b compliant wireless card. That's my definition of a Network
controller.
> I'm gonna plug the PCMCIA card in my notebook, see what it doesn. It it
> does work, the problem is the PCMCIA card bot been supported. Else I'v got
> a big problem :)
They say they have Linux support but no indication of which version. Don't
see drivers in the standard kernel so I guess they must be supplying it
as a patch. See http://www.eumitcom.com/html/wlan3.htm for download.
HTH
-- Bob Dunlop FarSite Communications rjd@xyzzy.clara.co.uk bob.dunlop@farsite.co.uk www.xyzzy.clara.co.uk www.farsite.co.uk - To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/