- #MICROSOFT KERNEL DEBUG NETWORK ADAPTER DRIVER WINDOWS 10 DRIVERS#
- #MICROSOFT KERNEL DEBUG NETWORK ADAPTER DRIVER WINDOWS 10 SERIES#
Linux RDMA Driver: There might be a PSoD appearing during PF-reset when the NVMe to RDMA connection is active.
#MICROSOFT KERNEL DEBUG NETWORK ADAPTER DRIVER WINDOWS 10 DRIVERS#
With NVMs and drivers (ice-1.7.16 and irdma-1.7.72) from the current Release 26.8, RDMA traffic can be configured for PFC on TCs other than TC0 Linux RDMA Driver: Prior to the combination of ice 1.7.16/irdma 1.7.72/NVM 3.1 from Release 26.8, PFC for RDMA traffic was only functional on TC0. Linux RDMA Driver: RDMA stability at application close is improved with NVM version 3.1+. The issue has been resolved and the rule.txt file is no longer created. Subsequently, this resulted in the file rule.txt being created on the system under C. Windows Driver: Running the command /dxsetup.exe PROSET=0 ANS=0 was resulting in an initialization of a logging subsystem that is no longer used. Workaround: change MTU of inner VLAN to be 4 bytes less than the MTU of the outer VLAN. Linux Driver: When using Double VLAN configuration with a specific non-Intel link partner, TCP traffic might fail to pass through the inner VLAN interface when the MTU of this interface matches the MTU of the outer VLAN interface. Linux Driver: When double VLAN or Queue in Queue feature is enabled, the inner most traffic source might need to be limited to an MTU size of 1496 or less to avoid connection issues. Linux Driver: QoS bandwidth shaping and priority tagging may not be functional in CentOS 7.2. This does not affect traffic or device functionality. Linux Driver: On CentOS 7.2, ethtool may report Speed as Unknown and you may see warnings in dmesg log. This was a cosmetic issue with no functional impact other than an increase in the dropped packets count. Linux Driver: Packets received during the driver load are displayed as dropped because the packet drop counter was started before the driver was fully loaded. This issue is fixed in ice driver 1.7.x and above. Ethtool -S statistics were unaffected by this issue and would show correct counts. Linux Driver: There was a statistics issue where ifconfig/ip -s link show could potentially show overall statistics counting backwards due to a timing issue in stats collection. Linux Driver: Rapid unloading and loading of the irdma and ice drivers may cause a kernel panic. When the MTU is set to one of these values the VM may experience a memory leak leading to kernel panic when TCP traffic is running from a link partner to the VF. Linux Driver: For configurations in which a VF is attached to a VM, avoid setting the MTU value of the VF within the range of 9199-9202. Linux Driver: When changing the RSS queue value in VM while Double VLAN is configured, rx_vlano may stop incrementing correctly. This issue impacts interrupt mode workloads only there is no impact to workloads using busy poll mode, such as ADQ. Linux Driver: Linux ice driver versions 1.4.x through 1.6.x have a performance regression that affects NVMe over Fabric baseline TCP performance using interrupt mode. Release 26.7 is the last release that supports Intel Ethernet Network Adapter E810-XXV-2 for OCP 2.0. The Intel Ethernet Network Adapter E810-XXV-2 for OCP 2.0 is no longer supported.
#MICROSOFT KERNEL DEBUG NETWORK ADAPTER DRIVER WINDOWS 10 SERIES#
VLAN pruning for Intel Ethernet 700 and 800 Series devices is now disabled by default and must be enabled to function. Auxiliary bus mode is now supported by out-of-tree (standalone) E810 Linux ice LAN driver. Application Device Queue (ADQ) GTP support added to Linux PF when using the Comms DDP package with Intel Ethernet 800 Series devices. Support for Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL) 8.5.
No new features were added only limited regression to find and address issues with the ice driver. L:imited support for the Linux ice driver on CentOS/Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL) 7.2. FreeBSD drivers now support DCB on Intel Ethernet 800 Series devices. Intel Ethernet 800 Series devices support RDMA in a Linux VF on a Microsoft Windows or Linux host. Linux- only support for Intel Ethernet Network Adapter E810-XXV-4T