On Tue, Oct 21, 2014 at 11:02 AM, Marcelo Ricardo Leitner marcelo.leitner@gmail.com wrote:
On 16-10-2014 13:47, Akemi Yagi wrote:
I'm the one who did the submission. Some of my comments (which I thought were helpful) have been hidden by Red Hat.
However, that report is closed as being a duplicate of: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=562273
Which is not available to viewing by the great unwashed.
I don't have access, either.
The host is running CentOS-6.5 with all updates applied to date. My question is: Has this issue been addressed in the official e1000e module or not? if not then does the recommendation to "add pcie_aspm=off to your kernel command line" hold?
My suggestion for you is to give ELRepo's kmod-e1000e a try. It has the latest version from Intel (3.1.0.2) as opposed to the version in the EL kernels (2.3.2-k). There are known cases in which a later version resolved issues.
Both BZs above are RHEL 5 specific, being 562273 a "driver update" one. Did you report this against any RHEL6 too?
Marcelo
The e1000e bug report against EL6 is in this CentOS bug tracker and you can find all the details:
http://bugs.centos.org/view.php?id=6810
RH bugzilla is here but it is private:
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1038754
Here again, I recommend use of ELRepo's kmod-e1000e package. It is possible that the driver in the upcoming CentOS 6.6 fixes the problem.
Akemi