Hi Ronald, openSUSE installs without problem but as you already know the network is not working due to the fact that the xgene_enet is compiled as a module... I'm compiling an openSUSE kernel with this module statically linked and I will see whats happen next. But it's strange to see that the module is not working (lsmod shows 0 for the 'used' column, strange...). Regards, Loic -----Message d'origine----- De : Ronald Maas [mailto:ronaldjmaas at gmail.com] Envoyé : samedi 9 avril 2016 07:17 À : LOIC DEVULDER - U329683 Objet : Fwd: Re: [Arm-dev] Gigabyte MP30-AR0 ---------- Forwarded message ---------- From: Ronald Maas <ronaldjmaas at gmail.com> Date: Fri, Apr 8, 2016 at 7:02 PM Subject: Re: Re: [Arm-dev] Gigabyte MP30-AR0 To: arm-dev at centos.org Hi Loic, Centos 7.2 is actually the easiest distribution to install as the xgene_enet driver is build in the kernel instead of compiled as a module. Only thing needed was setting the MAC0 / MAC1 variables in UEFI shell. And then after the Centos installer started, open a Linux shell and run dhclient eth0 A lot of good information about MP30-AR0 can be found at https://rwmj.wordpress.com/ Debian and OpenSuse could be installed using the full DVD installation image, but then you either need to recompile the kernel or use an alternative PCIe ethernet adapter (haven't tried that). For details how to change .config and recompile the kernel for Debian Testing see https://lists.debian.org/debian-efi/2016/03/msg00020.html Something similar should work for OpenSuse Kind regards, Ronald Maas