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Windows95Windows98NT4 WorkstationNT4 ServerWindows 2000

Network card Diagnostics

Network installations can be fun, but often they are painful:
The "@#$##!!#@
"(censored) Network does NOT work !

In such cases, it is always advisable to run a diagnostics on the Network cards, especially if you got the cards as used equipment.
And I can tell you from my experience:
network card are sensitive !
For example: watch out in office environments with carpets, walking on some carpet can create static electricity, which discharges as small sparks, when you touch a door. Such discharges can damage the electronics on a network card.

How to run diagnostics:

A NIC (Network Interface Card) is usually delivered with a Setup/Driver floppy disk:


Look for EXE-files: SETUP.EXE,
SOFTSET.EXE or (like above): PCIDIAG.EXE. Most of these SETUP-programs have also a diagnostics build-in.

Note:
all these setup/diagnostic programs are DOS-programs.

Most of them will NOT work properly inside a Windows95/98 "MS-DOS Prompt" Window, you need to select "Shutdown":

to "restart the computer in MS-DOS mode"
(or reboot to the MS-DOS mode).

On a Windows NT system, you will require a DOS-BOOT floppy to reboot the system from floppy with DOS, then to run the setup/diagnostic program
(because these programs need to address directly (via i/o-addressing) the network card, but this is allowed by Windows NT as a security violation: only the NT operating system via its device drivers is allowed to communicate directly with hardware devices).


Example: 3COM EtherLink III 3C509B: 3C5X9CFG.EXE


Search the menu for : "Test" or "Diagnostics", select it:


Run the tests, if any of them fails, you network board maybe bad and should be replaced.


Example: RealTek 8029: RSET8029..EXE


This program allows to run a diagnostics only on the board, just testing the electronics for proper reply:



But there is on this diagnostic program also the possibility to make a
test-transmission between 2 boards over the network:


But for that, you need 2 Systems with the SAME network card, so that one can be defined as the Initiator (creating a signal, sending it out onto the network) and one as the Responder (listening to the network for an incoming test signal).