README.md
��Intel(R) Network Connections Software Version 25.2 Release Notes

==================================================================

July 6, 2020



This release includes software and drivers for Intel(R) adapters and integrated

network connections.





Contents

========



- What's New in This Release

- Discontinued Support

- Configuring SR-IOV for improved network security

- Operating System Support

- Installing Drivers and Intel(R) PROSet for Windows* Device Manager

- User Guides

- Intel Fiber Optic Adapters

- Saving and Restoring Adapter Settings in Microsoft Windows operating systems

- Teaming Notes

- Jumbo Frames

- Power Management and System Wake

- RDMA (Remote Direct Memory Access) Notes

- Microsoft* Windows* 8.1 and Windows Server* 2012 R2 Notes

- Microsoft* Windows Server* 2012 Notes

- Intel(R) Ethernet Controller 800 Series Device Notes

- Intel(R) 710 Series Network Controller Notes

- Intel(R) 10GbE Network Adapter Notes

- Quad Port Server Adapter Notes

- Intel(R) Ethernet Desktop Adapter and Network Connection Notes

- Known Issues

- Customer Support





What's New in This Release

==========================



- Support for the Intel(R) Ethernet Controller E810-C

- Support for the Intel(R) Ethernet Controller E810-C for backplane

- Support for the Intel(R) Ethernet Controller E810-C for QSFP

- Support for the Intel(R) Ethernet Controller E810-C for SFP

- Support for the Intel(R) Ethernet Network Adapter E810-C-Q2

- Support for the Intel(R) Ethernet Network Adapter E810-XXV-4





Discontinued Support

====================

RDMA driver location changes

----------------------------

Release 25.2 moved the Linux and FreeBSD iWARP drivers to a new directory and

renamed the Linux i40iw driver to irdma. The Linux irdma and FreeBSD iw_ixl

drivers can be found in the RDMA directory of this install media.



Release 25.0 is the last release to support:

- Microsoft* Windows* 7

- Microsoft* Windows Server* 2008 R2

- Intel(R) QSFP+ Configuration Utility (QCU)

- IOUtil



Release 24.4 removed the following from the installation package:

- Support for PRO/100 devices

- DOS drivers

- UEFI driver support for PCI/PCI-X devices

- Support for WinCE

- Microsoft* Windows* 10 RS3 (NDIS65) Universal Drivers. Please use the NDIS68

drivers.

- Support for FCoE

Note: Upgrading to Release 24.4 or later will automatically remove FCoE if it

was installed in a previous release. Please see BootUtil.txt if you use FCoE

Boot.



i40evf and ixlv drivers renamed to iavf

---------------------------------------

Release 24.0 renamed the i40evf and ixlv drivers to iavf. The i40evf and ixlv

drivers have been removed from this install media. The iavf drivers can be

found in the PROAVF directory of this install media.



Discontinued operating systems

------------------------------

Release 24.0 is the last release that supports the following operating systems:

- VMWare* ESX* 6.0 VMKLinux drivers

- VMWare ESX 5.0/5.1



Unsupported devices and adapters

--------------------------------

Starting with Release 23.5, the drivers for the following adapters and devices

will no longer be tested or updated. The drivers may still be provided in your

download package or on your install media for your convenience.

- Intel(R) 82566MM Gigabit Network Connection

- Intel(R) PRO/1000 PB Dual Port Server Connection

- Intel(R) PRO/1000 EB Network Connection with I/O Acceleration

- Intel(R) PRO/1000 EB1 Network Connection with I/O Acceleration

- Intel(R) PRO/1000 EB Backplane Connection with I/O Acceleration

- Intel(R) 82567V-3 Gigabit Network Connection

- Intel(R) 82567V-4 Gigabit Network Connection

- Intel(R) 82567LM-4 Gigabit Network Connection

- Intel(R) 82567LF Gigabit Network Connection

- Intel(R) 82567V Gigabit Network Connection

- Intel(R) 82567LM-2 Gigabit Network Connection

- Intel(R) 82567LF-2 Gigabit Network Connection

- Intel(R) 82567V-2 Gigabit Network Connection

- Intel(R) 82567LM-3 Gigabit Network Connection

- Intel(R) 82567LF-3 Gigabit Network Connection

- Intel(R) 82577LM Gigabit Network Connection

- Intel(R) 82577LC Gigabit Network Connection

- Intel(R) 82578DM Gigabit Network Connection

- Intel(R) 82578DC Gigabit Network Connection

- Intel(R) 82567LM Gigabit Network Connection

- Intel(R) 82566DM Gigabit Network Connection

- Intel(R) 82566DC Gigabit Network Connection

- Intel(R) 82566MC Gigabit Network Connection

- Intel(R) PRO/1000 PT Dual Port Network Connection

- Intel(R) PRO/1000 PT Dual Port Server Adapter

- Intel(R) PRO/1000 PT Dual Port Server Connection

- Intel(R) PRO/1000 PF Dual Port Server Adapter

- Intel(R) PRO/1000 PT Network Connection

- Intel(R) PRO/1000 PT Server Adapter

- Intel(R) PRO/1000 PF Network Connection

- Intel(R) PRO/1000 PF Server Adapter

- Intel(R) PRO/1000 PB Server Connection

- Intel(R) PRO/1000 PM Network Connection

- Intel(R) PRO/1000 PL Network Connection

- Intel(R) PRO/1000 PT Quad Port Server Adapter

- Intel(R) PRO/1000 PF Quad Port Server Adapter

- Intel(R) PRO/1000 PT Desktop Adapter

- Intel(R) PRO/1000 EB1 Backplane Connection with I/O Acceleration

- Intel(R) PRO/1000 PT Quad Port LP Server Adapter

- Intel(R) 82566DM-2 Gigabit Network Connection

- Intel(R) 82562V 10/100 Network Connection

- Intel(R) 82562V-2 10/100 Network Connection

- Intel(R) 82562G-2 10/100 Network Connection

- Intel(R) 82562GT-3 10/100 Network Connection

- Intel(R) 82562GT-2 10/100 Network Connection

- Intel(R) 82562GT 10/100 Network Connection

- Intel(R) 82562G 10/100 Network Connection

- Intel(R) Gigabit PT Quad Port Server ExpressModule

- Intel(R) 82566DC-2 Gigabit Network Connection

- Intel(R) 82598EB 10 Gigabit AF Dual Port Network Connection

- Intel(R) 10 Gigabit XF SR Dual Port Server Adapter

- Intel(R) 10 Gigabit XF SR Server Adapter

- Intel(R) 82598EB 10 Gigabit AF Network Connection

- Intel(R) 10 Gigabit AT Server Adapter

- Intel(R) 82598EB 10 Gigabit AT Network Connection

- Intel(R) 10 Gigabit AT2 Server Adapter

- Intel(R) 82598EB 10 Gigabit AT2 Network Connection

- Intel(R) 82598EB 10 Gigabit AT CX4 Network Connection

- Intel(R) 10 Gigabit SR Dual Port Express Module

- Intel(R) 10 Gigabit CX4 Dual Port Server Adapter

- Intel(R) 82598EB 10 Gigabit KX4 Network Connection

- Intel(R) 10 Gigabit AF DA Dual Port Server Adapter

- Intel(R) 10 Gigabit XF LR Server Adapter

- Intel(R) 82598EB 10 Gigabit Dual Port Network Connection





Configuring SR-IOV for improved network security

================================================



In a virtualized environment, on Intel(R) Server Adapters that support SR-IOV,

the virtual function (VF) may be subject to malicious behavior.

Software-generated frames are not expected and can throttle traffic between the

host and the virtual switch, reducing performance. To resolve this issue,

configure all SR-IOV enabled ports for VLAN tagging. This configuration allows

unexpected, and potentially malicious, frames to be dropped.





Operating System Support

========================



NOTE: Before performing a major OS upgrade, Intel recommends that you uninstall

the Intel PROSet feature, perform the OS upgrade, and then reinstall with the

latest version of Intel PROSet. This will ensure all features are available and

avoid potential issues.



NOTE: Microsoft* Windows Server* 2012 R2 is the last Windows Server operating

system version that supports Intel(R) Advanced Networking Services (Intel ANS).



NOTE:�Intel(R) PROSet for Windows*�Device�Manager is not supported on

Microsoft*�Windows Server* 2019 (and later) and Microsoft Windows*�10 Version

1809�(and later). Use Intel(R)�PROSet Adapter Configuration Utility instead.

The installer will determine which utility to install based on the operating

system you are running.



Intel 10GbE Ethernet Adapters do not support Microsoft* Windows* 32-bit

operating systems. They support 32-bit versions of Linux* and FreeBSD*.



Even though the UEFI driver states that it supports "Intel(R) 40GbE" devices,

the driver supports all devices based on the Intel(R) X722, XXV710, X710, and

XL710 controllers, regardless of speed.



Supported operating systems

---------------------------

The drivers in this release have been tested with the following operating

systems. Additional OSs may function with our drivers but are not tested.

- Microsoft* Windows Server*, version 2004

- Microsoft Windows Server 2019, Version 1903

- Microsoft Windows Server 2019

- Microsoft Windows Server 2016

- Microsoft Windows Server 2012 R2

- Microsoft Windows Server 2012

- Microsoft* Windows* 10, version 2004

- Microsoft Windows 10, Version 1903

- Microsoft Windows 10, Version 1809

- Microsoft Windows 8.1

- VMWare* ESXi* 7.0

- VMWare ESXi 6.7

- VMWare ESXi 6.5

- VMWare ESXi 6.0

- Linux*, v2.4 kernel or higher

- Red Hat* Enterprise Linux* (RHEL) 8.2

- Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7.8

- Novell* SUSE* Linux Enterprise Server (SLES) 15 SP2

- Novell SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 12 SP5

- FreeBSD* 12.1

- FreeBSD 11.3



Drivers and software for unsupported operating systems

------------------------------------------------------

The most recent software and drivers for unsupported operating systems can be

found on the Intel Customer Support website at

http://www.intel.com/support/go/network/adapter/home.htm



Some older Intel(R) Ethernet Adapters do not have full software support for the

most recent versions of Microsoft Windows*. Many older Intel Ethernet Adapters

have base drivers supplied by Microsoft Windows. Lists of supported devices per

OS are available at:

http://www.intel.com/support/go/network/adapter/nicoscomp.htm





Installing Drivers and Intel(R) PROSet

======================================



You must have administrator rights to install or use Intel PROSet for Windows

Device Manager. Intel recommends the following procedure for installing drivers:

1) Cancel any Found New Hardware Wizard screens that open.

2) Start the autorun located on the CD or in your download directory.

3) Click "Install Drivers and Software" and follow the instructions in the

install wizard.



Intel(R) PROSet functionality is integrated with the Windows Device Manager. To

configure Intel(R) Ethernet Adapters and Controllers, open the Windows Device

Manager. Do not open adapter, team, or VLAN properties from the network control

panel as you may be prompted to reboot your system.



You must upgrade PROSet when upgrading drivers. Failure to do so will result in

instability and missing tabs in Windows Device Manager.



NOTE: Support for the Intel PROSet command line utilities (prosetcl.exe and

crashdmp.exe) has been removed. This functionality has been replaced by

the Intel(R)�PROSet for Microsoft* Windows PowerShell* software. Please

transition all of your scripts and processes to use the Intel PROSet

for Microsoft Windows PowerShell software. Microsoft* Windows* 8.1

and Windows Server* 2012 R2 are the last operating systems to support

the Intel PROSet command line utilities.



Intel PROSet for Windows* Device Manager is not supported on the

following devices

----------------------------------------------------------------

* Intel(R) 82567V-3 Gigabit Network Connection

* Intel(R) X552 10G Ethernet devices

* Intel(R) X552 Virtual Function devices

* Intel(R) X553 Ethernet devices

* Intel(R) X553 Virtual Function devices

* Any platform with a System on a Chip (SoC) processor that includes either

a server controller (designated by an initial X, such as X552) or both a

server and client controller (designated by an initial I, such as I218)

* Devices based on the Intel(R) Ethernet Controller X722

* Intel(R) X722 Virtual Function devices



Intel PROSet fails to install

-----------------------------

A possible cause could be the Windows Modules Installer service is disabled.

The installer for Intel PROSet requires this service. You can enable this

service from the Administrative Tools -> Component Services control panel.





User Guides

===========



Several user guides for Intel Network Connections are available for this

product. You may access them in the following ways:

- On Windows-based systems, start the autorun program on the Intel CD,

then click "View User Guides".

- Double-click "index.htm" located in the root of the Intel CD.

- Go to http://support.intel.com.





Intel Fiber Optic Adapters

==========================



Caution: The fiber optic ports may utilize Class 1 or Class 1M laser devices.

Do not stare into the end of a fiber optic connector connected to a "live"

system. Do not use optical instruments to view the laser output. Using optical

instruments increases eye hazard. Laser radiation is hazardous and may cause

eye injury. To inspect a connector, receptacle or adapter end, be sure that the

fiber optic device or system is turned off, or the fiber cable is disconnected

from the "live" system.



The Intel Gigabit and 10GbE network adapters with fiber optic connections

operate only at their native speed and only at full-duplex. Therefore you do

not need to make any adjustments. Use of controls or adjustments or performance

of procedures other than those specified herein may result in hazardous

radiation exposure. The laser module contains no serviceable parts.





Saving and Restoring Adapter Settings in Microsoft Windows

operating systems

==========================================================



You can save and then restore adapter settings using the Microsoft* Windows

PowerShell* script, SaveRestore.ps1. You must have Administration privileges to

run scripts. If you do not have Administration privileges, you will not receive

an error; the script just will not run. Only adapter settings are saved

(including ANS teaming and VLANs). The adapter's driver is not saved. Restore

using the script only once. Restoring multiple times may result in unstable

configuration. The Restore operation requires the same OS as when the

configuration was saved.



NOTE: Intel(R) PROSet for Windows* Device Manager must be installed for

SaveRestore.ps1 to run. Also, for systems running a 64-bit OS, be sure

to run the 64-bit version of Windows PowerShell, not the 32-bit (x86)

version, when running the SaveRestore.ps1 script.



NOTE: Support for the SaveResDX.vbs script is being removed. Please transition

all of your scripts and processes to Microsoft Windows PowerShell.



NOTE: "Enable RDMA routing across IP Subnets" may not be automatically saved

when you upgrade from prior versions of the Intel Network Connections software.

You can manually override the default values within the RDMA Configurations

Options dialog or via command line properties.



Major Operating system upgrades and saving your configuration

-------------------------------------------------------------

Your network device settings, including teams and VLANs, are not saved when you

upgrade your operating system. You must reinstall your network drivers and

software and reconfigure your network devices. This applies for upgrading from

one version of Microsoft Windows to another, not applying a service pack.





Teaming Notes

=============

Intel devices that are not supported by Intel(R) PROSet can still be added to

teams. These devices are supported by the Multi-Vendor Teaming functionality of

ANS teams.



Microsoft Server 2012 NIC Teaming (LBFO)

----------------------------------------

Intel(R) Advanced Network Services (ANS) teaming and VLANs are incompatible

with Microsoft Server 2012 NIC Teaming (LBFO). Do not create an LBFO team using

ports that are part of an ANS team or ANS VLAN.



DCB is not compatible with Microsoft Server 2012 NIC Teaming (LBFO)

-------------------------------------------------------------------

Data Center Bridging (DCB) is incompatible with Microsoft Server 2012 NIC

Teaming (LBFO). Do not create an LBFO team using Intel 10G ports when DCB is

installed. Do not install DCB if Intel 10G ports are part of an LBFO team.

Install failures and persistent link loss may occur if DCB and LBFO are used on

the same port. Installing Microsoft's Hot fix KB 2818790 will resolve the

issue. This issue only affects Microsoft Windows Server 2012.



RLB is not supported when a team is added to a virtual NIC

----------------------------------------------------------

Virtual NICs cannot be created on a team with Receive Load Balancing enabled.

Receive Load Balancing is automatically disabled if you create a virtual NIC on

a team.



Team setup requirement

----------------------

Before creating a team, make sure each adapter is configured similarly. Check

each adapter's settings in Intel PROSet. Settings to check include QoS Packet

Tagging, Jumbo Frames, and the various offloads. If team members implement

Advanced features differently, the team will align the settings with the least

capable adapter.



Changing Offload Settings for an Adapter in an ANS Team

-------------------------------------------------------

When you disable an offload setting for an adapter in an ANS team, the team

reloads and the team capabilities are recalculated. As a result, the offload

setting is disabled for the remaining adapters in the ANS team. Intel PROSet

does not reflect the fact that the offload setting is disabled for the

remaining adapters in the team.

If you re-enable the offload setting for the original adapter in the team, the

settings will not be applied until the system is rebooted or the team is

reloaded.



IEEE 802.3ad teaming on Cisco trunks

------------------------------------

When implementing 802.3ad teams on Cisco switch ports in trunking mode, set the

native/untagged VLAN for these ports to ID 1. Otherwise, you may experience

traffic loss or lack of failover between aggregators. See your Cisco

documentation for information about setting the native VLAN ID.





Teaming Known Issues

--------------------



Unexpected performance drop or disabled ANS team member

-------------------------------------------------------

Using non-Intel cmdlets, such as the Set-NetAdapterAdvancedProperty cmdlet

provided in Microsoft PowerShell*, to change settings for an ANS-teamed adapter

may cause the team to stop using that adapter to pass traffic. You may see this

as reduced performance or the adapter being disabled in the PROSet Teaming GUI.

You can repair the issue by changing the setting back to its previous state, or

by removing the adapter from the ANS team and then adding it back.



Network Connections window shows the team as disabled or network

cable unplugged

----------------------------------------------------------------

After adding a VLAN to the team, this is normal. The connection protocols are

now bound to the VLAN on the team. You can configure the connection protocols

in the Properties for the VLAN.



Team name doesn't change in Device Manager

------------------------------------------

If you modify a team name from the team property sheet, it may take several

minutes for the name to change in Device Manager. Closing and opening Device

Manager will load the new name.



Removing a teamed adapter from a hot-plug system

------------------------------------------------

When you physically remove an adapter that is part of a team or a VLAN, you

must reboot or reload the team/VLAN before using that adapter in the same

network. This will prevent Ethernet address conflicts.



VLANs remain after team removal

-------------------------------

When you remove a team, some of the VLANs bound to that team may remain. You

can manually remove the VLANs to correct the issue.



Changing speed and duplex of adapters in a team

-----------------------------------------------

When you add an adapter to a Link Aggregation team using Intel PROSet, make

sure that the adapter is running at the same speed and duplex of the other

adapters in the team.



Compatibility notes for Multi Vendor Teaming

--------------------------------------------

Attempting to hot-add a non-Intel adapter to a team may cause system

instability. If you do hot-add a non-Intel adapter to a team, make sure you

restart the computer or reload the team.



IEEE 802.3ad teaming with Foundry switches

------------------------------------------

Foundry switches require an even number of ports in an aggregated link. If you

remove an adapter from an 802.3ad team connected to a Foundry switch, make sure

you maintain an even number of adapters in the team.





Jumbo Frames and Jumbo Packets

==============================



Jumbo Frames and MACSec are not compatible on the Intel(R) 82579LM and Intel(R)

82579V Network Connections. If MACSec is enabled on a platform containing

either part, you will not be able to enable Jumbo Frames on the connection.



Limited Jumbo Frame Size

------------------------

Some Intel gigabit adapters and connections that support Jumbo Frames have a

frame size limit of 4K bytes. The following devices have this limitation:

Intel(R) 82577LM Gigabit Network Connection

Intel(R) 82578DM Gigabit Network Connection



The following devices do not support jumbo frames:

Intel(R) PRO/1000 Gigabit Server Adapter

Intel(R) PRO/1000 PM Network Connection

Intel(R) 82562V 10/100 Network Connection

Intel(R) 82562GT 10/100 Network Connection

Intel(R) 82566DM Gigabit Network Connection

Intel(R) 82566DC Gigabit Network Connection

Intel(R) 82566DC-2 Gigabit Network Connection

Intel(R) 82562V-2 10/100 Network Connection

Intel(R) 82562G-2 10/100 Network Connection

Intel(R) 82562GT-2 10/100 Network Connection

Intel(R) 82567LF Gigabit Network Connection

Intel(R) 82567V Gigabit Network Connection

Intel(R) 82567LF-2 Gigabit Network Connection

Intel(R) 82567V-2 Gigabit Network Connection

Intel(R) 82567LF-3 Gigabit Network Connection

Intel(R) 82552 10/100 Network Connection

Intel(R) 82577LC Gigabit Network Connection

Intel(R) 82578DC Gigabit Network Connection

Intel(R) 82567V-3 Gigabit Network Connection

Intel(R) 82567V-4 Gigabit Network Connection



The Intel PRO/1000 PL Network Connection supports jumbo frames in Microsoft*

Windows* operating systems only when Intel(R) PROSet for Windows Device Manager

is installed.





Power Management and System Wake

================================



Not all systems support every wake setting. There may be BIOS or Operating

System settings that need to be enabled for your system to wake up. In

particular, this is true for Wake from S5 (also referred to as Wake from power

off).



System does not wake when expected

----------------------------------

Under Microsoft Windows Server 2012, the system may not wake even though Wake

on LAN settings are enabled. Disabling Fast Startup in the operating system

should resolve the issue.



System does not wake on link

----------------------------

On a driver-only installation, if you change 'Wake on Link Settings' to Forced

and change 'Wake on Magic Packet' and 'Wake on Pattern Match' to Disabled, the

system may not wake up when expected. In order to "Wake on Link" successfully,

check the Power Management tab and make sure that "Allow this device to wake

the computer" is checked. You may also need to change 'Wake on Magic Packet' or

'Wake on Pattern Match' to Enabled.



Directed Packets may not wake the system

----------------------------------------

On some systems, quad port server adapters may not wake when configured to wake

on directed packet. If you experience problems waking on directed packets, you

must configure the adapter to use Magic Packets*.



Power Management options are unavailable or missing

---------------------------------------------------

If you install only the base drivers, later install Intel(R) PROSet for Windows

Device Manager, then remove Intel PROSet, the settings on the Power Management

tab on the Adapter Property Sheet may be unavailable or missing altogether. You

must reinstall Intel PROSet to resolve the issue.



Low power link speed slower than expected

-----------------------------------------

If you disable the "Reduce Power During Standby" setting and remove power from

the system, your system may link at 10Mbps when power is restored, instead of

100Mbps or faster. The system will continue to link at 10Mbps until the

operating system is loaded. This setting will be restored when the OS loads.



System Wakes Unexpectedly

-------------------------

On a driver only install, if you uncheck the "Allow this device to bring the

computer out of standby" option on the Power Management tab, the adapter will

still wake the system from Standby or Hibernate. The "Wake on Settings" option

on the Advanced tab must also be set to Disabled.



Auto Connect Battery Saver (ACBS) enabled NICs do not power up when

connected back to back

-------------------------------------------------------------------

If you have two systems, both running on batteries and both with ACBS-enabled

NICs that are in an ACBS state, and you connect them back to back, the NICs

will not power up. Since both NICs are powered down, neither one can generate a

link signal to wake the other. Either connect AC power to one system or disable

ACBS to resolve this issue.



Auto Connect Battery Saver (ACBS) does not function

---------------------------------------------------

ACBS will not function on an adapter if the adapter has forced speed or duplex

settings. ACBS will only function if the adapter is set to auto-detect or

auto-negotiate.



Wake on LAN is unavailable

--------------------------

Wake on LAN is supported on port A only on the following devices:

- Intel(R) PRO/1000 GT Quad Port Server Adapter

- Intel(R) PRO/1000 PT Quad Port Server Adapter

- Intel(R) PRO/1000 PT Dual Port Network Connection

- Intel(R) PRO/1000 PT Dual Port Server Connection

- Intel(R) PRO/1000 PT Dual Port Server Adapter

- Intel(R) PRO/1000 PF Dual Port Server Adapter

- Intel(R) PRO/1000 PT Quad Port LP Server Adapter

- Intel(R) PRO/1000 PF Quad Port Server Adapter

- Intel(R) Gigabit ET2 Quad Port Server Adapter

- Intel(R) Ethernet Server Adapter I340-T4

- Intel(R) Ethernet Server Adapter I340-T2

- Intel(R) Gigabit ET Quad Port Server Adapter

- Intel(R) Gigabit EF Dual Port Server Adapter

- Intel(R) Gigabit ET Dual Port Server Adapters

- Intel(R) Gigabit VT Quad Port Server Adapter

- Intel(R) Ethernet Server Adapter I340-F4



Wake on LAN is not supported on any port of the following devices:

- Intel(R) Ethernet Converged Network Adapter X710

- Intel(R) Ethernet Converged Network Adapter X710-2

- Intel(R) Ethernet Converged Network Adapter X710-4

- Intel(R) Ethernet Converged Network Adapter X710-T

- Intel(R) Ethernet Converged Network Adapter X710-T4

- Intel(R) Ethernet Converged Network Adapter XL710-Q1

- Intel(R) Ethernet Converged Network Adapter XL710-Q2

- Intel(R) Ethernet Network Adapter X710-T2L

- Intel(R) Ethernet Network Adapter X710-T4L

- Intel(R) Ethernet Network Adapter X710-TL

- Intel(R) Ethernet Network Adapter E810-C-Q2

- Intel(R) Ethernet Network Adapter E810-XXV-4



Most Intel 10GbE Network Adapters do not support Wake on LAN on any port.



System Wakes-Up from a Removed VLAN

-----------------------------------

If a system goes into standby mode, and a directed packet is sent to the IP

address of the removed VLAN, the system will wake-up. This occurs because a

directed packet bypasses VLAN filtering.



Intel Network Adapters ignore consecutive Wake Up signals while

transitioning into standby mode

---------------------------------------------------------------

While sending a system into standby, occasionally a wake up packet arrives

before the system completes the transition into standby mode. When this

happens, the system ignores consecutive wake up signals and remains in standby

mode until manually powered up using the mouse, keyboard, or power button.



Link flap when Energy Efficient Ethernet is enabled

---------------------------------------------------

Some switches do not support Energy Efficient Ethernet (EEE) correctly. Make

sure your switch is loaded with the latest firmware. Disabling EEE on your

adapter may resolve this issue.





RDMA (Remote Direct Memory Access) Notes

========================================

Intel(R) Ethernet Controller 722 Series devices only support iWARP.



Intel(R) Ethernet Controller 800 Series devices support iWARP and RoCEV2.



Microsoft Windows support for iWARP is provided for Microsoft Windows Server

2012 R2, and later.



Microsoft Windows support for RoCEV2 is provided for Microsoft Windows Server

2016, and later.



Devices based on the Intel(R) Ethernet Controller 800 Series do not support

RDMA when operating in multiport mode with more than 4 ports.



You can install the RDMA Windows User Mode Provider by selecting RDMA in the

driver install wizard.





Microsoft Windows* 8.1 and Windows Server* 2012 R2 Notes

========================================================



Some older Intel(R) Ethernet Adapters do not have full software support for the

most recent versions of Microsoft Windows*. Many older Intel Ethernet Adapters

have base drivers supplied by Microsoft Windows. Lists of supported devices per

OS are available at:

http://www.intel.com/support/go/network/adapter/nicoscomp.htm



Encapsulated traffic may fail when traffic is tagged and 'Packet

Priority & VLAN' option is disabled

----------------------------------------------------------------

If the 'Packet Priority & VLAN' advanced parameter is set to "Disabled," VLAN

tagged packets will have incomplete destination information and may be dropped

by the physical switch. To ensure encapsulated traffic is not dropped, verify

that the 'Packet Priority & VLAN' advanced parameter is set to "Enabled."



Virtual Machine Queues are not allocated until reboot

-----------------------------------------------------

On a Microsoft Windows Server 2012 R2 system with Intel(R) Ethernet Gigabit

Server adapters installed, if you install Hyper-V and create a VM switch,

Virtual Machine Queues (VMQ) are not allocated until you reboot the system.

Virtual machines can send and receive traffic on the default queue, but no VMQs

will be used until after a system reboot.



Link loss after changing the Jumbo Frames setting

-------------------------------------------------

Inside a guest partition on a Microsoft Windows Server 2012 R2 Hyper-V virtual

machine, if you change the jumbo frame Advanced setting on an Intel(R) X540

based Ethernet Device or associated Hyper-V NetAdapter, you may lose link.

Changing any other Advanced Setting will resolve the issue.



DCB QoS and Priority Flow Control do not act as expected

--------------------------------------------------------

If you use Microsoft's Datacenter Bridging (DCB) implementation configure

Quality of Service (QoS) and Priority Flow Control (PFC), the actual traffic

flow segregation per traffic class may not match your configuration and PFC may

not pause traffic as expected. If you mapped more than one priority to a

Traffic Class, enabling only one of the priorities and disabling the others

will work around the issue. Installing Intel's DCB implementation will also

resolve this issue.

This issue affects Microsoft Windows Server 2012 and Server 2012 R2.





Microsoft* Windows Server* 2012 Notes

=====================================



Some older Intel(R) Ethernet Adapters do not have full software support for the

most recent versions of Microsoft Windows*. Many older Intel Ethernet Adapters

have base drivers supplied by Microsoft Windows. Lists of supported devices per

OS are available at:

http://www.intel.com/support/go/network/adapter/nicoscomp.htm



Hot plug operations do not work as expected in the following reference designs:

Foxcove - Hot plug operations do not work.

Emerald Ridge - Hot plug operations work only if you have the latest BIOS.



In Intel(R) PROSet for Windows Device Manager, the help text may not initially

be displayed. The text should appear after switching between tabs a few times

in Intel(R) PROSet.



DCB QoS and Priority Flow Control do not act as expected

--------------------------------------------------------

If you use Microsoft's Datacenter Bridging (DCB) implementation configure

Quality of Service (QoS) and Priority Flow Control (PFC), the actual traffic

flow segregation per traffic class may not match your configuration and PFC may

not pause traffic as expected. If you mapped more than one priority to a

Traffic Class, enabling only one of the priorities and disabling the others

will work around the issue. Installing Intel's DCB implementation will also

resolve this issue.

This issue affects Microsoft Windows Server 2012 and Server 2012 R2.





Intel(R) Ethernet Controller 800 Series Device Notes

====================================================



Tx hangs in some virtualized environments using LFC

---------------------------------------------------

When link-level flow control (LFC) is enabled on a heavily utilized network

interface, network traffic might stop due to a Tx hang event. This is caused

when the system runs out of descriptors and can't reuse them fast enough.

Disabling LFC or increasing the Rx descriptor ring size may help mitigate the

issue.



RDMA (Remote Direct Memory Access)

----------------------------------

Devices based on the Intel(R) Ethernet Controller 800 Series do not support

RDMA when operating in multiport mode with more than 4 ports.



System may crash during high storage bandwidth tests on Microsoft Windows

Server 2019

-------------------------------------------------------------------------

With a Storage Spaces Direct (S2D) storage cluster configuration running

Microsoft Windows Server 2019, high storage bandwidth tests may result in a

system crash, with bug check code 0x1E (KMODE_EXCEPTION_NOT_HANDLED) and

smbdirect as the failed module. This is due to a known issue in the operating

system. Customers should contact Microsoft via the appropriate support channel

for a solution.



VMQ Support

-----------

On Intel(R) Ethernet Controller 800 Series Devices, Intel regularly tests up to

128 VMQs per NIC. Edge case testing shows that binding more than 512 VMQs per

NIC may cause system instability or a system crash.



SR-IOV Support

--------------

On Intel(R) Ethernet Controller 800 Series Devices, Intel regularly tests up to

128 Virtual Functions (VFs) per NIC. Edge case testing shows that binding more

than 128 VFs per NIC may cause system instability or a system crash.



A port in willing mode does not apply DCB settings received from the

connected switch

--------------------------------------------------------------------

When operating in multiport mode with more than 4 ports, Intel(R) Ethernet

Controller 800 Series devices support a maximum of 4 traffic classes (TCs) per

port. If a port is in willing mode and connected to a switch that advertises

more than 4 TCs, the port will not map to the advertised TCs. Instead it will

map to the operating system's default TC configuration (usually 1 TC).



Poor receive performance and dropped packets

--------------------------------------------

Devices based on the Intel(R) Ethernet Controller 800 Series may exhibit poor

receive performance and dropped packets. The following may improve the

situation:

- In your system's BIOS/UEFI settings, select the "Performance" profile.

For Microsoft Windows Server operating systems:

- In the Power Options control panel, set the system to use the High

Performance Profile.

For Linux operating systems:

- On RHEL 7.x/8.x, use the tuned power management tool to set the

"latency-performance" profile.

- In other operating systems and environments, use the equivalent tool to set

the equivalent profile.

For FreeBSD operating systems:

- Do not modify the ACPI, P-state, or C-state system controls (sysctls) to

values intended to save power on the system.

For VMWare ESX instructions to set Power management to "High Performance" in

the operating system can be found here:

https://docs.vmware.com/en/VMware-vSphere/6.7/com.vmware.vsphere.resmgmt.doc/

GUID-F48D75C7-2461-4643-8A3A-B0383146F3AA.html#

GUID-F48D75C7-2461-4643-8A3A-B0383146F3AA





Intel(R) 710 Series Network Controller Notes

============================================



In order for an Intel(R) 40GbE Network Adapter to reach its full potential, you

must install it in a PCIe Gen3 x8 slot. Installing it in a shorter slot, or a

Gen2 or Gen1 slot, will impact the throughput the adapter can attain.



Some Intel(R) 710 series based devices report a subvendor ID of 0x0000 and may

display a generic branding string. Port 0 reports the correct subvendor ID and

displays the correct branding string.



Intel 710 series based devices may maintain link on any and all ports as long

as power is provided to the device, regardless of the device's or system's

power state.



Intel 710 series based devices do not support Microsoft*�Windows Server* 2012

as the SR-IOV Guest operating system or as the SR-IOV Host operating system.

They also do not support Linux as the SR-IOV guest operating system on any

Microsoft Windows Server Hyper-V Host.



SFP+ and QSFP+ Devices:



See the link below for information on supported media for X710/XL710/XXV710

based devices:

http://www.intel.com/content/dam/www/public/us/en/documents/release-notes/

xl710-ethernet-controller-feature-matrix.pdf

NOTES:

* Some Intel branded network adapters based on the X710/XL710 controller

only support Intel branded modules. On these adapters, other modules

are not supported and will not function.

* For connections based on the 710 series controller, support is dependent

on your system board. Please see your vendor for details.

* In all cases Intel recommends using Intel optics; other modules may function

but are not validated by Intel. Contact Intel for supported media types.

* In systems that do not have adequate airflow to cool the adapter and

optical modules, you must use high temperature optical modules.



Intel ANS VLANs adversely affect performance

--------------------------------------------

Intel ANS VLANs adversely affect the performance of 710 series based devices.

Use the networking features built into Microsoft Windows Server 2012, or other

server management software, to assign VLANs.



Traffic is not passed between Virtual NICs

------------------------------------------

SR-IOV Virtual Functions are unable to send or receive traffic between Virtual

NICs on the same physical port or between emulated connections on a Linux

Software bridge and connections that use SR-IOV VFs. Use an external switch

that is 802.1Qbg (VEPA) capable to workaround this issue.





Intel 10GbE Network Adapter Notes

=================================



Release 18.7 is the last release in which Intel 10GbE Network Adapters support

32-bit Microsoft Windows. Starting with Release 18.8, Intel 10GbE Network

Adapters only support 64-bit operating systems.



Devices based on the Intel(R) Ethernet Connection X552 and Intel(R) Ethernet

Connection X553 do not support the following features:

* Energy Efficient Ethernet (EEE)

* Intel PROSet for Windows Device Manager

* Intel ANS teams or VLANs (LBFO is supported)

* Data Center Bridging (DCB)

* IPSec Offloading

* MACSec Offloading

In addition, SFP+ devices based on the Intel(R) Ethernet Connection X552 and

Intel(R) Ethernet Connection X553 do not support the following features:

* Speed and duplex auto-negotiation.

* Wake on LAN

* 1000BASE-T SFP Modules



Devices based on the Intel(R) Ethernet Controller X722 do not support the

following features:

* Intel PROSet for Windows Device Manager

* Intel ANS teams or VLANs (LBFO is supported)



Attaching the cable to the Intel(R) 10 Gigabit AF DA Dual Port Server Adapter

may require significant force. The cable must be latched in for proper

operation.



When 82599-based SFP+ devices are connected back to back, they should be set to

the same Speed/Duplex setting. Results may vary if you mix speed settings.



Some Intel(R) 10 Gigabit Network Adapters and Connections support SFP+

pluggable optical modules.



82599-Based Adapters

NOTES:

* If your 82599-based Intel(R) Network Adapter came with Intel SFP+ optics, or

is an Intel(R) Ethernet Server Adapter X520 type of adapter, then it only

supports Intel optics and/or the direct attach cables listed below.



Supplier Type Part Numbers

SR Modules

Intel DUAL RATE 1G/10G SFP+ SR (bailed) AFBR-703SDZ-IN2

Intel DUAL RATE 1G/10G SFP+ SR (bailed) FTLX8571D3BCV-IT

Intel DUAL RATE 1G/10G SFP+ SR (bailed) AFBR-703SDDZ-IN1

LR Modules

Intel DUAL RATE 1G/10G SFP+ LR (bailed) FTLX1471D3BCV-IT

Intel DUAL RATE 1G/10G SFP+ LR (bailed) AFCT-701SDZ-IN2

Intel DUAL RATE 1G/10G SFP+ LR (bailed) AFCT-701SDDZ-IN1

QSFP Modules

Intel TRIPLE RATE 1G/10G/40G QSFP+ SR (bailed) E40GQSFPSR

QSFP+ 40G speed is not supported on 82599 based devices.



The following is a list of 3rd party SFP+ modules and direct attach cables that

have received some testing. Not all modules are applicable to all devices.



Supplier Type Part Numbers

Finisar SFP+ SR bailed, 10g single rate FTLX8571D3BCL

Avago SFP+ SR bailed, 10g single rate AFBR-700SDZ

Finisar SFP+ LR bailed, 10g single rate FTLX1471D3BCL



Finisar DUAL RATE 1G/10G SFP+ SR (No Bail) FTLX8571D3QCV-IT

Avago DUAL RATE 1G/10G SFP+ SR (No Bail) AFBR-703SDZ-IN1

Finisar DUAL RATE 1G/10G SFP+ LR (No Bail) FTLX1471D3QCV-IT

Avago DUAL RATE 1G/10G SFP+ LR (No Bail) AFCT-701SDZ-IN1



Finisar 1000BASE-T SFP FCLF8522P2BTL

Avago 1000BASE-T SFP ABCU-5710RZ

HP 1000BASE-SX SFP 453153-001



82599-Based SFP+ adapters support all passive and active limiting direct attach

cables that comply with SFF-8431 v4.1 and SFF-8472 v10.4 specifications.



82599-Based QSFP+ Adapters

NOTES:

* 82599-Based QSFP+ adapters do not support 1x40Gbps connections. They only

support 4x10Gbps connections. QSFP+ link partners must be configured for

4x10Gbps.

* 82599-Based QSFP+ adapters do not support automatic link speed detection.

The adapter's link speed must be configured to either 10Gbps or 1Gbps to

match the link partners speed capabilities. Incorrect speed configurations

will result in failure to link.



The Intel(R) Ethernet Converged Network Adapter X520-Q1 only supports the

optics and direct attach cables listed below.



Supplier Type Part Numbers

Intel DUAL RATE 1G/10G QSFP+ SR (bailed) E40GQSFPSR



82599-Based QSFP+ adapters support all passive and active limiting QSFP+ direct

attach cables that comply with SFF-8436_v4.1 specifications.



82598-Based Adapters

NOTES:

* Intel(R) Network Adapters that support removable optical modules

only support their original module type (i.e., the Intel(R) 10 Gigabit

SR Dual Port Express Module only supports SR optical modules). If you

plug in a different type of module, the driver will not load.

* Hot Swapping/hot plugging optical modules is not supported.

* Only single speed, 10 gigabit modules are supported.

* LAN on Motherboard (LOMs) may support DA, SR, or LR modules. Other

module types are not supported. Please see your system documentation for

details.



The following is a list of SFP+ modules and direct attach cables that have

received some testing. Not all modules are applicable to all devices.



Supplier Type Part Numbers

Finisar SFP+ SR bailed, 10g single rate FTLX8571D3BCL

Avago SFP+ SR bailed, 10g single rate AFBR-700SDZ

Finisar SFP+ LR bailed, 10g single rate FTLX1471D3BCL



82598-Based adapters support direct attach cables that comply with SFF-8431

v4.1 and SFF-8472 v10.4 specifications with the following exceptions:



Supplier Type Part Numbers

Leoni 3 meter passive direct attach cable 747522301

Amphenol 3 meter passive direct attach cable 571540002



*** Active direct attach cables are not supported.



THIRD PARTY OPTIC MODULES AND CABLES REFERRED TO ABOVE ARE LISTED ONLY FOR THE

PURPOSE OF HIGHLIGHTING THIRD PARTY SPECIFICATIONS AND POTENTIAL COMPATIBILITY,

AND ARE NOT RECOMMENDATIONS OR ENDORSEMENT OR SPONSORSHIP OF ANY THIRD PARTY'S

PRODUCT BY INTEL. INTEL IS NOT ENDORSING OR PROMOTING PRODUCTS MADE BY ANY

THIRD PARTY AND THE THIRD PARTY REFERENCE IS PROVIDED ONLY TO SHARE INFORMATION

REGARDING CERTAIN OPTIC MODULES AND CABLES WITH THE ABOVE SPECIFICATIONS. THERE

MAY BE OTHER MANUFACTURERS OR SUPPLIERS, PRODUCING OR SUPPLYING OPTIC MODULES

AND CABLES WITH SIMILAR OR MATCHING DESCRIPTIONS. CUSTOMERS MUST USE THEIR OWN

DISCRETION AND DILIGENCE TO PURCHASE OPTIC MODULES AND CABLES FROM ANY THIRD

PARTY OF THEIR CHOICE. CUSTOMERS ARE SOLELY RESPONSIBLE FOR ASSESSING THE

SUITABILITY OF THE PRODUCT AND/OR DEVICES AND FOR THE SELECTION OF THE VENDOR

FOR PURCHASING ANY PRODUCT. THE OPTIC MODULES AND CABLES REFERRED TO ABOVE ARE

NOT WARRANTED OR SUPPORTED BY INTEL. INTEL ASSUMES NO LIABILITY WHATSOEVER, AND

INTEL DISCLAIMS ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTY, RELATING TO SALE AND/OR USE OF

SUCH THIRD PARTY PRODUCTS OR SELECTION OF VENDOR BY CUSTOMERS.





Intel 10GbE Network Adapter Known Issues

-----------------------------------------



ETS Bandwidth Allocations Don't Match Settings

----------------------------------------------

When Jumbo Frames is set to 9K with a 10GbE adapter, a 90%/10% ETS traffic

split will not actually be attained on any particular port, despite settings

being made on the DCB switch. When ETS is set to a 90%/10% split, an actual

observed split of 70%/30% is more likely.



Supported SFP, SFP+, or QSFP+ module not recognized by the system

-----------------------------------------------------------------

If you try to install an unsupported module, the port may no longer install any

subsequent modules, regardless of whether the module is supported or not. The

port will show a yellow bang under Windows Device manager and an event id 49

(unsupported module) will be added to the system log when this issue occurs. To

resolve this issue, the system must be completely powered off.



Lower than expected performance on quad port 10GbE devices

----------------------------------------------------------

All SFP and QSFP quad port NICs based on the 82599 controller will link at 5

GB/s (PCIe gen2) when used in a system from Intel's Enterprise Platforms and

Services Division (EPSD). The PLX PCIe switch used on these NICs is not on the

EPSD white list of supported PCIe gen3 devices. Devices not on the white list

are blocked from linking at PCIe gen3 by the production BIOS.



Lower than expected performance on quad port 10GbE devices

----------------------------------------------------------

Quad port 10Gbe devices require x8 PCIe gen 3 slots. Full throughput is not

possible in a PCIe gen 2 slot.



Lower than expected performance on dual port 10GbE devices

----------------------------------------------------------

Some PCIe x8 slots are actually configured as x4 slots. These slots have

insufficient bandwidth for full 10Gbe line rate with dual port 10GbE devices.

The driver can detect this situation and will write the following message in

the system log: "PCI-Express bandwidth available for this card is not

sufficient for optimal performance. For optimal performance a x8 PCI-Express

slot is required." If this error occurs, moving your adapter to a true x8 slot

will resolve the issue.



Link Loss on 10GbE Devices with Jumbo Frames enabled

----------------------------------------------------

You must not lower Receive_Buffers or Transmit_Buffers below 256 if jumbo

frames are enabled on an Intel(R) 10GbE Device. Doing so will cause loss of

link.



Failed connection and possible system instability

-------------------------------------------------

If you have non-Intel networking devices capable of Receive-Side Scaling

installed in your system, the Microsoft Windows registry keyword "RSSBaseCPU"

may have been changed from the default value of 0x0 to point to a logical

processor. If this keyword has been changed then devices based on Intel(R)

82598 or 82599 10 Gigabit Ethernet Controllers might not pass traffic.

Attempting to make driver changes in this state may cause system instability.

Set the value of RSSBaseCpu to 0x0, or to a value corresponding to a physical

processor, and reboot the system to resolve the issue.





1GbE Quad Port Server Adapter Notes

===================================



Hot Plug operations are not supported by the following Intel Quad Port Server

Adapters:

Intel(R) Gigabit ET2 Quad Port Server Adapter

Intel(R) Gigabit ET Quad Port Server Adapter

Intel(R) Gigabit VT Quad Port Server Adapter

Intel(R) PRO/1000 PF Quad Port Server Adapter

Intel(R) PRO/1000 PT Quad Port LP Server Adapter

Intel(R) PRO/1000 PT Quad Port Server Adapter

Intel(R) PRO/1000 GT Quad Port Server Adapter

Intel(R) PRO/1000 MT Quad Port Server Adapter



System does not boot

--------------------

Your system may run out of I/O resources and fail to boot if you install more

than four quad port server adapters. Moving the adapters to different slots or

rebalancing resources in the system BIOS may resolve the issue.

This issue affects the following Adapters:

* Intel(R) Ethernet Server Adapter I350-T4

* Intel(R) Gigabit ET2 Quad Port Server Adapter

* Intel(R) Gigabit ET Quad Port Server Adapter

* Intel(R) Gigabit VT Quad Port Server Adapter

* Intel(R) PRO/1000 PF Quad Port Server Adapter

* Intel(R) PRO/1000 PT Quad Port LP server Adapter



Intel PRO/1000 GT Quad Port Server Adapter Not recommended

for use on some systems

----------------------------------------------------------

The Intel PRO/1000 GT Quad Port Server Adapter does not function correctly in

the following systems:



* SuperMicro* P4DP6 running SCO Unixware or OpenServer 6

* Intel(R) Server Board SE7505VB2 based systems (PCI slot 5 only. Other slots

work as designed)



Code 10 on Intel(R) PRO/1000 PT Quad Port LP Server Adapter

-----------------------------------------------------------

You may encounter a Windows Code 10 error with an Intel(R) PRO/1000 PT Quad

Port LP Server Adapter installed in slot #4 of a SuperMicro 7046T-H6R system.

Moving the adapter to another slot will resolve the issue.



Intel PRO/1000 MT Quad Port Server Adapter Known Issues

-------------------------------------------------------

The Intel PRO/1000 MT Quad Port Server Adapter operates in 3.3 volt PCI-X slots

only. For best performance, this adapter should be installed in a 64-bit PCI-X

slot. Refer to the detailed installation instructions in the User's Guide for

additional requirements.



Wake on LAN is not supported on the Intel PRO/1000 MT Quad Port Server Adapter.

Trying to enable this feature with IBAUTIL.EXE will not have any effect.



The Intel PRO/1000 MT Quad Port Server Adapter supports Intel(R) Boot Agent

functionality on ports A and B, however it is disabled by default. To enable

and use the Intel Boot Agent, refer to the User's Guide and other information

in the \APPS\BOOTAGNT\ directory.



Multiple Intel PRO/1000 MT Quad Port Server Adapters in one system

------------------------------------------------------------------

Installing more than two Intel PRO/1000 MT Quad Port Server Adapters in the

same system is not recommended. Many systems are unable to support the power

requirements for more than two of these adapters.



Use only in a PCI-X Slot

------------------------

Reduced performance has been observed when the Intel PRO/1000 MT Quad Port

Server Adapter is installed in a slot other than a PCI-X slot.



Shared Interrupt Limitation

---------------------------

In some systems, the BIOS and OS assign the same interrupt number to two or

more different ports on the Intel PRO/1000 MT Quad Port Server Adapter. If this

occurs, these ports do not function properly. To address this issue, reassign

the system resources so that each port of the adapter has its own unique

interrupt number or disable one of the ports sharing the same interrupt number.



Downshifting

------------

When connecting to any Gigabit switch via a faulty CAT 5 cable where one pair

is broken, the adapter does not downshift from 1 Gig to 100Mbps. For the

adapter to downshift, it must identify two broken pairs in the cable.



Intel PRO/1000 MT Quad Port Server Adapter Not recommended

for use on some systems

----------------------------------------------------------

The Intel PRO/1000 MT Quad Port Server Adapter does not function correctly in

the following systems:



Dell* PowerEdge* 2500

Dell PowerEdge 6400

Dell PowerEdge 6450

Dell PowerEdge 6650SC

Intel Saber, Saber-R, and Saber-Rx Systems

SuperMicro 370DE6

SuperMicro P4DP6

IBM* eServer* xSeries* 365



Using the Intel PRO/1000 MT Quad Port Server Adapter in these configurations is

not recommended.



Heavy traffic may cause system reboot in some systems

-----------------------------------------------------

Using an Intel PRO/1000 MT Quad Port Server Adapter may cause a reboot in

systems with the Intel Profusion chipset including: Intel OCPRF100 and SRPM8

server systems; Compaq* ProLiant* 8000, 8500, ML750, DL760; Dell PowerEdge

8450, 6300, 6350; IBM* x370. Using the Intel PRO/1000 MT Quad Port Server

Adapter in these configurations is not recommended.





Intel(R) Ethernet Desktop Adapter and Network Connection Notes

==============================================================



The Intel(R) 82562V 10/100 Network Connection and Intel(R) 82562V 10/100

Network Connection are supported by the gigabit drivers.



Release 20.6 is the last release in which Intel(R) Ethernet iSCSI Boot supports

Intel(R) Ethernet Desktop Adapters and Network Connections. Starting with

Release 20.7, Intel Ethernet iSCSI Boot no longer supports Intel Ethernet

Desktop Adapters and Network Connections.





Known Issues

============



Unexpected issues with VMs using SR-IOV in Microsoft Windows Server,

version 2004

--------------------------------------------------------------------

Guest VMs using SR-IOV may lose connection due to a known issue in Microsoft

Windows Server, version 2004. Microsoft plans to resolve the issue in a future

release. SR-IOV VFs work as expected in Windows Server 2019.



Signed PowerShell cmdlets run slower than unsigned cmdlets

----------------------------------------------------------

You may experience extreme slowness with signed PowerShell* cmdlets when a

system is connected to the network but not to the Internet. This occurs because

the operating system cannot connect to the service that verifies the signed

cmdlet. See the following Microsoft support article for a workaround:

https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/help/4523292/signed-powershell-cmdlets-run-s

lower-than-unsigned-cmdlets



Lower than expected receive throughput in Windows Hyper-V* guests

-----------------------------------------------------------------

You may experience lower than expected receive throughput in Windows guest VMs

when VMQ offload is enabled. Disabling Receive Segment Coalescing (RSC) in the

network adapter's advanced settings may help resolve the issue.



Logical switch creation fails

-----------------------------

When you use Microsoft SCVMM (System Center Virtual Machine Manager) to create

an encapsulation-enabled (VXLAN, NVGRE, etc.) logical switch, it may fail with

error code 0x80041001. To resolve the issue, after the failure is seen, perform

the following:

1. Disable the "Hyper-V Extensible Virtual Switch" property on the Intel

Ethernet device.

2. Recreate the logical switch.

This affects hosts running Microsoft* Windows Server* 2019.





Microsoft Windows guest operating systems may not pass traffic across VLANs

---------------------------------------------------------------------------

The Virtual Function (VF) driver is not aware of the VLAN configuration if you

use LBFO (Load Balancing and Failover) to configure VLANs in a Windows guest.

VLANs configured using LBFO on a Virtual Function driver may result in failure

to pass traffic.



Log link state events do not display correctly in localized Windows Server 2016

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------

In a previous version of the driver, some log link state events did not display

correctly in some localized versions of Microsoft* Windows Server* 2016 when

bringing link down and then back up on Intel(R) i210AT adapters. This issue has

been corrected in the current driver version. Be sure to download and install

the latest drivers and software from Intel.



NVM update utilities exit with error on kernel 4.16 and higher

--------------------------------------------------------------

On Linux* kernel 4.16 and higher, the iomem parameter is set to "strict" by

default, which prevents the NVM update utilities from accessing the MMIO on

1GbE and 10GbE devices. Trying to update a device when "strict" is set causes

the device to lose link during the update process. Also, if you run any of the

NVM update utilities (NVMUpdate, NVMCheck, QCU, or Bootutil), the utility may

exit with the error "The selected adapter (location:[Bus:Device:Function])

cannot be initialized due to inaccessible device memory. Update the device

driver and reboot the system before running this utility again. Consult the

utility documentation for more information."



If you wish to update a device without losing link, you can either:

1. Install Linux base drivers (igb or ixgbe) from Release 24.1, or newer

2. Set the iomem kernel parameter to "relaxed" (i.e., iomem=relaxed) and reboot

the system before running the update utility.



Incorrect branding strings

--------------------------

Devices based on the Intel(R) Ethernet Controller X550 and Intel Ethernet

Controller X700 series may display incorrect branding strings in Windows Device

Manager. This issue does not affect the functionality of the device. This issue

only affects Microsoft* Windows Server* 2016.



Identify Adapter command does not blink LEDs as expected

--------------------------------------------------------

On some Intel(R) Ethernet Connections, the LEDs are connected to PHY and not to

the MAC. The driver's Identify Adapter functionality uses the MAC register, so

the LEDs will not blink on these devices. This affects the following devices:

* Intel(R) Ethernet Connection X552 1000BASE-T

* Intel(R) Ethernet Connection X552/X557-AT 10GBASE-T



Changing a VLAN ID to untagged and then reusing that VLAN ID may cause the

untagged VLAN to fail

--------------------------------------------------------------------------

On Windows 10 RS1, if you change a VLAN ID to untagged on a device or team and

then later reuse that VLAN ID on that device or team, the untagged VLAN may

fail to pass traffic. To resolve this issue, remove the untagged VLAN and

recreate it.



VXN Driver Fails To Load in Windows Server VM on ESX 6.5

--------------------------------------------------------

The VXN driver may fail to load with a yellow-bang error after installation on

a Windows Server 2016 or Windows Server 2012 R2 VM running on an ESX 6.5 host.

To fix this, reboot the VM.



Driver Installation Hangs

-------------------------

Driver installation for devices based on the Intel Ethernet X710 and XL710

controllers may hang. This may be because the device is connected to a switch

that is not advertising traffic class 0. To resolve the issue, disconnect the

device from the switch or configure the switch to advertise TC0, power cycle

your system, then restart the driver installation. This may occur with any

Intel Ethernet X710 or XL710 device on Microsoft Windows Server 2016.



Device Fails to Load

--------------------

Devices based on the Intel Ethernet X710, XL710, X722, and XXV710 controllers

may fail to load with a yellow-bang error. This may be because the device is

connected to a switch that is not advertising traffic class 0. To resolve the

issue, disconnect the device from the switch or configure the switch to

advertise TC0, and restart your system. This may occur with any Intel Ethernet

X710, XL710, X722, or XXV710 device on any version of Microsoft Windows Server.



Import of IntelNetCmdlets PowerShell Module Fails When Trailing

Backslash Used

----------------------------------------------------------------

If you include a trailing backslash ("\") at the end of the Import-Module

command, the import operation will fail (for example, "ps>import-module

c:\<path>\IntelNetCmdlets\"). In Microsoft Windows* 10 and Windows Server*

2016, the auto-complete function appends a trailing backslash. If you use

auto-complete when entering the Import-Module command, delete the trailing

backslash before pressing Return to execute the command.



Code 10 Error in Device Manager When Intel DCB Installed and RSS Queues

Changed to 16 or Greater

-----------------------------------------------------------------------

If the Intel DCB feature is installed, changing the number of Receive Side

Scaling (RSS) queues to 16 or greater may result in a Code 10 error in Device

Manager. To resolve this issue, reinstall the driver from the Intel

installation media. Note that this will reset the RSS queues value to the

default of 8. Do not change the RSS queues to 16 or greater, as doing so will

result in another Code 10 error. Setting RSS queues to a lower value such as 1,

2, or 4 does not cause error.



Driver Installation Issues on Microsoft* Windows* 10

----------------------------------------------------

Release 20.7 (or later) driver installs on Microsoft Windows 10 may time out or

fail due to extended wait time (up to 4 minutes per Ethernet port). In most

cases, despite the timeout, the driver installs correctly and is usable. If the

driver does not install correctly, retry the installation process. Note that

Intel(R) PROSet for Windows Device Manager relies on correctly installed

drivers.



Lower than expected throughput on X710/XL710 based devices

----------------------------------------------------------

If you have an X710 or XL710 based device installed in a four CPU socket

system. Receive and transmit traffic may be significantly lower than expected.

Setting your interrupt rate to High may mitigate the issue.



Link loss after identifying the adapter

---------------------------------------

All ports on the device may lose link when you run the diagnostic tests to

identify the adapter on a single port. Link will return to normal after several

seconds. This only affects 10G-BaseT devices based on the Intel(R) Ethernet

Controller X710.



System does not get link when connected to a 10GbE switch

---------------------------------------------------------

Systems that contain an Intel(R) i210 or i211 device may not link to a 10GbE

switch. This may happen when the system's Ethernet cable is not connected to

the switch during power up or if the cable is disconnected for more than a

couple of minutes. Disabling and enabling the device in the operating system

will restore link.



Multicast routing table is not automatically set up

---------------------------------------------------

The multicast routing table for the Intel(R) Ethernet Virtual Function 700

Series driver is not automatically set up and the virtual machine will not

receive multicast traffic. Manually adding the multicast routing will resolve

the issue.



Enable PME setting not set to expected value

--------------------------------------------

After running Sysprep, the Enable PME setting may not be set to the expected

value. You should manually verify and configure the setting.



Receive Side Scaling value is blank

-----------------------------------

Changing the Receive Side Scaling setting of an adapter in a team may cause the

value for that setting to appear blank when you next check it. It may also

appear blank for the other adapters in the team. The adapter may be unbound

from the team in this situation. Disabling and enabling the team will resolve

the issue.



CPU utilization higher than expected

------------------------------------

Setting RSS Queues to a value greater than 4 is only advisable for large web

servers with several processors. Values greater than 4 may increase CPU

utilization to unacceptable levels and have other negative impacts on system

performance.



RSS Load Balancing Profile Advanced Setting

-------------------------------------------

Setting the "RSS load balancing profile" Advanced Setting to "ClosestProcessor"

may significantly reduce CPU utilization. However, in some system

configurations (such as a system with more Ethernet ports than processor

cores), the "ClosestProcessor" setting may cause transmit and receive failures.

Changing the setting to "NUMAScalingStatic" will resolve the issue.



Unexpected link loss when connected to Netgear XSM7224S switch

--------------------------------------------------------------

The Netgear XSM7224s switch is sensitive to Energy Efficient Ethernet (EEE)

mode. Link flap errors will occur with several Intel devices when EEE mode is

enabled. Disable EEE mode to resolve the issue. This issue affects devices

based on the following:

* Intel(R) I350 controller

* Intel(R) 82579 series of controllers

* Intel(R) I217 series of controllers

* Intel(R) I218 series of controllers



Opening Windows Device Manager property sheet takes longer than expected

------------------------------------------------------------------------

The Windows Device Manager property sheet may take 60 seconds or longer to

open. The driver must discover all Intel Ethernet devices and initialize them

before it can open the property sheet. This data is cached, so subsequent

openings of the property sheet are generally quicker.



Audio or video distortion when LAN cable is connected or disconnected

---------------------------------------------------------------------

Momentary audio distortion or video playback issues may occur when you connect

or disconnect a LAN cable to the onboard Ethernet port. Intel(R) 82577 and

82578 based network connections are affected by this issue.



Reduced or erratic receive performance

--------------------------------------

Intel(R) 7500 chipset-based systems may experience degraded receive

performance. Increasing receive descriptors to 1024 will resolve the issue.

Disabling C-states in the system BIOS will also resolve the issue.



Unexpected NMI with 82599-based NICs

------------------------------------

If you set the PCIe Maximum Payload Size to 256 bytes in your system BIOS and

install an 82599-based NIC, you may receive an NMI when the NIC attains link.

This happens when the physical slot does not support a payload size of 256

Bytes even if the BIOS does. Moving the adapter to a slot that supports 256

bytes will resolve the issue. Consult your system documentation for information

on supported payload values.



VLANs are not supported on VMQ enabled adapters and teams

---------------------------------------------------------

If you create a VLAN on a VMQ enabled adapter, the VMQ setting will

automatically be set to disabled. The same will happen if you create a VLAN on

a team whose member adapters have VMQ enabled.



Unexpected Connectivity Loss

----------------------------

If you uncheck the "Allow the computer to turn off this device to save power"

box on the Power Management tab and then put you system to sleep, you may lose

connectivity when you exit sleep. You must disable and enable the NIC to

resolve the issue. Installing Intel(R)PROSet for Windows Device Manager will

also resolve the issue.



VLANs unsupported on some Intel devices

---------------------------------------

The following devices do not support VLANs:

- Intel(R) 82567V-2 Gigabit Network Connection

- Intel(R) 82567V Gigabit Network Connection



Reduced Large Send Offload performance

--------------------------------------

Large Send Offload (LSO) and IPSec Offload are not compatible. LSO is

automatically disabled when IPSec Offload is enabled. This may reduce the

performance of non-IPSec traffic. Confining all of your IPSec traffic to one

port and enabling IPSec Offload only on that port may mitigate this issue. On

Microsoft Windows 8.1 and Server 2012 and later, devices based on the 82576,

82599, and X540 controllers are not affected by this issue.



Procedure for installing and upgrading drivers and utilities

------------------------------------------------------------

Intel does not recommend installing or upgrading drivers and Intel(R) PROSet

software over a network connection. Instead, install or upgrade drivers and

utilities from each system. To install or upgrade drivers and utilities, follow

the instructions in the User Guide.



"Malicious script detected" warning from Norton AntiVirus* during

PROSet Uninstall

-----------------------------------------------------------------

The Intel PROSet uninstall process uses a Visual Basic script as part of the

process. Norton AntiVirus and other virus scanning software may mistakenly flag

this as a malicious or dangerous script. Letting the script run allows the

uninstall process to complete normally.



"Out Of Disk Space" Message during Installation

-----------------------------------------------

The boot partition requires a minimum of 15 MB free space in order to install

Intel PROSet, regardless of which drive you specify for installation. If there

is insufficient space on the partition you will see this error message, and the

product will not install.



Windows Code 10 Error Message on Driver Install or Upgrade

----------------------------------------------------------

If you encounter a Windows Code 10 error message when installing or upgrading

drivers, reboot to resolve the issue.



No settings available on the Intel(R) Boot Options tab in Windows Device

Manager after flashing an EFI image

------------------------------------------------------------------------

The settings have been hidden because the EFI environment does not make use of

them.



Network stack will not enable RSC

---------------------------------

If Intel Data Center Bridging (DCB) is installed, the network stack will not

enable Receive Segment Coalescing (RSC).



PXE option ROM does not follow the PXE specification with respect to the

final "discover" cycle

------------------------------------------------------------------------

In order to avoid long wait periods, the option ROM no longer includes the

final 32-second discover cycle. (If there was no response in the prior

16-second cycle, it is almost certain that there will be none in the final,

32-second cycle.





Customer Support

================



- Main Intel support website: http://support.intel.com

- Network products information:

http://support.intel.com/support/go/network/adapter/home.htm





Legal / Disclaimers

===================



Copyright (C) 2002 - 2020, Intel Corporation. All rights reserved.

Parts of Intel(R) PROSet for Windows Device Manager are based on the pugixml

library (http://pugixml.org). pugixml is Copyright (C) 2006-2015 Arseny

Kapoulkine.



Intel Corporation assumes no responsibility for errors or omissions in this

document. Nor does Intel make any commitment to update the information

contained herein.



Intel and the Intel logo are trademarks of Intel Corporation or its

subsidiaries in the U.S. and/or other countries.



* Other product and corporate names may be trademarks of other companies and

are used only for explanation and to the owners' benefit, without intent to

infringe.