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M3A32-MVP DELUXE/WIFI-AP wifi problem
I recently bought into AMD's spider platform hype and purchased the Asus
M3A32-MVP DELUXE/WIFI-AP mobo. Everything is great with it except that the wifi solution doesn't work and the HD sound make the system crawl in games like COD4. I've searched everywhere, including the Asus forums to no avail. It seems that their engineers don't read their email or care about what's posted in the forums. Did anyone find better drivers that work? I heard this is the same wifi solution on other Intel boards as well and they're having the same issues. Peace shagg |
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M3A32-MVP DELUXE/WIFI-AP wifi problem
vc wrote:
I recently bought into AMD's spider platform hype and purchased the Asus M3A32-MVP DELUXE/WIFI-AP mobo. Everything is great with it except that the wifi solution doesn't work and the HD sound make the system crawl in games like COD4. I've searched everywhere, including the Asus forums to no avail. It seems that their engineers don't read their email or care about what's posted in the forums. Did anyone find better drivers that work? I heard this is the same wifi solution on other Intel boards as well and they're having the same issues. Peace shagg If your time was worth money, you'd be best to purchase a separate sound card and WiFi solution :-) If you've worked in a large company, the organization usually pivots around certain kinds of structures. For example, in software development (not my area), it might be a P.R. database or bug tracking system. Managers get rewarded, according to the rate that P.R.s are closed or whatever. Asus is not known for their ability to communicate with the outside world. There is no reason to expect "engineers" to be trolling forums. Engineers work on "the next big thing". They're very busy, and their managers are careful to shield them from support issues. Support people clean up the mess from "the last big thing". And in terms of support people, they are arranged in tiers. The good support may be applied to a motherboard, early after release, to correct most of the really bad mistakes made. After a while, the less competent support staff ("maintainers") take over. They might do things, like add to the CPUSupport via small BIOS changes or the like. Or screw up some BIOS releases (like two bad releases in a row, for my A7N8X-E motherboard) :-) So, based on that dismal picture, what is the best way to get support ? Contact Tech Support. They'll take down the details of your problem, in a structured way. The postings in the forum, while well intentioned, do not contain enough details to be immediately useful. Is Tech Support perfect ? Absolutely not. Sometimes, they throw away input, just to keep up. They "forget" to return phone calls, after telling a customer on the phone that they'll call back. So the system is far from perfect. But if you want something fixed, it starts with Tech Support. Not by posting here. Not by posting at vip.asus.com forums. The vip.asus.com forums are maintained by Asus staff. If there was a problem with the content posted on the site (say some porn), a member of Asus staff could remove it, ban the poster, etc. So there are staff to do that kind of maintenance. But there are too many threads on the forum, to expect the "admin" to care about the content of the threads. Now, to the details of your question. For the Analog Devices HDaudio driver, it is possible you may find other versions floating around. I cannot identify one immediately, because I don't know what the enumeration of your motherboard is. If you look in the SMAXWDM folder, of an Analog Devices installer, there will be an INF file in there (like perhaps ADIHDAud.inf). There are Vendor and Device numbers in the file. There may be a subsystem number as well. The subsystem consists of two four character hex numbers, and the "1043" part would stand for Asus. The other four digits would be for the motherboard. Many INF files do not identify the motherboard (i.e. give the model name). Your first job, would be determining what the subsystem is for your particular motherboard. Maybe it would take CPUZ or Everest or Sandra or some other utility, to find that information. Once you'd done that, you may find that some recent Intel LGA775 socket boards, have used the same HDaudio chip, and have later release drivers. But a driver is useless, unless there is a matching line in the INF in SMAXWDM. (I know for my AC'97 Soundmax chip, I found four different drivers, and one was on the Dell site. You never know where you'll find them.) Your Wifi situation is much worse :-) The first question would be, why do "RealTek" and "GA821" appear in the name for the driver file ? It is possible that a previous Wifi card bundled with an Asus motherboard, used an RTL8187 MAC. Now, I don't know if the driver in this case, supports both or not (i.e. the driver package supports older RTL8187 designs and newer Atheros designs). The Asus installer uses Installshield, and I don't have a means of looking at the CAB files. The "GA821" part seems to map to an Azurewave Wifi product. Azurewave may have been the first design win for a particular Atheros Wifi chip. Maybe the subsystem identifier maps to Azurewave. I don't know how that works. I didn't find an Asus identifier, in any case. But maybe that isn't necessary. The big advantage of the Atheros hardware, over the old RealTek or RalinkTech stuff Asus used in the past, is the Atheros is a single chip, complete with RF inside the chip. That reduces the manufacturing cost. It could be, Asus changed chipsets, to save money. So I'm not 100% sure what hardware is involved here. The Atheros is supposed to be PCI Express, but the way the Asus Wifi module is packaged, is doesn't really look like a PCI Express connector. Now, maybe they're running 2.5Gb/sec signals through a pin header, but I hope not. In researching the Atheros possible path, it appears that Atheros kinda abuses the Vendor/Device/Subsystem thing. To positively identify an Atheros design, software has to probe the serial EEPROM which is soldered next to the main chip. It contains configuration information, and also helps identify what might be firmware inside the main chip. It appears you start with the main chip design, and maybe different firmwares are permanently burned into the chip at the factory. Thus, the same chip design, can do B/G or B/G/super_G. A number is put on the ourside of the chip, like AR2425, which is an instance of chip plus some firmware. That is my best guess as to how that works, and why the chip has two identifying numbers. I learned that, by looking in the Linux side of things. They use a utility called "ath_info" to dump key parameters from the EEPROM. Using "lspci" apparently won't unambiguously identify the hardware. It is possible Windows utilities like the payware version of Everest or Sandra, would have the same problem. They could look at the Vendor and Device codes, but that information is not enough to do the job. So when someone says "I have a 5006" or "I have a 5007", chances are they're wrong. And that makes finding drivers that much harder. Apparently, there is a thing the Linux guys could use, called "ndiswrapper". An Atheros site offered a small download of that type. You can find more references here, but I don't know where this will lead you. This could be NDIS for an Atheros chip. Only 299KB. The subsystem identifier in the INF file, doesn't match the "1043" I'm used to for Asus. Using something like this probably doesn't do the same things as the Asus software - the Asus stuff offers two modes for the module, while this probably doesn't do Access Point. http://www.atheros.cz/download.php?a...R5007&system=3 More of those whiny type discussions, where users try to get their stuff working, before the developers are done. http://madwifi.org/ticket/859 http://madwifi.org/ticket/1192 http://madwifi.org/ticket/1679 If this was my motherboard, I think I'd punt on the Wifi, and work on the sound driver. That one is likely to be easier to solve. Buying a different Wifi solution is likely to be a faster way to get something running. Just some guesses, Paul |
#3
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M3A32-MVP DELUXE/WIFI-AP wifi problem
Paul, I want to thank you for your patience and time in discussing this
topic with me. Your're a gentleman. Victor "Paul" wrote in message ... vc wrote: I recently bought into AMD's spider platform hype and purchased the Asus M3A32-MVP DELUXE/WIFI-AP mobo. Everything is great with it except that the wifi solution doesn't work and the HD sound make the system crawl in games like COD4. I've searched everywhere, including the Asus forums to no avail. It seems that their engineers don't read their email or care about what's posted in the forums. Did anyone find better drivers that work? I heard this is the same wifi solution on other Intel boards as well and they're having the same issues. Peace shagg If your time was worth money, you'd be best to purchase a separate sound card and WiFi solution :-) If you've worked in a large company, the organization usually pivots around certain kinds of structures. For example, in software development (not my area), it might be a P.R. database or bug tracking system. Managers get rewarded, according to the rate that P.R.s are closed or whatever. Asus is not known for their ability to communicate with the outside world. There is no reason to expect "engineers" to be trolling forums. Engineers work on "the next big thing". They're very busy, and their managers are careful to shield them from support issues. Support people clean up the mess from "the last big thing". And in terms of support people, they are arranged in tiers. The good support may be applied to a motherboard, early after release, to correct most of the really bad mistakes made. After a while, the less competent support staff ("maintainers") take over. They might do things, like add to the CPUSupport via small BIOS changes or the like. Or screw up some BIOS releases (like two bad releases in a row, for my A7N8X-E motherboard) :-) So, based on that dismal picture, what is the best way to get support ? Contact Tech Support. They'll take down the details of your problem, in a structured way. The postings in the forum, while well intentioned, do not contain enough details to be immediately useful. Is Tech Support perfect ? Absolutely not. Sometimes, they throw away input, just to keep up. They "forget" to return phone calls, after telling a customer on the phone that they'll call back. So the system is far from perfect. But if you want something fixed, it starts with Tech Support. Not by posting here. Not by posting at vip.asus.com forums. The vip.asus.com forums are maintained by Asus staff. If there was a problem with the content posted on the site (say some porn), a member of Asus staff could remove it, ban the poster, etc. So there are staff to do that kind of maintenance. But there are too many threads on the forum, to expect the "admin" to care about the content of the threads. Now, to the details of your question. For the Analog Devices HDaudio driver, it is possible you may find other versions floating around. I cannot identify one immediately, because I don't know what the enumeration of your motherboard is. If you look in the SMAXWDM folder, of an Analog Devices installer, there will be an INF file in there (like perhaps ADIHDAud.inf). There are Vendor and Device numbers in the file. There may be a subsystem number as well. The subsystem consists of two four character hex numbers, and the "1043" part would stand for Asus. The other four digits would be for the motherboard. Many INF files do not identify the motherboard (i.e. give the model name). Your first job, would be determining what the subsystem is for your particular motherboard. Maybe it would take CPUZ or Everest or Sandra or some other utility, to find that information. Once you'd done that, you may find that some recent Intel LGA775 socket boards, have used the same HDaudio chip, and have later release drivers. But a driver is useless, unless there is a matching line in the INF in SMAXWDM. (I know for my AC'97 Soundmax chip, I found four different drivers, and one was on the Dell site. You never know where you'll find them.) Your Wifi situation is much worse :-) The first question would be, why do "RealTek" and "GA821" appear in the name for the driver file ? It is possible that a previous Wifi card bundled with an Asus motherboard, used an RTL8187 MAC. Now, I don't know if the driver in this case, supports both or not (i.e. the driver package supports older RTL8187 designs and newer Atheros designs). The Asus installer uses Installshield, and I don't have a means of looking at the CAB files. The "GA821" part seems to map to an Azurewave Wifi product. Azurewave may have been the first design win for a particular Atheros Wifi chip. Maybe the subsystem identifier maps to Azurewave. I don't know how that works. I didn't find an Asus identifier, in any case. But maybe that isn't necessary. The big advantage of the Atheros hardware, over the old RealTek or RalinkTech stuff Asus used in the past, is the Atheros is a single chip, complete with RF inside the chip. That reduces the manufacturing cost. It could be, Asus changed chipsets, to save money. So I'm not 100% sure what hardware is involved here. The Atheros is supposed to be PCI Express, but the way the Asus Wifi module is packaged, is doesn't really look like a PCI Express connector. Now, maybe they're running 2.5Gb/sec signals through a pin header, but I hope not. In researching the Atheros possible path, it appears that Atheros kinda abuses the Vendor/Device/Subsystem thing. To positively identify an Atheros design, software has to probe the serial EEPROM which is soldered next to the main chip. It contains configuration information, and also helps identify what might be firmware inside the main chip. It appears you start with the main chip design, and maybe different firmwares are permanently burned into the chip at the factory. Thus, the same chip design, can do B/G or B/G/super_G. A number is put on the ourside of the chip, like AR2425, which is an instance of chip plus some firmware. That is my best guess as to how that works, and why the chip has two identifying numbers. I learned that, by looking in the Linux side of things. They use a utility called "ath_info" to dump key parameters from the EEPROM. Using "lspci" apparently won't unambiguously identify the hardware. It is possible Windows utilities like the payware version of Everest or Sandra, would have the same problem. They could look at the Vendor and Device codes, but that information is not enough to do the job. So when someone says "I have a 5006" or "I have a 5007", chances are they're wrong. And that makes finding drivers that much harder. Apparently, there is a thing the Linux guys could use, called "ndiswrapper". An Atheros site offered a small download of that type. You can find more references here, but I don't know where this will lead you. This could be NDIS for an Atheros chip. Only 299KB. The subsystem identifier in the INF file, doesn't match the "1043" I'm used to for Asus. Using something like this probably doesn't do the same things as the Asus software - the Asus stuff offers two modes for the module, while this probably doesn't do Access Point. http://www.atheros.cz/download.php?a...R5007&system=3 More of those whiny type discussions, where users try to get their stuff working, before the developers are done. http://madwifi.org/ticket/859 http://madwifi.org/ticket/1192 http://madwifi.org/ticket/1679 If this was my motherboard, I think I'd punt on the Wifi, and work on the sound driver. That one is likely to be easier to solve. Buying a different Wifi solution is likely to be a faster way to get something running. Just some guesses, Paul |
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