Check the Marvell AQICN 10G on MOMO for crashes during high performance
Check the Marvell AQICN 10G on MOMO for crashes during high performance
I just received this new laptop with built-in 10G, but I'm facing a strange issue. The network works fine until it randomly crashes and disconnects from the internet. Once it loses connection, it won't reconnect on its own—I have to turn the adapter on and off again. Previously, I used a TP-Link 10G PCIe card without any problems. I don’t see any error messages in Event Viewer when it crashes, and the latest driver from Marvell is just one update ahead of the ASUS version.
it managed to function for a while but now it’s failing again twice. The first was just a minor disconnection, the second happened a few days later and was a complete lockup, forcing me to reset the adapter so it could restart. During that time I looked at ipconfig; Connection-specific DNS Suffix . Marvell AQtion 10Gbit Network Adapter DHCP Enabled. Yes Autoconfiguration Enabled. Link-local IPv6 Address fe80::907e:64b5:586:cc61%10(Preferred) Autoconfiguration IPv4 Address. 169.254.167.190 (Preferred) Subnet Mask 255.255.0.0 Default Gateway DNS Servers fec0:0:0:ffff::1 fec0:0:0:ffff::2 fec0:0:0:ffff::3 NetBIOS over Tcpip Enabled it really odd—it seems to jump to another IP, possibly because it couldn’t reach the DHCP server. I tried forcing the correct IP from the router since it’s set as static on the network. While it was locked up, I checked ipconfig; the issue still persisted. It’s not connecting even on the LAN, and I can’t reach my router at all. ------ ping 192.168.1.1 Pinging 192.168.1.1 with 32 bytes of data: Request timed out. ... tracert 192.168.1.1 Tracing route to 192.168.1.1 over a maximum of 30 hops 1 mainPC [192.168.1.119] reports: Destination host unreachable. Trace complete. I’m running out of options. The only way it works again seems to be turning the adapter off and back on. Could this be related to a Windows installation problem, given the recent changes with the NVMe drive and OS upgrade? Or is there a faulty network chip involved?
I experienced problems with a PCIe AQC107 card on Windows 11, which caused the network stack to crash entirely, requiring a reboot to resolve. Even its built-in gigabit connection stopped functioning at that time. I’m not sure why it worked fine on my Linux server afterward.
It appears Windows 11 may have encountered some problems following recent updates. A useful setting to investigate is EEE (Energy Efficient Ethernet), which can act as a "sleep mode" under certain conditions. Open Device Manager, navigate to network adapters, right-click your Ethernet card and select "Properties." In the dialog, switch EEE off as indicated in the image (the label may vary depending on your adapter model).