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Operating Systems Solaris Remove unneeded Ethernet devices? Post 302999559 by hicksd8 on Thursday 22nd of June 2017 01:11:53 PM
Old 06-22-2017
Yes, I am sure that the booting kernel will probe that hardware to see what's there. Can't you switch off the adapter(s) in the machine's BIOS?

---------- Post updated at 06:11 PM ---------- Previous update was at 06:04 PM ----------

Teamed devices show up as 'aggr' (aggregated) devices in /dev e.g.

Code:
/dev/aggr1

You could unconfigure them from their constituent e1000g2, e1000g3, etc.
 

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MY(4)							   BSD Kernel Interfaces Manual 						     MY(4)

NAME
my -- Myson Technology Ethernet PCI driver SYNOPSIS
To compile this driver into the kernel, place the following line in your kernel configuration file: device my Alternatively, to load the driver as a module at boot time, place the following line in loader.conf(5): if_my_load="YES" DESCRIPTION
The my driver provides support for various NICs based on the Myson chipset. The Myson chipset is a variant of the DEC Tulip NIC chipset. The driver will work with almost any MII-compliant PHY, thus failure to positively identify the chip is not a fatal error. HARDWARE
The my driver provides support for various NICs based on the Myson chipset. Supported models include: o Myson MTD800 PCI Fast Ethernet chip o Myson MTD803 PCI Fast Ethernet chip o Myson MTD89X PCI Gigabit Ethernet chip SEE ALSO
altq(4), de(4), netintro(4), pci(4), ifconfig(8) HISTORY
The my driver first appeared in FreeBSD 4.6. AUTHORS
The my driver was written by Myson Technology Inc. This manual page was written by Hiten M. Pandya <hmp@FreeBSD.org>. BUGS
The my driver does not support Power Management Events (PME). BSD
March 11, 2007 BSD
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