Broadcom NetXtreme BCM5723 Gigabit P is a network device. This product is available from Broadcom. The detected vendor ID for the NetXtreme BCM5723 Gigabit is 0x14e4 and the product IDs include 0x165b.
phpbench-run1 - Tests on Ubuntu 10.10, Intel Xeon 3.06GHz, ATI Rage XL
apache2216 - Tests on PTS Desktop Live 2010.1, AMD Opteron 8216, ATI ES1000, HP ProLiant DL365 G1
ttest - Tests on PTS Desktop Live 2010.1, AMD Opteron 285, ATI ES1000, IBM MS-9166
disk-mrfjo-run1 - Tests on Debian unstable, Ubuntu 11.04, Intel Xeon 2.40GHz, ATI Rage XL, Intel Core 2 Duo T7250, Intel Mobile GM965, Dell 0KU184
disk-mrfjo-run1 - Tests on Debian unstable, Intel Xeon 2.40GHz, ATI Rage XL
pts-motherboard-2 - Tests on Ubuntu 11.04, Debian unstable, Intel Core 2 Duo T7250, Intel Mobile GM965, Dell 0KU184, Intel Xeon 2.40GHz, ATI Rage XL
iozone-hp-dl380g3-raid5 - Tests on Ubuntu 10.04, Intel Xeon 2.80GHz, ATI Rage XL
fs-mark-hp-dl380g3 - Tests on Ubuntu 10.04, Intel Xeon 2.80GHz, ATI Rage XL
aio_stress_lxluoc08 - Tests on openSUSE 11.0, Intel Pentium III family 1400MHz, ATI Rage XL, Compaq ProLiant ML350 G2
bench node0 workdir fs multicore - Tests on CentOS 5.2, Ubuntu 10.04, Linux, Intel Xeon L5420, ATI ES1000 515E, Supermicro X7DWU, Intel Xeon MP 2.80GHz, ATI Rage XL, Compaq ProLiant DL580 G2, Intel Core i7 920, GeForce GTX 280, ASUS P6T DELUXE
bench node0 workdir fs multicore - Tests on CentOS 5.2, Ubuntu 10.04, Intel Xeon L5420, ATI ES1000 515E, Supermicro X7DWU, Intel Xeon MP 2.80GHz, ATI Rage XL, Compaq ProLiant DL580 G2
x246 - Tests on Ubuntu 10.04, Intel Xeon MP 2.80GHz, ATI Rage XL, Compaq ProLiant DL580 G2
aio-stress.txt - Tests on Ubuntu 10.04, Intel Xeon MP 2.80GHz, ATI Rage XL, Compaq ProLiant DL580 G2
Test - Tests on PTS Desktop Live 2010.1, AMD Opteron 2354, XGI, TYAN S3970
Broadcom Crystal HD Improvements Under Linux: For those that use the Broadcom Crystal HD adapters for video acceleration under Linux, their open-source driver has received a number of improvements just recently...
Broadcom Announces Open-Source 802.11n Driver!: Broadcom wireless network adapters have long been notorious with Linux users since this hardware vendor has not provided any open-source Linux drivers or specifications for their chipsets, even though Broadcom ASICs are dominantly used within today's wireless adapters.