Nick Cook <[EMAIL PROTECTED] Para: debian-user@lists.debian.org t> cc: Enviado Por: Assunto: Speaking of isapnp... [EMAIL PROTECTED] 08/10/00 17:32 Responder a ncook
pnpdump only generates an output with several options. You'll have to modify each one, and write the results to /etc/isapnp.conf (pnpdump > /etc/isapnp.conf does the task). So, You'll pick 1 of up to 3 IRQs, etc, uncommenting the lines (removing #). If you have a dual boot machine, I recommend you to use the same IRQ's an IO's values that are used under windows. I think that if you have isapnp installed, you don't have to do something else. It'll read /etc/isapnp.conf and configure your card(s). You should try to do isapnp /etc/isapnp.conf, before booting, so you'll know the results before booting. I'm a newbie(mostly). I'm answering you because I did a lot of mess with isapnp, and my system did not crash. >I'm trying to use isapnp in a last ditch effort to get Potato to recognize my >SCSI card (PnP ISA). isapnpdump sees it, and writes the config file. > >However, the rather sketchy docs recommend putting the isapnp command early in >the boot-up process. Call me chicken, but I don't wanna just mess around with >that. So, anybody recommend a good place to stick isapnp in the boot process; >e.g., which directory? > >As always, thanks. >------------------------- > - Nick - >[EMAIL PROTECTED] >Don't let your mind wander -- it's too little to be let out alone. > > > >-- >Unsubscribe? mail -s unsubscribe [EMAIL PROTECTED] < /dev/null