On 04/29/2013 09:42 PM, Maxim Karpenko wrote:
Hi
I've also saw the same issue with my shared IRQs (and also IRQ was
shared with nvidia graphics card).
If you look in your dmesg, it suggests you to boot with "irqpoll" option.
As for me - this didn't help until I added also "noirqdebug".
After th
On 04/29/2013 09:42 PM, Maxim Karpenko wrote:
Hi
I've also saw the same issue with my shared IRQs (and also IRQ was
shared with nvidia graphics card).
If you look in your dmesg, it suggests you to boot with "irqpoll" option.
As for me - this didn't help until I added also "noirqdebug".
After th
Hi
I've also saw the same issue with my shared IRQs (and also IRQ was shared
with nvidia graphics card).
If you look in your dmesg, it suggests you to boot with "irqpoll" option.
As for me - this didn't help until I added also "noirqdebug".
After that I'm running already 6 days without problems a
Got this working.
The problem was local APIC was not enabled in the bios. Once enabled
everything started to fall in place.
thanks all for your inputs and help
On Thu, 16 Aug 2012 09:03:16 +0100, Bhasker C V wrote:
> I have a old PC (AMD athelon 3000+) which has an onboard network card
> (gige-
On Thu, 16 Aug 2012 09:03:16 +0100, Bhasker C V wrote:
> I have a old PC (AMD athelon 3000+) which has an onboard network card
> (gige-tg3) kernel 3.5.0 debian squeeze.
Have you tried with Debian stock kernel (2.6.32) or the backported one
(3.2)? :-?
> 03:16.0 Ethernet controller: VIA Technolo
Olà,
Il 16/08/2012 10:03, Bhasker C V ha scritto:
Hi,
---cut---
Has anyone encountered this before
I have tried hpet=none (just to score off the hpet IRQ and this card IRQ
clash)
I have tried pci=biosirq
Another poss
On Thu, 22 Mar 2012 14:14:53 -0500, Mark Copper wrote:
> On Thu, Mar 22, 2012 at 12:24 PM, Camaleón wrote:
(...)
>> I wonder if you already have tried what the message suggests :-?
>>
>>
> I don't know about the original poster, but booting with irqpoll did not
> solve the problem for me. (I ma
On Thu, Mar 22, 2012 at 12:24 PM, Camaleón wrote:
> On Wed, 21 Mar 2012 20:56:52 +0100, alberto fuentes wrote:
>
> (please, no html... thank you)
>
>> I get this at my testing box. Can anybody help me debug/fix this?
>>
>>
>> Mar 21 20:29:05 box kernel: [ 4787.555028] irq 19: nobody cared (try boo
On Wed, 21 Mar 2012 20:56:52 +0100, alberto fuentes wrote:
(please, no html... thank you)
> I get this at my testing box. Can anybody help me debug/fix this?
>
>
> Mar 21 20:29:05 box kernel: [ 4787.555028] irq 19: nobody cared (try booting
> with the "irqpoll" option)
I was plagued by this problem. I seemed to have fixed it by turning
of the firewire in Bios.
Best advice I saw in searching the net was to find out exactly what
device is causing the problem. Do that by finding out what devices
use the IRQ an turn them all off but one. Not so simple if a device
On 03/21/2011 07:29 PM, Wayne Topa wrote:
On 03/21/2011 05:34 PM, Mark Copper wrote:
On Mon, Mar 21, 2011 at 4:02 PM, Wayne Topa wrote:
On 03/21/2011 04:04 PM, Mark Copper wrote:
On Mon, Mar 21, 2011 at 1:49 PM, Wayne Topa wrote:
On 03/21/2011 01:56 PM, Mark Copper wrote:
On Mon, Mar 21,
On 03/21/2011 01:56 PM, Mark Copper wrote:
On Mon, Mar 21, 2011 at 12:07 PM, Wayne Topa wrote:
On 03/21/2011 10:49 AM, Mark Copper wrote:
On Sun, Mar 20, 2011 at 12:32 PM, Wayne Topawrote:
Linux Version 2.6.32-5-amd64
Compiled #1 SMP Wed Jan 12 03:40:32 UTC 2011
Two 1GHz AMD Athlo
On Mon, Mar 21, 2011 at 12:07 PM, Wayne Topa wrote:
> On 03/21/2011 10:49 AM, Mark Copper wrote:
>>
>> On Sun, Mar 20, 2011 at 12:32 PM, Wayne Topa wrote:
>>>
>>> Linux Version 2.6.32-5-amd64
>>> Compiled #1 SMP Wed Jan 12 03:40:32 UTC 2011
>>> Two 1GHz AMD Athlon 64 X2 Processors, 4GB RAM
>>>
On 03/21/2011 10:49 AM, Mark Copper wrote:
On Sun, Mar 20, 2011 at 12:32 PM, Wayne Topa wrote:
Linux Version 2.6.32-5-amd64
Compiled #1 SMP Wed Jan 12 03:40:32 UTC 2011
Two 1GHz AMD Athlon 64 X2 Processors, 4GB RAM
3999.52 Bogomips Total
I installed, back in February, Squeeze on 3 par
On Sun, Mar 20, 2011 at 12:32 PM, Wayne Topa wrote:
> Linux Version 2.6.32-5-amd64
> Compiled #1 SMP Wed Jan 12 03:40:32 UTC 2011
> Two 1GHz AMD Athlon 64 X2 Processors, 4GB RAM
> 3999.52 Bogomips Total
>
>
> I installed, back in February, Squeeze on 3 partitions. For 2 days
> Squeeze worked f
mick hudson wrote:
> Sorry to bother you but I am unable to load Debian 3.1 onto my Gateway
> computer.
>
> I am advised during the installation of an error message 8259A
> Interrupt IRQ 7.
>
> When I examine the system log there are lots of dependancy problems
> reported .
>
> I also note t
Joan,
I would suggest you to try a different kernel. I also experienced
problems in the past related with the usb driver, and the same or
similar problem to the one you report. At the time I was trying to use a
2.4 kernel and a 2.6 kernel solved the problem, but since you are using
a 2.6 kern
On Mon, 2005-07-04 at 22:55 +0200, Joan Tur wrote:
> Hallo!
>
> The above line appears in dmesg (followed by "[]
> __report_bad_irq+0x2a/0xa0" & similar lines), and everything connected to the
> 2 affected usb ports doesn't work fine (*).
>
> For instance an usb mouse hasn't got an smooth movem
On Wed, Sep 01, 2004 at 11:55:27AM -0700, God bless us all, everyone. wrote:
> Please CC me as I am unsubscribed.
> The boot loader reports:
> ttyS00 at 0x03f8 irq=4 is at 16550A
> ttyS01 at 0x02f8 irq=3 is at 16550A
> ttyS02 at 0x03e8 irq=4 is at 16550A
> The modem (which has failed all attempts t
On Tue, 2003-11-11 at 14:30, Ron Johnson wrote:
> On Tue, 2003-11-11 at 12:56, Alan Chandler wrote:
> > On Tuesday 11 November 2003 15:50, Ron Johnson wrote:
> > > On Tue, 2003-11-11 at 09:28, Ron Johnson wrote:
> > > > On Tue, 2003-11-11 at 08:20, Kjetil Kjernsmo wrote:
> > > > > On Tuesday 11 Nov
On Mon, Sep 08, 2003 at 02:54:36PM -0400, Sridhar Srinivasan wrote:
> On Sat, Sep 06, 2003 at 07:34:51PM -0500, Nathan Malmberg wrote:
> > I've been trying to use my PCMCIA wireless network card on my laptop,
> > but whenever I insert the card, I get the message:
> >
> > orinoco_cs: RequestIRQ: Re
On Sun, Sep 07, 2003 at 12:43:25PM -0500, Ron Johnson wrote:
> On Sat, 2003-09-06 at 19:34, Nathan Malmberg wrote:
> > I sent a similar message a few days back, but I don't believe it was
> > ever posted to the list. A second effort...
>
> I saw it a few days ago, but didn't answer since I don't
On Sat, Sep 06, 2003 at 07:34:51PM -0500, Nathan Malmberg wrote:
> I've been trying to use my PCMCIA wireless network card on my laptop,
> but whenever I insert the card, I get the message:
>
> orinoco_cs: RequestIRQ: Resource in use
>
> I'm using a 2.4.21 kernel I compiled myself, but my 2.4.
On Sat, 2003-09-06 at 19:34, Nathan Malmberg wrote:
> Debian Users,
>
> I sent a similar message a few days back, but I don't believe it was
> ever posted to the list. A second effort...
I saw it a few days ago, but didn't answer since I don't have a
notebook PC. However...
> I've been trying
On Sunday 15 September 2002 21:26, nate wrote:
> john gennard said:
> > I have two Realtek ND010 Fast Ethernet PCI cards on a box.
> > IRQ's 11 and 12 have been allocated (?by the hardware itself)
> > and I need 12 for my PS2 mouse.
> >
> > Using the 'irq_addr' option with ifconfig does not work -
* Eric Smith ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
> According to Oleksandr Moskalenko on Tue, Nov 06, 2001 at 12:05:43PM -0500:
>
> >
> > Eric, I had such a problem and solved it by changing the IRQ on a 3Com
> > card. Their diagnostics and install floppy works wonders in most cases.
> > Have you tried t
* Eric Smith ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) babbled:
>
> I solved the problem soon after sending the email by disabling
> irq 10 in the bios, then one card caught irq 9 and the other 4 -
> I thought there was meant to be some science in this stuff ;)
there is. bios almost always wins, especially when it
According to Oleksandr Moskalenko on Tue, Nov 06, 2001 at 12:05:43PM -0500:
>
> Eric, I had such a problem and solved it by changing the IRQ on a 3Com
> card. Their diagnostics and install floppy works wonders in most cases.
> Have you tried that one? This is the way that I've seen advised on t
* Eric Smith ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
> I have a RealTek and a 3com card which are both sharing the same irq
> viz. /proc/interrups:
>
> I did all I could on the simplistic CMOS that I have but I cannot
> allocate IRQ specifically to ports. I also ran the reltek dos
> diagnostics and setting ut
modules.conf (debian) <=> conf.modules (deprecated) would be updated by
editing your /etc/modutils/aliases file with the appropriate information
and then running update-modules to regenerate the /etc/modules.conf
file. Or you theoretically make an /etc/modutils/local file which (in
theory since I
On Wed, 8 Aug 2001 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I have installed a neclone2000 pci ethernet card and I get this error:
> ne2k-pci.c:v1.02 10/19/2000 D. Becker/P. Gortmaker
> http://www.scyld.com/network/ne2k-pci.html
> PCI: Found IRQ 11 for device 00:0a.0
> IRQ routing conflict for 00:0a
Hi there -
You picked a slightly fidgety ethernet card to use under linux - I know, I have
one from the same family. Don't worry, all it needs is some tweaking. The
site below can answer all your questions better than I can, but essentially
your card uses the #c59x series of drivers, but that
Turns out IRQ 0 meant that the card wasn't actually getting an IRQ at all
(thanks to the ever fabulous rcw :). I set the BIOS to a non-PNP OS and
all is well. :)
Matt Thompson [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Network Administrator
Williamson & Associates
http://www.wassoc.com
On Wed, 2 May 2001, Matt Thompso
on Mon, Apr 09, 2001 at 05:48:09PM -0600, Walter Schell ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
wrote:
Don't send HTML mail to list.
--
Karsten M. Self http://kmself.home.netcom.com/
What part of "Gestalt" don't you understand? There is no K5 cabal
http://gestalt-system.sourceforge.net/ http:/
Try disabling your USB controller, and see if it then works.
If you have onboard USB, you should be able to turn it off
in the bios.
David Frey <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
: I think I may be having problems with my NIC as a result of an IRQ conflict
between my NIC (D-Link DFE-530TX) and my USB c
Yes you (Gary) are right the problem happens cosistently with some cd's but far
infrequently with others. What catches my intrest is that this did not occur
with Red Hat . Are the cdrom drivers different between the two dristibutions ?
From dmesg I notice that Debian used "Uniform CD driver revi
Most Pentium based systems have two EIDE buses. Normally if you have one hard
drive and one CDROM drive you'll have each as the master device on each bus.
This would result in the devices /dev/hda and /dev/hdc.
This is optimal as the EIDE protocol only allows one device at a time to be
active on
On Fri, Dec 22, 2000 at 10:29:29AM -0800, Xucaen wrote:
>
> --- Balbir Thomas <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > Hi,
> > I recently switched from RedHat 6.2 to potato
> > and my cdrom seems to have the following
> > problems :
> > Most of the time I get errors like :
> >
> > hdb: irq timeout: statu
1) please don't post in HTML
2) just a guess: did you check in your BIOS that the "PnP OS" was set to
"Disabled" ?
If it isn't it might explain why linux doesn't see your hardware.
Besides, if all your peripherals are __still__ set to the same IRQ, you may
need to force the
IRQ settings in the
on Sun, Dec 17, 2000 at 03:25:56AM -0800, Erik Steffl ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
> I have internal modem (real one, it works, the question is not about
> it and I know I should get external one:-) which acts as a serial port.
> It is ISA PnP card, can use different IRQs.
Try: http://linuxmafia.
To find which IRQ a ISA PnP card is using, you need to use the ISA PnP
tools. I think it might even be installed with a default debian setup.
run "pnpdump" and it will scan for cards and tell you everything you need
to know about the device to get it running.
Of course refer to the manfiles
Erik Steffl <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
ES> I have internal modem (real one, it works, the question is not about
ES> it and I know I should get external one:-) which acts as a serial port.
ES> It is ISA PnP card, can use different IRQs.
ES>
ES> My main question is: how do I find out which IRQ it u
ktb wrote:
>
> On Sun, Dec 17, 2000 at 03:25:56AM -0800, Erik Steffl wrote:
> > I have internal modem (real one, it works, the question is not about
> > it and I know I should get external one:-) which acts as a serial port.
> > It is ISA PnP card, can use different IRQs.
> >
> > My main quest
Erik Steffl <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> asked:
> how do I find out which IRQ [my internal PnP modem] uses
> using linux tools?
I think by typing:
cat /proc/interrupts
Paul Huygen
On Sun, Dec 17, 2000 at 03:25:56AM -0800, Erik Steffl wrote:
> I have internal modem (real one, it works, the question is not about
> it and I know I should get external one:-) which acts as a serial port.
> It is ISA PnP card, can use different IRQs.
>
> My main question is: how do I find out
Thank you!
On Tue, 28 Nov 2000 14:46:58 +0100, Alson van der Meulen wrote:
>you should use echo 7 > /proc/parport/0/irq
>(maybe a bit different path, guess it's this one)
>
>don't ask me for the advantages of interrupt-driven mode, just telling
>how to enable it.
Marcelo
_
Ma
On Tue, Nov 28, 2000 at 11:06:40AM -0500, Marcelo Chiapparini wrote:
> Hi!
>
> I run a deb 2.2 system. When I try to print for the first time after boot
> , the system complies with the
> following message:
>
> " parport0: detected irq7; use procfs to enable interrupt-driven
> operation"
>
> wh
Jay Kelly wrote:
>
> Hello all,
> Im trying to get the soundcard to install. Im using kernel 2.2.16
> and am installing a SoundBlaster 16. I have enabled the options in
> the kernel and selested them as modules. I cat /proc/interrupts and it shows
> the sound card on irq 7. Then I want to the isap
better to try using the bios to change the IRQ, if that doesn't work --
if the soundblaster is PCI (i cant remember what a SB32 is..) try moving
the slot, if its ISA the default for it should be IRQ5(but your
system appears to be different :) ). if your video
card is PCI try changing the slot too
On Wed, 28 Apr 1999, Lazar Fleysher wrote:
> I have an older type pentium with AT-style board ( i think it is called
> that way, it has one 5-pin keyboard connector). I do not recall seeing
Tis indeed
> The motherboard itself has four pins sticking out and it says "PS/2
> mouse". So I thought, I
On Wed, 28 Apr 1999 12:51:23 -0500 (EST), you wrote:
>*- On 28 Apr, Lazar Fleysher wrote about "IRQ and PS/2"
>> Hi everybody,
>>
>> I have run out of IRQs.
>> Well, actually I have one left (IRQ12), but it is reserved for PS/2 bus.
>> I do not have a manual for my motherboard, so I do not k
On Wed, Apr 28, 1999 at 11:07:36AM -0700, Lazar Fleysher wrote:
> Hi everybody,
>
> I have run out of IRQs.
> Well, actually I have one left (IRQ12), but it is reserved for PS/2 bus.
> I do not have a manual for my motherboard, so I do not know how to disable
> the ps/2 bus.
Normally this is
-Oorspronkelijk bericht-
Van: Lazar Fleysher <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Aan: Debian User
Datum: woensdag 28 april 1999 19:12
Onderwerp: IRQ and PS/2
>Hi everybody,
>
>I have run out of IRQs.
>Well, actually I have one left (IRQ12), but it is reserved for PS/2 bus.
>I do not have a manual
*- On 28 Apr, Lazar Fleysher wrote about "IRQ and PS/2"
> Hi everybody,
>
> I have run out of IRQs.
> Well, actually I have one left (IRQ12), but it is reserved for PS/2 bus.
> I do not have a manual for my motherboard, so I do not know how to disable
> the ps/2 bus. I have a regular serial m
>
> Hi everybody,
>
> I have run out of IRQs.
> Well, actually I have one left (IRQ12), but it is reserved for PS/2 bus.
> I do not have a manual for my motherboard, so I do not know how to disable
> the ps/2 bus. I have a regular serial mouse and AT-type (5-pin) keyboard.
> The motherboard
The IRQ of the card is normally set in eeprom memory by a DOS
configuration program on the floppy which comes with the card.
Linux will normally only recognize one card. With more than one, you
should set the parameters of the both of them in /etc/lilo.conf or (if the
drivers are compiled as mod
alias eth0
options eth0 irq=??? io=0x???
alias eth1
options eth1 irq=??? io=0x???
On 12-Mar-99 Ferenc Kiraly wrote:
> Hi!
>
> I have a Debian machine with two network kards installed
> that use the same driver (3c59x). They both use the same
> interrupt (11). Is that ok/wrong/the way it m
Ok, one way to do this would be to change the IRQ of NIC. First, do 'cat
/proc/interrupts' to find which IRQs are unused. Then, since your NIC is
on the COM port, you can setserial a different IRQ to it. That can be
done by setserial /dev/ttyS# irq X Where # is the COm port where your NIC
is, an
>> Could some one tell me how to change the default irq settings for sound
>> card. Default is 7, mine is 5.
>> It is impossible to do it from make menuconfig...
>
>Use "make xconfig" or edit .config file directly.
>
>Alex Y.
My guess is that the content of .config is alright but it is ignored.
W
> Could some one tell me how to change the default irq settings for sound
> card. Default is 7, mine is 5.
> It is impossible to do it from make menuconfig...
Use "make xconfig" or edit .config file directly.
Alex Y.
--
_
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