Hi people, occasionally, I get "lost interrupt" messages in the logs of my ibook.
They typically show up when the hard disc drive is busy, e.g. when lots of packages are extracted during "apt-get upgrade". When this happens, the hard disc "stops" working for some seconds and then continues to work. The following messages are logged by the kernel, then: kernel: ide-pmac lost interrupt, dma status: 8400 kernel: hda: lost interrupt kernel: hda: dma_intr: status=0xd0 { Busy } kernel: kernel: ide: failed opcode was: unknown kernel: hda: DMA disabled kernel: ide0: reset: success After issuing "hdparm -d1 /dev/hda", DMA is enabled again and remains enabled, at least if the drive is not too busy at that time. If all goes well, the kernel says: kernel: hda: Enabling Ultra DMA 5 Some information on my ibook G4 (14' 933MHz model): - My /proc/cpuinfo says: processor : 0 cpu : 7455, altivec supported clock : 707MHz revision : 0.3 (pvr 8001 0303) bogomips : 710.65 machine : PowerBook6,3 motherboard : PowerBook6,3 MacRISC3 Power Macintosh detected as : 287 (iBook G4) pmac flags : 0000001b L2 cache : 256K unified memory : 640MB pmac-generation : NewWorld Kernel version is 2.6.12.1 (but I noticed the "lost interrupt" messages already with previous 2.6 versions). If more information is necessary (Kernel config?), just tell me. If this could be some HW problem, how can I test if this really happens due to HW faults or because of a problem in the Linux kernel? (Maybe I can figure this out with MacOSX? But how?) Thanks for any help, Vivenzio -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]