Nigel Roberts writes: > #10 0xc0237fbe in rl_rxeof (sc=0xc0b9d200) at ../../pci/if_rl.c:1151 > #11 0xc023827a in rl_intr (arg=0xc0b9d200) at ../../pci/if_rl.c:1342 > #12 0xc0279c7a in vec3 () > #13 0xc01c2196 in ether_output (ifp=0xc0ba4000, m=0xc076af00, dst=0xc0c28770, > rt0=0xc0c59d00) at ../../net/if_ethersubr.c:369 > #14 0xc01d4663 in ip_output (m0=0xc076af00, opt=0x0, ro=0xc02f9970, flags=1, > imo=0x0) at ../../netinet/ip_output.c:822
Was the realtek really at IRQ 3? I'm NOT an x86 hacker, and I don't understand the interrupt code there very well.. Is it possible to have an irq line which is shared between 2 devices which use different interrupt masks? If so, what prevents intr_mux() from being called for a TTY interrupt, and then calling another driver which shares the line but has a NET mask, even when NET interrupts are masked? Does this go away if you remove the serial line driver (sio) from your kernel? Can we see a (non verbose) dmesg from this box? Drew To Unsubscribe: send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with "unsubscribe freebsd-hackers" in the body of the message