On Sun, Jan 23, 2005 at 09:35:16PM +0100, Bernd Walter wrote: > On Sun, Jan 23, 2005 at 01:42:46PM +0300, Andrew L. Neporada wrote: > > On Sat, Jan 22, 2005 at 02:52:21PM -0700, M. Warner Losh wrote: > > > > > > Chances are you don't have things configured quite correctly in the > > > bios. The interrupts aren't asserting proplerly. > > > > Interrupts 3,4,10,11 are reserved for ISA cards in BIOS. > > Tweaking "PnP aware OS [Y/N]" setting doesn't help. > > I've tried to tweak all relevant (IMO) BIOS settings without any effect :-( > > The question is if the card is configured to issue int10 and 11 for > sio1 and sio2.
Err.. Do you mean sio2 & sio3 here? > The probing sounds like you get no interrupt at all, but since the int > probing waits for unassigned interrupts the test may fail for special > systems or BIOS setups. > [snip] > > Test tranfering data at any speed and check vmstat -i output if you > got interrupts for it. Everything works fine at 57600 & 115200 bod (tested with a simple program that sends data between sio2 & sio3). vmstat -i: interrupt total rate ata0 irq14 10793 8 ata1 irq15 15442 11 rl0 irq9 32249 24 atkbd0 irq1 2 0 sio0 irq4 6 0 sio1 irq3 7 0 sio2 irq10 981321 757 sio3 irq11 981382 757 clk irq0 129329 99 rtc irq8 165557 127 Total 2316081 1788 > > -- > B.Walter BWCT http://www.bwct.de > [EMAIL PROTECTED] [EMAIL PROTECTED] Andrew. _______________________________________________ freebsd-hackers@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-hackers To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"