>>> Ah, so they are all on the same bus. Yuck, performance is going to be >>> sucky. Bad Tyan, no cookie. That'll also explain the limited number of >>> interrupts available. I don't think there's anything we can do to help >>> the situation, sadly. >> I cannot affect the company equipment purchase policy either :/ >> 2 more servers on Tyan motherboards perform pretty bad also. > Well this IS PC hardware we're talkinga bout here. :) > > If you can show that some other OS is able to confgiure an alternate > interrupt then it might just be something up with ACPI. I actually want the NICs and SCSI controllers run in different kernel threads. I have found a year-old discussion on -current http://lists.freebsd.org/pipermail/freebsd-current/2004-January/019964.html about assigning physical IRQ lines to PCI devices; so I wanted to know if there is a way to force ACPI assign virtual interrupts a similar way. I hope I would have some vacant time this weekend to dig in the ACPI code a bit; I think it is not natural to assign a virtual IRQ for 2 devices if there are a plenty of free lines left...
>> Well, I dont experience any problems with the base system (the server >> has 4G of physical RAM btw). The ports collection isnt amd64-ready >> though. I compiled some ports patching their makefiles but some of them >> dont compile at all. Say, I failed to build vnc server from ports (I >> needed it to install Oracle) the only one I managed to build was an >> ancient realvnc (3.3.7), but I couldnt connect to it. I tried to compile >> realvnc 4.x from sources but ran into namespace issues (they were >> discussed on another thread here regarding some software package; seems >> to be a buggy gcc). So, Ive given up and happily installed an i386 >> version. > Well, thats not a failing of the ports system itself :-) Did you report > your problems to the port maintainers? Some of them before I have given up... _______________________________________________ freebsd-stable@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-stable To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"