In message: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Kirk Strauser <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: : On Tuesday 10 May 2005 16:15, Warner Losh wrote: : : > I have no idea what you are asking for. : : Let me restate my original dilemma. My laptop can only use my WLAN card : when it's configured as a 16-bit PCMCIA device and not as a 32-bit CardBus : device.
I have several such devices. : In NetBSD, this can be accomplished by typing "boot -c" at its loader prompt : and typing "disable cbb*" to disable the cbb (CardBus) drivers, which : leaves the pcic (PCMCIA) drivers to correctly configure the card. After : doing this, the card works exactly as hoped. Why do you need to disable CardBus. The bridge should automatically detect that it is a R2 card (16-bit) and do the right thing. : However, commenting out "device cbb" in my FreeBSD kernel results in a : non-working setup. By that, I mean that the card's lights never flicker as : it's being inserted (as it would do under NetBSD and Linux when it's being : probed). In fact, I get no debugging information at all, whether : from /var/log/messages or via dmesg. : : Any ideas where I could go from here? In addition to my earlier suggestion, you can enable 'hw.cbb.debug=1' and 'hw.cardbus.debug=1' and 'hw.pccard.debug=1' and 'hw.pccard.cis_debug=1' for a much more chatty boot. This won't solve your problem, but will give me a clue about what might be going on. Warner _______________________________________________ freebsd-stable@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-stable To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"