With regards to your message at 12:35 PM 11/3/00, W Bauske. Where you stated:
>It appears my dual PIII motherboard also uses interrupts above 15:
>
> CPU0 CPU1
> 0: 12903677 14055458 IO-APIC-edge timer
> 1: 1815 1917 IO-APIC-edge keyboard
> 2: 0 0 XT-PIC cascade
> 12: 522 96 IO-APIC-edge PS/2 Mouse
> 13: 0 0 XT-PIC fpu
> 14: 33744 26522 IO-APIC-edge ide0
> 15: 60 51 IO-APIC-edge ide1
> 18: 138908 135458 IO-APIC-level eth0
> 20: 152 152 IO-APIC-level ide4, ide5
> 22: 23588 23422 IO-APIC-level ide2
>
>So I suppose it would have similar problems with such cards. Course
>it doesn't do sound or modems.... Only disks.
Actually it doesn't.
It has 2 PCI buses. One is using the first 16 interrupts, the other the
next 16. Still, all cards are getting 4 bit addresses.
The BIOS reports numbers like this so they are distinguishable. Ultimately
it all maps to one PCI controller through a PCI-PCI bridge chip.
UP2K does the same, but is capable of assigning interrupts to much wider
range of numbers.
Note on your UP2K the one line:
47: 125946091 0 eth0
That's IRQ 47.
Do you see any IRQ #'s reported above 32 on the P3 box?
With our best regards,
Maurice W. Hilarius Telephone: 01-780-456-9771
Hard Data Ltd. FAX: 01-780-456-9772
11060 - 166 Avenue mailto:maurice@harddata.com
Edmonton, AB, Canada http://www.harddata.com/
T5X 1Y3
_______________________________________________
Axp-list mailing list
Axp-list@redhat.com
https://listman.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/axp-list
This archive was generated by hypermail version 2a22 on Fri Dec 1 08:00:06 2000 PST
Send any problems or questions about this archive to webmaster@alphalinux.org.