Linux-Hardware Digest #375, Volume #10           Mon, 31 May 99 16:13:32 EDT

Contents:
  Re: more winhardware?!? ("Lee Sharp")
  Re: /dev/sndstat file (Henrik Carlqvist)
  Re: I have a problem with my video card (Henrik Carlqvist)
  Re: Dual cpu problem (Swietanowski Artur)
  Re: modem prob. (not winmodem issue) (David C)
  Re: choosing an OS for a retired Sun -- no BSD? (Bob Keys)
  Re: Netscape & PPP (Walt Shekrota)
  Need some video recommendations (Sadlysaid)
  My Ethernet card is not in the list? ("Karlkim SK")
  Need help with Rockwell V.34 PnP modem ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
  Re: Zip Disks fail to Mount (Mircea)
  Re: Windows easy to install? BULLSHIT!
  Can Cirrus Logic 7556 work under 16bpp? (Edmond Song)
  still no LP device in kernel 2.2 (bryan)
  Modules options? (Sekwang Kim)
  Re: What are drawbacks to using an ISA NIC? ("Steve Snyder")
  Simultaneous network/IDE traffic = reboot (Roland Olsson)

----------------------------------------------------------------------------

From: "Lee Sharp" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: more winhardware?!?
Date: Mon, 31 May 1999 16:22:40 GMT

MkSd <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in article
<7Gx43.87$[EMAIL PROTECTED]>...

>  I read a post that mentioned  winprinters,
> and stated that the Lexmark 1000 is a winpinter,
> is this true?

   There is a database at
http://www.picante.com/~gtaylor/pht/printer_list.cgi which can answer that.
 According to it, it is a paperweight.  You might check
http://bimbo.fjfi.cvut.cz/~paluch/l7kdriver/ to see if he plans on writing
a driver.

> How much winhardware is out there?

   Way to damn much.  And the best part is that they don't tell you.  I
have no reservations about returning Wincrap.  I also will not recomend it
for my NT and Win9x customers.  <I am a consultant>  It is nasty for
everyone.  The thing is, with Windows, you may never know.  With Linux, you
do.  All the stuff I recomend/buy for NT Win9x customers is on Linux HCLs.
:-)  If they DEMAND an HP 820 cse, I will sell it to them, but I will tell
them why they are a bad plan.

                        Lee
-- 
SCSI is *NOT* magic. There are *fundamental technical reasons* why it is
necessary to sacrifice a young goat to your SCSI chain now and then. *
Black holes are where God divided by zero. - I am speaking as an
individual, not as a representative of any company, organization or other
entity.  I am solely responsible for my words.




------------------------------

From: Henrik Carlqvist <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: /dev/sndstat file
Date: Sun, 30 May 1999 18:52:30 +0200

Grant Lowe wrote:
> > Create it with "mknod" (man page available). 
> 
> That worked. Now how can I update the file to contain the right info?

Recompile your kernel or insert a module to support your soundcard.

regards Henrik
-- 
spammer strikeback:
root@localhost [EMAIL PROTECTED] [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[EMAIL PROTECTED] [EMAIL PROTECTED] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

------------------------------

From: Henrik Carlqvist <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To: alt.os.linux
Subject: Re: I have a problem with my video card
Date: Sun, 30 May 1999 19:15:37 +0200

r3dLiN3 wrote:
> I have a ATI graphics Pro turbo PCI (mach 64) with a Mach 64 VT chip
> and 1Mb of memory . When I start X , when I want to move a window ,
> some white points appear into .
> What can I do??

You could try the "no_block_write" option (more info about this in
/var/X11R6/lib/doc/README.Mach64). However, I have seen a problem like
this on a Mach64 when the "no_block_write" option didn't help. The only
way I could find to get rid of the problem was not to use the whole 1 MB
memory and only use 800x600 resolution with 8-bit color. This card was
probably broken in some way.

regards Henrik
-- 
spammer strikeback:
root@localhost [EMAIL PROTECTED] [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[EMAIL PROTECTED] [EMAIL PROTECTED] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

------------------------------

From: Swietanowski Artur <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: Dual cpu problem
Date: Mon, 31 May 1999 19:03:18 +0200

Dan Taylor wrote:
> 
> What expert setting do I us e to have my dual 350 MHz pentium 2 be
> recognized by the RedHat 6 intall program?

None. RH 6 by default installs an SMP kernel, and from there on you 
go parallel! Maybe the installation itself would use only one 
processor, but would you care? 

HTH,
=====================================================================
Artur Swietanowski                    mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Institut für Statistik,  Operations Research  und  Computerverfahren,
Universität Wien,     Universitätsstr. 5,    A-1010 Wien,     Austria
tel. +43 (1) 427 738 620                     fax  +43 (1) 427 738 629
=====================================================================

------------------------------

From: David C <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: modem prob. (not winmodem issue)
Date: 31 May 1999 12:43:48 -0400

"Jason Newland" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
> I ditched my winmodem, and went with an ext. usr 56.6 Faxmodem.  The
> problem is that when I connect with the minicom prog., an AT command
> returns "boot>" All other (atz,etc) commands return "error" from the
> modem.

If I didn't know better, I'd say that this modem doesn't support the
Hayes-AT command set that everybody in the world has supported since
2400bps modems were the norm.

Maybe the modem has some kind of emulation mode that's making it act
like a pre-Hayes standard modem?  Maybe there's a DIP switch that can
turn this mode off?  You'll definitely need the docs to know about this
(if you don't have them, maybe you can download them from USR?)

Does the modem include a document listing the modem's command set?  Can
you download one from USR's web site?  The only USR modem I ever owned
(a Sportster 14400 external) used the generic AT commands, with some
extensions.

If you post the exact modem's model name and number (from the tag on its
underside, usually), someone here familiar with it might be able to help
you.

In the worst case, take the Windows INF file (what Windows uses to know
how to control different brands of modems) and study it for clues as to
what commands the modem will accept.  If you can't figure out the
format, let me know and I'll try and help you through it.  I did this to
get my modem working before I was able to find proper documentation.

> I wouldn't think it the com/irq's, or cable because I am able to
> connect to the modem and receive those errors all day long without
> interuption.

That sounds logical.  Errors like that are almost certainly coming from
the modem itself, so the computer-modem communication is happening just
fine.

Good luck.

-- David

------------------------------

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Bob Keys)
Crossposted-To: 
comp.unix.bsd.openbsd.misc,comp.unix.bsd.netbsd.misc,comp.unix.bsd.freebsd.misc,comp.sys.sun.hardware,comp.unix.solaris,comp.os.linux.misc
Subject: Re: choosing an OS for a retired Sun -- no BSD?
Date: 31 May 1999 14:35:20 GMT

Philip Brown ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
: On 28 May 1999 14:33:18 GMT, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
: >...
: >I just posted a high rating of OpenBSD 2.5 on my Sparcs.  Lean, mean and
: >runs like a striped arsed ape, even on 12 meg ram running X.
: 
: that is too vague. say WHAT you are running now.
: For example, I bet you're not run any of:
: 
: fvwm
: CDE
: emacs
: netscape
:  [.. other popular, large apps]

Well, I run the SS1 and the IPX on OpenBSD 2.5 as web servers on my home
net for web testing.  Fvwm, vi (emacs---retch), netscape 4.08 (with the 
sunos 4.1.1 libs, and apache compiled from the 1.3.6 apache sources. 
Compiled in a dozen or so graphics packages (before the 2.5 distrib tree
was up) such as xfig, tgif, plotutils, and the like.  Compiled in TeX (my
own ports).   
 
: saying "runs well" is misleading, without giving an idea of the limitations.
: I could set up solaris on the same box with no graphics, and claim it
: "runs well" :->

I have not run into any particular limitations, yet, except that I can't
get it to boot from miniroot on a sun4 machine (4/110), and had to load
it up from the IPX and carry the drive over to the 4/110.

The SS1 has 64M ram and never seems to swap.  The IPX has 12M ram and
also does not seem to be swapping much (no lag time in the middle of
operations).  The IPX seems to run about twice as fast as the SS1, even
on 12M ram, loaded with X, netscape, and serving web pages.  On 12M ram,
I think that is doing rather well.

Solaris ran well, but was slow!  NetBSD I could never get up to what I
felt was sufficiently stable to make a production box, and I have tried
everything and every version I can lay hands on.  OpenBSD 2.5 betas
(both the snaps) and now the 2.5 release just ran out of the box, no
crashes, no fuss, .... they just work.  I was pleasantly surprised, and
well pleased, for what I need to do.  In my book, it has the hightest
ratings of any unix I use, after AIX, period.   Now, if I could only
get a satisfactory port to my Sun3 si machines....... still have to use
Sunos-4.1.1U1 on those critters, since the NetBSD code still does not
work well enough on si controllers to be stable on my machines.....

Bob


------------------------------

From: Walt Shekrota <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: Netscape & PPP
Date: Mon, 31 May 1999 10:51:23 -0400

AND if you edit the resolv.conf file make sure to shutdown netscape and
restart him. DNS conf gets cached and can confuse the hell out of you!
You could have the correct DNS info in resolv.conf and old instance of
netscape running telling you he can't resolve. Ow!
-Walt
Good Luck.

=========


Arvid Walter wrote:

> alpine <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> : i have established a network connection
> : but netscape is reporting that it could not find the domain name for
> : anything
> : i.e.:  netscape is not seeing the connection
>
> : running pent pro 200
> : sportster 56k internal
> : redhat 5.2
>
> : i have had this exact system working before and went through a new
> : hard drive
> : and now can't seem to get it to function properly
> hi,
>   did you try to ping.
>
>   ping www.redhat.com
>
> I guess your system doesnt know the dns of your provider.
> You have got to tell him ,by editing the /etc/resolve.conf - file and
>   establish a route in /etc/sysconfig/ somewhere.
>
> live long and prosper,
>   asa.
> --
> mail me to get the complete of my signature



--
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Walt Shekrota                    Prefers USPS shipping method
Chapel Hill, NC 27514 USA
mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]




------------------------------

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Sadlysaid)
Subject: Need some video recommendations
Date: 31 May 1999 18:08:48 GMT

Hi. This what I want to be able to do under Linux, and want some
recommendations. I checked out some sights, but they were mostly reviews...so
it was assuming I knew what to compae to. But, here is what I want to do:

Play Quake II/III
Play Unreal via VMWare w/ Win98 (unless you can play it nativley on Linux)
Watch TV on my Linux box
Capture video on my Linux box

So, what is recommended? I know you need(or it is recommended) to use a Voodoo
2 card for Quake II/III. But, what can I use to connect my TV signal into
Linux? And what should I use for video capture? A quickcam? I am not looking
for one ard to do everything, just a recommendation of what i should get.

For an example:

Voodoo2 16mb      (for video)
QuickCam (parrelport)    (for video capture)
Video-I?O board     (for TV signal and maybe video capture)

I would greatly appreciate any recommendations. Thank you.

Please cc me any replies



------------------------------

From: "Karlkim SK" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: My Ethernet card is not in the list?
Date: Mon, 31 May 1999 15:13:08 GMT

Hi,
    I'm a new comer of Linux. I just installed Slackware 4.0. Everything
looks fine. But I couldn't  find the way to setup my Ethernet card.

My Ethernet card is "Allied Telesyn AT-2400 10Mb PCI." If I can't find in
the list, It means I can't use it, right?
    What should I do now? Contact Allied Telesyn or just wait for the new
module.
    I heard that in Linux community if you report some new hardware, the
driver will come soon. Is it true? If so, is it good to report here.

any help would be appreciated,
Karlkim SK
(Remove NoSpam. from my e-mail address



------------------------------

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Need help with Rockwell V.34 PnP modem
Date: Mon, 31 May 1999 14:53:17 -0400

I'm trying to setup my modem in linux
5.2.

I've got isapnp running and it returns
that
I have a ROK0030 Rockwell V.34 PnP
Modem.  I setup
/dev/modem to point to /dev/cua0.  I
start up minicom
and attempt to get it to dial, but
nothing happings.
I've tried several AT commands and I get
no response.
When I exit out of the program, I
sometimes hear to
modem attept to dial and then reset. 
What am I missing
to get this working?

------------------------------

From: Mircea <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: Zip Disks fail to Mount
Date: Mon, 31 May 1999 11:28:57 -0400

I have a zip disk which constantly fails to be mounted in my Slackware
3.6 box. That's just 1 in about 20, so I guess the disk is having some
trouble, and not the drive. Basically, it's not recognized when I try to
mount it, so I go out and fdisk it, I have to delete all kind of crappy
partitions that show-up from nowhere on the disk, then I mke2fs, and all
seems well, it can be used normally to write, read files, etc. But it
only works until I umount it, because when it gets mounted back (even if
I haven't ejected it from the unit), it's the same crap all over again,
FUBAR. So your disks may be defective.

MST

"Marc B. Sitkin" wrote:
> 
> I've got a problem mounting Zip disks. Some will mount perfectly well,
> others not at all. All are formated for Windows file systems, and work
> on windows machines (or Mac's)
> They simply refuse to mount or reformat on Linux. Any help in pointing
> me to a solution would be greatly appreciated.
> 
> thia
> marc sitkin

------------------------------

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] ()
Crossposted-To: comp.os.ms-windows.advocacy,comp.os.linux.setup
Subject: Re: Windows easy to install? BULLSHIT!
Date: Mon, 31 May 1999 12:11:38 -0700

On Mon, 31 May 1999 01:54:59 GMT, [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>After reading all these adventures and misadventures with installing
>and configuraing various OSes, I can't help but wonder if HAL's
>explanation is correct. I quote loosely "These things are always
>attributable to human error."

        Just how can you attribute Win9x deciding to install some
        phantom device that has never been near the system in 
        question as 'attributable to human error' beyond the trivial:
        'a human built it so it was a human that fucked up construction'?

-- 
 
      Novice end users deserve better than a               |||
        random collection of spare parts optimized        / | \
        for cost rather than ease...
         
                In search of sane PPP Docs? Try http://penguin.lvcm.com

------------------------------

Crossposted-To: comp.os.linux.x,comp.os.linux.setup
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Edmond Song)
Subject: Can Cirrus Logic 7556 work under 16bpp?
Date: Mon, 31 May 1999 19:14:10 GMT


Hi, there,

Through some manipulation of X server, I finally get my clgd card run
under 8 bpp. But when I issue startx -- -bpp 16, the color isn't right,
very dim background which is useless. I put a line under screen section
at weight 555, initially the X brought up. Just a few seconds, it dies
with no error messages. I have tried to include many parameters, such
as option "linear" option "noaccel", fast_dram , slow_draw, nobitblt, etc,
it just won't work!

Could any experts give me some suggestions? Many thanks.

-- 
--
Edmon
Is Cao Cao a wicked man? That is only a novel, don't believe it. 

------------------------------

From: bryan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: still no LP device in kernel 2.2
Date: Mon, 31 May 1999 19:02:01 GMT

I read the parport.txt file, etc, etc.  I tried to follow its
instructions.  but I still can't get /dev/lp1 to work.

afaik, if it doesn't show up in /proc/interrupts then it wont work, right?

I assigned the printer port to standard io and irq (0x378,7) yet its
not in /proc/devices or interrupts.

I did the insmod thing and this came out on /var/log/messages:

May 31 11:56:25 Bryan kernel: parport0: PC-style at 0x378, irq 7 [SPP,PS2,EPP]


so what else do I have to do?  lpd is running just fine.  I can stop
and restart the lpd daemon but that doesn't help.  files just keep
building up in the queue and not printing.

and I never see anything good about lp1 in 'dmesg'.

help!

-- 
Bryan

------------------------------

From: Sekwang Kim <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Modules options?
Date: Tue, 01 Jun 1999 01:05:58 +0900

Dear Linux Mania!
I have a problem about installing the Redhat 6.0 using FTP .
My ethernet card is "Intel express pro 10 "
I had to describe the module options when i installed the RedHat 6.0.
So. I searched the module "Interl express pro 10" card .
I found the modul name of this "eepro.o"
So. I wrote the "eepro.o" in the module options But
My computer didn't do anything....
How can i solve this problem?



------------------------------

Crossposted-To: comp.os.linux.networking
From: "Steve Snyder" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: "Steve Snyder" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: What are drawbacks to using an ISA NIC?
Date: Mon, 31 May 1999 15:40:46 GMT

1. I mis-wrote the expected top speed.  The cable modem moves a maximum of
3 megabits, not 3 megabytes, per second.  That should be well within the
capabilities of the ISA bus.  Sorry for the confusion.

2. That PCI slot is definitely defective.  Using a PCI NIC in that slot,
packets can be sent but not received.  I tried 2 different NICs in that
slot and examined all the IRQs in the system before deciding the slot was
bad.

Thanks for the response.


On Sun, 30 May 1999 21:47:58 -0700, Tim Moore wrote:

>ISA is clocked at 8.3MHz, PCI at 33MHz.  ISA has more CPU overhead too.
>
>This card is 10bT if I recall correctly, so it won't move more than
>about 850KB/s.  If you want 3MB/s you'll have to go 100bT which means
>PCI.
>
>Are you sure the slot is defective?  My PCI slots 4&5 share an IRQ which
>could cause weird behavior under some circumstances.  Other boards that
>have built-in SCSI, sound, etc are known to share IRQ's with particular
>PCI slots.
>
>Steve Snyder wrote:
>> 
>> I discovered (by trying to use it) that the last unused PCI slot in my
>> system is defective.  This forced me to add an ISA NIC (a 3Com 3C509B)
>> instead of the PCI device I had planned on.
>> 
>> The ISA NIC is working well.  I wonder, though, what the drawbacks are
>> compared to a PCI NIC.  This device is just attached to a cable modem,
>> which suggests that it will never be called upon to move more than
>> 3MB/second anyway.
>> 
>> Is interrupt latency higher with an ISA NIC?  Increased CPU use?  The
>> initial install involves more work because you have to specify the IRQ and
>> I/O port address range.  Now that the installation is done, though, I'm
>> interested in runtime gotchas.
>> 
>> Thank you.
>> 
>> ***** Steve Snyder *****
>
>-- 
>direct replies substitute timothymoore for user name
>
>"Everything is permitted.  Nothing is forbidden."
>                                   WS Burroughs.


***** Steve Snyder *****




------------------------------

Date: Mon, 31 May 1999 21:12:25 +0200
From: Roland Olsson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To: comp.os.linux.networking
Subject: Simultaneous network/IDE traffic = reboot

This is a multi-part message in MIME format.
==============0B567FA2BC1A6CBE88523E35
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit

Hi,

I have stumbled upon a _big_ problem with my machine. It makes a silent
and instantaneous soft reboot when performing (pretty tough) disk and
network access at the same time. I noticed this when trying to transfer
some 10+ Mb files from this machine as the screen just turned black and
the BIOS "welcome" screen appeared. No kernel oops or other message,
just a plain reboot. I can't find anything in the logs either. *sigh*

If I am using the machine "normally" everything works just fine. That is
no fiddling with large files or performing any extreme network activity.

I have found a very simple way of reproducing the crash. Just do a 'ping
-f' to the machine for a second or so and run 'hdparm -t /dev/hda' at
the same time. It reboots almost immediately. One more thing, if I do
'ping -f' locally no matter to what address/if, I can't make it crash.
But from another machine - reboot.

I have checked everything I can think of, i.e. conflicting IRQ:s, DMA
etc. I have tried to reassign almost everything in the BIOS but to no
avail. Also tested the 2.2.9 kernel but same thing there. I do not know
what to do next, does anyone of you have an idea?

Some facts about the machine:
  Intel Celeron 333
  128Mb DIMM
  Motherboard Abit BH6 (Award BIOS rev 4.51PG)
  2pcs NIC 3Com 3C905B-TX
  Seagate Medalist ST38420A IDE 8,6Gb
  Redhat 6.0 (kernel build 2.2.5-15)

Attached are some files from /proc that may or may not help you to help
me.

Regards,
/Roland
==============0B567FA2BC1A6CBE88523E35
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii;
 name="boot-allinfo"
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="boot-allinfo"

::::::::::::::
cpuinfo
::::::::::::::
processor       : 0
vendor_id       : GenuineIntel
cpu family      : 6
model           : 6
model name      : Celeron (Mendocino)
stepping        : 0
cpu MHz         : 334.098612
cache size      : 128 KB
fdiv_bug        : no
hlt_bug         : no
sep_bug         : no
f00f_bug        : no
fpu             : yes
fpu_exception   : yes
cpuid level     : 2
wp              : yes
flags           : fpu vme de pse tsc msr pae mce cx8 sep mtrr pge mca cmov pat pse36 
mmx osfxsr
bogomips        : 333.41

::::::::::::::
devices
::::::::::::::
Character devices:
  1 mem
  2 pty
  3 ttyp
  4 ttyS
  5 cua
  7 vcs
 10 misc
 29 fb
 36 netlink
128 ptm
136 pts

Block devices:
  1 ramdisk
  3 ide0
  9 md
::::::::::::::
dma
::::::::::::::
 4: cascade
::::::::::::::
dmesg
::::::::::::::
Linux version 2.2.5-15 ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) (gcc version egcs-2.91.66 
19990314/Linux (egcs-1.1.2 release)) #1 Mon Apr 19 23:00:46 EDT 1999
Detected 334098612 Hz processor.
Console: colour dummy device 80x25
Calibrating delay loop... 333.41 BogoMIPS
Memory: 63140k/65536k available (996k kernel code, 412k reserved, 928k data, 60k init)
VFS: Diskquotas version dquot_6.4.0 initialized
CPU: Intel Celeron (Mendocino) stepping 00
Checking 386/387 coupling... OK, FPU using exception 16 error reporting.
Checking 'hlt' instruction... OK.
POSIX conformance testing by UNIFIX
mtrr: v1.26 (19981001) Richard Gooch ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
PCI: PCI BIOS revision 2.10 entry at 0xfb460
PCI: Using configuration type 1
PCI: Probing PCI hardware
Linux NET4.0 for Linux 2.2
Based upon Swansea University Computer Society NET3.039
NET4: Unix domain sockets 1.0 for Linux NET4.0.
NET4: Linux TCP/IP 1.0 for NET4.0
IP Protocols: ICMP, UDP, TCP, IGMP
Initializing RT netlink socket
Starting kswapd v 1.5 
vesafb: framebuffer at 0xe6000000, mapped to 0xc4800000, size 4096k
vesafb: mode is 1024x768x32, linelength=4096, pages=0
vesafb: protected mode interface info at c000:7ee0
vesafb: scrolling: redraw
vesafb: directcolor: size=8:8:8:8, shift=24:16:8:0
Console: switching to colour frame buffer device 128x48
fb0: VESA VGA frame buffer device
Detected PS/2 Mouse Port.
Serial driver version 4.27 with MANY_PORTS MULTIPORT SHARE_IRQ enabled
ttyS00 at 0x03f8 (irq = 4) is a 16550A
pty: 256 Unix98 ptys configured
apm: BIOS version 1.2 Flags 0x07 (Driver version 1.9)
Real Time Clock Driver v1.09
RAM disk driver initialized:  16 RAM disks of 4096K size
PIIX4: IDE controller on PCI bus 00 dev 39
PIIX4: not 100% native mode: will probe irqs later
    ide0: BM-DMA at 0xf000-0xf007, BIOS settings: hda:DMA, hdb:DMA
    ide1: BM-DMA at 0xf008-0xf00f, BIOS settings: hdc:DMA, hdd:DMA
hda: ST38420A, ATA DISK drive
hdb: Pioneer CD-ROM ATAPI Model DR-A12X 0100, ATAPI CDROM drive
ide0 at 0x1f0-0x1f7,0x3f6 on irq 14
hda: ST38420A, 8223MB w/512kB Cache, CHS=1048/255/63
hdb: ATAPI 12X CD-ROM drive, 128kB Cache
Uniform CDROM driver Revision: 2.54
floppy0: no floppy controllers found
md driver 0.90.0 MAX_MD_DEVS=256, MAX_REAL=12
raid5: measuring checksumming speed
raid5: using high-speed MMX checksum routine
   pII_mmx   :   813.054 MB/sec
   p5_mmx    :   787.908 MB/sec
   8regs     :   576.072 MB/sec
   32regs    :   413.766 MB/sec
using fastest function: pII_mmx (813.054 MB/sec)
scsi : 0 hosts.
scsi : detected total.
md.c: sizeof(mdp_super_t) = 4096
Partition check:
 hda: hda1 hda2 < hda5 hda6 hda7 hda8 hda9 >
autodetecting RAID arrays
autorun ...
... autorun DONE.
VFS: Mounted root (ext2 filesystem) readonly.
Freeing unused kernel memory: 60k freed
Adding Swap: 72256k swap-space (priority -1)
3c59x.c:v0.99H 11/17/98 Donald Becker 
http://cesdis.gsfc.nasa.gov/linux/drivers/vortex.html
eth0: 3Com 3c905B Cyclone 100baseTx at 0xe400,  00:50:04:35:47:48, IRQ 10
  Internal config register is 1800000, transceivers 0xa.
  8K byte-wide RAM 5:3 Rx:Tx split, autoselect/Autonegotiate interface.
  MII transceiver found at address 24, status 786d.
  MII transceiver found at address 0, status 786d.
  Enabling bus-master transmits and whole-frame receives.
eth1: 3Com 3c905B Cyclone 100baseTx at 0xe800,  00:50:04:35:44:e8, IRQ 11
  Internal config register is 1800000, transceivers 0xa.
  8K byte-wide RAM 5:3 Rx:Tx split, autoselect/Autonegotiate interface.
  MII transceiver found at address 24, status 786d.
  MII transceiver found at address 0, status 786d.
  Enabling bus-master transmits and whole-frame receives.
eth0: Initial media type Autonegotiate.
eth0: MII #24 status 786d, link partner capability 0020, setting half-duplex.
eth0: vortex_open() InternalConfig 01800000.
eth0: vortex_open() irq 10 media status 8080.
eth1: Initial media type Autonegotiate.
eth1: MII #24 status 786d, link partner capability 41e1, setting full-duplex.
eth1: vortex_open() InternalConfig 01800000.
eth1: vortex_open() irq 11 media status 8080.
eth0: Media selection timer tick happened, Autonegotiate.
eth0: MII transceiver has status 7869.
eth1: Media selection timer tick happened, Autonegotiate.
eth1: MII transceiver has status 7869.
Installing knfsd (copyright (C) 1996 [EMAIL PROTECTED]).
nfsd_init: initialized fhcache, entries=256
CSLIP: code copyright 1989 Regents of the University of California
SLIP: version 0.8.4-NET3.019-NEWTTY-MODULAR (dynamic channels, max=256) (6 bit 
encapsulation enabled).
SLIP linefill/keepalive option.
cat uses obsolete /proc/pci interface
::::::::::::::
interrupts
::::::::::::::
           CPU0       
  0:      87868          XT-PIC  timer
  1:        933          XT-PIC  keyboard
  2:          0          XT-PIC  cascade
  8:          2          XT-PIC  rtc
 10:       1598          XT-PIC  eth0
 11:        441          XT-PIC  eth1
 13:          1          XT-PIC  fpu
 14:     654584          XT-PIC  ide0
NMI:          0
::::::::::::::
ioports
::::::::::::::
0000-001f : dma1
0020-003f : pic1
0040-005f : timer
0060-006f : keyboard
0070-007f : rtc
0080-008f : dma page reg
00a0-00bf : pic2
00c0-00df : dma2
00f0-00ff : fpu
01f0-01f7 : ide0
03c0-03df : vga+
03f6-03f6 : ide0
03f8-03ff : serial(auto)
e400-e47f : eth0
e800-e87f : eth1
f000-f007 : ide0
f008-f00f : ide1
::::::::::::::
modules
::::::::::::::
slip                    7636   2 (autoclean)
slhc                    4392   1 (autoclean) [slip]
nfsd                  151576   8 (autoclean)
lockd                  31208   1 (autoclean) [nfsd]
sunrpc                 52420   1 (autoclean) [nfsd lockd]
3c59x                  18472   2 (autoclean)
::::::::::::::
pci
::::::::::::::
PCI devices found:
  Bus  0, device   0, function  0:
    Host bridge: Intel 440BX - 82443BX Host (rev 2).
      Medium devsel.  Master Capable.  Latency=64.  
      Prefetchable 32 bit memory at 0xe0000000 [0xe0000008].
  Bus  0, device   1, function  0:
    PCI bridge: Intel 440BX - 82443BX AGP (rev 2).
      Medium devsel.  Master Capable.  Latency=64.  Min Gnt=128.
  Bus  0, device   7, function  0:
    ISA bridge: Intel 82371AB PIIX4 ISA (rev 2).
      Medium devsel.  Fast back-to-back capable.  Master Capable.  No bursts.  
  Bus  0, device   7, function  1:
    IDE interface: Intel 82371AB PIIX4 IDE (rev 1).
      Medium devsel.  Fast back-to-back capable.  Master Capable.  Latency=64.  
      I/O at 0xf000 [0xf001].
  Bus  0, device   7, function  2:
    USB Controller: Intel 82371AB PIIX4 USB (rev 1).
      Medium devsel.  Fast back-to-back capable.  Master Capable.  Latency=64.  
      I/O at 0xe000 [0xe001].
  Bus  0, device   7, function  3:
    Bridge: Intel 82371AB PIIX4 ACPI (rev 2).
      Medium devsel.  Fast back-to-back capable.  
  Bus  0, device  13, function  0:
    Ethernet controller: 3Com 3C905B 100bTX (rev 48).
      Medium devsel.  IRQ 10.  Master Capable.  Latency=64.  Min Gnt=10.Max Lat=10.
      I/O at 0xe400 [0xe401].
      Non-prefetchable 32 bit memory at 0xea001000 [0xea001000].
  Bus  0, device  15, function  0:
    Ethernet controller: 3Com 3C905B 100bTX (rev 48).
      Medium devsel.  IRQ 11.  Master Capable.  Latency=64.  Min Gnt=10.Max Lat=10.
      I/O at 0xe800 [0xe801].
      Non-prefetchable 32 bit memory at 0xea000000 [0xea000000].
  Bus  0, device  17, function  0:
    VGA compatible controller: Matrox Mystique (rev 3).
      Medium devsel.  Fast back-to-back capable.  Master Capable.  Latency=64.  
      Prefetchable 32 bit memory at 0xe6000000 [0xe6000008].
      Non-prefetchable 32 bit memory at 0xe7000000 [0xe7000000].
      Non-prefetchable 32 bit memory at 0xe8000000 [0xe8000000].


==============0B567FA2BC1A6CBE88523E35==


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