Robert Collier <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Thats the wrong base address. So I flipped the base address to 0x3f8
> in the Bios, rebooted, and then findchip reported:
>
> Found NSC PC87338 Controller at 0x398, DevID=0x0b, Rev. 2
> SIR Base 0x3f8, FIR Base 0x3f8
> IRQ = 5, DMA = 0
> ^
> Enabled: yes, Suspended: no
> UART compatible: yes
> Half duplex delay = 0 us
>
> But it's set to 10 in the BIOS.
what does lspnp say? i'm curious because even though lspnp sees the
correct interrupt for my '338 chip, findchip and nsc-ircc report an
irq of 0. (which the driver intends to be an error, not
poll-the-iobase like in setserial). i'm not sure why
nsc-ircc/findchip and lspnp disagree in my case, although the putting
the driver in debug mode indicates that nsc-ircc thinks that the chip
isn't in PNP mode.
is there a reliable place to find documentation on the '338? mine
also gives a different version id than the driver expects... is this
something the OEM (in my case Gateway) sets when they solder on the
controller? ... one hypothesis is different versions have different
encodings for irqs and whatnot.
ian
--
----
Ian Soboroff [EMAIL PROTECTED]
University of MD Baltimore County http://www.cs.umbc.edu/~ian
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