>> >> Interrupts are very obviously broken. In this case, its waiting for an >> interrupt to verify that the 'hlt' instruction works. You can work around >> this as well, if you want, but its really going to be in your best interest >> to figure out whats wrong in the BIOS. > > Copying IRQ routing tables to 0xf0000...done. > Verifing copy of IRQ routing tables at 0xf0000...done > Checking IRQ routing table consistency... > check_pirq_routing_table() - irq_routing_table located at: 0x000f0000 > done. > Moving GDT to 0x500...ok > Adjust low_table_end from 0x00000530 to 0x00001000 > Adjust rom_table_end from 0x000f0400 to 0x00100000 > Wrote linuxbios table at: 00000530 - 000006ec checksum 622a > So it looks like the IRQ routing tables are copied to 0xf0000. This is the Upper Bios Area 0x0F0000(960K) - 0x0FFFFF(1MB) Correct?? Could this area be write only? I have the PAM register set to R/W. This is also the "shadow" Bios area, could that be the issue? Is there a way to dump this area in human readable format right after the check_pirq_routing_table() function, so I can see what the heck is going on here? By the way I used getpir.c to get my irq_tables.c file. Could this be messed up? If so how come the functions above do not detect any errors?
Thanks - Joe -- linuxbios mailing list [email protected] http://www.linuxbios.org/mailman/listinfo/linuxbios
