Yeah, I have read it too. There are 3 PCI slots and I can assign IRQs to them.
However, I'm going to puzzle you. I was not completely sure that I correctly 
concluded that the problem is related to my video card. I seen that it uses IRQ 
10 in the NVIDIA control panel. When the system boots, it shows the table with 
IRQs of different controllers and Display and Network controllers are linked to 
IRQ 10 also. Yet I could not understand why under Windows these devices share 
IRQ16. I assumed that under Solaris I see hexadecimal IRQ number, and hex 10 
corresponds to dec 16. I found your advice to execute dmesg command in the 
thread started by majorero and did it. To my surprise, the output informed me 
that several drivers share IRQ16 (!) with different interrupt levels. I 
recalled that you suspected that the sound card can be the culprit. Hence I 
dared to perform one more clear experiment. I installed Solaris Express from 
scratch and boot in console mode. There were no error about configuring IPv4 
interface, but my router didn't reply to a ping. I turned off th
 e computer and switched the power for a while (to reset any info cached in the 
network card). When I booted Solaris, I could ping the router - so you were 
right that simple rebooting from Windows to Solaris doesn't allow to work with 
LAN. The next step was installing the NVIDIA driver for the video card. I 
rebooted the system and loaded GNOME: I was able to surf the Web with Firefox! 
Cool, and I started to think that it is the sound card what kills my network 
card. I went further to confirm this and installed the Open Sound package and 
rebooted. Well, I still can access the Internet, display is working and I can 
play music ... Now I'm totally lost. I read that majorero gets inconsistent 
behavior of his network card and sound card, so I expect that some of the 
components can suddenly stop working on my machine too. I already got an error 
from an audio player about a problem in the data flow stream and the quality of 
the sound is very poor. So I guess that I would rather purch
 ase a PCI sound card in order to reveal a part of IRQ16 and get good sound. I 
would accept this as a norm if Windows would not handle this situation better. 
I hope that Solaris will be improved in this regard as I like it more than 
Windows and will try to work under Solaris anyway.
Thank you very much, Lars. I would leave the Solaris community without your 
timely support. I really appreciate your help.
 
 
This message posted from opensolaris.org
_______________________________________________
opensolaris-help mailing list
[email protected]

Reply via email to