Re: [newbie] more on Asus P4B533-E

2002-11-27 Thread Nikunj Bansal
If thats the case, then redhat seems to have done
something right. Coz I am able to use my existing
install of redhat from before my motherboard
replacement adventure and also I am able to get the
redhat 9.0 install CD to recognize all devices on the
onboard IDE controllers.

--- Alexander Rayborn <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
> I'm starting to think this is a bug in Intel's
> chipset design.  Mandrake
> refuses to recognize the IDE controllers are located
> on IRQs 14/15...
> then it complains on every boot:
>  
> PCI Resouce collisions 00:1F  (I'll post a complete
> dmesg if anyone is
> interested).
>  
> Alan Cox claims to have fixed this in the stock
> kernel with his patch
> tree, but I'm still too newbie to get a compiled
> kernel to boot.  It
> crashes after every boot.
>  
> What gets me thinking is... on these motherboards,
> Intel ships the
> "Intel Application Accelerator" which is basically
> nothing more than a
> package of UDMA drivers for the onboard IDE
> controllers.  It's starting
> to feel like they're compensating for something...
>  
> --Alexander
>  
> 


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[newbie] more on Asus P4B533-E

2002-11-27 Thread Alexander Rayborn
Title: Message



I'm starting to 
think this is a bug in Intel's chipset design.  Mandrake refuses to 
recognize the IDE controllers are located on IRQs 14/15... then it complains on 
every boot:
 
PCI Resouce 
collisions 00:1F  (I'll post a complete dmesg if anyone is 
interested).
 
Alan Cox claims to 
have fixed this in the stock kernel with his patch tree, but I'm still too 
newbie to get a compiled kernel to boot.  It crashes after every 
boot.
 
What gets me 
thinking is... on these motherboards, Intel ships the "Intel Application 
Accelerator" which is basically nothing more than a package of UDMA drivers for 
the onboard IDE controllers.  It's starting to feel like they're 
compensating for something...
 
--Alexander