Eric Wieling aka ManxPower wrote:
Andrew Sayman wrote:
Okay, so I believe I've gotten rid of the IRQ conflict, and it's still
not working.
All analog FXO ports are considered answered when the dialing is
finished.
Thanks for this bit of information.
I went back with a Vonage modem (I'm
Andrew Sayman wrote:
Noah Miller wrote:
Depending on your BIOS and motherboard, you may be able to use
another IRQ if you move the card to a different PCI slot.
- Noah
This is a computer meant to be rack-mounted that I'm trying to install
this on. I certainly don't
Elwin Andriol wrote:
Don't know if this will help you any further, but. After some trouble
with IRQ sharing mayhem we solved our little problem by tinkering the
linux kernel. I forgot the names of the actual modules, but after
disabling modules for APIC support and something about IRQ sharing
Okay, so I believe I've gotten rid of the IRQ conflict, and it's still
not working.
What concerns me is that even channels with absolutely nothing connected
to the slots will say answered.
The log output looks like this:
-- Executing Dial(SIP/2000-401a, Zap/2/w9w15554014809) in new stack
Andrew Sayman wrote:
Elwin Andriol wrote:
Don't know if this will help you any further, but. After some trouble
with IRQ sharing mayhem we solved our little problem by tinkering the
linux kernel. I forgot the names of the actual modules, but after
disabling modules for APIC
Andrew Sayman wrote:
Okay, so I believe I've gotten rid of the IRQ conflict, and it's still
not working.
All analog FXO ports are considered answered when the dialing is finished.
--
Eric Wieling * BTEL Consulting * 504-210-3699 x2120
___
Andrew Sayman wrote:
Okay, so I believe I've gotten rid of the IRQ conflict, and it's still
not working.
What concerns me is that even channels with absolutely nothing connected
to the slots will say answered.
The log output looks like this:
-- Executing Dial(SIP/2000-401a,
Okay, so I believe I've gotten rid of the IRQ conflict, and it's still
not working.
What concerns me is that even channels with absolutely nothing connected
to the slots will say answered.
The log output looks like this:
-- Executing Dial(SIP/2000-401a, Zap/2/w9w15554014809) in new
Hi Andrew -
Is this likely to be the problem? Are there known issues with this
configuration? Does anybody have any advice on how to configure the
kernel not to share those IRQs?
Depending on your BIOS and motherboard, you may be able to use
another IRQ if you move the card to a different
Noah Miller wrote:
Depending on your BIOS and motherboard, you may be able to use
another IRQ if you move the card to a different PCI slot.
- Noah
This is a computer meant to be rack-mounted that I'm trying to install
this on. I certainly don't see any space for another PCI slot, so I
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