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Fixed it!
The clue was buried in the serial HOWTO. Not explicitly, mind you. But it
suggested running "lspci -vv" in regard to seeing how the PCI cards were
really configured. When I did that I saw that the modem card was using I/O
0xe000 instead of 0xec00 (
Charles Curley wrote:
>
> On Mon, Apr 24, 2000 at 08:29:33AM -0600, D. R. Evans wrote:
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> ->
> -> On 23 Apr 00, at 18:03, Charles Curley wrote:
> ->
> ->
> -> > And in which case the card is out of spec. The PCI spec requires that
> -> > software be able to
On Mon, Apr 24, 2000 at 08:29:33AM -0600, D. R. Evans wrote:
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->
-> On 23 Apr 00, at 18:03, Charles Curley wrote:
->
->
-> > And in which case the card is out of spec. The PCI spec requires that
-> > software be able to assign a base address to the card in a
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On 23 Apr 00, at 18:03, Charles Curley wrote:
> And in which case the card is out of spec. The PCI spec requires that
> software be able to assign a base address to the card in all address
> spaces.
>
The card does appear to be in spec; I can indeed assign b
On Wed, Apr 19, 2000 at 07:59:17AM +0200, Jean-Louis Debert wrote:
-> "D. R. Evans" wrote:
-> > So I'm wondering, is there any way to get a device-by-device listing of
-> > what's occupying the various IRQs? (One hypothesis being that something
-> > else was sitting on IRQ 5 and moved to IRQ 10 wh
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On 19 Apr 00, at 7:59, Jean-Louis Debert wrote:
> "D. R. Evans" wrote:
> > So I'm wondering, is there any way to get a device-by-device listing of
> > what's occupying the various IRQs? (One hypothesis being that something
> > else was sitting on IRQ 5 and move
"D. R. Evans" wrote:
> So I'm wondering, is there any way to get a device-by-device listing of
> what's occupying the various IRQs? (One hypothesis being that something
> else was sitting on IRQ 5 and moved to IRQ 10 when the network card
> appeared and occupied IRQ 5. I know that the PCI bus is n
Trying to think logically about this so that I can generate a model of what
is going on.
If I can use the modem with no network card in the box, then that seems a
good test that at some level everything is OK.
But if the modem goes away when I add the network card, then that seems to
indicate
On Mon, 17 Apr 2000, you wrote:
>
> As I understand it, the modem gets configured to IRQ 10 during power-on by
> the PCI gubbins, so there's no way to control that.
>
It's a PCI modem??? Do this...go look and make SURE you
don't have to add any extra software for it to work under
Windows. Have
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On 17 Apr 00, at 11:44, John Aldrich wrote:
> On Mon, 17 Apr 2000, you wrote:
> > The modem is on IRQ 10, and the network card is on IRQ5. The I/O
> > addresses are also nicely different.
> >
> IRQ10 would seem to indicate a WinModem. Are you SURE it's
> not a
On Mon, 17 Apr 2000, you wrote:
> The modem is on IRQ 10, and the network card is on IRQ5. The I/O addresses are also
> nicely different.
>
IRQ10 would seem to indicate a WinModem. Are you SURE it's
not a WinModem? If it is, you will ALWAYS have trouble
accessing it, even if it *appears* to be w
I've tried to post this several times already over the course of the past few days,
but I have seen nothing appear on the reflector. Haven't received any bounce
messages either, so I don't know where the messages think they've been going.
Anyway, apologies if you've seen this before.
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