Plug and Play OS [Yes]
Should be No.
How does this setting effect traditional ISA, PNP ISA, PCI cards.
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On Fri, Mar 03, 2000 at 08:50:07PM +0900, Takanori Watanabe wrote:
In message [EMAIL PROTECTED], Navan Carson wrote:
Plug and Play OS [Yes]
Should be No.
How does this setting effect traditional ISA, PNP ISA, PCI cards.
This setting tells BIOS not to set any
In message [EMAIL PROTECTED], Nikolai Saoukh wrote:
And any version FreeBSD ever have been released expects BIOS to
set PnP setting.
Well,
what then pnp stuff (/usr/src/sys/isa/pnp*) do in -current?
They can
1. reads PnP setting from ISA PnP system.
2. write PnP setting as User specified.
Plug and Play OS [Yes]
Should be No.
How does this setting effect traditional ISA, PNP ISA, PCI cards.
Some might not be initiased. The basic point is that FreeBSD does not do
the device enumeration and therefore any device that has not been
configured by the BIOS
In message [EMAIL PROTECTED] Nikolai Saoukh writes:
: what then pnp stuff (/usr/src/sys/isa/pnp*) do in -current?
That just deals with the isa pnp expansion cards. the PnP BIOS
setting to "no" means that the BIOS will enable all the PnP (not just
ISA add on cards) devices before passing control
[Just a quick response, some things to try will follow this evening.]
Configuration Table[Disabled]
PCI IRQ setting[Auto]
PCI IRQ sharing[No]
should be Yes.
Plug and Play OS [Yes]
Should be No.
I thought that PCI IRQ
Hi:
I looked in BIOS setup to see if there were any settings that I could try
changing to make the boot floopies work. The only ones that I found that
seemed to apply were (defaults in brackets):
Configuration Table[Disabled]
PCI IRQ setting[Auto]
PCI IRQ