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Date:      Fri, 29 Mar 2002 17:15:46 -0600 (CST)
From:      bdodson@scms.utmb.edu
To:        john@utzweb.net
Cc:        agorski@engin.umich.edu, freebsd-multimedia@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject:   Re: SB problem (was: Cat'ing /dev/audio)
Message-ID:  <200203292315.g2TNFmA97325@scms.utmb.edu>
In-Reply-To: <Pine.LNX.4.44.0203291636540.7667-100000@jupiter.linuxengine.net>

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Or moving the card to a different slot?

But, from your posting to the list, it seems you don't have a problem
any more, is that right?

You guys have saturated my knowledge base :(
Sorry

Bud

On 29 Mar, John Utz wrote:
> that's an interesting result
> 
> have you tried hardwiring the irq's in the bios?
> 
> 
> On Fri, 29 Mar 2002, Adam D. Gorski wrote:
> 
>> Ok.. I compared dmesg versus pciconf -l, and I found this.. I dunno if this
>> means anything, but I figured I'd mention it... the first matching works,
>> which is for my 3Com card:
>> 
>> * dmesg:
>> xl0: <3Com 3c900B-TPO Etherlink XL> port 0xd000-0xd07f mem
>> 0xe1000000-0xe100007f irq 9 at device 9.0 on pci0
>> 
>> * pciconf -l
>> xl0@pci0:9:0:   class=0x020000 card=0x900410b7 chip=0x900410b7 rev=0x04
>> hdr=0x00
>> 
>> So both show IRQ 9 (if I'm reading the output right) which seems fine..
>> but.. check out my RTL and SB outputs:
>> 
>> * dmesg
>> rl0: <RealTek 8139 10/100BaseTX> port 0x9800-0x98ff mem
>> 0xe0000000-0xe00000ff irq 11 at device 12.0 on pci0
>> 
>> pcm0: <Creative CT5880-C> port 0xa000-0xa03f irq 10 at device 11.0 on pci0
>> 
>> * pciconf -l
>> rl0@pci0:12:0:  class=0x020000 card=0x813910ec chip=0x813910ec rev=0x10
>> hdr=0x00
>> 
>> pcm0@pci0:11:0: class=0x040100 card=0x20001274 chip=0x58801274 rev=0x02
>> hdr=0x00
>> 
>> 
>> Ok, notice how one lists the SB @ IRQ 10, while the other shows it @ IRQ 11?
>> I dunno, just something that caught my eye based on the suggestions below.
>> 
>> Maybe this helps,
>> 
>> - Adam
>> 
>> 
>> On Fri, 29 Mar 2002 bdodson@scms.utmb.edu wrote:
>> 
>> ::On 29 Mar, Adam D. Gorski wrote:
>> ::> Hey,
>> ::>
>> ::> Thanks for the response. I went into my BIOS and told it that I don't have a
>> ::> PnP OS, but the modules still did not detect the card. So I re-compiled the
>> ::> kernel with 'device pcm', and the card is detected once again, but the
>> ::> problems persist. I'm going to try some things that were suggested still,
>> ::> and hopefully I'll get at least a step closer to the solution. Thanks once
>> ::> again!
>> ::>
>> ::> - Adam
>> ::>
>> ::
>> ::Hmm...  I'm out of ideas.  The bare 'device pcm' is right for devices
>> ::being configured by pnp (as all pci devices are).   'device pcm0 ......'
>> ::is right for devices which need to be hand configured (only isa or
>> ::pccard devices).  It sounds to me like you may have pci irq (or other
>> ::resource) conflicts.  You might try to do
>> ::
>> ::pciconf -vl (as root)
>> ::
>> ::and see if anything shows up that looks obviously bogus.  I'm sorry I
>> ::can't help you with the interpretation, but if you post the result to
>> ::the multimedia list, this may allow them to give you better help.
>> ::
>> ::Good luck,
>> ::Bud
>> ::
>> ::> On Fri, 29 Mar 2002 bdodson@scms.utmb.edu wrote:
>> ::>
>> ::> ::(reading your post via the archives, not subscribed to multimedia)
>> ::> ::
>> ::> ::I'm sure that someone will point out that FreeBSD is NOT a "PnP OS", so
>> ::> ::you need to set your BIOS to "PnP OS = NO".  I have no idea whether that
>> ::> ::will fix your problem, but I know for sure setting it to YES is wrong.
>> ::> ::That is probably why the modules did not work right: nothing is
>> ::> ::configuring PNP.
>> ::> ::
>> ::> ::Good luck,
>> ::> ::Bud Dodson
>> ::> ::
>> ::
>> ::

-- 
M. L. Dodson                                bdodson@scms.utmb.edu
409-772-2178                                FAX: 409-772-1790


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