From owner-freebsd-hackers Fri Jun 2 19:14:04 1995 Return-Path: hackers-owner Received: (from majordom@localhost) by freefall.cdrom.com (8.6.10/8.6.6) id TAA13187 for hackers-outgoing; Fri, 2 Jun 1995 19:14:04 -0700 Received: from crh.cl.msu.edu (crh.cl.msu.edu [35.8.1.24]) by freefall.cdrom.com (8.6.10/8.6.6) with SMTP id TAA13175 for ; Fri, 2 Jun 1995 19:13:58 -0700 Message-Id: <199506030213.TAA13175@freefall.cdrom.com> Received: by crh.cl.msu.edu (1.38.193.4/16.2) id AA24509; Fri, 2 Jun 1995 22:13:48 -0400 From: Charles Henrich Subject: Re: PCI Probe's To: rgrimes@gndrsh.aac.dev.com (Rodney W. Grimes) Date: Fri, 2 Jun 1995 22:13:48 -0400 (EDT) Cc: henrich@crh.cl.msu.edu, freebsd-hackers@FreeBSD.ORG In-Reply-To: <199505310618.XAA29899@gndrsh.aac.dev.com> from "Rodney W. Grimes" at May 30, 95 11:18:39 pm X-Mailer: ELM [version 2.4 PL23] Content-Type: text Content-Length: 684 Sender: hackers-owner@FreeBSD.ORG Precedence: bulk Fuck fuck fuck fuck. Okay guys, the PCI Mode configuration hack (er check) doesnt work for beans. (sys/i386/isa/pcibus.c) On a Compaq if you force mode 1 (by re-arranging the source code, see NetBSD sources for details that seemed to be stripped out of the FreeBSD source before entering the tree) the PCI bus (and adaptec 2940 in it) works just fine. Does anyone know how to really check for which mode the PCI bus is in? If not, we should at least do what the original NetBSD sources did and allow a kernel options line to specify the mode. -Crh Charles Henrich Michigan State University henrich@crh.cl.msu.edu http://rs560.msu.edu/~henrich/