[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

Re: [afnog]FreeBSD problem interface again!!!



Hi Brian,

The interfaces are now getting IRQ 10 and 11 but I still get a problem with the 
interface connected to the internet (xl0). The other interface which is 
connected to the internal net (rl0) is working fine. After I connected the mouse 
the IRQ 12 was no longer allocated to any of the interfaces thus resolving the 
watchdog timeout which was happening to both interfaces when the mouse 
was not present. Are you saying I should disable some other stuff like printer 
port or serial port to make those IRQs available to the interfaces? Actually 
IRQ 5 is available but none of the interfaces gets it. IS there a way of making 
an interface get a specific IRQ in FreeBSD? What happens now is that the 
internet interface works only for a few minutes and then stops and I can only 
get it going by doing a  /etc/netstart. Could it be another kind of problem?

Cheers,





On 2 Oct 2003 at 22:56, Brian Candler wrote:

> On Thu, Oct 02, 2003 at 07:26:03PM +0200, antonio at nambu.uem.mz wrote:
> > Hi all,
> > 
> > I have solved the problem with the watchdog timeout, it was due to the 
> > interrupt 12 which was being given to the nic, as soon as I plugged in a PS/2 
> > mouse the problem was solved (weird but true). Now I have another strange 
> > thing happening, the interface connected to the internet which is through a 
> > cable modem keeps stopping the traffic flow after every 2 or 3 minutes but if I 
> > restart the net with a /etc/netstart command it starts working again but soon 
> > stops again. Does anyone know what could be causing this?
> 
> It's almost certainly the same problem. IRQ12 is reserved for the PS/2
> mouse; don't try to re-use it.
> 
> Safe interrupts are generally IRQ10 or IRQ11; next safe ones are IRQ5 and
> IRQ9 (sometimes used for soundcards or COM3/COM4 or internal modems). If you
> *disable* the parallel port in the BIOS then you can use IRQ7. Don't use
> IRQ3 or IRQ4 unless COM2 or COM1 respectively have been disabled in the
> BIOS. If you disable the second IDE controller you can probably use IRQ14.
> None of the others are safe.
> 
> The fact that the "timeout" problem went away probably means that mouse
> interrupts are occuring when the software expects network interrupts. But of
> course, data may well not be there.
> 
> Regards,
> 
> Brian.



__________________________________________________
This is the Africa Network Operators' Group(AfNOG) 
technical discussion list.
The AfNOG website is: <http://www.afnog.org>