RTNETLINK answers: Invalid argument
Travis Fraser
travis at snowpatch.net
Mon Dec 1 18:46:58 UTC 2003
On Mon, 2003-12-01 at 00:14, Clifford Snow wrote:
> On Sun, 2003-11-30 at 19:30, Dennis Kaptain wrote:
>
> > thanks for the speedy reply. I am pretty sure I found my real problem. It
> > looks here like eth1 a 3c590, and es1371 (my sound card) are "sharing" IRQ10.
> > To the best of my knowledge... You can't do that!! Now I found a problem but
> > I still don't know how to fix it. Both cards are PnP PCI cards without
> > jumpers to set the IRQ. Is there a way to forceably assign IRQs to PnP PCI
> > cards in software?
> >
> > [root at zozo proc]# cat interrupts
> > CPU0 CPU1
> > 0: 4995 5789 IO-APIC-edge timer
> > 1: 72 97 IO-APIC-edge keyboard
> > 2: 0 0 XT-PIC cascade
> > 5: 3703 121 IO-APIC-level eth0
> > 8: 1 0 IO-APIC-edge rtc
> > 10: 1 16 IO-APIC-level eth1, es1371
> > 11: 0 0 IO-APIC-level usb-uhci
> > 12: 68 217 IO-APIC-edge PS/2 Mouse
> > 14: 182 219 IO-APIC-edge ide0
> > 15: 6657 5925 IO-APIC-edge ide1
> > NMI: 0 0
> > LOC: 10694 10693
> > ERR: 0
> > MIS: 0
> I believe you can set the irq at boot by modifying grub, but I don't
> know the syntax.
>
> BTW - My IRQ 5 is shared between a pci nic card and usb and it runs just
> fine.
>
> Clifford
See if you can switch the NIC to another PCI slot on your mainboard.
Certain slots will share IRQs.
I had read somewhere that soundcards don't like to share IRQs.
Travis Fraser
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