Warly writes:
 > Mikko Huhtala <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:

 > > machine is booted after install, cardmgr comes up and seems to be
 > > running, but no cards are detected. I have a network card in one slot
 > > and a modem in the other. If I eject one or the other card, the system
 > > hangs immediately.

 > 
 > try to boot with devfs=nomount and test if that works 
 > -- 
 > Warly


In dmesg kernel card services say

PCI: No IRQ known for interrupt pin A of device 00:02.0.
PCI: No IRQ known for interrupt pin B of device 00:02.1.
Yenta IRQ list 06b8, PCI irq0
Socket status: 30000011
Yenta IRQ list 06b8, PCI irq0
Socket status: 30000011

So it seems that IRQs do not get assigned correctly, but I suspect
this is only a symptom of actual problem.

I tried with 'devfs=nomount' as well as 'pci=biosirq' (recommended by
cardmgr) both separately and together. The problem presists. My case
seems to be a bit different from the one reported elsewhere in this
thread in that if I boot without the cards and then plug one (does not
matter which one) in when the system is up and cardmgr is running, the
system does hang.

Mikko

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