-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----

Fixed it!

The clue was buried in the serial HOWTO. Not explicitly, mind you. But it 
suggested running "lspci -vv" in regard to seeing how the PCI cards were 
really configured. When I did that I saw that the modem card was using I/O 
0xe000 instead of 0xec00 (which is what Windows says, and which worked fine 
in Linux without the network card installed). Anyway, putting that I/O 
address in the setserial call in rc.local did the trick.

Can't say I fully understand why any of this was necessary, but at least I 
now have a functioning modem in Linux again.

  Doc Evans
 

-----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-----
Version: PGP 6.0.2 -- QDPGP 2.60 
Comment: Key obtainable from servers: ID 0x6184B81D

iQCVAwUBOQYnRv2CFbFhhLgdAQFnWwQAlXC5aJ/U+9XR6jHn8Sq79jQOHVyLbZOy
ZSqdSl4/wMlxk3U0NgKyW+vUtfHWtbflHYan7ipi166Xvs2dcEk1UEw4y26TT42K
/dlUIAZ7P2j2q2tJgwCNzk0u6vad7zMNWZUVzz3pfQ72tPWhL1llV2uNd28wYznA
bm7rVf8TOzU=
=IaUr
-----END PGP SIGNATURE-----

----------------------------------------------------------
D.R. Evans N7DR / G4AMJ                      [EMAIL PROTECTED]

"Palindor Chronicles" information and extracts:
   http://www.sff.net/people/N7DR/drevans.htp
----------------------------------------------------------

Reply via email to