On Wednesday 22 February 2006 19:04, Gustavo A. Baratto wrote: > Two of our servers have an onboard broadcom NIC, and I noticed that in both > of them, the number of interrupts for the ata device is always the same as > the onboard bge device. I don't really understand what an ATA driver has to > do with the bge0, and worse, do these numbers below mean that there are two > interrupts going on where it should be just one? > > Thanks for any input... > > # vmstat -i > interrupt total rate > irq1: atkbd0 38 0 > irq6: fdc0 12 0 > irq13: npx0 1 0 > irq14: ata0 58 0 > irq15: ata1 192549752 165 > irq16: ahc0 1795054 1 > irq17: ahc1 15 0 > irq30: fxp0 545717199 468 > irq31: bge0 192987168 165 > cpu0: timer 2330016902 1999 > Total 3263066199 2800 > > > # Interrupt output from "systat -vmstat". The numbers for ata on icq 15 and > bge on irq31, are always the same here: > 2648 total > 1: atkb > 6: fdc0 > 13: npx > 14: ata > 212 15: ata > 16: ahc > 17: ahc > 222 30: fxp > 212 31: bge > 2002 cpu0: time
This is probably an instance of the interrupt aliasing problem with certain PXH bridges in Intel server chipsets. Unfortunately there is not a workaround as it the result of brain damage in the PXH design itself. -- John Baldwin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> <>< http://www.FreeBSD.org/~jhb/ "Power Users Use the Power to Serve" = http://www.FreeBSD.org _______________________________________________ [email protected] mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-hardware To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"
