On Wed, 23 Feb 2005, Zbynek Houska wrote: > Feb 23 12:58:35 mailsrv Linux Plug and Play Support v0.97 (c) Adam Belay > Feb 23 12:58:35 mailsrv pnp: PnP ACPI init > Feb 23 12:58:35 mailsrv pnp: PnP ACPI: found 12 devices > Feb 23 12:58:35 mailsrv SCSI subsystem initialized > Feb 23 12:58:35 mailsrv usbcore: registered new driver usbfs > Feb 23 12:58:35 mailsrv usbcore: registered new driver hub > Feb 23 12:58:35 mailsrv PCI: Using ACPI for IRQ routing > Feb 23 12:58:35 mailsrv ** PCI interrupts are no longer routed > automatically. If this > Feb 23 12:58:35 mailsrv ** causes a device to stop working, it is > probably because the > Feb 23 12:58:35 mailsrv ** driver failed to call pci_enable_device(). > As a temporary > Feb 23 12:58:35 mailsrv ** workaround, the "pci=routeirq" argument > restores the old > Feb 23 12:58:35 mailsrv ** behavior. If this argument makes the device > work again, > Feb 23 12:58:35 mailsrv ** please email the output of "lspci" to > [EMAIL PROTECTED] > Feb 23 12:58:35 mailsrv ** so I can fix the driver.
Isn't the problem shown above? > Is there any solution how to solve this? I use 2.6 kernel with udev. I am using the same driver on a web server. I usually disable ACPI (I dont need power management on servers). You could try switching ACPI off. -- -- [email protected] mailing list
