On May 16, 2007, at 5:54 PM, alan pae wrote:
>> I mean from the 'prtconf -v' I could not find any 'pci1385' item, >> which is the vendor id of the Netgear, and 'pci168c' which is the >> vendor id of Atheros, so I guess WG511T is not inserted in the >> cardbus slot when you run 'prtconf -v', or maybe the cardbus >> driver runs something wrong. But I can see the cardbus controller >> has a reasonalbe 'assigned-address', so think the card is not >> inserted when you run 'prtconf -v'. >> >> If the card was inserted when you ran 'prtconf -v', there must be >> a bug in cardbus, maybe something about interrupt routing, since >> the WG511T is not recognized. >> > > Reboot to Windows XP. > > Goto Control Panel, System, Hardware, Device Manager, and search. > > Interrupt 10 is being used by: > > 1394 Firewire > > Modem / 10/100 Mini PCI Combo card > > Netgear WG511T > > PCMCIA host > > and > > USB > > > 1394 was already disabled as I have no devices for it. In > addition, the Mini PCI Combo adapter is now disabled. > > Is there any way to ratchet up the diagnostics on this or is there > any way to change/view the irq's being used by Solaris? > > thanks, > alan > > May 15 14:38:16 unix: [ID 954099 kern.info] NOTICE: IRQ10 is being > shared by drivers with different interrupt levels. > May 15 14:38:16 This may result in reduced system performance. > > > This message posted from opensolaris.org > _______________________________________________ > laptop-discuss mailing list > laptop-discuss at opensolaris.org I have the same card, Netgear WG511T, in an IBM Thinkpad T41 and, even with the latest bits (B63), I have to install the cardbus version 0.3 before the card is recognized. Lloyd Staley