Linux-Hardware Digest #257, Volume #9 Sun, 24 Jan 99 07:13:24 EST
Contents:
Re: Matrox Millenium G200 AGP (Sven Terhurne)
Re: HELP: IBM ISA Token Ring 16/4 (mark ross)
Re: ESS Sound Card Problem (Hugh McCurdy)
Re: What is a good 486/5x86 Laptop for Linux? (Pas Moi)
Re: Linux keyboard? (For emacs use) (Rick Onanian)
Re: RH 5.2 on a 486 Compaq, worth the time? ("Tom")
Re: Linux keyboard? (For emacs use) (Sven Utcke)
DVD RAM (bob weeks)
Re: New RedHat with linux version 3.3.3 coming soon? (Hugh McCurdy)
Re: linux modem/ppp dramas...still (Igor Furlan)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
From: Sven Terhurne <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: Matrox Millenium G200 AGP
Date: Fri, 22 Jan 1999 22:38:39 +0100
After installing XFree86-3.3.3 I didn't have any problems configuring my
Matrox G200.
Get XFree86-3.3.3 at: www.xfree86.org (if you need RPM's (for redhat) have a
look at the redhat ftp-site, it is possible that they have the RPMS))
After installing (and if you got the sources of course compiling) X-Win
should work fine! (by the way, you need the SVGA-server, this server works
with the G200)
Good luck!
Myst wrote:
> I have this videocard,i will like to know how to configure it under Xwin.
------------------------------
From: mark ross <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To: comp.os.linux.networking,comp.os.linux.setup
Subject: Re: HELP: IBM ISA Token Ring 16/4
Date: Fri, 22 Jan 1999 13:29:24 -0800
Thanks for the info Richard & Michael
Richard Payne wrote:
>
> >Does the token ring driver seem stable ?
> >I was thinking of building linux box to route between a token ring and
> >ethernet networks.
> >Any one have any experence on this ?
>
> Seems fine to me. I've got a 486 with an Auto16/4 in it and it has
> run for months w/o any trouble.
>
> --
> Rich Payne
> (Speaking for myself, not my employer)
> payner at timken dot com
>
> Looking for Alpha-Linux info?
> http://www.alphalinux.org
------------------------------
From: Hugh McCurdy <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: ESS Sound Card Problem
Date: Fri, 22 Jan 1999 21:44:21 +0000
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>
> I'm running RedHat Linux 5.2 on a P166/32 MB RAM, etc etc etc.
>
> With an ESS1689 PnP sound card!
>
> Sndconfig detects the card fine, but when it tries to play the sample sound,
> it quits because the 'device or resource busy'. Grrr.
>
> lsmod doesn't show any obviously unnecessary c**p. I tried using 'insmod
> sound' and 'modprobe sound' and both came up with the 'device or resource
> busy' message. WTF is going on?
>
> I read the Sound-HOWTO and it *didn't* help. Read it again. And again.
>
> During the system startup when the rc.sysinit script tries to detect the sound
> card, it comes up with the same error as well.
>
> This is really ticking me off. Also, it does the same thing with my Iomega
> ZIP drive, and I can't figure out why either.
>
> I'm a _newbie_, but lay it on thick. If you give me a message full of
> technogarble, that's great! It'll keep me busy looking it all up to see what
> it means!
>
> Long Live The Penguin!
>
> Christopher
Unfortunately, I don't remember exactly what I did. I know I did a lot
of reading
of any sound documenation I found in the Linux source tree
(/usr/src/linux).
I will recount my experiences as best I can in hopes that it helps
someone else.
I installed my soundcard. Then booted Win95 which promptly crapped out
causing
me to get the Win95 setup floppy and CD-ROM so I could fix it. (I
mention this
not to flame MS, even though they deserve it, but to warn others that
they had
better have their floppy and CD-ROM handy in case they have the same
problem -
AND to backup anything you can't afford to lose).
OK, got Win95 running. Then it found and initalized the soundcard so
that the
BIOS started to detect it.
Then I recompiled Linux with the sound drivers as modules. I had to
include
modules which I didn't think I cared about. Caused me to recompile the
kernel, etc.
Once everything is happy, I execute the following commands (which I have
in a script).
insmod soundcore
insmod sound
insmod uart401
insmod sb io=0x220 irq=5 dma=1 dma16=-1
insmod mpu401 io=0x330
insmod opl3 io=0x388
insmod v_midi
You'll have to look at what Win95 and/or your BIOS reports for the
values that go with
your card.
As I said, I'm reporting what I remember so I could have very easily
left out a step.
And this was my first sound card so I'm hardly an expert. But I got it
working and
I hope that whatever I remember will be of use to someone.
--
Hugh McCurdy
------------------------------
From: Pas Moi <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: What is a good 486/5x86 Laptop for Linux?
Date: 20 Jan 1999 21:00:24 -0500
>> "A" == Alkemyst wrote on Thu, 21 Jan 1999 00:20:05 GMT:
i run a slackware-based system on a 755cdv. i'm perfectly happy with
this machine. i do all my computing under linux, and almost
exclusively on this machine. i don't know if you'd want to be doing
graphics stuff on something like this, but it will meet your basic
needs.
A> How much does not having a built in CD hurt? How about the models
A> where you have either a floppy or CD but not both at the same time?
you may have different habits, but i do get kind of lazy about
switching them. on the other hand, i rarely have any need to transfer
files over sneaker-net, and aside from a few cdrom dictionaries, i
have little use for the cdrom drive. and if your other machine has a
cdrom drive, you can always network the two and grab stuff that way.
not that big of a deal, really.
A> I have been looking at the Thinkpad 360?(model number 9547 i
A> think), 755CD, 760C, and 760LD.
i prefer the 7xx series.
A> Also if someone has one that fits this bill, please let me know.
sorry, i'm keeping mine.
ciao,
g.y.
--
Guy Yasko -- [EMAIL PROTECTED] [remove noise]
Barbie says, Take quaaludes in gin and go to a disco right away!
But Ken says, WOO-WOO!! No credit at "Mr. Liquor"!!
------------------------------
From: Rick Onanian <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To:
comp.os.linux.misc,comp.unix.questions,comp.unix.misc,comp.emacs,comp.editors
Subject: Re: Linux keyboard? (For emacs use)
Date: Fri, 22 Jan 1999 17:05:22 -0500
Sven Utcke wrote:
> > German has a wider and different use
> > of capitalization and I'd argue that it's time for you to drop the
> > initial capital in all nouns, too.
>
> As do many Germans. It is however easy to come up with examples (in
> German) which are very hard to understand or highly ambiguous without
> proper capitalisation. It seems that due to it's long history of
> making extensive use of capitalisation, German in it's present form
> can not easily be modified to do away with capitals.
Well, if it helps the discussion any... I find any example of German very hard to
understand, and highly ambiguous, whether or not they capitalize properly.
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
If my opinion were serious, I may have mentioned that I don't know German. Luckily,
due to my unfortunate lack of existance, my non-existential opinion does not
represent my employer, or indeed, life itself. 42.
>
> > Norwegian used to do that, but it's
> > like several generations ago.
> >
> > | b) I believe that having capital letters at the beginning of sentences
> > | makes for a rather valuable visual guide in reading.
> >
> > I hope it makes you happy that automatic conversion to sentence-initial
> > capitals is fairly easy with proper punctuation of sentences,
>
> Unfortunately it can not (unless you always use a full stop followed by
> one space for abbreviations and followed by two spaces for sentence
> endings, as most Emacs-users have learned to do). Thus the need for
> "\ " and "\@" in TeX.
>
> > and that I
> > do this before producing hard-copy,
>
> This would certainly make me happy if I had to read any of it.
>
> Although you are right that the use of both punctuation _and_ capitals
> to mark the border between two sentences is highly redundant (ignoring
> the problem with abbreviations for a moment), I still think it makes a
> valuable aid when reading. You convention can of course be understood
> too, but it just takes that little bit of extra time. A bit like
> reading a long text written in a type without serifs (sp?).
>
> > | But then, this is a free world...
> >
> > and it will remain so only as long as people are allowed to disagree...
>
> Well said.
>
> Sven
> --
> _ _ Lehrstuhl fuer Mustererkennung und Bildverarbeitung
> | |_ __ | |__ Sven Utcke
> | | ' \| '_ \ phone: +49 761 203 8274 Am Flughafen 17
> |_|_|_|_|_.__/ fax : +49 761 203 8262 79110 Freiburg i. Brsg.
> mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] www.informatik.uni-freiburg.de/~utcke
------------------------------
From: "Tom" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To: comp.os.linux.setup
Subject: Re: RH 5.2 on a 486 Compaq, worth the time?
Date: Fri, 22 Jan 1999 22:18:41 GMT
Richard J Graner <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
news:7894do$6h9$[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
>Would it work in the first place with Compaq being so proprietary? I have a
>ProLinea 4/50 slimline desktop. 32MB, 340MB HDD, everything else built on
>motherboard I would expect.
Go ahead, but here are a few things I learned while installing RH5.2 on two
Compaq Prolinea 4/66's, one with 16m, 420hdd, ide CD-Rom, the other with,
32m, 720m & 420m hdd, both with 3Com 3c509 10BaseT adapters.
1/ I removed the 2m hdd partition which holds the Compaq Rompaq utilities to
update the BIOS. Instead of leaving the utilities on the hdd I got updated
ones from the Compaq ftp site and created floppies.
2/ I installed from CD onto the 1st box. Mounted the CD-Rom drive into the
path "/home/ftp/pub/cdrom". And then did an FTP install to the 2nd box.
This worked well.
3/ After installation RH could not see all 32m of ram. I tried the "linux
ram=32M" command at the LILO prompt, but this would not work. It was only
after I upgraded the BIOS with a new Rompaq load, that RH could see all of
the ram. The Rompaq update was also available on the Compaq ftp site.
..Tom {http://www3.ns.sympatico.ca/tjowen}
------------------------------
From: Sven Utcke <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To:
comp.os.linux.misc,comp.unix.questions,comp.unix.misc,comp.emacs,comp.editors
Subject: Re: Linux keyboard? (For emacs use)
Date: 22 Jan 1999 21:16:37 +0100
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (Jari Aalto+mail.emacs) writes:
> Erik Naggum <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> > ... I use two spaces after sentence-ending punctuation.
>
> Which is some odd relict that somebody still seems to believe is needed...
Nah. I think it is a fair chance he uses it because it allows a
computer (Emacs in this particular case) to differentiate between
line-endings and abbreviations. And no, to capitalise the beginning of
sentences would not be enough for this.
> ...Putting two spaces between sentences is an old secretary's myth.
> While it won't affect your web pages, it makes your e-mail and
> word-processor documents harder to read.
I personally disagree, but I have never tried to really study the
effect of one versus two spaces, so who knows, maybe he is right.
> One of the first things
> you learn in a good typography class is that a word space should be
> about the width of the letter "i." The extra space breaks the
> natural rhythm of the sentences.
I thought that is the idea...
> You don't do it in your
> handwriting,
Actually, I do. As a matter of fact, up to this second I thought
everybody did.
> we never do it in books and newspapers,
Well, Knuth does (in the TeXbook).
P. A. Darnell and P. E. Margolis do it (in "C --- A Software
Engineering Approach").
Unfortunately I do not have a Newspaper at hand...
> why should it
> be right for your word processor or your e-mail?
So that my word-processor nows whether it is dealing with an
abbreviation or a sentence-ending?
> Since we typographers are very
> picky about such things, if a larger space were helpful, we would
> use it.
But typographers in many countries do! To be honest, I always thought
the United States were one of these countries...
Confused
Sven
--
_ _ Lehrstuhl fuer Mustererkennung und Bildverarbeitung
| |_ __ | |__ Sven Utcke
| | ' \| '_ \ phone: +49 761 203 8274 Am Flughafen 17
|_|_|_|_|_.__/ fax : +49 761 203 8262 79110 Freiburg i. Brsg.
mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] www.informatik.uni-freiburg.de/~utcke
------------------------------
From: bob weeks <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: DVD RAM
Date: Thu, 21 Jan 1999 09:06:00 +0000
Will a SCSI DVD ram drive work as a normal drive?
Can I format it as a LINUX file system and mount it or do I have to
mount it as a DOS drive
and use 8.3 filename?
I know there are UVF formats for DVD roms but is the RAM device a CRrom
device?
Thanks
Bob Weeks
------------------------------
From: Hugh McCurdy <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: New RedHat with linux version 3.3.3 coming soon?
Date: Fri, 22 Jan 1999 21:52:38 +0000
Phil Jones wrote:
>
> I understand RedHat 5.2 is the latest RedHat for
> sale and contains version 3.3.2 of linux. Anyone
> know when RedHat will put out a package with the
> linux 3.3.3? Thanks.
>
I think you mean v3.3.2 vs v3.3.3 of XFree86.
No, I don't know when RH release their next version. If I were
to guess, I'd say March or April. But that's only a guess.
However you can download a newer copy of XFree86.
http://www.xfree86.org/
Be warned, if you have a slow connection (28.8, "56"K) then you
could be downloading for a few hours.
--
Hugh McCurdy
------------------------------
From: Igor Furlan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To: aus.computers.linux,comp.os.linux.setup,comp.protocols.ppp
Subject: Re: linux modem/ppp dramas...still
Date: Sat, 23 Jan 1999 11:25:28 -0800
==============8BB7BA339ECBCBA0CDA17CF8
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
ochre small wrote:
> Hi again all,
> thanks to lots of advice and a little luck, I have now arrived at the point
> where I can get my internal pnp modem to dial, and I hear it happening. I
> have been using minicom, and I now have the following problem:
>
> Although it responds to AT commands such as ATDT xxxxxx
> th emodem does not send strings back to minicom as far as I can tell.
>
> all of the suggestions tell me to expect OK as a return. even when I tell
> it to dial and it does, it doesn't send back anything except a much delayed
> (~10 sec) echo of my keystrokes.
You have some problems with your IRQ settings.
Try the following :
a) man pnpdump
with the help of "pnpdump" you can create
a script file which can be used by
b) isapnp
c) with "setserial" ---connect PnP modem with COM port of your choice ----
You have to match IRQ setting for PnP and COM port
My settings are :
setserial /dev/cua2 irq 4 baud_base 115200 uart 16550A
isapnp /etc/pnp/config-scripts/isa/isapnp.conf
The output from "pnpdump --configure" is ( file name isapnp.conf)
( please pay attention to the UNCOMMENTED lines)
# $Id: pnpdump.c,v 1.15a 1998/05/25 17:22:16 fox Exp $
# This is free software, see the sources for details.
# This software has NO WARRANTY, use at your OWN RISK
#
# For details of this file format, see isapnp.conf(5)
#
# For latest information on isapnp and pnpdump see:
# http://www.roestock.demon.co.uk/isapnptools/
#
# Compiler flags: -DREALTIME -DNEEDSETSCHEDULER
#
# Trying port address 0203
# Trying port address 020b
# Board 1 has serial identifier a1 81 ff 93 ac 31 30 72 56
# (DEBUG)
(READPORT 0x020b)
(ISOLATE PRESERVE)
(IDENTIFY *)
# Card 1: (serial identifier a1 81 ff 93 ac 31 30 72 56)
# Vendor Id USR3031, Serial Number 2181010348, checksum 0xA1.
# Version 1.0, Vendor version 0.0
# ANSI string -->U.S. Robotics 56K FAX INT<--
#
# Logical device id USR3031
# Device supports vendor reserved register @ 0x3a
# Device supports vendor reserved register @ 0x3d
#
# Edit the entries below to uncomment out the configuration required.
# Note that only the first value of any range is given, this may be changed if
required
# Don't forget to uncomment the activate (ACT Y) when happy
(CONFIGURE USR3031/2181010348 (LD 0
# Multiple choice time, choose one only !
# Start dependent functions: priority preferred
# Logical device decodes 16 bit IO address lines
# Minimum IO base address 0x02f8
# Maximum IO base address 0x02f8
# IO base alignment 8 bytes
# Number of IO addresses required: 8
(IO 0 (BASE 0x03e8))
# IRQ 3, 5, 7, 10, 11, 12 or 15.
# High true, edge sensitive interrupt (by default)
(INT 0 (IRQ 4 (MODE +E)))
# Start dependent functions: priority acceptable
# Logical device decodes 16 bit IO address lines
# Minimum IO base address 0x03f8
# Maximum IO base address 0x03f8
# IO base alignment 8 bytes
# Number of IO addresses required: 8
# (IO 0 (BASE 0x03f8))
# IRQ 2, 3, 4, 5, 7, 10, 11, 12 or 15.
# High true, edge sensitive interrupt (by default)
# (INT 0 (IRQ 2 (MODE +E)))
# Start dependent functions: priority acceptable
# Logical device decodes 16 bit IO address lines
# Minimum IO base address 0x03e8
# Maximum IO base address 0x03e8
# IO base alignment 8 bytes
# Number of IO addresses required: 8
# (IO 0 (BASE 0x03e8))
# IRQ 2, 3, 4, 5, 7, 10, 11, 12 or 15.
# High true, edge sensitive interrupt (by default)
# (INT 0 (IRQ 2 (MODE +E)))
# Start dependent functions: priority acceptable
# Logical device decodes 16 bit IO address lines
# Minimum IO base address 0x02e8
# Maximum IO base address 0x02e8
# IO base alignment 8 bytes
# Number of IO addresses required: 8
# (IO 0 (BASE 0x02e8))
# IRQ 2, 3, 4, 5, 7, 10, 11, 12 or 15.
# High true, edge sensitive interrupt (by default)
# (INT 0 (IRQ 2 (MODE +E)))
# End dependent functions
(ACT Y)
))
# End tag... Checksum 0x00 (OK)
# Returns all cards to the "Wait for Key" state
(WAITFORKEY)
GOOD LUCK !!
Igor
==============8BB7BA339ECBCBA0CDA17CF8
Content-Type: text/html; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
<!doctype html public "-//w3c//dtd html 4.0 transitional//en">
<html>
<p>ochre small wrote:
<blockquote TYPE=CITE>Hi again all,
<br>thanks to lots of advice and a little luck, I have now arrived at the
point
<br>where I can get my internal pnp modem to dial, and I hear it happening.
I
<br>have been using minicom, and I now have the following problem:
<p>Although it responds to AT commands such as ATDT xxxxxx
<br>th emodem does not send strings back to minicom as far as I can tell.
<p>all of the suggestions tell me to expect OK as a return. even
when I tell
<br>it to dial and it does, it doesn't send back anything except a much
delayed
<br>(~10 sec) echo of my keystrokes.</blockquote>
<p><br>You have some problems with your IRQ settings.
<p>Try the following :<tt></tt>
<p><tt>a) man pnpdump</tt>
<br><tt> with the help of "pnpdump" you can create</tt>
<br><tt> a script file which can be used by</tt>
<br><tt>b) isapnp</tt>
<br><tt>c) with "setserial" ---connect PnP modem with COM port of
your choice ----</tt>
<br><tt> You have to match IRQ setting for PnP and COM
port</tt>
<br><tt></tt> <tt></tt>
<p>My settings are :
<p><tt>setserial /dev/cua2 irq 4 baud_base 115200 uart 16550A</tt>
<br><tt>isapnp /etc/pnp/config-scripts/isa/isapnp.conf</tt>
<p>The output from "pnpdump --configure" is ( file name isapnp.conf)
<br>( please pay attention to the UNCOMMENTED lines)
<p><tt># $Id: pnpdump.c,v 1.15a 1998/05/25 17:22:16 fox Exp $</tt>
<br><tt># This is free software, see the sources for details.</tt>
<br><tt># This software has NO WARRANTY, use at your OWN RISK</tt>
<br><tt>#</tt>
<br><tt># For details of this file format, see isapnp.conf(5)</tt>
<br><tt>#</tt>
<br><tt># For latest information on isapnp and pnpdump see:</tt>
<br><tt># <A
HREF="http://www.roestock.demon.co.uk/isapnptools/">http://www.roestock.demon.co.uk/isapnptools/</A></tt>
<br><tt>#</tt>
<br><tt># Compiler flags: -DREALTIME -DNEEDSETSCHEDULER</tt>
<br><tt>#</tt>
<br><tt># Trying port address 0203</tt>
<br><tt># Trying port address 020b</tt>
<br><tt># Board 1 has serial identifier a1 81 ff 93 ac 31 30 72 56</tt><tt></tt>
<p><tt># (DEBUG)</tt>
<br><tt>(READPORT 0x020b)</tt>
<br><tt>(ISOLATE PRESERVE)</tt>
<br><tt>(IDENTIFY *)</tt><tt></tt>
<p><tt># Card 1: (serial identifier a1 81 ff 93 ac 31 30 72 56)</tt>
<br><tt># Vendor Id USR3031, Serial Number 2181010348, checksum 0xA1.</tt>
<br><tt># Version 1.0, Vendor version 0.0</tt>
<br><tt># ANSI string -->U.S. Robotics 56K FAX INT<--</tt>
<br><tt>#</tt>
<br><tt># Logical device id USR3031</tt>
<br><tt># Device supports vendor reserved register
@ 0x3a</tt>
<br><tt># Device supports vendor reserved register
@ 0x3d</tt>
<br><tt>#</tt>
<br><tt># Edit the entries below to uncomment out the configuration required.</tt>
<br><tt># Note that only the first value of any range is given, this may
be changed if required</tt>
<br><tt># Don't forget to uncomment the activate (ACT Y) when happy</tt><tt></tt>
<p><tt>(CONFIGURE USR3031/2181010348 (LD 0</tt>
<br><tt># Multiple choice time, choose one only !</tt><tt></tt>
<p><tt># Start dependent functions: priority preferred</tt>
<br><tt># Logical device decodes 16
bit IO address lines</tt>
<br><tt>#
Minimum IO base address 0x02f8</tt>
<br><tt>#
Maximum IO base address 0x02f8</tt>
<br><tt>#
IO base alignment 8 bytes</tt>
<br><tt>#
Number of IO addresses required: 8</tt>
<br><tt> (IO 0 (BASE 0x03e8))</tt>
<br><tt># IRQ 3, 5, 7, 10, 11, 12 or
15.</tt>
<br><tt>#
High true, edge sensitive interrupt (by default)</tt>
<br><tt> (INT 0 (IRQ 4 (MODE +E)))</tt><tt></tt>
<p><tt># Start dependent functions:
priority acceptable</tt>
<br><tt># Logical device decodes 16
bit IO address lines</tt>
<br><tt>#
Minimum IO base address 0x03f8</tt>
<br><tt>#
Maximum IO base address 0x03f8</tt>
<br><tt>#
IO base alignment 8 bytes</tt>
<br><tt>#
Number of IO addresses required: 8</tt>
<br><tt># (IO 0 (BASE 0x03f8))</tt>
<br><tt># IRQ 2, 3, 4, 5, 7, 10, 11,
12 or 15.</tt>
<br><tt>#
High true, edge sensitive interrupt (by default)</tt>
<br><tt># (INT 0 (IRQ 2 (MODE +E)))</tt><tt></tt>
<p><tt># Start dependent functions:
priority acceptable</tt>
<br><tt># Logical device decodes 16
bit IO address lines</tt>
<br><tt>#
Minimum IO base address 0x03e8</tt>
<br><tt>#
Maximum IO base address 0x03e8</tt>
<br><tt>#
IO base alignment 8 bytes</tt>
<br><tt>#
Number of IO addresses required: 8</tt>
<br><tt># (IO 0 (BASE 0x03e8))</tt>
<br><tt># IRQ 2, 3, 4, 5, 7, 10, 11,
12 or 15.</tt>
<br><tt>#
High true, edge sensitive interrupt (by default)</tt>
<br><tt># (INT 0 (IRQ 2 (MODE +E)))</tt><tt></tt>
<p><tt># Start dependent functions:
priority acceptable</tt>
<br><tt># Logical device decodes 16
bit IO address lines</tt>
<br><tt>#
Minimum IO base address 0x02e8</tt>
<br><tt>#
Maximum IO base address 0x02e8</tt>
<br><tt>#
IO base alignment 8 bytes</tt>
<br><tt>#
Number of IO addresses required: 8</tt>
<br><tt># (IO 0 (BASE 0x02e8))</tt>
<br><tt># IRQ 2, 3, 4, 5, 7, 10, 11,
12 or 15.</tt>
<br><tt>#
High true, edge sensitive interrupt (by default)</tt>
<br><tt># (INT 0 (IRQ 2 (MODE +E)))</tt><tt></tt>
<p><tt># End dependent functions</tt>
<br><tt> (ACT Y)</tt>
<br><tt>))</tt>
<br><tt># End tag... Checksum 0x00 (OK)</tt><tt></tt>
<p><tt># Returns all cards to the "Wait for Key" state</tt>
<br><tt>(WAITFORKEY)</tt>
<br><tt></tt> <tt></tt>
<p>GOOD LUCK !!
<p>Igor</html>
==============8BB7BA339ECBCBA0CDA17CF8==
------------------------------
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End of Linux-Hardware Digest
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