Mark,

No, but it's a PCI mainboard...hmm.  Maybe I'll try re-setting the card to
IRQ 10.   Although it *does* work now.

Stan Koper
-----Original Message-----
From: Mark E. Davidson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: Stan Koper <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Saturday, February 06, 1999 10:06 PM
Subject: Re: [SuSE Linux] IRQ for eth1


>I may be wrong, but isn't IRQ 9 the "PCI bridge" IRQ?  Is the card
>PCI-based?
>
>Mark
>
>-----Original Message-----
>From: Stan Koper <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>Date: Saturday, February 06, 1999 7:03 PM
>Subject: [SuSE Linux] IRQ for eth1
>
>
>>
>>Hi!
>>
>>When I boot linux (SuSE 5.3, kernel 2.0.35), eth1 is listed as using an
IRQ
>>of 9.  That's what the card is set for.  But when I run ifconfig. it shows
>>eth1 as using an irq of 10.  Is ifconfig detecting a conflict, and making
>>its own workaround?  I can certainly set the card to use IRQ 10, if
there's
>>some sort of conflict.  It seems to work, as far as I can tell.
>>
>>Stan Koper
>>
>

-
To get out of this list, please send email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with
this text in its body: unsubscribe suse-linux-e
Check out the SuSE-FAQ at http://www.suse.com/Support/Doku/FAQ/ and the
archiv at http://www.suse.com/Mailinglists/suse-linux-e/index.html

Reply via email to