IRQ
x37 13.12.2000 - 22:24 479 7
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Hab: Abit KT7-Raid Duron 650 @ 800 Viper V770 (TNT2) 2 Raid Platten Gewöhnliche 100MBit Netzwerkkarte Soundplaster pci128 128Mb Noname Ram 133Mhz Windows 2000 Professional
Mein Problem ist das sich 6 Geräte den IRQ 11 teilen unter anderem auch der USB und der schaltet dann sich nach 30 sec aus. Dann muss ich abstecken bisschen warten und wieder anstecken, dann gehts wieder ein zeitchen. Ich glaube das Prob is, dass die Graka oder USB keinen IRQ mit der Sound Karte teilen kann. Denn mit ISA Soundkarte funk alles es traumhaft, denn die bekommt einen anderen bzw. man kann hier die einstellungen selber ändern. Wisst ihr wie man Windows 2000 Professional dazu bringt denn IRQ der Soundk. zu ändern.
IRQ's im Win
11 Microsoft ACPI-Konformes System 11 NVIDIA RIVA TNT2/TNT2 Pro 11 Universeller VIA-Hostcontroller (USB) 11 Universeller VIA-Hostcontroller (USB) 11 OvisLink LFE-8139ATX-Fast Ethernet-Adapter 11 HPT370 UDMA/ATA100 RAID Controller 11 Soundkarte 15 Sekundärer IDE-Kanal 8 System CMOS/Echtzeituhr 13 Numerischer Coprozessor 6 Standart-Diskettenlaufwerkcontroller 4 Kommunikationsanschluß(COM1) 3 Kommunikationsanschluß(COM2) 12 PS/2-Kompatible Maus 1 Standartastatur (101/102 Tasten) oder Microsoft Natural Keyboard(Ps/2)
Bei Booten wird ja kurz die IRQs angezeigt, dort steht aber folgendes
14 IDE controller 5 Serial Bus Controller 9 Network 9 Mass Storage Controller (glaub htp370) 11 Display 11 ACPI Soundkarte hatte hab ich grad net drin bekamm aber glaub ich 7.
diese würden ja warscheindlich keine konfikte Verursachen... nur wie kann ich das fuck win2k dazu bekommen die anzunehmen?? bzw. was muss ich im Bios einstellen?? Hab die Konfig schon lang ... ist mir aber erst jetzt aufgefallen da ich vorher kein USB verwendet hab...
plz help me
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nik
OC Addicted
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das liegt am acpi und win2k. macht offensichtlich öfters solche probleme. wenn acpi aktiviert ist, verteilt´s die irq selber und ignoriert die bioseinstllungen. hab da mal was drüber gelesen *such* irgendwie kann man das acpi abschalten
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nik
OC Addicted
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nik
OC Addicted
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hab´s gefunden: Why do I have 6 devices sharing the same IRQ? This is not actually a fault of the BIOS or the motherboard. This is a feature of the new ACPI (Advanced Configuration and Power Interface) that can be found in Windows 2000 and also Windows 98SE. Windows 2000 will automatically enable ACPI when it is installed if it detects a compatible motherboard and BIOS during installation - which the ABIT KT7 is. You probably didn't experience this with your previous motherboard because it (or the BIOS) wasn't ACPI compliant! It is extremely common (if not normal?) for the ACPI to cause several PCI devices to all share the same IRQ. Providing your hardware properly supports ACPI this is not a problem and you need not worry about it - the days of worrying about shared IRQ's are drawing to a close! You will notice that ACPI overides the IRQ allocations that the BIOS made on booting. A fairly interesting web page describing one ordinary user's experiences with ACPI under Windows 2000 is available here - he too has 4 devices sharing an IRQ! A full detailed technical description of the ACPI standard, also known as OnNow is available at Microsoft's developer site. Note that Microsoft's Knowledge base has an article entitled "IRQ Sharing in Windows 2000" (Q252420). In summary this article states that PCI devices are designed to share IRQs, and that this is especially common in Windows 2000 when ACPI is enabled. It states that under the Resources tab of Device Manager you may see several devices sharing IRQs and that it is not possible (or necessary) to change this in Windows 2000 and that this actually prevents conflicts. Microsoft recommend that you disable PnP OS in the BIOS when using ACPI. It also states that manual IRQ assignments in the BIOS are ignored when ACPI is enabled - if you need to do this disable ACPI in the BIOS before installing Windows 2000. If you have problems with hardware not able to support this sharing of resources, then at present the best solution is to disable ACPI. [If you have a more elegant solution to this please email me!]. How to do this is described in the question above. If you do not have ACPI enabled but still have problems with devices sharing IRQ's, you may also want to try disabling IRQ steering by selecting the Properties-IRQ Steering of the PCI Bus device under My Computer-Properties-Device Manager. Alternatively disabling "Get IRQ table using ACPI BIOS" on this tab may also help. If you have ACPI enabled then these options are not available as they do not form part of the ACPI standard. hier gibt´snoch mehr: http://www.apushardware.com/faqs/kt7faq/faqbios.html
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Redphex
LegendRabbitOfNegativeEuphoria
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@Redphex THX des geht...
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