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Date:      Wed, 10 Jan 1996 14:40:42 -0700 (MST)
From:      Terry Lambert <terry@lambert.org>
To:        hasty@rah.star-gate.com (Amancio Hasty Jr.)
Cc:        terry@lambert.org, freebsd-hackers@FreeBSD.org
Subject:   Re: PnP problem...
Message-ID:  <199601102140.OAA15498@phaeton.artisoft.com>
In-Reply-To: <199601102116.NAA02144@rah.star-gate.com> from "Amancio Hasty Jr." at Jan 10, 96 01:16:36 pm

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>  > > Lets take this a step a time. In my case, I have a PnP motherboard.
>  > > 
>  > > 1) disable all PnP
>  > > 2) probe all non-PnP cards
>  > > 3) Query PnP cards for where they may fit
>  > > 4) Do a topological sort to fit them all
>  > > 
>  > > How am I supposed to know that I have a driver for a given PnP device?
>  > 
>  > You don't care, in the general case.
>  > 
> 
> Terry most cool, now the next step. Care to write the
> topological sort?
> 
> 	We are all happily waiting 8)


It's a trivial brute-force problem (ie: not interesting  8-)).  I have
access to MS developer documentation in their SDK and DDK, so I'll
have to check if this is under non-disclosure or not.

Even then, I'd say that the Intel sepc was enough if you went at it
from a software diagnostic perspective rather than a hardware designer
perspective.

I also have a slight handicap between theory and implementation of not
owning any PnP hardware (well, PCMCIA counts as a special intermediate
case, I guess, so that isn't strictly true).

What "PnP ISA motherboard are you using?


					Terry Lambert
					terry@lambert.org
---
Any opinions in this posting are my own and not those of my present
or previous employers.



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