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Date:      Mon, 12 Jan 2004 11:18:57 +0400
From:      "Mazen S. Alzogbi" <freebsd@mazenalzogbi.com>
To:        <ecrist@adtechintegrated.com>
Cc:        freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
Subject:   RE: Sound not working on laptop
Message-ID:  <1691D8C9A2220149A8AF30209B5D0EB467F569@sc3.shuaacapital.co.ae>
In-Reply-To: <1691D8C9A2220149A8AF30209B5D0EB4CF2E06@sc3.shuaacapital.co.ae>

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Hi,

Thanks for all the help. I tried to locate a 'Non Plug-and-Play OS'
option in the BIOS setup with no success. I think there aren't anything
like this in my BIOS.

Can someone on this list shed some light how to detect (track) IRQs and
conflicts?

Thanks,

Mazen

> Yes, it is solvable.  In your system BIOS, make certain that your
system is 
> set to 'Non Plug-and-Play OS.'  This will enable the BIOS to assign 
> appropriate IRQs and such.  You have some conflict, which I'm not 100%

> certain on how to track.  Someone on this list should be able to
answer that 
> part.  Once you figure this out, you should set a line in your kernel
config 
> (not sure on syntax) to the effect of assiging an unused IRQ.  It IS 
> recognizing your sound card and trying to use it, but it's running
into an 
> Input/Output (that's where it gets IO in IO port space) conflict.


> -- 
> Eric F Crist
> AdTech Integrated Systems, Inc
> (612) 998-3588



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