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Date:      Thu, 23 Aug 2001 17:33:55 -0700
From:      Darryl Okahata <darrylo@soco.agilent.com>
To:        "David W. Chapman Jr." <dwcjr@inethouston.net>, current@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject:   Re: unknown PNP hardware 
Message-ID:  <200108240033.RAA08537@mina.soco.agilent.com>
In-Reply-To: Your message of "Fri, 24 Aug 2001 01:46:34 %2B0200." <20010824014634.B14741@zerogravity.kawo2.rwth-aachen.d> 

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Alexander Langer <alex@big.endian.de> wrote:

> Thus spake David W. Chapman Jr. (dwcjr@inethouston.net):
> 
> > I'm running -current as of an hour ago.  I've gotten this since I've 
> > been running 4.2-stable, any ideas on how I can find out what it 
> > belongs to?
> 
> Statically wired ISA devices.
> 
> > unknown: <PNP0501> can't assign resources
> > unknown: <PNP0501> can't assign resources
> 
> 501 are the sio ports for example.
> 
> Look up some PNP devices listings, they're probably all listed
> in your device.hints.

     Going off on a slight tangent, I wrote a perl script months ago
that parsed the output of dmesg, and tried to determine which IRQs were
used, and for what.  One of the side-effects of this script is that it
also tried to identify unknown PCI devices (but *only* if an IRQ is
used), using an (old) hard-coded table originally obtained from:

	http://www.yourvote.com/pci/pcidev.csv

You can get the script from:

	ftp://ftp.sonic.net/pub/users/darrylo/freebsd/scanirq.gz

It's written for 4.X, but might work for -current (you'll have to
disable the checks for 4.X, at the very least).  You use it like this:

	dmesg | scanirq

-- 
	Darryl Okahata
	darrylo@soco.agilent.com

DISCLAIMER: this message is the author's personal opinion and does not
constitute the support, opinion, or policy of Agilent Technologies, or
of the little green men that have been following him all day.

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