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Full Discussion: Trying to get into OpenBSD
Operating Systems BSD Trying to get into OpenBSD Post 64091 by deckard on Saturday 26th of February 2005 11:08:00 PM
Old 02-27-2005
Thanks. A read through the FAQs did prove more helpful than I intitially thought with regard to my question about which packages are installed by default. The only resolution to the "device timeout" error on ne3 so far was for me to yank out the ISA sound card (Soundblaster 16 PnP). Not the ideal solution, but it works for now. I still need to find out how to assign IRQs to ISA devices. The only thing I found in the man pages were some references to isapnp and isa, but nothing about actual management commands.
 

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PNP(4)							 BSD/i386 Kernel Interfaces Manual						    PNP(4)

NAME
pnp -- support for ``Plug and Play'' (PnP) ISA devices DESCRIPTION
The pnp driver enumerates ISA devices which support ``Plug and Play ISA Specification'' in the system. It assigns ISA bus resources (inter- rupt line, DMA channel, I/O ports, and memory region) to each device and activates it. If it cannot assign necessary resources to a PnP ISA device without causing conflict with other devices in the system, the device will not be activated and will be unavailable to programs. CAVEATS
It is not possible to disable individual PnP ISA devices. The pnp driver will find all devices conforming the PnP ISA specification and try to activate them all. There is no way to explicitly assign particular resource to the PnP ISA device. The resource assignment is fully automatic and there is no provision for manual override. SEE ALSO
pnpbios(4) STANDARDS
Intel and Microsoft, Plug and Play ISA Specification, Version 1.0a, May 5, 1994. Clarifications to the Plug and Play ISA Specification, Version 1.0a, December 10, 1994. HISTORY
The pnp driver first appeared in FreeBSD 2.2.5. It has been substantially updated in subsequent versions. AUTHORS
PnP support was originally written for FreeBSD 2.2.5 by Luigi Rizzo, based on initial work done by Sujal Patel. BSD
September 20, 2001 BSD
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