Summary: | laptop hangs when pcmcia card (wireless NIC) inserted | ||
---|---|---|---|
Product: | Gentoo Linux | Reporter: | thegarbageman <isaachanson> |
Component: | [OLD] Core system | Assignee: | Mobile Herd (OBSOLETE) <mobile+disabled> |
Status: | VERIFIED NEEDINFO | ||
Severity: | critical | ||
Priority: | High | ||
Version: | unspecified | ||
Hardware: | x86 | ||
OS: | Linux | ||
Whiteboard: | |||
Package list: | Runtime testing required: | --- | |
Bug Depends on: | |||
Bug Blocks: | 68964 |
Description
thegarbageman
2004-03-22 14:09:41 UTC
I tried a US Robotics wireless adapter card with the same results. Afterwards, I tried using the PCMCIA kernel module instead of the pcmcia-cs package. That worked well. I would rather use the standalone tree, if possible. While I enabled kernel PCMCIA and wireless support, I did not select any wireless kernel drivers. Often this is a result of autoprobing touching some sensitive areas in memory. Try removing some of the ranges from the "include memory" lines found in /etc/pcmcia/config.opts and see if this helps. I will try that, thank you. I must say I am reluctant. I don't like screwing around with settings I don't understand. If that memory is "sensitive" (?), why do the kernel PCMCIA modules work with the same settings? It seems to me even if removing the memory ranges proves successful, this is still a bug - whether it's a problem with the Gentoo installation guide, the pcmcia-cs package, or something else entirely. I will try removing memory ranges from the file you mentioned, but I would think a default installation should just work. Thanks again. I appreciate the contribution Gentoo makes to the OS community. What kind of laptop? there's known issues with Dells and there are notes in the configuration file that address this. This bug report is awaiting feedback from the reporter. Closing due to lack of feedback. |