Hello! I was having problems getting my sound card going (suse 8.1 prof on a sony viao laptop) and after hours of searching the web I finally found someone with a similar problem that said if I just pass in pci=acpi on boot then it will work. That work liked a charm, so I'm happy. So the reason I'm writing though is what the heck does pci=acpi mean? I'm pretty new to linux so I'm just trying to absorbe all that I can. Thanks! Cheers, Daniel
On Mon, 8 Dec 2003 13:20:30 -0600, "Daniel Purdy"
what the heck does pci=acpi mean?
... tells the system to use ACPI, versus APM, through the PCI subsystem. more acpi info at: http://www.acpi.info/ -- /// Michael J. Tobler: motorcyclist, surfer, skydiver, \\\ \\\ and author: "Inside Linux", "C++ HowTo", "C++ Unleashed" /// Think of it! With VLSI we can pack 100 ENIACs in 1 sq. cm.!
On Monday 08 December 2003 10:20, Daniel Purdy wrote:
Hello! I was having problems getting my sound card going (suse 8.1 prof on a sony viao laptop) and after hours of searching the web I finally found someone with a similar problem that said if I just pass in pci=acpi on boot then it will work. That work liked a charm, so I'm happy. So the reason I'm writing though is what the heck does pci=acpi mean? I'm pretty new to linux so I'm just trying to absorbe all that I can. Thanks!
Cheers, Daniel
You will find that command line setting fixes just about everything in sony vaios. Sony is very dependent on acpi because they have about 8 things hanging on a single interrupt, and use acpi to route the signals to the correct device. Great mailing list for Linux-Sony users is located at http://insue.com/mailman/listinfo/linux-sony -- _____________________________________ John Andersen
participants (3)
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Daniel Purdy
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John Andersen
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mjt