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The Linux Plug-and-Play-HOWTO Next Previous Contents The Linux Plug-and-Play-HOWTO David S.Lawyer mailto:dave@lafn.org v0.11, May 2000 Help with understanding and dealing with the complex Plug-and-Play issue. How to get your Linux system to support Plug-and-Play. 1. Introduction 1.1 Copyright, Trademarks, Disclaimer, & Credits 1.2 Future Plans; You Can Help 1.3 New Versions of this HOWTO 2. What PnP Should Do: Allocate "Bus-Resources" 2.1 What is Plug-and-Play (PnP)? 2.2 How a Computer Finds Devices (and conversely) 2.3 I/O Addresses, etc. 2.4 IRQs --Overview 2.5 DMA Channels 2.6 Memory Ranges 2.7 "Resources" to both Device and Driver 2.8 The Problem 2.9 PnP Finds Devices Plugged Into Serial Ports 3. The Plug-and-Play (PnP) Solution 3.1 Introduction to PnP 3.2 How It Works (simplified) 3.3 Starting Up the PC 3.4 Buses 3.5 Linux Needs to Cope Better with PnP 4. Configuring a PnP BIOS 4.1 Do you have a PnP operating system? 4.2 How are bus-resources to be controlled? 4.3 Reset the configuration? 5. How to Deal with PnP Cards 5.1 Introduction to Dealing with PnP Cards 5.2 Disable PnP ? 5.3 BIOS Configures PnP 5.4 Isapnp (part of isapnptools) 5.5 PCI Utilities 5.6 Patch the Kernel to Make Linux PnP 5.7 Windows Configures 5.8 Device Driver Configures 5.9 PnP Software/Documents 6. Tell the Driver the Configuration 6.1 Introduction 6.2 Serial Port Driver: setserial 6.3 Sound Card Drivers 7. What Is My Current Configuration? 7.1 Boot-time Messages 7.2 How Are My Device Drivers Configured? 7.3 How Are My Hardware Devices Configured? 8. Appendix 8.1 Addresses 8.2 Interrupts --Details 8.3 PCI Interrupts 8.4 Isolation Next Previous Contents
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