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- Xref: sparky comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware:23908 comp.os.msdos.misc:5152 comp.os.msdos.programmer:9239
- Path: sparky!uunet!sun-barr!ames!pacbell.com!network.ucsd.edu!cogsci!crl!hartung
- From: hartung@crl.ucsd.edu (Jeff Hartung)
- Newsgroups: comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware,comp.os.msdos.misc,comp.os.msdos.programmer
- Subject: Now I've seen everything!
- Keywords: COM port I/O card IRQ conflict peripheral
- Message-ID: <1586@cogsci.ucsd.EDU>
- Date: 10 Sep 92 17:50:17 GMT
- Sender: news@cogsci.ucsd.EDU
- Followup-To: comp.os.msdos.misc
- Distribution: usa
- Organization: University of California, San Diego
- Lines: 69
-
-
- Well, here's a weird story. I had recently upgraded my motherboard to a 33
- MHz 486 from a 20 MHz 386SX (what a difference! :-) That's not the story, but
- while I changed the motherboard, I had reset the jumper on the I/O card so
- that COM2 was active. (I had previously disabled it beacuse I needed IRQ 3
- free for the ProAudio-16 sound board's SoundBlaster compatibility jumper
- setting.) Anyhow, I had decided that the 486 could probably handle IRQ
- sharing better than the earlier CPU, especially since COM2 usually just sits
- there unused.
-
- Everything was working fine for several days until about 1/2 an hour ago when
- a Telix session I was running under Windows suddenly froze up and wouldn't
- even let me hang up. (The "hanging up" message just hung there and the screen
- and wouldn't go away.) I finally decided to use the "Terminate" option from
- Windows to end the program. When I restarted Telix, it reported that it could
- not initialize COM1 and that I needed to choose another port. I looked at the
- modem, realized that it was still on line, and decided that must be the
- problem, so I turned the modem off and on and restarted Telix. Same message.
-
- "OK," I said to myself, "Windows must be screwed up. I'll restart it." (I
- talk to myself and my computer when things start to go wrong, do you? :-)
- That didn't work. I exited windows, warm booted, and started it again. That
- didn't work. I cold booted. That didn't work. I checked the Port settings
- from the control panel. They were mysteriously set (for COM1 and COM2) to
- port 02F8, IRQ 4. Although Windows let me change the settings, when I opened
- the Port dialig box, the setting for the port would go back to 02F8.
-
- I figured the WIN.INI file must be messed up and looked at it. Nope, there
- was the port and IRQ setting I wanted (03F8 and IRQ 4). I tried starting
- Telix under DOS. SAME PROBLEM!!!!! Uh oh, maybe this was a symptom of an
- I/O card going bad! I rebooted the machine again, this time powering it all
- the way off. When it restarted, the BIOS/CMOS settings screen reported only
- one COM port at 02F8. Ouch!
-
- Fearing the worst, I opened the case and looked at the settings on the I/O
- card. The first port was set to COM1, the second to COM2, but when I looked
- at the IRQ settings, I saw that BOTH ports were set to IRQ 4! "Ah ha!" I
- shouted, still talking to myself, and now to an I/O card as well. "That's
- what was wrong.
-
- I quickly placed the COM2 jumper on the IRQ 3 pins where it belonged and
- everything returned to normal. However, I started wondering, if there was a
- conflict, why were both COM ports showing up until now on the AMI BIOS startup
- screen? If the ports were happy sharing the IRQ, why did they suddenly stop
- being so friendly to one another? Why wouldn't even a complete power down
- restore the system to its original state? If there had always been a
- conflict, why did things _ever_ work in the first place?
-
- I have two working theories:
-
- 1. A supernatural being crept into my system via the connection
- to the UNIX host where I was reading my mail and changed my
- jumper from IRQ 3 to IRQ 4.
-
- 2. Windows 3.1 has added an undocumented "Make Random Changes to
- System Jumpers for No Reason Whatsoever" feature that was
- activated my my insistence in using a DOS program for my
- telecommunications needs.
-
- However, I'd be willing to hear from those who have alternate explanations.
-
- Cheers,
-
-
- --
- --Jeff Hartung--
- Disclaimer: My opinions only, etc., etc., BLAH! BLAH! BLAH!...
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