Bloom,
I hope this helps, Here goes
In Windows 2000, some or all of the devices on your ACPI motherboard may be
listed on the Resources tab in Device Manager as using the same IRQ (IRQ 9). You
cannot change the IRQ setting because the setting is unavailable. This occurs
because Windows 2000 takes advantage of the ACPI features of the motherboard,
including advanced PCI sharing. IRQ 9 is used by the PCI bus for IRQ steering.
This feature lets you add more devices without generating IRQ conflicts.
Note that Windows 2000 does not have the ability to rebalance resources as does
Microsoft Windows 98. Once PCI resources are set, they generally cannot be
changed. If you change to an invalid IRQ setting or I/O range for the bus that a
device is on, Windows 2000 cannot rebalance the resource it assigned to that bus
to compensate. Windows 2000 does not have this ability because of the more
complex hardware schemas it is designed to support. Windows 98 does not have to
support IOAPICs, multiple root PCI buses, multiple-processor systems, and so on.
Rebalancing becomes risky when you are dealing with these hardware schemas, and
will not be implemented in Windows 2000 except for very specific scenarios.
However, PCI devices are required to be able to share IRQs. The ability to share
IRQs should not prevent any hardware from working in general.
The Plug and Play operating system settings in the computer's BIOS should not
affect how Windows 2000 handles the hardware in general. However, Microsoft
recommends that you set this setting to "No" or "Disabled" in the computer's
BIOS. For information about viewing or modifying your computer's BIOS settings,
consult your computer's documentation or manufacturer.
Manually assigning IRQs to PCI slots as a troubleshooting method may work on a
non-ACPI system, but these settings are ignored by Plug and Play in Windows 2000
if ACPI support is enabled. If you need to manually assign IRQ addresses to a
device on an ACPI motherboard, disable ACPI in the computer's BIOS before
installing Windows 2000.
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!!! Heater !!!
Shit Happens All The Time
Programming today is a race between software engineers striving to build bigger and better idiot-proof programs, and the Universe trying to produce bigger and better idiots. So far, the Universe is winning.
[This message has been edited by Heater (edited 05-03-2001).]