If using a GUI, either open a terminal window or go to a different
shell (e.g., Ctrl-Alt-F3) and type cat /proc/pci. Make sure to put the
space after cat. You will see I/O and IRQ for any detected PCI
devices. If it's an ISA plug-n-play device, you would cat
/proc/isapnp.
Dave Prentice
prentice@instruction.com
http://www.originsresource.org
-----Original Message-----
From: Bill Johnson <bywater@ametro.net>
To: nolug@joeykelly.net <nolug@joeykelly.net>
Date: Saturday, October 02, 2004 11:55 AM
Subject: Re: Re: [Nolug] online
>I've discovered that the US Robotics internal modem I have is a
hardware
>modem and is supported by Linux, if I configure the serial port. I
have to
>look up the IRQ number and the I/O address to accomplish this, I'm
told to
>log on as root and open the "terminal emulation program" (I could'nt
find
>this program) and type the command cat/proc/pci in order to find the
above
>values. Every time I type the command, in the terminal window, I get
"no
>such file or directory" what am I doing wrong? Help
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