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Hew Jampton
28th May 2000, 18:18
When I run McAfee Nuts & Bolts, it comes up with the report “IRQ Holder for PCI Steering has been disabled (code 22)”. Nuts & Bolts cannot autofix this. I have checked in System Properties/ Device Manager/ View by connection/ Plug & Play BIOS/ PCI Bus/ Properties/ IRQ Steering and the following default settings are set:
Checked: Use IRQ Steering
Checked: Get IRQ table using MS Specification table
Not checked: Get IRQ table from Protected Mode PCIBIOS 2.1 cal
Checked: Get IRQ table from Real Mode PCIBIOS 2.1 cal

Under ‘Status’, is
IRQ Steering Enabled
IRQ table read from MS IRQ Routing Specification
IRQ Miniport Data processed successfully
IRQ Miniport loaded successfully

As I suspect that my computer crashes occasionally because of a device conflict that is not apparent in Device Manager, should I enable this ‘IRQ Holder for PCI Steering’, if so how do I do it?

spannersatcx
29th May 2000, 13:50
Windows 95 OEM Service Release 2 (OSR2) and Windows 98 provide support for PCI bus
IRQ steering. By using PCI bus IRQ steering, Windows can dynamically assign or "steer" PCI
bus IRQs to PCI devices. Note that Microsoft Windows 95 (retail release) and Microsoft
Windows 95 OEM Service Release 1 (OSR1) do not provide support for PCI bus IRQ
steering.

ISA and PCI IRQs

Multiple Industry Standard Architecture (ISA) devices cannot share an ISA IRQ, however,
multiple PCI devices can share a PCI IRQ. On computers that use a PCI bus, the 16
standard IRQs can be programmed to either PCI or ISA mode. An IRQ cannot be
programmed for both modes at once.

How IRQs Are Assigned to PCI Devices

In Windows 95 (retail release) and OSR1, the Basic Input/Output System (BIOS) assigns
IRQs to PCI devices. With OSR2 and Windows 98, if PCI bus IRQ steering is disabled in
Windows the BIOS assigns IRQs to PCI devices, but if PCI bus IRQ steering is enabled,
Windows assigns IRQs to PCI devices. When IRQ steering is enabled the BIOS still assigns
IRQs to PCI devices, and even though Windows has the ability to change these settings, it
generally does not.

CardBus Cards and OSR2

PCI R3 Personal Computer Memory Card International Association (PCMCIA) cards (CardBus
cards), look very similar to the more common ISA R2 PCMCIA cards. CardBus cards use
32-bit addressing and require a PCI-type shareable IRQ. R2 PCMCIA cards use 16-bit
addressing with an ISA-type non- shareable IRQ. PCI bus IRQ steering gives the operating
system the flexibility to reprogram PCI IRQs when it rebalances Plug and Play resources.
Without PCI bus IRQ steering, Windows can only rebalance Plug and Play ISA IRQs to
resolve resource conflicts.

How OSR2 and Windows 98 Use PCI Bus IRQ Steering

PCI bus IRQ steering gives OSR2 and Windows 98 the flexibility to reprogram PCI interrupts
when rebalancing Plug and Play PCI and ISA resources around non-Plug and Play ISA
devices. Windows 95 (retail release) and OSR1 cannot rebalance PCI and ISA IRQs for Plug
and Play devices around non-Plug and Play ISA devices to solve resource conflicts.

For example, if your computer's BIOS is unaware of non-Plug and Play ISA cards, the
operating system does not have PCI bus IRQ steering, and the BIOS has set a PCI device
to IRQ 10, you may have a resource conflict when you add a non-Plug and Play ISA device
that is configured for IRQ 10.

However, with PCI bus IRQ steering the operating system can resolve this IRQ resource
conflict. To do so, the operating system:

Disables the PCI device.

Reprograms a free IRQ to a PCI IRQ, for example IRQ 11.

Assigns an IRQ holder to IRQ 11.

Moves the PCI device to IRQ 11.

Reprograms IRQ 10 to be an ISA IRQ.

Removes the IRQ holder for IRQ 10.

IRQ Holder

An IRQ Holder for PCI Steering may be displayed when you view the System Devices branch
of Device Manager. An IRQ Holder for PCI Steering indicates that an IRQ has been
programmed to PCI mode and is unavailable for ISA devices, even if no PCI devices are
currently using the IRQ. To view IRQs that are programmed for PCI-mode, follow these
steps:

1.Click Start, point to Settings, click Control Panel, and then double-click System.

2.Click the Device Manager tab.

3.Double-click the System Devices branch.

4.Double-click the IRQ Holder for PCI Steering you want to view, and then click the
Resources tab.

How to Determine if Your Computer Is Using IRQ Steering

To determine if your computer is using IRQ Steering, follow these steps:

1.Click Start, point to Settings, click Control Panel, and then double-click System.

2.Click the Device Manager tab.

3.Double-click the System Devices branch.

4.Double-click PCI Bus, and then click the IRQ Steering tab. You should see one of the
following settings:

IRQ Steering Enabled

IRQ Steering Disabled

NOTE: PCI bus IRQ steering is disabled by default in OSR2. If you are using OSR2, and IRQ
steering is disabled, verify that the Use IRQ Steering check box is selected on the IRQ
Steering tab.

IRQ Steering may be displayed as disabled in Device Manager for any of the following
reasons:

The IRQ routing table that must be provided by the BIOS to the operating system may be missing or contain errors. The IRQ routing table provides information on how the motherboard is configured for PCI IRQ's.

The Use IRQ Steering check box is not selected.

The "Get IRQ table from Protected Mode PCIBIOS 2.1 call" check box is not selected.

Your computers BIOS may not support PCI bus IRQ steering. For more information, contact the
manufacturer of your BIOS.
MORE INFORMATION

When PCI bus IRQ steering is enabled, Windows dynamically assigns or "steers" PCI bus
IRQs to PCI devices. If there are IRQ conflicts between PCI devices, you may need to
disable PCI bus IRQ steering to determine where the conflicts occur. To disable PCI bus IRQ
steering, follow these steps:

1.Click Start, point to Settings, click Control Panel, and then double-click System.

2.Click the Device Manager tab.

3.Double-click the System Devices branch.

4.Double-click PCI Bus, and then click the IRQ Steering tab.

5.Click the Use IRQ Steering check box to clear it, click OK, and then click OK again.

6.When you are prompted to restart your computer, click Yes.

NOTE: If you click No instead of Yes when you are prompted to restart your
computer, the changes do not take affect.

NOTE: You may also have to disable PCI bus IRQ steering in your computer's basic
input/output system (BIOS). For information about how to do so, contact you BIOS
manufacturer.

The following settings determine which routing tables Windows uses when programming IRQ
steering:

Get IRQ table using ACPI BIOS:

When this check box is selected, the ACPI BIOS IRQ routing table is the first table Windows tries to use to program IRQ steering. If a PCI device is not working properly, click this check box to clear it.

Get IRQ table using MS Specification table:

When this check box is selected, the MS Specification routing table is the second table Windows tries to use to program IRQ steering.

Get IRQ table from Protected Mode PCIBIOS 2.1 call:

When this check box is selected, the Protected Mode PCIBIOS 2.1 routing table is the third table
Windows tries to use to program IRQ steering.

Get IRQ table from Real Mode PCIBIOS 2.1 call:

When this check box is selected, the Real Mode PCIBIOS 2.1 routing table is the fourth table
Windows tries to use to program IRQ steering.

NOTE: By default, the "Get IRQ table from Protected Mode PCIBIOS 2.1 call" check box is not
selected. You should only click this check box to place a check mark if a PCI device is not working properly.

IRQ Holder For PCI Steering may appear under IRQ Routing Status even though PCI bus
IRQ steering is disabled. This can occur if the IRQ settings are being read by your
computer's BIOS. For information about modifying the BIOS, contact your BIOS
manufacturer.


[This message has been edited by spannersatcx (edited 29 May 2000).]

Ausatco
29th May 2000, 17:10
Have ta give it to ya, spanners, that's something else!

Do you work on your laptop for MS while in the cruise? :) A datalink to redmond, perhaps? :)

Good stuff. Now I have a little reading to do ... http://www.pprune.org/ubb/NonCGI/frown.gif

AA

Hew Jampton
29th May 2000, 21:15
Thanks spanners, looks like I have a LOT of reading to do.