Interrupt storm detection
Ian FREISLICH
if at hetzner.co.za
Mon Jun 14 08:06:55 GMT 2004
> On 2004-06-11 16:01 +0200, Ian FREISLICH <if at hetzner.co.za> wrote:
>
> Hmmm, maybe I'm missing something obvious, but I thought that polling
> was more efficient than the silly one-byte-per-interrupt mode that is
> causing the interrupt storm detection to slow down the parallel port
> (and it was more efficient before!).
How do you turn polling on and does the driver support polling?
> And then, there are ECP and EPP modes (should be enabled in the BIOS
> setup) which even go as far as to allow DMA to the parallel port ...
>
> Just try
>
> lptcontrol -p
>
> for polled mode on /dev/lpt0 (or use -d /dev/lptX), or
>
> lptcontrol -e
[brane-dead] ~ # lptcontrol -p
lptcontrol: open: Device busy
[brane-dead] ~ # lptcontrol -e
lptcontrol: open: Device busy
[brane-dead] ~ # lpc down all
lp:
printer and queuing disabled
status message is now: printing disabled
[brane-dead] ~ # lptcontrol -e
lptcontrol: open: Device busy
[brane-dead] ~ # killall lpd
[brane-dead] ~ # lptcontrol -e
lptcontrol: open: Device busy
[brane-dead] ~ # lptcontrol -p
lptcontrol: open: Device busy
:/ ?
> for extendend mode (may need to have an ISA interrupt assigned to the
> printer port in the BIOS, for best results ;-)
The port is set as ECP/EPP in the BIOS with an IRQ assigned to it.
ppc0: <Parallel port> at port 0x378-0x37f irq 7 on isa0
ppc0: SMC-like chipset (ECP/EPP/PS2/NIBBLE) in COMPATIBLE mode
ppc0: FIFO with 16/16/16 bytes threshold
ppbus0: <Parallel port bus> on ppc0
ppbus0: IEEE1284 device found /NIBBLE/PS2/ECP
And it seems to plug and play:
Probing for PnP devices on ppbus0:
ppbus0: <Lexmark International Lexmark Optra E312> PRINTER PCL 6 Emulation, PostScript Level 2 Emulation, NPAP, PJL
plip0: <PLIP network interface> on ppbus0
lpt0: <Printer> on ppbus0
lpt0: Interrupt-driven port
ppi0: <Parallel I/O> on ppbus0
Ian
--
Ian Freislich
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