You are not logged in.
Hi!
I changed from hotplug to hwd. The booting process hangs about 20-25 minutes (!) at the lshwd part. After that the system is going up quick and without any problems. 
When I run the lshwd -id command the system freezes after a few minutes and I have to reset the machine. 
I'm not sure how to solve this problem. I tried hwd -u to get the latest update but it does not change the booting behaviour.
Any suggestions?
Thanks for your help
Sebastian
Offline

Ziggy is currently updating the table to increase compatibility. I would assume it is not yet compatible with your system.
Offline

hmm...
Rasat is maintaining the pci/usb-tables (though i made a completely new tables for lshwd-2.0, but this is not released yet), and the problem can be caused by a wrong module loaded OR by lshwd itself.
is running "lshwd" by itself hangs your system, or is it only the "-id" parameter only? if your system hangs in both situations, can u please look at the module list loaded by lshwd and check manually if one of those modules is the cause of that?
thanks.
Offline
"lshwd" and "lshwd -id" both run fine. (different from my first statement, sorry!)
But "hwd -s" or "hwd -e" whitch starts (I think) "lshwd -a -n -m" seems to be the point: After starting this command a lot of "modprobe" commands are eating nearly 100% of one cpu until the system freezes.
Is there a way to get a more verbose output of the "lshwd -a -n -m" command to find out the smashing "modprobe" command?
Offline

You can always try adding all the modules you need to the MODULES=() array in rc.conf - then you can get rid of both hotplug and hwd on boot.
Offline

look at the modules "lshwd -a" loads, and try loading them manually one-by-one, and see which one causes the problem. my guess is that lshwd recognizes a wrong module for your system, but this is only a guess. i'll be waiting for your results.
Offline

Rasat is maintaining the pci/usb-tables ...
If there is a problem among the modules in the tables, I will update and then you run "hwd -u".
Markku
Offline
I tried "lshwd -a" and  have found this:
The command stops before 
"00:11.0 Multimedia audio controller: IC Ensemble Inc|ICE1724 [Envy24HT] (snd-ice1724)". This is my great Maudio Revolution 5.1 soundcard.
Running a "ps ax | grep modprobe"" on another console shows several  entries:
One "/sbin/modprobe snd_ice1724 -q"
Thirteen times these pairs:
"44xx4 pts/2    S+     0:00 modprobe snd_pcm_oss
44xy pts/2    S+     0:00 sh -c modprobe -i snd-pcm ; modprobe snd-pcm-oss"
And one with most cpu-time:
"4687 pts/2    R+     2:29 modprobe -i snd-pcm"
After a "killall modprobe" the lshwd command continues fine and the system seems to be stable until now. 
Is this helpful? I think the sound card could be the problem. In other distributions (e.g. Suse) the configuration of the sound card produces a lot of trouble (and a lot of strange noise, too).
Offline

i am confused about the following line, which u stated is been shown 13 times :
44xy pts/2 S+ 0:00 sh -c modprobe -i snd-pcm ; modprobe snd-pcm-osslshwd doesnt load its modules in pairs (or more) - only 1 at a time, but the line u posted shows clearly this is not the case : 2 modules are being loaded at 1 line separated with a semicolon, which points to the fact this is not lshwd doings... so im confused here. 
but i agree it seems your sound-card is the trouble-maker, though its probably lshwd's fault... which modules are already loaded prior to "lshwd -a"?
ofcourse, this could be due to some weird kernel problem, but i dont want to throw lame accusations in the air before we have a good proof for that. so, the best thing is to look which modules "lshwd -a" tries to load, modprobe them manually, and see if your system freezes again. if so - blame it on the kernel  if not, we'll see what can we change in lshwd.
 if not, we'll see what can we change in lshwd.
thanks for all your input! 8)
Offline

I checked the tables in vendor and device ids what were found, all are fine.
Markku
Offline

i am confused about the following line, which u stated is been shown 13 times :
44xy pts/2 S+ 0:00 sh -c modprobe -i snd-pcm ; modprobe snd-pcm-osslshwd doesnt load its modules in pairs (or more) - only 1 at a time, but the line u posted shows clearly this is not the case : 2 modules are being loaded at 1 line separated with a semicolon, which points to the fact this is not lshwd doings... so im confused here.
but i agree it seems your sound-card is the trouble-maker, though its probably lshwd's fault... which modules are already loaded prior to "lshwd -a"?
Those lines are from alsaconf - they will be in /etc/modprobe.conf. Try commenting the alsaconf crap out.
Offline