From: <ed_...@dr...> - 2003-10-13 18:06:32
|
By running dmesg |grep serial I get the this: lirc_serial: port 03f8 already in use, proceeding anyway lirc_serial: compile the serial port driver as module and lirc_serial: make sure this module is loaded first lirc_serial: auto-detected active low receiver Is this what you are looking for. Eaither way this seems bad. What do you mean by what board, the board for the ir reciever. I'm really notsure. I bought it from here http://www.zapway.de/e_index1.htm I can try to contact them if need be and find out the details. Thanks Ed On Mon, 2003-10-13 at 09:17, Florian Schwarz wrote: >Edward G Finegan wrote: > >>I'm not sure if this is a problem I'm having with lirc or something >>deeper. I bought one or the IR receivers from zapway which is recommend >>on the site and I'm having problems getting it to work. I'm running a >>debian unstable system which i install the kernel modules source and >>compiled it against my current home made kernel. When i go to run mode2 >>i get no output at all. No error messages or output saying it received a >>signal. I have never used my serial ports before so i don't know if they >>need to be set up first or not. I ran setserial and it seemed to see >>them ok. Can anyone point me in the right direction. > >Please post the output of the module loading (lirc_serial) and please >tell us which board you use. > >Regards, >Floh |
From: Florian S. <fl...@ma...> - 2003-10-14 18:13:09
|
ed_...@dr... wrote: > By running dmesg |grep serial I get the this: > > lirc_serial: port 03f8 already in use, proceeding anyway > lirc_serial: compile the serial port driver as module and > lirc_serial: make sure this module is loaded first > lirc_serial: auto-detected active low receiver looks good this far... > Is this what you are looking for. Eaither way this seems bad. What do you > mean by what board, the board for the ir reciever. I'm really notsure. I bought it from here http://www.zapway.de/e_index1.htm > I can try to contact them if need be and find out the details. I mean which mainboard do you use? The EPIA-Boards only supply the serial port with 5V instead of the normal 10V. I heard some VIA-Boards supply to little power either... Please check this! btw: Next time one email to the list is enough, not five. Thanks! > Thanks > Ed Floh |
From: Edward G F. <ed_...@dr...> - 2003-10-14 22:00:09
|
I have a Ause a7v333 which is based on the VIA KT333 chip set. I did some searching with google wasn't able to come up with much on this topic. Is there a way I can test the volt output possibility with a multimeter??? On Tue, 2003-10-14 at 14:12, Florian Schwarz wrote: > ed_...@dr... wrote: > > > By running dmesg |grep serial I get the this: > > > > lirc_serial: port 03f8 already in use, proceeding anyway > > lirc_serial: compile the serial port driver as module and > > lirc_serial: make sure this module is loaded first > > lirc_serial: auto-detected active low receiver > > looks good this far... > > > Is this what you are looking for. Eaither way this seems bad. What do you > > mean by what board, the board for the ir reciever. I'm really notsure. I bought it from here http://www.zapway.de/e_index1.htm > > I can try to contact them if need be and find out the details. > > I mean which mainboard do you use? The EPIA-Boards only supply the > serial port with 5V instead of the normal 10V. I heard some VIA-Boards > supply to little power either... Please check this! > > btw: Next time one email to the list is enough, not five. Thanks! > > > Thanks > > Ed > > Floh > > > > ------------------------------------------------------- > This SF.net email is sponsored by: SF.net Giveback Program. > SourceForge.net hosts over 70,000 Open Source Projects. > See the people who have HELPED US provide better services: > Click here: http://sourceforge.net/supporters.php -- Edward G Finegan <ed_...@dr...> |
From: Florian S. <fl...@ma...> - 2003-10-15 12:05:29
|
Edward G Finegan wrote: > I have a Ause a7v333 which is based on the VIA KT333 chip set. I did > some searching with google wasn't able to come up with much on this > topic. Is there a way I can test the volt output possibility with a > multimeter??? Yes, between Pin 5 and Pin 7 should be approx. 10V. Anything below this value might cause problems. And please have a look at http://learn.to/quote, thx. Floh |
From: Edward G F. <ed_...@dr...> - 2003-10-21 01:56:51
|
Sorry for the long delay, I was outof town this weekend. > Yes, between Pin 5 and Pin 7 should be approx. 10V. Anything below this > value might cause problems. I am getting about 11 volts between these two pins. |