On 3/26/09, Corrado Zoccolo <czoccolo@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > Hi, > I found that on my netbook (acer aspire one 110), kernel boot time > (kernel 2.6.29) is severely affected by the EC boot procedure, since > it is first fooled by a spurious interrupt in thinking that interrupts > work, and then gets a timeout waiting for an interrupt that never > arrives: > [ 0.351161] calling acpi_init+0x0/0x236 @ 1 > [ 0.361052] ACPI: EC: Look up EC in DSDT > [ 0.367754] ACPI: BIOS _OSI(Linux) query ignored > [ 0.368984] ACPI: EC: non-query interrupt received, switching to > interrupt mode > [ 0.860013] ACPI: EC: missing confirmations, switch off interrupt mode. > [ 0.866062] ACPI: Interpreter enabled > > There is a bug report for this issue > http://bugzilla.kernel.org/show_bug.cgi?id=12001 , marked as fixed on > an old kernel, but I'm still getting it with 2.6.29 (maybe my > controller is flaky?), so I'm looking for a workaround: is there a way > to force the ACPI using polling? [CC linux-acpi] Thanks for reporting this bug / issue. Your hardware is probably defective by design - that is, it doesn't follow the ACPI spec. But we can't blame users for that :-). I take it this isn't a regression, i.e. if you've tried earlier kernels, it's never worked any better? You say this is a severe delay - but your logs show 0.5 seconds only, is that right? Just to get it clear. Currently there is no option to force polling, sorry. I'm _guessing_ this was a deliberate omission. But I can sympathise that even 0.5s boot delay is bad on a netbook. Feel free to create a new bugzilla entry. You can attach the full output of dmesg, but acpidump is probably not required. What would be really helpful is if you could file on bugzilla, and attach a full debug trace. I.e. as well as the normal dmesg, attach the dmesg output after recompiling with this change: drivers/acpi/ec.c: 29: /* Uncomment next line to get verbose printout */ 30: /* #define DEBUG */ change to 30: #define DEBUG Thanks again Alan -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-acpi" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html