Felipe, Hi. IRQ5 == NOT_GOOD. The two normal ways to change hardware interrupts are: 1) Change the slot the card is in until you find the slot that uses the IRQ you want. I recommend you do not share IRQs between your sound card and any other device in your system. Asus MBs give you a table that describes which slots are using shared IRQs. Follow the documentation if you have some. 2) Look and see if your BIOS allows you to set the IRQ of a specific slot. If it does (my Asus MBs do, which is another reason I like them) then reserve IRQ10 (or even IRQ9) for the slot your audio card is in. This is sometimes a bit difficult to find. It is under something like Advanced PCI Configuration in my BIOS. I've seen some GigaByte MBs that say they have this feature, but then don't do anything. Humm...is this actually an ISA card? I hope not... Mark > -----Original Message----- > From: linux-audio-user-admin@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx > [mailto:linux-audio-user-admin@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx]On Behalf Of felipe > Sent: Tuesday, February 04, 2003 2:41 PM > To: linux-audio-user@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx > Subject: Re: [linux-audio-user] Uhm, low latency? > > > On Tuesday 04 February 2003 01:58, Mark Knecht wrote: > > lspci -v and tell us what IRQ you have for audio. Best (in my > > experience) is IRQ 9, followed by 10, or 11. > > Uhm, my sound card (an opl3sa2 PnP) is using IRQ 5. IRQ 9 is taken by > usb-uhci (which I rarely use for my camera), 10 is not used, 11 > is for the > video card. I never tried to change the default values, how could > I do that? > Right now I enable the sound card at boot with > $: isapnp /etc/isapnp.conf > and then loading the alsa module, I thought this meant I could > simply change > the values in /etc/isapnp.conf but no... > > Anyways, working as root does the job very well, apart from freezing > everything sometimes :) > > felipe > > > -- > Prendi GRATIS l'email universale che... risparmia: http://www.email.it/f > > Sponsor: > Erboristeria.com: Fanghi Guam con sconti irresistibili > Clicca qui: http://adv2.email.it/cgi-bin/foclick.cgi?mid=800&d=4-2 > >