Florin Andrei wrote: > Well, the thing is, without APIC (default with Fedora single-CPU > kernels) there was some overlap in the way the devices were assigned > interrupts. Nothing bad (especially since the EMU10K1 got it's own IRQ), > but still i thought there is room for improvement. > So, since IO-APIC usually provides more interrupts, i thought, well, if > there are more IRQs available, the kernel might find a better way to > assign them. > > The reality is quite the opposite. With IO-APIC the IRQs suffer from > more overlapping than without it. Which is kind of strange to me. > > BTW, the mobo is based on the NForce v1 chipset. > As per Clemens' note this is complicated. I'm not sure I understand your feedback about 'suffers from more overlapping'. Could you post the output of /proc/interrupts for the same machine configuration with IO-APIC and old style interrupts? One other 'misdirection' you may run into here is that many motherboards will tie together the interrupt line from multiple PCI slots to a single wire and run that line to the interrupt controller. This was very common with the older style interrupts and would show up as two or more devices sharing an interrupt. The only way around this with the older machines was to move boards around. With the newer IO-APIC machines the interrupt controllers have more inputs and there is generally less reason for motherboard designers to tie these together, but I have heard that they are still tied together on certain motherboards. (I don't know if this is true...I've just heard it.) Therefore it might still happen that someone (you?) would see shared interrupts because fo the way the motherboard is designed. The info is often in the motherboard manual, or at least it alway is for Via-based motherboards. I have one non-audio nForce2 box but it's running in traditional mode: mark@gandalf mark $ cat /proc/interrupts CPU0 0: 112390402 XT-PIC timer 1: 126469 XT-PIC keyboard 2: 0 XT-PIC cascade 5: 1336833 XT-PIC NVidia nForce2, eth0 8: 2 XT-PIC rtc 9: 0 XT-PIC acpi 10: 68038461 XT-PIC ohci1394, ehci_hcd, usb-ohci, usb-ohci, nvidia 11: 2188451 XT-PIC ide2 12: 10755041 XT-PIC PS/2 Mouse 14: 3 XT-PIC ide0 NMI: 0 ERR: 0 As always, I think this is an interesting topic being that I'm a PC hardware guy. I cannot imagine why too many musicians would want to go through all of this though! Good luck! - Mark