I know I'm not a kernel developer, but I might have some ideas... I my self
have wanted to see the irq's listed that weren't currently in use.
I have a question tho. back in the 2.0 days, what was the + for in the
interrupts? This machine below has 2.0.36:
0: 1104087408 timer
1: 538377 keyboard
2: 0 cascade
9: 6704638 xirc2ps_cs
11: 142 i82365
12: 3263094 PS/2 Mouse
13: 1 math error
14: 9763449 + ide0
^
If this doesn't break anything, maybe you can put a - in that place (I don't
guess 2.2 uses it since the other 3 machines I have are using 2.2 and
doesn't show the +) to indicate that it's a non active irq.
> So, a) means it does not add anything new and b) means it removes
> something which is already there (the ease of detecting what is currently
> active).
Maybe my idea will help... Too bad I'm not very good at modifing other
peoples code. (I even have problems with my own if I haven't worked with it
in a while <g>)
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