Network Card IRQ Conflicts with Another DeviceLast reviewed: February 12, 1996Article ID: Q126633 |
The information in this article applies to:
SYMPTOMSAfter you install a network interface card (NIC) in your computer, the IRQ that is set may conflict with another device in your system.
CAUSEThis problem can occur with NICs that are software configurable. If Windows 95 cannot detect the NIC resources (for example, if there is no PROTOCOL.INI file, NDIS 2 driver, or Novell NetWare ODI configuration) it defaults to the first available logical configuration, regardless of IRQ assignments.
RESOLUTIONUse Control Panel to change the IRQ setting for the NIC to its original setting. To do so, follow these steps:
MORE INFORMATIONDuring Setup, Windows 95 tries to determine the NIC's configuration from existing network information. If no network configuration information exists, Setup tries to detect the configuration. If you are using a software configurable NIC, Setup detects the I/O address, not the IRQ. Setup then assigns an IRQ from the first logical configuration Windows 95 has for it, even though the IRQ may already be assigned to another device. For example, if you install an Intel EtherExpress 16 NIC configured to use IRQ 10 in a computer with no previous network files, Setup assigns IRQ 3 to the NIC when it cannot find the NIC's IRQ. This creates an IRQ conflict, because IRQ 3 is already assigned to COM2.
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KBCategory: kbnetwork kbsetup kbhw
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