Chapter 4
IRQs Activity Monitoring
IRQ3
(COM 2)
IRQ4
(COM 1)
IRQ5
(LPT 2)
IRQ6
(Floppy Disk)
IRQ7
(LPT 1)
IRQ8
(RTC Alarm)
IRQ9
(IRQ2 Redir)
IRQ10 (Reserved)
IRQ11 (Reserved)
IRQ12 (PS/2 Mouse)
IRQ13 (Coprocessor)
IRQ14 (Hard Disk)
IRQ15 (Reserved)
Move Enter:Select +/-/PU/PD:Value F10:Save ESC:Exit F1:General Help
F5:Previous Values F6:Fail-safe defaults F7:Optimized Defaults
The following is a list of IRQ's, Interrupt ReQuests, which can be exempted
much as the COM ports and LPT ports above can. When an I/O device
wants to gain the attention of the operating system, it signals this by
causing an IRQ to occur. When the operating system is ready to respond to
the request, it interrupts itself and performs the service.
When set On, activity will neither prevent the system from going into
a power management mode nor awaken it.
Enabled
Enabled
Enabled
Enabled
Enabled
Menu Level
Disabled
Disabled
Disabled
Disabled
Enabled
Enabled
Enabled
Disabled
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