diff options
author | markm <markm@FreeBSD.org> | 1996-04-12 14:24:59 +0000 |
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committer | markm <markm@FreeBSD.org> | 1996-04-12 14:24:59 +0000 |
commit | 4bc136affadd38897e81eb995069f586b2106a20 (patch) | |
tree | ce7bae857d2f44daff25fb604488387d5025e377 /etc/sysconfig | |
parent | 1c2cbbd040ed08fc4cafb66da7251ca95e8aa245 (diff) | |
download | FreeBSD-src-4bc136affadd38897e81eb995069f586b2106a20.zip FreeBSD-src-4bc136affadd38897e81eb995069f586b2106a20.tar.gz |
Update the Entropy-Gatherer to reflect a better setup - do not
use IRQ1, as the keyboard hook already gets this timing info.
Also some slight improvements to the comments.
Diffstat (limited to 'etc/sysconfig')
-rw-r--r-- | etc/sysconfig | 18 |
1 files changed, 12 insertions, 6 deletions
diff --git a/etc/sysconfig b/etc/sysconfig index 2cb5fc4..11ee32e 100644 --- a/etc/sysconfig +++ b/etc/sysconfig @@ -4,7 +4,7 @@ # This is sysconfig - a file full of useful variables that you can set # to change the default startup behavior of your system. # -# $Id: sysconfig,v 1.42 1996/03/14 18:24:07 nate Exp $ +# $Id: sysconfig,v 1.43 1996/04/03 17:13:59 phk Exp $ ######################### Start Of Local Configuration Section ########### @@ -245,14 +245,14 @@ linux=NO # Set to a string representing the interrupts you are going to use # for generating entropy in the kernel (or NO to ignore). -# The keyboard (IRQ 1) is good if it used a lot. -# If the machine is networked, the Ethernet card is good. +# If the machine is networked, the Ethernet card IRQ is good. # The IRQ on an intelligent hard disk controller is good. # The IRQ's on most sound devices are good. # # The following choices are BAD: -# THe IRQ's on COM-ports (SIO devices), the IRQ used by an IDE -# disk or CDROM, and the IRQ on the system clock. +# The IRQ's on COM-ports (SIO devices), the IRQ used by a "classic" +# IDE disk or cdrom (Intelligent controllers seem to be OK), and +# the IRQ on the system clock. # # Experiment with the rest. The best interrupts are the ones that # happen fairly irregularly, and never occur in very high-speed bursts. @@ -261,4 +261,10 @@ linux=NO # /dev/random, and no problems on your system, like slowdowns, # Sluggish net/disk activity, perhaps even errors. -rand_irqs="-s 1" +# For example - if you have a sound blaster on IRQ5, an ethernet card +# on IRQ10 and a SCSI controller on IRQ11 (eg ADAPTEC 1542) you might +# try this: +# +# rand_irqs="-s 5 -s 10 -s 11" + +rand_irqs="NO" |