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<b><a class="bz_bug_link
bz_status_RESOLVED bz_closed"
title="RESOLVED NOTOURBUG - RX 480 does not work as eGPU (amdgpu crashes at amdgpu_bo_init)"
href="https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=98552#c17">Comment # 17</a>
on <a class="bz_bug_link
bz_status_RESOLVED bz_closed"
title="RESOLVED NOTOURBUG - RX 480 does not work as eGPU (amdgpu crashes at amdgpu_bo_init)"
href="https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=98552">bug 98552</a>
from <span class="vcard"><a class="email" href="mailto:alexdeucher@gmail.com" title="Alex Deucher <alexdeucher@gmail.com>"> <span class="fn">Alex Deucher</span></a>
</span></b>
<pre>(In reply to Gašper Sedej from <a href="show_bug.cgi?id=98552#c16">comment #16</a>)
<span class="quote">> So the "PCI resource allocation" is something that bios is doing? So another
> computer to test...?</span >
It's a combination of the bios and the kernel. Your best bet is to email the
linux-pci mailing list or file a kernel bug against the pci subsystem about the
failure to assign pci resources. There's nothing the gpu driver can do until
that is resolved.
linux-pci ML:
<a href="http://vger.kernel.org/vger-lists.html#linux-pci">http://vger.kernel.org/vger-lists.html#linux-pci</a>
Kernel bugzilla:
<a href="https://bugzilla.kernel.org/enter_bug.cgi?product=Drivers">https://bugzilla.kernel.org/enter_bug.cgi?product=Drivers</a>
Select PCI from the component list.</pre>
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