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- From: ralf@chpc.org (Ralph Valentino)
- Newsgroups: comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.video,comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.comm,comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.storage,comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.cd-rom,comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.systems,comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.networking,comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.chips,comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.misc,comp.answers,news.answers
- Subject: comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.* Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ) Part 1/5
- Followup-To: comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.misc
- Date: 11 Apr 1994 01:33:28 -0400
- Organization: Center For High Performance Computing
- Lines: 1088
- Sender: ralf@chpc.chpc.org
- Approved: news-answers-request@MIT.EDU
- Distribution: world
- Expires: 11 May 1994 00:00:00 GMT
- Message-ID: <2oanf8$md3@chpc.chpc.org>
- Reply-To: ralf@wpi.edu
- NNTP-Posting-Host: localhost.chpc.org
- Summary: This is a monthly posting containing a list of Frequently
- Asked Questions (and their answers) pertaining to hardware
- and IBM PC clones. It should be read by anyone who wishes
- to post to any group in the comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.*
- hierarchy.
- Xref: bloom-beacon.mit.edu comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.video:6699 comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.comm:2485 comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.storage:5011 comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.cd-rom:3342 comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.systems:2886 comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.networking:1847 comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.chips:5013 comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.misc:4920 comp.answers:4844 news.answers:17888
-
- Archive-name: pc-hardware-faq/part1
- Last-modified: 1994/04/10
- Version: 1.3
-
- This FAQ was compiled and written by Willie Lim and Ralph Valentino
- with numerous contributions by others. Acknowledgements are listed at
- end of this FAQ.
-
-
- Copyright notice:
-
- The comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.* Frequently Asked Questions is
- distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY
- WARRANTY. No author or distributor accepts responsibility to anyone
- for the consequences of using it or for whether it serves any
- particular purpose or works at all, unless he says so in writing.
- Refer to the GNU General Public License for full details.
-
- Everyone is granted permission to copy, modify and redistribute this
- FAQ, but only under the conditions described in the GNU General Public
- License. Among other things, the copyright notice and this notice
- must be preserved on all copies.
-
- Where section authors are noted, the copyright is held by that author.
- Where no author is noted, the copyright is held by the FAQ editors
- Willie Lim (wlim@lehman.com) and Ralph Valentino (ralf@wpi.wpi.edu).
-
- Changes, additions, comments, suggestions and questions to:
- Ralph Valentino ralf@wpi.edu
-
- Table of Contents:
-
- S) 1.0 Introduction
- Q) 1.1 What does this FAQ cover?
- Q) 1.2 Where can I find the latest copy of this FAQ?
- Q) 1.3 Is it ok to (sell/buy/job-offer/advertise) things here?
- Q) 1.4 Where should I post?
- Q) 1.5 How come no one answers my questions?
- Q) 1.6 What are the going prices for...?
- Q) 1.7 What is the history of the IBM PC?
- S) 2.0 Motherboards
- Q) 2.1 What are the differences between the 80x86 CPUs?
- Q) 2.2 How do I pick the right processor?
- Q) 2.3 What is the difference between the 386SX/386DX and 486SX/486DX?
- Q) 2.4 What is a ZIF socket?
- Q) 2.5 What is over clocking and should I do it?
- Q) 2.6 Which is faster, a DX-50 or DX2-66
- Q) 2.7 *What is the P24T/Overdrive?
- Q) 2.8 *What are the differences between the 80x87 co-processors?
- Q) 2.9 Would a math co-processor speed up my machine?
- Q) 2.10 *Can I use a x387 with my 486?
- Q) 2.11 Memory terminology, what does it mean?
- Q) 2.12 What happen to my 384k?
- Q) 2.13 How do I tell how big/fast my SIMMs are?
- Q) 2.14 What speed SIMMs do I need?
- Q) 2.15 Will 9 chip and 3 chip SIMMs work together?
- Q) 2.16 What do wait states and burst rates in my BIOS mean?
- Q) 2.17 Cache terminology, what does it mean?
- Q) 2.18 How do I upgrade the size of my cache?
- Q) 2.19 Do I need to fill the "dirty tag" RAM socket on my motherboard?
- Q) 2.20 How fast do my cache RAMs have to be?
- Q) 2.21 Which is the best cache policy, write-through or "write-back?"
- Q) 2.22 What about an n-way set associative cache, isn't it better?
- Q) 2.23 *Which is better, ISA/EISA/VLB?
- Q) 2.24 *What are the (dis)advantages of ISA/VLB/EISA SCSI?
- Q) 2.25 *What is PCI?
- Q) 2.26 Will an ISA card work in an MCA (PS/2) machine?
- Q) 2.27 *What does the "chip set" do?
- Q) 2.28 How do I enter the CMOS configuration menu?
- Q) 2.29 What is bus mastering and how do I know if I have it?
- Q) 2.30 Can I put an ISA cards in EISA slots?
- Q) 2.31 How should I configure ISA/VLB cards in the EISA config utility?
- Q) 2.32 What is the difference between EISA Standard and Enhanced modes?
- Q) 2.33 Is there any point in putting more than 16M in an ISA machine?
- Q) 2.34 What disadvantages are there to the HiNT EISA chip set?
- Q) 2.35 *Should I change the ISA bus speed?
- Q) 2.36 Can I use IRQ2 or is it special?
- Q) 2.37 Where do all the IRQ's go?
- S) 3.0 IO controllers/interfaces
- Q) 3.1 *How do IDE/MFM/RLL/ESDI/SCSI interfaces work?
- Q) 3.2 *How can I tell if I have MFM/RLL/ESDI/IDE/SCSI?
- Q) 3.3 Do caching controllers really help?
- Q) 3.4 Do IDE controllers use DMA?
- Q) 3.5 *How do I get an MFM/RLL/ESDI & IDE drive to coexist with each other?
- Q) 3.6 Why won't my two IDE drives work together?
- Q) 3.7 *Which is better, VLB or ISA IDE?
- Q) 3.8 How do I install a second controller?
- Q) 3.9 Which is better, SCSI or IDE?
- Q) 3.10 Can MFM/RLL/ESDI/IDE and SCSI coexist?
- Q) 3.11 What's the difference between SCSI and SCSI-2? Are they compatible?
- Q) 3.12 Can I share SCSI devices between computers?
- Q) 3.13 How do I swap A: and B:
- Q) 3.14 What is a 16550 and do I need one?
- Q) 3.15 *Are there any >4 serial port cards?
- Q) 3.16 Should I buy an internal or external modem?
- Q) 3.17 What do all of the modem terms mean?
- Q) 3.18 What kinds of sound cards are avalable?
- Q) 3.19 Where can I find EISA/VLB sound and IO cards?
- Q) 3.20 +How does the keyboard interface work?
- Q) 3.21 +Can I fake a keyboard so my computer will boot without it?
- S) 4.0 Storage/Retrieval Devices
- Q) 4.1 Why do I lose x Meg on my hard drive?
- Q) 4.2 *Should I get an IDE/floppy/SCSI/parallel port tape drive?
- Q) 4.3 I have two floppies. Can I add a floppy based tape drive?
- Q) 4.4 How fast is a tape drive? Will a dedicated controller improve this?
- Q) 4.5 What is QIC80, QIC40?
- Q) 4.6 How come I can't fit as much stuff on my tape drive as they claim?
- Q) 4.7 Are Colorado/Conner/Archive/... tapes compatible with each other?
- Q) 4.8 How does the drive/software know how long the tape is?
- Q) 4.9 What are all those QICs?
- Q) 4.10 Which QICs are read/write compatible?
- Q) 4.11 What is the CMOS/jumper setting for my hard drive?
- S) 5.0 Video
- Q) 5.1 *Can I use two video cards in the same system?
- Q) 5.2 *What kinds of monitors are available?
- Q) 5.3 *Can I get an RGB monitor to work with my PC?
- Q) 5.4 *How can I hook more than one monitor to my video card?
- Q) 5.5 *Which video card is best for DOS/Windows/X11/OS2?
- Q) 5.6 *What is the black horizontal line on my monitor?
- S) 6.0 Systems
- Q) 6.1 *What should I upgrade first?
- Q) 6.2 Do I need a CPU fan / heat sink
- Q) 6.3 What does the turbo switch do?
- Q) 6.4 How does the front panel LED display measure the system's speed?
- Q) 6.5 Should I turn my computer/monitor off?
- Q) 6.6 Are there any manufacturers/distributers who read the net?
- S) 7.0 Diagnostics
- Q) 7.1 *What do the POST beeps mean?
- Q) 7.2 What do the POST codes mean?
- Q) 7.3 *I think my cache is bad. What's a good diagnostic?
- S) 8.0 Misc
- Q) 8.1 What is the pin out for ...?
- Q) 8.2 *Where are benchmark programs located. What do they mean?
- Q) 8.3 What is Plug and Play?
- Q) 8.4 What size should I set my DOS partitions to be?
- Q) 8.5 Why won't my system boot from the hard drive?
- Q) 8.6 How do I clean my computer?
- Q) 8.7 *What OS's are available for the PC? Which are free?
- Q) 8.8 *How can I transfer files between my PC and a Unix system?
- Q) 8.9 What tape backup software is available?
- Q) 8.10 Why doesn't my new device work as fast as it should?
- Q) 8.11 My drive lists a MTBF of 300,000 hours. Will it really last 34 years?
- Q) 8.12 How do I find pin 1 on my chip/card/cable/connector?
- Q) 8.13 I've run out of power connectors, what can I do?
- S) 9.0 References
- Q) 9.1 What other FAQ's are out there?
- Q) 9.2 +What do the industry acronyms stand for?
- Q) 9.3 Where can I get the ISA/EISA/VLB/PCI/etc specs?
- Q) 9.4 What books are available for the PC architecture?
- Q) 9.5 What books are available on network programming?
- Q) 9.6 What's the phone number for...
- S) 10.0 Acknowledgments
-
- * = incomplete
- + = new or significant changes since last post
-
- S) 1.0 Introduction
-
- Q) 1.1 What does this FAQ cover?
-
- This FAQ covers Frequently Asked Questions from all groups in the
- comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.* hierarchy. Software topics are only
- included if they are directly related to hardware or hardware
- interfacing.
-
- Q) 1.2 Where can I find the latest copy of this FAQ?
-
- If you haven't done so, new users on the net should read
- news.announce.newusers. In particular, the following posts are a good
- idea:
- A Primer on How to Work With The Usenet Community
- Answers to Frequently Asked Questions About Usenet
- Hints on Writing Style for Usenet
- Introduction to The *.answers Groups
-
- This FAQ is currently posted to news.answers, comp.answers,
- comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.cd-rom, comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.chips,
- comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.comm, comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.misc,
- comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.networking, comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.storage,
- comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.systems, and comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.video.
- All posts to news.answers are archived and are available via anonymous
- FTP, uucp and e-mail from the following locations:
-
- FTP:
- FTP is a way of copying file between networked computers. If
- you need help in using or getting started with FTP, send
- e-mail to mail-server@rtfm.mit.edu with
- send usenet/news.answers/ftp-list/faq
- as the body of the message.
-
- location: rtfm.mit.edu [18.70.0.224]
- directory: /pub/usenet/news.answers/pc-hardware-faq
- filenames: part1 to part5
-
- location: ftp.uu.net [137.39.1.9]
- directory: /archive/usenet/news.answers/pc-hardware-faq
- filenames: part1.Z to part5.Z [use uncompress]
-
- location: nic.switch.ch [130.59.1.40]
- directory: info_service/Usenet/periodic-postings
- filenames: [Check info_service/Usenet/00index]
-
-
- UUCP:
- location: uunet!/archive/usenet/news.answers/pc-hardware-faq/
- filenames: part1.Z to part5.Z
-
- E-mail:
- Send email to mail-server@rtfm.mit.edu containing these lines:
- send usenet/news.answers/pc-hardware-faq/part1
- ...
- send usenet/news.answers/pc-hardware-faq/part5
-
- You can find a dozen or more sites in the US, Europe and Japan that
- store the FAQ and archives for this various newsgroups by using the
- Internet search programs, Archie or Wais.
-
- Q) 1.3 Is it ok to (sell/buy/job-offer/advertise) things here?
-
- No, none of the above fit within the charter of the
- comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.* hierarchy, therefore such posts are
- considered unacceptable. For buying/selling things, use groups with
- the words 'wanted' or 'forsale', and for job offers, use groups with
- the words 'jobs'. All of these can be found in the misc.* hierarchy.
- For commercial advertisements, use only the biz.* hierarchy as per the
- guidelines of USENET. (refer to the news.* groups for more
- information).
-
- Q) 1.4 Where should I post?
-
- [From: grohol@alpha.acast.nova.edu (John M. Grohol)]
-
- This Pointer will help you find the information you need and get your
- questions answered much quicker than if you were to simply crosspost to
- every hardware newsgroup in existence. It is provided as a public service.
-
- Comments are welcome.
-
- Question on... Post to...
- ---------------------------------- --------------------------------
- Networking/networks comp.sys.novell
- comp.dcom.lans.* (where * equals:
- ethernet; fddi; misc; token-ring)
- comp.protocols.tcp-ip.ibmpc
- comp.os.os2.networking
- Servers comp.dcom.servers
- Modems comp.dcom.modems
- Printers comp.periphs.printers
- SCSI devices comp.periphs.scsi
- Other peripherals comp.periphs
- Soundcards comp.sys.ibm.pc.soundcard
- Other hardware questions comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.misc
- Non-commercial sale of hardware misc.forsale.computers.pc-clone
- Commercial sale of hardware biz.computers.hardware
- ---------------------------------- --------------------------------
- Question on... NEW GROUPS TO POST TO:
- --------------------------------- --------------------------------
- Monitors/video cards comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.video
- Modems/fax cards/comm questions comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.comm
- Hard/floppy/tape drives & media comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.storage
- CD-ROM drives & interfaces comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.cd-rom
- Questions on computer vendors comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.systems
- PC networking/networks comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.networking
- System chips/RAM chips/cache comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.chips
- ---------------------------------- --------------------------------
-
- Comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware is an invalid newsgroup since being superceded by
- comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.misc. Ask your newsgroup administrator to remove
- the old group and carry the new ones, if they haven't done so already.
-
- The new groups were passed during a CFV conducted according to
- Usenet Guidelines throughout the month of October, 1993.
-
- Q) 1.5 How come no one answers my questions?
-
- If you don't give enough information when asking your question, then
- people will not be able to answer it. If you're not willing to take
- the time to look up the necessary information, then why should you
- expect people to take the time to answer your question? For instance,
- if you're asking a question about SCSI, it is very important to know
- what type of SCSI host adapter (controller) you have. Some other
- important things to mention are which device drivers/tsr's you are
- loading, what other similar devices you have in your system, and
- exactly what in your setup has changed since it last worked.
-
- Q) 1.6 What are the going prices for...?
-
- If you're looking for new equipment, pick up a copy of Computer
- Shopper. This is the "bible" for buying new equipment. Skim through
- it for the best prices and give these distributers a call. In most
- cases, the advertisements must be placed months in advance; the actual
- price may be even lower than the advertised price! Two other things
- to note are the warranty, return policy and location of the company
- (companies within the same state as you may be required to add extra
- sales taxes).
-
- If you're looking for the expected price of used equipment, then scan
- the newsgroup misc.forsale.computers.pc-clone for similar items. This
- will give you the best idea as what to expect. Don't make assumptions
- that the price of used equipment will follow the market trends of new
- equipment. For instance, when new memory prices nearly doubled, the
- used prices were barely effected.
-
- Q) 1.7 What is the history of the IBM PC?
-
- [From:]
-
- Around 1978 and '79, the market served by IBM's Data Entry Systems
- division began to change. Instead of terminals and minicomputers or
- mainframes, customers began demanding autonomous, low cost,
- single-user computers with minimal compute power or connectivity, but
- compliance to standards like the ASCII alphabet and the BASIC
- programming language. The closest product in IBM's line was the 5110,
- a closed, BASIC-in-ROM machine with a tiny built-in character display.
- The 5110 was uncompetitive, and IBM started losing bids from key
- customers, mostly government agencies.
-
- Data Entry commissioned a consulting firm (Boca Associates?) to design
- a stop-gap machine to fill what was perceived within IBM as a
- short-lived, specialized niche. It was intended that the stop-gap
- machine would only be offered for a couple of years until it would be
- replaced in "The Product Line" by an internal IBM design. Some IBM
- executives believed the single-user desktop system was a fad which
- would die out when the shortcomings of such systems became
- appreciated.
-
- The motherboard design was based very closely on a single-board
- computer described in a 1978 (?) Intel application note. (Anybody got
- an original copy of this collector's item? Among other things, Intel
- argues that 640KB is more memory than single-user applications will
- ever need, because of the efficiency of segmented memory
- "management"!) The expansion slot "bus" is based on an Intel bus
- called Multibus 1, which Intel introduced in its microprocessor
- software development equipment in the mid '70s. The Monochrome and
- Color Graphics Display Adapters are based on application notes for the
- Motorola 6845 video controller chip, except that the strangely
- interlaced pixel addresses in the CGA appears to have been a design
- error. The "event driven" keyboard is an original design, but the
- concept is from the Xerox Alto and Star graphics workstations. The
- keyboard noise and "feel" are intended to emulate those of the IBM
- Selectric typewriter. The Cassette Interface design is original, but
- similar in concept to the one on the Radio Shack TRS-80.
-
- Data Entry Division approached Digital Research Inc. to offer its
- popular CP/M-86 operating system on the machine, but DRI rebuffed
- them. IBM's second choice was BASIC-in-ROM vendor Microsoft, which
- had no OS product at the time but quickly purchased a crude disk
- operating system from struggling Pacific Microsystems(?) to offer it
- to IBM. Its command interpreter was an imitation of Unix' Bourne
- Shell, with the special characters changed to avoid infringing AT&T's
- rights.
-
- Data Entry Division began bidding this system in various State
- procurements, without any plan to offer it to the public.
-
- It became obvious that the Cassette Interface and optional 360KB
- Flexible Disk Drive were inadequate. The Cassette Interface was
- dropped, and an optional Fixed Disk Drive offered on a revised model
- known as the IBM Personal Computer XT. (A fixed, or "hard" disk had
- been offered on the PC by special order, with a Xebec controller, but
- few were sold.) The disk controller was designed around the Western
- Digital 1010 chip, and its design is taken directly from a WD
- application note.
-
- The XT succeeded beyond all expectations. IBM offered the system to
- the public after it became clear that no other division was going to
- come up with anything timely. IBM published complete schematics and
- ROM listings, encouraging clones.
-
- In 1984, IBM introduced an upwardly compatible model based on the
- Intel 80286. The expansion slot "bus" was extended to 16-bit data
- path width the same way Intel had extended Multibus: by adding data
- and address bits, a signal for boards to announce their capability to
- perform 16-bit transfers, and byte swapping on the motherboard to
- support the 8-bit boards.
-
- S) 2.0 Motherboards
-
- Q) 2.1 What are the differences between the 80x86 CPUs?
-
- This section is posted separately as the "Personal Computer Chiplist"
- and archived along side this FAQ. Refer to section one for
- instructions on retrieving this file.
-
- Subject: Personal Computer CHIPLIST
- From: offerman@einstein.et.tudelft.nl (A. Offerman)
- Newsgroups: comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.chips
- Summary: This list contains the various CPU's and NPX's and their features,
- used in the IBM PC, IBM PC/XT, IBM PC/AT, IBM PS/2 and compatbles,
- and the differences between them.
- Archive-name: pc-hardware-faq/chiplist
-
- Q) 2.2 How do I pick the right processor?
-
- [From: jabram@ichips.intel.com (Jeff Abramson)]
-
- This is a hard question. You have tradeoffs between price,
- performance, compatibility, upgradebility, and power consumption.
- As a desktop unit owner, you probably have less concerns about
- power, but as a laptop owner, this is very important.
-
- The frequency of the CPU defines how fast its internal clock runs.
- This defines how fast instructions are executed. In many ways, this
- is meaningless, because a RISC machine (MIPS) running at 100MHz may
- in reality be slower than a 50Mhz i486 because a RISC system must
- execute more instructions to perform the same function (in some
- cases). Even when comparing processors in the same family, this
- info can be misleading. For example, an Intel486-25 is faster than
- an AMD386-40, since the 486 has microarchitectural advancements over
- the 386. The same can be said for the Pentium, where a 66Mhz
- Pentium is twice as fast as a 66MHz 486.
-
- For compatibility, keep in mind that the Intel parts are the basis
- for all of these processors. Therefore you always run the risk that
- an imitator's part may not be compatible. AMD chips are compatible
- because they are copied. For some of you, these factors may be
- important.
-
- As far as upgradability goes, this depends on both your motherboard
- and the processor. If you purchase a 486DX, then you can upgrade to
- a DX2 and double your internal clock simply by buying an overdrive
- chip if your motherboard has the ZIF socket. If it doesn't then you
- can replace the CPU with a DX2. Many new 486 motherboards contain
- overdrive sockets for the not-yet-released Pentium chip that is pin
- compatible.
-
- Q) 2.3 What is the difference between the 386SX/386DX and 486SX/486DX?
-
- [From: jabram@ichips.intel.com (Jeff Abramson)]
-
- The Intel386DX contains full 32 bit buses for external data,
- internal data, and address. The Intel386SX contains a smaller 16
- bit external data bus, and a smaller 24 bit address bus.
-
- The Intel486DX contains a floating point unit, the Intel486SX does
- not. A common rumor is that the 486SX is simply a DX part that has
- a failure in the floating point unit, so it has been disabled and
- the part has been produces as an SX. This was true for early
- production parts and samples, but not for the mass produces SX parts
- that we see today.
-
- Q) 2.4 What is a ZIF socket?
-
- [From: jabram@ichips.intel.com (Jeff Abramson)]
-
- ZIF stands for Zero Insertion Force, and describes a socket on your
- motherboard that supports an upgrade processor (overdrive
- processor). In general, an overdrive upgrade works in conjunction
- with your original processor so you cannot remove the original
- processor after upgrade. NOTE: Some motherboards do not have a ZIF
- socket so you must replace the existing processor to upgrade.
-
- Q) 2.5 What is over clocking and should I do it?
-
- [From: jabram@ichips.intel.com (Jeff Abramson)]
-
- Overclocking is a term generally used to describe how you have
- increased the clock frequency on your board to run your system at a
- higher speed. For example, if you plug a 25MHz i486 into a board
- that is configured to run a 33MHz i486, then you are overclocking
- your CPU. Most boards allow you to configure your clocking via
- jumpers, and others require a new clock oscillator.
-
- Although users have had success with overclocking, it is a dangerous
- practice for two reasons. First, the chip has been designed to meet
- a certain speed. Therefore, some circuits do not have the margin to
- operate at a higher frequency. The chips coming from a wafer have
- various speed specs (statistical distribution), so you may be lucky
- and own a CPU that has the circuit margins you need to overclock.
- But you don't know - and if you overclock, you may get data failure.
- The data failure may be reproducable - and therefore avoidable, but
- most likely not.
-
- Second, you have reliability concerns when overclocking.
- Overclocking means faster frequency, which means more current and
- power. This can lead to real failures in your CPU.
- Electromigration is one such failure where metal lines in your CPU
- will actually break or connect if they get too much current. This
- is irreversable, and most likely not covered under warranty.
-
- So when can you overclock? Really only if you don't care about
- burning out your CPU and you don't care if you get wrong data every
- now and then. If you own a machine and you use it just for games,
- then overclocking may be something to try - and you simply upgrade
- to a new CPU when you burn out the current one. Otherwise, it's not
- worth the small performance gain.
-
- Q) 2.6 Which is faster, a DX-50 or DX2-66
-
- The two processors are relatively close for overall usage. The DX-50
- has more I/O bandwidth and the DX2-66 has more computational power.
-
- Q) 2.7 *What is the P24T/Overdrive?
- Q) 2.8 *What are the differences between the 80x87 co-processors?
- Q) 2.9 Would a math co-processor speed up my machine?
-
- [From: jruchak@mtmis1.mis.semi.harris.com (John Anthony Ruchak)]
-
- If you do a lot of number-crunching with CAD/CAM applications,
- spreadsheets, and the like, a math co-processor is likely to increase
- performance. If on the other hand, your primary work is word
- processing, a math co-processor will have barely any effect at all.
- Also, a math co-processor will not provide any benefit if your CPU
- already has one built-in (486/586-DX chips). In addition, a math
- co-processor is not likely to improve the over-all performance of
- Microsoft Windows, except when you are running the afore-mentioned
- number-crunching programs.
-
- Q) 2.10 *Can I use a x387 with my 486?
-
- Q) 2.11 Memory terminology, what does it mean?
-
- [From: cls@truffula.sj.ca.us (Cameron L. Spitzer)]
-
- Read/write memory in computers is implemented using Random Access Memory
- chips (RAMs). RAMs are also used to store the displayed image in a video
- board, to buffer frames in a network controller or sectors in a disk
- controller, etc. RAMs are sold by their size (in bits), word width (how
- many bits can you access in one cycle), and access time (how fast you
- can read a location), among other characteristics.
-
-
- SRAMs and DRAMs
- ---------------
- RAMs can be classified into two types: "static" and "dynamic."
-
- In a static RAM, each bit is represented by the state of a circuit
- with two stable states. Such a "bistable" circuit can be built with four
- transistors (for maximum density) or six (for highest speed and lowest
- power). Static RAMs (SRAMs) are available in many configurations.
- (Almost) all SRAMs have one pin per address line, and all of them
- are able to store data for as long as power is applied, without any
- external circuit activity.
-
- In a dynamic RAM (DRAM), each bit is represented by the charge on a
- *very* small (30-50 femptofarads) capacitor, which is built into a
- single, specialized transistor. DRAM storage cells take only about
- a quarter of the silicon area that SRAM cells take, and silicon
- area translates into cost.
- The cells in a DRAM are organized into rows and columns. To access
- a bit, you first select its row, and then you select its column.
- Unfortunately, the charge leaks off the capacitor over time,
- so each cell must be periodically "refreshed" by reading it and
- writing it back. This happens automatically whenever a row is accessed.
- After you're finished accessing a row, you have to give the DRAM time
- to copy the row of bits back to the cells: the "precharge" time.
-
- Because the row and column addresses are not needed at the same
- time, they share the same pins. This makes the DRAM package smaller
- and cheaper, but it makes the problem of distributing the signals
- in the memory array difficult, because the timing becomes so
- critical. Signal integrity in the memory array is one of the
- things that differentiate a lousy motherboard from a high quality
- one.
-
- SIMMs and SIPPs
- ---------------
- Through the 1970s, RAMs were shipped in tubes, and the board makers
- soldered them into boards or plugged them into sockets on boards.
- This became a problem when end-users started installing their own
- RAMs, because the leads ("pins") were too delicate. Also, the
- individual dual in-line package (DIP) sockets took up too much board
- area.
- In the early 1980s, DRAM manufacturers began offering DRAMs on tiny
- circuit boards which snap into special sockets, and by the late '80s
- these "single in-line memory modules" (SIMMs) had become the most popular
- DRAM packaging. Board vendors who didn't trust the new SIMM sockets
- used modules with pins: single inline pinned packages (SIPPs),
- which plug into sockets with more traditional pin receptacles.
-
- PC-compatibles store each byte in main memory with an associated
- check bit, or "parity bit." That's why you add memory in multiples
- of nine bits. The most common SIMMs present nine bits of data at
- each cycle (we say they're "nine bits wide") and have thirty contact
- pads, or "leads." (The leads are commonly called "pins" in the trade,
- although "pads" is a more appropriate term. SIMMs don't *have* pins!)
-
- At the high end of the PC market, "36 bit wide" SIMMs with 72 pads
- are gaining popularity. Because of their wide data path, 36-bit SIMMs
- give the motherboard designer more configuration options (you can
- upgrade in smaller chunks) and allow bandwidth-enhancing tricks
- (i.e. interleaving) which were once reserved for larger machines.
- Another advantage of 72-lead SIMMs is that four of the leads are used
- to tell the motherboard how fast the RAMs are, so it can configure
- itself automatically. (I do not know whether the current crop of
- motherboards takes advantage of this feature.)
-
- "3-chip" and "9-chip" SIMMs
-
- In 1988 and '89, when 1 megabit (1Mb) DRAMs were new, manufacturers
- had to pack nine RAMs onto a 1 megabyte (1MB) SIMM. Now (1993) 4Mb DRAMs
- are the most cost-effective size. So a 1MB SIMM can be built with
- two 4Mb DRAMs (configured 1M x4) plus a 1Mb (x1) for the check-bit.
-
- VRAMs
- -----
- In graphics-capable video boards, the displayed image is almost
- always stored in DRAMs. Access to this data must be shared between
- the hardware which continuously copies it to the display device (this
- process is called "display refresh" or "video refresh") and
- the CPU. Most boards do it by time-sharing ordinary, single-port
- DRAMs. But the faster, more expensive boards use specialized DRAMs
- which are equipped with a second data port whose function is tailored
- to the display refresh operation. These "Video DRAMs" (VRAMs)
- have a few extra pins and command a price premium. They nearly double
- the bandwidth available to the CPU or graphics engine.
-
- (As far as I know, the first dual-ported DRAMs were built by Four-
- Phase Systems Inc., in 1970, for use in their "IV-70" minicomputers, which
- had integrated video. The major DRAM vendors started offering VRAMs
- in about 1983 [Texas Instruments was first], and workstation vendors
- snapped them up. They made it to the PC trade in the late '80s.)
-
- Speed
- -----
- DRAMs are characterized by the time it takes to read a word,
- measured from the row address becoming valid to the data coming out.
- This parameter is called Row Access Time, or tRAC. There are many
- other timing parameters to a DRAM, but they scale with tRAC
- remarkably well. tRAC is measured in nanoseconds (ns).
- A nanosecond is one billionth (10 e-9) of a second.
-
- It's so difficult to control the semiconductor fabrication processes,
- that the parts don't all come out the same. Instead, their performance
- varies widely, depending on many factors. A RAM design which would
- yield 50 ns tRAC parts if the fab were always tuned perfectly, instead
- yields a distribution of parts from 80 to 50. When the plant is new,
- it may turn out mostly nominal 70 ns parts, which may actually deliver
- tRAC between 60.1 ns and 70.0 ns, at 70 or 85 degrees Celcius and
- 4.5 volts power supply. As it gets tuned up, it may turn out mostly 60
- ns parts and a few 50s and 70s. When it wears out it may get less
- accurate and start yielding more 70s again.
-
- RAM vendors have to test each part off the line to see how fast it is.
- An accurate, at-speed DRAM tester can cost several million dollars, and
- testing can be a quarter of the cost of the parts. The finished parts
- are not marked until they are tested and their speed is known.
-
-
- Q) 2.12 What happen to my 384k?
-
- The memory between 640k and 1Meg is used for the BIOS, the video
- aperture, and a number of other things. With the proper memory
- manager, DOS can take advantage of it. Many systems, however, won't
- identify its existence on boot. This does not mean it isn't there.
-
- Q) 2.13 How do I tell how big/fast my SIMMs are?
-
- Individual DRAMs are marked with their speed after they are tested.
- The mark is usually a suffix to the part number, representing tens of
- nanoseconds. Thus, a 511024-7 on a SIMM is very likely a 70 ns DRAM.
- (vendor numbering scheme table to be added)
-
- Q) 2.14 What speed SIMMs do I need?
-
- [From: cls@truffula.sj.ca.us (Cameron L. Spitzer)]
-
- There is no reliable formula for deriving the required RAM speed from
- the clock rate or wait states on the motherboard. Do not buy a
- motherboard that doesn't come with a manual that clearly specifies
- what speed SIMMs are required at each clock rate. You can always
- substitute *faster* SIMMs for the ones that were called out in the
- manual. If you are investing in a substantial quantity of RAM,
- consider buying faster than you need on the chance you can keep it
- when you get a faster CPU.
-
- That said, most 25 MHz and slower motherboards work fine with 80 ns
- parts, most 33 MHz boards and some 40 MHz boards were designed for
- 70 ns parts, and some 40 MHz boards and everything faster require
- 60 ns or faster. Some motherboards allow programming extra wait states
- to allow for slower parts, but some of these designs do not really relax
- all the critical timing requirements by doing that. It's much
- safer to use DRAMs that are fast enough for the no-wait or one-wait
- cycles at the top end of the motherboard's capabilities.
-
- Q) 2.15 Will 9 chip and 3 chip SIMMs work together?
-
- [From: cls@truffula.sj.ca.us (Cameron L. Spitzer)]
-
- Almost always. But there are exceptions.
-
- 1. Some motherboards do not supply enough refresh address bits for a
- 4Mb x1 or a 1Mb x4 DRAM. These old motherboards will not work with 4
- MB 9-chip SIMMs or 1 MB 3-chip SIMMS.
-
- 2. Some EL CHEAPO motherboards do not have proper terminations on the
- lines which drive the DRAM array. These boards may show only marginal
- compatibility with various SIMMs, not working with all prefectly good
- SIMMs you try, favoring SIMMs with parameters skewed towards one end
- or another of the allowed ranges. In some cases, most of the SIMMs
- you happen to try might be 9-chip modules, and in other cases they
- might be 3-chip modules. A random selection of a dozen SIMMs might
- lead you to conclude the motherboard doesn't "work" with 3-chip
- modules, or with a "mixture" of 3-chip and 9-chip modules.
-
- You might find the real solution is to use SIMMs one speed faster
- than the manual calls for, because the particular motherboard design
- just cuts too many things too close.
-
- Q) 2.16 What do wait states and burst rates in my BIOS mean?
-
- [From: cls@truffula.sj.ca.us (Cameron L. Spitzer)]
-
- Modern motherboards are equipped with variable clocks and features
- for tuning board performance at each speed. The BIOS knows how to
- program the register bits which control these options.
-
- 1. Wait states may be adjustable to allow for slower DRAMs or
- cache RAMs. If you don't have a motherboard manual, or it doesn't
- say, then you will just have to experiment.
- 2. Sometimes a wait or two on a write is required with write-through
- cache. The programming allows for slower DRAMs. The extra wait
- state may cost you enough time that you would do better running at a
- slower clock rate where the wait state is not required.
- 3. Burst rates refer to the number of wait states inserted for
- each longword access in the cache fill cycle.
-
- Bob Nichols (rnichols@ihlpm.ih.att.com) adds:
- These numbers refer to the number of clock cycles for each access of a
- "burst mode" memory read. The fastest a 486 can access memory is 2 clock
- cycles for the first word and 1 cycle for each subsequent word, so
- "2-1-1-1" corresponds to "zero wait states." Anything else is slower.
-
- How fast you can go depends on the external clock speed of your CPU, the
- access time of your cache SRAMs, and the design of the cache controller.
- It can also be affected by the amount of cache equipped, since "x-1-1-1"
- is generally dependent on having 2 banks of cache SRAMs so that the
- accesses can be interleaved. With a 50MHz bus (486DX-50), few
- motherboards can manage "2-1-1-1" no matter how fast the SRAMs are. At
- 33MHz or less (486DX-33, 486DX2-66), many motherboards can achieve
- "2-1-1-1" if the cache SRAMs are fast enough and there are 2 banks
- equipped (cache sizes of 64KB or 256KB, typically).
-
- Q) 2.17 Cache terminology, what does it mean?
-
- [From: cls@truffula.sj.ca.us (Cameron L. Spitzer)]
-
- Why cache improves performance
- ------------------------------
- Today's microprocessors ("uPs") need a faster memory than can be made
- with economical DRAMs. So we provide a fast SRAM buffer
- between the DRAM and the uP. The most popular way to set it up is
- by constructing a "direct mapped cache," which is the only setup
- I'll describe here.
-
-
- Generic motherboard cache architecture
- --------------------------------------
- The direct mapped cache has three big features:
- 1. a "data store" made with fast SRAMs,
- 2 a "tag store" made with even faster SRAMs, and
- 3. a comparator.
-
- The data store is the chunk of RAM you see in the motherboard price
- lists. It holds "blocks" or "lines" of data recently used by the CPU.
- Lines are almost always 16 bytes. The address feeding the cache is
- simply the least significant part of the address feeding main memory.
- Each memory location can be cached in only one location in the data
- store.
-
- There are two "policies" for managing the data store. Under the
- "write-back" (or "copy-back") policy, the master copy of the data is
- in cache, and main memory locations may be "stale" at times. Under
- "write-through", writes go immediately to main memory as well as to
- cache and memory is never "stale."
-
- The tag store mantains one "word" of information about each line of
- data in the data store.
- In a "write-back" or "copy-back" cache, the tag word contains two items:
- 1. the part of the main memory address that was *not*
- fed to the data store, and
- 2. a "dirty" bit.
-
- A write-through cache doesn't need a dirty bit. The tag store is
- addressed with the most significant address bits that are being fed to
- the data store. The tag is only concerned with the address bits that
- are used to select a line. With a 16 byte line, address bits 0
- through 3 are irrelevant to the tag.
-
- An example: The motherboard has 32 MB main memory and 256 KB cache.
- To specify a byte in main memory, 25 bits of address are required: A0
- through A24. To specify a byte in data store, 18 bits (A0 through
- A17) are required. Lines in cache are 16 bytes on 16 byte boundaries,
- so only A3 through A17 are required to specify a line. The tag word
- for this system would represent A18 through A24 (plus dirty bit). The
- tag store in this system would be addressed by A3 through A17,
- therefore the tag store would require 16 K tag words seven bits wide.
- The dirty bit is written at different times than the rest of the tag,
- so it might be housed separately, and this tag store might be built in
- three 16K x4 SRAMs.
-
- What happens when it runs
- -------------------------
- Each motherboard memory cycle begins when the uP puts out a memory
- address. The data store begins fetching, and simultaneously the
- tag begins fetching. When the tag word is ready, the Comparator
- compares the tag word to the current address.
-
- If they match, a cache hit is declared and the uP reads or writes
- the data store location. If the hit is a write, the copy-back
- cache marks the line "dirty" by setting its dirty-bit in the line's
- tag word. The write-through motherboard simultaneously stores the
- write data in data store and begins a DRAM write cycle. The uP
- moves on.
-
- If the tag word doesn't match, what a bummer, it's a cache miss.
- If the line in cache is dirty, double bummer, the line must be
- copied back to main memory before anything else can happen. All
- 16 bytes are copied back, even if the hit was a one-byte write.
- This data transfer is called a "dirty write flush."
-
- On a read-miss, the motherboard has to copy a line from main memory
- to cache (and update the tag, the whole operation is called a "cache
- fill"), and the uP can stop waiting as soon as the bytes it wants
- go by. On a write-miss, the caches I've worked with ignore the
- event (that's an oversimplification) and the main memory performs
- a write cycle. I've heard of systems that fill on a write-miss,
- that is they replace the cache line whenever it misses, read or
- write, dirty or not. I've never seen such a system.
-
- Terms
- -----
- The 486, the 68020, and their descendants have caches on chip.
- We call the on-chip cache "primary" and the cache on the
- motherboard "secondary." The 386 has no cache, therefore the cache
- on a 386 motherboard is "primary." I like to call the DRAM array
- "core" for brevity. Motherboard = "mb." Megabyte = "MB."
-
- Problems
- --------
- I added "core" and I had to disable my secondary cache to
- get the board running. Or, I added core and performance took a dive.
- Disabling secondary cache improved it, but still real slow.
- What happened?
-
- Whenever you are adding memory and you cross a power-of-2
- address boundary, another address bit becomes interesting to the
- tag. That is, the tag does not care when you add your 8th MB
- (MB) but it cares a lot about the new address bit 24 when you add
- your 9th MB, or your 17th (bit 25). Evidently, at the low-price
- end of the mb market there are boards with not enough tag RAM
- sockets to support all the core they can hold. Most of these EL
- CHEAPO mbs don't even try to use cache in the region beyond the
- tag's coverage. Some of them don't have the logic to stay out or
- the BIOS doesn't know to enable it. These boards just don't run
- right.
-
- Do not buy a mb if you are not sure it can cache all of core. The
- worst case is with core fully stuffed with whatever the board claims
- to hold, and the smallest cache configuration. Some motherboards
- ask you to add cache when you add core, so that they don't have to
- provide for that worst case tag width. These motherboards may ask
- you to move some jumpers in the tag area. The jumpers control
- which address bits the tag looks at. Do not buy a motherboard if
- you don't know how to set all the jumpers.
-
-
- Q) 2.18 How do I upgrade the size of my cache?
-
- Look in your motherboard manual. Each motherboard is different.
- You will have to add or replace cache RAMs and move jumpers.
-
- Q) 2.19 Do I need to fill the "dirty tag" RAM socket on my motherboard?
-
- [From: cls@truffula.sj.ca.us (Cameron L. Spitzer)]
-
- Perhaps you don't *have* to for the board to run, but the missing RAM
- will cost you performance. Most "write-back" mbs cope with the
- missing RAM by treating all lines as dirty. You get a lot of
- unneccessary write cycles; you might even do better with
- write-through.
-
- Your bargain-basement no-documentation no-brand mb might not have the
- pullup resistor on that socket, and it might run for a second, ten
- minutes, or ten years with that pin not driven. I think it's a
- pointless risk to leave the socket empty.
-
- Q) 2.20 How fast do my cache RAMs have to be?
-
- [From: cls@truffula.sj.ca.us (Cameron L. Spitzer)]
-
- Only the person who designed your mb knows for sure. There is
- no simple formula related to clock rate. However, most people tell
- me their 33 MHz mbs' manuals call for 25 ns data store and 20 ns
- tag store, and their 40 and 50 MHz mbs want 20 ns data store and
- 15 or 12 ns tag. Tqhe tag has to be faster than data store to make
- time for the comparator to work. Do not buy a motherboard if you do
- not know what speed and size of cache RAMs it requires in all its
- speeds and configurations.
-
- If you're not sure, it doesn't hurt to use faster RAMs than your
- manual calls for. If your manual says 20 ns for location x and you
- happen to have 15 ns parts, it's ok to "mix" the speeds. It's ok to
- "mix" RAMs from more than one manufacturer. However, the faster RAMs
- will not buy you more performance.
-
- Q) 2.21 Which is the best cache policy, write-through or "write-back?"
-
- [From: cls@truffula.sj.ca.us (Cameron L. Spitzer)]
-
- For most applications, copy-back gives better performance than
- write-through. The amount of win will depend on your application and
- may not be significant. Write-through is simpler, but not by much any
- more.
-
- Q) 2.22 What about an n-way set associative cache, isn't it better?
-
- [From: cls@truffula.sj.ca.us (Cameron L. Spitzer)]
-
- At the high end of the mb market, caches are available with more than
- one set. In these caches, the data store is broken into two or four
- parts, or sets, with a separate tag for each. On a miss, clever
- algorithms (such as Least Recently Used) can be used to pick which set
- will be filled, because each set has a candidate location. The result
- is a higher hit rate than a direct mapped (single set) cache the same
- size can offer.
-
- The primary cache on the 486 is four-way set associative.
-
- Q) 2.23 *Which is better, ISA/EISA/VLB?
-
- Q) 2.24 *What are the (dis)advantages of ISA/VLB/EISA SCSI?
-
- Q) 2.25 *What is PCI?
-
- (note: this section is being worked on)
-
- Q) 2.26 Will an ISA card work in an MCA (PS/2) machine?
-
- No, they will not. MCA, unlike EISA and VLB, is not backward
- compatible with ISA.
-
- Q) 2.27 *What does the "chip set" do?
-
- Q) 2.28 How do I enter the CMOS configuration menu?
-
- [From: burnesa@cat.com (Shaun Burnet)]
-
- AMI BIOS Del key during the POST
- Award BIOS Ctrl-Alt-Esc
- DTK BIOS Esc key during the POST
- IBM PS/2 BIOS Ctrl-Alt-Ins after Ctrl-Alt-Del
- Phoenix BIOS Ctrl-Alt-Esc or Ctrl-Alt-S
-
- Q) 2.29 What is bus mastering and how do I know if I have it?
-
- Bus mastering is the ability of an expansion (ISA/EISA/VLB/MCA/etc)
- card to directly read and write to main memory. This allows the CPU
- do delegate I/O work out to the cards, freeing it to do other things.
- For all of the above busses, bus mastering capability is assumed.
- Unless specifically stated otherwise, you should assume each slot has
- this capability. For cards, this is not assumed. If you want a bus
- mastering card, you should specifically request it and expect to pay
- more. Note that some cards (RLL/MFM/IDE/com) are not available in bus
- mastering versions.
-
- Q) 2.30 Can I put an ISA cards in EISA slots?
-
- Yes, you can put ISA cards in EISA slots, the EISA bus was
- specifically designed to be 100% ISA compatible. ISA cards will not
- directly effect the performance of EISA cards; a well balanced system
- will have both. Note, however, that the total bandwidth of the bus
- will be split between all cards, so there is a strong advantage to
- using EISA cards for the high bandwidth devices (disk/video).
-
- Q) 2.31 How should I configure ISA/VLB cards in the EISA config utility?
-
- Only EISA cards matter in the ECU; ISA and VLB entries are only place
- markers. While this is a good way to keep track of IRQ, DMA and BIOS
- conflictions, ISA and VLB need not be placed in the configuration at
- all, nor should it be assumed that the settings for them match the
- actual card settings. If you wish to add them, you can use the
- "Generic ISA Card" configuration file for either. Do not expect card
- vendors to supply them.
-
- Q) 2.32 What is the difference between EISA Standard and Enhanced modes?
-
- Many EISA cards support both Standard (ISA) and Enhanced (EISA) modes.
- In Standard mode, the card will appear to be an ISA card to the OS; it
- will generate edge triggered interrupts and only accept ISA addressing
- (for bus mastering cards), for instance. An important thing to note
- is that the card may still do EISA specific things like 32-bit data
- bus mastering and EISA configuration setup as this functionality is
- hidden from the OS.
-
- Q) 2.33 Is there any point in putting more than 16M in an ISA machine?
-
- [From: cls@truffula.sj.ca.us (Cameron L. Spitzer)]
-
- Sure. Even inferior operating systems can use it for something.
- The question is how much performance it buys. In ISA, the DMA
- channels and bus-mastering IO cards can only address the first 16 MB.
- Therefore the device drivers have to copy data up and down or just
- not use the space. I am told the Linux SCSI drivers know how to
- do this. I don't know about OS/2 or MSWindows.
-
- Q) 2.34 What disadvantages are there to the HiNT EISA chip set?
-
- [From: ralf@wpi.wpi.edu (Ralph Valentino)]
-
- The HiNT Caesar Chip Set (CS8001 & CS8002) can come in three different
- configurations. All three of these configurations have EISA style
- connectors and are (sometimes incorrectly) sold as EISA motherboards.
- The differences should be carefully noted, though.
-
- The rarest of these configuration uses a combination of the first HiNT
- chip (CS8001) and the Intel chip set. This configuration can support
- the full EISA functionality: 32 address bits, 32 data bits, level
- sensitive (sharable) interrupts, full EISA DMA, watch dog (sanity)
- timer, and so forth.
-
- The second configuration is called Super-ISA, which uses both of the
- HiNT chips. This configuration is very common in low-end models. It
- supports a very limited functionality: 24 address bits, 32 data bits,
- edge triggered (non-sharable) interrupts, ISA (16 data, 24 address)
- DMA, and no watch dog timer. Some EISA boards, such as the Adaptec
- 1742A EISA Fast SCSI-2 host adapter, can be configured to work in this
- mode by hacking their EISA configuration file (.CFG) to turn off these
- features. Other EISA cards require these features and are therefore
- unusable in these systems.
-
- The final configuration is called Pragmatic EISA, or P-EISA. Like
- Super-ISA, both HiNT chips are used but external support logic
- (buffers and such) are added to provide a somewhat increased
- functionality: 32 address bits, 32 data bits, edge triggered
- (non-sharable) interrupts, ISA (16 data, 24 address) DMA, and no watch
- dog timer. The full 32 bits for address and data allow bus mastering
- devices access to the complete range of main memory. As with
- Super-ISA, there may be incompatibilities with some EISA cards.
-
-
- Q) 2.35 *Should I change the ISA bus speed?
-
- Q) 2.36 Can I use IRQ2 or is it special?
-
- IRQ2 is used to cascade the second interrupt controller on AT
- machines. This has one and only one side effect: from a software
- point of view, IRQ2 = IRQ9. You can freely use IRQ2 on any hardware
- device, provided you are not already using IRQ9. Your associated
- software driver can be set to IRQ2 or IRQ9, which ever it happens to
- prefer. Note that many video cards have an IRQ2 enable jumper for
- very, very old backward compatibility reasons; you should disable this
- before attempting to use the IRQ for something else. There are no
- unexpected side effects.
-
- Q) 2.37 Where do all the IRQ's go?
-
- [From: wlim@lehman.com (Willie Lim)]
-
- Default settings.
-
- IRQ DMA IO BASE Card or Device
- ADDRESS
- (HEX)
- === === ======== ===============
- 0 * * timer (reserved)
- 1 * * keyboard (reserved)
- 2 * * interrupt 8-15 (cascade)
- 2 * 330 MPU-401 Emulation (PAS 16)
- 3 * 2F8 COM2:
- 3 * 2F8 COM4:
- 3 * 300 3Com Etherlink II, II/TP, II/16, II/16TP, 16/16TP
- 3 * 300 Novell NE2000
- 3 * 300 SMC/Western Digital 8003EP, 8013EWC, 8013WB
- 4 * 3F8 COM1:
- 4 * 3F8 COM3:
- 5 * 278 LPT2:
- 5 * 368 Ungermann-Bass Ethernet NIUpc (long), NIUpc/EOTP (short)
- 5 * ??? DEC etherWORKS LC, Turbo, Turbo/TP
- 5 1 220 Sound Blaster Emulation (PAS 16)
- 5 5 A20 Proteon P1390
- 6 * * floppy disk controller
- 7 * 378 LPT1: (PRN:)
- 7 3 * Pro Audio Spectrum 16 (PAS 16)
- 8 * * clock (reserved)
- 9 * * reserved
- 9 5 300 Boca Ethernet (BEN100, BEN102, BEN300)
- 10 * * unassigned
- 11 * * unassigned
- 12 * * unassigned
- 13 * * math co-processor
- 14 * * hard-disk
- 15 * * secondary disk controller
-
- ===============
- Ralph Valentino (ralf@chpc.org) (ralf@wpi.wpi.edu)
- Hardware Engineer, Worcester Polytechnic Institute
- Center for High Performance Computing, Marlborough MA
-