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- Linux PCI-HOWTO
- by Michael Will, Michael.Will@student.uni-tuebingen.de
- v0.6d, July 1996
-
- Information on what works with Linux and PCI-boards and what does not.
-
- 1. Introduction
-
- Many people, including me, would like to run Linux on a PCI-based
- machine. Since it is not obvious which PCI motherboards and PCI cards
- will work with Linux and which do not, I conducted a survey and spent
- some hours to compile the information contained herein.
-
- If you have information to add, please mail me. If you have questions,
- feel free to ask.
-
- Help with my style/grammar/language is welcome as well. I am not a
- native- speaker of English and expect to make occasional mistakes.
-
- Note: "on-board chip" refers to a SCSI chip integrated onto the
- motherboard rather than on a PCI expansion card.
-
- Also, "quotes" herein may have slight context editing.
-
- 2. Why PCI?
-
- 2.1. General overview
-
- The PC-architecture has several BUS-Systems to choose from:
-
- ISA
- 16 or 8bit, cheap, slow (usually 8Mhz), standard, many cards
- available>
-
- EISA
- 32bit, expensive, fast, few cards available, fading>
-
- MCA
- 32 or 16bit ex-IBM-proprietary, fast, becoming rare>
-
- VESA-Local-Bus
- 32bit, based on 486 architecture, cheap, fast, many cards
- available>
-
- PCI-Local-Bus
- 32bit (64 bit coming), cheap, fast, many cards available,
- nowadays standard>
-
- MCA worked fine, but never achieved much market, being used on only
- some early IBM PS/2 machines. There were very few cards.
-
- EISA was reliable, but rather expensive, and intended more for
- servers, than for the average user. It has the next fewest cards
- available.
-
- VESA-Local-Bus (VLB) had some problems with high bus-speeds, and was
- not very reliable, but mainly due to its low price and better-than-ISA
- performance, sold very well. Technically, it's almost a direct map of
- the 486 processor bus. Most VESA boards should be stable by now. At
- the beginning of 1996, many 486 motherboards still support VESA, but
- PCI is growing. VESA busses are tied directly to the speed of the
- memory bus for 486's, or half the speed for Pentiums.
-
- PCI now has the advantage. Like EISA it is not proprietary. It is as
- faster than EISA or MCA, and cheaper. Most current Pentium
- motherboards use the PCI bus; VESA is fading. Virtualy all PCI
- motherboards and cards sold at the beginning of 1996 are 32 bit, and
- run at 0-33 MHz.
-
- Currently, most Pentium motherboards run the PCI bus at 1/2 the memory
- speed (ie: 33 MHz for the 66 MHz memory bus on the P66,P100,P133,P166;
- 30 MHz for the 60 MHz memory bus on the P60,P90,P120,P150; and 25 Mhz
- on the 50 MHz memory bus of the P75). This is probably true of Cyrix
- 6x86 motherboards too. NexGen 5x86 implemention isn't known. The PCI
- spec does allow the PCI bus to be run asynchronously from the
- processor, (eg: 33 Mhz bus on P75), but this is not common yet.
-
- PCI 2.1 has been defined, allowing 64 bit PCI, and/or 0-66 MHz
- operations, but no x86 chipsets yet support these options. 64 bit PCI
- will probably appear first, in 32/64 bit dual compatible versions.
- That is, you will be able to mix 32 and 64 bit cards. 66 MHz PCI will
- take longer, as it's technically demanding, can only support one or
- maybe two slots per bridge, and may not work well with 33 MHz cards.
-
- PCI is not processor dependent like the VESA Local-Bus. This means you
- can use the winner-1000-PCI in an Alpha-driven-PCI computer as well as
- in a i486/Pentium-driven PCI computer, with the appropriate BIOS and
- software. Beside Intel and DEC Alpha platforms, PCI is used on some
- PowerPC's.
-
- Some PCI variations to be aware of: some implementations support "Bus
- Master" cards in all PCI slots, some in only one slot, and some not at
- all; some implementations support "bridging" on cards and some do not.
-
- 2.2. Performance
-
- taken from Craig Sutphin's early Pro-PCI-Propaganda
-
- Unlike some local buses, which are aimed at speeding up
- graphics alone, the PCI Local Bus is a total system solu¡
- tion, providing increased performance for networks, disk
- drives, full-motion video, graphics and the full range of
- high-speed peripherals. At 33 MHz, the synchronous PCI Local
- Bus transfers 32 bits of data at up to 132 Mbytes/sec. A
- transparent 64-bit extension of the 32-bit data and address
- buses can double the bus bandwidth (264 Mbytes/sec) and
- offer forward and backwards compatibility for 32 and 64-bit
- PCI Local Bus peripherals. Because it is processor-
- independent, the PCI Local Bus is optimized for I/O func¡
- tions, enabling the local bus to operate concurrent with the
- processor/memory subsystem. For users of high-end desktop
- PC's, PCI makes high reliability, high performance and ease
- of use more affordable than ever before; no trivial task at
- 33 MHz bus-clock rates. Variable length linear or toggle
- mode bursting for both reads and writes improves write
- dependent graphics performance. By comprehending the loading
- and frequency requirements of the local bus at the component
- level, buffers and glue logic are eliminated.
-
- See the chapter about Benchmarks for some crude (and perhaps
- meaningless) benchmarks on ASUS PCI Boards with 486 and 586.
-
- 2.3. The onboard-SCSI-II-chip NCR53c810
-
- One very nice feature of some PCI mother boards is the NCR onboard-
- SCSI-II-chip, which is said to be as fast as the EISA-Adaptec-1742,
- but much cheaper. Drivers for DOS/OS2 are available. Drew Eckard has
- released his version of his NCR53c810-driver, which is in the standard
- kernel since v1.2.
-
- This works so well I sold my adaptec-1542B-ISA soon after I bought the
- ASUS SP3-saturn-chipset PCI board, and found the onboard NCR-SCSI
- controller to be much faster.
-
- The NCR53c810-chip is onboard on some PCI-motherboards. There are
- add-on-boards available too, for about US$ 70.00.
-
- There is only one thing I noticed did not work with the NCR-drivers
- when I tried them. Disconnect/Reconnect did not work, so using a SCSI-
- tape could be a pain, especially when using "mt erase" or the like
- blocks the whole SCSI-bus until it has finished. Since this was very
- unsatisfying for me, I bought one of these nice but expensive DPT PCI
- SCSI controller and had no such problems anymore.
-
- People have reported this problem has been solved by Drew by now.
-
- FreeBSD does support the NCR53c810 for quite a long time already,
- including Tagged Command Queues, FAST, WIDE and Disconnect for NCR
- 53c810, 815, 825. Drew said, it would be possible to adapt the FreeBSD
- driver to Linux. I somewhere saw some patches to do exactly this, any
- pointer to the location?
-
- I personaly have the impression there are some important wheels
- invented more than once because of the differently evolving of FreeBSD
- and Linux. Some more cooperation could do both systems very well...
-
- 2.4. Drew Eckhardt on PCI-SCSI:
-
- Drew said on end of March 95 about the SCSI on PCI: (slightly edited
- for clarity in context)
-
- The Adaptec 2940, Buslogic BT946, BT946W, DPT PCI boards, Future
- Domain 3260, NCR53c810, NCR53c815, NCR53c820, and NCR53c825 all work
- for some definition of the word works.
-
- ╖ The Adaptec 2940 suffers from the same cabling sensitivity that
- plagues all recent boards, but otherwise works fine.
-
- ╖ The Future Domain boards are not busmasters, and the driver doesn't
- support multiple simultaenous commands. If you don't (currently)
- need multiple simultaneous commands, get a NCR board, which will be
- cheaper and is busmastering. If you need multiple simultaneous
- commands, get a Buslogic.
-
- ╖ The Buslogic BT956W will do WIDE SCSI with the Linux drivers
- (although you can't use targets 8-15), the Adaptec 2940W (with one
- line patch to the 2940 driver) won't, nor will the NCR53c820 and
- NCR53c825.
-
- ╖ The NCR boards are dirt cheap (< $ 70 US), are generally quite
- fast, but the driver currently doesn't support multiple
- simultaenous commands. Alpha which do neat things like
- disconnect/reconnect and synchronous transfer are now publicly
- available, see below.
-
- ╖ Emulux, Forex, and other unmentioned PCI SCSI controllers will not
- work.
-
- 2.5. New Alpha Version of the NCR driver
-
- Alpha versions of the NCR driver which do neat things like
- disconnect/reconnect and synchronous transfers are now publically
- available. Any one interested in playing with them should
-
- ╖ Join the NCR mailing list, by sending mail to
- majordomo@colorado.edu with subscribe ncr53c810 in the text.
-
- ╖ Get all of the readmes, and latest diffs file from
- ftp://tsx-11.mit.edu/pub/ALPHA/linux/SCSI/ncr53c810
-
- 2.6. The EATA-DMA driver and the PCI SCSI controllers from DPT
-
- The EATA-DMA scsi driver has undergone extensive changes and now also
- supports PCI SCSI controllers, multiple controllers and all SCSI
- channels on the multichannel SmartCache/Raid boards in all
- combinations of WIDE, FAST-20 (ULTRA) and DIFFERENTIAL.
-
- The driver supports all EATA-DMA Protocol (CAM document CAM/89-004
- rev. 2.0c) compliant SCSI controllers and has been tested with many of
- those controllers in mixed combinations.
-
- Those are: (ISA) (EISA) (PCI)
- DPT Smartcache: PM2011 PM2012B
- Smartcache III: PM2021 PM2022 PM2024
- PM2122 PM2124
- PM2322
- Smartcache IV: PM2041 PM2042 PM2044
- PM2142 PM2144
- PM2322
- SmartRAID : PM3021 PM3122
- PM3222 PM3224
- PM3334
- and some controllers from NEC, AT&T, SNI, AST, Olivetti and Alphatronix.
-
- On a "base" DPT card (no caching or RAID module), a MC680x0 controls
- the bus-mastering DMA chip(s) and the SCSI controller chip. The DPT
- SCSI card almost works like a SCSI coprocessor.
-
- The DPT card also will emulate an IDE controller/drive (ST506
- interface), which enables you to use it with all operating systems
- even if they don't have an EATA driver.
-
- On a card with the caching module, the 680x0 maintains and manages the
- on-board cacheing. The DPT card supports up to 64 MB RAM for disk-
- cacheing.
-
- On a card with the RAID module, the 680x0 also performs the management
- of the RAID, doing the mirroring on RAID-1, doing the striping and ECC
- info generation on RAID-5, etc.
-
- The entry level boards utilize a Motorola 68000, the high-end, more
- raid specific DPT cards use a 68020, 68030 or 68040/40MHz processor.
-
- Official list prices range from $ 265 to $ $1.645 (January 18, 1996)
-
- Since I've been asked numerous times where you can buy those boards in
- Europe, I asked DPT to send me a list of their official European
- distributors. Here is a small excerpt:
-
- Austria: Macrotron GmbH Tel:+43 1 408 15430 Fax:+43 1 408 1545
- Denmark: Tallgrass Technologies A/S Tel:+45 86 14 7000 Fax:+45 86 14 7333
- Finland: Computer 2000 Finnland OY Tel:+35 80 887 331 Fax:+35 80 887 333 43
- France : Chip Technologies Tel:+33 1 49 60 1011 Fax:+33 1 49 599350
- Germany: Akro Datensysteme GmbH Tel:+49 (0)89 3178701 Fax:+49 (0)89 31787299
- Russia : Soft-tronik Tel:+7 812 315 92 76 Fax:+7 812 311 01 08
- U.K. : Ambar Systems Ltd. Tel:+44 1296 311 300 Fax:+44 296 479 461
-
- "IMHO, the DPT cards are the best-designed SCSI cards available for a
- PC. And I've written code for just about every type of SCSI card for
- the PC. (Although, in retrospect, I don't know why!) ;-)" Jon R.
- Taylor (jtaylor@magicnet.net) President, Visionix, Inc.
-
- The latest version of the EATA-DMA driver and a Slackware bootdisk is
- available on: ftp.i-Connect.Net:/pub/Local/EATA
-
- Since patchlevel 1.1.81 the driver is included in the standard kernel
- distribution.
-
- The author can be reached under these addresses: neuffer@mail.uni-
- mainz.de or mike@i-Connect.Net
-
- 2.7. BT-946C fully supported with kernel 1.3.x and newer
-
- There is a driver in the 1.3.x kernels (available as a patch for the
- 1.2.13 kernel) written by someone associated with buslogic that fully
- supports the 946C and ALL of it's features including strict round
- robin, tagged queueing, multiple scatter/gather, multiple mailboxes,
- IRQ sharing, and yes, 15 devices on Fast/Wide. It is no longer
- necessary to use any ISA emulation with the driver (no DMA channel, no
- ISA address), and the driver is /fast/ and /stable/ (it's out of BETA
- and into full release).
-
- The driver is available on ftp.dandelion.com (the newest version can
- always be got by doing "get BusLogic*"). It supports ALL BusLogic
- controllers with the exception of the FlashPoint LT, which uses a
- different interface. The driver is included in the 1.3.x kernels as
- standard for BusLogic devices.
-
- 2.8. Future Domain TMC-3260 PCI SCSI
-
- Rik Faith (faith@cs.unc.edu) informed me on Wed, 1 Feb 1995 about the
- Future Domain TMC-3260 PCI SCSI card being supported by the Future
- Domain 16x0 SCSI driver. Newer information might be contained in the
- SCSI-HOWTO.
-
- ╖ Detection is not done well, and does not use standard PCI BIOS
- detection methods (someone who has a PCI board needs to send me
- patches to fix this problem). So, you might have to fiddle with
- the detection routine in the kernel to get it detected.
-
- ╖ The driver still does not support multiple outstanding commands, so
- your system will hang while your tape rewinds.
-
- ╖ The driver does not support the enhanced pseudo-32bit transfer mode
- supported by recent Future Domain chips, so you will not get
- transfer rates as high as under DOS.
-
- ╖ The driver only supports the SCSI-I protocol, so your really fast
- hard disks will not get used at the highest possible throughput.
- (Again, fixes for all these problems are solicited -- no one is
- working on them at this time.)
-
- 2.9. other thoughts on scsi
-
- James Soutter (J.K.Soutter1@lut.ac.uk) asked me to add the following
- information on Fast-Wide-SCSI-2:
-
- Fast Wide SCSI-2 is sometimes incorrectly called SCSI-3. It
- differs from the normal Fast SCSI-2 (like the Adapted
- 1542B?) because it uses a 16 bit data bus rather than the
- more usual 8 bit bus. This improves the maximum transfer
- rate from 10 MB/s to 20 MB/s but requires the use of special
- Fast Wide SCSI-2 drives.
-
- The added performance of Fast Wide SCSI-2 will not
- necessarily improve the speed of your system. Most hard
- disk drives have a maximum internal transfer rate of less
- than 10 MB/s and so one drive alone can not flood a FAST
- SCSI-2 bus.
-
- In Seagate's Oct 1993 product overview, only one Fast Wide
- SCSI-2 drive has an internal transfer rate of more than 10
- MB/s (the ST12450W). Most of the drives have a maximum
- internal transfer rate of 6 MB/s or less, although the
- ST12450W is not the only exception to the rule. In
- conclusion, Fast Wide SCSI is designed for the file server
- market and will not necessarily benefit a single user
- workstation style system.
-
- Rather than buying a PCI system with a SCSI interface on the
- motherboard, or rather than waiting for the NCR driver, you
- could purchase a separate PCI based SCSI card. According to
- Drew, the only PCI SCSI option that stands a chance of
- working is the Buslogic 946. It purports to be Adaptec 1540
- compatible, like the EISA/VESA/ISA boards in the series.
-
- Drew commented that other PCI based SCSI controllers are
- unlikely to be supported under Linux or the BSD's because
- the NCR based controllers are cheaper and more prevalent.
-
- According to broom@ocean.fit.qut.edu.au (Bradley Broom):
-
- The Buslogic BT-946C PCI SCSI works if you disable the
- option "enable Disconnection" with the AUTOSCSI-program
- under DOS which comes with the card.
-
- Ernst Kloecker (ernst@cs.tu-berlin.de) wrote: (edited)
-
- Talus Corporation has finished a NS/FIP driver for PCI
- boards with NCR SCSI. It will be shipping very soon, might
- even be free because a third party might pay for the work
- and donate the driver to NeXT.
-
- Not every PCI-Board has got the chip. The old ASUS do, and one of the
- J-Bond boards does, too. (Most of the boards nowadays (6/95) do expect
- you to buy the NCR53c810 seperately.) Some vendors provide an
- alternative as you can read in Drew's text...
-
- The NCR-Chip is clever enough to work with drives formatted by other
- controllers, and should be no problem.
-
- 3. ASUS-Boards
-
- 3.1. ASUS and the NMI (Parity) -- impact on Gravis-Ultrasound
-
- The newer trition PCI-Mainboards in 1995 did not seem to support
- parity-SIMMS anymore. Since I usualy took the cheaper nonparity-SIMMS
- anyway, I did not consider this a problem until I put the Gravis-
- Ultrasound into my machine. Under DOS the SBOS-Driver and Setup/Test
- utility does complain about "nmi procedure disabled on this p.c.". The
- manual says I'd better get a better mainboard in that case, not very
- helpful.
-
- The gravis-ultrasound did work nice in the ASUS-SP3 and ASUS-SP4,
- inspite of this, but the gravis-ultrasound-max I have here got gmod to
- kernel panic on both boards, and sometimes when playing au-files via
- /dev/audio did strange things, like playing the rest of an older,
- previously played sound after the new one. The sounddriver does
- recommend a buffer of 65536 with the GUS Max instead of the small one
- like the GUS - why I do not know. I do not have such a problem with
- the newer ASUS TP4 XE boards, though. Both are equipped with 1M DRAM
- onboard. These problems are probably not related to the NMI-problem,
- but because of the sounddriver?
-
- I heard not only ASUS but most of the newer PCI-Mainboards are lacking
- in parity/NMI-support.
-
- Strange enough - the ASUS-TP4 (Trition Chipset) does work with the GUS
- Max - it does load the SBOS-Driver. I have to admit, I am confused.
-
- 3.2. Various types of ASUS Boards
-
- 3.2.1. ASUS SP3 with saturn chipset I (rev. 2) for 486,
-
- ╖ 2 x rs232 with 16550
-
- ╖ NCR53c810 onboard,
-
- ╖ slightly broken saturn-chipset I (rev. 2)
-
- 3.2.2. ASUS SP3G with saturn chipset II (rev. 4) for 486,
-
- like SP3, but less buggy saturn chipset
-
- 3.2.3. ASUS SP3-SiS chipset, for 486
-
- like AP4, but newer, SiS chipset, green functions and all the EIDE,
- rs232 with 2 16550 and centronics. Only 2 SIMM Slots, Does seem to
- work with AMD486DX4/120, but was not very reliably on NCR53c810 and
- various operating systems (Windows-NT, Windows95, OS2), after
- upgrading to a PentiumBoard ASUS SP4, all the problems vanished, so it
- must have been the board. Still does seem to work nice for Linux,
- though.
-
- 3.2.4. ASUS AP4, for 486, with PCI/ISA/VesaLocalbus
-
- green functions, 1VL, 3 ISA, 4 PCI slots, only EIDE onboard, no fd-
- controller, no rs232/centronics. Very small size.
-
- does recognice AMD486DX2/66 as DX4/100 only. This can be corrected
- with soldering one pin (which?) to ground, but I would not recommend a
- board like this anyway.
-
- The one I tested was broken for OS2 and Linux, but people are said to
- use it for both.
-
- The VesaLocalbus-Slot is expected to be slower than the normal vesa-
- localbus boards because of the PCI2VL bridge, but without penalty to
- the PCI section.
-
- 3.2.5. ASUS SP4-SiS, for Pentium90, PCI/ISA
-
- like SP3-SiS, but for Pentium90/100.
-
- 3.2.6. ASUS TP4 with Triton chipset and EDO-Support
-
- has the Triton-Chipset for better performance and supports normal
- PS2-Simms as well as Fast-Page-Mode and EDO modules.
-
- 3.2.7. ASUS TP4XE with Triton chipset and additional SRAM/EDORAM sup¡
- port
-
- supports the new EDORAM and upcoming SRAM standards. At least SRAM is
- said to considerabely increase performance. Did for some reason not
- accept the 8M PS2-SIMMS working ok in ASUS SP4, after changing them
- against others, bigger looking ones, (16 chips instead of 8 if I
- remember right) it worked ok. Has been tested with P90 and P100.
-
- 3.3. Benchmarks on ASUS Mainboards
-
- I tried to compare the speed of CPUs in two ASUS Mainboards: for 486 I
- tested the SP3 SiS (the one with one vesa-local-bus slot) and for 586
- I tested the ASUS TP4/XE, each with 16M RAM, always the same unloaded
- system with another CPU, with whetstone and dhrystone.
-
- I must admit, I have not read the benchmarks-faq yet, and will
- probably edit the section a loot soon. If you have any comments,
- please mail me.
-
- I am especially confused about the amd486DX4/100 being faster on
- dhrystones than the DX4/120 version? I did not see that kind of
- inconsistency on comparing the P90 and P100.
-
- Perhaps this was at fault: when I plugged in the amdDX4-100, I had the
- board jumpered for DX2-66. While the BIOS did report it as an DX4-100,
- the board might have used the wrong clockspeeds... but since DX2-66
- uses 33Mhz * 2 and DX4 uses 33Mhz * 3, this would have been correct?
-
- The board running with DX4-120 is jumpered to 40Mhz * 3 = 120 Mhz.
-
- Another thing I wonder about is why the whetstones-result does yield
- so even numbers on some machines?
-
- 3.3.1. ASUS SP3 with amd486DX4-100
-
- ╖ Dhrystone time for 500000 passes = 7 by 63559 dhrystones/second
-
- ╖ Whetstone time for 1000 passes = 5 by 200.0000 Whetstones/second
-
- 3.3.2. ASUS SP3 with amd486DX4-120
-
- ╖ Dhrystone time for 500000 passes = 8 by 56074 dhrystones/second
-
- ╖ Whetstone time for 1000 passes = 4 by 250.0000 Whetstones/second
-
- 3.3.3. ASUS SP3 with intel486DX2-66
-
- ╖ Dhrystone time for 500000 passes = 9 by 50761 dhrystones/second
-
- ╖ Whetstone time for 1000 passes = 7 by 142.8571 Whetstones/second
-
- 3.3.4. ASUS TP4/XE with intel586-90
-
- ╖ Dhrystone time for 500000 passes = 4 by 101010 dhrystones/second
-
- ╖ Whetstone time for 1000 passes = 3 by 333.3333 Whetstones/second
-
- 3.3.5. ASUS TP4/XE with intel586-100
-
- ╖ Dhrystone time for 500000 passes = 4 by 102040 dhrystones/second
-
- ╖ Whetstone time for 1000 passes = 2 by 500.0000 Whetstones/second
-
- 3.4. Detailed information on the old ASUS PCI-I-SP3 with saturn
- chipset from heinrich@zsv.gmd.de:
-
- ╖ 3 PCI, 4 ISA Slots (3x16, 1x8 Bit)
-
- ╖ ZIF Socket for the CPU
-
- ╖ room for 4 72pin-SIMMs (max. 128M)
-
- ╖ Award BIOS in Flash-Eprom
-
- ╖ Onboard: NCR-SCSI, 1par, 2ser (with FIFO), AT-Bus, Floppy
-
- The board does like most in that price class -- write-through cache,
- no write-back. This should not be significant, maybe 3% of
- performance.
-
- The BIOS supports scsi-drives under DOS/Windows without additional
- drivers, but with the board come additional drivers which are said to
- give better performance, for DOS/Windows(ASPI), OS2, Windows-NT, SCO-
- Unix, Netware (3.11 and 4, if interpreted correctly)
-
- Gert Doering (gert@greenie.muc.de) was saying the SCO-Unix-driver for
- the onboard-SCSI-Chip was not working properly. After two or three
- times doing: "time dd if=/dev/rhd20 of=/dev/null bs=100k count=500" it
- kernel-paniced...
-
- The trouble some people experienced with this board might be due to
- them using an outboard Adaptec-SCSI-Controller with "sync negotiation"
- turned on. (This predates the NCR driver release; hence the use of the
- Adaptec.) Please check that in the BIOS-Setup of the Adaptec-1542C if
- you use one and have problems with occasional hangups!
-
- There is a new version of the ASUS-Board which should have definitely
- less problems. It is called ASUS-PCI-I/SP3G, the G is important. It
- has the new Saturn-chipset rev. 4 and the bugs should be gone. They
- use the Saturn-ZX-variant and the new SP3G has fully PCI conforming
- level-triggered (thus shareable), BIOS-configurable interrupts. It
- has an on-board PS/2-mouseport, EPA-power-saving-modes and
- DX4-support, too. It performs excellently. If you can get the German
- computer magazine C't from July (?), you will find a test report where
- the ASUS-Board is the best around.
-
- Latest information about ASUS-SP3-G: You might experience crashes when
- using PCI-to-Memory-Posting. If you disable this, all works perfect.
- jw@peanuts.informatik.uni-tuebingen.de said he believed it to be a
- problem of the current Linux-kernel rather than the hardware, because
- part of the system still works when crashing, looking like a deadlock
- in the swapper, and OS2/DOS/WINDOZE don't crash at all.
-
- 3.5. Pat Dowler (dowler@pt1B1106.FSH.UVic.CA) with ASUS SP3G
-
- ╖ ASUS SP3G board (it is rev.4 == saturn II)
-
- ╖ AMD DX4-100 CPU (need to set jumper 36 to 1&2 rather than 2&3,
- otherwise it's set the same as other 486DXn chips)
-
- ╖ 256K cache (comes with 15ns cache :-)
-
- ╖ 16meg RAM (2x8meg)
-
- ╖ ET4000 ISA video card
-
- ╖ quantum IDE hard drive
-
- ╖ SMC Elitel16 combo ethernet card
-
- Unlike some other reports, I find the mouse pointer moves very smoothy
- under X (just like the ol' 386) - it is jumpy under some, but not
- all, DOS games though...
-
- Performance is great!! I ran some large floating point tests and found
- the performance in 3x33 (100MHz) mode to be almost 1.5x that in 2x
- (66MHz) mode (large being 500x500 doubles - 4meg or so)... I was a
- little dubious about clock-tripling but I seem to be getting full
- benefit :-)
-
- The heavily configurable energy star stuff doesn't work with the
- current AMD DX4 chips - you need an SL chip
-
- I really need a SCSI disk and a PCI video card :-)
-
- (I had a phonecall by a person who had this problem with the buggy SMC
- FIFO chipset, after using X-window they hung.)
-
- 4. confusion about saturn chipsets
-
- Pat Duffy (duffy@theory.chem.ubc.ca) said:
-
- Saturn I: these are revisions 1 and 2 of the Saturn chipsets.
- Saturn II: This is also called rev. 4 of the Saturn chipsets.
-
- As far as I know, rev. 3 never actually shipped, and (from a few people who
- have it) the SP3G now has rev. 4 (or Saturn II) in it.
-
- Confused? Well, the only real definitive answer is to get ahold of the board
- and run the debug script in the PCI chipset list on it. As far as I know,
- though, the SP3G board is indeed shipping with rev. 4 (Saturn II).
-
- 5. Video-Cards
-
- Linux people have successfully used # 9 XGE Level 12, ELSA Winner
- 1000, and S3-928 video cards. The XFree86(tm)-3.1.1 does support
- boards with the tseng et4000/w32 in accelerated mode, as well as S3
- Vision 864 and 964 chipsets including boards like the ELSA Winner
- 1000Pro and 2000Pro, Number Nine GXE64 and GXE64Pro, Miro Crystal
- 20SV). Support in the S3 Server for the Chrontel8391 clock chip has
- been added.
-
- Trio32 and Trio64 S3 Boards like the SPEA V7 Mirage P64 PCI and MIRO
- Crystal 40SV, are also supported, the Mach32 and Mach64 are supported
- in accelerated mode, too.
-
- The SVGA Driver
-
- 16bpp mode (65K colors instead of the usual 256) support for Mach32
- boards as well as 32bpp for some S3 boards and the P9000 boards has
- been added.
-
- tldraben@teleport.com reported:
-
- ╖ Diamond Stealth W32 (et4000/W32) -- Text mode works, X11 suffered
- from "pixel dust", unbearable never got it to work and returned it.
-
- ╖ # 9GXE L12 -- Works, virtual consoles corrupted when switched,
- fixed this with disabling the "fast dram mode" feature in his BIOS.
- Does not get a dot clock above 85, though.
-
- Genoa Phantom 8900PCI card seems to work well. Genoa Phantom/W32 2MB
- does not work in an ASUS-Board. Tseng 3000/W32i chipset seems to work
- well. Spea-v7 mercury-lite works perfectly since XFree86(tm)-2.1.
-
- Spea V7 Mirage P64 PCI 2M with Trio64 works nice since
- XFree86(tm)-3.1.1
-
- ATI Graphics Ultra Pro for PCI with 2MB VRAM and an ATI68875C DAC run
- well as dem@skyline.dayton.oh.us tells us: "It's humming right along
- at 1280x1024 w/256 colors @74Hz non-interlaced. Looks great."
-
- Paradise WD90C33 PCI did lock up on screensaver/X - this has been
- solved in the newer versions of the kernel. jbauer@badlands.NoDak.edu
- (John Edward Bauer)
-
- miroChrystal 8S/PCI (1MB) S3 - no problem.
-
- Stephen Tweedie reported his Cirrus Logics 5434 PCI card works well.
- It is a 64bit with 2M and runs perfectly with the SVGA driver in 8, 16
- and 32 bit per pixel.
-
- 6. Ethernet Cards
-
- Of course the ISA-ethernet-cards still work, but people are asking for
- PCI-based ones. The author of many (if not most) ethernet- drivers
- said the following some time ago (unfortunately I have not managed to
- contact him about new information):
-
- From: Donald Becker (becker@cesdis.gsfc.nasa.gov) Subject:
- PCI ethernet cards supported?
-
- The LANCE code has been extended to handle the PCI version.
- I hope to get the PCI probe code (about a dozen extra lines
- in the LANCE driver) into the next kernel version. I'm
- working on the 32 bit mode code. I haven't yet started the
- 21040 code.
-
- I'll write drivers for the PCnet32 mode and the DEC 21040.
- That will cover most of the PCI ethercard market.
-
- file://cesdis.gsfc.nasa.gov/pub/people/becker/whoiam.html
-
- In the new testkernels of 1.1.50 and above, the AMD-singlechip
- ethernetadapters are supported. With a pentium, they ought to then see
- 900K/second ftps +(assuming an NCR PCI scsi controller) at about 20%
- cpu load. (AMD Lance).
-
- Anything based on the AMD PCnet/PCI chip should work at the time
- being. In the US the Boca board costs under US$ 70
-
- Geoffry Coram reported in the news that he got his 3com 590 TPO to
- work. He had to get the alpha driver from
- http://cesdis.gsfc.nasa.gov/linux/drivers. Other drivers would be
- there as well. Note
- http://cesdis.gsfc.nasa.gov/linux/drivers/vortex.html
-
- Donald Holmgren said he successfully attached his DEC DE435 (PCI) card
- to the local network on thin coax (BNC). The DE435 driver checks the
- twisted pair connection first, then switches to the alternate port
- (jumper selectable as AUI or BNC) if the 10BaseT port fails.
-
- Jim Cusick uses the Boca BEN 1PI card on a thin coax network. It
- works just fine. You might want to check out:
- http://cesdis.gsfc.nasa.gov/linux/misc/boca-failure.html for details
- on the early failures of this card. My second card, after sending one
- back for replacement, was marked "PN 4186". The old one that did not
- work was "PN 4185". Mandate this newer model when you order from you
- vendor. At $ 70, the card is a good deal.
- Dave Platt recommends to stay off the Boca BEN1PI card at all costs.
- It would be unreliable due to design flaws, and Boca seems unable to
- really fix the problem. The 3Com 3c590 "Vortex" PCI card is available
- in a combo version (10BaseT, thin coax, and AUI). The Linux driver
- for this card is not yet part of the release kernel, but is available
- from http://cesdis.gsfc.nasa.gov/linux/drivers/vortex.html and can be
- patched into the later 1.2.x kernels (as well as 1.3.x) without much
- difficulty. The Linux driver does not support the interface
- autodetect feature of this card - you must use the DOS utility to
- configure the card for the interface you wish to use (thin coax in
- this case). Once you've done that, the Linux driver will use the
- correct interface.
-
- He has been using a 3c590 for several weeks, and it is working fine.
-
- Dave Kennedy said he got two of the above Boca boards and they work
- fine under light load, but under heavy work like ftping two 16M files
- into both directions, they failed. He sent the boards back to Boca for
- a hardwarefix. After they soldered a couple of things
- (diodes/resistors) onto the card and sent them back, the cards worked
- fine regardless of load. The two cards have been in 7/24 use in two
- P90 systems without problems for 6 months now.
-
- Craig does not recommend it since Boca seems not to follow the AMD
- specs but he has been running them for 2 weeks without problems. He
- tested his NFS performance and has been moving large files to and from
- server (16M, 8M). He also tried to do all his workin localy using his
- data files mounted by NFS and has had no problems. Performance seems
- to be 100 percent better (wrt to NFS performance) over his NE2000 ISA
- board. (editors note: but so would probably have been the ISA SMC
- Elite Ultra?)
-
- 6.1. 3com-3c590-tpo
-
- Someone on usenet mentioned ht used the 3Com-3C590-TPO (EtherLink III
- - PCI). He had to get the "3c59x.c" driver and "vortex.patch" to make
- it work with his 1.2.8 Linux kernel.
-
- 6.2. DEC435 PCI NIC
-
- The DEC435 PCI NIC is said to work great with the drivers included in
- the Slackwaredistribution - I'd say they are in the standard-kernel?
-
- 7. Motherboards
-
- The people who answered were using the following boards:
-
- 7.1. ASUS
-
- ╖ Ruediger.Funck@Physik.TU-Muenchen.DE - successful.
-
- ╖ strauss@dagoba.escape.de - half-successful, works, but...
-
- ╖ krypton@netzservice.de (Ulrich Teichert), - successful.
-
- ╖ heinrich@zsv.gmd.de - successful
-
- ╖ CARSTEN@AWORLD.aworld.de - successful
-
- ╖ egooch@mc.com - successful - but trouble with the serial port
-
- ╖ archie@CS.Berkeley.EDU and his friend - successful after solving
- IDE-puzzle
-
- ╖ Lars Heinemann (lars@uni-paderborn.de) successful
-
- ╖ Michael Will (Michael.Will@student.uni-tuebingen.de) - successful.
-
- 7.2. Micronics P54i-90
-
- root@intellibase.gte.com succesful bill.foster@mccaw.com successful
- karpens@ncssm-server.ncssm.edu successful
-
- 7.3. SA486P AIO-II
-
- ah@doc.ic.ac.uk successful
-
- 7.4. Sirius SPACE
-
- hi86@rz.uni-karlsruhe.de - successful
-
- 7.5. Gateway-2000
-
- kenf@clark.net - no problems except the soundcard he tries to swap
- dmarples@comms.eee.strathclyde.ac.uk - successful, but... robert
- logan (rl@de-montfort.ac.uk) - flawless. James D. Levine
- (jdl@netcom.com) - flawless.
-
- 7.6. Intel-Premiere
-
- grif@cs.ucr.edu - successful jeromem@amiserv.xnet.com - successful
- demarest@rerf.or.jp - successful (Premier-II)
-
- 7.7. DELL Poweredge SP4100 gbelow@pmail.sams.ch - successful
-
- 7.8. torsten@videonetworks.com - successful when turning off plug and
- play DELL OptiPlex Gl+ 575
-
- 7.9. Comtrade Best Buy PCI / PCI48X MB Rev 1.0
-
- tldraben@Teleport.Com - "Works, I believe it has buggy Saturn chipset.
- I would also like to add: I strongly recommend not buying from
- Contrade. Their service is horrible. "
-
- 7.10. IDeal PCI / PCI48X MB Rev 1.0
-
- tldraben@Teleport.Com - "Did not work with PCI48X motherboard"
-
- 7.11. CMD Tech. PCI IDE / CSA-6400C
-
- tldraben@TelePort.com - "Works"
-
- 7.12. GA-486iS (Gigabyte)
-
- Stefan.Dalibor@informatik.uni-erlangen.de - success with problems.
-
- 7.13. GA-586-ID (Gigabyte) 90 Mhz Pentium PCI/EISA Board
-
- kkeyte@esoc.bitnet - succesful
-
- 7.14. ESCOM 486dx2/66 - which board?
-
- Works perfect except the ftape-streamer (archive)
-
- 7.15. J-Bond with i486dx2/66
-
- Drew Eckhardt (drew@kinglear.cs.Colorado.EDU) uses Diamond Stealth 64
- VRAM with 4M of memory (964 based). It works great, he usualy runs it
- at 1024x768 72hz in 32bpp; 16 and 8bpp also work. He needed to get the
- X311u2S3.tgz server from ftp.xfree86.org; people with 968 based
- Diamond boards will definately need to do this.
-
- 7.16. super micro 011895 03:50 SUPER P54CI-PCI rev 1.3 (Opti)
-
- Manuel de Vega Barreiro
-
- ╖ board super micro 011895 03:50 SUPER P54CI-PCI rev 1.3
-
- ╖ Opti chipset: 82c557,82c556,82c558,82c621.
-
- ╖ 4 PCI, 4 ISA Slots (4x16 Bit)
-
- ╖ ZIF Socket for CPU (120,100,90,75 mHz)
-
- ╖ 4 72 pin-SIMMs (max 128Mb)
-
- ╖ cache 256,512,1024 Kb L2-cache
-
- ╖ Ami WinBIOS in Flash-Eprom (101094-VIPER-P)
-
- ╖ onboard: EIDE for 4 drives
-
- ╖ Pentium with 90Mhz, 8M (now 16M) RAM and 256K L2-cache.
-
- ╖ 1 maxtor 540 Mb, 1 st3122A 1Gb
-
- ╖ Number Nine 9GXE64pro with 2Mb
-
- ╖ Sound blaster 16 + cdrom Matsushita
-
- ╖ 17" microscan 5ep ADI monitor
-
- I run linux 1.1.57 (now 1.2.1) without problems. dosemu0.53 work
- fine (com. software like kermit and xtalk) XFree86 3.1 at 1024x768
- resolution
-
- 8. reports on success
-
- 8.1. California Graphics - Sunray II Pro
-
- Guido Trentalancia (guido@gulliver.unian.it) reported the California
- Graphics - Sunray II Pro with Triton chipset to work well with
- Pentium100, Hd: Conner cfs420a, Conner cfs210a, crunching numbers at
- 147492 dhrystones/second.
-
- 8.2. Micronics P54i-90 (root@intellibase.gte.com)
-
- Pentium with 90Mhz, 32M RAM and 512K L2-cache. Works extremely well (a
- kernel recompile takes 10 minutes :-).
-
- The board includes:
-
- ╖ UART - two 16550A high speed UARTS
-
- ╖ ECP - one enhanced parallel port
-
- ╖ Onboard IDE controller
-
- ╖ Onboard floppy controller
-
- Pros: Currently, I'm using it with an Adaptec 1542CF and a 1G Seagate
- drive, No problems. Graphics is ATI Graphics Pro Turbo (PCI). Very
- fast. The serial ports can keep up with a TeleBit T3000 modem (38400)
- without overruns. Caching above 16M does occur. There are 3 banks of
- SIMM slots (2 SIMM's per bank), with each bank capable of 64M each (2
- 32M 72-pin SIMM's). Each bank must be filled completely to be used
- (I'm only using bank 0 with 2 16Mx72-pin SIMM's). The CPU socket is a
- ZIF type socket. The BIOS is Phoenix, FLASH type.
-
- Drawbacks: RAM is expandable to 192M, but the L2 cache is maxed at
- 512K. While the graphics are very fast, there is currently no XF86
- server for the Mach64 (well, actually there is, but it doesn't use any
- of the accelerator features; it's just an SVGA server). I don't know
- if the onboard IDE hard drive controller works; I'm prejudiced against
- a standard that won't allow my peripherals to operate across
- platforms, so I didn't buy an IDE disk; instead, I got a Seagate
- 31200N and a NEC 3Xi.
-
- Mitch
-
- 8.3. Angelo Haritsis (ah@doc.ic.ac.uk) about SA486P AIO-II:
-
- The motherboard I eventually bought (in the UK) is one supporting 486
- SX/DX/DX2/DX4 chips. It is called SA486P AIO-II. Features include:
-
- ╖ Intel Saturn v2 chipset
-
- ╖ Phoenix BIOS (flash eprom option)
-
- ╖ NCR scsi BIOS v 3.04.00
-
- ╖ 256K 15ns cache (max 512) write back and write through
-
- ╖ 4 72-pin SIMM slots in 2 banks
-
- ╖ 3 PCI slots, 4 ISA
-
- ╖ On-board NCR 53c810 scsi controller
-
- ╖ On-board IDE / floppy / 2 x 16550A uarts / enhanced parallel
-
- I bought it from a company (UK) called ICS, (note I have no
- connections whatsoever with the company, just a happy customer). I use
- a 486/DX2-66 CPU.
-
- Before I had a VLB 486 m/board with a buslogic BT-445S controller that
- I was borrowing. I have 2 scsi devices: 1 barracuda 2.1GB ST12550N
- disk and a Wangtek 5525ES tape drive. I was expecting a lot of
- adventures by switching to the new motherboard, esp after hearing all
- these non-success stories on the net. To my surprise everything worked
- flawlessly on the 1st boot! (1.1.50). And it has been doing so for
- about a month now. I did not even have to repartition the disk:
- apparently the disk geometry bios translation of the 2 controllers is
- the same. Linux has had no problems at all. SCSI is visibly much
- faster as well (sorry, I have no actual performance measurements).
-
- The only problems (related to Drew's linux ncr53c7,810 scsi driver -
- thanks for the good work Drew!) are:
-
- ╖ no synchronous transfers are yet supported => performance hit
-
- ╖ disconnect/reconnect is disabled => disk scsi ops "hold" during
- certain slow scsi device opeartions (eg tape rewind)
-
- ╖ tagged queuing is not there (?) => performance hit
-
- If you get Windows complainingg about 32-bit disk driver problems,
- just disable 32-bit disk access via Control Panel. This should not
- hurt performance. (What I did is remove the WDCTRL driver from my
- SYSTEM.INI).
-
- All else is fine. I tried the serial ports with some dos/windows s/w
- and worked ok. The IDE/floppy work ok as well. I have not tried the
- parallel yet. The motherboard is quite fast and so far I am very
- pleased with the upgrade. I have not yet tried a PCI graphics board. I
- will later on. I am using an old ISA S3 which is fine at the moment.
-
- 8.4. bill.foster@mccaw.com about his Micronics M5Pi
-
- Micronics M5Pi motherboard with 60 MHz Pentium, PCI bus having the
- following components:
-
- 16Mb RAM/512k cache
- onboard IDE, parallel, 16550A UARTS
- 2 X 340MB Maxtor IDE Hard Drives
- Soundblaster 16 SCSI-II
- Toshiba 3401B SCSI CD-ROM
- Archive Viper 525MB SCSI Tape Drive
- Viewsonic 17 monitor
- Cardex Challenger PCI video card (ET4000/W32P)
- A4-Tech Serial Mouse
-
- Everything works great, Slackware installation was very easy, I can
- run Quicken 7 for DOS under DOSEMU. I run X at 1152x900 resolution at
- 67Hz.
- 8.5. Simon Karpen (karpens@ncssm-server.ncssm.edu) with Micronics
- M54pi
-
- I have had no problems with the above board, the on-board PCI IDE
- (hopefully soon will also have SCSI), and an ATI Mach32 (GUP) with 2MB
- of VRAM.
-
- 8.6. Goerg von Below (gbelow@pmail.sams.ch) about DELL Poweredge
-
- - Intel 486DX4/100
- - 16 MB RAM
- - DELL SCSI array (DSA) with Firmware A07, DSA-Manager 1.7
- - 1 GB SCSI HD DIGITAL
- - NEC SCSI CD-ROM
- - 2 GB internal SCSI streamer
- - 3-Com C579 EISA Ethernet card
- - ATI 6800AX PCI VGA subsystem, 1024 MB RAM
-
- CAVE! DELL SCSI Array controller (DSA) runs only with firmware Rev. A07 !
- A06 is buggy, impossible to reboot !
- To get it: ftp dell.com , file is /dellbbs/dsa/dsaman17.zip
-
- Apart from this firmware-problem there where no problems for the last
- 2 months, running with linux 1.1.42 as primary nameserver, newsserver
- and www-server on internet.
-
- 8.7. zenon@resonex.com about Gateway2000 P-66
-
- Gateway2000's P5-66 system with Intel's PCI motherboard, with 5 ISA
- slots and 3 PCI slots. The only PCI card I am using is the # 9 GXe
- level 12 PCI card (2 MB VRAM and 1 MB DRAM). This card was bought from
- Dell. Under Linux I am using the graphics in the 80x25 mode only (I am
- waiting for some XFree86 refinements before using it in 1280x1024
- resolution), but under DOS/Windows I have used the card in
- 1280x1024x256 mode without problems. Etherlink 3C509 Ethernet card,
- Mitsumi bus-interface card, Adaptec 1542C SCSI interface card and
- additional serial/parallel ports card (which makes the total of serial
- ports 3).
-
- I have total of 32 MB RAM (recognized and used by both Linux and DOS).
- There is also a bus mouse (Microsoft in the PS2 mode).
-
- No problems so far.
-
- 8.8. James D. Levine (jdl@netcom.com) with Gateway2000
-
- Gateway 2000 P5-60 with an Intel Mercury motherboard, AMI-Flash-BIOS,
- (1.00.03.AF1, (c)'92) 16M RAM, on-board IDE controller and an ATI AX0
- (Mach32 Ultra XLR) PCI display adapter. He had absolutely no problems
- with the hardware so far but has not tried anything fancy, such as
- accelerated IDE drivers or SCSI support.
-
- 8.9. hi86@rz.uni-karlsruhe.de with SPACE
-
- SPACE-board, 8MB RAM, S3 805 1MB DRAM PCI 260MB Seagate IDE-hard disk
- because of lack of NCR53c810-Driver, 0.99pl15d, does seem to work
- well.
-
- 8.10. grif@cs.ucr.edu with INTEL
-
- 17 machines running a 60Mhz-i586 on Intel-Premier-PCI-Board
-
- 8.11. Jermoe Meyers (jeromem@amiserv.xnet.com) with Intel Premiere
-
- Motherboard - Intel Premiere Plato-babyAT 90mhz with Buslogic bt946c
- w/4.86 mcode w/4.22 autoSCSI firmware, (note, mine came with 4.80
- mcode and 4.17 autoSCSI firmware. (interrupt pins A,B,C conform to
- respective PCI slots!) ATI Xpression (Mach64) - using driver from
- sunsite, (running AcerView 56L monitor).
-
- The motherboard has 4 IDE drives, Linux (Slackware 2.0) sees the first
- two and everything on the Buslogic as it emulates an adaptec 1542.
- Uh, yes, Dos sees them all. Buslogic is VERY accomodating in regards
- to shipping upgraded chips (you will have to know how to change PLCC
- (plastic leaded chip carrier) chips, 3 of them. Though, don't let
- that scare you :-) it's not that tough. Get a low end PLCC removal
- tool, and your in business. You also might want to "flash upgrade
- your system bios from Intel's IPAN BBS, a trivial process. Whats even
- more interesting is I also have a Sound Blaster SCSI-2 running a scsi
- CDROM drive off it's adaptech 1522 onboard controller. So thats 4 IDE
- drives (2 under Linux) and 2 SCSI-2 controllers.
-
- I hope this helps others who are struggling with PCI technology use
- Linux! Jerry (jeromem@xnet.com)
-
- 8.12. Timothy Demarest (demarest@rerf.or.jp) Intel Plato Premiere II
-
- My system is configured as follows: 16Mb 60ns RAM, 3Com Etherlink-III
- 53C809 ethernet card (using 10base2), ATI Mach 64 2Mb VRAM, Toshiba 2x
- SCSI CDROM, NCR 53c810 PCI SCSI, Syquest 3270 270Mb Cartridge Drive,
- Viewsonic 17 monitor, Pentium-90 (FDIV Bug Free). Running Slackware
- 2.1.0, Kernel 1.2.0, with other misc patches/upgrades.
-
- Everything is functioning flawlessly. I dont recommend the Syquest
- drives. I have used the 3105 and the 3270 and both a very, very
- fragile. Also, the cartridges are easily damaged and I have had
- frequent problems with them. I am in the process of looking for
- alternative removable storage (MO, Zip, Minidisc, etc).
-
- Some information you might need:
-
- 8.12.1. Flash Bios upgrades
-
- Flash Bios updates can be ftp'd from
- wuarchive.wustl.edu:/pub/MSDOS_UPLOADS/plato. The current version is
- 1.00.12.AX1. The BIOS upgrades *must* be done in order. 1.00.03.AZ1
- to 1.00.06.AX1 to 1.00.08.AX1 to 1.00.10.AX1 to 1.00.12.AX1. The
- Flash BIOS updates can also be downloaded from the Intel BBS. I do
- not have that number right now.
-
- 8.12.2. NCR 53c810 BIOSless PCI SCSI
-
- If you are using an NCR 53c810 BIOSless PCI SCSI card in the Plato,
- you may have trouble getting the card to be recognized. I had to
- change one of the jumpers on the NCR card: the jumper that controls
- whether there is 1 or 2 NCR SCSI cards in your system must be set to
- "2". I dont know why, but this is how I got it to work. The other
- jumper controls the INT setting (A,B,C,D). I left mine at A (the
- default).
-
- 8.12.3. apart from that - plug and play!
-
- There are no settings in the motherboard BIOS for setting the NCR
- 53c810. Dont worry - once the card is jumpered correctly, it will be
- recognized! So much for PCI Plug-n-Play!
-
- 8.13. heinrich@zsv.gmd.de with ASUS
-
- ASUS-PCI-Board (SP3) having:
-
- ╖ -- Asus PCI-Board with AMD 486/dx2-66 and 16M RAM
-
- ╖ -- Fujitsu 2196ESA 1G SCSI-II
-
- ╖ -- Future Domain 850MEX Controller (cheap-SCSI-Controller, almost a
- clone to Seagate's ST01... want's to use ncr53c810 as soon as the
- driver comes out
-
- ╖ -- ATI Graphics Ultra (the older one with Mach-8 Chip, ISA-Bus)
-
- ╖ -- Slackware 1.1.1
-
- He just exchanged the boards, plugged his cards in, connected the
- cables, and it worked perfect. He does not use any PCI-Cards yet,
- though.
-
- 8.14. CARSTEN@AWORLD.aworld.de with ASUS
-
- ASUS-PCI-Board with 486DX66/2, miro-crystal 8s PCI driven by the
- S3-drivers of XFree86-2.0, using the onboard SCSI-Chip. No problems
- with compatibility at all.
-
- 8.15. Lars Heinemann (lars@uni-paderborn.de) with ASUS
-
- ASUS PCI/I-486SP3 Motherboard w/ 486DX2/66 and 16M RAM (2x8),
- miroChrystal 8S/PCI (1MB) S3, Soundblaster PRO, Adaptec 1542b (3.20
- ROM) SCSI host adapter with two hard disks (Fujitsu M2694ESA u.
- Quantum LPS52) and a QIC-150 Streamer attached. No problems at all!
-
- 8.16. Ruediger.Funck@Physik.TU-Muenchen.DE with ASUS
-
- ASUS PCI/I-486SP3 / i486DX2-66 / 8 MB PS/2 70 ns BIOS: Award v 4.50
- CPU TO DRAM write buffer: enabled CPU TO PCI write buffer: enabled PCI
- TO DRAM write buffer: disabled, unchangeable CPU TO PCI burst write:
- enabled Miro Crystal 8s PCI - S3 P86C805 - 1MB DRAM
-
- Quantum LPS 540S SCSI-Harddisk on NCR53c810-controller.
-
- 8.17. robert logan (rl@de-montfort.ac.uk with GW/2000)
-
- Gateway 2000 4DX2-66P 16 Megs RAM, PCI ATI AX0 2MB DRAM (ATI GUP). WD
- 2540 Hard Disk (528 Megs) CrystalScan 1776LE 17inch. (Runs up to
- 1280x1024) Slackware 1.1.2 (0.99pl15f)
-
- It is giving no problems. He uses SLIP for networking and an Orchid-
- Soundwave-32 for niceties, awaiting the NCR-Driver. The only problem
- he has is that the IDE-Drive could be much faster on the PCI-IDE. It
- is one of the new Western Digital fast drives and in DOS/WfW it
- absolutely screams - on Linux it is just as slow as a good IDE-Drive.
-
- 8.18. archie@CS.Berkeley.EDU and his friend use ASUS
-
- Archie and his friend have rather similar configurations:
-
- ╖ ASUS PCI-SP3 board (4 ISA, 3 PCI)
-
- ╖ Intel 486DX2/66
-
- ╖ Genoa Phantom 8900PCI card (friend: Tseng 3000/W32i chipset)
-
- ╖ Maxtor 345 MB IDE hard drive
-
- ╖ Supra 14.4 internal modem
-
- ╖ ViewSonic 6e monitor (Archie)
-
- ╖ NEC Multisync 4fge (friend)
-
- ╖ Slackware 1.2.0
-
- The onboard-SCSI is disabled. First there were problems with the IDE-
- drive: ``on the board there's a jumper which selects whether IRQ14
- comes from the ISA bus or the PCI bus. The manual has an example where
- they show connecting it to PCI INT-A. Well, we did that just like the
- example... but then later our IDE drive would not work (the IDE
- controller is on board). Had to take it back. The guys at NCA were
- puzzled, then traced it back to this jumper. I guess the IDE
- controller uses IRQ14 or something? That's not documented anywhere in
- the manual. Other than that, seems to be kicking ass nicely now.
- Running X, modeming, etc. (for the Supra you have to explicitly tell
- the kernel that the COM port has a 16550A using setserial (in
- Slackware /etc/rc.d/rc.serial))''.
-
- 8.19. Michael Will with ASUS-SP3 486 (the old one)
-
- used the following:
-
- ╖ ASUS PCI-SP3-Board with 486dx2/66 and 16M RAM
-
- ╖ NCR53c810-SCSI-II chip driving a 1GB-Seagate-SCSI-II disk and a
- Wangtec-tape
-
- ╖ ATI-GUP PCI Mach32 Graphics card with 2M VRAM running perfectly
- with XFree86(tm)-3.1 8bpp and 16bpp
-
- ╖ Linux kernel 1.1.69
-
- It runs perfectly and I am content with the speed, the ATI-GUP-PCI
- (Mach32) does not give as good benchmarks as expected, though. Since I
- got the money by now, I got me an ASUS-SP4 with P90 which gives me
- better throughput on Mach32-PCI... If I had even more money I'd get
- me another 16M of RAM and a Mach64-PCI with 4M RAM, though... I still
- keep on dreaming :-)
-
- 8.20. Mike Frisch (mfrisch@saturn.tlug.org) Giga-Byte 486IM
-
- ╖ Motherboard: Giga-Byte 486IM
-
- ╖ Configuration: 4 ISA slots (2 double as VLB) and 4 PCI slots
-
- ╖ CPU: Intel 486DX/33
-
- ╖ BIOS: Award 4.50G
-
- ╖ PCI EIDE Disk Controller: Giga-Byte GA-107 (CMD 640x PCI Multi-I/O)
-
- ╖ PCI Video card: ATI Graphics eXpression PCI 2MB DRAM
-
- ╖ Linux Kernel: 1.2.9
-
- ╖ Linux Dist'n: Highly modified Slackware 2.2.0
-
- I have been running this board 24 hours a day for the past 5-6 months.
- It has worked flawlessly for me under DOS/Windows, OS/2 Warp, and
- Linux (with Linux being run usually 24 hours a day).
-
- 8.21. Karl Keyte (kkeyte@esoc.bitnet) Gigabyte GA586 Pentium
-
- ╖ PCI/EISA Board Gigabyte GA586-ID 90MHz Pentium (dual processor, one
- fitted)
-
- ╖ 32M RAM
-
- ╖ SCSI - no scsi-NCR-chip on-board, using Adaptec 1542C,
-
- ╖ PCI ATI GUP 2M VRAM
-
- ╖ Adaptec 1742 EISA SCSI controller
-
- ╖ Soundblaster 16
-
- ╖ usual I/O
-
- Everything under DOS AND Linux works perfectly. No problem
- whatsoever. A VERY fast machine! BYTE Unix benchmarks place it about
- the same as a Sun SuperSPARC-20 running Solaris 2.3. The PC is faster
- for integer arithmetic and process stuff (including context
- switching). The SPARC is faster for floating point and one of the
- disk benchmarks.
-
- 8.22. kenf@clark.net with G/W 2000
-
- He uses a Gateway 2000 with no problems, except the soundcard (which
- one?). He is trading it in for a genuine soundblaster in hopes that
- will help.
-
- 8.23. Joerg Wedeck (jw@peanuts.informatik.uni-tuebingen.de) / ESCOM
-
- originaly buyed a 486 DX2/66 from ESCOM (which board?) with onboard
- IDE and without (!) onboard NCR-SCSI-chip. ISA-adaptec 1542cf scsi-
- controller instead spea v7 mercury lite (s3, PCI, 1MB), ISA-
- Soundblaster-16, mitsumi-cdrom (the slower one). Everything except
- the archive-streamer works with no problems. The spea-v7 works
- perfectly since XFree86-2.1
-
- He abandoned the Intel-board in favour of an ASUS-SP3-g and has some
- problems with PCI-to-Memory burstmode which is crashing only on Linux,
- "looking like a deadlock in the swapper". If you have any information
- on this, please eMail the maintainer of the PCI-HOWTO.
-
- After turning off the PCI-to-Memory posting feature it just works
- perfect.
-
- Rather than sending him mail please read his http-homepage at
- "http://wsiserv.informatik.uni-tuebingen.de/ jw" where he keeps
- information about his PCI-system, too.
-
- 8.24. Ulrich Teichert / ASUS
-
- ASUS-PCI board with AMD486dx40 (but actually running at 33Mhz?!) His
- ISA-ET3000 Optima 1024A ISA works nice. No problems with Quantum540S
- SCSI Harddisk attached to the onboard NCR53c810.
-
- 9. Reports of problems
-
- 9.1. Compaq PCI systems, especially Presarios
-
- Patrick Yaner (p_yaner@eos.ncsu.edu) reported a Compaq-speciality to
- me. It seems they are mapping the PCI BIOS data area to an obscure
- area of memory, one that Linux (or OS2) cannot access. It can usually
- find it, but it can't get in, and gives a message on startup
- (something like "pcibios_init: entry in high memory area, unable to
- access"). Although this is alright with the display (which is on the
- PCI bus) and the IDE controller (also PCI), it means any other PCI
- devices -- such as an Ethernet card -- cannot be detected by Linux.
-
- Compaq offers a driver for DOS at
- ftp://ftp.compaq.com/pub/softpaq/Drivers/SP1116.ZIP
-
- but using this with linux would mean using the program that boots
- linux from DOS, instead of LILO. Note that Compaq occasionally
- updates the software in this archive, so the file
- ftp://ftp.compaq.com/pub/softpaq/allfiles.html (also available as
- allfiles.txt) might be handy in checking to see that they haven't
- upgraded.
-
- Oddly, this information can also be found in the SCSI HOWTO, although
- the Pressarios come with IDE built in.
-
- 9.2. VLSI Wildcat PCI chipset like in Zeos P120 box
-
- Paul Bame (bame@sde.hp.com) reported:
-
- My ATAPI CD-ROM and 3c509 Ethernet weren't detected until I disabled
- Plug-and-Play, as recommended in the Ethernet-HOWTO"
-
- 9.3. hschmal@informatik.uni-rostock.de and SCSI-PCI-SC200
-
- He re.sgml that after plugging that card into his Pentium-board, Linux
- no longer boots. My first guess is that it is not supported.
-
- 9.4. dmarples@comms.eee.strathclyde.ac.uk G/W 2000
-
- Gateway 2000 G/W 2000 4DX2/66 PCI ATI-Graphics-Ultra-Pro IDE of
- indeterminate make
-
- It works well - only the IDE-Card runs in ISA-compatibility-mode, and
- works a lot faster when switched into PCI-Mode by a DOS-program...
- thus it's not that fast in Linux, and a patch would be nice.
-
- 9.5. cip574@wpax01.physik.uni-wuerzburg.de (Frank Hofmann) / ASUS
-
- He uses the ASUS-board with 16MB-RAM, ISA-based S3/928, and the
- onboard-IDE-controller with a Seagate ST4550A harddisk. He's had no
- trouble with the newer Linux-kernels.
-
- His problem:
-
- using X, my mouse is not responding the way I was used to before. It's
- sometimes behind movement and makes jumps if moved quickly. I think
- this was discussed In a Linux newsgroup before (I don't know which
- one) and is due to the use of 16550 serial chips for the onboard
- serial interfaces. After two weeks, I got used to it :-)
-
- Reducing the threshold of the 16550 should help. There should be a
- patch to setserial available somewhere, but I do not know where.
-
- 9.6. axel@avalanche.cs.tu-berlin.de (Axel Mahler) / ASUS
-
- ASUS PCI/I-486SP3 Motherboard (Award BIOS 4.50), 16 MB RAM the on-
- Board NCR Chip is disabled, he had the Genoa Phantom/W32 2MB for PCI
- and a Adaptec AHA-1542CF (BIOS v2.01) connected to:
-
- ╖ an IBM 1.05 GB Harddisk
-
- ╖ a Toshiba CD-ROM (XM4101-B)
-
- ╖ a HP DAT-Streamer (2GB)
-
- when creating the filesystems, 'mke2fs' (0.4, v. 1.11.93) hung and
- installation was impossible. After replacing the Genoa Phantom/W32 2MB
- PCI with an ELSA Winner 1000 2MB PCI it worked perfectly. He tested
- it with an old Eizo VGA-ISA and it worked as well, so the problem was
- in the Genoa-PCI-card.
-
- 9.7. Frank Strauss (strauss@dagoba.escape.de) / ASUS
-
- ASUS SP3 Board i486DX2/66 NCR53c810 disabled Adaptec 1542B in ISA Slot
- with 2 hard drives (200MB Maxtor, 420MB Fijutsu), SyQuest 88MB and
- Tandberg Streamer ELSA Winner 1000 PCI, 1MB-VRAM Soundblaster Pro in
- ISA Slot at IRQ 5 Onboard IDE disabled Onboard serial, parallel, FD
- enabled
- After a reset, the machine sometimes 'hangs' (soft and hard-reset the
- same) - this is probably not related to the Adaptec and the Soundcard,
- because even without these the system sometimes fails to come up. But
- if it runs, (and the ELSA-WINNER-1000-PCI-message appears) it runs ok.
-
- The two serial ports are detected as 16550 as they should, but at some
- mailbox-sessions there was heavy data-loss at V42bis... The problem
- seems to be in the hardware...
-
- CPU>-PCI-Burst seems to work well with DOS/MS-Windows
-
- CPU->PCI-Burst does not work properly with linux0.99p15, Messing up
- when switching the virtual-consoles, crashing completely when calling
- big apps like ghostview, or xdvi, leaving the SCSI-LED on (!).
-
- (I suspect these apps would be using a lot of CPU->PCI-burst because
- of the big heap of data to transmit to the PCI-Winner-1000)
-
- After disabling CPU->PCI-Burst, it works well, the Winner-1000 at
- 1152x846 (not much font cache with 1MB) does 93k xstones. OpaqueMove
- with twm is more than just endureable :-)
-
- He has got a SATURN.EXE which he loads under DOS before starting
- Linux, helping to turn on burst without hangs...
-
- Someone stated that these problems might go away when turning off
- "sync negotiation" on the Adaptec - I do not know if this is possible
- with the adaptec1542B too? But I guess so.
-
- With CPU->PCI-Burst it yielded 95k xstones, so he considers it as not
- too grave to do without. His only problem is that he would like to run
- his Winner-1000 at 1152x900 which fails because it seems to take any
- x-resolution higher than 1024pixels as a 1280pixel-resolution, thus
- wasting a lot end resulting in a y-resolution of 816pixels... but this
- is probably no PCI-related problem. It should have gone away with
- XFree86-2.1
-
- 9.8. egooch@mc.com / ASUS
-
- ╖ BOARD ASUS PCI/I-486 SP3 RAM: 16MB (4x4M-SIMM)
-
- ╖ CPU 486DX33 CPU
-
- ╖ BIOS Ver. 4.50 (12/30/93)
-
- ╖ Floppy Two floppy drives (1.2 and 1.44), using ASUS on-
- board floppy controller
-
- ╖ SCSI tried both WD7000 SCSI controller and Adaptec 1542CF and
- worked.
-
- ╖ Two SCSI 320M hard drives
-
- ╖ SCSI NEC84 CDROM drive
-
- ╖ SCSI QIC150 Archive tape drive
-
- ╖ Video - Tseng ET4000 ISA graphics card
-
- ╖ Sound PAS16 sound card
-
- ╖ Printer attached to on-board ASUS parallel port
-
- He has nothing in the PCI-Slots yet, but wants to buy a PCI-Video-
- Card, currently uses WD7000 SCSI controller but will switch to the
- NCR-Chip onboard as soon as the driver is out.
-
- Everything works perfectly - the first serial port which has a 14.4K-
- Modem attached does hang occasionally when reconnecting with the modem
- after having used it previously. He says that would not be unique to
- ASUS but rather a bug in the SMC-LSI device with its 16550UART. The
- logitech-serial-mouse on the second port works fine. Setting down the
- threshold of the 16550 for the mouseport would definitely help, one
- does seem to need a special patched setserial for that? I have not got
- the information yet, please contact me if you know more!
-
- 9.9. Stefan.Dalibor@informatik.uni-erlangen.de / GigaByte
-
- ╖ Board - GA-486iS from Gigabyte w/ 256Kb 2L-Cache, i486-DX2
-
- ╖ Bios - AMI, 93/8
-
- ╖ SCSI - no scsi-NCR-chip on-board, using Adaptec 1542C,
-
- ╖ Video - ELSA Winner 1000
-
- ╖ Linux 0.99pl14 + SCSI-Clustering-Patches / Slackware 1.1.1
-
- All seems to go well, but he has not tried neither networking,
- printing or a streamer yet. Before applying the clustering- patches he
- had some problems with hangs triggered by "find", but this no longer
- is the case - perhaps it was an older kernel-bug.
-
- The ELSA-Winner-1000 sometimes hangs, with very strange patterns on
- the screen resolved only by rebooting... The dealer has told him it
- was a bug in the ELSA-Card, but the manufacturer claims it had solved
- the problem. The bug is not reproducible so he does not plan to take
- any action at the moment.
-
- All in all the machine seems to work very well under heavy text
- processing (emacs, LaTeX, xfig, ghostview) usage. Interaction is
- surprisingly responsive, little difference between it and the 3-4X as
- expensive Sun he works on...
-
- CPU->PCI-Burst is still disabled because the bios does not support the
- PCI-things well?
-
- A problem with his new modem (v32 terbo) arose: it looses characters.
- Especially when using SLIP it complains a lot about RX and TX errors.
- As soon as he runs X it gets unusable. He said he activated FIFO and
- RTS/CTS with stty, but to no avail...
-
- 9.10. Steve Durst (sdurst@burns.rl.af.mil) with UMC 8500 mainboard
-
- Running Linux 1.2.12 on the UMC8500-100Mhz motherboard with the
- dreaded CMD PCIO640B (E)IDE controller, when booting the screen
- wiggles a few seconds, as if the Diamond Stealth64-DRAM (S3 864) has
- to warm up first, but he can live with that.
-
- 9.11. Tom Drabenstott (tldraben@Teleport.Com) with Comtrade / PCI48IX
-
- PCI48IX Motherboard Rev. 1.0. Made by ??? documentation copyrighted by
- "exrc". The BIOS says not very much about PCI.
-
- His E-315E Super IDE UMC (863+865) ISA-Controller-card does have
- problems. (It is a multifunction controller-card). It seems to work
- well under DOS/OS2 but not under Linux.
-
- 10. General tips for PCI-Motherboard + Linux NCR PCI SCSI
-
- This was compiled by Angelo Haritsis (ah@doc.ic.ac.uk) from various
- people's postings:
-
- 10.1. DON'Ts:
-
- Do *NOT* go for combination VLB/PCI motherboards. They usually have a
- lot of problems. Get a plain PCI version (with ISA slots as well of
- course). A lot of bad things have been heard about OPTI chipset PCI
- motherboards. Someone hints: "Avoid the OPTi (82C596/82C597/82C822)
- chipset based motherboards like the TMC PCI54PV".
-
- (I know of at least one person having no problems with his TMC PCI54PV
- motherboard. He just had to put the NCR53c810 addonboard into slot-A
- which is the only slot capable of busmastering as it seems.)
-
- Rumours say that Intel chipset PCI motherboards will have problems
- with more than one bus-mastering PCI board. I have not tried this one
- yet on mine and have nothing to suggest. I also heard that the Saturn
- II chipset is problematic, but this is the one I use and it is
- perfectly ok! Advice: Try to negotiate a 1-2 week money back agreement
- with your supplier, in case the motherboard you get has problems with
- the use you plan for it.
-
- 10.2. SIMM slots
-
- Go for 72-pin only SIMMs for speed: Some (all?) of the mainboards
- which take 30 pin SIMMs use a 32 bit main memory interface, and will
- be significantly slower than the Intel based boards which all use a 64
- bit or permantly interleaved memory interface. You might want to keep
- that in mind.
-
- 10.3. Praised PCI Pentium motherboard
-
- The P90 Intel motherboard with the Intel Premiere II chipset (aka
- Plato). Get the latest BIOS which has concatenated NCR scsi BIOS
- 3.04.00. Otherwise DOS won't see your scsi disk(s) if you use a BIOS-
- less 53c810 based controller. NCR SCSI BIOS exists in the AMI BIOS of
- the plato after version 1.00.08 (or maybe verion 1.00.06). This BIOS
- is FLASH upgradeable so you should be able to get the upgrade on a
- floppy from your supplier. The current version is 1.00.10 and has all
- early problems fixed.
-
- (Bios files should be available at ftp.demon.co.uk:/pub/ibmpc/intel,
- but I did not check that myself. the Autor.)
-
- 10.4. irq-lines
-
- The value in the interrupt line PCI configuration register is usually
- set manually (for compatability with legacy ISA boards) in the
- extended CMOS setup screens on a per-slot or per-device basis. Older
- PCI mainboards also force you to set jumpers for each PCI slot/device
- which select how PCI INTA and perhaps INTB, INTC, and INTD are mapped
- to an 8259 IRQ line, Obviously, if these jumpers exist on your board,
- they must match the settings in the extended CMOS setup. Also note
- that some boards (notably Viglens) have silkscreens and instruction
- manuals which disagree with the wiring, and some experimentation may
- be in order.
-
- 10.5. Info about the different NCR 8xx family scsi chips:
-
- All NCR 8XX Chips are dircet connect PCI bus mastering devices, that
- have no preformance difference wether on motherboard or add in option
- card. All devices comply with PCI 2.0 Specification, and can burst 32
- bit data at the full 33 MHz (133Mbytes/Sec)
-
- 10.5.1. 53C810
-
- 53C810 = 8 bit Fast SCSI-2 (10 MB/Sec) Single ended only Requires
- Integrated Mother board BIOS 100 pin Quad Flat Pack (PQFP) Worlds
- first PCI SCSI Chip, Volumes make it the most inexpensive.
-
- 10.5.2. 53C815
-
- 53C815 = 8 bit Fast SCSI-2 (10 MB/Sec) Single Ended only Support ROM
- BIOS interface, which makes it ideal for add-in card Designs. 128 Pin
- QFP
-
- 10.5.3. 53C825
-
- 53C825 = 8 bit Fast SCSI-2, Single ended or Differential 16 bit Fast
- SCSI-2 (20 MB/Sec), Single ended or Differetial Also has support for
- external Rom, making it a good candidate for add in cards. 160 pin QFP
- Not supported by linux yet. (See section below on news about the 825).
- Must have devices with wide or differential scsi to use these
- features.
-
- 10.6. future of 53c8xx
-
- There are 4 new devices planned for announcement late this year and
- into early next year. Footprint compitible with 810 and 825 with some
- new features.
-
- All the Chips require a BIOS in DOS/Intel applications. The 810 is
- the only chip that needs it resident on the motherboard. Latest NCR
- SCSI BIOS version: 3.04.00 The bios supports disks >1GB, indeed up to
- 8G under MS-LOSS.
-
- 10.7. Performance of the 53c810
-
- C't magazine's DOS benchmarks showed that it was significantly faster
- than the Buslogic BT-946, one user noted a 10-15% performance increase
- versus an Adaptec 2940, and with a very fast disk it may be 2.5X as
- fast as an Adaptec 1540.
-
- 10.8. News about NCR53c825 support
-
- works. period.
-
- 10.9. Frederic POTTER (Frederic.Potter@masi.ibp.fr) about Pen¡
- tium+NCR+Strap_bug
-
- On some Intel Plato board, the NCR bios doesn't recognize the board,
- because it needs to see the board as a "secondary SCSI controller",
- and because on most SCSI board the jumper to select between
- primary/secondary has been ironed to primary (to spare 1 cent,
- presumably).
-
- Solution:
-
- near the NCR chip, they are 3 via ( kind of holes ) with a strap like
- that
- O--O O
-
- this mean primary is selected as default setting. For the Plato Intel
- Mainboard, it should be like that
-
- O O--O
-
- The best solution is to get rid of the strap and to put a 2 position
- jumper instead.
-
- 10.10. PCIprobe in the latest Linux Kernels by Frederic Potter
-
- Frederic Potter has added a PCI-Probe into the latest kernels. If you
- do a "cat /proc/pci" it should list all your cards. If you own cards
- which are not properly recogniced, please contact him via mail as
- "Frederic.Potter@masi.ibp.fr".
-
- See arch/i386/kernel/bios32.c and include/linux/pci.h in the kernel
- source for more information on PCI-Probe-Stuff.
-
- 10.11. Other PCI Devices
-
- What other PCI-cards are supported? Apart from various graphicscards,
- I would like to know about other cards like ethernet, framegrabber, or
- the TSET boards Cyclades is about to beta-test at the moment:
-
- 10.11.1. Cyclades: a 16-port PCI RISC-based multiport card.
-
- The product is called Cyclom-Ye, and has the following
- characteristics:
-
- ╖ PCI host card based on the PLX chip-set. This host card supports 8
- to 32 serial ports, utilizing 8 or 16-port external boxes.
-
- ╖ SCSI II cable.
-
- ╖ 8 or 16-port external boxes with RJ45 or DB25 connectors (your
- choice). You can start with 8 ports and expand to 32, by just
- adding more boxes. Each external box contains 2 or 4 CD-1400 RISC
- Serial controllers (each CD-1400 controls 4 serial ports).
-
- ╖ Up to 4 Host cards can be installed in the PC system, allowing a
- maximum of 128 serial ports per system.
-
- The product is being in the beta-test phase at July the 26th, 1995,
- and should be available by Octobre or something. eMail them at
- sales@cyclades.com.
-
- 11. Conclusion
-
- If you have some moneny to put into your machine, you'd be well off
- with a Pentium90, ASUS-SP4, which is what I use at the moment. If you
- can afford 32M RAM that would be much better than 16M RAM.
-
- Real soon now the upcoming standard will be the Triton Chipset with
- support for special SIMMS called EDODRAM, and SRAM. Both will be more
- expensive than PS2-RAM, and at the time of writing (28-June-1995) SRAM
- is not available. While EDO-DRAM is more expensive, this is not
- because of the production costs, they are said to be the same.
-
- For a highperformance system I would still choose an ASUS-TP4/XE with
- EDO-DRAM, but if you do not need to use it at the moment, I d rather
- wait some more.
-
- For Graphic-boards I'd say the best cheap board fitting perfectly on a
- good Multisync-15 like the Samsung SyncMaster 15Gli, is the SPEA V7
- Mirage P64 with Trio64 Chipset and 2M DRAM. For more sophisticated
- Display like the Iiyama-IDEK 8617A-T I think the PCI Mach64 ATI-GUP-
- Turbo (not the cheaper GUP-Turbo-Windows) would be a good choice, with
- 4M RAM you can have truecolor in higher resolutions. It is well
- supported in the XFree86(tm)-3.1.1, and there are commercial X-Servers
- available of which I'd recommend Accelerated/X by Roell, which
- supports the Mach64 very well and fast.
-
- For SCSI I'd take the DPT rather than the (much cheaper and very fast)
- NCR53c810 in case you plan to use SCSI-Tapes a lot. The NCR53c810
- driver on Linux does lack disconnect/reconnect support, thus blocking
- the SCSIbus on operations like "mt rewind", "mt fsf" etc. It bears a
- performance penalty on tar-operations - but check out Drews new alpha
- drivers before making a decision, perhaps it does solve all the
- problems.
-
- For building servers, the DPT would be the controller of choice anyway
- because of all the nifty hardware cache (with elevator sorting on
- accesses, so cache it is not a silly thing even in a Linux enviroment
- where the OS does the caching) and RAID-Support up to raid level 5.
-
- If you do not want to spend that much money on computer equipment
- (e.g.: you are having a life) you might go for an ASUS-SP3-SiS with
- AMD-DX2/66 or DX4/100. The SPEA V7 Mirage P64 PCI with 2M DRAM would
- be a good choice, since it uses the Trio64 S3 Chip, which is well
- supported by XFree86(tm)-3.1.1, quite cheap to buy and fast, too.
-
- Another fine card since XFree86(tm)-3.1 is the fast and cheap
- et4000/w32-PCI-card.
-
- 12. Thanks
-
- I want to thank the following people for supporting this document:
-
- ╖ David Lesher (wb8foz@netcom.com) for extensive help with the
- english language
-
- ╖ Nathanael MAKAREVITCH (nat@nataa.frmug.fr.net) for translating into
- french
-
- ╖ Jun Morimoto (morimoto@lab.imagica.co.jp) for translating into
- japanese
-
- ╖ Marco Melgazzi (marco@vcldec1.polito.it) for translating into
- italian
-
- ╖ Donald Becker (becker@cesdis.gsfc.nasa.gov) for ethernet-
- informations
-
- ╖ Drew Eckhardt (drew@kinglear.cs.Colorado.EDU) for SCSI-informations
-
- ╖ Zhahai Stewart (zhahai@hisys.com) for help with the intro section
-
- and many more peole adding information mostly by mail and by posts,
- some of them will be named here:
-
- CARSTEN@AWORLD.aworld.de,
- dmarples@comms.eee.strathclyde.ac.uk,
- drew@kinglear.cs.Colorado.EDU (Working at the PCI-NCR53c810-Driver),
- duncan@spd.eee.strathclyde.ac.uk,
- fm3@irz.inf.tu-dresden.de,
- grif@ucrengr.ucr.edu,
- heinrich@zsv.gmd.de,
- hm@ix.de (iX-Magazine),
- hm@seneca.ix.de,
- kebsch.pad@sni.de,
- kenf@clark.net,
- matthias@penthouse.boerde.de,
- ortloff@omega.informatik.uni-dortmund.de,
- preberle@cip.informatik.uni-erlangen.de,
- rob@me62.lbl.gov,
- rsi@netcom.com,
- sk001sp@unidui.uni-duisburg.de,
- strauss@dagoba.escape.de,
- strauss@dagoba.priconet.de,
- hi86@rz.uni-karlsruhe.de,
- Ulrich Teichert, krypton@netzservice.de,
- Stefan.Dalibor@informatik.uni-erlangen.de,
- tldraben@teleport.com
- mundkur@eagle.ece.uci.edu,
- ooch@jericho.mc.com,
- Gert Doering (gert@greenie.muc.de),
- James D. Levine (jdl@netcom.com),
- Georg von Below (gbelow@pmail.sams.ch),
- Jerome Meyers (jeromem@quake.xnet.com),
- Angelo Haritsis (ah@doc.ic.ac.uk),
- archie@CS.Berkeley.EDU and his friend kenf@clark.net.
-
- 13. copyright/legalese
-
- (c)opyright 1993,94 by Michael Will - the GPL (Gnu Public License)
- applies. See last section about this.
-
- If you sell this HOWTO on a CD or in a book I would be happy to have a
- copy for reference.
-
- (Michael.Will@student.uni-tuebingen.de)
-
- Contact me, either via eMail or call +49-7071-969063.
-
- Trademarks are owned by their owners. There is no warranty on the
- information in this document.
-
- For german users I am offering tested, preinstalled / preconfigured
- and supported Linux-PCI-machines. Call me at 07071-969063.
-
- 14. GPL - Gnu Public License
-
- GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE
- Version 2, June 1991
-
- Copyright (C) 1989, 1991 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
- 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA
- Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim copies
- of this license document, but changing it is not allowed.
-
- Preamble
-
- The licenses for most software are designed to take away your
- freedom to share and change it. By contrast, the GNU General Public
- License is intended to guarantee your freedom to share and change free
- software--to make sure the software is free for all its users. This
- General Public License applies to most of the Free Software
- Foundation's software and to any other program whose authors commit to
- using it. (Some other Free Software Foundation software is covered by
- the GNU Library General Public License instead.) You can apply it to
- your programs, too.
-
- When we speak of free software, we are referring to freedom, not
- price. Our General Public Licenses are designed to make sure that you
- have the freedom to distribute copies of free software (and charge for
- this service if you wish), that you receive source code or can get it
- if you want it, that you can change the software or use pieces of it
- in new free programs; and that you know you can do these things.
-
- To protect your rights, we need to make restrictions that forbid
- anyone to deny you these rights or to ask you to surrender the rights.
- These restrictions translate to certain responsibilities for you if you
- distribute copies of the software, or if you modify it.
-
- For example, if you distribute copies of such a program, whether
- gratis or for a fee, you must give the recipients all the rights that
- you have. You must make sure that they, too, receive or can get the
- source code. And you must show them these terms so they know their
- rights.
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- We protect your rights with two steps: (1) copyright the software, and
- (2) offer you this license which gives you legal permission to copy,
- distribute and/or modify the software.
-
- Also, for each author's protection and ours, we want to make certain
- that everyone understands that there is no warranty for this free
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- want its recipients to know that what they have is not the original, so
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- The precise terms and conditions for copying, distribution and
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- GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE
- TERMS AND CONDITIONS FOR COPYING, DISTRIBUTION AND MODIFICATION
-
- 0. This License applies to any program or other work which contains
- a notice placed by the copyright holder saying it may be distributed
- under the terms of this General Public License. The "Program", below,
- refers to any such program or work, and a "work based on the Program"
- means either the Program or any derivative work under copyright law:
- that is to say, a work containing the Program or a portion of it,
- either verbatim or with modifications and/or translated into another
- language. (Hereinafter, translation is included without limitation in
- the term "modification".) Each licensee is addressed as "you".
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- Activities other than copying, distribution and modification are not
- covered by this License; they are outside its scope. The act of
- running the Program is not restricted, and the output from the Program
- is covered only if its contents constitute a work based on the
- Program (independent of having been made by running the Program).
- Whether that is true depends on what the Program does.
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- 1. You may copy and distribute verbatim copies of the Program's
- source code as you receive it, in any medium, provided that you
- conspicuously and appropriately publish on each copy an appropriate
- copyright notice and disclaimer of warranty; keep intact all the
- notices that refer to this License and to the absence of any warranty;
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- along with the Program.
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- You may charge a fee for the physical act of transferring a copy, and
- you may at your option offer warranty protection in exchange for a fee.
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- 2. You may modify your copy or copies of the Program or any portion
- of it, thus forming a work based on the Program, and copy and
- distribute such modifications or work under the terms of Section 1
- above, provided that you also meet all of these conditions:
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- stating that you changed the files and the date of any change.
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- b) You must cause any work that you distribute or publish, that in
- whole or in part contains or is derived from the Program or any
- part thereof, to be licensed as a whole at no charge to all third
- parties under the terms of this License.
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- c) If the modified program normally reads commands interactively
- when run, you must cause it, when started running for such
- interactive use in the most ordinary way, to print or display an
- announcement including an appropriate copyright notice and a
- notice that there is no warranty (or else, saying that you provide
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- these conditions, and telling the user how to view a copy of this
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- These requirements apply to the modified work as a whole. If
- identifiable sections of that work are not derived from the Program,
- and can be reasonably considered independent and separate works in
- themselves, then this License, and its terms, do not apply to those
- sections when you distribute them as separate works. But when you
- distribute the same sections as part of a whole which is a work based
- on the Program, the distribution of the whole must be on the terms of
- this License, whose permissions for other licensees extend to the
- entire whole, and thus to each and every part regardless of who wrote it.
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- Thus, it is not the intent of this section to claim rights or contest
- your rights to work written entirely by you; rather, the intent is to
- exercise the right to control the distribution of derivative or
- collective works based on the Program.
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- In addition, mere aggregation of another work not based on the Program
- with the Program (or with a work based on the Program) on a volume of
- a storage or distribution medium does not bring the other work under
- the scope of this License.
- 3. You may copy and distribute the Program (or a work based on it,
- under Section 2) in object code or executable form under the terms of
- Sections 1 and 2 above provided that you also do one of the following:
-
- a) Accompany it with the complete corresponding machine-readable
- source code, which must be distributed under the terms of Sections
- 1 and 2 above on a medium customarily used for software interchange; or,
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- b) Accompany it with a written offer, valid for at least three
- years, to give any third party, for a charge no more than your
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- to distribute corresponding source code. (This alternative is
- allowed only for noncommercial distribution and only if you
- received the program in object code or executable form with such
- an offer, in accord with Subsection b above.)
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- making modifications to it. For an executable work, complete source
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- 4. You may not copy, modify, sublicense, or distribute the Program
- except as expressly provided under this License. Any attempt
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- void, and will automatically terminate your rights under this License.
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- 6. Each time you redistribute the Program (or any work based on the
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- conditions are imposed on you (whether by court order, agreement or
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- all those who receive copies directly or indirectly through you, then
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- refrain entirely from distribution of the Program.
-
- If any portion of this section is held invalid or unenforceable under
- any particular circumstance, the balance of the section is intended to
- apply and the section as a whole is intended to apply in other
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- It is not the purpose of this section to induce you to infringe any
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- 8. If the distribution and/or use of the Program is restricted in
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- 9. The Free Software Foundation may publish revised and/or new versions
- of the General Public License from time to time. Such new versions will
- be similar in spirit to the present version, but may differ in detail to
- address new problems or concerns.
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- Each version is given a distinguishing version number. If the Program
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- later version", you have the option of following the terms and conditions
- either of that version or of any later version published by the Free
- Software Foundation. If the Program does not specify a version number of
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- 10. If you wish to incorporate parts of the Program into other free
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- NO WARRANTY
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- 11. BECAUSE THE PROGRAM IS LICENSED FREE OF CHARGE, THERE IS NO WARRANTY
- FOR THE PROGRAM, TO THE EXTENT PERMITTED BY APPLICABLE LAW. EXCEPT WHEN
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- PROVIDE THE PROGRAM "AS IS" WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EITHER EXPRESSED
- OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF
- MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. THE ENTIRE RISK AS
- TO THE QUALITY AND PERFORMANCE OF THE PROGRAM IS WITH YOU. SHOULD THE
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- REPAIR OR CORRECTION.
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- 12. IN NO EVENT UNLESS REQUIRED BY APPLICABLE LAW OR AGREED TO IN WRITING
- WILL ANY COPYRIGHT HOLDER, OR ANY OTHER PARTY WHO MAY MODIFY AND/OR
- REDISTRIBUTE THE PROGRAM AS PERMITTED ABOVE, BE LIABLE TO YOU FOR DAMAGES,
- INCLUDING ANY GENERAL, SPECIAL, INCIDENTAL OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES ARISING
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- TO LOSS OF DATA OR DATA BEING RENDERED INACCURATE OR LOSSES SUSTAINED BY
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- PROGRAMS), EVEN IF SUCH HOLDER OR OTHER PARTY HAS BEEN ADVISED OF THE
- POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGES.
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- END OF TERMS AND CONDITIONS
-
- Appendix: How to Apply These Terms to Your New Programs
-
- If you develop a new program, and you want it to be of the greatest
- possible use to the public, the best way to achieve this is to make it
- free software which everyone can redistribute and change under these terms.
-
- To do so, attach the following notices to the program. It is safest
- to attach them to the start of each source file to most effectively
- convey the exclusion of warranty; and each file should have at least
- the "copyright" line and a pointer to where the full notice is found.
-
- <one line to give the program's name and a brief idea of what it does.>
- Copyright (C) 19yy (name of author)
-
- This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
- it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
- the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
- (at your option) any later version.
-
- This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
- but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
- MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
- GNU General Public License for more details.
-
- You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
- along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
- Foundation, Inc., 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA.
-
- Also add information on how to contact you by electronic and paper mail.
-
- If the program is interactive, make it output a short notice like this
- when it starts in an interactive mode:
-
- Gnomovision version 69, Copyright (C) 19yy name of author
- Gnomovision comes with ABSOLUTELY NO WARRANTY; for details type `show w'.
- This is free software, and you are welcome to redistribute it
- under certain conditions; type `show c' for details.
-
- The hypothetical commands `show w' and `show c' should show the appropriate
- parts of the General Public License. Of course, the commands you use may
- be called something other than `show w' and `show c'; they could even be
- mouse-clicks or menu items--whatever suits your program.
-
- You should also get your employer (if you work as a programmer) or your
- school, if any, to sign a "copyright disclaimer" for the program, if
- necessary. Here is a sample; alter the names:
-
- Yoyodyne, Inc., hereby disclaims all copyright interest in the program
- `Gnomovision' (which makes passes at compilers) written by James Hacker.
-
- (signature of Ty Coon), 1 April 1989
- Ty Coon, President of Vice
-
- This General Public License does not permit incorporating your program into
- proprietary programs. If your program is a subroutine library, you may
- consider it more useful to permit linking proprietary applications with the
- library. If this is what you want to do, use the GNU Library General
- Public License instead of this License.
-
-