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| COMX drivers for the 2.2 kernel |
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| Originally written by: Tivadar Szemethy, <tiv@itc.hu> |
| Currently maintained by: Gergely Madarasz <gorgo@itc.hu> |
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| Last change: 21/06/1999. |
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| INTRODUCTION |
| |
| This document describes the software drivers and their use for the |
| COMX line of synchronous serial adapters for Linux version 2.2.0 and |
| above. |
| The cards are produced and sold by ITC-Pro Ltd. Budapest, Hungary |
| For further info contact <info@itc.hu> |
| or http://www.itc.hu (mostly in Hungarian). |
| The firmware files and software are available from ftp://ftp.itc.hu |
| |
| Currently, the drivers support the following cards and protocols: |
| |
| COMX (2x64 kbps intelligent board) |
| CMX (1x256 + 1x128 kbps intelligent board) |
| HiCOMX (2x2Mbps intelligent board) |
| LoCOMX (1x512 kbps passive board) |
| MixCOM (1x512 or 2x512kbps passive board with a hardware watchdog an |
| optional BRI interface and optional flashROM (1-32M)) |
| SliceCOM (1x2Mbps channelized E1 board) |
| PciCOM (X21) |
| |
| At the moment of writing this document, the (Cisco)-HDLC, LAPB, SyncPPP and |
| Frame Relay (DTE, rfc1294 IP encapsulation with partially implemented Q933a |
| LMI) protocols are available as link-level protocol. |
| X.25 support is being worked on. |
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| USAGE |
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| Load the comx.o module and the hardware-specific and protocol-specific |
| modules you'll need into the running kernel using the insmod utility. |
| This creates the /proc/comx directory. |
| See the example scripts in the 'etc' directory. |
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| /proc INTERFACE INTRO |
| |
| The COMX driver set has a new type of user interface based on the /proc |
| filesystem which eliminates the need for external user-land software doing |
| IOCTL calls. |
| Each network interface or device (i.e. those ones you configure with 'ifconfig' |
| and 'route' etc.) has a corresponding directory under /proc/comx. You can |
| dynamically create a new interface by saying 'mkdir /proc/comx/comx0' (or you |
| can name it whatever you want up to 8 characters long, comx[n] is just a |
| convention). |
| Generally the files contained in these directories are text files, which can |
| be viewed by 'cat filename' and you can write a string to such a file by |
| saying 'echo _string_ >filename'. This is very similar to the sysctl interface. |
| Don't use a text editor to edit these files, always use 'echo' (or 'cat' |
| where appropriate). |
| When you've created the comx[n] directory, two files are created automagically |
| in it: 'boardtype' and 'protocol'. You have to fill in these files correctly |
| for your board and protocol you intend to use (see the board and protocol |
| descriptions in this file below or the example scripts in the 'etc' directory). |
| After filling in these files, other files will appear in the directory for |
| setting the various hardware- and protocol-related informations (for example |
| irq and io addresses, keepalive values etc.) These files are set to default |
| values upon creation, so you don't necessarily have to change all of them. |
| |
| When you're ready with filling in the files in the comx[n] directory, you can |
| configure the corresponding network interface with the standard network |
| configuration utilities. If you're unable to bring the interfaces up, look up |
| the various kernel log files on your system, and consult the messages for |
| a probable reason. |
| |
| EXAMPLE |
| |
| To create the interface 'comx0' which is the first channel of a COMX card: |
| |
| insmod comx |
| # insmod comx-hw-comx ; insmod comx-proto-ppp (these are usually |
| autoloaded if you use the kernel module loader) |
| |
| mkdir /proc/comx/comx0 |
| echo comx >/proc/comx/comx0/boardtype |
| echo 0x360 >/proc/comx/comx0/io <- jumper-selectable I/O port |
| echo 0x0a >/proc/comx/comx0/irq <- jumper-selectable IRQ line |
| echo 0xd000 >/proc/comx/comx0/memaddr <- software-configurable memory |
| address. COMX uses 64 KB, and this |
| can be: 0xa000, 0xb000, 0xc000, |
| 0xd000, 0xe000. Avoid conflicts |
| with other hardware. |
| cat </etc/siol1.rom >/proc/comx/comx0/firmware <- the firmware for the card |
| echo HDLC >/proc/comx/comx0/protocol <- the data-link protocol |
| echo 10 >/proc/comx/comx0/keepalive <- the keepalive for the protocol |
| ifconfig comx0 1.2.3.4 pointopoint 5.6.7.8 netmask 255.255.255.255 <- |
| finally configure it with ifconfig |
| Check its status: |
| cat /proc/comx/comx0/status |
| |
| If you want to use the second channel of this board: |
| |
| mkdir /proc/comx/comx1 |
| echo comx >/proc/comx/comx1/boardtype |
| echo 0x360 >/proc/comx/comx1/io |
| echo 10 >/proc/comx/comx1/irq |
| echo 0xd000 >/proc/comx/comx1/memaddr |
| echo 1 >/proc/comx/comx1/channel <- channels are numbered |
| as 0 (default) and 1 |
| |
| Now, check if the driver recognized that you're going to use the other |
| channel of the same adapter: |
| |
| cat /proc/comx/comx0/twin |
| comx1 |
| cat /proc/comx/comx1/twin |
| comx0 |
| |
| You don't have to load the firmware twice, if you use both channels of |
| an adapter, just write it into the channel 0's /proc firmware file. |
| |
| Default values: io 0x360 for COMX, 0x320 (HICOMX), irq 10, memaddr 0xd0000 |
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| THE LOCOMX HARDWARE DRIVER |
| |
| The LoCOMX driver doesn't require firmware, and it doesn't use memory either, |
| but it uses DMA channels 1 and 3. You can set the clock rate (if enabled by |
| jumpers on the board) by writing the kbps value into the file named 'clock'. |
| Set it to 'external' (it is the default) if you have external clock source. |
| |
| (Note: currently the LoCOMX driver does not support the internal clock) |
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| THE COMX, CMX AND HICOMX DRIVERS |
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| On the HICOMX, COMX and CMX, you have to load the firmware (it is different for |
| the three cards!). All these adapters can share the same memory |
| address (we usually use 0xd0000). On the CMX you can set the internal |
| clock rate (if enabled by jumpers on the small adapter boards) by writing |
| the kbps value into the 'clock' file. You have to do this before initializing |
| the card. If you use both HICOMX and CMX/COMX cards, initialize the HICOMX |
| first. The I/O address of the HICOMX board is not configurable by any |
| method available to the user: it is hardwired to 0x320, and if you have to |
| change it, consult ITC-Pro Ltd. |
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| THE MIXCOM DRIVER |
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| The MixCOM board doesn't require firmware, the driver communicates with |
| it through I/O ports. You can have three of these cards in one machine. |
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| THE SLICECOM DRIVER |
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| The SliceCOM board doesn't require firmware. You can have 4 of these cards |
| in one machine. The driver doesn't (yet) support shared interrupts, so |
| you will need a separate IRQ line for every board. |
| Read Documentation/networking/slicecom.txt for help on configuring |
| this adapter. |
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| THE HDLC/PPP LINE PROTOCOL DRIVER |
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| The HDLC/SyncPPP line protocol driver uses the kernel's built-in syncppp |
| driver (syncppp.o). You don't have to manually select syncppp.o when building |
| the kernel, the dependencies compile it in automatically. |
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| EXAMPLE |
| (setting up hw parameters, see above) |
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| # using HDLC: |
| echo hdlc >/proc/comx/comx0/protocol |
| echo 10 >/proc/comx/comx0/keepalive <- not necessary, 10 is the default |
| ifconfig comx0 1.2.3.4 pointopoint 5.6.7.8 netmask 255.255.255.255 |
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| (setting up hw parameters, see above) |
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| # using PPP: |
| echo ppp >/proc/comx/comx0/protocol |
| ifconfig comx0 up |
| ifconfig comx0 1.2.3.4 pointopoint 5.6.7.8 netmask 255.255.255.255 |
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| THE LAPB LINE PROTOCOL DRIVER |
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| For this, you'll need to configure LAPB support (See 'LAPB Data Link Driver' in |
| 'Network options' section) into your kernel (thanks to Jonathan Naylor for his |
| excellent implementation). |
| comx-proto-lapb.o provides the following files in the appropriate directory |
| (the default values in parens): t1 (5), t2 (1), n2 (20), mode (DTE, STD) and |
| window (7). Agree with the administrator of your peer router on these |
| settings (most people use defaults, but you have to know if you are DTE or |
| DCE). |
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| EXAMPLE |
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| (setting up hw parameters, see above) |
| echo lapb >/proc/comx/comx0/protocol |
| echo dce >/proc/comx/comx0/mode <- DCE interface in this example |
| ifconfig comx0 1.2.3.4 pointopoint 5.6.7.8 netmask 255.255.255.255 |
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| THE FRAME RELAY PROTOCOL DRIVER |
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| You DON'T need any other frame relay related modules from the kernel to use |
| COMX-Frame Relay. This protocol is a bit more complicated than the others, |
| because it allows to use 'subinterfaces' or DLCIs within one physical device. |
| First you have to create the 'master' device (the actual physical interface) |
| as you would do for other protocols. Specify 'frad' as protocol type. |
| Now you can bring this interface up by saying 'ifconfig comx0 up' (or whatever |
| you've named the interface). Do not assign any IP address to this interface |
| and do not set any routes through it. |
| Then, set up your DLCIs the following way: create a comx interface for each |
| DLCI you intend to use (with mkdir), and write 'dlci' to the 'boardtype' file, |
| and 'ietf-ip' to the 'protocol' file. Currently, the only supported |
| encapsulation type is this (also called as RFC1294/1490 IP encapsulation). |
| Write the DLCI number to the 'dlci' file, and write the name of the physical |
| COMX device to the file called 'master'. |
| Now you can assign an IP address to this interface and set routes using it. |
| See the example file for further info and example config script. |
| Notes: this driver implements a DTE interface with partially implemented |
| Q933a LMI. |
| You can find an extensively commented example in the 'etc' directory. |
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| FURTHER /proc FILES |
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| boardtype: |
| Type of the hardware. Valid values are: |
| 'comx', 'hicomx', 'locomx', 'cmx', 'slicecom'. |
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| protocol: |
| Data-link protocol on this channel. Can be: HDLC, LAPB, PPP, FRAD |
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| status: |
| You can read the channel's actual status from the 'status' file, for example |
| 'cat /proc/comx/comx3/status'. |
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| lineup_delay: |
| Interpreted in seconds (default is 1). Used to avoid line jitter: the system |
| will consider the line status 'UP' only if it is up for at least this number |
| of seconds. |
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| debug: |
| You can set various debug options through this file. Valid options are: |
| 'comx_events', 'comx_tx', 'comx_rx', 'hw_events', 'hw_tx', 'hw_rx'. |
| You can enable a debug options by writing its name prepended by a '+' into |
| the debug file, for example 'echo +comx_rx >comx0/debug'. |
| Disabling an option happens similarly, use the '-' prefix |
| (e.g. 'echo -hw_rx >debug'). |
| Debug results can be read from the debug file, for example: |
| tail -f /proc/comx/comx2/debug |
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