Originally, this driver was written for the Digital Equipment | |
Corporation series of EtherWORKS Ethernet cards: | |
DE425 TP/COAX EISA | |
DE434 TP PCI | |
DE435 TP/COAX/AUI PCI | |
DE450 TP/COAX/AUI PCI | |
DE500 10/100 PCI Fasternet | |
but it will now attempt to support all cards which conform to the | |
Digital Semiconductor SROM Specification. The driver currently | |
recognises the following chips: | |
DC21040 (no SROM) | |
DC21041[A] | |
DC21140[A] | |
DC21142 | |
DC21143 | |
So far the driver is known to work with the following cards: | |
KINGSTON | |
Linksys | |
ZNYX342 | |
SMC8432 | |
SMC9332 (w/new SROM) | |
ZNYX31[45] | |
ZNYX346 10/100 4 port (can act as a 10/100 bridge!) | |
The driver has been tested on a relatively busy network using the DE425, | |
DE434, DE435 and DE500 cards and benchmarked with 'ttcp': it transferred | |
16M of data to a DECstation 5000/200 as follows: | |
TCP UDP | |
TX RX TX RX | |
DE425 1030k 997k 1170k 1128k | |
DE434 1063k 995k 1170k 1125k | |
DE435 1063k 995k 1170k 1125k | |
DE500 1063k 998k 1170k 1125k in 10Mb/s mode | |
All values are typical (in kBytes/sec) from a sample of 4 for each | |
measurement. Their error is +/-20k on a quiet (private) network and also | |
depend on what load the CPU has. | |
========================================================================= | |
The ability to load this driver as a loadable module has been included | |
and used extensively during the driver development (to save those long | |
reboot sequences). Loadable module support under PCI and EISA has been | |
achieved by letting the driver autoprobe as if it were compiled into the | |
kernel. Do make sure you're not sharing interrupts with anything that | |
cannot accommodate interrupt sharing! | |
To utilise this ability, you have to do 8 things: | |
0) have a copy of the loadable modules code installed on your system. | |
1) copy de4x5.c from the /linux/drivers/net directory to your favourite | |
temporary directory. | |
2) for fixed autoprobes (not recommended), edit the source code near | |
line 5594 to reflect the I/O address you're using, or assign these when | |
loading by: | |
insmod de4x5 io=0xghh where g = bus number | |
hh = device number | |
NB: autoprobing for modules is now supported by default. You may just | |
use: | |
insmod de4x5 | |
to load all available boards. For a specific board, still use | |
the 'io=?' above. | |
3) compile de4x5.c, but include -DMODULE in the command line to ensure | |
that the correct bits are compiled (see end of source code). | |
4) if you are wanting to add a new card, goto 5. Otherwise, recompile a | |
kernel with the de4x5 configuration turned off and reboot. | |
5) insmod de4x5 [io=0xghh] | |
6) run the net startup bits for your new eth?? interface(s) manually | |
(usually /etc/rc.inet[12] at boot time). | |
7) enjoy! | |
To unload a module, turn off the associated interface(s) | |
'ifconfig eth?? down' then 'rmmod de4x5'. | |
Automedia detection is included so that in principle you can disconnect | |
from, e.g. TP, reconnect to BNC and things will still work (after a | |
pause whilst the driver figures out where its media went). My tests | |
using ping showed that it appears to work.... | |
By default, the driver will now autodetect any DECchip based card. | |
Should you have a need to restrict the driver to DIGITAL only cards, you | |
can compile with a DEC_ONLY define, or if loading as a module, use the | |
'dec_only=1' parameter. | |
I've changed the timing routines to use the kernel timer and scheduling | |
functions so that the hangs and other assorted problems that occurred | |
while autosensing the media should be gone. A bonus for the DC21040 | |
auto media sense algorithm is that it can now use one that is more in | |
line with the rest (the DC21040 chip doesn't have a hardware timer). | |
The downside is the 1 'jiffies' (10ms) resolution. | |
IEEE 802.3u MII interface code has been added in anticipation that some | |
products may use it in the future. | |
The SMC9332 card has a non-compliant SROM which needs fixing - I have | |
patched this driver to detect it because the SROM format used complies | |
to a previous DEC-STD format. | |
I have removed the buffer copies needed for receive on Intels. I cannot | |
remove them for Alphas since the Tulip hardware only does longword | |
aligned DMA transfers and the Alphas get alignment traps with non | |
longword aligned data copies (which makes them really slow). No comment. | |
I have added SROM decoding routines to make this driver work with any | |
card that supports the Digital Semiconductor SROM spec. This will help | |
all cards running the dc2114x series chips in particular. Cards using | |
the dc2104x chips should run correctly with the basic driver. I'm in | |
debt to <mjacob@feral.com> for the testing and feedback that helped get | |
this feature working. So far we have tested KINGSTON, SMC8432, SMC9332 | |
(with the latest SROM complying with the SROM spec V3: their first was | |
broken), ZNYX342 and LinkSys. ZNYX314 (dual 21041 MAC) and ZNYX 315 | |
(quad 21041 MAC) cards also appear to work despite their incorrectly | |
wired IRQs. | |
I have added a temporary fix for interrupt problems when some SCSI cards | |
share the same interrupt as the DECchip based cards. The problem occurs | |
because the SCSI card wants to grab the interrupt as a fast interrupt | |
(runs the service routine with interrupts turned off) vs. this card | |
which really needs to run the service routine with interrupts turned on. | |
This driver will now add the interrupt service routine as a fast | |
interrupt if it is bounced from the slow interrupt. THIS IS NOT A | |
RECOMMENDED WAY TO RUN THE DRIVER and has been done for a limited time | |
until people sort out their compatibility issues and the kernel | |
interrupt service code is fixed. YOU SHOULD SEPARATE OUT THE FAST | |
INTERRUPT CARDS FROM THE SLOW INTERRUPT CARDS to ensure that they do not | |
run on the same interrupt. PCMCIA/CardBus is another can of worms... | |
Finally, I think I have really fixed the module loading problem with | |
more than one DECchip based card. As a side effect, I don't mess with | |
the device structure any more which means that if more than 1 card in | |
2.0.x is installed (4 in 2.1.x), the user will have to edit | |
linux/drivers/net/Space.c to make room for them. Hence, module loading | |
is the preferred way to use this driver, since it doesn't have this | |
limitation. | |
Where SROM media detection is used and full duplex is specified in the | |
SROM, the feature is ignored unless lp->params.fdx is set at compile | |
time OR during a module load (insmod de4x5 args='eth??:fdx' [see | |
below]). This is because there is no way to automatically detect full | |
duplex links except through autonegotiation. When I include the | |
autonegotiation feature in the SROM autoconf code, this detection will | |
occur automatically for that case. | |
Command line arguments are now allowed, similar to passing arguments | |
through LILO. This will allow a per adapter board set up of full duplex | |
and media. The only lexical constraints are: the board name (dev->name) | |
appears in the list before its parameters. The list of parameters ends | |
either at the end of the parameter list or with another board name. The | |
following parameters are allowed: | |
fdx for full duplex | |
autosense to set the media/speed; with the following | |
sub-parameters: | |
TP, TP_NW, BNC, AUI, BNC_AUI, 100Mb, 10Mb, AUTO | |
Case sensitivity is important for the sub-parameters. They *must* be | |
upper case. Examples: | |
insmod de4x5 args='eth1:fdx autosense=BNC eth0:autosense=100Mb'. | |
For a compiled in driver, in linux/drivers/net/CONFIG, place e.g. | |
DE4X5_OPTS = -DDE4X5_PARM='"eth0:fdx autosense=AUI eth2:autosense=TP"' | |
Yes, I know full duplex isn't permissible on BNC or AUI; they're just | |
examples. By default, full duplex is turned off and AUTO is the default | |
autosense setting. In reality, I expect only the full duplex option to | |
be used. Note the use of single quotes in the two examples above and the | |
lack of commas to separate items. |