| This is a subset of the documentation. To use this driver you MUST have the |
| full package from: |
| |
| Internet: |
| ========= |
| |
| 1. ftp://ftp.ccac.rwth-aachen.de/pub/jr/z8530drv-utils_3.0-3.tar.gz |
| |
| 2. ftp://ftp.pspt.fi/pub/ham/linux/ax25/z8530drv-utils_3.0-3.tar.gz |
| |
| Please note that the information in this document may be hopelessly outdated. |
| A new version of the documentation, along with links to other important |
| Linux Kernel AX.25 documentation and programs, is available on |
| http://yaina.de/jreuter |
| |
| ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| |
| |
| SCC.C - Linux driver for Z8530 based HDLC cards for AX.25 |
| |
| ******************************************************************** |
| |
| (c) 1993,2000 by Joerg Reuter DL1BKE <jreuter@yaina.de> |
| |
| portions (c) 1993 Guido ten Dolle PE1NNZ |
| |
| for the complete copyright notice see >> Copying.Z8530DRV << |
| |
| ******************************************************************** |
| |
| |
| 1. Initialization of the driver |
| =============================== |
| |
| To use the driver, 3 steps must be performed: |
| |
| 1. if compiled as module: loading the module |
| 2. Setup of hardware, MODEM and KISS parameters with sccinit |
| 3. Attach each channel to the Linux kernel AX.25 with "ifconfig" |
| |
| Unlike the versions below 2.4 this driver is a real network device |
| driver. If you want to run xNOS instead of our fine kernel AX.25 |
| use a 2.x version (available from above sites) or read the |
| AX.25-HOWTO on how to emulate a KISS TNC on network device drivers. |
| |
| |
| 1.1 Loading the module |
| ====================== |
| |
| (If you're going to compile the driver as a part of the kernel image, |
| skip this chapter and continue with 1.2) |
| |
| Before you can use a module, you'll have to load it with |
| |
| insmod scc.o |
| |
| please read 'man insmod' that comes with module-init-tools. |
| |
| You should include the insmod in one of the /etc/rc.d/rc.* files, |
| and don't forget to insert a call of sccinit after that. It |
| will read your /etc/z8530drv.conf. |
| |
| 1.2. /etc/z8530drv.conf |
| ======================= |
| |
| To setup all parameters you must run /sbin/sccinit from one |
| of your rc.*-files. This has to be done BEFORE you can |
| "ifconfig" an interface. Sccinit reads the file /etc/z8530drv.conf |
| and sets the hardware, MODEM and KISS parameters. A sample file is |
| delivered with this package. Change it to your needs. |
| |
| The file itself consists of two main sections. |
| |
| 1.2.1 configuration of hardware parameters |
| ========================================== |
| |
| The hardware setup section defines the following parameters for each |
| Z8530: |
| |
| chip 1 |
| data_a 0x300 # data port A |
| ctrl_a 0x304 # control port A |
| data_b 0x301 # data port B |
| ctrl_b 0x305 # control port B |
| irq 5 # IRQ No. 5 |
| pclock 4915200 # clock |
| board BAYCOM # hardware type |
| escc no # enhanced SCC chip? (8580/85180/85280) |
| vector 0 # latch for interrupt vector |
| special no # address of special function register |
| option 0 # option to set via sfr |
| |
| |
| chip - this is just a delimiter to make sccinit a bit simpler to |
| program. A parameter has no effect. |
| |
| data_a - the address of the data port A of this Z8530 (needed) |
| ctrl_a - the address of the control port A (needed) |
| data_b - the address of the data port B (needed) |
| ctrl_b - the address of the control port B (needed) |
| |
| irq - the used IRQ for this chip. Different chips can use different |
| IRQs or the same. If they share an interrupt, it needs to be |
| specified within one chip-definition only. |
| |
| pclock - the clock at the PCLK pin of the Z8530 (option, 4915200 is |
| default), measured in Hertz |
| |
| board - the "type" of the board: |
| |
| SCC type value |
| --------------------------------- |
| PA0HZP SCC card PA0HZP |
| EAGLE card EAGLE |
| PC100 card PC100 |
| PRIMUS-PC (DG9BL) card PRIMUS |
| BayCom (U)SCC card BAYCOM |
| |
| escc - if you want support for ESCC chips (8580, 85180, 85280), set |
| this to "yes" (option, defaults to "no") |
| |
| vector - address of the vector latch (aka "intack port") for PA0HZP |
| cards. There can be only one vector latch for all chips! |
| (option, defaults to 0) |
| |
| special - address of the special function register on several cards. |
| (option, defaults to 0) |
| |
| option - The value you write into that register (option, default is 0) |
| |
| You can specify up to four chips (8 channels). If this is not enough, |
| just change |
| |
| #define MAXSCC 4 |
| |
| to a higher value. |
| |
| Example for the BAYCOM USCC: |
| ---------------------------- |
| |
| chip 1 |
| data_a 0x300 # data port A |
| ctrl_a 0x304 # control port A |
| data_b 0x301 # data port B |
| ctrl_b 0x305 # control port B |
| irq 5 # IRQ No. 5 (#) |
| board BAYCOM # hardware type (*) |
| # |
| # SCC chip 2 |
| # |
| chip 2 |
| data_a 0x302 |
| ctrl_a 0x306 |
| data_b 0x303 |
| ctrl_b 0x307 |
| board BAYCOM |
| |
| An example for a PA0HZP card: |
| ----------------------------- |
| |
| chip 1 |
| data_a 0x153 |
| data_b 0x151 |
| ctrl_a 0x152 |
| ctrl_b 0x150 |
| irq 9 |
| pclock 4915200 |
| board PA0HZP |
| vector 0x168 |
| escc no |
| # |
| # |
| # |
| chip 2 |
| data_a 0x157 |
| data_b 0x155 |
| ctrl_a 0x156 |
| ctrl_b 0x154 |
| irq 9 |
| pclock 4915200 |
| board PA0HZP |
| vector 0x168 |
| escc no |
| |
| A DRSI would should probably work with this: |
| -------------------------------------------- |
| (actually: two DRSI cards...) |
| |
| chip 1 |
| data_a 0x303 |
| data_b 0x301 |
| ctrl_a 0x302 |
| ctrl_b 0x300 |
| irq 7 |
| pclock 4915200 |
| board DRSI |
| escc no |
| # |
| # |
| # |
| chip 2 |
| data_a 0x313 |
| data_b 0x311 |
| ctrl_a 0x312 |
| ctrl_b 0x310 |
| irq 7 |
| pclock 4915200 |
| board DRSI |
| escc no |
| |
| Note that you cannot use the on-board baudrate generator off DRSI |
| cards. Use "mode dpll" for clock source (see below). |
| |
| This is based on information provided by Mike Bilow (and verified |
| by Paul Helay) |
| |
| The utility "gencfg" |
| -------------------- |
| |
| If you only know the parameters for the PE1CHL driver for DOS, |
| run gencfg. It will generate the correct port addresses (I hope). |
| Its parameters are exactly the same as the ones you use with |
| the "attach scc" command in net, except that the string "init" must |
| not appear. Example: |
| |
| gencfg 2 0x150 4 2 0 1 0x168 9 4915200 |
| |
| will print a skeleton z8530drv.conf for the OptoSCC to stdout. |
| |
| gencfg 2 0x300 2 4 5 -4 0 7 4915200 0x10 |
| |
| does the same for the BAYCOM USCC card. In my opinion it is much easier |
| to edit scc_config.h... |
| |
| |
| 1.2.2 channel configuration |
| =========================== |
| |
| The channel definition is divided into three sub sections for each |
| channel: |
| |
| An example for scc0: |
| |
| # DEVICE |
| |
| device scc0 # the device for the following params |
| |
| # MODEM / BUFFERS |
| |
| speed 1200 # the default baudrate |
| clock dpll # clock source: |
| # dpll = normal half duplex operation |
| # external = MODEM provides own Rx/Tx clock |
| # divider = use full duplex divider if |
| # installed (1) |
| mode nrzi # HDLC encoding mode |
| # nrzi = 1k2 MODEM, G3RUH 9k6 MODEM |
| # nrz = DF9IC 9k6 MODEM |
| # |
| bufsize 384 # size of buffers. Note that this must include |
| # the AX.25 header, not only the data field! |
| # (optional, defaults to 384) |
| |
| # KISS (Layer 1) |
| |
| txdelay 36 # (see chapter 1.4) |
| persist 64 |
| slot 8 |
| tail 8 |
| fulldup 0 |
| wait 12 |
| min 3 |
| maxkey 7 |
| idle 3 |
| maxdef 120 |
| group 0 |
| txoff off |
| softdcd on |
| slip off |
| |
| The order WITHIN these sections is unimportant. The order OF these |
| sections IS important. The MODEM parameters are set with the first |
| recognized KISS parameter... |
| |
| Please note that you can initialize the board only once after boot |
| (or insmod). You can change all parameters but "mode" and "clock" |
| later with the Sccparam program or through KISS. Just to avoid |
| security holes... |
| |
| (1) this divider is usually mounted on the SCC-PBC (PA0HZP) or not |
| present at all (BayCom). It feeds back the output of the DPLL |
| (digital pll) as transmit clock. Using this mode without a divider |
| installed will normally result in keying the transceiver until |
| maxkey expires --- of course without sending anything (useful). |
| |
| 2. Attachment of a channel by your AX.25 software |
| ================================================= |
| |
| 2.1 Kernel AX.25 |
| ================ |
| |
| To set up an AX.25 device you can simply type: |
| |
| ifconfig scc0 44.128.1.1 hw ax25 dl0tha-7 |
| |
| This will create a network interface with the IP number 44.128.20.107 |
| and the callsign "dl0tha". If you do not have any IP number (yet) you |
| can use any of the 44.128.0.0 network. Note that you do not need |
| axattach. The purpose of axattach (like slattach) is to create a KISS |
| network device linked to a TTY. Please read the documentation of the |
| ax25-utils and the AX.25-HOWTO to learn how to set the parameters of |
| the kernel AX.25. |
| |
| 2.2 NOS, NET and TFKISS |
| ======================= |
| |
| Since the TTY driver (aka KISS TNC emulation) is gone you need |
| to emulate the old behaviour. The cost of using these programs is |
| that you probably need to compile the kernel AX.25, regardless of whether |
| you actually use it or not. First setup your /etc/ax25/axports, |
| for example: |
| |
| 9k6 dl0tha-9 9600 255 4 9600 baud port (scc3) |
| axlink dl0tha-15 38400 255 4 Link to NOS |
| |
| Now "ifconfig" the scc device: |
| |
| ifconfig scc3 44.128.1.1 hw ax25 dl0tha-9 |
| |
| You can now axattach a pseudo-TTY: |
| |
| axattach /dev/ptys0 axlink |
| |
| and start your NOS and attach /dev/ptys0 there. The problem is that |
| NOS is reachable only via digipeating through the kernel AX.25 |
| (disastrous on a DAMA controlled channel). To solve this problem, |
| configure "rxecho" to echo the incoming frames from "9k6" to "axlink" |
| and outgoing frames from "axlink" to "9k6" and start: |
| |
| rxecho |
| |
| Or simply use "kissbridge" coming with z8530drv-utils: |
| |
| ifconfig scc3 hw ax25 dl0tha-9 |
| kissbridge scc3 /dev/ptys0 |
| |
| |
| 3. Adjustment and Display of parameters |
| ======================================= |
| |
| 3.1 Displaying SCC Parameters: |
| ============================== |
| |
| Once a SCC channel has been attached, the parameter settings and |
| some statistic information can be shown using the param program: |
| |
| dl1bke-u:~$ sccstat scc0 |
| |
| Parameters: |
| |
| speed : 1200 baud |
| txdelay : 36 |
| persist : 255 |
| slottime : 0 |
| txtail : 8 |
| fulldup : 1 |
| waittime : 12 |
| mintime : 3 sec |
| maxkeyup : 7 sec |
| idletime : 3 sec |
| maxdefer : 120 sec |
| group : 0x00 |
| txoff : off |
| softdcd : on |
| SLIP : off |
| |
| Status: |
| |
| HDLC Z8530 Interrupts Buffers |
| ----------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| Sent : 273 RxOver : 0 RxInts : 125074 Size : 384 |
| Received : 1095 TxUnder: 0 TxInts : 4684 NoSpace : 0 |
| RxErrors : 1591 ExInts : 11776 |
| TxErrors : 0 SpInts : 1503 |
| Tx State : idle |
| |
| |
| The status info shown is: |
| |
| Sent - number of frames transmitted |
| Received - number of frames received |
| RxErrors - number of receive errors (CRC, ABORT) |
| TxErrors - number of discarded Tx frames (due to various reasons) |
| Tx State - status of the Tx interrupt handler: idle/busy/active/tail (2) |
| RxOver - number of receiver overruns |
| TxUnder - number of transmitter underruns |
| RxInts - number of receiver interrupts |
| TxInts - number of transmitter interrupts |
| EpInts - number of receiver special condition interrupts |
| SpInts - number of external/status interrupts |
| Size - maximum size of an AX.25 frame (*with* AX.25 headers!) |
| NoSpace - number of times a buffer could not get allocated |
| |
| An overrun is abnormal. If lots of these occur, the product of |
| baudrate and number of interfaces is too high for the processing |
| power of your computer. NoSpace errors are unlikely to be caused by the |
| driver or the kernel AX.25. |
| |
| |
| 3.2 Setting Parameters |
| ====================== |
| |
| |
| The setting of parameters of the emulated KISS TNC is done in the |
| same way in the SCC driver. You can change parameters by using |
| the kissparms program from the ax25-utils package or use the program |
| "sccparam": |
| |
| sccparam <device> <paramname> <decimal-|hexadecimal value> |
| |
| You can change the following parameters: |
| |
| param : value |
| ------------------------ |
| speed : 1200 |
| txdelay : 36 |
| persist : 255 |
| slottime : 0 |
| txtail : 8 |
| fulldup : 1 |
| waittime : 12 |
| mintime : 3 |
| maxkeyup : 7 |
| idletime : 3 |
| maxdefer : 120 |
| group : 0x00 |
| txoff : off |
| softdcd : on |
| SLIP : off |
| |
| |
| The parameters have the following meaning: |
| |
| speed: |
| The baudrate on this channel in bits/sec |
| |
| Example: sccparam /dev/scc3 speed 9600 |
| |
| txdelay: |
| The delay (in units of 10 ms) after keying of the |
| transmitter, until the first byte is sent. This is usually |
| called "TXDELAY" in a TNC. When 0 is specified, the driver |
| will just wait until the CTS signal is asserted. This |
| assumes the presence of a timer or other circuitry in the |
| MODEM and/or transmitter, that asserts CTS when the |
| transmitter is ready for data. |
| A normal value of this parameter is 30-36. |
| |
| Example: sccparam /dev/scc0 txd 20 |
| |
| persist: |
| This is the probability that the transmitter will be keyed |
| when the channel is found to be free. It is a value from 0 |
| to 255, and the probability is (value+1)/256. The value |
| should be somewhere near 50-60, and should be lowered when |
| the channel is used more heavily. |
| |
| Example: sccparam /dev/scc2 persist 20 |
| |
| slottime: |
| This is the time between samples of the channel. It is |
| expressed in units of 10 ms. About 200-300 ms (value 20-30) |
| seems to be a good value. |
| |
| Example: sccparam /dev/scc0 slot 20 |
| |
| tail: |
| The time the transmitter will remain keyed after the last |
| byte of a packet has been transferred to the SCC. This is |
| necessary because the CRC and a flag still have to leave the |
| SCC before the transmitter is keyed down. The value depends |
| on the baudrate selected. A few character times should be |
| sufficient, e.g. 40ms at 1200 baud. (value 4) |
| The value of this parameter is in 10 ms units. |
| |
| Example: sccparam /dev/scc2 4 |
| |
| full: |
| The full-duplex mode switch. This can be one of the following |
| values: |
| |
| 0: The interface will operate in CSMA mode (the normal |
| half-duplex packet radio operation) |
| 1: Fullduplex mode, i.e. the transmitter will be keyed at |
| any time, without checking the received carrier. It |
| will be unkeyed when there are no packets to be sent. |
| 2: Like 1, but the transmitter will remain keyed, also |
| when there are no packets to be sent. Flags will be |
| sent in that case, until a timeout (parameter 10) |
| occurs. |
| |
| Example: sccparam /dev/scc0 fulldup off |
| |
| wait: |
| The initial waittime before any transmit attempt, after the |
| frame has been queue for transmit. This is the length of |
| the first slot in CSMA mode. In full duplex modes it is |
| set to 0 for maximum performance. |
| The value of this parameter is in 10 ms units. |
| |
| Example: sccparam /dev/scc1 wait 4 |
| |
| maxkey: |
| The maximal time the transmitter will be keyed to send |
| packets, in seconds. This can be useful on busy CSMA |
| channels, to avoid "getting a bad reputation" when you are |
| generating a lot of traffic. After the specified time has |
| elapsed, no new frame will be started. Instead, the trans- |
| mitter will be switched off for a specified time (parameter |
| min), and then the selected algorithm for keyup will be |
| started again. |
| The value 0 as well as "off" will disable this feature, |
| and allow infinite transmission time. |
| |
| Example: sccparam /dev/scc0 maxk 20 |
| |
| min: |
| This is the time the transmitter will be switched off when |
| the maximum transmission time is exceeded. |
| |
| Example: sccparam /dev/scc3 min 10 |
| |
| idle |
| This parameter specifies the maximum idle time in full duplex |
| 2 mode, in seconds. When no frames have been sent for this |
| time, the transmitter will be keyed down. A value of 0 is |
| has same result as the fullduplex mode 1. This parameter |
| can be disabled. |
| |
| Example: sccparam /dev/scc2 idle off # transmit forever |
| |
| maxdefer |
| This is the maximum time (in seconds) to wait for a free channel |
| to send. When this timer expires the transmitter will be keyed |
| IMMEDIATELY. If you love to get trouble with other users you |
| should set this to a very low value ;-) |
| |
| Example: sccparam /dev/scc0 maxdefer 240 # 2 minutes |
| |
| |
| txoff: |
| When this parameter has the value 0, the transmission of packets |
| is enable. Otherwise it is disabled. |
| |
| Example: sccparam /dev/scc2 txoff on |
| |
| group: |
| It is possible to build special radio equipment to use more than |
| one frequency on the same band, e.g. using several receivers and |
| only one transmitter that can be switched between frequencies. |
| Also, you can connect several radios that are active on the same |
| band. In these cases, it is not possible, or not a good idea, to |
| transmit on more than one frequency. The SCC driver provides a |
| method to lock transmitters on different interfaces, using the |
| "param <interface> group <x>" command. This will only work when |
| you are using CSMA mode (parameter full = 0). |
| The number <x> must be 0 if you want no group restrictions, and |
| can be computed as follows to create restricted groups: |
| <x> is the sum of some OCTAL numbers: |
| |
| 200 This transmitter will only be keyed when all other |
| transmitters in the group are off. |
| 100 This transmitter will only be keyed when the carrier |
| detect of all other interfaces in the group is off. |
| 0xx A byte that can be used to define different groups. |
| Interfaces are in the same group, when the logical AND |
| between their xx values is nonzero. |
| |
| Examples: |
| When 2 interfaces use group 201, their transmitters will never be |
| keyed at the same time. |
| When 2 interfaces use group 101, the transmitters will only key |
| when both channels are clear at the same time. When group 301, |
| the transmitters will not be keyed at the same time. |
| |
| Don't forget to convert the octal numbers into decimal before |
| you set the parameter. |
| |
| Example: (to be written) |
| |
| softdcd: |
| use a software dcd instead of the real one... Useful for a very |
| slow squelch. |
| |
| Example: sccparam /dev/scc0 soft on |
| |
| |
| 4. Problems |
| =========== |
| |
| If you have tx-problems with your BayCom USCC card please check |
| the manufacturer of the 8530. SGS chips have a slightly |
| different timing. Try Zilog... A solution is to write to register 8 |
| instead to the data port, but this won't work with the ESCC chips. |
| *SIGH!* |
| |
| A very common problem is that the PTT locks until the maxkeyup timer |
| expires, although interrupts and clock source are correct. In most |
| cases compiling the driver with CONFIG_SCC_DELAY (set with |
| make config) solves the problems. For more hints read the (pseudo) FAQ |
| and the documentation coming with z8530drv-utils. |
| |
| I got reports that the driver has problems on some 386-based systems. |
| (i.e. Amstrad) Those systems have a bogus AT bus timing which will |
| lead to delayed answers on interrupts. You can recognize these |
| problems by looking at the output of Sccstat for the suspected |
| port. If it shows under- and overruns you own such a system. |
| |
| Delayed processing of received data: This depends on |
| |
| - the kernel version |
| |
| - kernel profiling compiled or not |
| |
| - a high interrupt load |
| |
| - a high load of the machine --- running X, Xmorph, XV and Povray, |
| while compiling the kernel... hmm ... even with 32 MB RAM ... ;-) |
| Or running a named for the whole .ampr.org domain on an 8 MB |
| box... |
| |
| - using information from rxecho or kissbridge. |
| |
| Kernel panics: please read /linux/README and find out if it |
| really occurred within the scc driver. |
| |
| If you cannot solve a problem, send me |
| |
| - a description of the problem, |
| - information on your hardware (computer system, scc board, modem) |
| - your kernel version |
| - the output of cat /proc/net/z8530 |
| |
| 4. Thor RLC100 |
| ============== |
| |
| Mysteriously this board seems not to work with the driver. Anyone |
| got it up-and-running? |
| |
| |
| Many thanks to Linus Torvalds and Alan Cox for including the driver |
| in the Linux standard distribution and their support. |
| |
| Joerg Reuter ampr-net: dl1bke@db0pra.ampr.org |
| AX-25 : DL1BKE @ DB0ABH.#BAY.DEU.EU |
| Internet: jreuter@yaina.de |
| WWW : http://yaina.de/jreuter |