| README file for the Linux DTC3180/3280 scsi driver. |
| by Ray Van Tassle (rayvt@comm.mot.com) March 1996 |
| Based on the generic & core NCR5380 code by Drew Eckhard |
| |
| SCSI device driver for the DTC 3180/3280. |
| Data Technology Corp---a division of Qume. |
| |
| The 3280 has a standard floppy interface. |
| |
| The 3180 does not. Otherwise, they are identical. |
| |
| The DTC3x80 does not support DMA but it does have Pseudo-DMA which is |
| supported by the driver. |
| |
| Its DTC406 scsi chip is supposedly compatible with the NCR 53C400. |
| It is memory mapped, uses an IRQ, but no dma or io-port. There is |
| internal DMA, between SCSI bus and an on-chip 128-byte buffer. Double |
| buffering is done automagically by the chip. Data is transferred |
| between the on-chip buffer and CPU/RAM via memory moves. |
| |
| The driver detects the possible memory addresses (jumper selectable): |
| CC00, DC00, C800, and D800 |
| The possible IRQ's (jumper selectable) are: |
| IRQ 10, 11, 12, 15 |
| Parity is supported by the chip, but not by this driver. |
| Information can be obtained from /proc/scsi/dtc3c80/N. |
| |
| Note on interrupts: |
| |
| The documentation says that it can be set to interrupt whenever the |
| on-chip buffer needs CPU attention. I couldn't get this to work. So |
| the driver polls for data-ready in the pseudo-DMA transfer routine. |
| The interrupt support routines in the NCR3280.c core modules handle |
| scsi disconnect/reconnect, and this (mostly) works. However..... I |
| have tested it with 4 totally different hard drives (both SCSI-1 and |
| SCSI-2), and one CDROM drive. Interrupts works great for all but one |
| specific hard drive. For this one, the driver will eventually hang in |
| the transfer state. I have tested with: "dd bs=4k count=2k |
| of=/dev/null if=/dev/sdb". It reads ok for a while, then hangs. |
| After beating my head against this for a couple of weeks, getting |
| nowhere, I give up. So.....This driver does NOT use interrupts, even |
| if you have the card jumpered to an IRQ. Probably nobody will ever |
| care. |