| i386 Micro Channel Architecture Support |
| ======================================= |
| |
| MCA support is enabled using the CONFIG_MCA define. A machine with a MCA |
| bus will have the kernel variable MCA_bus set, assuming the BIOS feature |
| bits are set properly (see arch/i386/boot/setup.S for information on |
| how this detection is done). |
| |
| Adapter Detection |
| ================= |
| |
| The ideal MCA adapter detection is done through the use of the |
| Programmable Option Select registers. Generic functions for doing |
| this have been added in include/linux/mca.h and arch/i386/kernel/mca.c. |
| Everything needed to detect adapters and read (and write) configuration |
| information is there. A number of MCA-specific drivers already use |
| this. The typical probe code looks like the following: |
| |
| #include <linux/mca.h> |
| |
| unsigned char pos2, pos3, pos4, pos5; |
| struct net_device* dev; |
| int slot; |
| |
| if( MCA_bus ) { |
| slot = mca_find_adapter( ADAPTER_ID, 0 ); |
| if( slot == MCA_NOTFOUND ) { |
| return -ENODEV; |
| } |
| /* optional - see below */ |
| mca_set_adapter_name( slot, "adapter name & description" ); |
| mca_set_adapter_procfn( slot, dev_getinfo, dev ); |
| |
| /* read the POS registers. Most devices only use 2 and 3 */ |
| pos2 = mca_read_stored_pos( slot, 2 ); |
| pos3 = mca_read_stored_pos( slot, 3 ); |
| pos4 = mca_read_stored_pos( slot, 4 ); |
| pos5 = mca_read_stored_pos( slot, 5 ); |
| } else { |
| return -ENODEV; |
| } |
| |
| /* extract configuration from pos[2345] and set everything up */ |
| |
| Loadable modules should modify this to test that the specified IRQ and |
| IO ports (plus whatever other stuff) match. See 3c523.c for example |
| code (actually, smc-mca.c has a slightly more complex example that can |
| handle a list of adapter ids). |
| |
| Keep in mind that devices should never directly access the POS registers |
| (via inb(), outb(), etc). While it's generally safe, there is a small |
| potential for blowing up hardware when it's done at the wrong time. |
| Furthermore, accessing a POS register disables a device temporarily. |
| This is usually okay during startup, but do _you_ want to rely on it? |
| During initial configuration, mca_init() reads all the POS registers |
| into memory. mca_read_stored_pos() accesses that data. mca_read_pos() |
| and mca_write_pos() are also available for (safer) direct POS access, |
| but their use is _highly_ discouraged. mca_write_pos() is particularly |
| dangerous, as it is possible for adapters to be put in inconsistent |
| states (i.e. sharing IO address, etc) and may result in crashes, toasted |
| hardware, and blindness. |
| |
| User level drivers (such as the AGX X server) can use /proc/mca/pos to |
| find adapters (see below). |
| |
| Some MCA adapters can also be detected via the usual ISA-style device |
| probing (many SCSI adapters, for example). This sort of thing is highly |
| discouraged. Perfectly good information is available telling you what's |
| there, so there's no excuse for messing with random IO ports. However, |
| we MCA people still appreciate any ISA-style driver that will work with |
| our hardware. You take what you can get... |
| |
| Level-Triggered Interrupts |
| ========================== |
| |
| Because MCA uses level-triggered interrupts, a few problems arise with |
| what might best be described as the ISA mindset and its effects on |
| drivers. These sorts of problems are expected to become less common as |
| more people use shared IRQs on PCI machines. |
| |
| In general, an interrupt must be acknowledged not only at the ICU (which |
| is done automagically by the kernel), but at the device level. In |
| particular, IRQ 0 must be reset after a timer interrupt (now done in |
| arch/i386/kernel/time.c) or the first timer interrupt hangs the system. |
| There were also problems with the 1.3.x floppy drivers, but that seems |
| to have been fixed. |
| |
| IRQs are also shareable, and most MCA-specific devices should be coded |
| with shared IRQs in mind. |
| |
| /proc/mca |
| ========= |
| |
| /proc/mca is a directory containing various files for adapters and |
| other stuff. |
| |
| /proc/mca/pos Straight listing of POS registers |
| /proc/mca/slot[1-8] Information on adapter in specific slot |
| /proc/mca/video Same for integrated video |
| /proc/mca/scsi Same for integrated SCSI |
| /proc/mca/machine Machine information |
| |
| See Appendix A for a sample. |
| |
| Device drivers can easily add their own information function for |
| specific slots (including integrated ones) via the |
| mca_set_adapter_procfn() call. Drivers that support this are ESDI, IBM |
| SCSI, and 3c523. If a device is also a module, make sure that the proc |
| function is removed in the module cleanup. This will require storing |
| the slot information in a private structure somewhere. See the 3c523 |
| driver for details. |
| |
| Your typical proc function will look something like this: |
| |
| static int |
| dev_getinfo( char* buf, int slot, void* d ) { |
| struct net_device* dev = (struct net_device*) d; |
| int len = 0; |
| |
| len += sprintf( buf+len, "Device: %s\n", dev->name ); |
| len += sprintf( buf+len, "IRQ: %d\n", dev->irq ); |
| len += sprintf( buf+len, "IO Port: %#lx-%#lx\n", ... ); |
| ... |
| |
| return len; |
| } |
| |
| Some of the standard MCA information will already be printed, so don't |
| bother repeating it. Don't try putting in more than 3K of information. |
| |
| Enable this function with: |
| mca_set_adapter_procfn( slot, dev_getinfo, dev ); |
| |
| Disable it with: |
| mca_set_adapter_procfn( slot, NULL, NULL ); |
| |
| It is also recommended that, even if you don't write a proc function, to |
| set the name of the adapter (i.e. "PS/2 ESDI Controller") via |
| mca_set_adapter_name( int slot, char* name ). |
| |
| MCA Device Drivers |
| ================== |
| |
| Currently, there are a number of MCA-specific device drivers. |
| |
| 1) PS/2 ESDI |
| drivers/block/ps2esdi.c |
| include/linux/ps2esdi.h |
| Uses major number 36, and should use /dev files /dev/eda, /dev/edb. |
| Supports two drives, but only one controller. May use the |
| command-line args "ed=cyl,head,sec" and "tp720". |
| |
| 2) PS/2 SCSI |
| drivers/scsi/ibmmca.c |
| drivers/scsi/ibmmca.h |
| The driver for the IBM SCSI subsystem. Includes both integrated |
| controllers and adapter cards. May require command-line arg |
| "ibmmcascsi=io_port" to force detection of an adapter. If you have a |
| machine with a front-panel display (i.e. model 95), you can use |
| "ibmmcascsi=display" to enable a drive activity indicator. |
| |
| 3) 3c523 |
| drivers/net/3c523.c |
| drivers/net/3c523.h |
| 3Com 3c523 Etherlink/MC ethernet driver. |
| |
| 4) SMC Ultra/MCA and IBM Adapter/A |
| drivers/net/smc-mca.c |
| drivers/net/smc-mca.h |
| Driver for the MCA version of the SMC Ultra and various other |
| OEM'ed and work-alike cards (Elite, Adapter/A, etc). |
| |
| 5) NE/2 |
| driver/net/ne2.c |
| driver/net/ne2.h |
| The NE/2 is the MCA version of the NE2000. This may not work |
| with clones that have a different adapter id than the original |
| NE/2. |
| |
| 6) Future Domain MCS-600/700, OEM'd IBM Fast SCSI Aapter/A and |
| Reply Sound Blaster/SCSI (SCSI part) |
| Better support for these cards than the driver for ISA. |
| Supports multiple cards with IRQ sharing. |
| |
| Also added boot time option of scsi-probe, which can do reordering of |
| SCSI host adapters. This will direct the kernel on the order which |
| SCSI adapter should be detected. Example: |
| scsi-probe=ibmmca,fd_mcs,adaptec1542,buslogic |
| |
| The serial drivers were modified to support the extended IO port range |
| of the typical MCA system (also #ifdef CONFIG_MCA). |
| |
| The following devices work with existing drivers: |
| 1) Token-ring |
| 2) Future Domain SCSI (MCS-600, MCS-700, not MCS-350, OEM'ed IBM SCSI) |
| 3) Adaptec 1640 SCSI (using the aha1542 driver) |
| 4) Bustek/Buslogic SCSI (various) |
| 5) Probably all Arcnet cards. |
| 6) Some, possibly all, MCA IDE controllers. |
| 7) 3Com 3c529 (MCA version of 3c509) (patched) |
| |
| 8) Intel EtherExpressMC (patched version) |
| You need to have CONFIG_MCA defined to have EtherExpressMC support. |
| 9) Reply Sound Blaster/SCSI (SB part) (patched version) |
| |
| Bugs & Other Weirdness |
| ====================== |
| |
| NMIs tend to occur with MCA machines because of various hardware |
| weirdness, bus timeouts, and many other non-critical things. Some basic |
| code to handle them (inspired by the NetBSD MCA code) has been added to |
| detect the guilty device, but it's pretty incomplete. If NMIs are a |
| persistent problem (on some model 70 or 80s, they occur every couple |
| shell commands), the CONFIG_IGNORE_NMI flag will take care of that. |
| |
| Various Pentium machines have had serious problems with the FPU test in |
| bugs.h. Basically, the machine hangs after the HLT test. This occurs, |
| as far as we know, on the Pentium-equipped 85s, 95s, and some PC Servers. |
| The PCI/MCA PC 750s are fine as far as I can tell. The ``mca-pentium'' |
| boot-prompt flag will disable the FPU bug check if this is a problem |
| with your machine. |
| |
| The model 80 has a raft of problems that are just too weird and unique |
| to get into here. Some people have no trouble while others have nothing |
| but problems. I'd suspect some problems are related to the age of the |
| average 80 and accompanying hardware deterioration, although others |
| are definitely design problems with the hardware. Among the problems |
| include SCSI controller problems, ESDI controller problems, and serious |
| screw-ups in the floppy controller. Oh, and the parallel port is also |
| pretty flaky. There were about 5 or 6 different model 80 motherboards |
| produced to fix various obscure problems. As far as I know, it's pretty |
| much impossible to tell which bugs a particular model 80 has (other than |
| triggering them, that is). |
| |
| Drivers are required for some MCA memory adapters. If you're suddenly |
| short a few megs of RAM, this might be the reason. The (I think) Enhanced |
| Memory Adapter commonly found on the model 70 is one. There's a very |
| alpha driver floating around, but it's pretty ugly (disassembled from |
| the DOS driver, actually). See the MCA Linux web page (URL below) |
| for more current memory info. |
| |
| The Thinkpad 700 and 720 will work, but various components are either |
| non-functional, flaky, or we don't know anything about them. The |
| graphics controller is supposed to be some WD, but we can't get things |
| working properly. The PCMCIA slots don't seem to work. Ditto for APM. |
| The serial ports work, but detection seems to be flaky. |
| |
| Credits |
| ======= |
| A whole pile of people have contributed to the MCA code. I'd include |
| their names here, but I don't have a list handy. Check the MCA Linux |
| home page (URL below) for a perpetually out-of-date list. |
| |
| ===================================================================== |
| MCA Linux Home Page: http://www.dgmicro.com/mca/ |
| |
| Christophe Beauregard |
| chrisb@truespectra.com |
| cpbeaure@calum.csclub.uwaterloo.ca |
| |
| ===================================================================== |
| Appendix A: Sample /proc/mca |
| |
| This is from my model 8595. Slot 1 contains the standard IBM SCSI |
| adapter, slot 3 is an Adaptec AHA-1640, slot 5 is a XGA-1 video adapter, |
| and slot 7 is the 3c523 Etherlink/MC. |
| |
| /proc/mca/machine: |
| Model Id: 0xf8 |
| Submodel Id: 0x14 |
| BIOS Revision: 0x5 |
| |
| /proc/mca/pos: |
| Slot 1: ff 8e f1 fc a0 ff ff ff IBM SCSI Adapter w/Cache |
| Slot 2: ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff |
| Slot 3: 1f 0f 81 3b bf b6 ff ff |
| Slot 4: ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff |
| Slot 5: db 8f 1d 5e fd c0 00 00 |
| Slot 6: ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff |
| Slot 7: 42 60 ff 08 ff ff ff ff 3Com 3c523 Etherlink/MC |
| Slot 8: ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff |
| Video : ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff |
| SCSI : ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff |
| |
| /proc/mca/slot1: |
| Slot: 1 |
| Adapter Name: IBM SCSI Adapter w/Cache |
| Id: 8eff |
| Enabled: Yes |
| POS: ff 8e f1 fc a0 ff ff ff |
| Subsystem PUN: 7 |
| Detected at boot: Yes |
| |
| /proc/mca/slot3: |
| Slot: 3 |
| Adapter Name: Unknown |
| Id: 0f1f |
| Enabled: Yes |
| POS: 1f 0f 81 3b bf b6 ff ff |
| |
| /proc/mca/slot5: |
| Slot: 5 |
| Adapter Name: Unknown |
| Id: 8fdb |
| Enabled: Yes |
| POS: db 8f 1d 5e fd c0 00 00 |
| |
| /proc/mca/slot7: |
| Slot: 7 |
| Adapter Name: 3Com 3c523 Etherlink/MC |
| Id: 6042 |
| Enabled: Yes |
| POS: 42 60 ff 08 ff ff ff ff |
| Revision: 0xe |
| IRQ: 9 |
| IO Address: 0x3300-0x3308 |
| Memory: 0xd8000-0xdbfff |
| Transceiver: External |
| Device: eth0 |
| Hardware Address: 02 60 8c 45 c4 2a |