Linux kernel mirror (for testing) git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git
kernel os linux
1
fork

Configure Feed

Select the types of activity you want to include in your feed.

at 2012a116d9e6803fb072d0cfe1aae0cc4e6d6416 588 lines 21 kB view raw
1NOTE: This is an unmaintained driver. It is not guaranteed to work due to 2changes made in the tty layer in 2.6. If you wish to take over maintenance of 3this driver, contact Michael Warfield <mhw@wittsend.com>. 4 5Changelog: 6---------- 711-01-2001: Original Document 8 910-29-2004: Minor misspelling & format fix, update status of driver. 10 James Nelson <james4765@gmail.com> 11 12Computone Intelliport II/Plus Multiport Serial Driver 13----------------------------------------------------- 14 15Release Notes For Linux Kernel 2.2 and higher. 16These notes are for the drivers which have already been integrated into the 17kernel and have been tested on Linux kernels 2.0, 2.2, 2.3, and 2.4. 18 19Version: 1.2.14 20Date: 11/01/2001 21Historical Author: Andrew Manison <amanison@america.net> 22Primary Author: Doug McNash 23Support: support@computone.com 24Fixes and Updates: Mike Warfield <mhw@wittsend.com> 25 26This file assumes that you are using the Computone drivers which are 27integrated into the kernel sources. For updating the drivers or installing 28drivers into kernels which do not already have Computone drivers, please 29refer to the instructions in the README.computone file in the driver patch. 30 31 321. INTRODUCTION 33 34This driver supports the entire family of Intelliport II/Plus controllers 35with the exception of the MicroChannel controllers. It does not support 36products previous to the Intelliport II. 37 38This driver was developed on the v2.0.x Linux tree and has been tested up 39to v2.4.14; it will probably not work with earlier v1.X kernels,. 40 41 422. QUICK INSTALLATION 43 44Hardware - If you have an ISA card, find a free interrupt and io port. 45 List those in use with `cat /proc/interrupts` and 46 `cat /proc/ioports`. Set the card dip switches to a free 47 address. You may need to configure your BIOS to reserve an 48 irq for an ISA card. PCI and EISA parameters are set 49 automagically. Insert card into computer with the power off 50 before or after drivers installation. 51 52 Note the hardware address from the Computone ISA cards installed into 53 the system. These are required for editing ip2.c or editing 54 /etc/modprobe.conf, or for specification on the modprobe 55 command line. 56 57 Note that the /etc/modules.conf should be used for older (pre-2.6) 58 kernels. 59 60Software - 61 62Module installation: 63 64a) Determine free irq/address to use if any (configure BIOS if need be) 65b) Run "make config" or "make menuconfig" or "make xconfig" 66 Select (m) module for CONFIG_COMPUTONE under character 67 devices. CONFIG_PCI and CONFIG_MODULES also may need to be set. 68c) Set address on ISA cards then: 69 edit /usr/src/linux/drivers/char/ip2.c if needed 70 or 71 edit /etc/modprobe.conf if needed (module). 72 or both to match this setting. 73d) Run "make modules" 74e) Run "make modules_install" 75f) Run "/sbin/depmod -a" 76g) install driver using `modprobe ip2 <options>` (options listed below) 77h) run ip2mkdev (either the script below or the binary version) 78 79 80Kernel installation: 81 82a) Determine free irq/address to use if any (configure BIOS if need be) 83b) Run "make config" or "make menuconfig" or "make xconfig" 84 Select (y) kernel for CONFIG_COMPUTONE under character 85 devices. CONFIG_PCI may need to be set if you have PCI bus. 86c) Set address on ISA cards then: 87 edit /usr/src/linux/drivers/char/ip2.c 88 (Optional - may be specified on kernel command line now) 89d) Run "make zImage" or whatever target you prefer. 90e) mv /usr/src/linux/arch/i386/boot/zImage to /boot. 91f) Add new config for this kernel into /etc/lilo.conf, run "lilo" 92 or copy to a floppy disk and boot from that floppy disk. 93g) Reboot using this kernel 94h) run ip2mkdev (either the script below or the binary version) 95 96Kernel command line options: 97 98When compiling the driver into the kernel, io and irq may be 99compiled into the driver by editing ip2.c and setting the values for 100io and irq in the appropriate array. An alternative is to specify 101a command line parameter to the kernel at boot up. 102 103 ip2=io0,irq0,io1,irq1,io2,irq2,io3,irq3 104 105Note that this order is very different from the specifications for the 106modload parameters which have separate IRQ and IO specifiers. 107 108The io port also selects PCI (1) and EISA (2) boards. 109 110 io=0 No board 111 io=1 PCI board 112 io=2 EISA board 113 else ISA board io address 114 115You only need to specify the boards which are present. 116 117 Examples: 118 119 2 PCI boards: 120 121 ip2=1,0,1,0 122 123 1 ISA board at 0x310 irq 5: 124 125 ip2=0x310,5 126 127This can be added to and "append" option in lilo.conf similar to this: 128 129 append="ip2=1,0,1,0" 130 131 1323. INSTALLATION 133 134Previously, the driver sources were packaged with a set of patch files 135to update the character drivers' makefile and configuration file, and other 136kernel source files. A build script (ip2build) was included which applies 137the patches if needed, and build any utilities needed. 138What you receive may be a single patch file in conventional kernel 139patch format build script. That form can also be applied by 140running patch -p1 < ThePatchFile. Otherwise run ip2build. 141 142The driver can be installed as a module (recommended) or built into the 143kernel. This is selected as for other drivers through the `make config` 144command from the root of the Linux source tree. If the driver is built 145into the kernel you will need to edit the file ip2.c to match the boards 146you are installing. See that file for instructions. If the driver is 147installed as a module the configuration can also be specified on the 148modprobe command line as follows: 149 150 modprobe ip2 irq=irq1,irq2,irq3,irq4 io=addr1,addr2,addr3,addr4 151 152where irqnum is one of the valid Intelliport II interrupts (3,4,5,7,10,11, 15312,15) and addr1-4 are the base addresses for up to four controllers. If 154the irqs are not specified the driver uses the default in ip2.c (which 155selects polled mode). If no base addresses are specified the defaults in 156ip2.c are used. If you are autoloading the driver module with kerneld or 157kmod the base addresses and interrupt number must also be set in ip2.c 158and recompile or just insert and options line in /etc/modprobe.conf or both. 159The options line is equivalent to the command line and takes precedence over 160what is in ip2.c. 161 162/etc/modprobe.conf sample: 163 options ip2 io=1,0x328 irq=1,10 164 alias char-major-71 ip2 165 alias char-major-72 ip2 166 alias char-major-73 ip2 167 168The equivalent in ip2.c: 169 170static int io[IP2_MAX_BOARDS]= { 1, 0x328, 0, 0 }; 171static int irq[IP2_MAX_BOARDS] = { 1, 10, -1, -1 }; 172 173The equivalent for the kernel command line (in lilo.conf): 174 175 append="ip2=1,1,0x328,10" 176 177 178Note: Both io and irq should be updated to reflect YOUR system. An "io" 179 address of 1 or 2 indicates a PCI or EISA card in the board table. 180 The PCI or EISA irq will be assigned automatically. 181 182Specifying an invalid or in-use irq will default the driver into 183running in polled mode for that card. If all irq entries are 0 then 184all cards will operate in polled mode. 185 186If you select the driver as part of the kernel run : 187 188 make zlilo (or whatever you do to create a bootable kernel) 189 190If you selected a module run : 191 192 make modules && make modules_install 193 194The utility ip2mkdev (see 5 and 7 below) creates all the device nodes 195required by the driver. For a device to be created it must be configured 196in the driver and the board must be installed. Only devices corresponding 197to real IntelliPort II ports are created. With multiple boards and expansion 198boxes this will leave gaps in the sequence of device names. ip2mkdev uses 199Linux tty naming conventions: ttyF0 - ttyF255 for normal devices, and 200cuf0 - cuf255 for callout devices. 201 202If you are using devfs, existing devices are automatically created within 203the devfs name space. Normal devices will be tts/F0 - tts/F255 and callout 204devices will be cua/F0 - cua/F255. With devfs installed, ip2mkdev will 205create symbolic links in /dev from the old conventional names to the newer 206devfs names as follows: 207 208 /dev/ip2ipl[n] -> /dev/ip2/ipl[n] n = 0 - 3 209 /dev/ip2stat[n] -> /dev/ip2/stat[n] n = 0 - 3 210 /dev/ttyF[n] -> /dev/tts/F[n] n = 0 - 255 211 /dev/cuf[n] -> /dev/cua/F[n] n = 0 - 255 212 213Only devices for existing ports and boards will be created. 214 215IMPORTANT NOTE: The naming convention used for devfs by this driver 216was changed from 1.2.12 to 1.2.13. The old naming convention was to 217use ttf/%d for the tty device and cuf/%d for the cua device. That 218has been changed to conform to an agreed-upon standard of placing 219all the tty devices under tts. The device names are now tts/F%d for 220the tty device and cua/F%d for the cua devices. If you were using 221the older devfs names, you must update for the newer convention. 222 223You do not need to run ip2mkdev if you are using devfs and only want to 224use the devfs native device names. 225 226 2274. USING THE DRIVERS 228 229As noted above, the driver implements the ports in accordance with Linux 230conventions, and the devices should be interchangeable with the standard 231serial devices. (This is a key point for problem reporting: please make 232sure that what you are trying do works on the ttySx/cuax ports first; then 233tell us what went wrong with the ip2 ports!) 234 235Higher speeds can be obtained using the setserial utility which remaps 23638,400 bps (extb) to 57,600 bps, 115,200 bps, or a custom speed. 237Intelliport II installations using the PowerPort expansion module can 238use the custom speed setting to select the highest speeds: 153,600 bps, 239230,400 bps, 307,200 bps, 460,800bps and 921,600 bps. The base for 240custom baud rate configuration is fixed at 921,600 for cards/expansion 241modules with ST654's and 115200 for those with Cirrus CD1400's. This 242corresponds to the maximum bit rates those chips are capable. 243For example if the baud base is 921600 and the baud divisor is 18 then 244the custom rate is 921600/18 = 51200 bps. See the setserial man page for 245complete details. Of course if stty accepts the higher rates now you can 246use that as well as the standard ioctls(). 247 248 2495. ip2mkdev and assorted utilities... 250 251Several utilities, including the source for a binary ip2mkdev utility are 252available under .../drivers/char/ip2. These can be build by changing to 253that directory and typing "make" after the kernel has be built. If you do 254not wish to compile the binary utilities, the shell script below can be 255cut out and run as "ip2mkdev" to create the necessary device files. To 256use the ip2mkdev script, you must have procfs enabled and the proc file 257system mounted on /proc. 258 259You do not need to run ip2mkdev if you are using devfs and only want to 260use the devfs native device names. 261 262 2636. DEVFS 264 265DEVFS is the DEVice File System available as an add on package for the 2662.2.x kernels and available as a configuration option in 2.3.46 and higher. 267Devfs allows for the automatic creation and management of device names 268under control of the device drivers themselves. The Devfs namespace is 269hierarchical and reduces the clutter present in the normal flat /dev 270namespace. Devfs names and conventional device names may be intermixed. 271A userspace daemon, devfsd, exists to allow for automatic creation and 272management of symbolic links from the devfs name space to the conventional 273names. More details on devfs can be found on the DEVFS home site at 274<http://www.atnf.csiro.au/~rgooch/linux/> or in the file kernel 275documentation files, .../linux/Documentation/filesystems/devfs/README. 276 277If you are using devfs, existing devices are automatically created within 278the devfs name space. Normal devices will be tts/F0 - tts/F255 and callout 279devices will be cua/F0 - cua/F255. With devfs installed, ip2mkdev will 280create symbolic links in /dev from the old conventional names to the newer 281devfs names as follows: 282 283 /dev/ip2ipl[n] -> /dev/ip2/ipl[n] n = 0 - 3 284 /dev/ip2stat[n] -> /dev/ip2/stat[n] n = 0 - 3 285 /dev/ttyF[n] -> /dev/tts/F[n] n = 0 - 255 286 /dev/cuf[n] -> /dev/cua/F[n] n = 0 - 255 287 288Only devices for existing ports and boards will be created. 289 290IMPORTANT NOTE: The naming convention used for devfs by this driver 291was changed from 1.2.12 to 1.2.13. The old naming convention was to 292use ttf/%d for the tty device and cuf/%d for the cua device. That 293has been changed to conform to an agreed-upon standard of placing 294all the tty devices under tts. The device names are now tts/F%d for 295the tty device and cua/F%d for the cua devices. If you were using 296the older devfs names, you must update for the newer convention. 297 298You do not need to run ip2mkdev if you are using devfs and only want to 299use the devfs native device names. 300 301 3027. NOTES 303 304This is a release version of the driver, but it is impossible to test it 305in all configurations of Linux. If there is any anomalous behaviour that 306does not match the standard serial port's behaviour please let us know. 307 308 3098. ip2mkdev shell script 310 311Previously, this script was simply attached here. It is now attached as a 312shar archive to make it easier to extract the script from the documentation. 313To create the ip2mkdev shell script change to a convenient directory (/tmp 314works just fine) and run the following command: 315 316 unshar Documentation/computone.txt 317 (This file) 318 319You should now have a file ip2mkdev in your current working directory with 320permissions set to execute. Running that script with then create the 321necessary devices for the Computone boards, interfaces, and ports which 322are present on you system at the time it is run. 323 324 325#!/bin/sh 326# This is a shell archive (produced by GNU sharutils 4.2.1). 327# To extract the files from this archive, save it to some FILE, remove 328# everything before the `!/bin/sh' line above, then type `sh FILE'. 329# 330# Made on 2001-10-29 10:32 EST by <mhw@alcove.wittsend.com>. 331# Source directory was `/home2/src/tmp'. 332# 333# Existing files will *not* be overwritten unless `-c' is specified. 334# 335# This shar contains: 336# length mode name 337# ------ ---------- ------------------------------------------ 338# 4251 -rwxr-xr-x ip2mkdev 339# 340save_IFS="${IFS}" 341IFS="${IFS}:" 342gettext_dir=FAILED 343locale_dir=FAILED 344first_param="$1" 345for dir in $PATH 346do 347 if test "$gettext_dir" = FAILED && test -f $dir/gettext \ 348 && ($dir/gettext --version >/dev/null 2>&1) 349 then 350 set `$dir/gettext --version 2>&1` 351 if test "$3" = GNU 352 then 353 gettext_dir=$dir 354 fi 355 fi 356 if test "$locale_dir" = FAILED && test -f $dir/shar \ 357 && ($dir/shar --print-text-domain-dir >/dev/null 2>&1) 358 then 359 locale_dir=`$dir/shar --print-text-domain-dir` 360 fi 361done 362IFS="$save_IFS" 363if test "$locale_dir" = FAILED || test "$gettext_dir" = FAILED 364then 365 echo=echo 366else 367 TEXTDOMAINDIR=$locale_dir 368 export TEXTDOMAINDIR 369 TEXTDOMAIN=sharutils 370 export TEXTDOMAIN 371 echo="$gettext_dir/gettext -s" 372fi 373if touch -am -t 200112312359.59 $$.touch >/dev/null 2>&1 && test ! -f 200112312359.59 -a -f $$.touch; then 374 shar_touch='touch -am -t $1$2$3$4$5$6.$7 "$8"' 375elif touch -am 123123592001.59 $$.touch >/dev/null 2>&1 && test ! -f 123123592001.59 -a ! -f 123123592001.5 -a -f $$.touch; then 376 shar_touch='touch -am $3$4$5$6$1$2.$7 "$8"' 377elif touch -am 1231235901 $$.touch >/dev/null 2>&1 && test ! -f 1231235901 -a -f $$.touch; then 378 shar_touch='touch -am $3$4$5$6$2 "$8"' 379else 380 shar_touch=: 381 echo 382 $echo 'WARNING: not restoring timestamps. Consider getting and' 383 $echo "installing GNU \`touch', distributed in GNU File Utilities..." 384 echo 385fi 386rm -f 200112312359.59 123123592001.59 123123592001.5 1231235901 $$.touch 387# 388if mkdir _sh17581; then 389 $echo 'x -' 'creating lock directory' 390else 391 $echo 'failed to create lock directory' 392 exit 1 393fi 394# ============= ip2mkdev ============== 395if test -f 'ip2mkdev' && test "$first_param" != -c; then 396 $echo 'x -' SKIPPING 'ip2mkdev' '(file already exists)' 397else 398 $echo 'x -' extracting 'ip2mkdev' '(text)' 399 sed 's/^X//' << 'SHAR_EOF' > 'ip2mkdev' && 400#!/bin/sh - 401# 402# ip2mkdev 403# 404# Make or remove devices as needed for Computone Intelliport drivers 405# 406# First rule! If the dev file exists and you need it, don't mess 407# with it. That prevents us from screwing up open ttys, ownership 408# and permissions on a running system! 409# 410# This script will NOT remove devices that no longer exist if their 411# board or interface box has been removed. If you want to get rid 412# of them, you can manually do an "rm -f /dev/ttyF* /dev/cuaf*" 413# before running this script. Running this script will then recreate 414# all the valid devices. 415# 416# Michael H. Warfield 417# /\/\|=mhw=|\/\/ 418# mhw@wittsend.com 419# 420# Updated 10/29/2000 for version 1.2.13 naming convention 421# under devfs. /\/\|=mhw=|\/\/ 422# 423# Updated 03/09/2000 for devfs support in ip2 drivers. /\/\|=mhw=|\/\/ 424# 425X 426if test -d /dev/ip2 ; then 427# This is devfs mode... We don't do anything except create symlinks 428# from the real devices to the old names! 429X cd /dev 430X echo "Creating symbolic links to devfs devices" 431X for i in `ls ip2` ; do 432X if test ! -L ip2$i ; then 433X # Remove it incase it wasn't a symlink (old device) 434X rm -f ip2$i 435X ln -s ip2/$i ip2$i 436X fi 437X done 438X for i in `( cd tts ; ls F* )` ; do 439X if test ! -L tty$i ; then 440X # Remove it incase it wasn't a symlink (old device) 441X rm -f tty$i 442X ln -s tts/$i tty$i 443X fi 444X done 445X for i in `( cd cua ; ls F* )` ; do 446X DEVNUMBER=`expr $i : 'F\(.*\)'` 447X if test ! -L cuf$DEVNUMBER ; then 448X # Remove it incase it wasn't a symlink (old device) 449X rm -f cuf$DEVNUMBER 450X ln -s cua/$i cuf$DEVNUMBER 451X fi 452X done 453X exit 0 454fi 455X 456if test ! -f /proc/tty/drivers 457then 458X echo "\ 459Unable to check driver status. 460Make sure proc file system is mounted." 461X 462X exit 255 463fi 464X 465if test ! -f /proc/tty/driver/ip2 466then 467X echo "\ 468Unable to locate ip2 proc file. 469Attempting to load driver" 470X 471X if /sbin/insmod ip2 472X then 473X if test ! -f /proc/tty/driver/ip2 474X then 475X echo "\ 476Unable to locate ip2 proc file after loading driver. 477Driver initialization failure or driver version error. 478" 479X exit 255 480X fi 481X else 482X echo "Unable to load ip2 driver." 483X exit 255 484X fi 485fi 486X 487# Ok... So we got the driver loaded and we can locate the procfs files. 488# Next we need our major numbers. 489X 490TTYMAJOR=`sed -e '/^ip2/!d' -e '/\/dev\/tt/!d' -e 's/.*tt[^ ]*[ ]*\([0-9]*\)[ ]*.*/\1/' < /proc/tty/drivers` 491CUAMAJOR=`sed -e '/^ip2/!d' -e '/\/dev\/cu/!d' -e 's/.*cu[^ ]*[ ]*\([0-9]*\)[ ]*.*/\1/' < /proc/tty/drivers` 492BRDMAJOR=`sed -e '/^Driver: /!d' -e 's/.*IMajor=\([0-9]*\)[ ]*.*/\1/' < /proc/tty/driver/ip2` 493X 494echo "\ 495TTYMAJOR = $TTYMAJOR 496CUAMAJOR = $CUAMAJOR 497BRDMAJOR = $BRDMAJOR 498" 499X 500# Ok... Now we should know our major numbers, if appropriate... 501# Now we need our boards and start the device loops. 502X 503grep '^Board [0-9]:' /proc/tty/driver/ip2 | while read token number type alltherest 504do 505X # The test for blank "type" will catch the stats lead-in lines 506X # if they exist in the file 507X if test "$type" = "vacant" -o "$type" = "Vacant" -o "$type" = "" 508X then 509X continue 510X fi 511X 512X BOARDNO=`expr "$number" : '\([0-9]\):'` 513X PORTS=`expr "$alltherest" : '.*ports=\([0-9]*\)' | tr ',' ' '` 514X MINORS=`expr "$alltherest" : '.*minors=\([0-9,]*\)' | tr ',' ' '` 515X 516X if test "$BOARDNO" = "" -o "$PORTS" = "" 517X then 518# This may be a bug. We should at least get this much information 519X echo "Unable to process board line" 520X continue 521X fi 522X 523X if test "$MINORS" = "" 524X then 525# Silently skip this one. This board seems to have no boxes 526X continue 527X fi 528X 529X echo "board $BOARDNO: $type ports = $PORTS; port numbers = $MINORS" 530X 531X if test "$BRDMAJOR" != "" 532X then 533X BRDMINOR=`expr $BOARDNO \* 4` 534X STSMINOR=`expr $BRDMINOR + 1` 535X if test ! -c /dev/ip2ipl$BOARDNO ; then 536X mknod /dev/ip2ipl$BOARDNO c $BRDMAJOR $BRDMINOR 537X fi 538X if test ! -c /dev/ip2stat$BOARDNO ; then 539X mknod /dev/ip2stat$BOARDNO c $BRDMAJOR $STSMINOR 540X fi 541X fi 542X 543X if test "$TTYMAJOR" != "" 544X then 545X PORTNO=$BOARDBASE 546X 547X for PORTNO in $MINORS 548X do 549X if test ! -c /dev/ttyF$PORTNO ; then 550X # We got the hardware but no device - make it 551X mknod /dev/ttyF$PORTNO c $TTYMAJOR $PORTNO 552X fi 553X done 554X fi 555X 556X if test "$CUAMAJOR" != "" 557X then 558X PORTNO=$BOARDBASE 559X 560X for PORTNO in $MINORS 561X do 562X if test ! -c /dev/cuf$PORTNO ; then 563X # We got the hardware but no device - make it 564X mknod /dev/cuf$PORTNO c $CUAMAJOR $PORTNO 565X fi 566X done 567X fi 568done 569X 570Xexit 0 571SHAR_EOF 572 (set 20 01 10 29 10 32 01 'ip2mkdev'; eval "$shar_touch") && 573 chmod 0755 'ip2mkdev' || 574 $echo 'restore of' 'ip2mkdev' 'failed' 575 if ( md5sum --help 2>&1 | grep 'sage: md5sum \[' ) >/dev/null 2>&1 \ 576 && ( md5sum --version 2>&1 | grep -v 'textutils 1.12' ) >/dev/null; then 577 md5sum -c << SHAR_EOF >/dev/null 2>&1 \ 578 || $echo 'ip2mkdev:' 'MD5 check failed' 579cb5717134509f38bad9fde6b1f79b4a4 ip2mkdev 580SHAR_EOF 581 else 582 shar_count="`LC_ALL= LC_CTYPE= LANG= wc -c < 'ip2mkdev'`" 583 test 4251 -eq "$shar_count" || 584 $echo 'ip2mkdev:' 'original size' '4251,' 'current size' "$shar_count!" 585 fi 586fi 587rm -fr _sh17581 588exit 0