The Design and Implementation of the FreeBSD Operating System, Second Edition
Now available: The Design and Implementation of the FreeBSD Operating System (Second Edition)


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FreeBSD/Linux Kernel Cross Reference
sys/Documentation/stallion.txt

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    1 * NOTE - This is an unmaintained driver.  Lantronix, which bought Stallion
    2 technologies, is not active in driver maintenance, and they have no information
    3 on when or if they will have a 2.6 driver.
    4 
    5 James Nelson <james4765@gmail.com> - 12-12-2004
    6 
    7 Stallion Multiport Serial Driver Readme
    8 ---------------------------------------
    9 
   10 Copyright (C) 1994-1999,  Stallion Technologies.
   11 
   12 Version:   5.5.1
   13 Date:      28MAR99
   14 
   15 
   16 
   17 1. INTRODUCTION
   18 
   19 There are two drivers that work with the different families of Stallion
   20 multiport serial boards. One is for the Stallion smart boards - that is
   21 EasyIO, EasyConnection 8/32 and EasyConnection 8/64-PCI, the other for
   22 the true Stallion intelligent multiport boards - EasyConnection 8/64
   23 (ISA, EISA, MCA), EasyConnection/RA-PCI, ONboard and Brumby.
   24 
   25 If you are using any of the Stallion intelligent multiport boards (Brumby,
   26 ONboard, EasyConnection 8/64 (ISA, EISA, MCA), EasyConnection/RA-PCI) with
   27 Linux you will need to get the driver utility package.  This contains a
   28 firmware loader and the firmware images necessary to make the devices operate.
   29 
   30 The Stallion Technologies ftp site, ftp.stallion.com, will always have
   31 the latest version of the driver utility package.
   32 
   33 ftp://ftp.stallion.com/drivers/ata5/Linux/ata-linux-550.tar.gz
   34 
   35 As of the printing of this document the latest version of the driver
   36 utility package is 5.5.0. If a later version is now available then you
   37 should use the latest version.
   38 
   39 If you are using the EasyIO, EasyConnection 8/32 or EasyConnection 8/64-PCI
   40 boards then you don't need this package, although it does have a serial stats
   41 display program.
   42 
   43 If you require DIP switch settings, EISA or MCA configuration files, or any
   44 other information related to Stallion boards then have a look at Stallion's
   45 web pages at http://www.stallion.com.
   46 
   47 
   48 
   49 2. INSTALLATION
   50 
   51 The drivers can be used as loadable modules or compiled into the kernel.
   52 You can choose which when doing a "config" on the kernel.
   53 
   54 All ISA, EISA and MCA boards that you want to use need to be configured into
   55 the driver(s). All PCI boards will be automatically detected when you load
   56 the driver - so they do not need to be entered into the driver(s)
   57 configuration structure. Note that kernel PCI support is required to use PCI
   58 boards.
   59 
   60 There are two methods of configuring ISA, EISA and MCA boards into the drivers.
   61 If using the driver as a loadable module then the simplest method is to pass
   62 the driver configuration as module arguments. The other method is to modify
   63 the driver source to add configuration lines for each board in use.
   64 
   65 If you have pre-built Stallion driver modules then the module argument
   66 configuration method should be used. A lot of Linux distributions come with
   67 pre-built driver modules in /lib/modules/X.Y.Z/misc for the kernel in use.
   68 That makes things pretty simple to get going.
   69 
   70 
   71 2.1 MODULE DRIVER CONFIGURATION:
   72 
   73 The simplest configuration for modules is to use the module load arguments
   74 to configure any ISA, EISA or MCA boards. PCI boards are automatically
   75 detected, so do not need any additional configuration at all.
   76 
   77 If using EasyIO, EasyConnection 8/32 ISA or MCA, or EasyConnection 8/63-PCI
   78 boards then use the "stallion" driver module, Otherwise if you are using
   79 an EasyConnection 8/64 ISA, EISA or MCA, EasyConnection/RA-PCI, ONboard,
   80 Brumby or original Stallion board then use the "istallion" driver module.
   81 
   82 Typically to load up the smart board driver use:
   83 
   84     modprobe stallion
   85 
   86 This will load the EasyIO and EasyConnection 8/32 driver. It will output a
   87 message to say that it loaded and print the driver version number. It will
   88 also print out whether it found the configured boards or not. These messages
   89 may not appear on the console, but typically are always logged to
   90 /var/adm/messages or /var/log/syslog files - depending on how the klogd and
   91 syslogd daemons are setup on your system.
   92 
   93 To load the intelligent board driver use:
   94 
   95     modprobe istallion
   96 
   97 It will output similar messages to the smart board driver.
   98 
   99 If not using an auto-detectable board type (that is a PCI board) then you
  100 will also need to supply command line arguments to the modprobe command
  101 when loading the driver. The general form of the configuration argument is
  102 
  103     board?=<name>[,<ioaddr>[,<addr>][,<irq>]]
  104 
  105 where:
  106 
  107     board?  -- specifies the arbitrary board number of this board,
  108                can be in the range 0 to 3.
  109 
  110     name    -- textual name of this board. The board name is the common
  111                board name, or any "shortened" version of that. The board
  112                type number may also be used here.
  113 
  114     ioaddr  -- specifies the I/O address of this board. This argument is
  115                optional, but should generally be specified.
  116 
  117     addr    -- optional second address argument. Some board types require
  118                a second I/O address, some require a memory address. The
  119                exact meaning of this argument depends on the board type.
  120 
  121     irq     -- optional IRQ line used by this board.
  122 
  123 Up to 4 board configuration arguments can be specified on the load line.
  124 Here is some examples:
  125 
  126     modprobe stallion board0=easyio,0x2a0,5
  127 
  128 This configures an EasyIO board as board 0 at I/O address 0x2a0 and IRQ 5.
  129 
  130     modprobe istallion board3=ec8/64,0x2c0,0xcc000
  131 
  132 This configures an EasyConnection 8/64 ISA as board 3 at I/O address 0x2c0 at
  133 memory address 0xcc000.
  134 
  135     modprobe stallion board1=ec8/32-at,0x2a0,0x280,10
  136 
  137 This configures an EasyConnection 8/32 ISA board at primary I/O address 0x2a0,
  138 secondary address 0x280 and IRQ 10.
  139 
  140 You will probably want to enter this module load and configuration information
  141 into your system startup scripts so that the drivers are loaded and configured
  142 on each system boot. Typically the start up script would be something like
  143 /etc/modprobe.conf.
  144 
  145 
  146 2.2 STATIC DRIVER CONFIGURATION:
  147 
  148 For static driver configuration you need to modify the driver source code.
  149 Entering ISA, EISA and MCA boards into the driver(s) configuration structure
  150 involves editing the driver(s) source file. It's pretty easy if you follow
  151 the instructions below. Both drivers can support up to 4 boards. The smart
  152 card driver (the stallion.c driver) supports any combination of EasyIO and
  153 EasyConnection 8/32 boards (up to a total of 4). The intelligent driver
  154 supports any combination of ONboards, Brumbys, Stallions and EasyConnection
  155 8/64 (ISA and EISA) boards (up to a total of 4).
  156 
  157 To set up the driver(s) for the boards that you want to use you need to
  158 edit the appropriate driver file and add configuration entries.
  159 
  160 If using EasyIO or EasyConnection 8/32 ISA or MCA boards,
  161    In drivers/char/stallion.c:
  162       - find the definition of the stl_brdconf array (of structures)
  163         near the top of the file
  164       - modify this to match the boards you are going to install
  165         (the comments before this structure should help)
  166       - save and exit
  167 
  168 If using ONboard, Brumby, Stallion or EasyConnection 8/64 (ISA or EISA)
  169 boards,
  170    In drivers/char/istallion.c:
  171       - find the definition of the stli_brdconf array (of structures)
  172         near the top of the file
  173       - modify this to match the boards you are going to install
  174         (the comments before this structure should help)
  175       - save and exit
  176 
  177 Once you have set up the board configurations then you are ready to build
  178 the kernel or modules.
  179 
  180 When the new kernel is booted, or the loadable module loaded then the
  181 driver will emit some kernel trace messages about whether the configured
  182 boards were detected or not. Depending on how your system logger is set
  183 up these may come out on the console, or just be logged to
  184 /var/adm/messages or /var/log/syslog. You should check the messages to
  185 confirm that all is well.
  186 
  187 
  188 2.3 SHARING INTERRUPTS
  189 
  190 It is possible to share interrupts between multiple EasyIO and
  191 EasyConnection 8/32 boards in an EISA system. To do this you must be using
  192 static driver configuration, modifying the driver source code to add driver
  193 configuration. Then a couple of extra things are required:
  194 
  195 1. When entering the board resources into the stallion.c file you need to
  196    mark the boards as using level triggered interrupts. Do this by replacing
  197    the "0" entry at field position 6 (the last field) in the board
  198    configuration structure with a "1". (This is the structure that defines
  199    the board type, I/O locations, etc. for each board). All boards that are
  200    sharing an interrupt must be set this way, and each board should have the
  201    same interrupt number specified here as well. Now build the module or
  202    kernel as you would normally.
  203 
  204 2. When physically installing the boards into the system you must enter
  205    the system EISA configuration utility. You will need to install the EISA
  206    configuration files for *all* the EasyIO and EasyConnection 8/32 boards
  207    that are sharing interrupts. The Stallion EasyIO and EasyConnection 8/32
  208    EISA configuration files required are supplied by Stallion Technologies
  209    on the EASY Utilities floppy diskette (usually supplied in the box with
  210    the board when purchased. If not, you can pick it up from Stallion's FTP
  211    site, ftp.stallion.com). You will need to edit the board resources to
  212    choose level triggered interrupts, and make sure to set each board's
  213    interrupt to the same IRQ number.
  214 
  215 You must complete both the above steps for this to work. When you reboot
  216 or load the driver your EasyIO and EasyConnection 8/32 boards will be
  217 sharing interrupts.
  218 
  219 
  220 2.4 USING HIGH SHARED MEMORY
  221 
  222 The EasyConnection 8/64-EI, ONboard and Stallion boards are capable of
  223 using shared memory addresses above the usual 640K - 1Mb range. The ONboard
  224 ISA and the Stallion boards can be programmed to use memory addresses up to
  225 16Mb (the ISA bus addressing limit), and the EasyConnection 8/64-EI and
  226 ONboard/E can be programmed for memory addresses up to 4Gb (the EISA bus
  227 addressing limit).
  228 
  229 The higher than 1Mb memory addresses are fully supported by this driver.
  230 Just enter the address as you normally would for a lower than 1Mb address
  231 (in the driver's board configuration structure).
  232 
  233 
  234 
  235 2.5 TROUBLE SHOOTING
  236 
  237 If a board is not found by the driver but is actually in the system then the
  238 most likely problem is that the I/O address is wrong. Change the module load
  239 argument for the loadable module form. Or change it in the driver stallion.c
  240 or istallion.c configuration structure and rebuild the kernel or modules, or
  241 change it on the board.
  242 
  243 On EasyIO and EasyConnection 8/32 boards the IRQ is software programmable, so
  244 if there is a conflict you may need to change the IRQ used for a board. There
  245 are no interrupts to worry about for ONboard, Brumby or EasyConnection 8/64
  246 (ISA, EISA and MCA) boards. The memory region on EasyConnection 8/64 and
  247 ONboard boards is software programmable, but not on the Brumby boards.
  248 
  249 
  250 
  251 3. USING THE DRIVERS
  252 
  253 3.1 INTELLIGENT DRIVER OPERATION
  254 
  255 The intelligent boards also need to have their "firmware" code downloaded
  256 to them. This is done via a user level application supplied in the driver
  257 utility package called "stlload". Compile this program wherever you dropped
  258 the package files, by typing "make". In its simplest form you can then type
  259 
  260     ./stlload -i cdk.sys
  261 
  262 in this directory and that will download board 0 (assuming board 0 is an
  263 EasyConnection 8/64 or EasyConnection/RA board). To download to an
  264 ONboard, Brumby or Stallion do:
  265 
  266     ./stlload -i 2681.sys
  267 
  268 Normally you would want all boards to be downloaded as part of the standard
  269 system startup. To achieve this, add one of the lines above into the
  270 /etc/rc.d/rc.S or /etc/rc.d/rc.serial file. To download each board just add
  271 the "-b <brd-number>" option to the line. You will need to download code for
  272 every board. You should probably move the stlload program into a system
  273 directory, such as /usr/sbin. Also, the default location of the cdk.sys image
  274 file in the stlload down-loader is /usr/lib/stallion. Create that directory
  275 and put the cdk.sys and 2681.sys files in it. (It's a convenient place to put
  276 them anyway). As an example your /etc/rc.d/rc.S file might have the
  277 following lines added to it (if you had 3 boards):
  278 
  279     /usr/sbin/stlload -b 0 -i /usr/lib/stallion/cdk.sys
  280     /usr/sbin/stlload -b 1 -i /usr/lib/stallion/2681.sys
  281     /usr/sbin/stlload -b 2 -i /usr/lib/stallion/2681.sys
  282 
  283 The image files cdk.sys and 2681.sys are specific to the board types. The
  284 cdk.sys will only function correctly on an EasyConnection 8/64 board. Similarly
  285 the 2681.sys image fill only operate on ONboard, Brumby and Stallion boards.
  286 If you load the wrong image file into a board it will fail to start up, and
  287 of course the ports will not be operational!
  288 
  289 If you are using the modularized version of the driver you might want to put
  290 the modprobe calls in the startup script as well (before the download lines
  291 obviously).
  292 
  293 
  294 3.2 USING THE SERIAL PORTS
  295 
  296 Once the driver is installed you will need to setup some device nodes to
  297 access the serial ports. The simplest method is to use the /dev/MAKEDEV program.
  298 It will automatically create device entries for Stallion boards. This will
  299 create the normal serial port devices as /dev/ttyE# where# is the port number
  300 starting from 0. A bank of 64 minor device numbers is allocated to each board,
  301 so the first port on the second board is port 64,etc. A set of callout type
  302 devices may also be created. They are created as the devices /dev/cue# where #
  303 is the same as for the ttyE devices.
  304 
  305 For the most part the Stallion driver tries to emulate the standard PC system
  306 COM ports and the standard Linux serial driver. The idea is that you should
  307 be able to use Stallion board ports and COM ports interchangeably without
  308 modifying anything but the device name. Anything that doesn't work like that
  309 should be considered a bug in this driver!
  310 
  311 If you look at the driver code you will notice that it is fairly closely
  312 based on the Linux serial driver (linux/drivers/char/serial.c). This is
  313 intentional, obviously this is the easiest way to emulate its behavior!
  314 
  315 Since this driver tries to emulate the standard serial ports as much as
  316 possible, most system utilities should work as they do for the standard
  317 COM ports. Most importantly "stty" works as expected and "setserial" can
  318 also be used (excepting the ability to auto-configure the I/O and IRQ
  319 addresses of boards). Higher baud rates are supported in the usual fashion
  320 through setserial or using the CBAUDEX extensions. Note that the EasyIO and
  321 EasyConnection (all types) support at least 57600 and 115200 baud. The newer
  322 EasyConnection XP modules and new EasyIO boards support 230400 and 460800
  323 baud as well. The older boards including ONboard and Brumby support a
  324 maximum baud rate of 38400.
  325 
  326 If you are unfamiliar with how to use serial ports, then get the Serial-HOWTO
  327 by Greg Hankins. It will explain everything you need to know!
  328 
  329 
  330 
  331 4. NOTES
  332 
  333 You can use both drivers at once if you have a mix of board types installed
  334 in a system. However to do this you will need to change the major numbers
  335 used by one of the drivers. Currently both drivers use major numbers 24, 25
  336 and 28 for their devices. Change one driver to use some other major numbers,
  337 and then modify the mkdevnods script to make device nodes based on those new
  338 major numbers. For example, you could change the istallion.c driver to use
  339 major numbers 60, 61 and 62. You will also need to create device nodes with
  340 different names for the ports, for example ttyF# and cuf#.
  341 
  342 The original Stallion board is no longer supported by Stallion Technologies.
  343 Although it is known to work with the istallion driver.
  344 
  345 Finding a free physical memory address range can be a problem. The older
  346 boards like the Stallion and ONboard need large areas (64K or even 128K), so
  347 they can be very difficult to get into a system. If you have 16 Mb of RAM
  348 then you have no choice but to put them somewhere in the 640K -> 1Mb range.
  349 ONboards require 64K, so typically 0xd0000 is good, or 0xe0000 on some
  350 systems. If you have an original Stallion board, "V4.0" or Rev.O, then you
  351 need a 64K memory address space, so again 0xd0000 and 0xe0000 are good.
  352 Older Stallion boards are a much bigger problem. They need 128K of address
  353 space and must be on a 128K boundary. If you don't have a VGA card then
  354 0xc0000 might be usable - there is really no other place you can put them
  355 below 1Mb.
  356 
  357 Both the ONboard and old Stallion boards can use higher memory addresses as
  358 well, but you must have less than 16Mb of RAM to be able to use them. Usual
  359 high memory addresses used include 0xec0000 and 0xf00000.
  360 
  361 The Brumby boards only require 16Kb of address space, so you can usually
  362 squeeze them in somewhere. Common addresses are 0xc8000, 0xcc000, or in
  363 the 0xd0000 range. EasyConnection 8/64 boards are even better, they only
  364 require 4Kb of address space, again usually 0xc8000, 0xcc000 or 0xd0000
  365 are good.
  366 
  367 If you are using an EasyConnection 8/64-EI or ONboard/E then usually the
  368 0xd0000 or 0xe0000 ranges are the best options below 1Mb. If neither of
  369 them can be used then the high memory support to use the really high address
  370 ranges is the best option. Typically the 2Gb range is convenient for them,
  371 and gets them well out of the way.
  372 
  373 The ports of the EasyIO-8M board do not have DCD or DTR signals. So these
  374 ports cannot be used as real modem devices. Generally, when using these
  375 ports you should only use the cueX devices.
  376 
  377 The driver utility package contains a couple of very useful programs. One 
  378 is a serial port statistics collection and display program - very handy
  379 for solving serial port problems. The other is an extended option setting
  380 program that works with the intelligent boards.
  381 
  382 
  383 
  384 5. DISCLAIMER
  385 
  386 The information contained in this document is believed to be accurate and
  387 reliable. However, no responsibility is assumed by Stallion Technologies
  388 Pty. Ltd. for its use, nor any infringements of patents or other rights
  389 of third parties resulting from its use. Stallion Technologies reserves
  390 the right to modify the design of its products and will endeavour to change
  391 the information in manuals and accompanying documentation accordingly.
  392 

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