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1 | LINUX DRIVERS FOR BAYCOM MODEMS |
2 | ||
3 | Thomas M. Sailer, HB9JNX/AE4WA, <sailer@ife.ee.ethz.ch> | |
4 | ||
5 | !!NEW!! (04/98) The drivers for the baycom modems have been split into | |
6 | separate drivers as they did not share any code, and the driver | |
7 | and device names have changed. | |
8 | ||
9 | This document describes the Linux Kernel Drivers for simple Baycom style | |
10 | amateur radio modems. | |
11 | ||
12 | The following drivers are available: | |
13 | ||
14 | baycom_ser_fdx: | |
15 | This driver supports the SER12 modems either full or half duplex. | |
16 | Its baud rate may be changed via the `baud' module parameter, | |
17 | therefore it supports just about every bit bang modem on a | |
18 | serial port. Its devices are called bcsf0 through bcsf3. | |
19 | This is the recommended driver for SER12 type modems, | |
20 | however if you have a broken UART clone that does not have working | |
21 | delta status bits, you may try baycom_ser_hdx. | |
22 | ||
23 | baycom_ser_hdx: | |
24 | This is an alternative driver for SER12 type modems. | |
25 | It only supports half duplex, and only 1200 baud. Its devices | |
26 | are called bcsh0 through bcsh3. Use this driver only if baycom_ser_fdx | |
27 | does not work with your UART. | |
28 | ||
29 | baycom_par: | |
30 | This driver supports the par96 and picpar modems. | |
31 | Its devices are called bcp0 through bcp3. | |
32 | ||
33 | baycom_epp: | |
34 | This driver supports the EPP modem. | |
35 | Its devices are called bce0 through bce3. | |
36 | This driver is work-in-progress. | |
37 | ||
38 | The following modems are supported: | |
39 | ||
40 | ser12: This is a very simple 1200 baud AFSK modem. The modem consists only | |
41 | of a modulator/demodulator chip, usually a TI TCM3105. The computer | |
42 | is responsible for regenerating the receiver bit clock, as well as | |
43 | for handling the HDLC protocol. The modem connects to a serial port, | |
44 | hence the name. Since the serial port is not used as an async serial | |
45 | port, the kernel driver for serial ports cannot be used, and this | |
46 | driver only supports standard serial hardware (8250, 16450, 16550) | |
47 | ||
48 | par96: This is a modem for 9600 baud FSK compatible to the G3RUH standard. | |
49 | The modem does all the filtering and regenerates the receiver clock. | |
50 | Data is transferred from and to the PC via a shift register. | |
51 | The shift register is filled with 16 bits and an interrupt is signalled. | |
52 | The PC then empties the shift register in a burst. This modem connects | |
53 | to the parallel port, hence the name. The modem leaves the | |
54 | implementation of the HDLC protocol and the scrambler polynomial to | |
55 | the PC. | |
56 | ||
57 | picpar: This is a redesign of the par96 modem by Henning Rech, DF9IC. The modem | |
58 | is protocol compatible to par96, but uses only three low power ICs | |
59 | and can therefore be fed from the parallel port and does not require | |
60 | an additional power supply. Furthermore, it incorporates a carrier | |
61 | detect circuitry. | |
62 | ||
63 | EPP: This is a high-speed modem adaptor that connects to an enhanced parallel port. | |
64 | Its target audience is users working over a high speed hub (76.8kbit/s). | |
65 | ||
66 | eppfpga: This is a redesign of the EPP adaptor. | |
67 | ||
68 | ||
69 | ||
70 | All of the above modems only support half duplex communications. However, | |
71 | the driver supports the KISS (see below) fullduplex command. It then simply | |
72 | starts to send as soon as there's a packet to transmit and does not care | |
73 | about DCD, i.e. it starts to send even if there's someone else on the channel. | |
74 | This command is required by some implementations of the DAMA channel | |
75 | access protocol. | |
76 | ||
77 | ||
78 | The Interface of the drivers | |
79 | ||
80 | Unlike previous drivers, these drivers are no longer character devices, | |
81 | but they are now true kernel network interfaces. Installation is therefore | |
82 | simple. Once installed, four interfaces named bc{sf,sh,p,e}[0-3] are available. | |
83 | sethdlc from the ax25 utilities may be used to set driver states etc. | |
84 | Users of userland AX.25 stacks may use the net2kiss utility (also available | |
85 | in the ax25 utilities package) to convert packets of a network interface | |
86 | to a KISS stream on a pseudo tty. There's also a patch available from | |
87 | me for WAMPES which allows attaching a kernel network interface directly. | |
88 | ||
89 | ||
90 | Configuring the driver | |
91 | ||
92 | Every time a driver is inserted into the kernel, it has to know which | |
93 | modems it should access at which ports. This can be done with the setbaycom | |
94 | utility. If you are only using one modem, you can also configure the | |
95 | driver from the insmod command line (or by means of an option line in | |
970e2486 | 96 | /etc/modprobe.d/*.conf). |
1da177e4 LT |
97 | |
98 | Examples: | |
99 | modprobe baycom_ser_fdx mode="ser12*" iobase=0x3f8 irq=4 | |
100 | sethdlc -i bcsf0 -p mode "ser12*" io 0x3f8 irq 4 | |
101 | ||
102 | Both lines configure the first port to drive a ser12 modem at the first | |
103 | serial port (COM1 under DOS). The * in the mode parameter instructs the driver to use | |
104 | the software DCD algorithm (see below). | |
105 | ||
106 | insmod baycom_par mode="picpar" iobase=0x378 | |
107 | sethdlc -i bcp0 -p mode "picpar" io 0x378 | |
108 | ||
109 | Both lines configure the first port to drive a picpar modem at the | |
110 | first parallel port (LPT1 under DOS). (Note: picpar implies | |
111 | hardware DCD, par96 implies software DCD). | |
112 | ||
113 | The channel access parameters can be set with sethdlc -a or kissparms. | |
114 | Note that both utilities interpret the values slightly differently. | |
115 | ||
116 | ||
117 | Hardware DCD versus Software DCD | |
118 | ||
119 | To avoid collisions on the air, the driver must know when the channel is | |
120 | busy. This is the task of the DCD circuitry/software. The driver may either | |
121 | utilise a software DCD algorithm (options=1) or use a DCD signal from | |
122 | the hardware (options=0). | |
123 | ||
124 | ser12: if software DCD is utilised, the radio's squelch should always be | |
125 | open. It is highly recommended to use the software DCD algorithm, | |
126 | as it is much faster than most hardware squelch circuitry. The | |
127 | disadvantage is a slightly higher load on the system. | |
128 | ||
129 | par96: the software DCD algorithm for this type of modem is rather poor. | |
130 | The modem simply does not provide enough information to implement | |
131 | a reasonable DCD algorithm in software. Therefore, if your radio | |
132 | feeds the DCD input of the PAR96 modem, the use of the hardware | |
133 | DCD circuitry is recommended. | |
134 | ||
135 | picpar: the picpar modem features a builtin DCD hardware, which is highly | |
136 | recommended. | |
137 | ||
138 | ||
139 | ||
140 | Compatibility with the rest of the Linux kernel | |
141 | ||
142 | The serial driver and the baycom serial drivers compete | |
143 | for the same hardware resources. Of course only one driver can access a given | |
144 | interface at a time. The serial driver grabs all interfaces it can find at | |
145 | startup time. Therefore the baycom drivers subsequently won't be able to | |
146 | access a serial port. You might therefore find it necessary to release | |
147 | a port owned by the serial driver with 'setserial /dev/ttyS# uart none', where | |
148 | # is the number of the interface. The baycom drivers do not reserve any | |
149 | ports at startup, unless one is specified on the 'insmod' command line. Another | |
150 | method to solve the problem is to compile all drivers as modules and | |
151 | leave it to kmod to load the correct driver depending on the application. | |
152 | ||
153 | The parallel port drivers (baycom_par, baycom_epp) now use the parport subsystem | |
154 | to arbitrate the ports between different client drivers. | |
155 | ||
156 | vy 73s de | |
157 | Tom Sailer, sailer@ife.ee.ethz.ch | |
158 | hb9jnx @ hb9w.ampr.org |