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1
2 -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
3 1) This file is a supplement to arcnet.txt. Please read that for general
4 driver configuration help.
5 -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
6 2) This file is no longer Linux-specific. It should probably be moved out of
7 the kernel sources. Ideas?
8 -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
9
10 Because so many people (myself included) seem to have obtained ARCnet cards
11 without manuals, this file contains a quick introduction to ARCnet hardware,
12 some cabling tips, and a listing of all jumper settings I can find. Please
13 e-mail apenwarr@worldvisions.ca with any settings for your particular card,
14 or any other information you have!
15
16
17 INTRODUCTION TO ARCNET
18 ----------------------
19
20 ARCnet is a network type which works in a way similar to popular Ethernet
21 networks but which is also different in some very important ways.
22
23 First of all, you can get ARCnet cards in at least two speeds: 2.5 Mbps
24 (slower than Ethernet) and 100 Mbps (faster than normal Ethernet). In fact,
25 there are others as well, but these are less common. The different hardware
26 types, as far as I'm aware, are not compatible and so you cannot wire a
27 100 Mbps card to a 2.5 Mbps card, and so on. From what I hear, my driver does
28 work with 100 Mbps cards, but I haven't been able to verify this myself,
29 since I only have the 2.5 Mbps variety. It is probably not going to saturate
30 your 100 Mbps card. Stop complaining. :)
31
32 You also cannot connect an ARCnet card to any kind of Ethernet card and
33 expect it to work.
34
35 There are two "types" of ARCnet - STAR topology and BUS topology. This
36 refers to how the cards are meant to be wired together. According to most
37 available documentation, you can only connect STAR cards to STAR cards and
38 BUS cards to BUS cards. That makes sense, right? Well, it's not quite
39 true; see below under "Cabling."
40
41 Once you get past these little stumbling blocks, ARCnet is actually quite a
42 well-designed standard. It uses something called "modified token passing"
43 which makes it completely incompatible with so-called "Token Ring" cards,
44 but which makes transfers much more reliable than Ethernet does. In fact,
45 ARCnet will guarantee that a packet arrives safely at the destination, and
46 even if it can't possibly be delivered properly (ie. because of a cable
47 break, or because the destination computer does not exist) it will at least
48 tell the sender about it.
49
50 Because of the carefully defined action of the "token", it will always make
51 a pass around the "ring" within a maximum length of time. This makes it
52 useful for realtime networks.
53
54 In addition, all known ARCnet cards have an (almost) identical programming
55 interface. This means that with one ARCnet driver you can support any
56 card, whereas with Ethernet each manufacturer uses what is sometimes a
57 completely different programming interface, leading to a lot of different,
58 sometimes very similar, Ethernet drivers. Of course, always using the same
59 programming interface also means that when high-performance hardware
60 facilities like PCI bus mastering DMA appear, it's hard to take advantage of
61 them. Let's not go into that.
62
63 One thing that makes ARCnet cards difficult to program for, however, is the
64 limit on their packet sizes; standard ARCnet can only send packets that are
65 up to 508 bytes in length. This is smaller than the Internet "bare minimum"
66 of 576 bytes, let alone the Ethernet MTU of 1500. To compensate, an extra
67 level of encapsulation is defined by RFC1201, which I call "packet
68 splitting," that allows "virtual packets" to grow as large as 64K each,
69 although they are generally kept down to the Ethernet-style 1500 bytes.
70
71 For more information on the advantages and disadvantages (mostly the
72 advantages) of ARCnet networks, you might try the "ARCnet Trade Association"
73 WWW page:
74 http://www.arcnet.com
75
76
77 CABLING ARCNET NETWORKS
78 -----------------------
79
80 This section was rewritten by
81 Vojtech Pavlik <vojtech@suse.cz>
82 using information from several people, including:
83 Avery Pennraun <apenwarr@worldvisions.ca>
84 Stephen A. Wood <saw@hallc1.cebaf.gov>
85 John Paul Morrison <jmorriso@bogomips.ee.ubc.ca>
86 Joachim Koenig <jojo@repas.de>
87 and Avery touched it up a bit, at Vojtech's request.
88
89 ARCnet (the classic 2.5 Mbps version) can be connected by two different
90 types of cabling: coax and twisted pair. The other ARCnet-type networks
91 (100 Mbps TCNS and 320 kbps - 32 Mbps ARCnet Plus) use different types of
92 cabling (Type1, Fiber, C1, C4, C5).
93
94 For a coax network, you "should" use 93 Ohm RG-62 cable. But other cables
95 also work fine, because ARCnet is a very stable network. I personally use 75
96 Ohm TV antenna cable.
97
98 Cards for coax cabling are shipped in two different variants: for BUS and
99 STAR network topologies. They are mostly the same. The only difference
100 lies in the hybrid chip installed. BUS cards use high impedance output,
101 while STAR use low impedance. Low impedance card (STAR) is electrically
102 equal to a high impedance one with a terminator installed.
103
104 Usually, the ARCnet networks are built up from STAR cards and hubs. There
105 are two types of hubs - active and passive. Passive hubs are small boxes
106 with four BNC connectors containing four 47 Ohm resistors:
107
108 | | wires
109 R + junction
110 -R-+-R- R 47 Ohm resistors
111 R
112 |
113
114 The shielding is connected together. Active hubs are much more complicated;
115 they are powered and contain electronics to amplify the signal and send it
116 to other segments of the net. They usually have eight connectors. Active
117 hubs come in two variants - dumb and smart. The dumb variant just
118 amplifies, but the smart one decodes to digital and encodes back all packets
119 coming through. This is much better if you have several hubs in the net,
120 since many dumb active hubs may worsen the signal quality.
121
122 And now to the cabling. What you can connect together:
123
124 1. A card to a card. This is the simplest way of creating a 2-computer
125 network.
126
127 2. A card to a passive hub. Remember that all unused connectors on the hub
128 must be properly terminated with 93 Ohm (or something else if you don't
129 have the right ones) terminators.
130 (Avery's note: oops, I didn't know that. Mine (TV cable) works
131 anyway, though.)
132
133 3. A card to an active hub. Here is no need to terminate the unused
134 connectors except some kind of aesthetic feeling. But, there may not be
135 more than eleven active hubs between any two computers. That of course
136 doesn't limit the number of active hubs on the network.
137
138 4. An active hub to another.
139
140 5. An active hub to passive hub.
141
142 Remember, that you can not connect two passive hubs together. The power loss
143 implied by such a connection is too high for the net to operate reliably.
144
145 An example of a typical ARCnet network:
146
147 R S - STAR type card
148 S------H--------A-------S R - Terminator
149 | | H - Hub
150 | | A - Active hub
151 | S----H----S
152 S |
153 |
154 S
155
156 The BUS topology is very similar to the one used by Ethernet. The only
157 difference is in cable and terminators: they should be 93 Ohm. Ethernet
158 uses 50 Ohm impedance. You use T connectors to put the computers on a single
159 line of cable, the bus. You have to put terminators at both ends of the
160 cable. A typical BUS ARCnet network looks like:
161
162 RT----T------T------T------T------TR
163 B B B B B B
164
165 B - BUS type card
166 R - Terminator
167 T - T connector
168
169 But that is not all! The two types can be connected together. According to
170 the official documentation the only way of connecting them is using an active
171 hub:
172
173 A------T------T------TR
174 | B B B
175 S---H---S
176 |
177 S
178
179 The official docs also state that you can use STAR cards at the ends of
180 BUS network in place of a BUS card and a terminator:
181
182 S------T------T------S
183 B B
184
185 But, according to my own experiments, you can simply hang a BUS type card
186 anywhere in middle of a cable in a STAR topology network. And more - you
187 can use the bus card in place of any star card if you use a terminator. Then
188 you can build very complicated networks fulfilling all your needs! An
189 example:
190
191 S
192 |
193 RT------T-------T------H------S
194 B B B |
195 | R
196 S------A------T-------T-------A-------H------TR
197 | B B | | B
198 | S BT |
199 | | | S----A-----S
200 S------H---A----S | |
201 | | S------T----H---S |
202 S S B R S
203
204 A basically different cabling scheme is used with Twisted Pair cabling. Each
205 of the TP cards has two RJ (phone-cord style) connectors. The cards are
206 then daisy-chained together using a cable connecting every two neighboring
207 cards. The ends are terminated with RJ 93 Ohm terminators which plug into
208 the empty connectors of cards on the ends of the chain. An example:
209
210 ___________ ___________
211 _R_|_ _|_|_ _|_R_
212 | | | | | |
213 |Card | |Card | |Card |
214 |_____| |_____| |_____|
215
216
217 There are also hubs for the TP topology. There is nothing difficult
218 involved in using them; you just connect a TP chain to a hub on any end or
219 even at both. This way you can create almost any network configuration.
220 The maximum of 11 hubs between any two computers on the net applies here as
221 well. An example:
222
223 RP-------P--------P--------H-----P------P-----PR
224 |
225 RP-----H--------P--------H-----P------PR
226 | |
227 PR PR
228
229 R - RJ Terminator
230 P - TP Card
231 H - TP Hub
232
233 Like any network, ARCnet has a limited cable length. These are the maximum
234 cable lengths between two active ends (an active end being an active hub or
235 a STAR card).
236
237 RG-62 93 Ohm up to 650 m
238 RG-59/U 75 Ohm up to 457 m
239 RG-11/U 75 Ohm up to 533 m
240 IBM Type 1 150 Ohm up to 200 m
241 IBM Type 3 100 Ohm up to 100 m
242
243 The maximum length of all cables connected to a passive hub is limited to 65
244 meters for RG-62 cabling; less for others. You can see that using passive
245 hubs in a large network is a bad idea. The maximum length of a single "BUS
246 Trunk" is about 300 meters for RG-62. The maximum distance between the two
247 most distant points of the net is limited to 3000 meters. The maximum length
248 of a TP cable between two cards/hubs is 650 meters.
249
250
251 SETTING THE JUMPERS
252 -------------------
253
254 All ARCnet cards should have a total of four or five different settings:
255
256 - the I/O address: this is the "port" your ARCnet card is on. Probed
257 values in the Linux ARCnet driver are only from 0x200 through 0x3F0. (If
258 your card has additional ones, which is possible, please tell me.) This
259 should not be the same as any other device on your system. According to
260 a doc I got from Novell, MS Windows prefers values of 0x300 or more,
261 eating net connections on my system (at least) otherwise. My guess is
262 this may be because, if your card is at 0x2E0, probing for a serial port
263 at 0x2E8 will reset the card and probably mess things up royally.
264 - Avery's favourite: 0x300.
265
266 - the IRQ: on 8-bit cards, it might be 2 (9), 3, 4, 5, or 7.
267 on 16-bit cards, it might be 2 (9), 3, 4, 5, 7, or 10-15.
268
269 Make sure this is different from any other card on your system. Note
270 that IRQ2 is the same as IRQ9, as far as Linux is concerned. You can
271 "cat /proc/interrupts" for a somewhat complete list of which ones are in
272 use at any given time. Here is a list of common usages from Vojtech
273 Pavlik <vojtech@suse.cz>:
274 ("Not on bus" means there is no way for a card to generate this
275 interrupt)
276 IRQ 0 - Timer 0 (Not on bus)
277 IRQ 1 - Keyboard (Not on bus)
278 IRQ 2 - IRQ Controller 2 (Not on bus, nor does interrupt the CPU)
279 IRQ 3 - COM2
280 IRQ 4 - COM1
281 IRQ 5 - FREE (LPT2 if you have it; sometimes COM3; maybe PLIP)
282 IRQ 6 - Floppy disk controller
283 IRQ 7 - FREE (LPT1 if you don't use the polling driver; PLIP)
284 IRQ 8 - Realtime Clock Interrupt (Not on bus)
285 IRQ 9 - FREE (VGA vertical sync interrupt if enabled)
286 IRQ 10 - FREE
287 IRQ 11 - FREE
288 IRQ 12 - FREE
289 IRQ 13 - Numeric Coprocessor (Not on bus)
290 IRQ 14 - Fixed Disk Controller
291 IRQ 15 - FREE (Fixed Disk Controller 2 if you have it)
292
293 Note: IRQ 9 is used on some video cards for the "vertical retrace"
294 interrupt. This interrupt would have been handy for things like
295 video games, as it occurs exactly once per screen refresh, but
296 unfortunately IBM cancelled this feature starting with the original
297 VGA and thus many VGA/SVGA cards do not support it. For this
298 reason, no modern software uses this interrupt and it can almost
299 always be safely disabled, if your video card supports it at all.
300
301 If your card for some reason CANNOT disable this IRQ (usually there
302 is a jumper), one solution would be to clip the printed circuit
303 contact on the board: it's the fourth contact from the left on the
304 back side. I take no responsibility if you try this.
305
306 - Avery's favourite: IRQ2 (actually IRQ9). Watch that VGA, though.
307
308 - the memory address: Unlike most cards, ARCnets use "shared memory" for
309 copying buffers around. Make SURE it doesn't conflict with any other
310 used memory in your system!
311 A0000 - VGA graphics memory (ok if you don't have VGA)
312 B0000 - Monochrome text mode
313 C0000 \ One of these is your VGA BIOS - usually C0000.
314 E0000 /
315 F0000 - System BIOS
316
317 Anything less than 0xA0000 is, well, a BAD idea since it isn't above
318 640k.
319 - Avery's favourite: 0xD0000
320
321 - the station address: Every ARCnet card has its own "unique" network
322 address from 0 to 255. Unlike Ethernet, you can set this address
323 yourself with a jumper or switch (or on some cards, with special
324 software). Since it's only 8 bits, you can only have 254 ARCnet cards
325 on a network. DON'T use 0 or 255, since these are reserved (although
326 neat stuff will probably happen if you DO use them). By the way, if you
327 haven't already guessed, don't set this the same as any other ARCnet on
328 your network!
329 - Avery's favourite: 3 and 4. Not that it matters.
330
331 - There may be ETS1 and ETS2 settings. These may or may not make a
332 difference on your card (many manuals call them "reserved"), but are
333 used to change the delays used when powering up a computer on the
334 network. This is only necessary when wiring VERY long range ARCnet
335 networks, on the order of 4km or so; in any case, the only real
336 requirement here is that all cards on the network with ETS1 and ETS2
337 jumpers have them in the same position. Chris Hindy <chrish@io.org>
338 sent in a chart with actual values for this:
339 ET1 ET2 Response Time Reconfiguration Time
340 --- --- ------------- --------------------
341 open open 74.7us 840us
342 open closed 283.4us 1680us
343 closed open 561.8us 1680us
344 closed closed 1118.6us 1680us
345
346 Make sure you set ETS1 and ETS2 to the SAME VALUE for all cards on your
347 network.
348
349 Also, on many cards (not mine, though) there are red and green LED's.
350 Vojtech Pavlik <vojtech@suse.cz> tells me this is what they mean:
351 GREEN RED Status
352 ----- --- ------
353 OFF OFF Power off
354 OFF Short flashes Cabling problems (broken cable or not
355 terminated)
356 OFF (short) ON Card init
357 ON ON Normal state - everything OK, nothing
358 happens
359 ON Long flashes Data transfer
360 ON OFF Never happens (maybe when wrong ID)
361
362
363 The following is all the specific information people have sent me about
364 their own particular ARCnet cards. It is officially a mess, and contains
365 huge amounts of duplicated information. I have no time to fix it. If you
366 want to, PLEASE DO! Just send me a 'diff -u' of all your changes.
367
368 The model # is listed right above specifics for that card, so you should be
369 able to use your text viewer's "search" function to find the entry you want.
370 If you don't KNOW what kind of card you have, try looking through the
371 various diagrams to see if you can tell.
372
373 If your model isn't listed and/or has different settings, PLEASE PLEASE
374 tell me. I had to figure mine out without the manual, and it WASN'T FUN!
375
376 Even if your ARCnet model isn't listed, but has the same jumpers as another
377 model that is, please e-mail me to say so.
378
379 Cards Listed in this file (in this order, mostly):
380
381 Manufacturer Model # Bits
382 ------------ ------- ----
383 SMC PC100 8
384 SMC PC110 8
385 SMC PC120 8
386 SMC PC130 8
387 SMC PC270E 8
388 SMC PC500 16
389 SMC PC500Longboard 16
390 SMC PC550Longboard 16
391 SMC PC600 16
392 SMC PC710 8
393 SMC? LCS-8830(-T) 8/16
394 Puredata PDI507 8
395 CNet Tech CN120-Series 8
396 CNet Tech CN160-Series 16
397 Lantech? UM9065L chipset 8
398 Acer 5210-003 8
399 Datapoint? LAN-ARC-8 8
400 Topware TA-ARC/10 8
401 Thomas-Conrad 500-6242-0097 REV A 8
402 Waterloo? (C)1985 Waterloo Micro. 8
403 No Name -- 8/16
404 No Name Taiwan R.O.C? 8
405 No Name Model 9058 8
406 Tiara Tiara Lancard? 8
407
408
409 ** SMC = Standard Microsystems Corp.
410 ** CNet Tech = CNet Technology, Inc.
411
412
413 Unclassified Stuff
414 ------------------
415 - Please send any other information you can find.
416
417 - And some other stuff (more info is welcome!):
418 From: root@ultraworld.xs4all.nl (Timo Hilbrink)
419 To: apenwarr@foxnet.net (Avery Pennarun)
420 Date: Wed, 26 Oct 1994 02:10:32 +0000 (GMT)
421 Reply-To: timoh@xs4all.nl
422
423 [...parts deleted...]
424
425 About the jumpers: On my PC130 there is one more jumper, located near the
426 cable-connector and it's for changing to star or bus topology;
427 closed: star - open: bus
428 On the PC500 are some more jumper-pins, one block labeled with RX,PDN,TXI
429 and another with ALE,LA17,LA18,LA19 these are undocumented..
430
431 [...more parts deleted...]
432
433 --- CUT ---
434
435
436 ** Standard Microsystems Corp (SMC) **
437 PC100, PC110, PC120, PC130 (8-bit cards)
438 PC500, PC600 (16-bit cards)
439 ---------------------------------
440 - mainly from Avery Pennarun <apenwarr@worldvisions.ca>. Values depicted
441 are from Avery's setup.
442 - special thanks to Timo Hilbrink <timoh@xs4all.nl> for noting that PC120,
443 130, 500, and 600 all have the same switches as Avery's PC100.
444 PC500/600 have several extra, undocumented pins though. (?)
445 - PC110 settings were verified by Stephen A. Wood <saw@cebaf.gov>
446 - Also, the JP- and S-numbers probably don't match your card exactly. Try
447 to find jumpers/switches with the same number of settings - it's
448 probably more reliable.
449
450
451 JP5 [|] : : : :
452 (IRQ Setting) IRQ2 IRQ3 IRQ4 IRQ5 IRQ7
453 Put exactly one jumper on exactly one set of pins.
454
455
456 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
457 S1 /----------------------------------\
458 (I/O and Memory | 1 1 * 0 0 0 0 * 1 1 0 1 |
459 addresses) \----------------------------------/
460 |--| |--------| |--------|
461 (a) (b) (m)
462
463 WARNING. It's very important when setting these which way
464 you're holding the card, and which way you think is '1'!
465
466 If you suspect that your settings are not being made
467 correctly, try reversing the direction or inverting the
468 switch positions.
469
470 a: The first digit of the I/O address.
471 Setting Value
472 ------- -----
473 00 0
474 01 1
475 10 2
476 11 3
477
478 b: The second digit of the I/O address.
479 Setting Value
480 ------- -----
481 0000 0
482 0001 1
483 0010 2
484 ... ...
485 1110 E
486 1111 F
487
488 The I/O address is in the form ab0. For example, if
489 a is 0x2 and b is 0xE, the address will be 0x2E0.
490
491 DO NOT SET THIS LESS THAN 0x200!!!!!
492
493
494 m: The first digit of the memory address.
495 Setting Value
496 ------- -----
497 0000 0
498 0001 1
499 0010 2
500 ... ...
501 1110 E
502 1111 F
503
504 The memory address is in the form m0000. For example, if
505 m is D, the address will be 0xD0000.
506
507 DO NOT SET THIS TO C0000, F0000, OR LESS THAN A0000!
508
509 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
510 S2 /--------------------------\
511 (Station Address) | 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 |
512 \--------------------------/
513
514 Setting Value
515 ------- -----
516 00000000 00
517 10000000 01
518 01000000 02
519 ...
520 01111111 FE
521 11111111 FF
522
523 Note that this is binary with the digits reversed!
524
525 DO NOT SET THIS TO 0 OR 255 (0xFF)!
526
527
528 *****************************************************************************
529
530 ** Standard Microsystems Corp (SMC) **
531 PC130E/PC270E (8-bit cards)
532 ---------------------------
533 - from Juergen Seifert <seifert@htwm.de>
534
535
536 STANDARD MICROSYSTEMS CORPORATION (SMC) ARCNET(R)-PC130E/PC270E
537 ===============================================================
538
539 This description has been written by Juergen Seifert <seifert@htwm.de>
540 using information from the following Original SMC Manual
541
542 "Configuration Guide for
543 ARCNET(R)-PC130E/PC270
544 Network Controller Boards
545 Pub. # 900.044A
546 June, 1989"
547
548 ARCNET is a registered trademark of the Datapoint Corporation
549 SMC is a registered trademark of the Standard Microsystems Corporation
550
551 The PC130E is an enhanced version of the PC130 board, is equipped with a
552 standard BNC female connector for connection to RG-62/U coax cable.
553 Since this board is designed both for point-to-point connection in star
554 networks and for connection to bus networks, it is downwardly compatible
555 with all the other standard boards designed for coax networks (that is,
556 the PC120, PC110 and PC100 star topology boards and the PC220, PC210 and
557 PC200 bus topology boards).
558
559 The PC270E is an enhanced version of the PC260 board, is equipped with two
560 modular RJ11-type jacks for connection to twisted pair wiring.
561 It can be used in a star or a daisy-chained network.
562
563
564 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
565 ________________________________________________________________
566 | | S1 | |
567 | |_________________| |
568 | Offs|Base |I/O Addr |
569 | RAM Addr | ___|
570 | ___ ___ CR3 |___|
571 | | \/ | CR4 |___|
572 | | PROM | ___|
573 | | | N | | 8
574 | | SOCKET | o | | 7
575 | |________| d | | 6
576 | ___________________ e | | 5
577 | | | A | S | 4
578 | |oo| EXT2 | | d | 2 | 3
579 | |oo| EXT1 | SMC | d | | 2
580 | |oo| ROM | 90C63 | r |___| 1
581 | |oo| IRQ7 | | |o| _____|
582 | |oo| IRQ5 | | |o| | J1 |
583 | |oo| IRQ4 | | STAR |_____|
584 | |oo| IRQ3 | | | J2 |
585 | |oo| IRQ2 |___________________| |_____|
586 |___ ______________|
587 | |
588 |_____________________________________________|
589
590 Legend:
591
592 SMC 90C63 ARCNET Controller / Transceiver /Logic
593 S1 1-3: I/O Base Address Select
594 4-6: Memory Base Address Select
595 7-8: RAM Offset Select
596 S2 1-8: Node ID Select
597 EXT Extended Timeout Select
598 ROM ROM Enable Select
599 STAR Selected - Star Topology (PC130E only)
600 Deselected - Bus Topology (PC130E only)
601 CR3/CR4 Diagnostic LEDs
602 J1 BNC RG62/U Connector (PC130E only)
603 J1 6-position Telephone Jack (PC270E only)
604 J2 6-position Telephone Jack (PC270E only)
605
606 Setting one of the switches to Off/Open means "1", On/Closed means "0".
607
608
609 Setting the Node ID
610 -------------------
611
612 The eight switches in group S2 are used to set the node ID.
613 These switches work in a way similar to the PC100-series cards; see that
614 entry for more information.
615
616
617 Setting the I/O Base Address
618 ----------------------------
619
620 The first three switches in switch group S1 are used to select one
621 of eight possible I/O Base addresses using the following table
622
623
624 Switch | Hex I/O
625 1 2 3 | Address
626 -------|--------
627 0 0 0 | 260
628 0 0 1 | 290
629 0 1 0 | 2E0 (Manufacturer's default)
630 0 1 1 | 2F0
631 1 0 0 | 300
632 1 0 1 | 350
633 1 1 0 | 380
634 1 1 1 | 3E0
635
636
637 Setting the Base Memory (RAM) buffer Address
638 --------------------------------------------
639
640 The memory buffer requires 2K of a 16K block of RAM. The base of this
641 16K block can be located in any of eight positions.
642 Switches 4-6 of switch group S1 select the Base of the 16K block.
643 Within that 16K address space, the buffer may be assigned any one of four
644 positions, determined by the offset, switches 7 and 8 of group S1.
645
646 Switch | Hex RAM | Hex ROM
647 4 5 6 7 8 | Address | Address *)
648 -----------|---------|-----------
649 0 0 0 0 0 | C0000 | C2000
650 0 0 0 0 1 | C0800 | C2000
651 0 0 0 1 0 | C1000 | C2000
652 0 0 0 1 1 | C1800 | C2000
653 | |
654 0 0 1 0 0 | C4000 | C6000
655 0 0 1 0 1 | C4800 | C6000
656 0 0 1 1 0 | C5000 | C6000
657 0 0 1 1 1 | C5800 | C6000
658 | |
659 0 1 0 0 0 | CC000 | CE000
660 0 1 0 0 1 | CC800 | CE000
661 0 1 0 1 0 | CD000 | CE000
662 0 1 0 1 1 | CD800 | CE000
663 | |
664 0 1 1 0 0 | D0000 | D2000 (Manufacturer's default)
665 0 1 1 0 1 | D0800 | D2000
666 0 1 1 1 0 | D1000 | D2000
667 0 1 1 1 1 | D1800 | D2000
668 | |
669 1 0 0 0 0 | D4000 | D6000
670 1 0 0 0 1 | D4800 | D6000
671 1 0 0 1 0 | D5000 | D6000
672 1 0 0 1 1 | D5800 | D6000
673 | |
674 1 0 1 0 0 | D8000 | DA000
675 1 0 1 0 1 | D8800 | DA000
676 1 0 1 1 0 | D9000 | DA000
677 1 0 1 1 1 | D9800 | DA000
678 | |
679 1 1 0 0 0 | DC000 | DE000
680 1 1 0 0 1 | DC800 | DE000
681 1 1 0 1 0 | DD000 | DE000
682 1 1 0 1 1 | DD800 | DE000
683 | |
684 1 1 1 0 0 | E0000 | E2000
685 1 1 1 0 1 | E0800 | E2000
686 1 1 1 1 0 | E1000 | E2000
687 1 1 1 1 1 | E1800 | E2000
688
689 *) To enable the 8K Boot PROM install the jumper ROM.
690 The default is jumper ROM not installed.
691
692
693 Setting the Timeouts and Interrupt
694 ----------------------------------
695
696 The jumpers labeled EXT1 and EXT2 are used to determine the timeout
697 parameters. These two jumpers are normally left open.
698
699 To select a hardware interrupt level set one (only one!) of the jumpers
700 IRQ2, IRQ3, IRQ4, IRQ5, IRQ7. The Manufacturer's default is IRQ2.
701
702
703 Configuring the PC130E for Star or Bus Topology
704 -----------------------------------------------
705
706 The single jumper labeled STAR is used to configure the PC130E board for
707 star or bus topology.
708 When the jumper is installed, the board may be used in a star network, when
709 it is removed, the board can be used in a bus topology.
710
711
712 Diagnostic LEDs
713 ---------------
714
715 Two diagnostic LEDs are visible on the rear bracket of the board.
716 The green LED monitors the network activity: the red one shows the
717 board activity:
718
719 Green | Status Red | Status
720 -------|------------------- ---------|-------------------
721 on | normal activity flash/on | data transfer
722 blink | reconfiguration off | no data transfer;
723 off | defective board or | incorrect memory or
724 | node ID is zero | I/O address
725
726
727 *****************************************************************************
728
729 ** Standard Microsystems Corp (SMC) **
730 PC500/PC550 Longboard (16-bit cards)
731 -------------------------------------
732 - from Juergen Seifert <seifert@htwm.de>
733
734
735 STANDARD MICROSYSTEMS CORPORATION (SMC) ARCNET-PC500/PC550 Long Board
736 =====================================================================
737
738 Note: There is another Version of the PC500 called Short Version, which
739 is different in hard- and software! The most important differences
740 are:
741 - The long board has no Shared memory.
742 - On the long board the selection of the interrupt is done by binary
743 coded switch, on the short board directly by jumper.
744
745 [Avery's note: pay special attention to that: the long board HAS NO SHARED
746 MEMORY. This means the current Linux-ARCnet driver can't use these cards.
747 I have obtained a PC500Longboard and will be doing some experiments on it in
748 the future, but don't hold your breath. Thanks again to Juergen Seifert for
749 his advice about this!]
750
751 This description has been written by Juergen Seifert <seifert@htwm.de>
752 using information from the following Original SMC Manual
753
754 "Configuration Guide for
755 SMC ARCNET-PC500/PC550
756 Series Network Controller Boards
757 Pub. # 900.033 Rev. A
758 November, 1989"
759
760 ARCNET is a registered trademark of the Datapoint Corporation
761 SMC is a registered trademark of the Standard Microsystems Corporation
762
763 The PC500 is equipped with a standard BNC female connector for connection
764 to RG-62/U coax cable.
765 The board is designed both for point-to-point connection in star networks
766 and for connection to bus networks.
767
768 The PC550 is equipped with two modular RJ11-type jacks for connection
769 to twisted pair wiring.
770 It can be used in a star or a daisy-chained (BUS) network.
771
772 1
773 0 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 6 5 4 3 2 1
774 ____________________________________________________________________
775 < | SW1 | | SW2 | |
776 > |_____________________| |_____________| |
777 < IRQ |I/O Addr |
778 > ___|
779 < CR4 |___|
780 > CR3 |___|
781 < ___|
782 > N | | 8
783 < o | | 7
784 > d | S | 6
785 < e | W | 5
786 > A | 3 | 4
787 < d | | 3
788 > d | | 2
789 < r |___| 1
790 > |o| _____|
791 < |o| | J1 |
792 > 3 1 JP6 |_____|
793 < |o|o| JP2 | J2 |
794 > |o|o| |_____|
795 < 4 2__ ______________|
796 > | | |
797 <____| |_____________________________________________|
798
799 Legend:
800
801 SW1 1-6: I/O Base Address Select
802 7-10: Interrupt Select
803 SW2 1-6: Reserved for Future Use
804 SW3 1-8: Node ID Select
805 JP2 1-4: Extended Timeout Select
806 JP6 Selected - Star Topology (PC500 only)
807 Deselected - Bus Topology (PC500 only)
808 CR3 Green Monitors Network Activity
809 CR4 Red Monitors Board Activity
810 J1 BNC RG62/U Connector (PC500 only)
811 J1 6-position Telephone Jack (PC550 only)
812 J2 6-position Telephone Jack (PC550 only)
813
814 Setting one of the switches to Off/Open means "1", On/Closed means "0".
815
816
817 Setting the Node ID
818 -------------------
819
820 The eight switches in group SW3 are used to set the node ID. Each node
821 attached to the network must have an unique node ID which must be
822 different from 0.
823 Switch 1 serves as the least significant bit (LSB).
824
825 The node ID is the sum of the values of all switches set to "1"
826 These values are:
827
828 Switch | Value
829 -------|-------
830 1 | 1
831 2 | 2
832 3 | 4
833 4 | 8
834 5 | 16
835 6 | 32
836 7 | 64
837 8 | 128
838
839 Some Examples:
840
841 Switch | Hex | Decimal
842 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 | Node ID | Node ID
843 ----------------|---------|---------
844 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 | not allowed
845 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 | 1 | 1
846 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 | 2 | 2
847 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 | 3 | 3
848 . . . | |
849 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 | 55 | 85
850 . . . | |
851 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 | AA | 170
852 . . . | |
853 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 1 | FD | 253
854 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 | FE | 254
855 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 | FF | 255
856
857
858 Setting the I/O Base Address
859 ----------------------------
860
861 The first six switches in switch group SW1 are used to select one
862 of 32 possible I/O Base addresses using the following table
863
864 Switch | Hex I/O
865 6 5 4 3 2 1 | Address
866 -------------|--------
867 0 1 0 0 0 0 | 200
868 0 1 0 0 0 1 | 210
869 0 1 0 0 1 0 | 220
870 0 1 0 0 1 1 | 230
871 0 1 0 1 0 0 | 240
872 0 1 0 1 0 1 | 250
873 0 1 0 1 1 0 | 260
874 0 1 0 1 1 1 | 270
875 0 1 1 0 0 0 | 280
876 0 1 1 0 0 1 | 290
877 0 1 1 0 1 0 | 2A0
878 0 1 1 0 1 1 | 2B0
879 0 1 1 1 0 0 | 2C0
880 0 1 1 1 0 1 | 2D0
881 0 1 1 1 1 0 | 2E0 (Manufacturer's default)
882 0 1 1 1 1 1 | 2F0
883 1 1 0 0 0 0 | 300
884 1 1 0 0 0 1 | 310
885 1 1 0 0 1 0 | 320
886 1 1 0 0 1 1 | 330
887 1 1 0 1 0 0 | 340
888 1 1 0 1 0 1 | 350
889 1 1 0 1 1 0 | 360
890 1 1 0 1 1 1 | 370
891 1 1 1 0 0 0 | 380
892 1 1 1 0 0 1 | 390
893 1 1 1 0 1 0 | 3A0
894 1 1 1 0 1 1 | 3B0
895 1 1 1 1 0 0 | 3C0
896 1 1 1 1 0 1 | 3D0
897 1 1 1 1 1 0 | 3E0
898 1 1 1 1 1 1 | 3F0
899
900
901 Setting the Interrupt
902 ---------------------
903
904 Switches seven through ten of switch group SW1 are used to select the
905 interrupt level. The interrupt level is binary coded, so selections
906 from 0 to 15 would be possible, but only the following eight values will
907 be supported: 3, 4, 5, 7, 9, 10, 11, 12.
908
909 Switch | IRQ
910 10 9 8 7 |
911 ---------|--------
912 0 0 1 1 | 3
913 0 1 0 0 | 4
914 0 1 0 1 | 5
915 0 1 1 1 | 7
916 1 0 0 1 | 9 (=2) (default)
917 1 0 1 0 | 10
918 1 0 1 1 | 11
919 1 1 0 0 | 12
920
921
922 Setting the Timeouts
923 --------------------
924
925 The two jumpers JP2 (1-4) are used to determine the timeout parameters.
926 These two jumpers are normally left open.
927 Refer to the COM9026 Data Sheet for alternate configurations.
928
929
930 Configuring the PC500 for Star or Bus Topology
931 ----------------------------------------------
932
933 The single jumper labeled JP6 is used to configure the PC500 board for
934 star or bus topology.
935 When the jumper is installed, the board may be used in a star network, when
936 it is removed, the board can be used in a bus topology.
937
938
939 Diagnostic LEDs
940 ---------------
941
942 Two diagnostic LEDs are visible on the rear bracket of the board.
943 The green LED monitors the network activity: the red one shows the
944 board activity:
945
946 Green | Status Red | Status
947 -------|------------------- ---------|-------------------
948 on | normal activity flash/on | data transfer
949 blink | reconfiguration off | no data transfer;
950 off | defective board or | incorrect memory or
951 | node ID is zero | I/O address
952
953
954 *****************************************************************************
955
956 ** SMC **
957 PC710 (8-bit card)
958 ------------------
959 - from J.S. van Oosten <jvoosten@compiler.tdcnet.nl>
960
961 Note: this data is gathered by experimenting and looking at info of other
962 cards. However, I'm sure I got 99% of the settings right.
963
964 The SMC710 card resembles the PC270 card, but is much more basic (i.e. no
965 LEDs, RJ11 jacks, etc.) and 8 bit. Here's a little drawing:
966
967 _______________________________________
968 | +---------+ +---------+ |____
969 | | S2 | | S1 | |
970 | +---------+ +---------+ |
971 | |
972 | +===+ __ |
973 | | R | | | X-tal ###___
974 | | O | |__| ####__'|
975 | | M | || ###
976 | +===+ |
977 | |
978 | .. JP1 +----------+ |
979 | .. | big chip | |
980 | .. | 90C63 | |
981 | .. | | |
982 | .. +----------+ |
983 ------- -----------
984 |||||||||||||||||||||
985
986 The row of jumpers at JP1 actually consists of 8 jumpers, (sometimes
987 labelled) the same as on the PC270, from top to bottom: EXT2, EXT1, ROM,
988 IRQ7, IRQ5, IRQ4, IRQ3, IRQ2 (gee, wonder what they would do? :-) )
989
990 S1 and S2 perform the same function as on the PC270, only their numbers
991 are swapped (S1 is the nodeaddress, S2 sets IO- and RAM-address).
992
993 I know it works when connected to a PC110 type ARCnet board.
994
995
996 *****************************************************************************
997
998 ** Possibly SMC **
999 LCS-8830(-T) (8 and 16-bit cards)
1000 ---------------------------------
1001 - from Mathias Katzer <mkatzer@HRZ.Uni-Bielefeld.DE>
1002 - Marek Michalkiewicz <marekm@i17linuxb.ists.pwr.wroc.pl> says the
1003 LCS-8830 is slightly different from LCS-8830-T. These are 8 bit, BUS
1004 only (the JP0 jumper is hardwired), and BNC only.
1005
1006 This is a LCS-8830-T made by SMC, I think ('SMC' only appears on one PLCC,
1007 nowhere else, not even on the few Xeroxed sheets from the manual).
1008
1009 SMC ARCnet Board Type LCS-8830-T
1010
1011 ------------------------------------
1012 | |
1013 | JP3 88 8 JP2 |
1014 | ##### | \ |
1015 | ##### ET1 ET2 ###|
1016 | 8 ###|
1017 | U3 SW 1 JP0 ###| Phone Jacks
1018 | -- ###|
1019 | | | |
1020 | | | SW2 |
1021 | | | |
1022 | | | ##### |
1023 | -- ##### #### BNC Connector
1024 | ####
1025 | 888888 JP1 |
1026 | 234567 |
1027 -- -------
1028 |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
1029 --------------------------
1030
1031
1032 SW1: DIP-Switches for Station Address
1033 SW2: DIP-Switches for Memory Base and I/O Base addresses
1034
1035 JP0: If closed, internal termination on (default open)
1036 JP1: IRQ Jumpers
1037 JP2: Boot-ROM enabled if closed
1038 JP3: Jumpers for response timeout
1039
1040 U3: Boot-ROM Socket
1041
1042
1043 ET1 ET2 Response Time Idle Time Reconfiguration Time
1044
1045 78 86 840
1046 X 285 316 1680
1047 X 563 624 1680
1048 X X 1130 1237 1680
1049
1050 (X means closed jumper)
1051
1052 (DIP-Switch downwards means "0")
1053
1054 The station address is binary-coded with SW1.
1055
1056 The I/O base address is coded with DIP-Switches 6,7 and 8 of SW2:
1057
1058 Switches Base
1059 678 Address
1060 000 260-26f
1061 100 290-29f
1062 010 2e0-2ef
1063 110 2f0-2ff
1064 001 300-30f
1065 101 350-35f
1066 011 380-38f
1067 111 3e0-3ef
1068
1069
1070 DIP Switches 1-5 of SW2 encode the RAM and ROM Address Range:
1071
1072 Switches RAM ROM
1073 12345 Address Range Address Range
1074 00000 C:0000-C:07ff C:2000-C:3fff
1075 10000 C:0800-C:0fff
1076 01000 C:1000-C:17ff
1077 11000 C:1800-C:1fff
1078 00100 C:4000-C:47ff C:6000-C:7fff
1079 10100 C:4800-C:4fff
1080 01100 C:5000-C:57ff
1081 11100 C:5800-C:5fff
1082 00010 C:C000-C:C7ff C:E000-C:ffff
1083 10010 C:C800-C:Cfff
1084 01010 C:D000-C:D7ff
1085 11010 C:D800-C:Dfff
1086 00110 D:0000-D:07ff D:2000-D:3fff
1087 10110 D:0800-D:0fff
1088 01110 D:1000-D:17ff
1089 11110 D:1800-D:1fff
1090 00001 D:4000-D:47ff D:6000-D:7fff
1091 10001 D:4800-D:4fff
1092 01001 D:5000-D:57ff
1093 11001 D:5800-D:5fff
1094 00101 D:8000-D:87ff D:A000-D:bfff
1095 10101 D:8800-D:8fff
1096 01101 D:9000-D:97ff
1097 11101 D:9800-D:9fff
1098 00011 D:C000-D:c7ff D:E000-D:ffff
1099 10011 D:C800-D:cfff
1100 01011 D:D000-D:d7ff
1101 11011 D:D800-D:dfff
1102 00111 E:0000-E:07ff E:2000-E:3fff
1103 10111 E:0800-E:0fff
1104 01111 E:1000-E:17ff
1105 11111 E:1800-E:1fff
1106
1107
1108 *****************************************************************************
1109
1110 ** PureData Corp **
1111 PDI507 (8-bit card)
1112 --------------------
1113 - from Mark Rejhon <mdrejhon@magi.com> (slight modifications by Avery)
1114 - Avery's note: I think PDI508 cards (but definitely NOT PDI508Plus cards)
1115 are mostly the same as this. PDI508Plus cards appear to be mainly
1116 software-configured.
1117
1118 Jumpers:
1119 There is a jumper array at the bottom of the card, near the edge
1120 connector. This array is labelled J1. They control the IRQs and
1121 something else. Put only one jumper on the IRQ pins.
1122
1123 ETS1, ETS2 are for timing on very long distance networks. See the
1124 more general information near the top of this file.
1125
1126 There is a J2 jumper on two pins. A jumper should be put on them,
1127 since it was already there when I got the card. I don't know what
1128 this jumper is for though.
1129
1130 There is a two-jumper array for J3. I don't know what it is for,
1131 but there were already two jumpers on it when I got the card. It's
1132 a six pin grid in a two-by-three fashion. The jumpers were
1133 configured as follows:
1134
1135 .-------.
1136 o | o o |
1137 :-------: ------> Accessible end of card with connectors
1138 o | o o | in this direction ------->
1139 `-------'
1140
1141 Carl de Billy <CARL@carainfo.com> explains J3 and J4:
1142
1143 J3 Diagram:
1144
1145 .-------.
1146 o | o o |
1147 :-------: TWIST Technology
1148 o | o o |
1149 `-------'
1150 .-------.
1151 | o o | o
1152 :-------: COAX Technology
1153 | o o | o
1154 `-------'
1155
1156 - If using coax cable in a bus topology the J4 jumper must be removed;
1157 place it on one pin.
1158
1159 - If using bus topology with twisted pair wiring move the J3
1160 jumpers so they connect the middle pin and the pins closest to the RJ11
1161 Connectors. Also the J4 jumper must be removed; place it on one pin of
1162 J4 jumper for storage.
1163
1164 - If using star topology with twisted pair wiring move the J3
1165 jumpers so they connect the middle pin and the pins closest to the RJ11
1166 connectors.
1167
1168
1169 DIP Switches:
1170
1171 The DIP switches accessible on the accessible end of the card while
1172 it is installed, is used to set the ARCnet address. There are 8
1173 switches. Use an address from 1 to 254.
1174
1175 Switch No.
1176 12345678 ARCnet address
1177 -----------------------------------------
1178 00000000 FF (Don't use this!)
1179 00000001 FE
1180 00000010 FD
1181 ....
1182 11111101 2
1183 11111110 1
1184 11111111 0 (Don't use this!)
1185
1186 There is another array of eight DIP switches at the top of the
1187 card. There are five labelled MS0-MS4 which seem to control the
1188 memory address, and another three labelled IO0-IO2 which seem to
1189 control the base I/O address of the card.
1190
1191 This was difficult to test by trial and error, and the I/O addresses
1192 are in a weird order. This was tested by setting the DIP switches,
1193 rebooting the computer, and attempting to load ARCETHER at various
1194 addresses (mostly between 0x200 and 0x400). The address that caused
1195 the red transmit LED to blink, is the one that I thought works.
1196
1197 Also, the address 0x3D0 seem to have a special meaning, since the
1198 ARCETHER packet driver loaded fine, but without the red LED
1199 blinking. I don't know what 0x3D0 is for though. I recommend using
1200 an address of 0x300 since Windows may not like addresses below
1201 0x300.
1202
1203 IO Switch No.
1204 210 I/O address
1205 -------------------------------
1206 111 0x260
1207 110 0x290
1208 101 0x2E0
1209 100 0x2F0
1210 011 0x300
1211 010 0x350
1212 001 0x380
1213 000 0x3E0
1214
1215 The memory switches set a reserved address space of 0x1000 bytes
1216 (0x100 segment units, or 4k). For example if I set an address of
1217 0xD000, it will use up addresses 0xD000 to 0xD100.
1218
1219 The memory switches were tested by booting using QEMM386 stealth,
1220 and using LOADHI to see what address automatically became excluded
1221 from the upper memory regions, and then attempting to load ARCETHER
1222 using these addresses.
1223
1224 I recommend using an ARCnet memory address of 0xD000, and putting
1225 the EMS page frame at 0xC000 while using QEMM stealth mode. That
1226 way, you get contiguous high memory from 0xD100 almost all the way
1227 the end of the megabyte.
1228
1229 Memory Switch 0 (MS0) didn't seem to work properly when set to OFF
1230 on my card. It could be malfunctioning on my card. Experiment with
1231 it ON first, and if it doesn't work, set it to OFF. (It may be a
1232 modifier for the 0x200 bit?)
1233
1234 MS Switch No.
1235 43210 Memory address
1236 --------------------------------
1237 00001 0xE100 (guessed - was not detected by QEMM)
1238 00011 0xE000 (guessed - was not detected by QEMM)
1239 00101 0xDD00
1240 00111 0xDC00
1241 01001 0xD900
1242 01011 0xD800
1243 01101 0xD500
1244 01111 0xD400
1245 10001 0xD100
1246 10011 0xD000
1247 10101 0xCD00
1248 10111 0xCC00
1249 11001 0xC900 (guessed - crashes tested system)
1250 11011 0xC800 (guessed - crashes tested system)
1251 11101 0xC500 (guessed - crashes tested system)
1252 11111 0xC400 (guessed - crashes tested system)
1253
1254
1255 *****************************************************************************
1256
1257 ** CNet Technology Inc. **
1258 120 Series (8-bit cards)
1259 ------------------------
1260 - from Juergen Seifert <seifert@htwm.de>
1261
1262
1263 CNET TECHNOLOGY INC. (CNet) ARCNET 120A SERIES
1264 ==============================================
1265
1266 This description has been written by Juergen Seifert <seifert@htwm.de>
1267 using information from the following Original CNet Manual
1268
1269 "ARCNET
1270 USER'S MANUAL
1271 for
1272 CN120A
1273 CN120AB
1274 CN120TP
1275 CN120ST
1276 CN120SBT
1277 P/N:12-01-0007
1278 Revision 3.00"
1279
1280 ARCNET is a registered trademark of the Datapoint Corporation
1281
1282 P/N 120A ARCNET 8 bit XT/AT Star
1283 P/N 120AB ARCNET 8 bit XT/AT Bus
1284 P/N 120TP ARCNET 8 bit XT/AT Twisted Pair
1285 P/N 120ST ARCNET 8 bit XT/AT Star, Twisted Pair
1286 P/N 120SBT ARCNET 8 bit XT/AT Star, Bus, Twisted Pair
1287
1288 __________________________________________________________________
1289 | |
1290 | ___|
1291 | LED |___|
1292 | ___|
1293 | N | | ID7
1294 | o | | ID6
1295 | d | S | ID5
1296 | e | W | ID4
1297 | ___________________ A | 2 | ID3
1298 | | | d | | ID2
1299 | | | 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 d | | ID1
1300 | | | _________________ r |___| ID0
1301 | | 90C65 || SW1 | ____|
1302 | JP 8 7 | ||_________________| | |
1303 | |o|o| JP1 | | | J2 |
1304 | |o|o| |oo| | | JP 1 1 1 | |
1305 | ______________ | | 0 1 2 |____|
1306 | | PROM | |___________________| |o|o|o| _____|
1307 | > SOCKET | JP 6 5 4 3 2 |o|o|o| | J1 |
1308 | |______________| |o|o|o|o|o| |o|o|o| |_____|
1309 |_____ |o|o|o|o|o| ______________|
1310 | |
1311 |_____________________________________________|
1312
1313 Legend:
1314
1315 90C65 ARCNET Probe
1316 S1 1-5: Base Memory Address Select
1317 6-8: Base I/O Address Select
1318 S2 1-8: Node ID Select (ID0-ID7)
1319 JP1 ROM Enable Select
1320 JP2 IRQ2
1321 JP3 IRQ3
1322 JP4 IRQ4
1323 JP5 IRQ5
1324 JP6 IRQ7
1325 JP7/JP8 ET1, ET2 Timeout Parameters
1326 JP10/JP11 Coax / Twisted Pair Select (CN120ST/SBT only)
1327 JP12 Terminator Select (CN120AB/ST/SBT only)
1328 J1 BNC RG62/U Connector (all except CN120TP)
1329 J2 Two 6-position Telephone Jack (CN120TP/ST/SBT only)
1330
1331 Setting one of the switches to Off means "1", On means "0".
1332
1333
1334 Setting the Node ID
1335 -------------------
1336
1337 The eight switches in SW2 are used to set the node ID. Each node attached
1338 to the network must have an unique node ID which must be different from 0.
1339 Switch 1 (ID0) serves as the least significant bit (LSB).
1340
1341 The node ID is the sum of the values of all switches set to "1"
1342 These values are:
1343
1344 Switch | Label | Value
1345 -------|-------|-------
1346 1 | ID0 | 1
1347 2 | ID1 | 2
1348 3 | ID2 | 4
1349 4 | ID3 | 8
1350 5 | ID4 | 16
1351 6 | ID5 | 32
1352 7 | ID6 | 64
1353 8 | ID7 | 128
1354
1355 Some Examples:
1356
1357 Switch | Hex | Decimal
1358 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 | Node ID | Node ID
1359 ----------------|---------|---------
1360 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 | not allowed
1361 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 | 1 | 1
1362 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 | 2 | 2
1363 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 | 3 | 3
1364 . . . | |
1365 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 | 55 | 85
1366 . . . | |
1367 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 | AA | 170
1368 . . . | |
1369 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 1 | FD | 253
1370 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 | FE | 254
1371 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 | FF | 255
1372
1373
1374 Setting the I/O Base Address
1375 ----------------------------
1376
1377 The last three switches in switch block SW1 are used to select one
1378 of eight possible I/O Base addresses using the following table
1379
1380
1381 Switch | Hex I/O
1382 6 7 8 | Address
1383 ------------|--------
1384 ON ON ON | 260
1385 OFF ON ON | 290
1386 ON OFF ON | 2E0 (Manufacturer's default)
1387 OFF OFF ON | 2F0
1388 ON ON OFF | 300
1389 OFF ON OFF | 350
1390 ON OFF OFF | 380
1391 OFF OFF OFF | 3E0
1392
1393
1394 Setting the Base Memory (RAM) buffer Address
1395 --------------------------------------------
1396
1397 The memory buffer (RAM) requires 2K. The base of this buffer can be
1398 located in any of eight positions. The address of the Boot Prom is
1399 memory base + 8K or memory base + 0x2000.
1400 Switches 1-5 of switch block SW1 select the Memory Base address.
1401
1402 Switch | Hex RAM | Hex ROM
1403 1 2 3 4 5 | Address | Address *)
1404 --------------------|---------|-----------
1405 ON ON ON ON ON | C0000 | C2000
1406 ON ON OFF ON ON | C4000 | C6000
1407 ON ON ON OFF ON | CC000 | CE000
1408 ON ON OFF OFF ON | D0000 | D2000 (Manufacturer's default)
1409 ON ON ON ON OFF | D4000 | D6000
1410 ON ON OFF ON OFF | D8000 | DA000
1411 ON ON ON OFF OFF | DC000 | DE000
1412 ON ON OFF OFF OFF | E0000 | E2000
1413
1414 *) To enable the Boot ROM install the jumper JP1
1415
1416 Note: Since the switches 1 and 2 are always set to ON it may be possible
1417 that they can be used to add an offset of 2K, 4K or 6K to the base
1418 address, but this feature is not documented in the manual and I
1419 haven't tested it yet.
1420
1421
1422 Setting the Interrupt Line
1423 --------------------------
1424
1425 To select a hardware interrupt level install one (only one!) of the jumpers
1426 JP2, JP3, JP4, JP5, JP6. JP2 is the default.
1427
1428 Jumper | IRQ
1429 -------|-----
1430 2 | 2
1431 3 | 3
1432 4 | 4
1433 5 | 5
1434 6 | 7
1435
1436
1437 Setting the Internal Terminator on CN120AB/TP/SBT
1438 --------------------------------------------------
1439
1440 The jumper JP12 is used to enable the internal terminator.
1441
1442 -----
1443 0 | 0 |
1444 ----- ON | | ON
1445 | 0 | | 0 |
1446 | | OFF ----- OFF
1447 | 0 | 0
1448 -----
1449 Terminator Terminator
1450 disabled enabled
1451
1452
1453 Selecting the Connector Type on CN120ST/SBT
1454 -------------------------------------------
1455
1456 JP10 JP11 JP10 JP11
1457 ----- -----
1458 0 0 | 0 | | 0 |
1459 ----- ----- | | | |
1460 | 0 | | 0 | | 0 | | 0 |
1461 | | | | ----- -----
1462 | 0 | | 0 | 0 0
1463 ----- -----
1464 Coaxial Cable Twisted Pair Cable
1465 (Default)
1466
1467
1468 Setting the Timeout Parameters
1469 ------------------------------
1470
1471 The jumpers labeled EXT1 and EXT2 are used to determine the timeout
1472 parameters. These two jumpers are normally left open.
1473
1474
1475
1476 *****************************************************************************
1477
1478 ** CNet Technology Inc. **
1479 160 Series (16-bit cards)
1480 -------------------------
1481 - from Juergen Seifert <seifert@htwm.de>
1482
1483 CNET TECHNOLOGY INC. (CNet) ARCNET 160A SERIES
1484 ==============================================
1485
1486 This description has been written by Juergen Seifert <seifert@htwm.de>
1487 using information from the following Original CNet Manual
1488
1489 "ARCNET
1490 USER'S MANUAL
1491 for
1492 CN160A
1493 CN160AB
1494 CN160TP
1495 P/N:12-01-0006
1496 Revision 3.00"
1497
1498 ARCNET is a registered trademark of the Datapoint Corporation
1499
1500 P/N 160A ARCNET 16 bit XT/AT Star
1501 P/N 160AB ARCNET 16 bit XT/AT Bus
1502 P/N 160TP ARCNET 16 bit XT/AT Twisted Pair
1503
1504 ___________________________________________________________________
1505 < _________________________ ___|
1506 > |oo| JP2 | | LED |___|
1507 < |oo| JP1 | 9026 | LED |___|
1508 > |_________________________| ___|
1509 < N | | ID7
1510 > 1 o | | ID6
1511 < 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 d | S | ID5
1512 > _______________ _____________________ e | W | ID4
1513 < | PROM | | SW1 | A | 2 | ID3
1514 > > SOCKET | |_____________________| d | | ID2
1515 < |_______________| | IO-Base | MEM | d | | ID1
1516 > r |___| ID0
1517 < ____|
1518 > | |
1519 < | J1 |
1520 > | |
1521 < |____|
1522 > 1 1 1 1 |
1523 < 3 4 5 6 7 JP 8 9 0 1 2 3 |
1524 > |o|o|o|o|o| |o|o|o|o|o|o| |
1525 < |o|o|o|o|o| __ |o|o|o|o|o|o| ___________|
1526 > | | |
1527 <____________| |_______________________________________|
1528
1529 Legend:
1530
1531 9026 ARCNET Probe
1532 SW1 1-6: Base I/O Address Select
1533 7-10: Base Memory Address Select
1534 SW2 1-8: Node ID Select (ID0-ID7)
1535 JP1/JP2 ET1, ET2 Timeout Parameters
1536 JP3-JP13 Interrupt Select
1537 J1 BNC RG62/U Connector (CN160A/AB only)
1538 J1 Two 6-position Telephone Jack (CN160TP only)
1539 LED
1540
1541 Setting one of the switches to Off means "1", On means "0".
1542
1543
1544 Setting the Node ID
1545 -------------------
1546
1547 The eight switches in SW2 are used to set the node ID. Each node attached
1548 to the network must have an unique node ID which must be different from 0.
1549 Switch 1 (ID0) serves as the least significant bit (LSB).
1550
1551 The node ID is the sum of the values of all switches set to "1"
1552 These values are:
1553
1554 Switch | Label | Value
1555 -------|-------|-------
1556 1 | ID0 | 1
1557 2 | ID1 | 2
1558 3 | ID2 | 4
1559 4 | ID3 | 8
1560 5 | ID4 | 16
1561 6 | ID5 | 32
1562 7 | ID6 | 64
1563 8 | ID7 | 128
1564
1565 Some Examples:
1566
1567 Switch | Hex | Decimal
1568 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 | Node ID | Node ID
1569 ----------------|---------|---------
1570 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 | not allowed
1571 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 | 1 | 1
1572 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 | 2 | 2
1573 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 | 3 | 3
1574 . . . | |
1575 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 | 55 | 85
1576 . . . | |
1577 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 | AA | 170
1578 . . . | |
1579 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 1 | FD | 253
1580 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 | FE | 254
1581 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 | FF | 255
1582
1583
1584 Setting the I/O Base Address
1585 ----------------------------
1586
1587 The first six switches in switch block SW1 are used to select the I/O Base
1588 address using the following table:
1589
1590 Switch | Hex I/O
1591 1 2 3 4 5 6 | Address
1592 ------------------------|--------
1593 OFF ON ON OFF OFF ON | 260
1594 OFF ON OFF ON ON OFF | 290
1595 OFF ON OFF OFF OFF ON | 2E0 (Manufacturer's default)
1596 OFF ON OFF OFF OFF OFF | 2F0
1597 OFF OFF ON ON ON ON | 300
1598 OFF OFF ON OFF ON OFF | 350
1599 OFF OFF OFF ON ON ON | 380
1600 OFF OFF OFF OFF OFF ON | 3E0
1601
1602 Note: Other IO-Base addresses seem to be selectable, but only the above
1603 combinations are documented.
1604
1605
1606 Setting the Base Memory (RAM) buffer Address
1607 --------------------------------------------
1608
1609 The switches 7-10 of switch block SW1 are used to select the Memory
1610 Base address of the RAM (2K) and the PROM.
1611
1612 Switch | Hex RAM | Hex ROM
1613 7 8 9 10 | Address | Address
1614 ----------------|---------|-----------
1615 OFF OFF ON ON | C0000 | C8000
1616 OFF OFF ON OFF | D0000 | D8000 (Default)
1617 OFF OFF OFF ON | E0000 | E8000
1618
1619 Note: Other MEM-Base addresses seem to be selectable, but only the above
1620 combinations are documented.
1621
1622
1623 Setting the Interrupt Line
1624 --------------------------
1625
1626 To select a hardware interrupt level install one (only one!) of the jumpers
1627 JP3 through JP13 using the following table:
1628
1629 Jumper | IRQ
1630 -------|-----------------
1631 3 | 14
1632 4 | 15
1633 5 | 12
1634 6 | 11
1635 7 | 10
1636 8 | 3
1637 9 | 4
1638 10 | 5
1639 11 | 6
1640 12 | 7
1641 13 | 2 (=9) Default!
1642
1643 Note: - Do not use JP11=IRQ6, it may conflict with your Floppy Disk
1644 Controller
1645 - Use JP3=IRQ14 only, if you don't have an IDE-, MFM-, or RLL-
1646 Hard Disk, it may conflict with their controllers
1647
1648
1649 Setting the Timeout Parameters
1650 ------------------------------
1651
1652 The jumpers labeled JP1 and JP2 are used to determine the timeout
1653 parameters. These two jumpers are normally left open.
1654
1655
1656 *****************************************************************************
1657
1658 ** Lantech **
1659 8-bit card, unknown model
1660 -------------------------
1661 - from Vlad Lungu <vlungu@ugal.ro> - his e-mail address seemed broken at
1662 the time I tried to reach him. Sorry Vlad, if you didn't get my reply.
1663
1664 ________________________________________________________________
1665 | 1 8 |
1666 | ___________ __|
1667 | | SW1 | LED |__|
1668 | |__________| |
1669 | ___|
1670 | _____________________ |S | 8
1671 | | | |W |
1672 | | | |2 |
1673 | | | |__| 1
1674 | | UM9065L | |o| JP4 ____|____
1675 | | | |o| | CN |
1676 | | | |________|
1677 | | | |
1678 | |___________________| |
1679 | |
1680 | |
1681 | _____________ |
1682 | | | |
1683 | | PROM | |ooooo| JP6 |
1684 | |____________| |ooooo| |
1685 |_____________ _ _|
1686 |____________________________________________| |__|
1687
1688
1689 UM9065L : ARCnet Controller
1690
1691 SW 1 : Shared Memory Address and I/O Base
1692
1693 ON=0
1694
1695 12345|Memory Address
1696 -----|--------------
1697 00001| D4000
1698 00010| CC000
1699 00110| D0000
1700 01110| D1000
1701 01101| D9000
1702 10010| CC800
1703 10011| DC800
1704 11110| D1800
1705
1706 It seems that the bits are considered in reverse order. Also, you must
1707 observe that some of those addresses are unusual and I didn't probe them; I
1708 used a memory dump in DOS to identify them. For the 00000 configuration and
1709 some others that I didn't write here the card seems to conflict with the
1710 video card (an S3 GENDAC). I leave the full decoding of those addresses to
1711 you.
1712
1713 678| I/O Address
1714 ---|------------
1715 000| 260
1716 001| failed probe
1717 010| 2E0
1718 011| 380
1719 100| 290
1720 101| 350
1721 110| failed probe
1722 111| 3E0
1723
1724 SW 2 : Node ID (binary coded)
1725
1726 JP 4 : Boot PROM enable CLOSE - enabled
1727 OPEN - disabled
1728
1729 JP 6 : IRQ set (ONLY ONE jumper on 1-5 for IRQ 2-6)
1730
1731
1732 *****************************************************************************
1733
1734 ** Acer **
1735 8-bit card, Model 5210-003
1736 --------------------------
1737 - from Vojtech Pavlik <vojtech@suse.cz> using portions of the existing
1738 arcnet-hardware file.
1739
1740 This is a 90C26 based card. Its configuration seems similar to the SMC
1741 PC100, but has some additional jumpers I don't know the meaning of.
1742
1743 __
1744 | |
1745 ___________|__|_________________________
1746 | | | |
1747 | | BNC | |
1748 | |______| ___|
1749 | _____________________ |___
1750 | | | |
1751 | | Hybrid IC | |
1752 | | | o|o J1 |
1753 | |_____________________| 8|8 |
1754 | 8|8 J5 |
1755 | o|o |
1756 | 8|8 |
1757 |__ 8|8 |
1758 (|__| LED o|o |
1759 | 8|8 |
1760 | 8|8 J15 |
1761 | |
1762 | _____ |
1763 | | | _____ |
1764 | | | | | ___|
1765 | | | | | |
1766 | _____ | ROM | | UFS | |
1767 | | | | | | | |
1768 | | | ___ | | | | |
1769 | | | | | |__.__| |__.__| |
1770 | | NCR | |XTL| _____ _____ |
1771 | | | |___| | | | | |
1772 | |90C26| | | | | |
1773 | | | | RAM | | UFS | |
1774 | | | J17 o|o | | | | |
1775 | | | J16 o|o | | | | |
1776 | |__.__| |__.__| |__.__| |
1777 | ___ |
1778 | | |8 |
1779 | |SW2| |
1780 | | | |
1781 | |___|1 |
1782 | ___ |
1783 | | |10 J18 o|o |
1784 | | | o|o |
1785 | |SW1| o|o |
1786 | | | J21 o|o |
1787 | |___|1 |
1788 | |
1789 |____________________________________|
1790
1791
1792 Legend:
1793
1794 90C26 ARCNET Chip
1795 XTL 20 MHz Crystal
1796 SW1 1-6 Base I/O Address Select
1797 7-10 Memory Address Select
1798 SW2 1-8 Node ID Select (ID0-ID7)
1799 J1-J5 IRQ Select
1800 J6-J21 Unknown (Probably extra timeouts & ROM enable ...)
1801 LED1 Activity LED
1802 BNC Coax connector (STAR ARCnet)
1803 RAM 2k of SRAM
1804 ROM Boot ROM socket
1805 UFS Unidentified Flying Sockets
1806
1807
1808 Setting the Node ID
1809 -------------------
1810
1811 The eight switches in SW2 are used to set the node ID. Each node attached
1812 to the network must have an unique node ID which must not be 0.
1813 Switch 1 (ID0) serves as the least significant bit (LSB).
1814
1815 Setting one of the switches to OFF means "1", ON means "0".
1816
1817 The node ID is the sum of the values of all switches set to "1"
1818 These values are:
1819
1820 Switch | Value
1821 -------|-------
1822 1 | 1
1823 2 | 2
1824 3 | 4
1825 4 | 8
1826 5 | 16
1827 6 | 32
1828 7 | 64
1829 8 | 128
1830
1831 Don't set this to 0 or 255; these values are reserved.
1832
1833
1834 Setting the I/O Base Address
1835 ----------------------------
1836
1837 The switches 1 to 6 of switch block SW1 are used to select one
1838 of 32 possible I/O Base addresses using the following tables
1839
1840 | Hex
1841 Switch | Value
1842 -------|-------
1843 1 | 200
1844 2 | 100
1845 3 | 80
1846 4 | 40
1847 5 | 20
1848 6 | 10
1849
1850 The I/O address is sum of all switches set to "1". Remember that
1851 the I/O address space bellow 0x200 is RESERVED for mainboard, so
1852 switch 1 should be ALWAYS SET TO OFF.
1853
1854
1855 Setting the Base Memory (RAM) buffer Address
1856 --------------------------------------------
1857
1858 The memory buffer (RAM) requires 2K. The base of this buffer can be
1859 located in any of sixteen positions. However, the addresses below
1860 A0000 are likely to cause system hang because there's main RAM.
1861
1862 Jumpers 7-10 of switch block SW1 select the Memory Base address.
1863
1864 Switch | Hex RAM
1865 7 8 9 10 | Address
1866 ----------------|---------
1867 OFF OFF OFF OFF | F0000 (conflicts with main BIOS)
1868 OFF OFF OFF ON | E0000
1869 OFF OFF ON OFF | D0000
1870 OFF OFF ON ON | C0000 (conflicts with video BIOS)
1871 OFF ON OFF OFF | B0000 (conflicts with mono video)
1872 OFF ON OFF ON | A0000 (conflicts with graphics)
1873
1874
1875 Setting the Interrupt Line
1876 --------------------------
1877
1878 Jumpers 1-5 of the jumper block J1 control the IRQ level. ON means
1879 shorted, OFF means open.
1880
1881 Jumper | IRQ
1882 1 2 3 4 5 |
1883 ----------------------------
1884 ON OFF OFF OFF OFF | 7
1885 OFF ON OFF OFF OFF | 5
1886 OFF OFF ON OFF OFF | 4
1887 OFF OFF OFF ON OFF | 3
1888 OFF OFF OFF OFF ON | 2
1889
1890
1891 Unknown jumpers & sockets
1892 -------------------------
1893
1894 I know nothing about these. I just guess that J16&J17 are timeout
1895 jumpers and maybe one of J18-J21 selects ROM. Also J6-J10 and
1896 J11-J15 are connecting IRQ2-7 to some pins on the UFSs. I can't
1897 guess the purpose.
1898
1899
1900 *****************************************************************************
1901
1902 ** Datapoint? **
1903 LAN-ARC-8, an 8-bit card
1904 ------------------------
1905 - from Vojtech Pavlik <vojtech@suse.cz>
1906
1907 This is another SMC 90C65-based ARCnet card. I couldn't identify the
1908 manufacturer, but it might be DataPoint, because the card has the
1909 original arcNet logo in its upper right corner.
1910
1911 _______________________________________________________
1912 | _________ |
1913 | | SW2 | ON arcNet |
1914 | |_________| OFF ___|
1915 | _____________ 1 ______ 8 | | 8
1916 | | | SW1 | XTAL | ____________ | S |
1917 | > RAM (2k) | |______|| | | W |
1918 | |_____________| | H | | 3 |
1919 | _________|_____ y | |___| 1
1920 | _________ | | |b | |
1921 | |_________| | | |r | |
1922 | | SMC | |i | |
1923 | | 90C65| |d | |
1924 | _________ | | | | |
1925 | | SW1 | ON | | |I | |
1926 | |_________| OFF |_________|_____/C | _____|
1927 | 1 8 | | | |___
1928 | ______________ | | | BNC |___|
1929 | | | |____________| |_____|
1930 | > EPROM SOCKET | _____________ |
1931 | |______________| |_____________| |
1932 | ______________|
1933 | |
1934 |________________________________________|
1935
1936 Legend:
1937
1938 90C65 ARCNET Chip
1939 SW1 1-5: Base Memory Address Select
1940 6-8: Base I/O Address Select
1941 SW2 1-8: Node ID Select
1942 SW3 1-5: IRQ Select
1943 6-7: Extra Timeout
1944 8 : ROM Enable
1945 BNC Coax connector
1946 XTAL 20 MHz Crystal
1947
1948
1949 Setting the Node ID
1950 -------------------
1951
1952 The eight switches in SW3 are used to set the node ID. Each node attached
1953 to the network must have an unique node ID which must not be 0.
1954 Switch 1 serves as the least significant bit (LSB).
1955
1956 Setting one of the switches to Off means "1", On means "0".
1957
1958 The node ID is the sum of the values of all switches set to "1"
1959 These values are:
1960
1961 Switch | Value
1962 -------|-------
1963 1 | 1
1964 2 | 2
1965 3 | 4
1966 4 | 8
1967 5 | 16
1968 6 | 32
1969 7 | 64
1970 8 | 128
1971
1972
1973 Setting the I/O Base Address
1974 ----------------------------
1975
1976 The last three switches in switch block SW1 are used to select one
1977 of eight possible I/O Base addresses using the following table
1978
1979
1980 Switch | Hex I/O
1981 6 7 8 | Address
1982 ------------|--------
1983 ON ON ON | 260
1984 OFF ON ON | 290
1985 ON OFF ON | 2E0 (Manufacturer's default)
1986 OFF OFF ON | 2F0
1987 ON ON OFF | 300
1988 OFF ON OFF | 350
1989 ON OFF OFF | 380
1990 OFF OFF OFF | 3E0
1991
1992
1993 Setting the Base Memory (RAM) buffer Address
1994 --------------------------------------------
1995
1996 The memory buffer (RAM) requires 2K. The base of this buffer can be
1997 located in any of eight positions. The address of the Boot Prom is
1998 memory base + 0x2000.
1999 Jumpers 3-5 of switch block SW1 select the Memory Base address.
2000
2001 Switch | Hex RAM | Hex ROM
2002 1 2 3 4 5 | Address | Address *)
2003 --------------------|---------|-----------
2004 ON ON ON ON ON | C0000 | C2000
2005 ON ON OFF ON ON | C4000 | C6000
2006 ON ON ON OFF ON | CC000 | CE000
2007 ON ON OFF OFF ON | D0000 | D2000 (Manufacturer's default)
2008 ON ON ON ON OFF | D4000 | D6000
2009 ON ON OFF ON OFF | D8000 | DA000
2010 ON ON ON OFF OFF | DC000 | DE000
2011 ON ON OFF OFF OFF | E0000 | E2000
2012
2013 *) To enable the Boot ROM set the switch 8 of switch block SW3 to position ON.
2014
2015 The switches 1 and 2 probably add 0x0800 and 0x1000 to RAM base address.
2016
2017
2018 Setting the Interrupt Line
2019 --------------------------
2020
2021 Switches 1-5 of the switch block SW3 control the IRQ level.
2022
2023 Jumper | IRQ
2024 1 2 3 4 5 |
2025 ----------------------------
2026 ON OFF OFF OFF OFF | 3
2027 OFF ON OFF OFF OFF | 4
2028 OFF OFF ON OFF OFF | 5
2029 OFF OFF OFF ON OFF | 7
2030 OFF OFF OFF OFF ON | 2
2031
2032
2033 Setting the Timeout Parameters
2034 ------------------------------
2035
2036 The switches 6-7 of the switch block SW3 are used to determine the timeout
2037 parameters. These two switches are normally left in the OFF position.
2038
2039
2040 *****************************************************************************
2041
2042 ** Topware **
2043 8-bit card, TA-ARC/10
2044 -------------------------
2045 - from Vojtech Pavlik <vojtech@suse.cz>
2046
2047 This is another very similar 90C65 card. Most of the switches and jumpers
2048 are the same as on other clones.
2049
2050 _____________________________________________________________________
2051 | ___________ | | ______ |
2052 | |SW2 NODE ID| | | | XTAL | |
2053 | |___________| | Hybrid IC | |______| |
2054 | ___________ | | __|
2055 | |SW1 MEM+I/O| |_________________________| LED1|__|)
2056 | |___________| 1 2 |
2057 | J3 |o|o| TIMEOUT ______|
2058 | ______________ |o|o| | |
2059 | | | ___________________ | RJ |
2060 | > EPROM SOCKET | | \ |------|
2061 |J2 |______________| | | | |
2062 ||o| | | |______|
2063 ||o| ROM ENABLE | SMC | _________ |
2064 | _____________ | 90C65 | |_________| _____|
2065 | | | | | | |___
2066 | > RAM (2k) | | | | BNC |___|
2067 | |_____________| | | |_____|
2068 | |____________________| |
2069 | ________ IRQ 2 3 4 5 7 ___________ |
2070 ||________| |o|o|o|o|o| |___________| |
2071 |________ J1|o|o|o|o|o| ______________|
2072 | |
2073 |_____________________________________________|
2074
2075 Legend:
2076
2077 90C65 ARCNET Chip
2078 XTAL 20 MHz Crystal
2079 SW1 1-5 Base Memory Address Select
2080 6-8 Base I/O Address Select
2081 SW2 1-8 Node ID Select (ID0-ID7)
2082 J1 IRQ Select
2083 J2 ROM Enable
2084 J3 Extra Timeout
2085 LED1 Activity LED
2086 BNC Coax connector (BUS ARCnet)
2087 RJ Twisted Pair Connector (daisy chain)
2088
2089
2090 Setting the Node ID
2091 -------------------
2092
2093 The eight switches in SW2 are used to set the node ID. Each node attached to
2094 the network must have an unique node ID which must not be 0. Switch 1 (ID0)
2095 serves as the least significant bit (LSB).
2096
2097 Setting one of the switches to Off means "1", On means "0".
2098
2099 The node ID is the sum of the values of all switches set to "1"
2100 These values are:
2101
2102 Switch | Label | Value
2103 -------|-------|-------
2104 1 | ID0 | 1
2105 2 | ID1 | 2
2106 3 | ID2 | 4
2107 4 | ID3 | 8
2108 5 | ID4 | 16
2109 6 | ID5 | 32
2110 7 | ID6 | 64
2111 8 | ID7 | 128
2112
2113 Setting the I/O Base Address
2114 ----------------------------
2115
2116 The last three switches in switch block SW1 are used to select one
2117 of eight possible I/O Base addresses using the following table:
2118
2119
2120 Switch | Hex I/O
2121 6 7 8 | Address
2122 ------------|--------
2123 ON ON ON | 260 (Manufacturer's default)
2124 OFF ON ON | 290
2125 ON OFF ON | 2E0
2126 OFF OFF ON | 2F0
2127 ON ON OFF | 300
2128 OFF ON OFF | 350
2129 ON OFF OFF | 380
2130 OFF OFF OFF | 3E0
2131
2132
2133 Setting the Base Memory (RAM) buffer Address
2134 --------------------------------------------
2135
2136 The memory buffer (RAM) requires 2K. The base of this buffer can be
2137 located in any of eight positions. The address of the Boot Prom is
2138 memory base + 0x2000.
2139 Jumpers 3-5 of switch block SW1 select the Memory Base address.
2140
2141 Switch | Hex RAM | Hex ROM
2142 1 2 3 4 5 | Address | Address *)
2143 --------------------|---------|-----------
2144 ON ON ON ON ON | C0000 | C2000
2145 ON ON OFF ON ON | C4000 | C6000 (Manufacturer's default)
2146 ON ON ON OFF ON | CC000 | CE000
2147 ON ON OFF OFF ON | D0000 | D2000
2148 ON ON ON ON OFF | D4000 | D6000
2149 ON ON OFF ON OFF | D8000 | DA000
2150 ON ON ON OFF OFF | DC000 | DE000
2151 ON ON OFF OFF OFF | E0000 | E2000
2152
2153 *) To enable the Boot ROM short the jumper J2.
2154
2155 The jumpers 1 and 2 probably add 0x0800 and 0x1000 to RAM address.
2156
2157
2158 Setting the Interrupt Line
2159 --------------------------
2160
2161 Jumpers 1-5 of the jumper block J1 control the IRQ level. ON means
2162 shorted, OFF means open.
2163
2164 Jumper | IRQ
2165 1 2 3 4 5 |
2166 ----------------------------
2167 ON OFF OFF OFF OFF | 2
2168 OFF ON OFF OFF OFF | 3
2169 OFF OFF ON OFF OFF | 4
2170 OFF OFF OFF ON OFF | 5
2171 OFF OFF OFF OFF ON | 7
2172
2173
2174 Setting the Timeout Parameters
2175 ------------------------------
2176
2177 The jumpers J3 are used to set the timeout parameters. These two
2178 jumpers are normally left open.
2179
2180
2181 *****************************************************************************
2182
2183 ** Thomas-Conrad **
2184 Model #500-6242-0097 REV A (8-bit card)
2185 ---------------------------------------
2186 - from Lars Karlsson <100617.3473@compuserve.com>
2187
2188 ________________________________________________________
2189 | ________ ________ |_____
2190 | |........| |........| |
2191 | |________| |________| ___|
2192 | SW 3 SW 1 | |
2193 | Base I/O Base Addr. Station | |
2194 | address | |
2195 | ______ switch | |
2196 | | | | |
2197 | | | |___|
2198 | | | ______ |___._
2199 | |______| |______| ____| BNC
2200 | Jumper- _____| Connector
2201 | Main chip block _ __| '
2202 | | | | RJ Connector
2203 | |_| | with 110 Ohm
2204 | |__ Terminator
2205 | ___________ __|
2206 | |...........| | RJ-jack
2207 | |...........| _____ | (unused)
2208 | |___________| |_____| |__
2209 | Boot PROM socket IRQ-jumpers |_ Diagnostic
2210 |________ __ _| LED (red)
2211 | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
2212 | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |________|
2213 |
2214 |
2215
2216 And here are the settings for some of the switches and jumpers on the cards.
2217
2218
2219 I/O
2220
2221 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
2222
2223 2E0----- 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1
2224 2F0----- 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0
2225 300----- 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 1
2226 350----- 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 0
2227
2228 "0" in the above example means switch is off "1" means that it is on.
2229
2230
2231 ShMem address.
2232
2233 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
2234
2235 CX00--0 0 1 1 | | |
2236 DX00--0 0 1 0 |
2237 X000--------- 1 1 |
2238 X400--------- 1 0 |
2239 X800--------- 0 1 |
2240 XC00--------- 0 0
2241 ENHANCED----------- 1
2242 COMPATIBLE--------- 0
2243
2244
2245 IRQ
2246
2247
2248 3 4 5 7 2
2249 . . . . .
2250 . . . . .
2251
2252
2253 There is a DIP-switch with 8 switches, used to set the shared memory address
2254 to be used. The first 6 switches set the address, the 7th doesn't have any
2255 function, and the 8th switch is used to select "compatible" or "enhanced".
2256 When I got my two cards, one of them had this switch set to "enhanced". That
2257 card didn't work at all, it wasn't even recognized by the driver. The other
2258 card had this switch set to "compatible" and it behaved absolutely normally. I
2259 guess that the switch on one of the cards, must have been changed accidentally
2260 when the card was taken out of its former host. The question remains
2261 unanswered, what is the purpose of the "enhanced" position?
2262
2263 [Avery's note: "enhanced" probably either disables shared memory (use IO
2264 ports instead) or disables IO ports (use memory addresses instead). This
2265 varies by the type of card involved. I fail to see how either of these
2266 enhance anything. Send me more detailed information about this mode, or
2267 just use "compatible" mode instead.]
2268
2269
2270 *****************************************************************************
2271
2272 ** Waterloo Microsystems Inc. ?? **
2273 8-bit card (C) 1985
2274 -------------------
2275 - from Robert Michael Best <rmb117@cs.usask.ca>
2276
2277 [Avery's note: these don't work with my driver for some reason. These cards
2278 SEEM to have settings similar to the PDI508Plus, which is
2279 software-configured and doesn't work with my driver either. The "Waterloo
2280 chip" is a boot PROM, probably designed specifically for the University of
2281 Waterloo. If you have any further information about this card, please
2282 e-mail me.]
2283
2284 The probe has not been able to detect the card on any of the J2 settings,
2285 and I tried them again with the "Waterloo" chip removed.
2286
2287 _____________________________________________________________________
2288 | \/ \/ ___ __ __ |
2289 | C4 C4 |^| | M || ^ ||^| |
2290 | -- -- |_| | 5 || || | C3 |
2291 | \/ \/ C10 |___|| ||_| |
2292 | C4 C4 _ _ | | ?? |
2293 | -- -- | \/ || | |
2294 | | || | |
2295 | | || C1 | |
2296 | | || | \/ _____|
2297 | | C6 || | C9 | |___
2298 | | || | -- | BNC |___|
2299 | | || | >C7| |_____|
2300 | | || | |
2301 | __ __ |____||_____| 1 2 3 6 |
2302 || ^ | >C4| |o|o|o|o|o|o| J2 >C4| |
2303 || | |o|o|o|o|o|o| |
2304 || C2 | >C4| >C4| |
2305 || | >C8| |
2306 || | 2 3 4 5 6 7 IRQ >C4| |
2307 ||_____| |o|o|o|o|o|o| J3 |
2308 |_______ |o|o|o|o|o|o| _______________|
2309 | |
2310 |_____________________________________________|
2311
2312 C1 -- "COM9026
2313 SMC 8638"
2314 In a chip socket.
2315
2316 C2 -- "@Copyright
2317 Waterloo Microsystems Inc.
2318 1985"
2319 In a chip Socket with info printed on a label covering a round window
2320 showing the circuit inside. (The window indicates it is an EPROM chip.)
2321
2322 C3 -- "COM9032
2323 SMC 8643"
2324 In a chip socket.
2325
2326 C4 -- "74LS"
2327 9 total no sockets.
2328
2329 M5 -- "50006-136
2330 20.000000 MHZ
2331 MTQ-T1-S3
2332 0 M-TRON 86-40"
2333 Metallic case with 4 pins, no socket.
2334
2335 C6 -- "MOSTEK@TC8643
2336 MK6116N-20
2337 MALAYSIA"
2338 No socket.
2339
2340 C7 -- No stamp or label but in a 20 pin chip socket.
2341
2342 C8 -- "PAL10L8CN
2343 8623"
2344 In a 20 pin socket.
2345
2346 C9 -- "PAl16R4A-2CN
2347 8641"
2348 In a 20 pin socket.
2349
2350 C10 -- "M8640
2351 NMC
2352 9306N"
2353 In an 8 pin socket.
2354
2355 ?? -- Some components on a smaller board and attached with 20 pins all
2356 along the side closest to the BNC connector. The are coated in a dark
2357 resin.
2358
2359 On the board there are two jumper banks labeled J2 and J3. The
2360 manufacturer didn't put a J1 on the board. The two boards I have both
2361 came with a jumper box for each bank.
2362
2363 J2 -- Numbered 1 2 3 4 5 6.
2364 4 and 5 are not stamped due to solder points.
2365
2366 J3 -- IRQ 2 3 4 5 6 7
2367
2368 The board itself has a maple leaf stamped just above the irq jumpers
2369 and "-2 46-86" beside C2. Between C1 and C6 "ASS 'Y 300163" and "@1986
2370 CORMAN CUSTOM ELECTRONICS CORP." stamped just below the BNC connector.
2371 Below that "MADE IN CANADA"
2372
2373
2374 *****************************************************************************
2375
2376 ** No Name **
2377 8-bit cards, 16-bit cards
2378 -------------------------
2379 - from Juergen Seifert <seifert@htwm.de>
2380
2381 NONAME 8-BIT ARCNET
2382 ===================
2383
2384 I have named this ARCnet card "NONAME", since there is no name of any
2385 manufacturer on the Installation manual nor on the shipping box. The only
2386 hint to the existence of a manufacturer at all is written in copper,
2387 it is "Made in Taiwan"
2388
2389 This description has been written by Juergen Seifert <seifert@htwm.de>
2390 using information from the Original
2391 "ARCnet Installation Manual"
2392
2393
2394 ________________________________________________________________
2395 | |STAR| BUS| T/P| |
2396 | |____|____|____| |
2397 | _____________________ |
2398 | | | |
2399 | | | |
2400 | | | |
2401 | | SMC | |
2402 | | | |
2403 | | COM90C65 | |
2404 | | | |
2405 | | | |
2406 | |__________-__________| |
2407 | _____|
2408 | _______________ | CN |
2409 | | PROM | |_____|
2410 | > SOCKET | |
2411 | |_______________| 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 |
2412 | _______________ _______________ |
2413 | |o|o|o|o|o|o|o|o| | SW1 || SW2 ||
2414 | |o|o|o|o|o|o|o|o| |_______________||_______________||
2415 |___ 2 3 4 5 7 E E R Node ID IOB__|__MEM____|
2416 | \ IRQ / T T O |
2417 |__________________1_2_M______________________|
2418
2419 Legend:
2420
2421 COM90C65: ARCnet Probe
2422 S1 1-8: Node ID Select
2423 S2 1-3: I/O Base Address Select
2424 4-6: Memory Base Address Select
2425 7-8: RAM Offset Select
2426 ET1, ET2 Extended Timeout Select
2427 ROM ROM Enable Select
2428 CN RG62 Coax Connector
2429 STAR| BUS | T/P Three fields for placing a sign (colored circle)
2430 indicating the topology of the card
2431
2432 Setting one of the switches to Off means "1", On means "0".
2433
2434
2435 Setting the Node ID
2436 -------------------
2437
2438 The eight switches in group SW1 are used to set the node ID.
2439 Each node attached to the network must have an unique node ID which
2440 must be different from 0.
2441 Switch 8 serves as the least significant bit (LSB).
2442
2443 The node ID is the sum of the values of all switches set to "1"
2444 These values are:
2445
2446 Switch | Value
2447 -------|-------
2448 8 | 1
2449 7 | 2
2450 6 | 4
2451 5 | 8
2452 4 | 16
2453 3 | 32
2454 2 | 64
2455 1 | 128
2456
2457 Some Examples:
2458
2459 Switch | Hex | Decimal
2460 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 | Node ID | Node ID
2461 ----------------|---------|---------
2462 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 | not allowed
2463 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 | 1 | 1
2464 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 | 2 | 2
2465 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 | 3 | 3
2466 . . . | |
2467 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 | 55 | 85
2468 . . . | |
2469 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 | AA | 170
2470 . . . | |
2471 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 1 | FD | 253
2472 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 | FE | 254
2473 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 | FF | 255
2474
2475
2476 Setting the I/O Base Address
2477 ----------------------------
2478
2479 The first three switches in switch group SW2 are used to select one
2480 of eight possible I/O Base addresses using the following table
2481
2482 Switch | Hex I/O
2483 1 2 3 | Address
2484 ------------|--------
2485 ON ON ON | 260
2486 ON ON OFF | 290
2487 ON OFF ON | 2E0 (Manufacturer's default)
2488 ON OFF OFF | 2F0
2489 OFF ON ON | 300
2490 OFF ON OFF | 350
2491 OFF OFF ON | 380
2492 OFF OFF OFF | 3E0
2493
2494
2495 Setting the Base Memory (RAM) buffer Address
2496 --------------------------------------------
2497
2498 The memory buffer requires 2K of a 16K block of RAM. The base of this
2499 16K block can be located in any of eight positions.
2500 Switches 4-6 of switch group SW2 select the Base of the 16K block.
2501 Within that 16K address space, the buffer may be assigned any one of four
2502 positions, determined by the offset, switches 7 and 8 of group SW2.
2503
2504 Switch | Hex RAM | Hex ROM
2505 4 5 6 7 8 | Address | Address *)
2506 -----------|---------|-----------
2507 0 0 0 0 0 | C0000 | C2000
2508 0 0 0 0 1 | C0800 | C2000
2509 0 0 0 1 0 | C1000 | C2000
2510 0 0 0 1 1 | C1800 | C2000
2511 | |
2512 0 0 1 0 0 | C4000 | C6000
2513 0 0 1 0 1 | C4800 | C6000
2514 0 0 1 1 0 | C5000 | C6000
2515 0 0 1 1 1 | C5800 | C6000
2516 | |
2517 0 1 0 0 0 | CC000 | CE000
2518 0 1 0 0 1 | CC800 | CE000
2519 0 1 0 1 0 | CD000 | CE000
2520 0 1 0 1 1 | CD800 | CE000
2521 | |
2522 0 1 1 0 0 | D0000 | D2000 (Manufacturer's default)
2523 0 1 1 0 1 | D0800 | D2000
2524 0 1 1 1 0 | D1000 | D2000
2525 0 1 1 1 1 | D1800 | D2000
2526 | |
2527 1 0 0 0 0 | D4000 | D6000
2528 1 0 0 0 1 | D4800 | D6000
2529 1 0 0 1 0 | D5000 | D6000
2530 1 0 0 1 1 | D5800 | D6000
2531 | |
2532 1 0 1 0 0 | D8000 | DA000
2533 1 0 1 0 1 | D8800 | DA000
2534 1 0 1 1 0 | D9000 | DA000
2535 1 0 1 1 1 | D9800 | DA000
2536 | |
2537 1 1 0 0 0 | DC000 | DE000
2538 1 1 0 0 1 | DC800 | DE000
2539 1 1 0 1 0 | DD000 | DE000
2540 1 1 0 1 1 | DD800 | DE000
2541 | |
2542 1 1 1 0 0 | E0000 | E2000
2543 1 1 1 0 1 | E0800 | E2000
2544 1 1 1 1 0 | E1000 | E2000
2545 1 1 1 1 1 | E1800 | E2000
2546
2547 *) To enable the 8K Boot PROM install the jumper ROM.
2548 The default is jumper ROM not installed.
2549
2550
2551 Setting Interrupt Request Lines (IRQ)
2552 -------------------------------------
2553
2554 To select a hardware interrupt level set one (only one!) of the jumpers
2555 IRQ2, IRQ3, IRQ4, IRQ5 or IRQ7. The manufacturer's default is IRQ2.
2556
2557
2558 Setting the Timeouts
2559 --------------------
2560
2561 The two jumpers labeled ET1 and ET2 are used to determine the timeout
2562 parameters (response and reconfiguration time). Every node in a network
2563 must be set to the same timeout values.
2564
2565 ET1 ET2 | Response Time (us) | Reconfiguration Time (ms)
2566 --------|--------------------|--------------------------
2567 Off Off | 78 | 840 (Default)
2568 Off On | 285 | 1680
2569 On Off | 563 | 1680
2570 On On | 1130 | 1680
2571
2572 On means jumper installed, Off means jumper not installed
2573
2574
2575 NONAME 16-BIT ARCNET
2576 ====================
2577
2578 The manual of my 8-Bit NONAME ARCnet Card contains another description
2579 of a 16-Bit Coax / Twisted Pair Card. This description is incomplete,
2580 because there are missing two pages in the manual booklet. (The table
2581 of contents reports pages ... 2-9, 2-11, 2-12, 3-1, ... but inside
2582 the booklet there is a different way of counting ... 2-9, 2-10, A-1,
2583 (empty page), 3-1, ..., 3-18, A-1 (again), A-2)
2584 Also the picture of the board layout is not as good as the picture of
2585 8-Bit card, because there isn't any letter like "SW1" written to the
2586 picture.
2587 Should somebody have such a board, please feel free to complete this
2588 description or to send a mail to me!
2589
2590 This description has been written by Juergen Seifert <seifert@htwm.de>
2591 using information from the Original
2592 "ARCnet Installation Manual"
2593
2594
2595 ___________________________________________________________________
2596 < _________________ _________________ |
2597 > | SW? || SW? | |
2598 < |_________________||_________________| |
2599 > ____________________ |
2600 < | | |
2601 > | | |
2602 < | | |
2603 > | | |
2604 < | | |
2605 > | | |
2606 < | | |
2607 > |____________________| |
2608 < ____|
2609 > ____________________ | |
2610 < | | | J1 |
2611 > | < | |
2612 < |____________________| ? ? ? ? ? ? |____|
2613 > |o|o|o|o|o|o| |
2614 < |o|o|o|o|o|o| |
2615 > |
2616 < __ ___________|
2617 > | | |
2618 <____________| |_______________________________________|
2619
2620
2621 Setting one of the switches to Off means "1", On means "0".
2622
2623
2624 Setting the Node ID
2625 -------------------
2626
2627 The eight switches in group SW2 are used to set the node ID.
2628 Each node attached to the network must have an unique node ID which
2629 must be different from 0.
2630 Switch 8 serves as the least significant bit (LSB).
2631
2632 The node ID is the sum of the values of all switches set to "1"
2633 These values are:
2634
2635 Switch | Value
2636 -------|-------
2637 8 | 1
2638 7 | 2
2639 6 | 4
2640 5 | 8
2641 4 | 16
2642 3 | 32
2643 2 | 64
2644 1 | 128
2645
2646 Some Examples:
2647
2648 Switch | Hex | Decimal
2649 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 | Node ID | Node ID
2650 ----------------|---------|---------
2651 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 | not allowed
2652 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 | 1 | 1
2653 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 | 2 | 2
2654 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 | 3 | 3
2655 . . . | |
2656 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 | 55 | 85
2657 . . . | |
2658 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 | AA | 170
2659 . . . | |
2660 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 1 | FD | 253
2661 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 | FE | 254
2662 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 | FF | 255
2663
2664
2665 Setting the I/O Base Address
2666 ----------------------------
2667
2668 The first three switches in switch group SW1 are used to select one
2669 of eight possible I/O Base addresses using the following table
2670
2671 Switch | Hex I/O
2672 3 2 1 | Address
2673 ------------|--------
2674 ON ON ON | 260
2675 ON ON OFF | 290
2676 ON OFF ON | 2E0 (Manufacturer's default)
2677 ON OFF OFF | 2F0
2678 OFF ON ON | 300
2679 OFF ON OFF | 350
2680 OFF OFF ON | 380
2681 OFF OFF OFF | 3E0
2682
2683
2684 Setting the Base Memory (RAM) buffer Address
2685 --------------------------------------------
2686
2687 The memory buffer requires 2K of a 16K block of RAM. The base of this
2688 16K block can be located in any of eight positions.
2689 Switches 6-8 of switch group SW1 select the Base of the 16K block.
2690 Within that 16K address space, the buffer may be assigned any one of four
2691 positions, determined by the offset, switches 4 and 5 of group SW1.
2692
2693 Switch | Hex RAM | Hex ROM
2694 8 7 6 5 4 | Address | Address
2695 -----------|---------|-----------
2696 0 0 0 0 0 | C0000 | C2000
2697 0 0 0 0 1 | C0800 | C2000
2698 0 0 0 1 0 | C1000 | C2000
2699 0 0 0 1 1 | C1800 | C2000
2700 | |
2701 0 0 1 0 0 | C4000 | C6000
2702 0 0 1 0 1 | C4800 | C6000
2703 0 0 1 1 0 | C5000 | C6000
2704 0 0 1 1 1 | C5800 | C6000
2705 | |
2706 0 1 0 0 0 | CC000 | CE000
2707 0 1 0 0 1 | CC800 | CE000
2708 0 1 0 1 0 | CD000 | CE000
2709 0 1 0 1 1 | CD800 | CE000
2710 | |
2711 0 1 1 0 0 | D0000 | D2000 (Manufacturer's default)
2712 0 1 1 0 1 | D0800 | D2000
2713 0 1 1 1 0 | D1000 | D2000
2714 0 1 1 1 1 | D1800 | D2000
2715 | |
2716 1 0 0 0 0 | D4000 | D6000
2717 1 0 0 0 1 | D4800 | D6000
2718 1 0 0 1 0 | D5000 | D6000
2719 1 0 0 1 1 | D5800 | D6000
2720 | |
2721 1 0 1 0 0 | D8000 | DA000
2722 1 0 1 0 1 | D8800 | DA000
2723 1 0 1 1 0 | D9000 | DA000
2724 1 0 1 1 1 | D9800 | DA000
2725 | |
2726 1 1 0 0 0 | DC000 | DE000
2727 1 1 0 0 1 | DC800 | DE000
2728 1 1 0 1 0 | DD000 | DE000
2729 1 1 0 1 1 | DD800 | DE000
2730 | |
2731 1 1 1 0 0 | E0000 | E2000
2732 1 1 1 0 1 | E0800 | E2000
2733 1 1 1 1 0 | E1000 | E2000
2734 1 1 1 1 1 | E1800 | E2000
2735
2736
2737 Setting Interrupt Request Lines (IRQ)
2738 -------------------------------------
2739
2740 ??????????????????????????????????????
2741
2742
2743 Setting the Timeouts
2744 --------------------
2745
2746 ??????????????????????????????????????
2747
2748
2749 *****************************************************************************
2750
2751 ** No Name **
2752 8-bit cards ("Made in Taiwan R.O.C.")
2753 -----------
2754 - from Vojtech Pavlik <vojtech@suse.cz>
2755
2756 I have named this ARCnet card "NONAME", since I got only the card with
2757 no manual at all and the only text identifying the manufacturer is
2758 "MADE IN TAIWAN R.O.C" printed on the card.
2759
2760 ____________________________________________________________
2761 | 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 |
2762 | |o|o| JP1 o|o|o|o|o|o|o|o| ON |
2763 | + o|o|o|o|o|o|o|o| ___|
2764 | _____________ o|o|o|o|o|o|o|o| OFF _____ | | ID7
2765 | | | SW1 | | | | ID6
2766 | > RAM (2k) | ____________________ | H | | S | ID5
2767 | |_____________| | || y | | W | ID4
2768 | | || b | | 2 | ID3
2769 | | || r | | | ID2
2770 | | || i | | | ID1
2771 | | 90C65 || d | |___| ID0
2772 | SW3 | || | |
2773 | |o|o|o|o|o|o|o|o| ON | || I | |
2774 | |o|o|o|o|o|o|o|o| | || C | |
2775 | |o|o|o|o|o|o|o|o| OFF |____________________|| | _____|
2776 | 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 | | | |___
2777 | ______________ | | | BNC |___|
2778 | | | |_____| |_____|
2779 | > EPROM SOCKET | |
2780 | |______________| |
2781 | ______________|
2782 | |
2783 |_____________________________________________|
2784
2785 Legend:
2786
2787 90C65 ARCNET Chip
2788 SW1 1-5: Base Memory Address Select
2789 6-8: Base I/O Address Select
2790 SW2 1-8: Node ID Select (ID0-ID7)
2791 SW3 1-5: IRQ Select
2792 6-7: Extra Timeout
2793 8 : ROM Enable
2794 JP1 Led connector
2795 BNC Coax connector
2796
2797 Although the jumpers SW1 and SW3 are marked SW, not JP, they are jumpers, not
2798 switches.
2799
2800 Setting the jumpers to ON means connecting the upper two pins, off the bottom
2801 two - or - in case of IRQ setting, connecting none of them at all.
2802
2803 Setting the Node ID
2804 -------------------
2805
2806 The eight switches in SW2 are used to set the node ID. Each node attached
2807 to the network must have an unique node ID which must not be 0.
2808 Switch 1 (ID0) serves as the least significant bit (LSB).
2809
2810 Setting one of the switches to Off means "1", On means "0".
2811
2812 The node ID is the sum of the values of all switches set to "1"
2813 These values are:
2814
2815 Switch | Label | Value
2816 -------|-------|-------
2817 1 | ID0 | 1
2818 2 | ID1 | 2
2819 3 | ID2 | 4
2820 4 | ID3 | 8
2821 5 | ID4 | 16
2822 6 | ID5 | 32
2823 7 | ID6 | 64
2824 8 | ID7 | 128
2825
2826 Some Examples:
2827
2828 Switch | Hex | Decimal
2829 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 | Node ID | Node ID
2830 ----------------|---------|---------
2831 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 | not allowed
2832 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 | 1 | 1
2833 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 | 2 | 2
2834 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 | 3 | 3
2835 . . . | |
2836 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 | 55 | 85
2837 . . . | |
2838 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 | AA | 170
2839 . . . | |
2840 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 1 | FD | 253
2841 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 | FE | 254
2842 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 | FF | 255
2843
2844
2845 Setting the I/O Base Address
2846 ----------------------------
2847
2848 The last three switches in switch block SW1 are used to select one
2849 of eight possible I/O Base addresses using the following table
2850
2851
2852 Switch | Hex I/O
2853 6 7 8 | Address
2854 ------------|--------
2855 ON ON ON | 260
2856 OFF ON ON | 290
2857 ON OFF ON | 2E0 (Manufacturer's default)
2858 OFF OFF ON | 2F0
2859 ON ON OFF | 300
2860 OFF ON OFF | 350
2861 ON OFF OFF | 380
2862 OFF OFF OFF | 3E0
2863
2864
2865 Setting the Base Memory (RAM) buffer Address
2866 --------------------------------------------
2867
2868 The memory buffer (RAM) requires 2K. The base of this buffer can be
2869 located in any of eight positions. The address of the Boot Prom is
2870 memory base + 0x2000.
2871 Jumpers 3-5 of jumper block SW1 select the Memory Base address.
2872
2873 Switch | Hex RAM | Hex ROM
2874 1 2 3 4 5 | Address | Address *)
2875 --------------------|---------|-----------
2876 ON ON ON ON ON | C0000 | C2000
2877 ON ON OFF ON ON | C4000 | C6000
2878 ON ON ON OFF ON | CC000 | CE000
2879 ON ON OFF OFF ON | D0000 | D2000 (Manufacturer's default)
2880 ON ON ON ON OFF | D4000 | D6000
2881 ON ON OFF ON OFF | D8000 | DA000
2882 ON ON ON OFF OFF | DC000 | DE000
2883 ON ON OFF OFF OFF | E0000 | E2000
2884
2885 *) To enable the Boot ROM set the jumper 8 of jumper block SW3 to position ON.
2886
2887 The jumpers 1 and 2 probably add 0x0800, 0x1000 and 0x1800 to RAM adders.
2888
2889 Setting the Interrupt Line
2890 --------------------------
2891
2892 Jumpers 1-5 of the jumper block SW3 control the IRQ level.
2893
2894 Jumper | IRQ
2895 1 2 3 4 5 |
2896 ----------------------------
2897 ON OFF OFF OFF OFF | 2
2898 OFF ON OFF OFF OFF | 3
2899 OFF OFF ON OFF OFF | 4
2900 OFF OFF OFF ON OFF | 5
2901 OFF OFF OFF OFF ON | 7
2902
2903
2904 Setting the Timeout Parameters
2905 ------------------------------
2906
2907 The jumpers 6-7 of the jumper block SW3 are used to determine the timeout
2908 parameters. These two jumpers are normally left in the OFF position.
2909
2910
2911 *****************************************************************************
2912
2913 ** No Name **
2914 (Generic Model 9058)
2915 --------------------
2916 - from Andrew J. Kroll <ag784@freenet.buffalo.edu>
2917 - Sorry this sat in my to-do box for so long, Andrew! (yikes - over a
2918 year!)
2919 _____
2920 | <
2921 | .---'
2922 ________________________________________________________________ | |
2923 | | SW2 | | |
2924 | ___________ |_____________| | |
2925 | | | 1 2 3 4 5 6 ___| |
2926 | > 6116 RAM | _________ 8 | | |
2927 | |___________| |20MHzXtal| 7 | | |
2928 | |_________| __________ 6 | S | |
2929 | 74LS373 | |- 5 | W | |
2930 | _________ | E |- 4 | | |
2931 | >_______| ______________|..... P |- 3 | 3 | |
2932 | | | : O |- 2 | | |
2933 | | | : X |- 1 |___| |
2934 | ________________ | | : Y |- | |
2935 | | SW1 | | SL90C65 | : |- | |
2936 | |________________| | | : B |- | |
2937 | 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 | | : O |- | |
2938 | |_________o____|..../ A |- _______| |
2939 | ____________________ | R |- | |------,
2940 | | | | D |- | BNC | # |
2941 | > 2764 PROM SOCKET | |__________|- |_______|------'
2942 | |____________________| _________ | |
2943 | >________| <- 74LS245 | |
2944 | | |
2945 |___ ______________| |
2946 |H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H| | |
2947 |U_U_U_U_U_U_U_U_U_U_U_U_U_U_U_U_U_U_U_U_U_U_U| | |
2948 \|
2949 Legend:
2950
2951 SL90C65 ARCNET Controller / Transceiver /Logic
2952 SW1 1-5: IRQ Select
2953 6: ET1
2954 7: ET2
2955 8: ROM ENABLE
2956 SW2 1-3: Memory Buffer/PROM Address
2957 3-6: I/O Address Map
2958 SW3 1-8: Node ID Select
2959 BNC BNC RG62/U Connection
2960 *I* have had success using RG59B/U with *NO* terminators!
2961 What gives?!
2962
2963 SW1: Timeouts, Interrupt and ROM
2964 ---------------------------------
2965
2966 To select a hardware interrupt level set one (only one!) of the dip switches
2967 up (on) SW1...(switches 1-5)
2968 IRQ3, IRQ4, IRQ5, IRQ7, IRQ2. The Manufacturer's default is IRQ2.
2969
2970 The switches on SW1 labeled EXT1 (switch 6) and EXT2 (switch 7)
2971 are used to determine the timeout parameters. These two dip switches
2972 are normally left off (down).
2973
2974 To enable the 8K Boot PROM position SW1 switch 8 on (UP) labeled ROM.
2975 The default is jumper ROM not installed.
2976
2977
2978 Setting the I/O Base Address
2979 ----------------------------
2980
2981 The last three switches in switch group SW2 are used to select one
2982 of eight possible I/O Base addresses using the following table
2983
2984
2985 Switch | Hex I/O
2986 4 5 6 | Address
2987 -------|--------
2988 0 0 0 | 260
2989 0 0 1 | 290
2990 0 1 0 | 2E0 (Manufacturer's default)
2991 0 1 1 | 2F0
2992 1 0 0 | 300
2993 1 0 1 | 350
2994 1 1 0 | 380
2995 1 1 1 | 3E0
2996
2997
2998 Setting the Base Memory Address (RAM & ROM)
2999 -------------------------------------------
3000
3001 The memory buffer requires 2K of a 16K block of RAM. The base of this
3002 16K block can be located in any of eight positions.
3003 Switches 1-3 of switch group SW2 select the Base of the 16K block.
3004 (0 = DOWN, 1 = UP)
3005 I could, however, only verify two settings...
3006
3007 Switch| Hex RAM | Hex ROM
3008 1 2 3 | Address | Address
3009 ------|---------|-----------
3010 0 0 0 | E0000 | E2000
3011 0 0 1 | D0000 | D2000 (Manufacturer's default)
3012 0 1 0 | ????? | ?????
3013 0 1 1 | ????? | ?????
3014 1 0 0 | ????? | ?????
3015 1 0 1 | ????? | ?????
3016 1 1 0 | ????? | ?????
3017 1 1 1 | ????? | ?????
3018
3019
3020 Setting the Node ID
3021 -------------------
3022
3023 The eight switches in group SW3 are used to set the node ID.
3024 Each node attached to the network must have an unique node ID which
3025 must be different from 0.
3026 Switch 1 serves as the least significant bit (LSB).
3027 switches in the DOWN position are OFF (0) and in the UP position are ON (1)
3028
3029 The node ID is the sum of the values of all switches set to "1"
3030 These values are:
3031 Switch | Value
3032 -------|-------
3033 1 | 1
3034 2 | 2
3035 3 | 4
3036 4 | 8
3037 5 | 16
3038 6 | 32
3039 7 | 64
3040 8 | 128
3041
3042 Some Examples:
3043
3044 Switch# | Hex | Decimal
3045 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 | Node ID | Node ID
3046 ----------------|---------|---------
3047 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 | not allowed <-.
3048 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 | 1 | 1 |
3049 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 | 2 | 2 |
3050 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 | 3 | 3 |
3051 . . . | | |
3052 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 | 55 | 85 |
3053 . . . | | + Don't use 0 or 255!
3054 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 | AA | 170 |
3055 . . . | | |
3056 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 1 | FD | 253 |
3057 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 | FE | 254 |
3058 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 | FF | 255 <-'
3059
3060
3061 *****************************************************************************
3062
3063 ** Tiara **
3064 (model unknown)
3065 -------------------------
3066 - from Christoph Lameter <christoph@lameter.com>
3067
3068
3069 Here is information about my card as far as I could figure it out:
3070 ----------------------------------------------- tiara
3071 Tiara LanCard of Tiara Computer Systems.
3072
3073 +----------------------------------------------+
3074 ! ! Transmitter Unit ! !
3075 ! +------------------+ -------
3076 ! MEM Coax Connector
3077 ! ROM 7654321 <- I/O -------
3078 ! : : +--------+ !
3079 ! : : ! 90C66LJ! +++
3080 ! : : ! ! !D Switch to set
3081 ! : : ! ! !I the Nodenumber
3082 ! : : +--------+ !P
3083 ! !++
3084 ! 234567 <- IRQ !
3085 +------------!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!--------+
3086 !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
3087
3088 0 = Jumper Installed
3089 1 = Open
3090
3091 Top Jumper line Bit 7 = ROM Enable 654=Memory location 321=I/O
3092
3093 Settings for Memory Location (Top Jumper Line)
3094 456 Address selected
3095 000 C0000
3096 001 C4000
3097 010 CC000
3098 011 D0000
3099 100 D4000
3100 101 D8000
3101 110 DC000
3102 111 E0000
3103
3104 Settings for I/O Address (Top Jumper Line)
3105 123 Port
3106 000 260
3107 001 290
3108 010 2E0
3109 011 2F0
3110 100 300
3111 101 350
3112 110 380
3113 111 3E0
3114
3115 Settings for IRQ Selection (Lower Jumper Line)
3116 234567
3117 011111 IRQ 2
3118 101111 IRQ 3
3119 110111 IRQ 4
3120 111011 IRQ 5
3121 111110 IRQ 7
3122
3123 *****************************************************************************
3124
3125
3126 Other Cards
3127 -----------
3128
3129 I have no information on other models of ARCnet cards at the moment. Please
3130 send any and all info to:
3131 apenwarr@worldvisions.ca
3132
3133 Thanks.