| |
| ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| 1) This file is a supplement to arcnet.txt. Please read that for general |
| driver configuration help. |
| ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| 2) This file is no longer Linux-specific. It should probably be moved out of |
| the kernel sources. Ideas? |
| ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| |
| Because so many people (myself included) seem to have obtained ARCnet cards |
| without manuals, this file contains a quick introduction to ARCnet hardware, |
| some cabling tips, and a listing of all jumper settings I can find. Please |
| e-mail apenwarr@worldvisions.ca with any settings for your particular card, |
| or any other information you have! |
| |
| |
| INTRODUCTION TO ARCNET |
| ---------------------- |
| |
| ARCnet is a network type which works in a way similar to popular Ethernet |
| networks but which is also different in some very important ways. |
| |
| First of all, you can get ARCnet cards in at least two speeds: 2.5 Mbps |
| (slower than Ethernet) and 100 Mbps (faster than normal Ethernet). In fact, |
| there are others as well, but these are less common. The different hardware |
| types, as far as I'm aware, are not compatible and so you cannot wire a |
| 100 Mbps card to a 2.5 Mbps card, and so on. From what I hear, my driver does |
| work with 100 Mbps cards, but I haven't been able to verify this myself, |
| since I only have the 2.5 Mbps variety. It is probably not going to saturate |
| your 100 Mbps card. Stop complaining. :) |
| |
| You also cannot connect an ARCnet card to any kind of Ethernet card and |
| expect it to work. |
| |
| There are two "types" of ARCnet - STAR topology and BUS topology. This |
| refers to how the cards are meant to be wired together. According to most |
| available documentation, you can only connect STAR cards to STAR cards and |
| BUS cards to BUS cards. That makes sense, right? Well, it's not quite |
| true; see below under "Cabling." |
| |
| Once you get past these little stumbling blocks, ARCnet is actually quite a |
| well-designed standard. It uses something called "modified token passing" |
| which makes it completely incompatible with so-called "Token Ring" cards, |
| but which makes transfers much more reliable than Ethernet does. In fact, |
| ARCnet will guarantee that a packet arrives safely at the destination, and |
| even if it can't possibly be delivered properly (ie. because of a cable |
| break, or because the destination computer does not exist) it will at least |
| tell the sender about it. |
| |
| Because of the carefully defined action of the "token", it will always make |
| a pass around the "ring" within a maximum length of time. This makes it |
| useful for realtime networks. |
| |
| In addition, all known ARCnet cards have an (almost) identical programming |
| interface. This means that with one ARCnet driver you can support any |
| card, whereas with Ethernet each manufacturer uses what is sometimes a |
| completely different programming interface, leading to a lot of different, |
| sometimes very similar, Ethernet drivers. Of course, always using the same |
| programming interface also means that when high-performance hardware |
| facilities like PCI bus mastering DMA appear, it's hard to take advantage of |
| them. Let's not go into that. |
| |
| One thing that makes ARCnet cards difficult to program for, however, is the |
| limit on their packet sizes; standard ARCnet can only send packets that are |
| up to 508 bytes in length. This is smaller than the Internet "bare minimum" |
| of 576 bytes, let alone the Ethernet MTU of 1500. To compensate, an extra |
| level of encapsulation is defined by RFC1201, which I call "packet |
| splitting," that allows "virtual packets" to grow as large as 64K each, |
| although they are generally kept down to the Ethernet-style 1500 bytes. |
| |
| For more information on the advantages and disadvantages (mostly the |
| advantages) of ARCnet networks, you might try the "ARCnet Trade Association" |
| WWW page: |
| http://www.arcnet.com |
| |
| |
| CABLING ARCNET NETWORKS |
| ----------------------- |
| |
| This section was rewritten by |
| Vojtech Pavlik <vojtech@suse.cz> |
| using information from several people, including: |
| Avery Pennraun <apenwarr@worldvisions.ca> |
| Stephen A. Wood <saw@hallc1.cebaf.gov> |
| John Paul Morrison <jmorriso@bogomips.ee.ubc.ca> |
| Joachim Koenig <jojo@repas.de> |
| and Avery touched it up a bit, at Vojtech's request. |
| |
| ARCnet (the classic 2.5 Mbps version) can be connected by two different |
| types of cabling: coax and twisted pair. The other ARCnet-type networks |
| (100 Mbps TCNS and 320 kbps - 32 Mbps ARCnet Plus) use different types of |
| cabling (Type1, Fiber, C1, C4, C5). |
| |
| For a coax network, you "should" use 93 Ohm RG-62 cable. But other cables |
| also work fine, because ARCnet is a very stable network. I personally use 75 |
| Ohm TV antenna cable. |
| |
| Cards for coax cabling are shipped in two different variants: for BUS and |
| STAR network topologies. They are mostly the same. The only difference |
| lies in the hybrid chip installed. BUS cards use high impedance output, |
| while STAR use low impedance. Low impedance card (STAR) is electrically |
| equal to a high impedance one with a terminator installed. |
| |
| Usually, the ARCnet networks are built up from STAR cards and hubs. There |
| are two types of hubs - active and passive. Passive hubs are small boxes |
| with four BNC connectors containing four 47 Ohm resistors: |
| |
| | | wires |
| R + junction |
| -R-+-R- R 47 Ohm resistors |
| R |
| | |
| |
| The shielding is connected together. Active hubs are much more complicated; |
| they are powered and contain electronics to amplify the signal and send it |
| to other segments of the net. They usually have eight connectors. Active |
| hubs come in two variants - dumb and smart. The dumb variant just |
| amplifies, but the smart one decodes to digital and encodes back all packets |
| coming through. This is much better if you have several hubs in the net, |
| since many dumb active hubs may worsen the signal quality. |
| |
| And now to the cabling. What you can connect together: |
| |
| 1. A card to a card. This is the simplest way of creating a 2-computer |
| network. |
| |
| 2. A card to a passive hub. Remember that all unused connectors on the hub |
| must be properly terminated with 93 Ohm (or something else if you don't |
| have the right ones) terminators. |
| (Avery's note: oops, I didn't know that. Mine (TV cable) works |
| anyway, though.) |
| |
| 3. A card to an active hub. Here is no need to terminate the unused |
| connectors except some kind of aesthetic feeling. But, there may not be |
| more than eleven active hubs between any two computers. That of course |
| doesn't limit the number of active hubs on the network. |
| |
| 4. An active hub to another. |
| |
| 5. An active hub to passive hub. |
| |
| Remember that you cannot connect two passive hubs together. The power loss |
| implied by such a connection is too high for the net to operate reliably. |
| |
| An example of a typical ARCnet network: |
| |
| R S - STAR type card |
| S------H--------A-------S R - Terminator |
| | | H - Hub |
| | | A - Active hub |
| | S----H----S |
| S | |
| | |
| S |
| |
| The BUS topology is very similar to the one used by Ethernet. The only |
| difference is in cable and terminators: they should be 93 Ohm. Ethernet |
| uses 50 Ohm impedance. You use T connectors to put the computers on a single |
| line of cable, the bus. You have to put terminators at both ends of the |
| cable. A typical BUS ARCnet network looks like: |
| |
| RT----T------T------T------T------TR |
| B B B B B B |
| |
| B - BUS type card |
| R - Terminator |
| T - T connector |
| |
| But that is not all! The two types can be connected together. According to |
| the official documentation the only way of connecting them is using an active |
| hub: |
| |
| A------T------T------TR |
| | B B B |
| S---H---S |
| | |
| S |
| |
| The official docs also state that you can use STAR cards at the ends of |
| BUS network in place of a BUS card and a terminator: |
| |
| S------T------T------S |
| B B |
| |
| But, according to my own experiments, you can simply hang a BUS type card |
| anywhere in middle of a cable in a STAR topology network. And more - you |
| can use the bus card in place of any star card if you use a terminator. Then |
| you can build very complicated networks fulfilling all your needs! An |
| example: |
| |
| S |
| | |
| RT------T-------T------H------S |
| B B B | |
| | R |
| S------A------T-------T-------A-------H------TR |
| | B B | | B |
| | S BT | |
| | | | S----A-----S |
| S------H---A----S | | |
| | | S------T----H---S | |
| S S B R S |
| |
| A basically different cabling scheme is used with Twisted Pair cabling. Each |
| of the TP cards has two RJ (phone-cord style) connectors. The cards are |
| then daisy-chained together using a cable connecting every two neighboring |
| cards. The ends are terminated with RJ 93 Ohm terminators which plug into |
| the empty connectors of cards on the ends of the chain. An example: |
| |
| ___________ ___________ |
| _R_|_ _|_|_ _|_R_ |
| | | | | | | |
| |Card | |Card | |Card | |
| |_____| |_____| |_____| |
| |
| |
| There are also hubs for the TP topology. There is nothing difficult |
| involved in using them; you just connect a TP chain to a hub on any end or |
| even at both. This way you can create almost any network configuration. |
| The maximum of 11 hubs between any two computers on the net applies here as |
| well. An example: |
| |
| RP-------P--------P--------H-----P------P-----PR |
| | |
| RP-----H--------P--------H-----P------PR |
| | | |
| PR PR |
| |
| R - RJ Terminator |
| P - TP Card |
| H - TP Hub |
| |
| Like any network, ARCnet has a limited cable length. These are the maximum |
| cable lengths between two active ends (an active end being an active hub or |
| a STAR card). |
| |
| RG-62 93 Ohm up to 650 m |
| RG-59/U 75 Ohm up to 457 m |
| RG-11/U 75 Ohm up to 533 m |
| IBM Type 1 150 Ohm up to 200 m |
| IBM Type 3 100 Ohm up to 100 m |
| |
| The maximum length of all cables connected to a passive hub is limited to 65 |
| meters for RG-62 cabling; less for others. You can see that using passive |
| hubs in a large network is a bad idea. The maximum length of a single "BUS |
| Trunk" is about 300 meters for RG-62. The maximum distance between the two |
| most distant points of the net is limited to 3000 meters. The maximum length |
| of a TP cable between two cards/hubs is 650 meters. |
| |
| |
| SETTING THE JUMPERS |
| ------------------- |
| |
| All ARCnet cards should have a total of four or five different settings: |
| |
| - the I/O address: this is the "port" your ARCnet card is on. Probed |
| values in the Linux ARCnet driver are only from 0x200 through 0x3F0. (If |
| your card has additional ones, which is possible, please tell me.) This |
| should not be the same as any other device on your system. According to |
| a doc I got from Novell, MS Windows prefers values of 0x300 or more, |
| eating net connections on my system (at least) otherwise. My guess is |
| this may be because, if your card is at 0x2E0, probing for a serial port |
| at 0x2E8 will reset the card and probably mess things up royally. |
| - Avery's favourite: 0x300. |
| |
| - the IRQ: on 8-bit cards, it might be 2 (9), 3, 4, 5, or 7. |
| on 16-bit cards, it might be 2 (9), 3, 4, 5, 7, or 10-15. |
| |
| Make sure this is different from any other card on your system. Note |
| that IRQ2 is the same as IRQ9, as far as Linux is concerned. You can |
| "cat /proc/interrupts" for a somewhat complete list of which ones are in |
| use at any given time. Here is a list of common usages from Vojtech |
| Pavlik <vojtech@suse.cz>: |
| ("Not on bus" means there is no way for a card to generate this |
| interrupt) |
| IRQ 0 - Timer 0 (Not on bus) |
| IRQ 1 - Keyboard (Not on bus) |
| IRQ 2 - IRQ Controller 2 (Not on bus, nor does interrupt the CPU) |
| IRQ 3 - COM2 |
| IRQ 4 - COM1 |
| IRQ 5 - FREE (LPT2 if you have it; sometimes COM3; maybe PLIP) |
| IRQ 6 - Floppy disk controller |
| IRQ 7 - FREE (LPT1 if you don't use the polling driver; PLIP) |
| IRQ 8 - Realtime Clock Interrupt (Not on bus) |
| IRQ 9 - FREE (VGA vertical sync interrupt if enabled) |
| IRQ 10 - FREE |
| IRQ 11 - FREE |
| IRQ 12 - FREE |
| IRQ 13 - Numeric Coprocessor (Not on bus) |
| IRQ 14 - Fixed Disk Controller |
| IRQ 15 - FREE (Fixed Disk Controller 2 if you have it) |
| |
| Note: IRQ 9 is used on some video cards for the "vertical retrace" |
| interrupt. This interrupt would have been handy for things like |
| video games, as it occurs exactly once per screen refresh, but |
| unfortunately IBM cancelled this feature starting with the original |
| VGA and thus many VGA/SVGA cards do not support it. For this |
| reason, no modern software uses this interrupt and it can almost |
| always be safely disabled, if your video card supports it at all. |
| |
| If your card for some reason CANNOT disable this IRQ (usually there |
| is a jumper), one solution would be to clip the printed circuit |
| contact on the board: it's the fourth contact from the left on the |
| back side. I take no responsibility if you try this. |
| |
| - Avery's favourite: IRQ2 (actually IRQ9). Watch that VGA, though. |
| |
| - the memory address: Unlike most cards, ARCnets use "shared memory" for |
| copying buffers around. Make SURE it doesn't conflict with any other |
| used memory in your system! |
| A0000 - VGA graphics memory (ok if you don't have VGA) |
| B0000 - Monochrome text mode |
| C0000 \ One of these is your VGA BIOS - usually C0000. |
| E0000 / |
| F0000 - System BIOS |
| |
| Anything less than 0xA0000 is, well, a BAD idea since it isn't above |
| 640k. |
| - Avery's favourite: 0xD0000 |
| |
| - the station address: Every ARCnet card has its own "unique" network |
| address from 0 to 255. Unlike Ethernet, you can set this address |
| yourself with a jumper or switch (or on some cards, with special |
| software). Since it's only 8 bits, you can only have 254 ARCnet cards |
| on a network. DON'T use 0 or 255, since these are reserved (although |
| neat stuff will probably happen if you DO use them). By the way, if you |
| haven't already guessed, don't set this the same as any other ARCnet on |
| your network! |
| - Avery's favourite: 3 and 4. Not that it matters. |
| |
| - There may be ETS1 and ETS2 settings. These may or may not make a |
| difference on your card (many manuals call them "reserved"), but are |
| used to change the delays used when powering up a computer on the |
| network. This is only necessary when wiring VERY long range ARCnet |
| networks, on the order of 4km or so; in any case, the only real |
| requirement here is that all cards on the network with ETS1 and ETS2 |
| jumpers have them in the same position. Chris Hindy <chrish@io.org> |
| sent in a chart with actual values for this: |
| ET1 ET2 Response Time Reconfiguration Time |
| --- --- ------------- -------------------- |
| open open 74.7us 840us |
| open closed 283.4us 1680us |
| closed open 561.8us 1680us |
| closed closed 1118.6us 1680us |
| |
| Make sure you set ETS1 and ETS2 to the SAME VALUE for all cards on your |
| network. |
| |
| Also, on many cards (not mine, though) there are red and green LED's. |
| Vojtech Pavlik <vojtech@suse.cz> tells me this is what they mean: |
| GREEN RED Status |
| ----- --- ------ |
| OFF OFF Power off |
| OFF Short flashes Cabling problems (broken cable or not |
| terminated) |
| OFF (short) ON Card init |
| ON ON Normal state - everything OK, nothing |
| happens |
| ON Long flashes Data transfer |
| ON OFF Never happens (maybe when wrong ID) |
| |
| |
| The following is all the specific information people have sent me about |
| their own particular ARCnet cards. It is officially a mess, and contains |
| huge amounts of duplicated information. I have no time to fix it. If you |
| want to, PLEASE DO! Just send me a 'diff -u' of all your changes. |
| |
| The model # is listed right above specifics for that card, so you should be |
| able to use your text viewer's "search" function to find the entry you want. |
| If you don't KNOW what kind of card you have, try looking through the |
| various diagrams to see if you can tell. |
| |
| If your model isn't listed and/or has different settings, PLEASE PLEASE |
| tell me. I had to figure mine out without the manual, and it WASN'T FUN! |
| |
| Even if your ARCnet model isn't listed, but has the same jumpers as another |
| model that is, please e-mail me to say so. |
| |
| Cards Listed in this file (in this order, mostly): |
| |
| Manufacturer Model # Bits |
| ------------ ------- ---- |
| SMC PC100 8 |
| SMC PC110 8 |
| SMC PC120 8 |
| SMC PC130 8 |
| SMC PC270E 8 |
| SMC PC500 16 |
| SMC PC500Longboard 16 |
| SMC PC550Longboard 16 |
| SMC PC600 16 |
| SMC PC710 8 |
| SMC? LCS-8830(-T) 8/16 |
| Puredata PDI507 8 |
| CNet Tech CN120-Series 8 |
| CNet Tech CN160-Series 16 |
| Lantech? UM9065L chipset 8 |
| Acer 5210-003 8 |
| Datapoint? LAN-ARC-8 8 |
| Topware TA-ARC/10 8 |
| Thomas-Conrad 500-6242-0097 REV A 8 |
| Waterloo? (C)1985 Waterloo Micro. 8 |
| No Name -- 8/16 |
| No Name Taiwan R.O.C? 8 |
| No Name Model 9058 8 |
| Tiara Tiara Lancard? 8 |
| |
| |
| ** SMC = Standard Microsystems Corp. |
| ** CNet Tech = CNet Technology, Inc. |
| |
| |
| Unclassified Stuff |
| ------------------ |
| - Please send any other information you can find. |
| |
| - And some other stuff (more info is welcome!): |
| From: root@ultraworld.xs4all.nl (Timo Hilbrink) |
| To: apenwarr@foxnet.net (Avery Pennarun) |
| Date: Wed, 26 Oct 1994 02:10:32 +0000 (GMT) |
| Reply-To: timoh@xs4all.nl |
| |
| [...parts deleted...] |
| |
| About the jumpers: On my PC130 there is one more jumper, located near the |
| cable-connector and it's for changing to star or bus topology; |
| closed: star - open: bus |
| On the PC500 are some more jumper-pins, one block labeled with RX,PDN,TXI |
| and another with ALE,LA17,LA18,LA19 these are undocumented.. |
| |
| [...more parts deleted...] |
| |
| --- CUT --- |
| |
| |
| ** Standard Microsystems Corp (SMC) ** |
| PC100, PC110, PC120, PC130 (8-bit cards) |
| PC500, PC600 (16-bit cards) |
| --------------------------------- |
| - mainly from Avery Pennarun <apenwarr@worldvisions.ca>. Values depicted |
| are from Avery's setup. |
| - special thanks to Timo Hilbrink <timoh@xs4all.nl> for noting that PC120, |
| 130, 500, and 600 all have the same switches as Avery's PC100. |
| PC500/600 have several extra, undocumented pins though. (?) |
| - PC110 settings were verified by Stephen A. Wood <saw@cebaf.gov> |
| - Also, the JP- and S-numbers probably don't match your card exactly. Try |
| to find jumpers/switches with the same number of settings - it's |
| probably more reliable. |
| |
| |
| JP5 [|] : : : : |
| (IRQ Setting) IRQ2 IRQ3 IRQ4 IRQ5 IRQ7 |
| Put exactly one jumper on exactly one set of pins. |
| |
| |
| 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 |
| S1 /----------------------------------\ |
| (I/O and Memory | 1 1 * 0 0 0 0 * 1 1 0 1 | |
| addresses) \----------------------------------/ |
| |--| |--------| |--------| |
| (a) (b) (m) |
| |
| WARNING. It's very important when setting these which way |
| you're holding the card, and which way you think is '1'! |
| |
| If you suspect that your settings are not being made |
| correctly, try reversing the direction or inverting the |
| switch positions. |
| |
| a: The first digit of the I/O address. |
| Setting Value |
| ------- ----- |
| 00 0 |
| 01 1 |
| 10 2 |
| 11 3 |
| |
| b: The second digit of the I/O address. |
| Setting Value |
| ------- ----- |
| 0000 0 |
| 0001 1 |
| 0010 2 |
| ... ... |
| 1110 E |
| 1111 F |
| |
| The I/O address is in the form ab0. For example, if |
| a is 0x2 and b is 0xE, the address will be 0x2E0. |
| |
| DO NOT SET THIS LESS THAN 0x200!!!!! |
| |
| |
| m: The first digit of the memory address. |
| Setting Value |
| ------- ----- |
| 0000 0 |
| 0001 1 |
| 0010 2 |
| ... ... |
| 1110 E |
| 1111 F |
| |
| The memory address is in the form m0000. For example, if |
| m is D, the address will be 0xD0000. |
| |
| DO NOT SET THIS TO C0000, F0000, OR LESS THAN A0000! |
| |
| 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 |
| S2 /--------------------------\ |
| (Station Address) | 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 | |
| \--------------------------/ |
| |
| Setting Value |
| ------- ----- |
| 00000000 00 |
| 10000000 01 |
| 01000000 02 |
| ... |
| 01111111 FE |
| 11111111 FF |
| |
| Note that this is binary with the digits reversed! |
| |
| DO NOT SET THIS TO 0 OR 255 (0xFF)! |
| |
| |
| ***************************************************************************** |
| |
| ** Standard Microsystems Corp (SMC) ** |
| PC130E/PC270E (8-bit cards) |
| --------------------------- |
| - from Juergen Seifert <seifert@htwm.de> |
| |
| |
| STANDARD MICROSYSTEMS CORPORATION (SMC) ARCNET(R)-PC130E/PC270E |
| =============================================================== |
| |
| This description has been written by Juergen Seifert <seifert@htwm.de> |
| using information from the following Original SMC Manual |
| |
| "Configuration Guide for |
| ARCNET(R)-PC130E/PC270 |
| Network Controller Boards |
| Pub. # 900.044A |
| June, 1989" |
| |
| ARCNET is a registered trademark of the Datapoint Corporation |
| SMC is a registered trademark of the Standard Microsystems Corporation |
| |
| The PC130E is an enhanced version of the PC130 board, is equipped with a |
| standard BNC female connector for connection to RG-62/U coax cable. |
| Since this board is designed both for point-to-point connection in star |
| networks and for connection to bus networks, it is downwardly compatible |
| with all the other standard boards designed for coax networks (that is, |
| the PC120, PC110 and PC100 star topology boards and the PC220, PC210 and |
| PC200 bus topology boards). |
| |
| The PC270E is an enhanced version of the PC260 board, is equipped with two |
| modular RJ11-type jacks for connection to twisted pair wiring. |
| It can be used in a star or a daisy-chained network. |
| |
| |
| 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 |
| ________________________________________________________________ |
| | | S1 | | |
| | |_________________| | |
| | Offs|Base |I/O Addr | |
| | RAM Addr | ___| |
| | ___ ___ CR3 |___| |
| | | \/ | CR4 |___| |
| | | PROM | ___| |
| | | | N | | 8 |
| | | SOCKET | o | | 7 |
| | |________| d | | 6 |
| | ___________________ e | | 5 |
| | | | A | S | 4 |
| | |oo| EXT2 | | d | 2 | 3 |
| | |oo| EXT1 | SMC | d | | 2 |
| | |oo| ROM | 90C63 | r |___| 1 |
| | |oo| IRQ7 | | |o| _____| |
| | |oo| IRQ5 | | |o| | J1 | |
| | |oo| IRQ4 | | STAR |_____| |
| | |oo| IRQ3 | | | J2 | |
| | |oo| IRQ2 |___________________| |_____| |
| |___ ______________| |
| | | |
| |_____________________________________________| |
| |
| Legend: |
| |
| SMC 90C63 ARCNET Controller / Transceiver /Logic |
| S1 1-3: I/O Base Address Select |
| 4-6: Memory Base Address Select |
| 7-8: RAM Offset Select |
| S2 1-8: Node ID Select |
| EXT Extended Timeout Select |
| ROM ROM Enable Select |
| STAR Selected - Star Topology (PC130E only) |
| Deselected - Bus Topology (PC130E only) |
| CR3/CR4 Diagnostic LEDs |
| J1 BNC RG62/U Connector (PC130E only) |
| J1 6-position Telephone Jack (PC270E only) |
| J2 6-position Telephone Jack (PC270E only) |
| |
| Setting one of the switches to Off/Open means "1", On/Closed means "0". |
| |
| |
| Setting the Node ID |
| ------------------- |
| |
| The eight switches in group S2 are used to set the node ID. |
| These switches work in a way similar to the PC100-series cards; see that |
| entry for more information. |
| |
| |
| Setting the I/O Base Address |
| ---------------------------- |
| |
| The first three switches in switch group S1 are used to select one |
| of eight possible I/O Base addresses using the following table |
| |
| |
| Switch | Hex I/O |
| 1 2 3 | Address |
| -------|-------- |
| 0 0 0 | 260 |
| 0 0 1 | 290 |
| 0 1 0 | 2E0 (Manufacturer's default) |
| 0 1 1 | 2F0 |
| 1 0 0 | 300 |
| 1 0 1 | 350 |
| 1 1 0 | 380 |
| 1 1 1 | 3E0 |
| |
| |
| Setting the Base Memory (RAM) buffer Address |
| -------------------------------------------- |
| |
| The memory buffer requires 2K of a 16K block of RAM. The base of this |
| 16K block can be located in any of eight positions. |
| Switches 4-6 of switch group S1 select the Base of the 16K block. |
| Within that 16K address space, the buffer may be assigned any one of four |
| positions, determined by the offset, switches 7 and 8 of group S1. |
| |
| Switch | Hex RAM | Hex ROM |
| 4 5 6 7 8 | Address | Address *) |
| -----------|---------|----------- |
| 0 0 0 0 0 | C0000 | C2000 |
| 0 0 0 0 1 | C0800 | C2000 |
| 0 0 0 1 0 | C1000 | C2000 |
| 0 0 0 1 1 | C1800 | C2000 |
| | | |
| 0 0 1 0 0 | C4000 | C6000 |
| 0 0 1 0 1 | C4800 | C6000 |
| 0 0 1 1 0 | C5000 | C6000 |
| 0 0 1 1 1 | C5800 | C6000 |
| | | |
| 0 1 0 0 0 | CC000 | CE000 |
| 0 1 0 0 1 | CC800 | CE000 |
| 0 1 0 1 0 | CD000 | CE000 |
| 0 1 0 1 1 | CD800 | CE000 |
| | | |
| 0 1 1 0 0 | D0000 | D2000 (Manufacturer's default) |
| 0 1 1 0 1 | D0800 | D2000 |
| 0 1 1 1 0 | D1000 | D2000 |
| 0 1 1 1 1 | D1800 | D2000 |
| | | |
| 1 0 0 0 0 | D4000 | D6000 |
| 1 0 0 0 1 | D4800 | D6000 |
| 1 0 0 1 0 | D5000 | D6000 |
| 1 0 0 1 1 | D5800 | D6000 |
| | | |
| 1 0 1 0 0 | D8000 | DA000 |
| 1 0 1 0 1 | D8800 | DA000 |
| 1 0 1 1 0 | D9000 | DA000 |
| 1 0 1 1 1 | D9800 | DA000 |
| | | |
| 1 1 0 0 0 | DC000 | DE000 |
| 1 1 0 0 1 | DC800 | DE000 |
| 1 1 0 1 0 | DD000 | DE000 |
| 1 1 0 1 1 | DD800 | DE000 |
| | | |
| 1 1 1 0 0 | E0000 | E2000 |
| 1 1 1 0 1 | E0800 | E2000 |
| 1 1 1 1 0 | E1000 | E2000 |
| 1 1 1 1 1 | E1800 | E2000 |
| |
| *) To enable the 8K Boot PROM install the jumper ROM. |
| The default is jumper ROM not installed. |
| |
| |
| Setting the Timeouts and Interrupt |
| ---------------------------------- |
| |
| The jumpers labeled EXT1 and EXT2 are used to determine the timeout |
| parameters. These two jumpers are normally left open. |
| |
| To select a hardware interrupt level set one (only one!) of the jumpers |
| IRQ2, IRQ3, IRQ4, IRQ5, IRQ7. The Manufacturer's default is IRQ2. |
| |
| |
| Configuring the PC130E for Star or Bus Topology |
| ----------------------------------------------- |
| |
| The single jumper labeled STAR is used to configure the PC130E board for |
| star or bus topology. |
| When the jumper is installed, the board may be used in a star network, when |
| it is removed, the board can be used in a bus topology. |
| |
| |
| Diagnostic LEDs |
| --------------- |
| |
| Two diagnostic LEDs are visible on the rear bracket of the board. |
| The green LED monitors the network activity: the red one shows the |
| board activity: |
| |
| Green | Status Red | Status |
| -------|------------------- ---------|------------------- |
| on | normal activity flash/on | data transfer |
| blink | reconfiguration off | no data transfer; |
| off | defective board or | incorrect memory or |
| | node ID is zero | I/O address |
| |
| |
| ***************************************************************************** |
| |
| ** Standard Microsystems Corp (SMC) ** |
| PC500/PC550 Longboard (16-bit cards) |
| ------------------------------------- |
| - from Juergen Seifert <seifert@htwm.de> |
| |
| |
| STANDARD MICROSYSTEMS CORPORATION (SMC) ARCNET-PC500/PC550 Long Board |
| ===================================================================== |
| |
| Note: There is another Version of the PC500 called Short Version, which |
| is different in hard- and software! The most important differences |
| are: |
| - The long board has no Shared memory. |
| - On the long board the selection of the interrupt is done by binary |
| coded switch, on the short board directly by jumper. |
| |
| [Avery's note: pay special attention to that: the long board HAS NO SHARED |
| MEMORY. This means the current Linux-ARCnet driver can't use these cards. |
| I have obtained a PC500Longboard and will be doing some experiments on it in |
| the future, but don't hold your breath. Thanks again to Juergen Seifert for |
| his advice about this!] |
| |
| This description has been written by Juergen Seifert <seifert@htwm.de> |
| using information from the following Original SMC Manual |
| |
| "Configuration Guide for |
| SMC ARCNET-PC500/PC550 |
| Series Network Controller Boards |
| Pub. # 900.033 Rev. A |
| November, 1989" |
| |
| ARCNET is a registered trademark of the Datapoint Corporation |
| SMC is a registered trademark of the Standard Microsystems Corporation |
| |
| The PC500 is equipped with a standard BNC female connector for connection |
| to RG-62/U coax cable. |
| The board is designed both for point-to-point connection in star networks |
| and for connection to bus networks. |
| |
| The PC550 is equipped with two modular RJ11-type jacks for connection |
| to twisted pair wiring. |
| It can be used in a star or a daisy-chained (BUS) network. |
| |
| 1 |
| 0 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 6 5 4 3 2 1 |
| ____________________________________________________________________ |
| < | SW1 | | SW2 | | |
| > |_____________________| |_____________| | |
| < IRQ |I/O Addr | |
| > ___| |
| < CR4 |___| |
| > CR3 |___| |
| < ___| |
| > N | | 8 |
| < o | | 7 |
| > d | S | 6 |
| < e | W | 5 |
| > A | 3 | 4 |
| < d | | 3 |
| > d | | 2 |
| < r |___| 1 |
| > |o| _____| |
| < |o| | J1 | |
| > 3 1 JP6 |_____| |
| < |o|o| JP2 | J2 | |
| > |o|o| |_____| |
| < 4 2__ ______________| |
| > | | | |
| <____| |_____________________________________________| |
| |
| Legend: |
| |
| SW1 1-6: I/O Base Address Select |
| 7-10: Interrupt Select |
| SW2 1-6: Reserved for Future Use |
| SW3 1-8: Node ID Select |
| JP2 1-4: Extended Timeout Select |
| JP6 Selected - Star Topology (PC500 only) |
| Deselected - Bus Topology (PC500 only) |
| CR3 Green Monitors Network Activity |
| CR4 Red Monitors Board Activity |
| J1 BNC RG62/U Connector (PC500 only) |
| J1 6-position Telephone Jack (PC550 only) |
| J2 6-position Telephone Jack (PC550 only) |
| |
| Setting one of the switches to Off/Open means "1", On/Closed means "0". |
| |
| |
| Setting the Node ID |
| ------------------- |
| |
| The eight switches in group SW3 are used to set the node ID. Each node |
| attached to the network must have an unique node ID which must be |
| different from 0. |
| Switch 1 serves as the least significant bit (LSB). |
| |
| The node ID is the sum of the values of all switches set to "1" |
| These values are: |
| |
| Switch | Value |
| -------|------- |
| 1 | 1 |
| 2 | 2 |
| 3 | 4 |
| 4 | 8 |
| 5 | 16 |
| 6 | 32 |
| 7 | 64 |
| 8 | 128 |
| |
| Some Examples: |
| |
| Switch | Hex | Decimal |
| 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 | Node ID | Node ID |
| ----------------|---------|--------- |
| 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 | not allowed |
| 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 | 1 | 1 |
| 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 | 2 | 2 |
| 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 | 3 | 3 |
| . . . | | |
| 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 | 55 | 85 |
| . . . | | |
| 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 | AA | 170 |
| . . . | | |
| 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 1 | FD | 253 |
| 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 | FE | 254 |
| 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 | FF | 255 |
| |
| |
| Setting the I/O Base Address |
| ---------------------------- |
| |
| The first six switches in switch group SW1 are used to select one |
| of 32 possible I/O Base addresses using the following table |
| |
| Switch | Hex I/O |
| 6 5 4 3 2 1 | Address |
| -------------|-------- |
| 0 1 0 0 0 0 | 200 |
| 0 1 0 0 0 1 | 210 |
| 0 1 0 0 1 0 | 220 |
| 0 1 0 0 1 1 | 230 |
| 0 1 0 1 0 0 | 240 |
| 0 1 0 1 0 1 | 250 |
| 0 1 0 1 1 0 | 260 |
| 0 1 0 1 1 1 | 270 |
| 0 1 1 0 0 0 | 280 |
| 0 1 1 0 0 1 | 290 |
| 0 1 1 0 1 0 | 2A0 |
| 0 1 1 0 1 1 | 2B0 |
| 0 1 1 1 0 0 | 2C0 |
| 0 1 1 1 0 1 | 2D0 |
| 0 1 1 1 1 0 | 2E0 (Manufacturer's default) |
| 0 1 1 1 1 1 | 2F0 |
| 1 1 0 0 0 0 | 300 |
| 1 1 0 0 0 1 | 310 |
| 1 1 0 0 1 0 | 320 |
| 1 1 0 0 1 1 | 330 |
| 1 1 0 1 0 0 | 340 |
| 1 1 0 1 0 1 | 350 |
| 1 1 0 1 1 0 | 360 |
| 1 1 0 1 1 1 | 370 |
| 1 1 1 0 0 0 | 380 |
| 1 1 1 0 0 1 | 390 |
| 1 1 1 0 1 0 | 3A0 |
| 1 1 1 0 1 1 | 3B0 |
| 1 1 1 1 0 0 | 3C0 |
| 1 1 1 1 0 1 | 3D0 |
| 1 1 1 1 1 0 | 3E0 |
| 1 1 1 1 1 1 | 3F0 |
| |
| |
| Setting the Interrupt |
| --------------------- |
| |
| Switches seven through ten of switch group SW1 are used to select the |
| interrupt level. The interrupt level is binary coded, so selections |
| from 0 to 15 would be possible, but only the following eight values will |
| be supported: 3, 4, 5, 7, 9, 10, 11, 12. |
| |
| Switch | IRQ |
| 10 9 8 7 | |
| ---------|-------- |
| 0 0 1 1 | 3 |
| 0 1 0 0 | 4 |
| 0 1 0 1 | 5 |
| 0 1 1 1 | 7 |
| 1 0 0 1 | 9 (=2) (default) |
| 1 0 1 0 | 10 |
| 1 0 1 1 | 11 |
| 1 1 0 0 | 12 |
| |
| |
| Setting the Timeouts |
| -------------------- |
| |
| The two jumpers JP2 (1-4) are used to determine the timeout parameters. |
| These two jumpers are normally left open. |
| Refer to the COM9026 Data Sheet for alternate configurations. |
| |
| |
| Configuring the PC500 for Star or Bus Topology |
| ---------------------------------------------- |
| |
| The single jumper labeled JP6 is used to configure the PC500 board for |
| star or bus topology. |
| When the jumper is installed, the board may be used in a star network, when |
| it is removed, the board can be used in a bus topology. |
| |
| |
| Diagnostic LEDs |
| --------------- |
| |
| Two diagnostic LEDs are visible on the rear bracket of the board. |
| The green LED monitors the network activity: the red one shows the |
| board activity: |
| |
| Green | Status Red | Status |
| -------|------------------- ---------|------------------- |
| on | normal activity flash/on | data transfer |
| blink | reconfiguration off | no data transfer; |
| off | defective board or | incorrect memory or |
| | node ID is zero | I/O address |
| |
| |
| ***************************************************************************** |
| |
| ** SMC ** |
| PC710 (8-bit card) |
| ------------------ |
| - from J.S. van Oosten <jvoosten@compiler.tdcnet.nl> |
| |
| Note: this data is gathered by experimenting and looking at info of other |
| cards. However, I'm sure I got 99% of the settings right. |
| |
| The SMC710 card resembles the PC270 card, but is much more basic (i.e. no |
| LEDs, RJ11 jacks, etc.) and 8 bit. Here's a little drawing: |
| |
| _______________________________________ |
| | +---------+ +---------+ |____ |
| | | S2 | | S1 | | |
| | +---------+ +---------+ | |
| | | |
| | +===+ __ | |
| | | R | | | X-tal ###___ |
| | | O | |__| ####__'| |
| | | M | || ### |
| | +===+ | |
| | | |
| | .. JP1 +----------+ | |
| | .. | big chip | | |
| | .. | 90C63 | | |
| | .. | | | |
| | .. +----------+ | |
| ------- ----------- |
| ||||||||||||||||||||| |
| |
| The row of jumpers at JP1 actually consists of 8 jumpers, (sometimes |
| labelled) the same as on the PC270, from top to bottom: EXT2, EXT1, ROM, |
| IRQ7, IRQ5, IRQ4, IRQ3, IRQ2 (gee, wonder what they would do? :-) ) |
| |
| S1 and S2 perform the same function as on the PC270, only their numbers |
| are swapped (S1 is the nodeaddress, S2 sets IO- and RAM-address). |
| |
| I know it works when connected to a PC110 type ARCnet board. |
| |
| |
| ***************************************************************************** |
| |
| ** Possibly SMC ** |
| LCS-8830(-T) (8 and 16-bit cards) |
| --------------------------------- |
| - from Mathias Katzer <mkatzer@HRZ.Uni-Bielefeld.DE> |
| - Marek Michalkiewicz <marekm@i17linuxb.ists.pwr.wroc.pl> says the |
| LCS-8830 is slightly different from LCS-8830-T. These are 8 bit, BUS |
| only (the JP0 jumper is hardwired), and BNC only. |
| |
| This is a LCS-8830-T made by SMC, I think ('SMC' only appears on one PLCC, |
| nowhere else, not even on the few Xeroxed sheets from the manual). |
| |
| SMC ARCnet Board Type LCS-8830-T |
| |
| ------------------------------------ |
| | | |
| | JP3 88 8 JP2 | |
| | ##### | \ | |
| | ##### ET1 ET2 ###| |
| | 8 ###| |
| | U3 SW 1 JP0 ###| Phone Jacks |
| | -- ###| |
| | | | | |
| | | | SW2 | |
| | | | | |
| | | | ##### | |
| | -- ##### #### BNC Connector |
| | #### |
| | 888888 JP1 | |
| | 234567 | |
| -- ------- |
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||| |
| -------------------------- |
| |
| |
| SW1: DIP-Switches for Station Address |
| SW2: DIP-Switches for Memory Base and I/O Base addresses |
| |
| JP0: If closed, internal termination on (default open) |
| JP1: IRQ Jumpers |
| JP2: Boot-ROM enabled if closed |
| JP3: Jumpers for response timeout |
| |
| U3: Boot-ROM Socket |
| |
| |
| ET1 ET2 Response Time Idle Time Reconfiguration Time |
| |
| 78 86 840 |
| X 285 316 1680 |
| X 563 624 1680 |
| X X 1130 1237 1680 |
| |
| (X means closed jumper) |
| |
| (DIP-Switch downwards means "0") |
| |
| The station address is binary-coded with SW1. |
| |
| The I/O base address is coded with DIP-Switches 6,7 and 8 of SW2: |
| |
| Switches Base |
| 678 Address |
| 000 260-26f |
| 100 290-29f |
| 010 2e0-2ef |
| 110 2f0-2ff |
| 001 300-30f |
| 101 350-35f |
| 011 380-38f |
| 111 3e0-3ef |
| |
| |
| DIP Switches 1-5 of SW2 encode the RAM and ROM Address Range: |
| |
| Switches RAM ROM |
| 12345 Address Range Address Range |
| 00000 C:0000-C:07ff C:2000-C:3fff |
| 10000 C:0800-C:0fff |
| 01000 C:1000-C:17ff |
| 11000 C:1800-C:1fff |
| 00100 C:4000-C:47ff C:6000-C:7fff |
| 10100 C:4800-C:4fff |
| 01100 C:5000-C:57ff |
| 11100 C:5800-C:5fff |
| 00010 C:C000-C:C7ff C:E000-C:ffff |
| 10010 C:C800-C:Cfff |
| 01010 C:D000-C:D7ff |
| 11010 C:D800-C:Dfff |
| 00110 D:0000-D:07ff D:2000-D:3fff |
| 10110 D:0800-D:0fff |
| 01110 D:1000-D:17ff |
| 11110 D:1800-D:1fff |
| 00001 D:4000-D:47ff D:6000-D:7fff |
| 10001 D:4800-D:4fff |
| 01001 D:5000-D:57ff |
| 11001 D:5800-D:5fff |
| 00101 D:8000-D:87ff D:A000-D:bfff |
| 10101 D:8800-D:8fff |
| 01101 D:9000-D:97ff |
| 11101 D:9800-D:9fff |
| 00011 D:C000-D:c7ff D:E000-D:ffff |
| 10011 D:C800-D:cfff |
| 01011 D:D000-D:d7ff |
| 11011 D:D800-D:dfff |
| 00111 E:0000-E:07ff E:2000-E:3fff |
| 10111 E:0800-E:0fff |
| 01111 E:1000-E:17ff |
| 11111 E:1800-E:1fff |
| |
| |
| ***************************************************************************** |
| |
| ** PureData Corp ** |
| PDI507 (8-bit card) |
| -------------------- |
| - from Mark Rejhon <mdrejhon@magi.com> (slight modifications by Avery) |
| - Avery's note: I think PDI508 cards (but definitely NOT PDI508Plus cards) |
| are mostly the same as this. PDI508Plus cards appear to be mainly |
| software-configured. |
| |
| Jumpers: |
| There is a jumper array at the bottom of the card, near the edge |
| connector. This array is labelled J1. They control the IRQs and |
| something else. Put only one jumper on the IRQ pins. |
| |
| ETS1, ETS2 are for timing on very long distance networks. See the |
| more general information near the top of this file. |
| |
| There is a J2 jumper on two pins. A jumper should be put on them, |
| since it was already there when I got the card. I don't know what |
| this jumper is for though. |
| |
| There is a two-jumper array for J3. I don't know what it is for, |
| but there were already two jumpers on it when I got the card. It's |
| a six pin grid in a two-by-three fashion. The jumpers were |
| configured as follows: |
| |
| .-------. |
| o | o o | |
| :-------: ------> Accessible end of card with connectors |
| o | o o | in this direction -------> |
| `-------' |
| |
| Carl de Billy <CARL@carainfo.com> explains J3 and J4: |
| |
| J3 Diagram: |
| |
| .-------. |
| o | o o | |
| :-------: TWIST Technology |
| o | o o | |
| `-------' |
| .-------. |
| | o o | o |
| :-------: COAX Technology |
| | o o | o |
| `-------' |
| |
| - If using coax cable in a bus topology the J4 jumper must be removed; |
| place it on one pin. |
| |
| - If using bus topology with twisted pair wiring move the J3 |
| jumpers so they connect the middle pin and the pins closest to the RJ11 |
| Connectors. Also the J4 jumper must be removed; place it on one pin of |
| J4 jumper for storage. |
| |
| - If using star topology with twisted pair wiring move the J3 |
| jumpers so they connect the middle pin and the pins closest to the RJ11 |
| connectors. |
| |
| |
| DIP Switches: |
| |
| The DIP switches accessible on the accessible end of the card while |
| it is installed, is used to set the ARCnet address. There are 8 |
| switches. Use an address from 1 to 254. |
| |
| Switch No. |
| 12345678 ARCnet address |
| ----------------------------------------- |
| 00000000 FF (Don't use this!) |
| 00000001 FE |
| 00000010 FD |
| .... |
| 11111101 2 |
| 11111110 1 |
| 11111111 0 (Don't use this!) |
| |
| There is another array of eight DIP switches at the top of the |
| card. There are five labelled MS0-MS4 which seem to control the |
| memory address, and another three labelled IO0-IO2 which seem to |
| control the base I/O address of the card. |
| |
| This was difficult to test by trial and error, and the I/O addresses |
| are in a weird order. This was tested by setting the DIP switches, |
| rebooting the computer, and attempting to load ARCETHER at various |
| addresses (mostly between 0x200 and 0x400). The address that caused |
| the red transmit LED to blink, is the one that I thought works. |
| |
| Also, the address 0x3D0 seem to have a special meaning, since the |
| ARCETHER packet driver loaded fine, but without the red LED |
| blinking. I don't know what 0x3D0 is for though. I recommend using |
| an address of 0x300 since Windows may not like addresses below |
| 0x300. |
| |
| IO Switch No. |
| 210 I/O address |
| ------------------------------- |
| 111 0x260 |
| 110 0x290 |
| 101 0x2E0 |
| 100 0x2F0 |
| 011 0x300 |
| 010 0x350 |
| 001 0x380 |
| 000 0x3E0 |
| |
| The memory switches set a reserved address space of 0x1000 bytes |
| (0x100 segment units, or 4k). For example if I set an address of |
| 0xD000, it will use up addresses 0xD000 to 0xD100. |
| |
| The memory switches were tested by booting using QEMM386 stealth, |
| and using LOADHI to see what address automatically became excluded |
| from the upper memory regions, and then attempting to load ARCETHER |
| using these addresses. |
| |
| I recommend using an ARCnet memory address of 0xD000, and putting |
| the EMS page frame at 0xC000 while using QEMM stealth mode. That |
| way, you get contiguous high memory from 0xD100 almost all the way |
| the end of the megabyte. |
| |
| Memory Switch 0 (MS0) didn't seem to work properly when set to OFF |
| on my card. It could be malfunctioning on my card. Experiment with |
| it ON first, and if it doesn't work, set it to OFF. (It may be a |
| modifier for the 0x200 bit?) |
| |
| MS Switch No. |
| 43210 Memory address |
| -------------------------------- |
| 00001 0xE100 (guessed - was not detected by QEMM) |
| 00011 0xE000 (guessed - was not detected by QEMM) |
| 00101 0xDD00 |
| 00111 0xDC00 |
| 01001 0xD900 |
| 01011 0xD800 |
| 01101 0xD500 |
| 01111 0xD400 |
| 10001 0xD100 |
| 10011 0xD000 |
| 10101 0xCD00 |
| 10111 0xCC00 |
| 11001 0xC900 (guessed - crashes tested system) |
| 11011 0xC800 (guessed - crashes tested system) |
| 11101 0xC500 (guessed - crashes tested system) |
| 11111 0xC400 (guessed - crashes tested system) |
| |
| |
| ***************************************************************************** |
| |
| ** CNet Technology Inc. ** |
| 120 Series (8-bit cards) |
| ------------------------ |
| - from Juergen Seifert <seifert@htwm.de> |
| |
| |
| CNET TECHNOLOGY INC. (CNet) ARCNET 120A SERIES |
| ============================================== |
| |
| This description has been written by Juergen Seifert <seifert@htwm.de> |
| using information from the following Original CNet Manual |
| |
| "ARCNET |
| USER'S MANUAL |
| for |
| CN120A |
| CN120AB |
| CN120TP |
| CN120ST |
| CN120SBT |
| P/N:12-01-0007 |
| Revision 3.00" |
| |
| ARCNET is a registered trademark of the Datapoint Corporation |
| |
| P/N 120A ARCNET 8 bit XT/AT Star |
| P/N 120AB ARCNET 8 bit XT/AT Bus |
| P/N 120TP ARCNET 8 bit XT/AT Twisted Pair |
| P/N 120ST ARCNET 8 bit XT/AT Star, Twisted Pair |
| P/N 120SBT ARCNET 8 bit XT/AT Star, Bus, Twisted Pair |
| |
| __________________________________________________________________ |
| | | |
| | ___| |
| | LED |___| |
| | ___| |
| | N | | ID7 |
| | o | | ID6 |
| | d | S | ID5 |
| | e | W | ID4 |
| | ___________________ A | 2 | ID3 |
| | | | d | | ID2 |
| | | | 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 d | | ID1 |
| | | | _________________ r |___| ID0 |
| | | 90C65 || SW1 | ____| |
| | JP 8 7 | ||_________________| | | |
| | |o|o| JP1 | | | J2 | |
| | |o|o| |oo| | | JP 1 1 1 | | |
| | ______________ | | 0 1 2 |____| |
| | | PROM | |___________________| |o|o|o| _____| |
| | > SOCKET | JP 6 5 4 3 2 |o|o|o| | J1 | |
| | |______________| |o|o|o|o|o| |o|o|o| |_____| |
| |_____ |o|o|o|o|o| ______________| |
| | | |
| |_____________________________________________| |
| |
| Legend: |
| |
| 90C65 ARCNET Probe |
| S1 1-5: Base Memory Address Select |
| 6-8: Base I/O Address Select |
| S2 1-8: Node ID Select (ID0-ID7) |
| JP1 ROM Enable Select |
| JP2 IRQ2 |
| JP3 IRQ3 |
| JP4 IRQ4 |
| JP5 IRQ5 |
| JP6 IRQ7 |
| JP7/JP8 ET1, ET2 Timeout Parameters |
| JP10/JP11 Coax / Twisted Pair Select (CN120ST/SBT only) |
| JP12 Terminator Select (CN120AB/ST/SBT only) |
| J1 BNC RG62/U Connector (all except CN120TP) |
| J2 Two 6-position Telephone Jack (CN120TP/ST/SBT only) |
| |
| Setting one of the switches to Off means "1", On means "0". |
| |
| |
| Setting the Node ID |
| ------------------- |
| |
| The eight switches in SW2 are used to set the node ID. Each node attached |
| to the network must have an unique node ID which must be different from 0. |
| Switch 1 (ID0) serves as the least significant bit (LSB). |
| |
| The node ID is the sum of the values of all switches set to "1" |
| These values are: |
| |
| Switch | Label | Value |
| -------|-------|------- |
| 1 | ID0 | 1 |
| 2 | ID1 | 2 |
| 3 | ID2 | 4 |
| 4 | ID3 | 8 |
| 5 | ID4 | 16 |
| 6 | ID5 | 32 |
| 7 | ID6 | 64 |
| 8 | ID7 | 128 |
| |
| Some Examples: |
| |
| Switch | Hex | Decimal |
| 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 | Node ID | Node ID |
| ----------------|---------|--------- |
| 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 | not allowed |
| 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 | 1 | 1 |
| 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 | 2 | 2 |
| 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 | 3 | 3 |
| . . . | | |
| 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 | 55 | 85 |
| . . . | | |
| 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 | AA | 170 |
| . . . | | |
| 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 1 | FD | 253 |
| 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 | FE | 254 |
| 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 | FF | 255 |
| |
| |
| Setting the I/O Base Address |
| ---------------------------- |
| |
| The last three switches in switch block SW1 are used to select one |
| of eight possible I/O Base addresses using the following table |
| |
| |
| Switch | Hex I/O |
| 6 7 8 | Address |
| ------------|-------- |
| ON ON ON | 260 |
| OFF ON ON | 290 |
| ON OFF ON | 2E0 (Manufacturer's default) |
| OFF OFF ON | 2F0 |
| ON ON OFF | 300 |
| OFF ON OFF | 350 |
| ON OFF OFF | 380 |
| OFF OFF OFF | 3E0 |
| |
| |
| Setting the Base Memory (RAM) buffer Address |
| -------------------------------------------- |
| |
| The memory buffer (RAM) requires 2K. The base of this buffer can be |
| located in any of eight positions. The address of the Boot Prom is |
| memory base + 8K or memory base + 0x2000. |
| Switches 1-5 of switch block SW1 select the Memory Base address. |
| |
| Switch | Hex RAM | Hex ROM |
| 1 2 3 4 5 | Address | Address *) |
| --------------------|---------|----------- |
| ON ON ON ON ON | C0000 | C2000 |
| ON ON OFF ON ON | C4000 | C6000 |
| ON ON ON OFF ON | CC000 | CE000 |
| ON ON OFF OFF ON | D0000 | D2000 (Manufacturer's default) |
| ON ON ON ON OFF | D4000 | D6000 |
| ON ON OFF ON OFF | D8000 | DA000 |
| ON ON ON OFF OFF | DC000 | DE000 |
| ON ON OFF OFF OFF | E0000 | E2000 |
| |
| *) To enable the Boot ROM install the jumper JP1 |
| |
| Note: Since the switches 1 and 2 are always set to ON it may be possible |
| that they can be used to add an offset of 2K, 4K or 6K to the base |
| address, but this feature is not documented in the manual and I |
| haven't tested it yet. |
| |
| |
| Setting the Interrupt Line |
| -------------------------- |
| |
| To select a hardware interrupt level install one (only one!) of the jumpers |
| JP2, JP3, JP4, JP5, JP6. JP2 is the default. |
| |
| Jumper | IRQ |
| -------|----- |
| 2 | 2 |
| 3 | 3 |
| 4 | 4 |
| 5 | 5 |
| 6 | 7 |
| |
| |
| Setting the Internal Terminator on CN120AB/TP/SBT |
| -------------------------------------------------- |
| |
| The jumper JP12 is used to enable the internal terminator. |
| |
| ----- |
| 0 | 0 | |
| ----- ON | | ON |
| | 0 | | 0 | |
| | | OFF ----- OFF |
| | 0 | 0 |
| ----- |
| Terminator Terminator |
| disabled enabled |
| |
| |
| Selecting the Connector Type on CN120ST/SBT |
| ------------------------------------------- |
| |
| JP10 JP11 JP10 JP11 |
| ----- ----- |
| 0 0 | 0 | | 0 | |
| ----- ----- | | | | |
| | 0 | | 0 | | 0 | | 0 | |
| | | | | ----- ----- |
| | 0 | | 0 | 0 0 |
| ----- ----- |
| Coaxial Cable Twisted Pair Cable |
| (Default) |
| |
| |
| Setting the Timeout Parameters |
| ------------------------------ |
| |
| The jumpers labeled EXT1 and EXT2 are used to determine the timeout |
| parameters. These two jumpers are normally left open. |
| |
| |
| |
| ***************************************************************************** |
| |
| ** CNet Technology Inc. ** |
| 160 Series (16-bit cards) |
| ------------------------- |
| - from Juergen Seifert <seifert@htwm.de> |
| |
| CNET TECHNOLOGY INC. (CNet) ARCNET 160A SERIES |
| ============================================== |
| |
| This description has been written by Juergen Seifert <seifert@htwm.de> |
| using information from the following Original CNet Manual |
| |
| "ARCNET |
| USER'S MANUAL |
| for |
| CN160A |
| CN160AB |
| CN160TP |
| P/N:12-01-0006 |
| Revision 3.00" |
| |
| ARCNET is a registered trademark of the Datapoint Corporation |
| |
| P/N 160A ARCNET 16 bit XT/AT Star |
| P/N 160AB ARCNET 16 bit XT/AT Bus |
| P/N 160TP ARCNET 16 bit XT/AT Twisted Pair |
| |
| ___________________________________________________________________ |
| < _________________________ ___| |
| > |oo| JP2 | | LED |___| |
| < |oo| JP1 | 9026 | LED |___| |
| > |_________________________| ___| |
| < N | | ID7 |
| > 1 o | | ID6 |
| < 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 d | S | ID5 |
| > _______________ _____________________ e | W | ID4 |
| < | PROM | | SW1 | A | 2 | ID3 |
| > > SOCKET | |_____________________| d | | ID2 |
| < |_______________| | IO-Base | MEM | d | | ID1 |
| > r |___| ID0 |
| < ____| |
| > | | |
| < | J1 | |
| > | | |
| < |____| |
| > 1 1 1 1 | |
| < 3 4 5 6 7 JP 8 9 0 1 2 3 | |
| > |o|o|o|o|o| |o|o|o|o|o|o| | |
| < |o|o|o|o|o| __ |o|o|o|o|o|o| ___________| |
| > | | | |
| <____________| |_______________________________________| |
| |
| Legend: |
| |
| 9026 ARCNET Probe |
| SW1 1-6: Base I/O Address Select |
| 7-10: Base Memory Address Select |
| SW2 1-8: Node ID Select (ID0-ID7) |
| JP1/JP2 ET1, ET2 Timeout Parameters |
| JP3-JP13 Interrupt Select |
| J1 BNC RG62/U Connector (CN160A/AB only) |
| J1 Two 6-position Telephone Jack (CN160TP only) |
| LED |
| |
| Setting one of the switches to Off means "1", On means "0". |
| |
| |
| Setting the Node ID |
| ------------------- |
| |
| The eight switches in SW2 are used to set the node ID. Each node attached |
| to the network must have an unique node ID which must be different from 0. |
| Switch 1 (ID0) serves as the least significant bit (LSB). |
| |
| The node ID is the sum of the values of all switches set to "1" |
| These values are: |
| |
| Switch | Label | Value |
| -------|-------|------- |
| 1 | ID0 | 1 |
| 2 | ID1 | 2 |
| 3 | ID2 | 4 |
| 4 | ID3 | 8 |
| 5 | ID4 | 16 |
| 6 | ID5 | 32 |
| 7 | ID6 | 64 |
| 8 | ID7 | 128 |
| |
| Some Examples: |
| |
| Switch | Hex | Decimal |
| 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 | Node ID | Node ID |
| ----------------|---------|--------- |
| 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 | not allowed |
| 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 | 1 | 1 |
| 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 | 2 | 2 |
| 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 | 3 | 3 |
| . . . | | |
| 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 | 55 | 85 |
| . . . | | |
| 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 | AA | 170 |
| . . . | | |
| 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 1 | FD | 253 |
| 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 | FE | 254 |
| 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 | FF | 255 |
| |
| |
| Setting the I/O Base Address |
| ---------------------------- |
| |
| The first six switches in switch block SW1 are used to select the I/O Base |
| address using the following table: |
| |
| Switch | Hex I/O |
| 1 2 3 4 5 6 | Address |
| ------------------------|-------- |
| OFF ON ON OFF OFF ON | 260 |
| OFF ON OFF ON ON OFF | 290 |
| OFF ON OFF OFF OFF ON | 2E0 (Manufacturer's default) |
| OFF ON OFF OFF OFF OFF | 2F0 |
| OFF OFF ON ON ON ON | 300 |
| OFF OFF ON OFF ON OFF | 350 |
| OFF OFF OFF ON ON ON | 380 |
| OFF OFF OFF OFF OFF ON | 3E0 |
| |
| Note: Other IO-Base addresses seem to be selectable, but only the above |
| combinations are documented. |
| |
| |
| Setting the Base Memory (RAM) buffer Address |
| -------------------------------------------- |
| |
| The switches 7-10 of switch block SW1 are used to select the Memory |
| Base address of the RAM (2K) and the PROM. |
| |
| Switch | Hex RAM | Hex ROM |
| 7 8 9 10 | Address | Address |
| ----------------|---------|----------- |
| OFF OFF ON ON | C0000 | C8000 |
| OFF OFF ON OFF | D0000 | D8000 (Default) |
| OFF OFF OFF ON | E0000 | E8000 |
| |
| Note: Other MEM-Base addresses seem to be selectable, but only the above |
| combinations are documented. |
| |
| |
| Setting the Interrupt Line |
| -------------------------- |
| |
| To select a hardware interrupt level install one (only one!) of the jumpers |
| JP3 through JP13 using the following table: |
| |
| Jumper | IRQ |
| -------|----------------- |
| 3 | 14 |
| 4 | 15 |
| 5 | 12 |
| 6 | 11 |
| 7 | 10 |
| 8 | 3 |
| 9 | 4 |
| 10 | 5 |
| 11 | 6 |
| 12 | 7 |
| 13 | 2 (=9) Default! |
| |
| Note: - Do not use JP11=IRQ6, it may conflict with your Floppy Disk |
| Controller |
| - Use JP3=IRQ14 only, if you don't have an IDE-, MFM-, or RLL- |
| Hard Disk, it may conflict with their controllers |
| |
| |
| Setting the Timeout Parameters |
| ------------------------------ |
| |
| The jumpers labeled JP1 and JP2 are used to determine the timeout |
| parameters. These two jumpers are normally left open. |
| |
| |
| ***************************************************************************** |
| |
| ** Lantech ** |
| 8-bit card, unknown model |
| ------------------------- |
| - from Vlad Lungu <vlungu@ugal.ro> - his e-mail address seemed broken at |
| the time I tried to reach him. Sorry Vlad, if you didn't get my reply. |
| |
| ________________________________________________________________ |
| | 1 8 | |
| | ___________ __| |
| | | SW1 | LED |__| |
| | |__________| | |
| | ___| |
| | _____________________ |S | 8 |
| | | | |W | |
| | | | |2 | |
| | | | |__| 1 |
| | | UM9065L | |o| JP4 ____|____ |
| | | | |o| | CN | |
| | | | |________| |
| | | | | |
| | |___________________| | |
| | | |
| | | |
| | _____________ | |
| | | | | |
| | | PROM | |ooooo| JP6 | |
| | |____________| |ooooo| | |
| |_____________ _ _| |
| |____________________________________________| |__| |
| |
| |
| UM9065L : ARCnet Controller |
| |
| SW 1 : Shared Memory Address and I/O Base |
| |
| ON=0 |
| |
| 12345|Memory Address |
| -----|-------------- |
| 00001| D4000 |
| 00010| CC000 |
| 00110| D0000 |
| 01110| D1000 |
| 01101| D9000 |
| 10010| CC800 |
| 10011| DC800 |
| 11110| D1800 |
| |
| It seems that the bits are considered in reverse order. Also, you must |
| observe that some of those addresses are unusual and I didn't probe them; I |
| used a memory dump in DOS to identify them. For the 00000 configuration and |
| some others that I didn't write here the card seems to conflict with the |
| video card (an S3 GENDAC). I leave the full decoding of those addresses to |
| you. |
| |
| 678| I/O Address |
| ---|------------ |
| 000| 260 |
| 001| failed probe |
| 010| 2E0 |
| 011| 380 |
| 100| 290 |
| 101| 350 |
| 110| failed probe |
| 111| 3E0 |
| |
| SW 2 : Node ID (binary coded) |
| |
| JP 4 : Boot PROM enable CLOSE - enabled |
| OPEN - disabled |
| |
| JP 6 : IRQ set (ONLY ONE jumper on 1-5 for IRQ 2-6) |
| |
| |
| ***************************************************************************** |
| |
| ** Acer ** |
| 8-bit card, Model 5210-003 |
| -------------------------- |
| - from Vojtech Pavlik <vojtech@suse.cz> using portions of the existing |
| arcnet-hardware file. |
| |
| This is a 90C26 based card. Its configuration seems similar to the SMC |
| PC100, but has some additional jumpers I don't know the meaning of. |
| |
| __ |
| | | |
| ___________|__|_________________________ |
| | | | | |
| | | BNC | | |
| | |______| ___| |
| | _____________________ |___ |
| | | | | |
| | | Hybrid IC | | |
| | | | o|o J1 | |
| | |_____________________| 8|8 | |
| | 8|8 J5 | |
| | o|o | |
| | 8|8 | |
| |__ 8|8 | |
| (|__| LED o|o | |
| | 8|8 | |
| | 8|8 J15 | |
| | | |
| | _____ | |
| | | | _____ | |
| | | | | | ___| |
| | | | | | | |
| | _____ | ROM | | UFS | | |
| | | | | | | | | |
| | | | ___ | | | | | |
| | | | | | |__.__| |__.__| | |
| | | NCR | |XTL| _____ _____ | |
| | | | |___| | | | | | |
| | |90C26| | | | | | |
| | | | | RAM | | UFS | | |
| | | | J17 o|o | | | | | |
| | | | J16 o|o | | | | | |
| | |__.__| |__.__| |__.__| | |
| | ___ | |
| | | |8 | |
| | |SW2| | |
| | | | | |
| | |___|1 | |
| | ___ | |
| | | |10 J18 o|o | |
| | | | o|o | |
| | |SW1| o|o | |
| | | | J21 o|o | |
| | |___|1 | |
| | | |
| |____________________________________| |
| |
| |
| Legend: |
| |
| 90C26 ARCNET Chip |
| XTL 20 MHz Crystal |
| SW1 1-6 Base I/O Address Select |
| 7-10 Memory Address Select |
| SW2 1-8 Node ID Select (ID0-ID7) |
| J1-J5 IRQ Select |
| J6-J21 Unknown (Probably extra timeouts & ROM enable ...) |
| LED1 Activity LED |
| BNC Coax connector (STAR ARCnet) |
| RAM 2k of SRAM |
| ROM Boot ROM socket |
| UFS Unidentified Flying Sockets |
| |
| |
| Setting the Node ID |
| ------------------- |
| |
| The eight switches in SW2 are used to set the node ID. Each node attached |
| to the network must have an unique node ID which must not be 0. |
| Switch 1 (ID0) serves as the least significant bit (LSB). |
| |
| Setting one of the switches to OFF means "1", ON means "0". |
| |
| The node ID is the sum of the values of all switches set to "1" |
| These values are: |
| |
| Switch | Value |
| -------|------- |
| 1 | 1 |
| 2 | 2 |
| 3 | 4 |
| 4 | 8 |
| 5 | 16 |
| 6 | 32 |
| 7 | 64 |
| 8 | 128 |
| |
| Don't set this to 0 or 255; these values are reserved. |
| |
| |
| Setting the I/O Base Address |
| ---------------------------- |
| |
| The switches 1 to 6 of switch block SW1 are used to select one |
| of 32 possible I/O Base addresses using the following tables |
| |
| | Hex |
| Switch | Value |
| -------|------- |
| 1 | 200 |
| 2 | 100 |
| 3 | 80 |
| 4 | 40 |
| 5 | 20 |
| 6 | 10 |
| |
| The I/O address is sum of all switches set to "1". Remember that |
| the I/O address space bellow 0x200 is RESERVED for mainboard, so |
| switch 1 should be ALWAYS SET TO OFF. |
| |
| |
| Setting the Base Memory (RAM) buffer Address |
| -------------------------------------------- |
| |
| The memory buffer (RAM) requires 2K. The base of this buffer can be |
| located in any of sixteen positions. However, the addresses below |
| A0000 are likely to cause system hang because there's main RAM. |
| |
| Jumpers 7-10 of switch block SW1 select the Memory Base address. |
| |
| Switch | Hex RAM |
| 7 8 9 10 | Address |
| ----------------|--------- |
| OFF OFF OFF OFF | F0000 (conflicts with main BIOS) |
| OFF OFF OFF ON | E0000 |
| OFF OFF ON OFF | D0000 |
| OFF OFF ON ON | C0000 (conflicts with video BIOS) |
| OFF ON OFF OFF | B0000 (conflicts with mono video) |
| OFF ON OFF ON | A0000 (conflicts with graphics) |
| |
| |
| Setting the Interrupt Line |
| -------------------------- |
| |
| Jumpers 1-5 of the jumper block J1 control the IRQ level. ON means |
| shorted, OFF means open. |
| |
| Jumper | IRQ |
| 1 2 3 4 5 | |
| ---------------------------- |
| ON OFF OFF OFF OFF | 7 |
| OFF ON OFF OFF OFF | 5 |
| OFF OFF ON OFF OFF | 4 |
| OFF OFF OFF ON OFF | 3 |
| OFF OFF OFF OFF ON | 2 |
| |
| |
| Unknown jumpers & sockets |
| ------------------------- |
| |
| I know nothing about these. I just guess that J16&J17 are timeout |
| jumpers and maybe one of J18-J21 selects ROM. Also J6-J10 and |
| J11-J15 are connecting IRQ2-7 to some pins on the UFSs. I can't |
| guess the purpose. |
| |
| |
| ***************************************************************************** |
| |
| ** Datapoint? ** |
| LAN-ARC-8, an 8-bit card |
| ------------------------ |
| - from Vojtech Pavlik <vojtech@suse.cz> |
| |
| This is another SMC 90C65-based ARCnet card. I couldn't identify the |
| manufacturer, but it might be DataPoint, because the card has the |
| original arcNet logo in its upper right corner. |
| |
| _______________________________________________________ |
| | _________ | |
| | | SW2 | ON arcNet | |
| | |_________| OFF ___| |
| | _____________ 1 ______ 8 | | 8 |
| | | | SW1 | XTAL | ____________ | S | |
| | > RAM (2k) | |______|| | | W | |
| | |_____________| | H | | 3 | |
| | _________|_____ y | |___| 1 |
| | _________ | | |b | | |
| | |_________| | | |r | | |
| | | SMC | |i | | |
| | | 90C65| |d | | |
| | _________ | | | | | |
| | | SW1 | ON | | |I | | |
| | |_________| OFF |_________|_____/C | _____| |
| | 1 8 | | | |___ |
| | ______________ | | | BNC |___| |
| | | | |____________| |_____| |
| | > EPROM SOCKET | _____________ | |
| | |______________| |_____________| | |
| | ______________| |
| | | |
| |________________________________________| |
| |
| Legend: |
| |
| 90C65 ARCNET Chip |
| SW1 1-5: Base Memory Address Select |
| 6-8: Base I/O Address Select |
| SW2 1-8: Node ID Select |
| SW3 1-5: IRQ Select |
| 6-7: Extra Timeout |
| 8 : ROM Enable |
| BNC Coax connector |
| XTAL 20 MHz Crystal |
| |
| |
| Setting the Node ID |
| ------------------- |
| |
| The eight switches in SW3 are used to set the node ID. Each node attached |
| to the network must have an unique node ID which must not be 0. |
| Switch 1 serves as the least significant bit (LSB). |
| |
| Setting one of the switches to Off means "1", On means "0". |
| |
| The node ID is the sum of the values of all switches set to "1" |
| These values are: |
| |
| Switch | Value |
| -------|------- |
| 1 | 1 |
| 2 | 2 |
| 3 | 4 |
| 4 | 8 |
| 5 | 16 |
| 6 | 32 |
| 7 | 64 |
| 8 | 128 |
| |
| |
| Setting the I/O Base Address |
| ---------------------------- |
| |
| The last three switches in switch block SW1 are used to select one |
| of eight possible I/O Base addresses using the following table |
| |
| |
| Switch | Hex I/O |
| 6 7 8 | Address |
| ------------|-------- |
| ON ON ON | 260 |
| OFF ON ON | 290 |
| ON OFF ON | 2E0 (Manufacturer's default) |
| OFF OFF ON | 2F0 |
| ON ON OFF | 300 |
| OFF ON OFF | 350 |
| ON OFF OFF | 380 |
| OFF OFF OFF | 3E0 |
| |
| |
| Setting the Base Memory (RAM) buffer Address |
| -------------------------------------------- |
| |
| The memory buffer (RAM) requires 2K. The base of this buffer can be |
| located in any of eight positions. The address of the Boot Prom is |
| memory base + 0x2000. |
| Jumpers 3-5 of switch block SW1 select the Memory Base address. |
| |
| Switch | Hex RAM | Hex ROM |
| 1 2 3 4 5 | Address | Address *) |
| --------------------|---------|----------- |
| ON ON ON ON ON | C0000 | C2000 |
| ON ON OFF ON ON | C4000 | C6000 |
| ON ON ON OFF ON | CC000 | CE000 |
| ON ON OFF OFF ON | D0000 | D2000 (Manufacturer's default) |
| ON ON ON ON OFF | D4000 | D6000 |
| ON ON OFF ON OFF | D8000 | DA000 |
| ON ON ON OFF OFF | DC000 | DE000 |
| ON ON OFF OFF OFF | E0000 | E2000 |
| |
| *) To enable the Boot ROM set the switch 8 of switch block SW3 to position ON. |
| |
| The switches 1 and 2 probably add 0x0800 and 0x1000 to RAM base address. |
| |
| |
| Setting the Interrupt Line |
| -------------------------- |
| |
| Switches 1-5 of the switch block SW3 control the IRQ level. |
| |
| Jumper | IRQ |
| 1 2 3 4 5 | |
| ---------------------------- |
| ON OFF OFF OFF OFF | 3 |
| OFF ON OFF OFF OFF | 4 |
| OFF OFF ON OFF OFF | 5 |
| OFF OFF OFF ON OFF | 7 |
| OFF OFF OFF OFF ON | 2 |
| |
| |
| Setting the Timeout Parameters |
| ------------------------------ |
| |
| The switches 6-7 of the switch block SW3 are used to determine the timeout |
| parameters. These two switches are normally left in the OFF position. |
| |
| |
| ***************************************************************************** |
| |
| ** Topware ** |
| 8-bit card, TA-ARC/10 |
| ------------------------- |
| - from Vojtech Pavlik <vojtech@suse.cz> |
| |
| This is another very similar 90C65 card. Most of the switches and jumpers |
| are the same as on other clones. |
| |
| _____________________________________________________________________ |
| | ___________ | | ______ | |
| | |SW2 NODE ID| | | | XTAL | | |
| | |___________| | Hybrid IC | |______| | |
| | ___________ | | __| |
| | |SW1 MEM+I/O| |_________________________| LED1|__|) |
| | |___________| 1 2 | |
| | J3 |o|o| TIMEOUT ______| |
| | ______________ |o|o| | | |
| | | | ___________________ | RJ | |
| | > EPROM SOCKET | | \ |------| |
| |J2 |______________| | | | | |
| ||o| | | |______| |
| ||o| ROM ENABLE | SMC | _________ | |
| | _____________ | 90C65 | |_________| _____| |
| | | | | | | |___ |
| | > RAM (2k) | | | | BNC |___| |
| | |_____________| | | |_____| |
| | |____________________| | |
| | ________ IRQ 2 3 4 5 7 ___________ | |
| ||________| |o|o|o|o|o| |___________| | |
| |________ J1|o|o|o|o|o| ______________| |
| | | |
| |_____________________________________________| |
| |
| Legend: |
| |
| 90C65 ARCNET Chip |
| XTAL 20 MHz Crystal |
| SW1 1-5 Base Memory Address Select |
| 6-8 Base I/O Address Select |
| SW2 1-8 Node ID Select (ID0-ID7) |
| J1 IRQ Select |
| J2 ROM Enable |
| J3 Extra Timeout |
| LED1 Activity LED |
| BNC Coax connector (BUS ARCnet) |
| RJ Twisted Pair Connector (daisy chain) |
| |
| |
| Setting the Node ID |
| ------------------- |
| |
| The eight switches in SW2 are used to set the node ID. Each node attached to |
| the network must have an unique node ID which must not be 0. Switch 1 (ID0) |
| serves as the least significant bit (LSB). |
| |
| Setting one of the switches to Off means "1", On means "0". |
| |
| The node ID is the sum of the values of all switches set to "1" |
| These values are: |
| |
| Switch | Label | Value |
| -------|-------|------- |
| 1 | ID0 | 1 |
| 2 | ID1 | 2 |
| 3 | ID2 | 4 |
| 4 | ID3 | 8 |
| 5 | ID4 | 16 |
| 6 | ID5 | 32 |
| 7 | ID6 | 64 |
| 8 | ID7 | 128 |
| |
| Setting the I/O Base Address |
| ---------------------------- |
| |
| The last three switches in switch block SW1 are used to select one |
| of eight possible I/O Base addresses using the following table: |
| |
| |
| Switch | Hex I/O |
| 6 7 8 | Address |
| ------------|-------- |
| ON ON ON | 260 (Manufacturer's default) |
| OFF ON ON | 290 |
| ON OFF ON | 2E0 |
| OFF OFF ON | 2F0 |
| ON ON OFF | 300 |
| OFF ON OFF | 350 |
| ON OFF OFF | 380 |
| OFF OFF OFF | 3E0 |
| |
| |
| Setting the Base Memory (RAM) buffer Address |
| -------------------------------------------- |
| |
| The memory buffer (RAM) requires 2K. The base of this buffer can be |
| located in any of eight positions. The address of the Boot Prom is |
| memory base + 0x2000. |
| Jumpers 3-5 of switch block SW1 select the Memory Base address. |
| |
| Switch | Hex RAM | Hex ROM |
| 1 2 3 4 5 | Address | Address *) |
| --------------------|---------|----------- |
| ON ON ON ON ON | C0000 | C2000 |
| ON ON OFF ON ON | C4000 | C6000 (Manufacturer's default) |
| ON ON ON OFF ON | CC000 | CE000 |
| ON ON OFF OFF ON | D0000 | D2000 |
| ON ON ON ON OFF | D4000 | D6000 |
| ON ON OFF ON OFF | D8000 | DA000 |
| ON ON ON OFF OFF | DC000 | DE000 |
| ON ON OFF OFF OFF | E0000 | E2000 |
| |
| *) To enable the Boot ROM short the jumper J2. |
| |
| The jumpers 1 and 2 probably add 0x0800 and 0x1000 to RAM address. |
| |
| |
| Setting the Interrupt Line |
| -------------------------- |
| |
| Jumpers 1-5 of the jumper block J1 control the IRQ level. ON means |
| shorted, OFF means open. |
| |
| Jumper | IRQ |
| 1 2 3 4 5 | |
| ---------------------------- |
| ON OFF OFF OFF OFF | 2 |
| OFF ON OFF OFF OFF | 3 |
| OFF OFF ON OFF OFF | 4 |
| OFF OFF OFF ON OFF | 5 |
| OFF OFF OFF OFF ON | 7 |
| |
| |
| Setting the Timeout Parameters |
| ------------------------------ |
| |
| The jumpers J3 are used to set the timeout parameters. These two |
| jumpers are normally left open. |
| |
| |
| ***************************************************************************** |
| |
| ** Thomas-Conrad ** |
| Model #500-6242-0097 REV A (8-bit card) |
| --------------------------------------- |
| - from Lars Karlsson <100617.3473@compuserve.com> |
| |
| ________________________________________________________ |
| | ________ ________ |_____ |
| | |........| |........| | |
| | |________| |________| ___| |
| | SW 3 SW 1 | | |
| | Base I/O Base Addr. Station | | |
| | address | | |
| | ______ switch | | |
| | | | | | |
| | | | |___| |
| | | | ______ |___._ |
| | |______| |______| ____| BNC |
| | Jumper- _____| Connector |
| | Main chip block _ __| ' |
| | | | | RJ Connector |
| | |_| | with 110 Ohm |
| | |__ Terminator |
| | ___________ __| |
| | |...........| | RJ-jack |
| | |...........| _____ | (unused) |
| | |___________| |_____| |__ |
| | Boot PROM socket IRQ-jumpers |_ Diagnostic |
| |________ __ _| LED (red) |
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |________| |
| | |
| | |
| |
| And here are the settings for some of the switches and jumpers on the cards. |
| |
| |
| I/O |
| |
| 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 |
| |
| 2E0----- 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 |
| 2F0----- 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 |
| 300----- 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 1 |
| 350----- 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 0 |
| |
| "0" in the above example means switch is off "1" means that it is on. |
| |
| |
| ShMem address. |
| |
| 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 |
| |
| CX00--0 0 1 1 | | | |
| DX00--0 0 1 0 | |
| X000--------- 1 1 | |
| X400--------- 1 0 | |
| X800--------- 0 1 | |
| XC00--------- 0 0 |
| ENHANCED----------- 1 |
| COMPATIBLE--------- 0 |
| |
| |
| IRQ |
| |
| |
| 3 4 5 7 2 |
| . . . . . |
| . . . . . |
| |
| |
| There is a DIP-switch with 8 switches, used to set the shared memory address |
| to be used. The first 6 switches set the address, the 7th doesn't have any |
| function, and the 8th switch is used to select "compatible" or "enhanced". |
| When I got my two cards, one of them had this switch set to "enhanced". That |
| card didn't work at all, it wasn't even recognized by the driver. The other |
| card had this switch set to "compatible" and it behaved absolutely normally. I |
| guess that the switch on one of the cards, must have been changed accidentally |
| when the card was taken out of its former host. The question remains |
| unanswered, what is the purpose of the "enhanced" position? |
| |
| [Avery's note: "enhanced" probably either disables shared memory (use IO |
| ports instead) or disables IO ports (use memory addresses instead). This |
| varies by the type of card involved. I fail to see how either of these |
| enhance anything. Send me more detailed information about this mode, or |
| just use "compatible" mode instead.] |
| |
| |
| ***************************************************************************** |
| |
| ** Waterloo Microsystems Inc. ?? ** |
| 8-bit card (C) 1985 |
| ------------------- |
| - from Robert Michael Best <rmb117@cs.usask.ca> |
| |
| [Avery's note: these don't work with my driver for some reason. These cards |
| SEEM to have settings similar to the PDI508Plus, which is |
| software-configured and doesn't work with my driver either. The "Waterloo |
| chip" is a boot PROM, probably designed specifically for the University of |
| Waterloo. If you have any further information about this card, please |
| e-mail me.] |
| |
| The probe has not been able to detect the card on any of the J2 settings, |
| and I tried them again with the "Waterloo" chip removed. |
| |
| _____________________________________________________________________ |
| | \/ \/ ___ __ __ | |
| | C4 C4 |^| | M || ^ ||^| | |
| | -- -- |_| | 5 || || | C3 | |
| | \/ \/ C10 |___|| ||_| | |
| | C4 C4 _ _ | | ?? | |
| | -- -- | \/ || | | |
| | | || | | |
| | | || C1 | | |
| | | || | \/ _____| |
| | | C6 || | C9 | |___ |
| | | || | -- | BNC |___| |
| | | || | >C7| |_____| |
| | | || | | |
| | __ __ |____||_____| 1 2 3 6 | |
| || ^ | >C4| |o|o|o|o|o|o| J2 >C4| | |
| || | |o|o|o|o|o|o| | |
| || C2 | >C4| >C4| | |
| || | >C8| | |
| || | 2 3 4 5 6 7 IRQ >C4| | |
| ||_____| |o|o|o|o|o|o| J3 | |
| |_______ |o|o|o|o|o|o| _______________| |
| | | |
| |_____________________________________________| |
| |
| C1 -- "COM9026 |
| SMC 8638" |
| In a chip socket. |
| |
| C2 -- "@Copyright |
| Waterloo Microsystems Inc. |
| 1985" |
| In a chip Socket with info printed on a label covering a round window |
| showing the circuit inside. (The window indicates it is an EPROM chip.) |
| |
| C3 -- "COM9032 |
| SMC 8643" |
| In a chip socket. |
| |
| C4 -- "74LS" |
| 9 total no sockets. |
| |
| M5 -- "50006-136 |
| 20.000000 MHZ |
| MTQ-T1-S3 |
| 0 M-TRON 86-40" |
| Metallic case with 4 pins, no socket. |
| |
| C6 -- "MOSTEK@TC8643 |
| MK6116N-20 |
| MALAYSIA" |
| No socket. |
| |
| C7 -- No stamp or label but in a 20 pin chip socket. |
| |
| C8 -- "PAL10L8CN |
| 8623" |
| In a 20 pin socket. |
| |
| C9 -- "PAl16R4A-2CN |
| 8641" |
| In a 20 pin socket. |
| |
| C10 -- "M8640 |
| NMC |
| 9306N" |
| In an 8 pin socket. |
| |
| ?? -- Some components on a smaller board and attached with 20 pins all |
| along the side closest to the BNC connector. The are coated in a dark |
| resin. |
| |
| On the board there are two jumper banks labeled J2 and J3. The |
| manufacturer didn't put a J1 on the board. The two boards I have both |
| came with a jumper box for each bank. |
| |
| J2 -- Numbered 1 2 3 4 5 6. |
| 4 and 5 are not stamped due to solder points. |
| |
| J3 -- IRQ 2 3 4 5 6 7 |
| |
| The board itself has a maple leaf stamped just above the irq jumpers |
| and "-2 46-86" beside C2. Between C1 and C6 "ASS 'Y 300163" and "@1986 |
| CORMAN CUSTOM ELECTRONICS CORP." stamped just below the BNC connector. |
| Below that "MADE IN CANADA" |
| |
| |
| ***************************************************************************** |
| |
| ** No Name ** |
| 8-bit cards, 16-bit cards |
| ------------------------- |
| - from Juergen Seifert <seifert@htwm.de> |
| |
| NONAME 8-BIT ARCNET |
| =================== |
| |
| I have named this ARCnet card "NONAME", since there is no name of any |
| manufacturer on the Installation manual nor on the shipping box. The only |
| hint to the existence of a manufacturer at all is written in copper, |
| it is "Made in Taiwan" |
| |
| This description has been written by Juergen Seifert <seifert@htwm.de> |
| using information from the Original |
| "ARCnet Installation Manual" |
| |
| |
| ________________________________________________________________ |
| | |STAR| BUS| T/P| | |
| | |____|____|____| | |
| | _____________________ | |
| | | | | |
| | | | | |
| | | | | |
| | | SMC | | |
| | | | | |
| | | COM90C65 | | |
| | | | | |
| | | | | |
| | |__________-__________| | |
| | _____| |
| | _______________ | CN | |
| | | PROM | |_____| |
| | > SOCKET | | |
| | |_______________| 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 | |
| | _______________ _______________ | |
| | |o|o|o|o|o|o|o|o| | SW1 || SW2 || |
| | |o|o|o|o|o|o|o|o| |_______________||_______________|| |
| |___ 2 3 4 5 7 E E R Node ID IOB__|__MEM____| |
| | \ IRQ / T T O | |
| |__________________1_2_M______________________| |
| |
| Legend: |
| |
| COM90C65: ARCnet Probe |
| S1 1-8: Node ID Select |
| S2 1-3: I/O Base Address Select |
| 4-6: Memory Base Address Select |
| 7-8: RAM Offset Select |
| ET1, ET2 Extended Timeout Select |
| ROM ROM Enable Select |
| CN RG62 Coax Connector |
| STAR| BUS | T/P Three fields for placing a sign (colored circle) |
| indicating the topology of the card |
| |
| Setting one of the switches to Off means "1", On means "0". |
| |
| |
| Setting the Node ID |
| ------------------- |
| |
| The eight switches in group SW1 are used to set the node ID. |
| Each node attached to the network must have an unique node ID which |
| must be different from 0. |
| Switch 8 serves as the least significant bit (LSB). |
| |
| The node ID is the sum of the values of all switches set to "1" |
| These values are: |
| |
| Switch | Value |
| -------|------- |
| 8 | 1 |
| 7 | 2 |
| 6 | 4 |
| 5 | 8 |
| 4 | 16 |
| 3 | 32 |
| 2 | 64 |
| 1 | 128 |
| |
| Some Examples: |
| |
| Switch | Hex | Decimal |
| 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 | Node ID | Node ID |
| ----------------|---------|--------- |
| 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 | not allowed |
| 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 | 1 | 1 |
| 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 | 2 | 2 |
| 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 | 3 | 3 |
| . . . | | |
| 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 | 55 | 85 |
| . . . | | |
| 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 | AA | 170 |
| . . . | | |
| 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 1 | FD | 253 |
| 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 | FE | 254 |
| 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 | FF | 255 |
| |
| |
| Setting the I/O Base Address |
| ---------------------------- |
| |
| The first three switches in switch group SW2 are used to select one |
| of eight possible I/O Base addresses using the following table |
| |
| Switch | Hex I/O |
| 1 2 3 | Address |
| ------------|-------- |
| ON ON ON | 260 |
| ON ON OFF | 290 |
| ON OFF ON | 2E0 (Manufacturer's default) |
| ON OFF OFF | 2F0 |
| OFF ON ON | 300 |
| OFF ON OFF | 350 |
| OFF OFF ON | 380 |
| OFF OFF OFF | 3E0 |
| |
| |
| Setting the Base Memory (RAM) buffer Address |
| -------------------------------------------- |
| |
| The memory buffer requires 2K of a 16K block of RAM. The base of this |
| 16K block can be located in any of eight positions. |
| Switches 4-6 of switch group SW2 select the Base of the 16K block. |
| Within that 16K address space, the buffer may be assigned any one of four |
| positions, determined by the offset, switches 7 and 8 of group SW2. |
| |
| Switch | Hex RAM | Hex ROM |
| 4 5 6 7 8 | Address | Address *) |
| -----------|---------|----------- |
| 0 0 0 0 0 | C0000 | C2000 |
| 0 0 0 0 1 | C0800 | C2000 |
| 0 0 0 1 0 | C1000 | C2000 |
| 0 0 0 1 1 | C1800 | C2000 |
| | | |
| 0 0 1 0 0 | C4000 | C6000 |
| 0 0 1 0 1 | C4800 | C6000 |
| 0 0 1 1 0 | C5000 | C6000 |
| 0 0 1 1 1 | C5800 | C6000 |
| | | |
| 0 1 0 0 0 | CC000 | CE000 |
| 0 1 0 0 1 | CC800 | CE000 |
| 0 1 0 1 0 | CD000 | CE000 |
| 0 1 0 1 1 | CD800 | CE000 |
| | | |
| 0 1 1 0 0 | D0000 | D2000 (Manufacturer's default) |
| 0 1 1 0 1 | D0800 | D2000 |
| 0 1 1 1 0 | D1000 | D2000 |
| 0 1 1 1 1 | D1800 | D2000 |
| | | |
| 1 0 0 0 0 | D4000 | D6000 |
| 1 0 0 0 1 | D4800 | D6000 |
| 1 0 0 1 0 | D5000 | D6000 |
| 1 0 0 1 1 | D5800 | D6000 |
| | | |
| 1 0 1 0 0 | D8000 | DA000 |
| 1 0 1 0 1 | D8800 | DA000 |
| 1 0 1 1 0 | D9000 | DA000 |
| 1 0 1 1 1 | D9800 | DA000 |
| | | |
| 1 1 0 0 0 | DC000 | DE000 |
| 1 1 0 0 1 | DC800 | DE000 |
| 1 1 0 1 0 | DD000 | DE000 |
| 1 1 0 1 1 | DD800 | DE000 |
| | | |
| 1 1 1 0 0 | E0000 | E2000 |
| 1 1 1 0 1 | E0800 | E2000 |
| 1 1 1 1 0 | E1000 | E2000 |
| 1 1 1 1 1 | E1800 | E2000 |
| |
| *) To enable the 8K Boot PROM install the jumper ROM. |
| The default is jumper ROM not installed. |
| |
| |
| Setting Interrupt Request Lines (IRQ) |
| ------------------------------------- |
| |
| To select a hardware interrupt level set one (only one!) of the jumpers |
| IRQ2, IRQ3, IRQ4, IRQ5 or IRQ7. The manufacturer's default is IRQ2. |
| |
| |
| Setting the Timeouts |
| -------------------- |
| |
| The two jumpers labeled ET1 and ET2 are used to determine the timeout |
| parameters (response and reconfiguration time). Every node in a network |
| must be set to the same timeout values. |
| |
| ET1 ET2 | Response Time (us) | Reconfiguration Time (ms) |
| --------|--------------------|-------------------------- |
| Off Off | 78 | 840 (Default) |
| Off On | 285 | 1680 |
| On Off | 563 | 1680 |
| On On | 1130 | 1680 |
| |
| On means jumper installed, Off means jumper not installed |
| |
| |
| NONAME 16-BIT ARCNET |
| ==================== |
| |
| The manual of my 8-Bit NONAME ARCnet Card contains another description |
| of a 16-Bit Coax / Twisted Pair Card. This description is incomplete, |
| because there are missing two pages in the manual booklet. (The table |
| of contents reports pages ... 2-9, 2-11, 2-12, 3-1, ... but inside |
| the booklet there is a different way of counting ... 2-9, 2-10, A-1, |
| (empty page), 3-1, ..., 3-18, A-1 (again), A-2) |
| Also the picture of the board layout is not as good as the picture of |
| 8-Bit card, because there isn't any letter like "SW1" written to the |
| picture. |
| Should somebody have such a board, please feel free to complete this |
| description or to send a mail to me! |
| |
| This description has been written by Juergen Seifert <seifert@htwm.de> |
| using information from the Original |
| "ARCnet Installation Manual" |
| |
| |
| ___________________________________________________________________ |
| < _________________ _________________ | |
| > | SW? || SW? | | |
| < |_________________||_________________| | |
| > ____________________ | |
| < | | | |
| > | | | |
| < | | | |
| > | | | |
| < | | | |
| > | | | |
| < | | | |
| > |____________________| | |
| < ____| |
| > ____________________ | | |
| < | | | J1 | |
| > | < | | |
| < |____________________| ? ? ? ? ? ? |____| |
| > |o|o|o|o|o|o| | |
| < |o|o|o|o|o|o| | |
| > | |
| < __ ___________| |
| > | | | |
| <____________| |_______________________________________| |
| |
| |
| Setting one of the switches to Off means "1", On means "0". |
| |
| |
| Setting the Node ID |
| ------------------- |
| |
| The eight switches in group SW2 are used to set the node ID. |
| Each node attached to the network must have an unique node ID which |
| must be different from 0. |
| Switch 8 serves as the least significant bit (LSB). |
| |
| The node ID is the sum of the values of all switches set to "1" |
| These values are: |
| |
| Switch | Value |
| -------|------- |
| 8 | 1 |
| 7 | 2 |
| 6 | 4 |
| 5 | 8 |
| 4 | 16 |
| 3 | 32 |
| 2 | 64 |
| 1 | 128 |
| |
| Some Examples: |
| |
| Switch | Hex | Decimal |
| 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 | Node ID | Node ID |
| ----------------|---------|--------- |
| 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 | not allowed |
| 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 | 1 | 1 |
| 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 | 2 | 2 |
| 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 | 3 | 3 |
| . . . | | |
| 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 | 55 | 85 |
| . . . | | |
| 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 | AA | 170 |
| . . . | | |
| 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 1 | FD | 253 |
| 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 | FE | 254 |
| 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 | FF | 255 |
| |
| |
| Setting the I/O Base Address |
| ---------------------------- |
| |
| The first three switches in switch group SW1 are used to select one |
| of eight possible I/O Base addresses using the following table |
| |
| Switch | Hex I/O |
| 3 2 1 | Address |
| ------------|-------- |
| ON ON ON | 260 |
| ON ON OFF | 290 |
| ON OFF ON | 2E0 (Manufacturer's default) |
| ON OFF OFF | 2F0 |
| OFF ON ON | 300 |
| OFF ON OFF | 350 |
| OFF OFF ON | 380 |
| OFF OFF OFF | 3E0 |
| |
| |
| Setting the Base Memory (RAM) buffer Address |
| -------------------------------------------- |
| |
| The memory buffer requires 2K of a 16K block of RAM. The base of this |
| 16K block can be located in any of eight positions. |
| Switches 6-8 of switch group SW1 select the Base of the 16K block. |
| Within that 16K address space, the buffer may be assigned any one of four |
| positions, determined by the offset, switches 4 and 5 of group SW1. |
| |
| Switch | Hex RAM | Hex ROM |
| 8 7 6 5 4 | Address | Address |
| -----------|---------|----------- |
| 0 0 0 0 0 | C0000 | C2000 |
| 0 0 0 0 1 | C0800 | C2000 |
| 0 0 0 1 0 | C1000 | C2000 |
| 0 0 0 1 1 | C1800 | C2000 |
| | | |
| 0 0 1 0 0 | C4000 | C6000 |
| 0 0 1 0 1 | C4800 | C6000 |
| 0 0 1 1 0 | C5000 | C6000 |
| 0 0 1 1 1 | C5800 | C6000 |
| | | |
| 0 1 0 0 0 | CC000 | CE000 |
| 0 1 0 0 1 | CC800 | CE000 |
| 0 1 0 1 0 | CD000 | CE000 |
| 0 1 0 1 1 | CD800 | CE000 |
| | | |
| 0 1 1 0 0 | D0000 | D2000 (Manufacturer's default) |
| 0 1 1 0 1 | D0800 | D2000 |
| 0 1 1 1 0 | D1000 | D2000 |
| 0 1 1 1 1 | D1800 | D2000 |
| | | |
| 1 0 0 0 0 | D4000 | D6000 |
| 1 0 0 0 1 | D4800 | D6000 |
| 1 0 0 1 0 | D5000 | D6000 |
| 1 0 0 1 1 | D5800 | D6000 |
| | | |
| 1 0 1 0 0 | D8000 | DA000 |
| 1 0 1 0 1 | D8800 | DA000 |
| 1 0 1 1 0 | D9000 | DA000 |
| 1 0 1 1 1 | D9800 | DA000 |
| | | |
| 1 1 0 0 0 | DC000 | DE000 |
| 1 1 0 0 1 | DC800 | DE000 |
| 1 1 0 1 0 | DD000 | DE000 |
| 1 1 0 1 1 | DD800 | DE000 |
| | | |
| 1 1 1 0 0 | E0000 | E2000 |
| 1 1 1 0 1 | E0800 | E2000 |
| 1 1 1 1 0 | E1000 | E2000 |
| 1 1 1 1 1 | E1800 | E2000 |
| |
| |
| Setting Interrupt Request Lines (IRQ) |
| ------------------------------------- |
| |
| ?????????????????????????????????????? |
| |
| |
| Setting the Timeouts |
| -------------------- |
| |
| ?????????????????????????????????????? |
| |
| |
| ***************************************************************************** |
| |
| ** No Name ** |
| 8-bit cards ("Made in Taiwan R.O.C.") |
| ----------- |
| - from Vojtech Pavlik <vojtech@suse.cz> |
| |
| I have named this ARCnet card "NONAME", since I got only the card with |
| no manual at all and the only text identifying the manufacturer is |
| "MADE IN TAIWAN R.O.C" printed on the card. |
| |
| ____________________________________________________________ |
| | 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 | |
| | |o|o| JP1 o|o|o|o|o|o|o|o| ON | |
| | + o|o|o|o|o|o|o|o| ___| |
| | _____________ o|o|o|o|o|o|o|o| OFF _____ | | ID7 |
| | | | SW1 | | | | ID6 |
| | > RAM (2k) | ____________________ | H | | S | ID5 |
| | |_____________| | || y | | W | ID4 |
| | | || b | | 2 | ID3 |
| | | || r | | | ID2 |
| | | || i | | | ID1 |
| | | 90C65 || d | |___| ID0 |
| | SW3 | || | | |
| | |o|o|o|o|o|o|o|o| ON | || I | | |
| | |o|o|o|o|o|o|o|o| | || C | | |
| | |o|o|o|o|o|o|o|o| OFF |____________________|| | _____| |
| | 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 | | | |___ |
| | ______________ | | | BNC |___| |
| | | | |_____| |_____| |
| | > EPROM SOCKET | | |
| | |______________| | |
| | ______________| |
| | | |
| |_____________________________________________| |
| |
| Legend: |
| |
| 90C65 ARCNET Chip |
| SW1 1-5: Base Memory Address Select |
| 6-8: Base I/O Address Select |
| SW2 1-8: Node ID Select (ID0-ID7) |
| SW3 1-5: IRQ Select |
| 6-7: Extra Timeout |
| 8 : ROM Enable |
| JP1 Led connector |
| BNC Coax connector |
| |
| Although the jumpers SW1 and SW3 are marked SW, not JP, they are jumpers, not |
| switches. |
| |
| Setting the jumpers to ON means connecting the upper two pins, off the bottom |
| two - or - in case of IRQ setting, connecting none of them at all. |
| |
| Setting the Node ID |
| ------------------- |
| |
| The eight switches in SW2 are used to set the node ID. Each node attached |
| to the network must have an unique node ID which must not be 0. |
| Switch 1 (ID0) serves as the least significant bit (LSB). |
| |
| Setting one of the switches to Off means "1", On means "0". |
| |
| The node ID is the sum of the values of all switches set to "1" |
| These values are: |
| |
| Switch | Label | Value |
| -------|-------|------- |
| 1 | ID0 | 1 |
| 2 | ID1 | 2 |
| 3 | ID2 | 4 |
| 4 | ID3 | 8 |
| 5 | ID4 | 16 |
| 6 | ID5 | 32 |
| 7 | ID6 | 64 |
| 8 | ID7 | 128 |
| |
| Some Examples: |
| |
| Switch | Hex | Decimal |
| 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 | Node ID | Node ID |
| ----------------|---------|--------- |
| 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 | not allowed |
| 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 | 1 | 1 |
| 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 | 2 | 2 |
| 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 | 3 | 3 |
| . . . | | |
| 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 | 55 | 85 |
| . . . | | |
| 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 | AA | 170 |
| . . . | | |
| 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 1 | FD | 253 |
| 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 | FE | 254 |
| 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 | FF | 255 |
| |
| |
| Setting the I/O Base Address |
| ---------------------------- |
| |
| The last three switches in switch block SW1 are used to select one |
| of eight possible I/O Base addresses using the following table |
| |
| |
| Switch | Hex I/O |
| 6 7 8 | Address |
| ------------|-------- |
| ON ON ON | 260 |
| OFF ON ON | 290 |
| ON OFF ON | 2E0 (Manufacturer's default) |
| OFF OFF ON | 2F0 |
| ON ON OFF | 300 |
| OFF ON OFF | 350 |
| ON OFF OFF | 380 |
| OFF OFF OFF | 3E0 |
| |
| |
| Setting the Base Memory (RAM) buffer Address |
| -------------------------------------------- |
| |
| The memory buffer (RAM) requires 2K. The base of this buffer can be |
| located in any of eight positions. The address of the Boot Prom is |
| memory base + 0x2000. |
| Jumpers 3-5 of jumper block SW1 select the Memory Base address. |
| |
| Switch | Hex RAM | Hex ROM |
| 1 2 3 4 5 | Address | Address *) |
| --------------------|---------|----------- |
| ON ON ON ON ON | C0000 | C2000 |
| ON ON OFF ON ON | C4000 | C6000 |
| ON ON ON OFF ON | CC000 | CE000 |
| ON ON OFF OFF ON | D0000 | D2000 (Manufacturer's default) |
| ON ON ON ON OFF | D4000 | D6000 |
| ON ON OFF ON OFF | D8000 | DA000 |
| ON ON ON OFF OFF | DC000 | DE000 |
| ON ON OFF OFF OFF | E0000 | E2000 |
| |
| *) To enable the Boot ROM set the jumper 8 of jumper block SW3 to position ON. |
| |
| The jumpers 1 and 2 probably add 0x0800, 0x1000 and 0x1800 to RAM adders. |
| |
| Setting the Interrupt Line |
| -------------------------- |
| |
| Jumpers 1-5 of the jumper block SW3 control the IRQ level. |
| |
| Jumper | IRQ |
| 1 2 3 4 5 | |
| ---------------------------- |
| ON OFF OFF OFF OFF | 2 |
| OFF ON OFF OFF OFF | 3 |
| OFF OFF ON OFF OFF | 4 |
| OFF OFF OFF ON OFF | 5 |
| OFF OFF OFF OFF ON | 7 |
| |
| |
| Setting the Timeout Parameters |
| ------------------------------ |
| |
| The jumpers 6-7 of the jumper block SW3 are used to determine the timeout |
| parameters. These two jumpers are normally left in the OFF position. |
| |
| |
| ***************************************************************************** |
| |
| ** No Name ** |
| (Generic Model 9058) |
| -------------------- |
| - from Andrew J. Kroll <ag784@freenet.buffalo.edu> |
| - Sorry this sat in my to-do box for so long, Andrew! (yikes - over a |
| year!) |
| _____ |
| | < |
| | .---' |
| ________________________________________________________________ | | |
| | | SW2 | | | |
| | ___________ |_____________| | | |
| | | | 1 2 3 4 5 6 ___| | |
| | > 6116 RAM | _________ 8 | | | |
| | |___________| |20MHzXtal| 7 | | | |
| | |_________| __________ 6 | S | | |
| | 74LS373 | |- 5 | W | | |
| | _________ | E |- 4 | | | |
| | >_______| ______________|..... P |- 3 | 3 | | |
| | | | : O |- 2 | | | |
| | | | : X |- 1 |___| | |
| | ________________ | | : Y |- | | |
| | | SW1 | | SL90C65 | : |- | | |
| | |________________| | | : B |- | | |
| | 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 | | : O |- | | |
| | |_________o____|..../ A |- _______| | |
| | ____________________ | R |- | |------, |
| | | | | D |- | BNC | # | |
| | > 2764 PROM SOCKET | |__________|- |_______|------' |
| | |____________________| _________ | | |
| | >________| <- 74LS245 | | |
| | | | |
| |___ ______________| | |
| |H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H| | | |
| |U_U_U_U_U_U_U_U_U_U_U_U_U_U_U_U_U_U_U_U_U_U_U| | | |
| \| |
| Legend: |
| |
| SL90C65 ARCNET Controller / Transceiver /Logic |
| SW1 1-5: IRQ Select |
| 6: ET1 |
| 7: ET2 |
| 8: ROM ENABLE |
| SW2 1-3: Memory Buffer/PROM Address |
| 3-6: I/O Address Map |
| SW3 1-8: Node ID Select |
| BNC BNC RG62/U Connection |
| *I* have had success using RG59B/U with *NO* terminators! |
| What gives?! |
| |
| SW1: Timeouts, Interrupt and ROM |
| --------------------------------- |
| |
| To select a hardware interrupt level set one (only one!) of the dip switches |
| up (on) SW1...(switches 1-5) |
| IRQ3, IRQ4, IRQ5, IRQ7, IRQ2. The Manufacturer's default is IRQ2. |
| |
| The switches on SW1 labeled EXT1 (switch 6) and EXT2 (switch 7) |
| are used to determine the timeout parameters. These two dip switches |
| are normally left off (down). |
| |
| To enable the 8K Boot PROM position SW1 switch 8 on (UP) labeled ROM. |
| The default is jumper ROM not installed. |
| |
| |
| Setting the I/O Base Address |
| ---------------------------- |
| |
| The last three switches in switch group SW2 are used to select one |
| of eight possible I/O Base addresses using the following table |
| |
| |
| Switch | Hex I/O |
| 4 5 6 | Address |
| -------|-------- |
| 0 0 0 | 260 |
| 0 0 1 | 290 |
| 0 1 0 | 2E0 (Manufacturer's default) |
| 0 1 1 | 2F0 |
| 1 0 0 | 300 |
| 1 0 1 | 350 |
| 1 1 0 | 380 |
| 1 1 1 | 3E0 |
| |
| |
| Setting the Base Memory Address (RAM & ROM) |
| ------------------------------------------- |
| |
| The memory buffer requires 2K of a 16K block of RAM. The base of this |
| 16K block can be located in any of eight positions. |
| Switches 1-3 of switch group SW2 select the Base of the 16K block. |
| (0 = DOWN, 1 = UP) |
| I could, however, only verify two settings... |
| |
| Switch| Hex RAM | Hex ROM |
| 1 2 3 | Address | Address |
| ------|---------|----------- |
| 0 0 0 | E0000 | E2000 |
| 0 0 1 | D0000 | D2000 (Manufacturer's default) |
| 0 1 0 | ????? | ????? |
| 0 1 1 | ????? | ????? |
| 1 0 0 | ????? | ????? |
| 1 0 1 | ????? | ????? |
| 1 1 0 | ????? | ????? |
| 1 1 1 | ????? | ????? |
| |
| |
| Setting the Node ID |
| ------------------- |
| |
| The eight switches in group SW3 are used to set the node ID. |
| Each node attached to the network must have an unique node ID which |
| must be different from 0. |
| Switch 1 serves as the least significant bit (LSB). |
| switches in the DOWN position are OFF (0) and in the UP position are ON (1) |
| |
| The node ID is the sum of the values of all switches set to "1" |
| These values are: |
| Switch | Value |
| -------|------- |
| 1 | 1 |
| 2 | 2 |
| 3 | 4 |
| 4 | 8 |
| 5 | 16 |
| 6 | 32 |
| 7 | 64 |
| 8 | 128 |
| |
| Some Examples: |
| |
| Switch# | Hex | Decimal |
| 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 | Node ID | Node ID |
| ----------------|---------|--------- |
| 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 | not allowed <-. |
| 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 | 1 | 1 | |
| 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 | 2 | 2 | |
| 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 | 3 | 3 | |
| . . . | | | |
| 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 | 55 | 85 | |
| . . . | | + Don't use 0 or 255! |
| 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 | AA | 170 | |
| . . . | | | |
| 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 1 | FD | 253 | |
| 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 | FE | 254 | |
| 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 | FF | 255 <-' |
| |
| |
| ***************************************************************************** |
| |
| ** Tiara ** |
| (model unknown) |
| ------------------------- |
| - from Christoph Lameter <christoph@lameter.com> |
| |
| |
| Here is information about my card as far as I could figure it out: |
| ----------------------------------------------- tiara |
| Tiara LanCard of Tiara Computer Systems. |
| |
| +----------------------------------------------+ |
| ! ! Transmitter Unit ! ! |
| ! +------------------+ ------- |
| ! MEM Coax Connector |
| ! ROM 7654321 <- I/O ------- |
| ! : : +--------+ ! |
| ! : : ! 90C66LJ! +++ |
| ! : : ! ! !D Switch to set |
| ! : : ! ! !I the Nodenumber |
| ! : : +--------+ !P |
| ! !++ |
| ! 234567 <- IRQ ! |
| +------------!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!--------+ |
| !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! |
| |
| 0 = Jumper Installed |
| 1 = Open |
| |
| Top Jumper line Bit 7 = ROM Enable 654=Memory location 321=I/O |
| |
| Settings for Memory Location (Top Jumper Line) |
| 456 Address selected |
| 000 C0000 |
| 001 C4000 |
| 010 CC000 |
| 011 D0000 |
| 100 D4000 |
| 101 D8000 |
| 110 DC000 |
| 111 E0000 |
| |
| Settings for I/O Address (Top Jumper Line) |
| 123 Port |
| 000 260 |
| 001 290 |
| 010 2E0 |
| 011 2F0 |
| 100 300 |
| 101 350 |
| 110 380 |
| 111 3E0 |
| |
| Settings for IRQ Selection (Lower Jumper Line) |
| 234567 |
| 011111 IRQ 2 |
| 101111 IRQ 3 |
| 110111 IRQ 4 |
| 111011 IRQ 5 |
| 111110 IRQ 7 |
| |
| ***************************************************************************** |
| |
| |
| Other Cards |
| ----------- |
| |
| I have no information on other models of ARCnet cards at the moment. Please |
| send any and all info to: |
| apenwarr@worldvisions.ca |
| |
| Thanks. |