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| IBM PCI Pit/Pit-Phy/Olympic CHIPSET BASED TOKEN RING CARDS README |
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| Release 0.2.0 - Release |
| June 8th 1999 Peter De Schrijver & Mike Phillips |
| Release 0.9.C - Release |
| April 18th 2001 Mike Phillips |
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| Thanks: |
| Erik De Cock, Adrian Bridgett and Frank Fiene for their |
| patience and testing. |
| Donald Champion for the cardbus support |
| Kyle Lucke for the dma api changes. |
| Jonathon Bitner for hardware support. |
| Everybody on linux-tr for their continued support. |
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| Options: |
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| The driver accepts four options: ringspeed, pkt_buf_sz, |
| message_level and network_monitor. |
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| These options can be specified differently for each card found. |
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| ringspeed: Has one of three settings 0 (default), 4 or 16. 0 will |
| make the card autosense the ringspeed and join at the appropriate speed, |
| this will be the default option for most people. 4 or 16 allow you to |
| explicitly force the card to operate at a certain speed. The card will fail |
| if you try to insert it at the wrong speed. (Although some hubs will allow |
| this so be *very* careful). The main purpose for explicitly setting the ring |
| speed is for when the card is first on the ring. In autosense mode, if the card |
| cannot detect any active monitors on the ring it will not open, so you must |
| re-init the card at the appropriate speed. Unfortunately at present the only |
| way of doing this is rmmod and insmod which is a bit tough if it is compiled |
| in the kernel. |
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| pkt_buf_sz: This is this initial receive buffer allocation size. This will |
| default to 4096 if no value is entered. You may increase performance of the |
| driver by setting this to a value larger than the network packet size, although |
| the driver now re-sizes buffers based on MTU settings as well. |
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| message_level: Controls level of messages created by the driver. Defaults to 0: |
| which only displays start-up and critical messages. Presently any non-zero |
| value will display all soft messages as well. NB This does not turn |
| debugging messages on, that must be done by modified the source code. |
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| network_monitor: Any non-zero value will provide a quasi network monitoring |
| mode. All unexpected MAC frames (beaconing etc.) will be received |
| by the driver and the source and destination addresses printed. |
| Also an entry will be added in /proc/net called olympic_tr%d, where tr%d |
| is the registered device name, i.e tr0, tr1, etc. This displays low |
| level information about the configuration of the ring and the adapter. |
| This feature has been designed for network administrators to assist in |
| the diagnosis of network / ring problems. (This used to OLYMPIC_NETWORK_MONITOR, |
| but has now changed to allow each adapter to be configured differently and |
| to alleviate the necessity to re-compile olympic to turn the option on). |
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| Multi-card: |
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| The driver will detect multiple cards and will work with shared interrupts, |
| each card is assigned the next token ring device, i.e. tr0 , tr1, tr2. The |
| driver should also happily reside in the system with other drivers. It has |
| been tested with ibmtr.c running, and I personally have had one Olicom PCI |
| card and two IBM olympic cards (all on the same interrupt), all running |
| together. |
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| Variable MTU size: |
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| The driver can handle a MTU size up to either 4500 or 18000 depending upon |
| ring speed. The driver also changes the size of the receive buffers as part |
| of the mtu re-sizing, so if you set mtu = 18000, you will need to be able |
| to allocate 16 * (sk_buff with 18000 buffer size) call it 18500 bytes per ring |
| position = 296,000 bytes of memory space, plus of course anything |
| necessary for the tx sk_buff's. Remember this is per card, so if you are |
| building routers, gateway's etc, you could start to use a lot of memory |
| real fast. |
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| 6/8/99 Peter De Schrijver and Mike Phillips |
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