1---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2NOTE: See also arcnet-hardware.txt in this directory for jumper-setting 3and cabling information if you're like many of us and didn't happen to get a 4manual with your ARCnet card. 5---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 6 7Since no one seems to listen to me otherwise, perhaps a poem will get your 8attention: 9 This driver's getting fat and beefy, 10 But my cat is still named Fifi. 11 12Hmm, I think I'm allowed to call that a poem, even though it's only two 13lines. Hey, I'm in Computer Science, not English. Give me a break. 14 15The point is: I REALLY REALLY REALLY REALLY REALLY want to hear from you if 16you test this and get it working. Or if you don't. Or anything. 17 18ARCnet 0.32 ALPHA first made it into the Linux kernel 1.1.80 - this was 19nice, but after that even FEWER people started writing to me because they 20didn't even have to install the patch. <sigh> 21 22Come on, be a sport! Send me a success report! 23 24(hey, that was even better than my original poem... this is getting bad!) 25 26 27-------- 28WARNING: 29-------- 30 31If you don't e-mail me about your success/failure soon, I may be forced to 32start SINGING. And we don't want that, do we? 33 34(You know, it might be argued that I'm pushing this point a little too much. 35If you think so, why not flame me in a quick little e-mail? Please also 36include the type of card(s) you're using, software, size of network, and 37whether it's working or not.) 38 39My e-mail address is: apenwarr@worldvisions.ca 40 41 42--------------------------------------------------------------------------- 43 44 45These are the ARCnet drivers for Linux. 46 47 48This new release (2.91) has been put together by David Woodhouse 49<dwmw2@infradead.org>, in an attempt to tidy up the driver after adding support 50for yet another chipset. Now the generic support has been separated from the 51individual chipset drivers, and the source files aren't quite so packed with 52#ifdefs! I've changed this file a bit, but kept it in the first person from 53Avery, because I didn't want to completely rewrite it. 54 55The previous release resulted from many months of on-and-off effort from me 56(Avery Pennarun), many bug reports/fixes and suggestions from others, and in 57particular a lot of input and coding from Tomasz Motylewski. Starting with 58ARCnet 2.10 ALPHA, Tomasz's all-new-and-improved RFC1051 support has been 59included and seems to be working fine! 60 61 62Where do I discuss these drivers? 63--------------------------------- 64 65Tomasz has been so kind as to set up a new and improved mailing list. 66Subscribe by sending a message with the BODY "subscribe linux-arcnet YOUR 67REAL NAME" to listserv@tichy.ch.uj.edu.pl. Then, to submit messages to the 68list, mail to linux-arcnet@tichy.ch.uj.edu.pl. 69 70There are archives of the mailing list at: 71 http://epistolary.org/mailman/listinfo.cgi/arcnet 72 73The people on linux-net@vger.kernel.org (now defunct, replaced by 74netdev@vger.kernel.org) have also been known to be very helpful, especially 75when we're talking about ALPHA Linux kernels that may or may not work right 76in the first place. 77 78 79Other Drivers and Info 80---------------------- 81 82You can try my ARCNET page on the World Wide Web at: 83 http://www.qis.net/~jschmitz/arcnet/ 84 85Also, SMC (one of the companies that makes ARCnet cards) has a WWW site you 86might be interested in, which includes several drivers for various cards 87including ARCnet. Try: 88 http://www.smc.com/ 89 90Performance Technologies makes various network software that supports 91ARCnet: 92 http://www.perftech.com/ or ftp to ftp.perftech.com. 93 94Novell makes a networking stack for DOS which includes ARCnet drivers. Try 95FTPing to ftp.novell.com. 96 97You can get the Crynwr packet driver collection (including arcether.com, the 98one you'll want to use with ARCnet cards) from 99oak.oakland.edu:/simtel/msdos/pktdrvr. It won't work perfectly on a 386+ 100without patches, though, and also doesn't like several cards. Fixed 101versions are available on my WWW page, or via e-mail if you don't have WWW 102access. 103 104 105Installing the Driver 106--------------------- 107 108All you will need to do in order to install the driver is: 109 make config 110 (be sure to choose ARCnet in the network devices 111 and at least one chipset driver.) 112 make clean 113 make zImage 114 115If you obtained this ARCnet package as an upgrade to the ARCnet driver in 116your current kernel, you will need to first copy arcnet.c over the one in 117the linux/drivers/net directory. 118 119You will know the driver is installed properly if you get some ARCnet 120messages when you reboot into the new Linux kernel. 121 122There are four chipset options: 123 124 1. Standard ARCnet COM90xx chipset. 125 126This is the normal ARCnet card, which you've probably got. This is the only 127chipset driver which will autoprobe if not told where the card is. 128It following options on the command line: 129 com90xx=[<io>[,<irq>[,<shmem>]]][,<name>] | <name> 130 131If you load the chipset support as a module, the options are: 132 io=<io> irq=<irq> shmem=<shmem> device=<name> 133 134To disable the autoprobe, just specify "com90xx=" on the kernel command line. 135To specify the name alone, but allow autoprobe, just put "com90xx=<name>" 136 137 2. ARCnet COM20020 chipset. 138 139This is the new chipset from SMC with support for promiscuous mode (packet 140sniffing), extra diagnostic information, etc. Unfortunately, there is no 141sensible method of autoprobing for these cards. You must specify the I/O 142address on the kernel command line. 143The command line options are: 144 com20020=<io>[,<irq>[,<node_ID>[,backplane[,CKP[,timeout]]]]][,name] 145 146If you load the chipset support as a module, the options are: 147 io=<io> irq=<irq> node=<node_ID> backplane=<backplane> clock=<CKP> 148 timeout=<timeout> device=<name> 149 150The COM20020 chipset allows you to set the node ID in software, overriding the 151default which is still set in DIP switches on the card. If you don't have the 152COM20020 data sheets, and you don't know what the other three options refer 153to, then they won't interest you - forget them. 154 155 3. ARCnet COM90xx chipset in IO-mapped mode. 156 157This will also work with the normal ARCnet cards, but doesn't use the shared 158memory. It performs less well than the above driver, but is provided in case 159you have a card which doesn't support shared memory, or (strangely) in case 160you have so many ARCnet cards in your machine that you run out of shmem slots. 161If you don't give the IO address on the kernel command line, then the driver 162will not find the card. 163The command line options are: 164 com90io=<io>[,<irq>][,<name>] 165 166If you load the chipset support as a module, the options are: 167 io=<io> irq=<irq> device=<name> 168 169 4. ARCnet RIM I cards. 170 171These are COM90xx chips which are _completely_ memory mapped. The support for 172these is not tested. If you have one, please mail the author with a success 173report. All options must be specified, except the device name. 174Command line options: 175 arcrimi=<shmem>,<irq>,<node_ID>[,<name>] 176 177If you load the chipset support as a module, the options are: 178 shmem=<shmem> irq=<irq> node=<node_ID> device=<name> 179 180 181Loadable Module Support 182----------------------- 183 184Configure and rebuild Linux. When asked, answer 'm' to "Generic ARCnet 185support" and to support for your ARCnet chipset if you want to use the 186loadable module. You can also say 'y' to "Generic ARCnet support" and 'm' 187to the chipset support if you wish. 188 189 make config 190 make clean 191 make zImage 192 make modules 193 194If you're using a loadable module, you need to use insmod to load it, and 195you can specify various characteristics of your card on the command 196line. (In recent versions of the driver, autoprobing is much more reliable 197and works as a module, so most of this is now unnecessary.) 198 199For example: 200 cd /usr/src/linux/modules 201 insmod arcnet.o 202 insmod com90xx.o 203 insmod com20020.o io=0x2e0 device=eth1 204 205 206Using the Driver 207---------------- 208 209If you build your kernel with ARCnet COM90xx support included, it should 210probe for your card automatically when you boot. If you use a different 211chipset driver complied into the kernel, you must give the necessary options 212on the kernel command line, as detailed above. 213 214Go read the NET-2-HOWTO and ETHERNET-HOWTO for Linux; they should be 215available where you picked up this driver. Think of your ARCnet as a 216souped-up (or down, as the case may be) Ethernet card. 217 218By the way, be sure to change all references from "eth0" to "arc0" in the 219HOWTOs. Remember that ARCnet isn't a "true" Ethernet, and the device name 220is DIFFERENT. 221 222 223Multiple Cards in One Computer 224------------------------------ 225 226Linux has pretty good support for this now, but since I've been busy, the 227ARCnet driver has somewhat suffered in this respect. COM90xx support, if 228compiled into the kernel, will (try to) autodetect all the installed cards. 229 230If you have other cards, with support compiled into the kernel, then you can 231just repeat the options on the kernel command line, e.g.: 232LILO: linux com20020=0x2e0 com20020=0x380 com90io=0x260 233 234If you have the chipset support built as a loadable module, then you need to 235do something like this: 236 insmod -o arc0 com90xx 237 insmod -o arc1 com20020 io=0x2e0 238 insmod -o arc2 com90xx 239The ARCnet drivers will now sort out their names automatically. 240 241 242How do I get it to work with...? 243-------------------------------- 244 245NFS: Should be fine linux->linux, just pretend you're using Ethernet cards. 246 oak.oakland.edu:/simtel/msdos/nfs has some nice DOS clients. There 247 is also a DOS-based NFS server called SOSS. It doesn't multitask 248 quite the way Linux does (actually, it doesn't multitask AT ALL) but 249 you never know what you might need. 250 251 With AmiTCP (and possibly others), you may need to set the following 252 options in your Amiga nfstab: MD 1024 MR 1024 MW 1024 253 (Thanks to Christian Gottschling <ferksy@indigo.tng.oche.de> 254 for this.) 255 256 Probably these refer to maximum NFS data/read/write block sizes. I 257 don't know why the defaults on the Amiga didn't work; write to me if 258 you know more. 259 260DOS: If you're using the freeware arcether.com, you might want to install 261 the driver patch from my web page. It helps with PC/TCP, and also 262 can get arcether to load if it timed out too quickly during 263 initialization. In fact, if you use it on a 386+ you REALLY need 264 the patch, really. 265 266Windows: See DOS :) Trumpet Winsock works fine with either the Novell or 267 Arcether client, assuming you remember to load winpkt of course. 268 269LAN Manager and Windows for Workgroups: These programs use protocols that 270 are incompatible with the Internet standard. They try to pretend 271 the cards are Ethernet, and confuse everyone else on the network. 272 273 However, v2.00 and higher of the Linux ARCnet driver supports this 274 protocol via the 'arc0e' device. See the section on "Multiprotocol 275 Support" for more information. 276 277 Using the freeware Samba server and clients for Linux, you can now 278 interface quite nicely with TCP/IP-based WfWg or Lan Manager 279 networks. 280 281Windows 95: Tools are included with Win95 that let you use either the LANMAN 282 style network drivers (NDIS) or Novell drivers (ODI) to handle your 283 ARCnet packets. If you use ODI, you'll need to use the 'arc0' 284 device with Linux. If you use NDIS, then try the 'arc0e' device. 285 See the "Multiprotocol Support" section below if you need arc0e, 286 you're completely insane, and/or you need to build some kind of 287 hybrid network that uses both encapsulation types. 288 289OS/2: I've been told it works under Warp Connect with an ARCnet driver from 290 SMC. You need to use the 'arc0e' interface for this. If you get 291 the SMC driver to work with the TCP/IP stuff included in the 292 "normal" Warp Bonus Pack, let me know. 293 294 ftp.microsoft.com also has a freeware "Lan Manager for OS/2" client 295 which should use the same protocol as WfWg does. I had no luck 296 installing it under Warp, however. Please mail me with any results. 297 298NetBSD/AmiTCP: These use an old version of the Internet standard ARCnet 299 protocol (RFC1051) which is compatible with the Linux driver v2.10 300 ALPHA and above using the arc0s device. (See "Multiprotocol ARCnet" 301 below.) ** Newer versions of NetBSD apparently support RFC1201. 302 303 304Using Multiprotocol ARCnet 305-------------------------- 306 307The ARCnet driver v2.10 ALPHA supports three protocols, each on its own 308"virtual network device": 309 310 arc0 - RFC1201 protocol, the official Internet standard which just 311 happens to be 100% compatible with Novell's TRXNET driver. 312 Version 1.00 of the ARCnet driver supported _only_ this 313 protocol. arc0 is the fastest of the three protocols (for 314 whatever reason), and allows larger packets to be used 315 because it supports RFC1201 "packet splitting" operations. 316 Unless you have a specific need to use a different protocol, 317 I strongly suggest that you stick with this one. 318 319 arc0e - "Ethernet-Encapsulation" which sends packets over ARCnet 320 that are actually a lot like Ethernet packets, including the 321 6-byte hardware addresses. This protocol is compatible with 322 Microsoft's NDIS ARCnet driver, like the one in WfWg and 323 LANMAN. Because the MTU of 493 is actually smaller than the 324 one "required" by TCP/IP (576), there is a chance that some 325 network operations will not function properly. The Linux 326 TCP/IP layer can compensate in most cases, however, by 327 automatically fragmenting the TCP/IP packets to make them 328 fit. arc0e also works slightly more slowly than arc0, for 329 reasons yet to be determined. (Probably it's the smaller 330 MTU that does it.) 331 332 arc0s - The "[s]imple" RFC1051 protocol is the "previous" Internet 333 standard that is completely incompatible with the new 334 standard. Some software today, however, continues to 335 support the old standard (and only the old standard) 336 including NetBSD and AmiTCP. RFC1051 also does not support 337 RFC1201's packet splitting, and the MTU of 507 is still 338 smaller than the Internet "requirement," so it's quite 339 possible that you may run into problems. It's also slower 340 than RFC1201 by about 25%, for the same reason as arc0e. 341 342 The arc0s support was contributed by Tomasz Motylewski 343 and modified somewhat by me. Bugs are probably my fault. 344 345You can choose not to compile arc0e and arc0s into the driver if you want - 346this will save you a bit of memory and avoid confusion when eg. trying to 347use the "NFS-root" stuff in recent Linux kernels. 348 349The arc0e and arc0s devices are created automatically when you first 350ifconfig the arc0 device. To actually use them, though, you need to also 351ifconfig the other virtual devices you need. There are a number of ways you 352can set up your network then: 353 354 3551. Single Protocol. 356 357 This is the simplest way to configure your network: use just one of the 358 two available protocols. As mentioned above, it's a good idea to use 359 only arc0 unless you have a good reason (like some other software, ie. 360 WfWg, that only works with arc0e). 361 362 If you need only arc0, then the following commands should get you going: 363 ifconfig arc0 MY.IP.ADD.RESS 364 route add MY.IP.ADD.RESS arc0 365 route add -net SUB.NET.ADD.RESS arc0 366 [add other local routes here] 367 368 If you need arc0e (and only arc0e), it's a little different: 369 ifconfig arc0 MY.IP.ADD.RESS 370 ifconfig arc0e MY.IP.ADD.RESS 371 route add MY.IP.ADD.RESS arc0e 372 route add -net SUB.NET.ADD.RESS arc0e 373 374 arc0s works much the same way as arc0e. 375 376 3772. More than one protocol on the same wire. 378 379 Now things start getting confusing. To even try it, you may need to be 380 partly crazy. Here's what *I* did. :) Note that I don't include arc0s in 381 my home network; I don't have any NetBSD or AmiTCP computers, so I only 382 use arc0s during limited testing. 383 384 I have three computers on my home network; two Linux boxes (which prefer 385 RFC1201 protocol, for reasons listed above), and one XT that can't run 386 Linux but runs the free Microsoft LANMAN Client instead. 387 388 Worse, one of the Linux computers (freedom) also has a modem and acts as 389 a router to my Internet provider. The other Linux box (insight) also has 390 its own IP address and needs to use freedom as its default gateway. The 391 XT (patience), however, does not have its own Internet IP address and so 392 I assigned it one on a "private subnet" (as defined by RFC1597). 393 394 To start with, take a simple network with just insight and freedom. 395 Insight needs to: 396 - talk to freedom via RFC1201 (arc0) protocol, because I like it 397 more and it's faster. 398 - use freedom as its Internet gateway. 399 400 That's pretty easy to do. Set up insight like this: 401 ifconfig arc0 insight 402 route add insight arc0 403 route add freedom arc0 /* I would use the subnet here (like I said 404 to to in "single protocol" above), 405 but the rest of the subnet 406 unfortunately lies across the PPP 407 link on freedom, which confuses 408 things. */ 409 route add default gw freedom 410 411 And freedom gets configured like so: 412 ifconfig arc0 freedom 413 route add freedom arc0 414 route add insight arc0 415 /* and default gateway is configured by pppd */ 416 417 Great, now insight talks to freedom directly on arc0, and sends packets 418 to the Internet through freedom. If you didn't know how to do the above, 419 you should probably stop reading this section now because it only gets 420 worse. 421 422 Now, how do I add patience into the network? It will be using LANMAN 423 Client, which means I need the arc0e device. It needs to be able to talk 424 to both insight and freedom, and also use freedom as a gateway to the 425 Internet. (Recall that patience has a "private IP address" which won't 426 work on the Internet; that's okay, I configured Linux IP masquerading on 427 freedom for this subnet). 428 429 So patience (necessarily; I don't have another IP number from my 430 provider) has an IP address on a different subnet than freedom and 431 insight, but needs to use freedom as an Internet gateway. Worse, most 432 DOS networking programs, including LANMAN, have braindead networking 433 schemes that rely completely on the netmask and a 'default gateway' to 434 determine how to route packets. This means that to get to freedom or 435 insight, patience WILL send through its default gateway, regardless of 436 the fact that both freedom and insight (courtesy of the arc0e device) 437 could understand a direct transmission. 438 439 I compensate by giving freedom an extra IP address - aliased 'gatekeeper' 440 - that is on my private subnet, the same subnet that patience is on. I 441 then define gatekeeper to be the default gateway for patience. 442 443 To configure freedom (in addition to the commands above): 444 ifconfig arc0e gatekeeper 445 route add gatekeeper arc0e 446 route add patience arc0e 447 448 This way, freedom will send all packets for patience through arc0e, 449 giving its IP address as gatekeeper (on the private subnet). When it 450 talks to insight or the Internet, it will use its "freedom" Internet IP 451 address. 452 453 You will notice that we haven't configured the arc0e device on insight. 454 This would work, but is not really necessary, and would require me to 455 assign insight another special IP number from my private subnet. Since 456 both insight and patience are using freedom as their default gateway, the 457 two can already talk to each other. 458 459 It's quite fortunate that I set things up like this the first time (cough 460 cough) because it's really handy when I boot insight into DOS. There, it 461 runs the Novell ODI protocol stack, which only works with RFC1201 ARCnet. 462 In this mode it would be impossible for insight to communicate directly 463 with patience, since the Novell stack is incompatible with Microsoft's 464 Ethernet-Encap. Without changing any settings on freedom or patience, I 465 simply set freedom as the default gateway for insight (now in DOS, 466 remember) and all the forwarding happens "automagically" between the two 467 hosts that would normally not be able to communicate at all. 468 469 For those who like diagrams, I have created two "virtual subnets" on the 470 same physical ARCnet wire. You can picture it like this: 471 472 473 [RFC1201 NETWORK] [ETHER-ENCAP NETWORK] 474 (registered Internet subnet) (RFC1597 private subnet) 475 476 (IP Masquerade) 477 /---------------\ * /---------------\ 478 | | * | | 479 | +-Freedom-*-Gatekeeper-+ | 480 | | | * | | 481 \-------+-------/ | * \-------+-------/ 482 | | | 483 Insight | Patience 484 (Internet) 485 486 487 488It works: what now? 489------------------- 490 491Send mail describing your setup, preferably including driver version, kernel 492version, ARCnet card model, CPU type, number of systems on your network, and 493list of software in use to me at the following address: 494 apenwarr@worldvisions.ca 495 496I do send (sometimes automated) replies to all messages I receive. My email 497can be weird (and also usually gets forwarded all over the place along the 498way to me), so if you don't get a reply within a reasonable time, please 499resend. 500 501 502It doesn't work: what now? 503-------------------------- 504 505Do the same as above, but also include the output of the ifconfig and route 506commands, as well as any pertinent log entries (ie. anything that starts 507with "arcnet:" and has shown up since the last reboot) in your mail. 508 509If you want to try fixing it yourself (I strongly recommend that you mail me 510about the problem first, since it might already have been solved) you may 511want to try some of the debug levels available. For heavy testing on 512D_DURING or more, it would be a REALLY good idea to kill your klogd daemon 513first! D_DURING displays 4-5 lines for each packet sent or received. D_TX, 514D_RX, and D_SKB actually DISPLAY each packet as it is sent or received, 515which is obviously quite big. 516 517Starting with v2.40 ALPHA, the autoprobe routines have changed 518significantly. In particular, they won't tell you why the card was not 519found unless you turn on the D_INIT_REASONS debugging flag. 520 521Once the driver is running, you can run the arcdump shell script (available 522from me or in the full ARCnet package, if you have it) as root to list the 523contents of the arcnet buffers at any time. To make any sense at all out of 524this, you should grab the pertinent RFCs. (some are listed near the top of 525arcnet.c). arcdump assumes your card is at 0xD0000. If it isn't, edit the 526script. 527 528Buffers 0 and 1 are used for receiving, and Buffers 2 and 3 are for sending. 529Ping-pong buffers are implemented both ways. 530 531If your debug level includes D_DURING and you did NOT define SLOW_XMIT_COPY, 532the buffers are cleared to a constant value of 0x42 every time the card is 533reset (which should only happen when you do an ifconfig up, or when Linux 534decides that the driver is broken). During a transmit, unused parts of the 535buffer will be cleared to 0x42 as well. This is to make it easier to figure 536out which bytes are being used by a packet. 537 538You can change the debug level without recompiling the kernel by typing: 539 ifconfig arc0 down metric 1xxx 540 /etc/rc.d/rc.inet1 541where "xxx" is the debug level you want. For example, "metric 1015" would put 542you at debug level 15. Debug level 7 is currently the default. 543 544Note that the debug level is (starting with v1.90 ALPHA) a binary 545combination of different debug flags; so debug level 7 is really 1+2+4 or 546D_NORMAL+D_EXTRA+D_INIT. To include D_DURING, you would add 16 to this, 547resulting in debug level 23. 548 549If you don't understand that, you probably don't want to know anyway. 550E-mail me about your problem. 551 552 553I want to send money: what now? 554------------------------------- 555 556Go take a nap or something. You'll feel better in the morning. 557