ARCnet Hardware¶
Note
This file is a supplement to ARCnet. Please read that for general driver configuration help.
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:
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:
A card to a card. This is the simplest way of creating a 2-computer network.
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.)
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.
An active hub to another.
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 BIOSAnything 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) and 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)!
PC130E/PC270E (8-bit cards)¶
from Juergen Seifert <seifert@htwm.de>
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
PC500/PC550 Longboard (16-bit cards)¶
from Juergen Seifert <seifert@htwm.de>
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
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.
ARCnet address
12345678
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.
I/O address
210
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. (8-bit cards)¶
120 Series (8-bit cards)¶
from Juergen Seifert <seifert@htwm.de>
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. (16-bit cards)¶
160 Series (16-bit cards)¶
from Juergen Seifert <seifert@htwm.de>
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 below 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>
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
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¶
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.
(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:
Thanks.