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HM2_7I43

NAME
SYNOPSIS
DESCRIPTION
Jumper settings
Communicating with the board
SEE ALSO
LICENSE

NAME

hm2_7i43 − EMC2 HAL driver for the Mesa Electronics 7i43 EPP Anything IO board with HostMot2 firmware.

SYNOPSIS

loadrt hm2_7i43 [ioaddr=N] [ioaddr_hi=N] [epp_wide=N] [config="str[,str...]"] [debug_epp=N]

ioaddr [default: 0x378]

The base address of the parallel port.

ioaddr_hi [default: 0]

The secondary address of the parallel port, used to set EPP mode. 0 means to use ioaddr + 0x400.

epp_wide [default: 1]

Set to zero to disable the "wide EPP mode". "Wide" mode allows a 16- and 32-bit EPP transfers, which can reduce the time spent in the read and write functions. However, this may not work on all EPP parallel ports.

config [default: ""]

HostMot2 config strings, described in the hostmot2(9) manpage.

debug_epp [default: 0]

Developer/debug use only! Enable debug logging of most EPP transfers.

DESCRIPTION

hm2_7i43 is a device driver that interfaces the Mesa 7i43 board with the HostMot2 firmware to the EMC2 HAL. Both the 200K and the 400K FPGAs are supported.

The driver talks with the 7i43 over the parallel port, not over USB. USB can be used to power the 7i43, but not to talk to it. USB communication with the 7i43 will not be supported any time soon, since USB has poor real-time qualities.

The driver programs the board’s FPGA with firmware when it registers the board with the hostmot2 driver. The old bfload(1) firmware loading method is not used anymore. Instead the firmware to load is specified in the config modparam, as described in the hostmot2(9) manpage, in the config modparam section.

Some parallel ports require special initialization before they can be used. EMC2 provides a kernel driver that does this initialization called probe_parport. Load this driver before loading hm2_7i43, by putting "loadrt probe_parport" in your .hal file.

Jumper settings

To send the FPGA configuration from the PC, the board must be configured to get its firmware from the EPP port. To do this, jumpers W4 and W5 must both be down, ie toward the USB connector.

The board must be configured to power on whether or not the USB interface is active. This is done by setting jumper W7 up, ie away from the edge of the board.

Communicating with the board

The 7i43 communicates with the EMC computer over EPP, the Enhanced Parallel Port. This provides about 1 MBps of throughput, and the communication latency is very predictable and reasonably low.

The parallel port must support EPP 1.7 or EPP 1.9. EPP 1.9 is prefered, but EPP 1.7 will work too. The EPP mode of the parallel port is sometimes a setting in the BIOS.

Note that the popular "NetMOS" aka "MosChip 9805" PCI parport cards do not work. They do not meet the EPP spec, and cannot be reliably used with the 7i43. You have to find another card, sorry.

EPP is very reliable under normal circumstances, but bad cabling or excessively long cabling runs may cause communication timeouts. The driver exports a parameter named hm2_7i43.<BoardNum>.io_error to inform HAL of this condition. When the driver detects an EPP timeout, it sets io_error to True and stops communicating with the 7i43 board. Setting io_error back to False makes the driver start trying to communicate with the 7i43 again.

Access to the EPP bus is not threadsafe: only one realtime thread may access the EPP bus.

SEE ALSO

hostmot2(9)

LICENSE

GPL