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| i got a mutipl-port serial board and need to write a simple C program to set its base addresses in a Linux box. according to the user manual of the board, the job can be accomplish be write/read some bytes to some specify IO ports. i got no more experiences in accessing IO ports in Linux, so i think i'd better find some simple code rather than coding from scratch. any help will be highly appreciated. -- steven woody (id: narke) Ben Sanderson: Are you desirable? Are you irresistible? Maybe if you drank bourbon with me, it would help. Maybe if you kissed me and I could taste the sting in your mouth it would help. If you drank bourbon with me naked. If you smelled of bourbon as you fucked me, it would help. It would increase my esteem for you. If you poured bourbon onto your naked body and said to me "drink this". If you spread your legs and you had bourbon dripping from your breasts and your pussy and said "drink here" then I could fall in love with you. Because then I would have a purpose. To clean you up and that, that would prove that I'm worth something. I'd lick you clean so that you could go away and fuck someone else. - Leaving Las Vegas (1995) |
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| Steven Woody <anti-spam.narkewoody@gmail.com.dont-post-to> wrote: > i got a mutipl-port serial board and need to write a simple C program to > set its base addresses in a Linux box. according to the user manual of > the board, the job can be accomplish be write/read some bytes to some > specify IO ports. It sounds as if you are going to write a driver for that card? There are a lot of "sample code" in /usr/src/linux. Check in /usr/src/linux/driver/char for files like moxa.c and serial.c. regards Henrik -- The address in the header is only to prevent spam. My real address is: hc7(at)uthyres.com Examples of addresses which go to spammers: info@k-soft.se info@k-software.biz info@webrider.ru root@localhost |
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| Henrik Carlqvist <Henrik.Carlqvist@deadspam.com> writes: > Steven Woody <anti-spam.narkewoody@gmail.com.dont-post-to> wrote: >> i got a mutipl-port serial board and need to write a simple C program to >> set its base addresses in a Linux box. according to the user manual of >> the board, the job can be accomplish be write/read some bytes to some >> specify IO ports. > > It sounds as if you are going to write a driver for that card? There are a > lot of "sample code" in /usr/src/linux. Check in > /usr/src/linux/driver/char for files like moxa.c and serial.c. no, i am _not_ going to write any driver program. what i want to write is a program running on user space and change the boards's base address by writting specific bytes to some specific ports. -- steven woody (id: narke) Virginia Woolf: Someone has to die Leonard, in order that the rest of us should value our life more. - The Hours (2002) |
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| Steven Woody wrote: > Henrik Carlqvist <Henrik.Carlqvist@deadspam.com> writes: > > >>Steven Woody <anti-spam.narkewoody@gmail.com.dont-post-to> wrote: >> >>>i got a mutipl-port serial board and need to write a simple C program to >>>set its base addresses in a Linux box. according to the user manual of >>>the board, the job can be accomplish be write/read some bytes to some >>>specify IO ports. >> >>It sounds as if you are going to write a driver for that card? There are a >>lot of "sample code" in /usr/src/linux. Check in >>/usr/src/linux/driver/char for files like moxa.c and serial.c. > > > no, i am _not_ going to write any driver program. what i want to write is a > program running on user space and change the boards's base address by writting > specific bytes to some specific ports. > > Unfortunately, user space programs do not have access to the raw memory interface. If you have a driver for this card that allows you to interact with the card directly, then fine. Otherwise, you must write a driver that executes from kernel space. -- Fletcher Glenn |
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| "Steven Woody" <anti-spam.narkewoody@gmail.com.dont-post-to> wrote in message news:87u0hgnakp.fsf@narke.yellow.line... > i got a mutipl-port serial board and need to write a simple C program to > set > its base addresses in a Linux box. according to the user manual of the > board, > the job can be accomplish be write/read some bytes to some specify IO > ports. > > i got no more experiences in accessing IO ports in Linux, so i think i'd > better > find some simple code rather than coding from scratch. > > any help will be highly appreciated. Read the man page for "iopl". But you are doing this the wrong way, you should write a driver. DS |
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| Henrik Carlqvist <Henrik.Carlqvist@deadspam.com> writes: > Steven Woody <anti-spam.narkewoody@gmail.com.dont-post-to> wrote: >> i got a mutipl-port serial board and need to write a simple C program to >> set its base addresses in a Linux box. according to the user manual of >> the board, the job can be accomplish be write/read some bytes to some >> specify IO ports. > > It sounds as if you are going to write a driver for that card? There are a > lot of "sample code" in /usr/src/linux. Check in > /usr/src/linux/driver/char for files like moxa.c and serial.c. > > regards Henrik > -- > The address in the header is only to prevent spam. My real address is: > hc7(at)uthyres.com Examples of addresses which go to spammers: > info@k-soft.se info@k-software.biz info@webrider.ru root@localhost > no! i am not about to write any driver. i just want to do some setting things on a multiport serial board. the board got some eeprom and use it to store io addresses and irq numbers for each serial port build on it. according to the manual, if i want to get/change those data stored in the eeprom, i have to do it via read/write some specific io ports which is dedicated for configuration. today, i skimmed the Linux's IO Port Programming HOWTO, i think i should use inb/outb to do the job, is that right? thanks. -- steven woody (id: narke) How Far You Fall Doesn't Matter, It's How You Land - Haine, La (1995) |
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| Steven Woody <anti-spam.narkewoody@gmail.com.dont-post-to> wrote: > no! i am not about to write any driver. i just want to do some setting things > on a multiport serial board. the board got some eeprom and use it to store io > addresses and irq numbers for each serial port build on it. according to the > manual, if i want to get/change those data stored in the eeprom, i have to do > it via read/write some specific io ports which is dedicated for configuration. > > today, i skimmed the Linux's IO Port Programming HOWTO, i think i should use > inb/outb to do the job, is that right? Yes, you can probably write a program using ioperm and outb to change those settings. But then what? If you from user space change the IRQ and/or address of a serial port the kernel is going to be confused if it before thought that the port should have other values. Maybe you could fix this with the program setserial. regards Henrik -- The address in the header is only to prevent spam. My real address is: hc7(at)uthyres.com Examples of addresses which go to spammers: info@k-soft.se info@k-software.biz info@webrider.ru root@localhost |
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| Henrik Carlqvist <Henrik.Carlqvist@deadspam.com> wrote: >Steven Woody <anti-spam.narkewoody@gmail.com.dont-post-to> wrote: >> no! i am not about to write any driver. i just want to do some setting things >> on a multiport serial board. the board got some eeprom and use it to store io >> addresses and irq numbers for each serial port build on it. according to the >> manual, if i want to get/change those data stored in the eeprom, i have to do >> it via read/write some specific io ports which is dedicated for configuration. >> >> today, i skimmed the Linux's IO Port Programming HOWTO, i think i should use >> inb/outb to do the job, is that right? Yes, that should do just fine for writing a board configuration program. This isn't something that will be used except for the one time you install and configure the board. >Yes, you can probably write a program using ioperm and outb to change >those settings. But then what? If you from user space change the IRQ >and/or address of a serial port the kernel is going to be confused if it >before thought that the port should have other values. Maybe you could fix >this with the program setserial. That is exactly the same as if the board had hardware jumpers to set the port addresses and IRQ's. In either case the kernel (driver) doesn't really know what they are, and if it isn't the default it has to be set. I'm not sure what the approved way to do that is today, but /setserial/ should work. However, I would expect that the best way would be to load the driver with the appropriate command line options, assuming the driver for that board does in fact have such facilities. In any case, reading the docs on the driver being used would be essential. -- Floyd L. Davidson <http://www.apaflo.com/floyd_davidson> Ukpeagvik (Barrow, Alaska) floyd@apaflo.com |
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| "David Schwartz" <davids@webmaster.com> writes: > "Steven Woody" <anti-spam.narkewoody@gmail.com.dont-post-to> wrote in > message news:87u0hgnakp.fsf@narke.yellow.line... > >> i got a mutipl-port serial board and need to write a simple C program to >> set >> its base addresses in a Linux box. according to the user manual of the >> board, >> the job can be accomplish be write/read some bytes to some specify IO >> ports. >> >> i got no more experiences in accessing IO ports in Linux, so i think i'd >> better >> find some simple code rather than coding from scratch. >> >> any help will be highly appreciated. > > Read the man page for "iopl". But you are doing this the wrong way, you > should write a driver. > > DS > > i believe there is some misunderstands here, a user space program rather than a driver should do the job. allow me to describe the problem in a more clear way, i have a multiple-port-serial-board. the board comes w/o any jumpers, it gets io/irq values for each port it provided by reading those values from its on-board EEPROM as soon as power up. so, if one would like to change the io/irq settings in linux, he has to 1, write new io/irq values into the board's eeprose. 2, power down the board. 3, 'setserial' to the new io/irq's, so the software setting will agree with hardward facts. so, the program i about to write need to do only the 1st step. writing values to EEPROM needs not be any driver program, doesn't it? -- steven woody (id: narke) Charles: Let me ask you one thing. Do you think - after we've dried off, after we've spent lots more time together - you might agree *not* to marry me? And do you think not being married to me might maybe be something you could consider doing for the rest of your life? Carrie: I do. - Four Weddings and a Funeral (1994) |
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| Steven Woody (anti-spam.narkewoody@gmail.com.dont-post-to) writes: > "David Schwartz" <davids@webmaster.com> writes: > >> "Steven Woody" <anti-spam.narkewoody@gmail.com.dont-post-to> wrote in >> message news:87u0hgnakp.fsf@narke.yellow.line... >> >>> i got a mutipl-port serial board and need to write a simple C program to >>> set >>> its base addresses in a Linux box. according to the user manual of the >>> board, >>> the job can be accomplish be write/read some bytes to some specify IO >>> ports. >>> >>> i got no more experiences in accessing IO ports in Linux, so i think i'd >>> better >>> find some simple code rather than coding from scratch. >>> >>> any help will be highly appreciated. >> >> Read the man page for "iopl". But you are doing this the wrong way, you >> should write a driver. >> >> DS >> >> > > i believe there is some misunderstands here, a user space program rather than a > driver should do the job. allow me to describe the problem in a more clear way, > > i have a multiple-port-serial-board. the board comes w/o any jumpers, it gets > io/irq values for each port it provided by reading those values from its > on-board EEPROM as soon as power up. so, if one would like to change the > io/irq settings in linux, he has to > > 1, write new io/irq values into the board's eeprose. > 2, power down the board. > 3, 'setserial' to the new io/irq's, so the software setting will agree with > hardward facts. > > > so, the program i about to write need to do only the 1st step. writing values > to EEPROM needs not be any driver program, doesn't it? > > > Then boot with DOS, and use debug to set the needed values. Michael |