Path: utzoo!utgpu!cunews!micor!latour!ecicrl!clewis From: clewis@ferret.ocunix.on.ca (Chris Lewis) Newsgroups: comp.unix.sysv386 Subject: Re: Computone/Intelliport device drivers .vs. FAS Message-ID: <1289@ecicrl.ocunix.on.ca> Date: 7 Feb 91 05:23:49 GMT References: <1991Feb3.053633.13387@yrloc.ipsa.reuter.COM> Organization: Elegant Communications Inc., Ottawa, Canada Lines: 62 In article <1991Feb3.053633.13387@yrloc.ipsa.reuter.COM> loc@yrloc.ipsa.reuter.COM (Leigh Clayton) writes: > I have not been able to get much information about the Computone >device drivers, and the problems I've had with the thing I've been left >to myself to deal with (Neither ISC nor Computone seems to care whether >the thing works in 386/ix or not). > I'd dearly love to get a driver that I have source for, and don't mind >doing some hacking, but does anyone know whether FAS can be expected >to 'basically' support this board? By that I mean that I can't even find >mention in my system files of the Interrupt vectors, IO port addresses, >and so forth that the thing uses, let alone how it's 8-port multipexing >works and stuff like that. I've spoken to computone more than once, and you're right, they're not much help. The documentation is very poor. The computone board cannot be controlled by the FAS driver or anything else that's designed for 8250 chip-style serial ports. The computone board is built similarly to many of the other "intelligent" multiport boards, and has a microprocessor on it (a Z80 if I remember correctly), and a fair bit of memory. The drivers speak to the board thru shared memory, and the CPU on the board does a lot of the work. The interface between the on-board processor and the rest of the machine is completely undocumented. I think the driver even downloads software to the on-board CPU, but that may have been another board. I've fought with these things before, and it doesn't help that there are about 3 or 4 different types of 8-port computone boards. (Computone went into receivership, then bought some other company doing the same thing, and they came out of receivership - they're producing both boards plus other multi-port boards now). Perhaps the best thing is to make ABSOLUTELY certain that you have the latest ROMS and driver software. I have no idea what the latest versions are, because it's been over a year since I've had to touch one of these accursed things. My remembrance was that: - the computone is "useable" for direct-connected terminals and printers provided that you have the latest firmware/software. On both Xenix and ISC (though, this is back in the days of 1.0.6) - modem control doesn't work worth a darn. - the snazzy features (transparent print thru and the other gunge) are useless. Perhaps your best bet is to try to continue to use the computone for your terminals, and then try to buy a 2 or 4 port dumb serial card which you should be able to pick up for $40 or so, plus modify FAS to work with that. I suspect FAS on a 4 or 8 port dumb board would outperform the computone. In a previous incarnation, I designed a 8-port board that didn't have any of the fancy features, not much memory (the expensive part) and had termio on the card. Worked great. Would have cost only $100-$200. Too bad the company made only a half-dozen of the things before they cancelled their UNIX project (and me). Real fast. -- Chris Lewis, Phone: (613) 832-0541, Internet: clewis@ferret.ocunix.on.ca UUCP: uunet!mitel!cunews!latour!ecicrl!clewis Moderator of the Ferret Mailing List (ferret-request@eci386) Psroff enquiries: psroff-request@eci386, current patchlevel is *7*.