2 .\" Copyright (c) 1996 Jonathan Stone.
3 .\" All rights reserved.
5 .\" Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
6 .\" modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
8 .\" 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
9 .\" notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
10 .\" 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
11 .\" notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
12 .\" documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
13 .\" 3. All advertising materials mentioning features or use of this software
14 .\" must display the following acknowledgement:
15 .\" This product includes software developed by Jonathan Stone.
16 .\" 4. The name of the author may not be used to endorse or promote products
17 .\" derived from this software without specific prior written permission
19 .\" THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE AUTHOR ``AS IS'' AND ANY EXPRESS OR
20 .\" IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES
21 .\" OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED.
22 .\" IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT,
23 .\" INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT
24 .\" NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE,
25 .\" DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY
26 .\" THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT
27 .\" (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF
28 .\" THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
30 .\" $NetBSD: intro.4,v 1.23 2007/10/01 23:15:13 jnemeth Exp $
37 .Nd introduction to sparc special files and hardware support
39 This section describes the special files, related driver functions,
40 and networking support
41 available in the system.
42 In this part of the manual, the
45 each configurable device gives a sample specification
46 for use in constructing a system description for the
51 section lists messages which may appear on the console
52 and/or in the system error log
54 due to errors in device operation;
59 This section contains both devices
60 which may be configured into the system
61 and network related information.
62 The networking support is introduced in
65 This section describes the hardware supported on the SPARC
67 Software support for these devices comes in two forms.
68 A hardware device may be supported with a character or block
70 or it may be used within the networking subsystem and have a
71 .Em network interface driver .
72 Block and character devices are accessed through files in the file
73 system of a special type; see
75 Network interfaces are indirectly accessed through the interprocess
76 communication facilities provided by the system; see
79 A hardware device is identified to the system at configuration time
80 and the appropriate device or network interface driver is then compiled
82 When the resultant system is booted, the
83 autoconfiguration facilities in the system probe for the device
84 and, if found, enable the software support for it.
85 If a device does not respond at autoconfiguration
86 time it is not accessible at any time afterwards.
87 To enable a device which did not autoconfigure,
88 the system must be rebooted.
90 The autoconfiguration system is described in
92 A list of the supported devices is given below.
118 .Sh SUPPORTED SYSTEMS
119 The following Sun SPARC system architectures and models are supported:
120 .Bl -tag -width speaker
122 first generation SPARC systems on VMEbus:
124 Sun 4/100 series (14.28 MHz)
126 Sun 4/200 series (16.67 MHz)
128 Sun 4/300 series (25 MHz)
130 desktop SPARC systems with Sbus:
132 SPARCstation 1 (20 MHz)
134 SPARCstation 1+ (25 MHz)
136 SPARCstation 2 (40 MHz)
138 SPARCstation SLC (20 MHz)
140 SPARCstation ELC (33 MHz)
142 SPARCstation IPC (25 MHz)
144 SPARCstation IPX (40 MHz).
146 desktop SPARC systems with Mbus for CPUs, and Sbus:
148 SPARCclassic (50 MHz microSPARC I)
150 SPARCstation LX (50 MHz microSPARC I)
152 SPARCstation 4 (70 MHz microSPARC II)
154 SPARCstation 5 (70, 85, 110 MHz microSPARC II)
156 SPARCstation 5 (170 MHz TurboSPARC)
158 SPARCstation 10M (36 MHz SuperSPARC I)
160 SPARCstation 20M (50 MHz SuperSPARC I)
162 SPARCstation 10 (Mbus modules)
164 SPARCstation 20 (Mbus modules)
167 The SPARCstation 2 and IPX can be upgraded with a Weitek PowerUP CPU
168 that is clock-doubled (i.e. internally it runs at 80 MHz).
170 supports this configuration.
172 Hardware level clones of these systems from other manufacturers
173 will likely work (e.g. Xerox, Tatung, Axil, Cycle);
174 other systems which have a SPARC CPU but do not
175 use Sun's hardware architecture (e.g. Solbourne) will likely not work.
177 The sun4m architecture with Mbus modules for the CPUs is supported
178 with the following modules with only one CPU:
179 .Bl -tag -width speaker
181 40 MHz SuperSPARC I with 1MB SuperCACHE
183 50 MHz SuperSPARC I with 1MB SuperCACHE
185 60 MHz SuperSPARC I with 1MB SuperCACHE
187 75 MHz SuperSPARC II with 1MB SuperCACHE
189 85 MHz SuperSPARC II with 1MB SuperCACHE
191 100 MHz Ross Technology hyperSPARC
193 125 MHz Ross Technology hyperSPARC
195 150 MHz Ross Technology hyperSPARC
198 This list is not exhaustive;
200 is continuously being improved, and may well run on Mbus CPU modules
203 There is also some support for Sun
205 computers based on the microSPARC CPU.
208 does not yet properly support multiprocessor systems,
209 but will run on one processor of a multiprocessor system.
211 The Sun 4/400 series, and sun4d (SPARCcenter 1000, 1000E, and
212 2000) are not supported.
214 The sun4u (UltraSPARC 64-bit) architectures are supported by
217 The devices listed below are supported in this incarnation of
219 Devices are indicated by their functional interface.
220 Not all supported devices are listed.
222 .Bl -tag -width leXlebufferXX
224 AMD 79C30 obio (sun4c) and dbri (sun4m) audio controller
226 Bi-directional Parallel port
228 black and white obio frame buffer
230 24 bit VMEbus color frame buffer
232 8 bit obio (sun4 P4 bus) color graphics frame buffer
234 24 bit Sbus color frame buffer
236 8 bit obio (sun4c \*[Am] sun4m), Sbus color graphics frame buffer
238 8 bit VMEbus, Sbus, and obio (sun4m) color graphics frame buffer
240 8 bit VMEbus color frame buffer
242 Dual Basic Rate Interface (BRI) ISDN (SPARC LX \*[Am] SPARCstation 10) (only the audio component is supported)
244 Sun non-volatile configuration RAM driver
246 NCR53C90 ESP100 (Sun 4/300), ESP100A (sun4c),
247 ESP200 (sun4m) SCSI controller
249 FSBE/S (X1053A, part # 501-2015) Fast SCSI-2/Buffered Ethernet Sbus controller
251 Intel 82072 obio (sun4c) or Intel 82077 obio (sun4m)
252 floppy disk drive controller
254 Intel 82586 Ethernet controller (Sun 4/100)
256 Qlogic ISP Sbus SCSI controller
258 Sun type 2, type 3, type 4, and type 5 keyboards (on zs)
260 AMD 7990 LANCE Ethernet controller (Sun 4/200, 4/300, sun4c, sun4m, Sbus)
262 Magma Sp Serial/Parallel board device driver
266 Sun Open boot PROM (what became IEEE 1275) configuration driver
268 sun4m power management; the
272 commands can use it to power down the system.
274 NCR5380 "SCSI-2" VMEbus (Sun 4/200, Sun 4/400) SCSI controller
276 NCR5380 obio (Sun 4/100) "SCSI Wierd" SCSI controller
278 8 or 24 bit Sbus color graphics frame buffer
280 Xylogics 753/7053 VMEbus SMD disk controller
282 Xylogics 450/451 VMEbus SMD disk controller
284 Zilog 8530 serial controller
286 .Sh UNSUPPORTED DEVICES
287 The following devices are not supported, due to unavailability of
288 either documentation or sample hardware:
289 .Bl -tag -width speaker
291 Dual Basic Rate Interface (BRI) ISDN (SPARC LX \*[Am] SPARCstation 10)
299 Large chunks of text carefully recycled (shamelessly appropriated) from