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- Linux and the 3Com EtherLink III Series Ethercards (driver v1.18c and higher)
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
- This file contains the instructions and caveats for v1.18c and higher versions
- of the 3c509 driver. You should not use the driver without reading this file.
- release 1.0
- 28 February 2002
- Current maintainer (corrections to):
- David Ruggiero <jdr@farfalle.com>
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
- (0) Introduction
- The following are notes and information on using the 3Com EtherLink III series
- ethercards in Linux. These cards are commonly known by the most widely-used
- card's 3Com model number, 3c509. They are all 10mb/s ISA-bus cards and shouldn't
- be (but sometimes are) confused with the similarly-numbered PCI-bus "3c905"
- (aka "Vortex" or "Boomerang") series. Kernel support for the 3c509 family is
- provided by the module 3c509.c, which has code to support all of the following
- models:
- 3c509 (original ISA card)
- 3c509B (later revision of the ISA card; supports full-duplex)
- 3c589 (PCMCIA)
- 3c589B (later revision of the 3c589; supports full-duplex)
- 3c529 (MCA)
- 3c579 (EISA)
- Large portions of this documentation were heavily borrowed from the guide
- written the original author of the 3c509 driver, Donald Becker. The master
- copy of that document, which contains notes on older versions of the driver,
- currently resides on Scyld web server: http://www.scyld.com/.
- (1) Special Driver Features
- Overriding card settings
- The driver allows boot- or load-time overriding of the card's detected IOADDR,
- IRQ, and transceiver settings, although this capability shouldn't generally be
- needed except to enable full-duplex mode (see below). An example of the syntax
- for LILO parameters for doing this:
- ether=10,0x310,3,0x3c509,eth0
- This configures the first found 3c509 card for IRQ 10, base I/O 0x310, and
- transceiver type 3 (10base2). The flag "0x3c509" must be set to avoid conflicts
- with other card types when overriding the I/O address. When the driver is
- loaded as a module, only the IRQ may be overridden. For example,
- setting two cards to IRQ10 and IRQ11 is done by using the irq module
- option:
- options 3c509 irq=10,11
- (2) Full-duplex mode
- The v1.18c driver added support for the 3c509B's full-duplex capabilities.
- In order to enable and successfully use full-duplex mode, three conditions
- must be met:
- (a) You must have a Etherlink III card model whose hardware supports full-
- duplex operations. Currently, the only members of the 3c509 family that are
- positively known to support full-duplex are the 3c509B (ISA bus) and 3c589B
- (PCMCIA) cards. Cards without the "B" model designation do *not* support
- full-duplex mode; these include the original 3c509 (no "B"), the original
- 3c589, the 3c529 (MCA bus), and the 3c579 (EISA bus).
- (b) You must be using your card's 10baseT transceiver (i.e., the RJ-45
- connector), not its AUI (thick-net) or 10base2 (thin-net/coax) interfaces.
- AUI and 10base2 network cabling is physically incapable of full-duplex
- operation.
- (c) Most importantly, your 3c509B must be connected to a link partner that is
- itself full-duplex capable. This is almost certainly one of two things: a full-
- duplex-capable Ethernet switch (*not* a hub), or a full-duplex-capable NIC on
- another system that's connected directly to the 3c509B via a crossover cable.
- Full-duplex mode can be enabled using 'ethtool'.
-
- /////Extremely important caution concerning full-duplex mode/////
- Understand that the 3c509B's hardware's full-duplex support is much more
- limited than that provide by more modern network interface cards. Although
- at the physical layer of the network it fully supports full-duplex operation,
- the card was designed before the current Ethernet auto-negotiation (N-way)
- spec was written. This means that the 3c509B family ***cannot and will not
- auto-negotiate a full-duplex connection with its link partner under any
- circumstances, no matter how it is initialized***. If the full-duplex mode
- of the 3c509B is enabled, its link partner will very likely need to be
- independently _forced_ into full-duplex mode as well; otherwise various nasty
- failures will occur - at the very least, you'll see massive numbers of packet
- collisions. This is one of very rare circumstances where disabling auto-
- negotiation and forcing the duplex mode of a network interface card or switch
- would ever be necessary or desirable.
- (3) Available Transceiver Types
- For versions of the driver v1.18c and above, the available transceiver types are:
-
- 0 transceiver type from EEPROM config (normally 10baseT); force half-duplex
- 1 AUI (thick-net / DB15 connector)
- 2 (undefined)
- 3 10base2 (thin-net == coax / BNC connector)
- 4 10baseT (RJ-45 connector); force half-duplex mode
- 8 transceiver type and duplex mode taken from card's EEPROM config settings
- 12 10baseT (RJ-45 connector); force full-duplex mode
- Prior to driver version 1.18c, only transceiver codes 0-4 were supported. Note
- that the new transceiver codes 8 and 12 are the *only* ones that will enable
- full-duplex mode, no matter what the card's detected EEPROM settings might be.
- This insured that merely upgrading the driver from an earlier version would
- never automatically enable full-duplex mode in an existing installation;
- it must always be explicitly enabled via one of these code in order to be
- activated.
- The transceiver type can be changed using 'ethtool'.
-
- (4a) Interpretation of error messages and common problems
- Error Messages
- eth0: Infinite loop in interrupt, status 2011.
- These are "mostly harmless" message indicating that the driver had too much
- work during that interrupt cycle. With a status of 0x2011 you are receiving
- packets faster than they can be removed from the card. This should be rare
- or impossible in normal operation. Possible causes of this error report are:
-
- - a "green" mode enabled that slows the processor down when there is no
- keyboard activity.
- - some other device or device driver hogging the bus or disabling interrupts.
- Check /proc/interrupts for excessive interrupt counts. The timer tick
- interrupt should always be incrementing faster than the others.
- No received packets
- If a 3c509, 3c562 or 3c589 can successfully transmit packets, but never
- receives packets (as reported by /proc/net/dev or 'ifconfig') you likely
- have an interrupt line problem. Check /proc/interrupts to verify that the
- card is actually generating interrupts. If the interrupt count is not
- increasing you likely have a physical conflict with two devices trying to
- use the same ISA IRQ line. The common conflict is with a sound card on IRQ10
- or IRQ5, and the easiest solution is to move the 3c509 to a different
- interrupt line. If the device is receiving packets but 'ping' doesn't work,
- you have a routing problem.
- Tx Carrier Errors Reported in /proc/net/dev
- If an EtherLink III appears to transmit packets, but the "Tx carrier errors"
- field in /proc/net/dev increments as quickly as the Tx packet count, you
- likely have an unterminated network or the incorrect media transceiver selected.
- 3c509B card is not detected on machines with an ISA PnP BIOS.
- While the updated driver works with most PnP BIOS programs, it does not work
- with all. This can be fixed by disabling PnP support using the 3Com-supplied
- setup program.
- 3c509 card is not detected on overclocked machines
- Increase the delay time in id_read_eeprom() from the current value, 500,
- to an absurdly high value, such as 5000.
- (4b) Decoding Status and Error Messages
- The bits in the main status register are:
- value description
- 0x01 Interrupt latch
- 0x02 Tx overrun, or Rx underrun
- 0x04 Tx complete
- 0x08 Tx FIFO room available
- 0x10 A complete Rx packet has arrived
- 0x20 A Rx packet has started to arrive
- 0x40 The driver has requested an interrupt
- 0x80 Statistics counter nearly full
- The bits in the transmit (Tx) status word are:
- value description
- 0x02 Out-of-window collision.
- 0x04 Status stack overflow (normally impossible).
- 0x08 16 collisions.
- 0x10 Tx underrun (not enough PCI bus bandwidth).
- 0x20 Tx jabber.
- 0x40 Tx interrupt requested.
- 0x80 Status is valid (this should always be set).
- When a transmit error occurs the driver produces a status message such as
- eth0: Transmit error, Tx status register 82
- The two values typically seen here are:
- 0x82
- Out of window collision. This typically occurs when some other Ethernet
- host is incorrectly set to full duplex on a half duplex network.
- 0x88
- 16 collisions. This typically occurs when the network is exceptionally busy
- or when another host doesn't correctly back off after a collision. If this
- error is mixed with 0x82 errors it is the result of a host incorrectly set
- to full duplex (see above).
- Both of these errors are the result of network problems that should be
- corrected. They do not represent driver malfunction.
- (5) Revision history (this file)
- 28Feb02 v1.0 DR New; major portions based on Becker original 3c509 docs
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