896 lines
22 KiB
INI
896 lines
22 KiB
INI
.TH PLAN9.INI 8
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.SH NAME
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plan9.ini \- configuration file for PCs
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.SH SYNOPSIS
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.I none
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.SH DESCRIPTION
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When booting Plan 9 on a PC, the DOS program
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.IR 9boot (8)
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first reads a DOS file
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containing configuration information from the boot disk.
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This file,
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.BR plan9.ini ,
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looks like a shell script containing lines of the form
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.IP
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.EX
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name=\f2value\fP
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.EE
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.LP
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each of which defines a kernel or device parameter.
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.PP
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Blank lines and
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Carriage Returns
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.IB ( \er )
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are ignored.
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.B #
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comments are ignored, but are only recognised if
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.L #
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appears at the start of a line.
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.PP
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For devices, the generic format of
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.I value
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is
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.IP
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.EX
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type=TYPE [port=N] [irq=N] [mem=N] [size=N] [dma=N] [ea=N]
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.EE
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.LP
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specifying the controller type,
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the base I/O port of the interface, its interrupt
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level, the physical starting address of any mapped memory,
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the length in bytes of that memory, the DMA channel,
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and for Ethernets an override of the physical network address.
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Not all elements are relevant to all devices; the relevant values
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and their defaults are defined below in the description of each device.
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.PP
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The file is used by the kernel to configure the hardware available.
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The information it contains is also passed to the boot
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process, and subsequently other programs,
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as environment variables
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(see
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.IR boot (8)).
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However, values whose names begin with an asterisk
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.B *
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are used by the kernel and are not converted into environment variables.
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.PP
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The following sections describe how variables are used.
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.SS ETHERNET
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.SS \fLether\fIX\fL=\fIvalue\fP
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This defines an Ethernet interface.
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.IR X ,
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a unique monotonically increasing number beginning at 0,
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identifies an Ethernet card to be probed at system boot.
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Probing stops when a card is found or there is no line for
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.BR etherX+1 .
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After probing as directed by the
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.BI ether X
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lines, any remaining Ethernet cards that can be automatically
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detected are added.
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Almost all cards can be automatically detected.
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For debugging purposes, automatic probing can
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be disabled by specifying the line
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.BR *noetherprobe= .
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.PP
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Some cards are software configurable and do not require all options.
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Unspecified options default to the factory defaults.
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.PP
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Known
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.IR TYPE s
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are
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.\" .TF ga620
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.TF vt6102
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.PD
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.TP
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.B igbe
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The Intel 8254X Gigabit Ethernet controllers,
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as found on the Intel PRO/1000 adapters for copper (not fiber).
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Completely configurable.
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.TP
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.B igbepcie
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The Intel 8256[36], 8257[12], and 82573[ev] Gigabit Ethernet
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PCI-Express controllers.
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Completely configurable.
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.TP
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.B rtl8169
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The Realtek 8169 Gigabit Ethernet controller.
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Completely configurable.
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.TP
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.B ga620
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Netgear GA620 and GA620T Gigabit Ethernet cards,
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and other cards using the Alteon Acenic chip such as the
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Alteon Acenic fiber and copper cards,
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the DEC DEGPA-SA and the SGI Acenic.
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Completely configurable.
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.TP
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.B dp83820
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National Semiconductor DP83820-based Gigabit Ethernet adapters, notably
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the D-Link DGE-500T.
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Completely configurable.
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.TP
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.B vgbe
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The VIA Velocity Gigabit Ethernet controller.
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Known to drive the VIA8237 (ABIT AV8), but at 100Mb/s full-duplex only.
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.TP
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.B m10g
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The Myricom 10-Gigabit Ethernet 10G-PCIE-8A controller.
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Completely configurable.
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Can't boot through these due to enormous firmware loads.
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.TP
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.B i82598
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The Intel 8259[89] 10-Gigabit Ethernet PCI-Express controllers.
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Completely configurable.
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.TP
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.B i82557
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Cards using the Intel 8255[789] Fast Ethernet PCI Bus LAN Controller such as the
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Intel EtherExpress PRO/100B.
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Completely configurable, no options need be given.
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If you need to force the media, specify
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one of the options (no value)
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.BR 10BASE-T ,
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.BR 10BASE-2 ,
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.BR 10BASE-5 ,
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.BR 100BASE-TX ,
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.BR 10BASE-TFD ,
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.BR 100BASE-TXFD ,
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.BR 100BASE-T4 ,
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.BR 100BASE-FX ,
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or
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.BR 100BASE-FXFD .
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Completely configurable.
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.TP
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.B 2114x
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Cards using the Digital Equipment (now Intel) 2114x PCI Fast Ethernet Adapter Controller,
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for example the Netgear FA310.
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Completely configurable, no options need be given.
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Media can be specified the same was as for the
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.BR i82557 .
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Some cards using the
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.B PNIC
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and
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.B PNIC2
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near-clone chips may also work.
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.TP
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.B 83815
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National Semiconductor DP83815-based adapters, notably
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the Netgear FA311, Netgear FA312, and various SiS built-in
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controllers such as the SiS900.
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On the SiS controllers, the Ethernet address is not detected properly;
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specify it with an
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.B ea=
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attribute.
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Completely configurable.
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.TP
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.B rtl8139
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The Realtek 8139 Fast Ethernet controller.
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Completely configurable.
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.TP
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.B vt6102
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The VIA VT6102 Fast Ethernet Controller (Rhine II).
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.TP
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.B smc91cxx
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SMC 91cXX chip-based PCMCIA adapters, notably the SMC EtherEZ card.
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.TP
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.B elnk3
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The 3COM Etherlink III series of cards including the 5x9, 59x, and 905 and 905B.
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Completely configurable, no options need be given.
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The media may be specified by setting
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.B media=
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to the value
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.BR 10BaseT ,
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.BR 10Base2 ,
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.BR 100BaseTX ,
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.BR 100BaseFX ,
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.BR aui ,
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and
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.BR mii .
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If you need to force full duplex, because for example the Ethernet switch does not negotiate correctly,
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just name the word (no value)
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.B fullduplex
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or
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.BR 100BASE-TXFD .
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Similarly, to force 100Mbit operation, specify
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.BR force100 .
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Port 0x110 is used for the little ISA configuration dance.
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.TP
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.B 3c589
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The 3COM 3C589 series PCMCIA cards, including the
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3C562 and the 589E.
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There is no support for the modem on the 3C562.
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Completely configurable, no options need be given.
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Defaults are
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.EX
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port=0x240 irq=10
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.EE
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The media may be specified as
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.B media=10BaseT
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or
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.BR media=10Base2 .
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.TP
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.B ec2t
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The Linksys Combo PCMCIA EthernetCard (EC2T),
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EtherFast 10/100 PCMCIA cards (PCMPC100) and integrated controllers (PCM100),
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the Netgear FA410TX 10/100 PCMCIA card
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and the Accton EtherPair-PCMCIA (EN2216).
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Completely configurable, no options need be given.
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Defaults are
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.EX
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port=0x300 irq=9
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.EE
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These cards are NE2000 clones.
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Other NE2000 compatible PCMCIA cards may be tried
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with the option
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.EX
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id=string
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.EE
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where
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.B string
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is a unique identifier string contained in the attribute
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memory of the card (see
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.IR pcmcia (8));
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unlike most options in
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.BR plan9.ini ,
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this string is case-sensitive.
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The option
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.B dummyrr=[01]
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can be used to turn off (0) or on (1) a dummy remote read in the driver
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in such cases,
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depending on how NE2000 compatible they are.
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.TP
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.B ne2000
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Not software configurable iff ISA;
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PCI clones or supersets are software configurable;
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includes the Realtek 8029 clone used by Parallels.
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16-bit card.
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Defaults are
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.EX
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port=0x300 irq=2 mem=0x04000 size=0x4000
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.EE
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The option (no value)
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.B nodummyrr
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is needed on some (near) clones to turn off a dummy remote read in the driver.
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.TP
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.B amd79c970
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The AMD PCnet PCI Ethernet Adapter (AM79C970).
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(This is the Ethernet adapter used by VMware.)
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Completely configurable, no options need be given.
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.TP
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.B wd8003
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Includes WD8013 and SMC Elite and Elite Ultra cards. There are varying degrees
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of software configurability. Cards may be in either 8-bit or 16-bit slots.
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Defaults are
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.EX
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port=0x280 irq=3 mem=0xD0000 size=0x2000
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.EE
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BUG: On many machines only the 16 bit card works.
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.TP
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.B sink
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A
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.B /dev/null
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for Ethernet packets \(em the interface discards sent
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packets and never receives any.
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This is used to provide a test bed for
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some experimental Ethernet bridging software.
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.TP
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.B wavelan
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Lucent Wavelan (Orinoco) IEEE 802.11b
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and compatible PCMCIA cards.
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Compatible cards include the Dell TrueMobile 1150
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and the Linksys Instant Wireless Network PC Card.
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Port and IRQ defaults are 0x180 and 3 respectively.
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.IP
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These cards take a number of unique options to aid in
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identifying the card correctly on the 802.11b network.
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The network may be
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.I "ad hoc"
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or
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.I managed
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(i.e. use an access point):
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.EX
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mode=[adhoc, managed]
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.EE
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and defaults to
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.IR managed .
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The 802.11b network to attach to
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.RI ( managed
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mode)
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or identify as
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.RI ( "ad hoc"
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mode),
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is specified by
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.EX
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essid=string
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.EE
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and defaults to a null string.
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The card station name is given by
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.EX
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station=string
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.EE
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and defaults to
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.IR "Plan 9 STA" .
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The channel to use is given by
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.EX
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channel=number
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.EE
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where
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.I number
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lies in the range 1 to 16 inclusive;
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the channel is normally negotiated automatically.
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.IP
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If the card is capable of encryption,
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the following options may be used:
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.EX
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crypt=[off, on]
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.EE
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and defaults to
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.IR on .
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.EX
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key\fIN\fP=string
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.EE
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sets the encryption key
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.I N
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(where
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.I N
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is in the range 1 to 4 inclusive) to
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.IR string ;
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this will also set the transmit key to
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.I N
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(see below).
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There are two formats for
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.I string
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which depend on the length of the string.
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If it is exactly 5 or 13 characters long it is assumed
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to be an alphanumeric key; if it is exactly 10 or 26 characters
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long the key is assumed to be in hex format (without a leading
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.IR 0x ).
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The lengths are checked,
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as is the format of a hex key.
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.EX
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txkey=number
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.EE
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sets the transmit key to use to be
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.I number
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in the range 1 to 4 inclusive.
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If it is desired to exclude or include unencrypted packets
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.EX
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clear=[off, on]
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.EE
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configures reception and defaults to inclusion.
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.IP
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The defaults are intended to match the common case of
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a managed network with encryption and a typical entry would
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only require, for example
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.EX
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essid=left-armpit key1=afish key2=calledraawaru
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.EE
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if the port and IRQ defaults are used.
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These options may be set after boot by writing to the device's
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.I ctl
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file using a space as the separator between option and value, e.g.
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.EX
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echo 'key2 1d8f65c9a52d83c8e4b43f94af' >/net/ether0/0/ctl
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.EE
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.IP
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Card-specific power management may be enabled/disabled by
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.EX
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pm=[on, off]
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.EE
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.TP
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.B wavelanpci
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PCI Ethernet adapters that use the same Wavelan
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programming interface.
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Currently the only tested cards are those based on the
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Intersil Prism 2.5 chipset.
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.
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.TP
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.B iwl
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Intel Wireless WiFi Link mini PCI-Express adapters require
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firmware from
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.B http://firmware.openbsd.org/firmware/iwn-firmware*.tgz
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to be present on attach in
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.B /lib/firmware
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or
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.B /boot.
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To select the access point, the
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.B essid=
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and
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.B bssid=
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parameters can be specified at boot or set during runtime
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like:
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.EX
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echo essid left-armpit >/net/ether1/clone
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.EE
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If both
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.B essid=
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and
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.B bssid=
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are specified, both must match.
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Scan results appear in the
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.B ifstats
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file and can be read out like:
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.EX
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cat /net/ether1/ifstats
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.EE
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Ad-hoc mode or WEP encryption is currently not supported.
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To enable WPA/WPA2 encryption, see
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.IR wpa (8)
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for details.
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.TP
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.B rt2860
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Ralink Technology PCI/PCI-Express wireless adapters require
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firmware from
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.B http://firmware.openbsd.org/firmware/ral-firmware*.tgz
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to be present on attach in
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.B /lib/firmware
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or
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.B /boot.
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See iwl section above for configuration details.
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.SS DISKS, TAPES
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(S)ATA controllers are autodetected.
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.SS \fL*nodma=\fP
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disables dma on ata devices.
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.SS \fL*sd\fIXX\fLdma=on\fP
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explicitly enables dma on a specific ata device.
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.SS \fLscsi\fIX\fL=value\fP
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This defines a SCSI interface which cannot be automatically detected
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by the kernel.
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.PP
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Known
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.IR TYPE s
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are
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.TP
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.B aha1542
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Adaptec 154x series of controllers (and clones).
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Almost completely configurable, only the
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.EX
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port=0x300
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.EE
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option need be given.
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.PP
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NCR/Symbios/LSI-Logic 53c8xx-based adapters
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and Mylex MultiMaster (Buslogic BT-*) adapters are
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automatically detected and need no entries.
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.PP
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By default, the NCR 53c8xx driver searches for up to 32 controllers.
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This can be changed by setting the variable
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.BR *maxsd53c8xx .
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.PP
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By default the Mylex driver resets SCSI cards by using
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both the hard reset and SCSI bus reset flags in the driver interface.
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If a variable
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.BR *noscsireset
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is defined, the SCSI bus reset flag is omitted.
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.SS \fLaoeif=\fP\fIlist\fP
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This specifies a space-separated
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.I list
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of Ethernet interfaces to be bound at boot to the ATA-over-Ethernet driver,
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.IR aoe (3).
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For example,
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.LR "aoeif=ether0 ether1" .
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Only interfaces on this list will initially be accessible via AoE.
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.SS \fLaoedev=e!#æ/aoe/\fIshelf\fL.\fIslot\fR
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This specifies an ATA-over-Ethernet device accessible via the interfaces
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named in
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.IR aoeif
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on AoE
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.I shelf
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and
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.I slot
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to use as a root device for bootstrapping.
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.SS AUDIO
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.SS \fLaudio\fIX\fL=\fIvalue\fP
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This defines a sound interface.
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.PP
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Known types are
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.TF ess1688
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.PD
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.TP
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.B sb16
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Sound Blaster 16.
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.TP
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.B ess1688
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A Sound Blaster clone.
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.PP
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The DMA channel may be any of 5, 6, or 7.
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The defaults are
|
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.IP
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.EX
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port=0x220 irq=7 dma=5
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.EE
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.SS UARTS
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Plan 9 automatically configures COM1 and COM2, if found,
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as
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.B eia0
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(port 0x3F8, IRQ4)
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and
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.B eia1
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(port 0x2F8, IRQ3)
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respectively.
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These devices can be disabled by adding a line:
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.IP
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.EX
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eia\fIX\fP=disabled
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.EE
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.LP
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This is typically done in order to reuse the IRQ for
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another device.
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.P
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.PP
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Additional i8250 (ISA) uarts (uart2 to uart5) can be
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configured using:
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.IP
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.EX
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uart\fIX\fP=type=isa port=\fIport\fP irq=\fIirq
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.EE
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.PP
|
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Perle PCI-Fast4, PCI-Fast8, and PCI-Fast16 controllers
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are automatically detected and need no configuration lines.
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.PP
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The line
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.B serial=type=com
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can be used to specify settings for a PCMCIA modem.
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.SS \fLmouseport=\fIvalue\fP
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This specifies where the mouse is attached.
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.I Value
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can be
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.TP
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.B ps2
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the PS2 mouse/keyboard port. The BIOS setup procedure
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should be used to configure the machine appropriately.
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.TP
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.B ps2intellimouse
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an Intellimouse on the PS2 port.
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.TP
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.B 0
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for COM1
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.TP
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.B 1
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for COM2
|
|
.SS \fLmodemport=\fIvalue\fP
|
|
Picks the UART line to call out on.
|
|
This is used when connecting to a file server over
|
|
an async line.
|
|
.I Value
|
|
is the number of the port.
|
|
.SS \fLconsole=\fIvalue params\fP
|
|
This is used to specify the console device.
|
|
The default
|
|
.I value
|
|
is
|
|
.BR cga ;
|
|
a number
|
|
.B 0
|
|
or
|
|
.B 1
|
|
specifies
|
|
.I COM1
|
|
or
|
|
.I COM2
|
|
respectively.
|
|
A serial console is initially configured with the
|
|
.IR uart (3)
|
|
configuration string
|
|
.B b9600
|
|
.B l8
|
|
.B pn
|
|
.BR s1 ,
|
|
specifying 9600 baud,
|
|
8 bit bytes, no parity, and one stop bit.
|
|
If
|
|
.I params
|
|
is given, it will be used to further
|
|
configure the uart.
|
|
Notice that there is no
|
|
.B =
|
|
sign in the
|
|
.I params
|
|
syntax.
|
|
For example,
|
|
.IP
|
|
.EX
|
|
console=0 b19200 po
|
|
.EE
|
|
.LP
|
|
would use COM1 at 19,200 baud
|
|
with odd parity.
|
|
.SS "PC CARD"
|
|
.SS \fLpccard0=disabled\fP
|
|
Disable probing for and automatic configuration of PC card controllers.
|
|
.SS \fLpcmcia\fIX\fL=type=XXX irq=\fIvalue\fP
|
|
If the default IRQ for the
|
|
PCMCIA
|
|
is correct, this entry can be omitted. The value of
|
|
.B type
|
|
is ignored.
|
|
.SS \fLpcmcia0=disabled\fP
|
|
Disable probing for and automatic configuration of PCMCIA controllers.
|
|
.SS BOOTING
|
|
.SS \fLbootfile=\fIvalue\fP
|
|
This is used to direct the actions of
|
|
.IR 9boot (8)
|
|
by naming the file from which to load the kernel in
|
|
the current BIOS boot device.
|
|
.SS \fLbootargs=\fIvalue\fP
|
|
The
|
|
.I value
|
|
of this variable is passed to
|
|
.IR boot (8)
|
|
by the kernel as the name of the root file system to
|
|
automatically mount and boot into.
|
|
It is typically used to specify additional arguments to
|
|
pass to
|
|
.IR cwfs (4)
|
|
or
|
|
.IR ipconfig (8).
|
|
For example, if the system is to run from a local
|
|
.IR cwfs (4)
|
|
partition, the definition might read
|
|
.BR bootargs=local!/dev/sdC0/fscache .
|
|
See
|
|
.IR boot (8)
|
|
for more.
|
|
.SS \fLnobootprompt=\fIvalue\fP
|
|
Suppress the
|
|
.L "root from"
|
|
prompt and use
|
|
.I value
|
|
as the answer instead.
|
|
.SS \fLuser=\fIvalue\fP
|
|
Suppress the
|
|
.L "user"
|
|
prompt and use
|
|
.I value
|
|
as the answer instead.
|
|
.SS \fLdebugfactotum=\fP
|
|
Causes
|
|
.IR boot (8)
|
|
to start
|
|
.I factotum
|
|
with the
|
|
.B -p
|
|
option, so that it can be debugged.
|
|
.SS \fLfactotumopts=\fIoptions\fP
|
|
Causes
|
|
.IR boot (8)
|
|
to start
|
|
.I factotum
|
|
with the given
|
|
.IR options ,
|
|
which must be a single word (i.e., contain no whitespace).
|
|
.SS \fLcfs=\fIvalue\fP
|
|
This gives the name of the file holding the disk partition
|
|
for the cache file system,
|
|
.IR cfs (4).
|
|
Extending the
|
|
.B bootargs
|
|
example, one would write
|
|
.BR cfs=#S/sdC0/cache .
|
|
.SS \fLbootdisk=\fIvalue\fP
|
|
This deprecated variable was used to specify the disk used by
|
|
the cache file system and other disk-resident services.
|
|
It is superseded by
|
|
.B bootargs
|
|
and
|
|
.BR cfs .
|
|
.SS \fLfs=\fIa.b.c.d\fP
|
|
.SS \fLauth=\fIa.b.c.d\fP
|
|
These specify the IP address of the file and authentication server
|
|
to use when mounting a network-provided root file system.
|
|
They are used only if the addresses cannot be determined via DHCP.
|
|
.SS PROCESSOR
|
|
.SS \fL*e820=\fItype \fB0x\fIstart \fB0x\fIend ...\fP
|
|
This variable is automatically generated by the boot loader (see
|
|
.IR 9boot (8))
|
|
by doing a BIOS E820 memory scan while still in realmode and
|
|
passed to the kernel. The format is a unordered list of
|
|
decimal region
|
|
.I type
|
|
and hexadecimal 64-bit
|
|
.I start
|
|
and
|
|
.I end
|
|
addresses of the area.
|
|
.SS \fL*maxmem=\fIvalue\fP
|
|
This defines the maximum physical address that the system will scan when sizing memory.
|
|
By default the PC operating system will scan up to 3.75 gigabytes
|
|
(0xF0000000, the base of kernel virtual address space), but setting
|
|
.B *maxmem
|
|
will limit the scan.
|
|
.B *maxmem
|
|
must be less than 3.75 gigabytes.
|
|
This variable is not consulted if using the E820 memory map.
|
|
.SS \fL*kernelpercent=\fIvalue\fP
|
|
This defines what percentage of available memory is reserved for the kernel allocation pool.
|
|
The remainder is left for user processes. The default
|
|
.I value
|
|
is
|
|
.B 30
|
|
on CPU servers,
|
|
.B 60
|
|
on terminals with less than 16MB of memory,
|
|
and
|
|
.B 40
|
|
on terminals with memories of 16MB or more.
|
|
Terminals use more kernel memory because
|
|
.IR draw (3)
|
|
maintains its graphic images in kernel memory.
|
|
This deprecated option is rarely necessary in newer kernels.
|
|
.SS \fL*imagemaxmb=\fIvalue\fP
|
|
This limits the maximum amount of memory (in megabytes) the graphics
|
|
image memory pool can grow. The default is unlimited for terminals
|
|
and cpu servers.
|
|
.SS \fL*nomce=\fIvalue\fP
|
|
If machine check exceptions are supported by the processor,
|
|
then they are enabled by default.
|
|
Setting this variable to
|
|
.B 1
|
|
causes them to be disabled even when available.
|
|
.SS \fL*nomp=\fP
|
|
A multiprocessor machine will enable all processors by default.
|
|
Setting
|
|
.B *nomp
|
|
restricts the kernel to starting only one processor and using the
|
|
traditional interrupt controller.
|
|
.SS \fL*ncpu=\fIvalue\fP
|
|
Setting
|
|
.B *ncpu
|
|
restricts the kernel to starting at most
|
|
.I value
|
|
processors.
|
|
.SS \fL*apicdebug=\fP
|
|
Prints a summary of the multiprocessor APIC interrupt configuration.
|
|
.SS \fL*nomsi=\fP
|
|
Disables message signaled interrupts.
|
|
.SS \fL*notsc=\fP
|
|
Disables the use of the per processor timestamp counter registers
|
|
as high resolution clock.
|
|
.SS \fL*pcimaxbno=value\fP
|
|
This puts a limit on the maximum bus number probed
|
|
on a PCI bus (default 7).
|
|
For example, a
|
|
.I value
|
|
of 1 should suffice on a 'standard' motherboard with an AGP slot.
|
|
This, and
|
|
.B *pcimaxdno
|
|
below are rarely used and only on troublesome or suspect hardware.
|
|
.SS \fL*pcimaxdno=\fIvalue\fP
|
|
This puts a limit on the maximum device number probed
|
|
on a PCI bus (default 31).
|
|
.SS \fL*nopcirouting=\fP
|
|
Disable pci routing during boot. May solve interrupt routing
|
|
problems on certain machines.
|
|
.SS \fL*pcihinv=\fP
|
|
Prints a summary of the detected PCI busses and devices.
|
|
.SS \fL*nodumpstack=\fP
|
|
Disable printing a stack dump on panic.
|
|
Useful if there is only a limited cga screen available,
|
|
otherwise the textual information about the panic may scroll off.
|
|
.\" .SS \fL*nobios=\fP
|
|
.\" what does this do? something with pci
|
|
.SS \fLioexclude=\fIvalue\fP
|
|
Specifies a list of ranges of I/O ports to exclude from use by drivers.
|
|
Ranges are inclusive on both ends and separated by commas.
|
|
For example:
|
|
.EX
|
|
ioexclude=0x330-0x337,0x430-0x43F
|
|
.EE
|
|
.SS \fLumbexclude=\fIvalue\fP
|
|
Specifies a list of ranges of UMB to exclude from use by drivers.
|
|
Ranges are inclusive on both ends and separated by commas.
|
|
For example:
|
|
.EX
|
|
umbexclude=0xD1800-0xD3FFF
|
|
.EE
|
|
.SS \fL*acpi=\fIvalue\fP
|
|
The presence of this option enables ACPI and the export of the
|
|
.B #P/acpitbls
|
|
file in
|
|
.IR arch (3)
|
|
device. In multiprocessor mode, the kernel will use the ACPI
|
|
tables to configure APIC interrupts unless a
|
|
.I value
|
|
of
|
|
.B 0
|
|
is specified.
|
|
.SS \fLapm0=\fP
|
|
This enables the ``advanced power management'' interface
|
|
as described in
|
|
.IR apm (3)
|
|
and
|
|
.IR apm (8).
|
|
The main feature of the interface is the ability to watch
|
|
battery life (see
|
|
.IR stats (8)).
|
|
It is not on by default because it causes problems on some laptops.
|
|
.SS VIDEO
|
|
.SS \fLmonitor=\fIvalue\fP
|
|
.SS \fLvgasize=\fIvalue\fP
|
|
These are used not by the kernel but by
|
|
.I termrc
|
|
(see
|
|
.IR cpurc (8))
|
|
when starting
|
|
.IR vga (8).
|
|
If
|
|
.I value
|
|
is set to
|
|
.B ask
|
|
then the user is prompted for a choice on boot.
|
|
.SS \fL*dpms=\fIvalue\fP
|
|
This is used to specify the screen blanking behavior of the MGA4xx
|
|
video driver.
|
|
Values are
|
|
.BR standby ,
|
|
.BR suspend ,
|
|
and
|
|
.BR off .
|
|
The first two specify differing levels of power saving;
|
|
the third turns the monitor off completely.
|
|
.SS NVRAM
|
|
.SS \fLnvram=\fIfile\fP
|
|
.SS \fLnvrlen=\fIlength\fP
|
|
.SS \fLnvroff=\fIoffset\fP
|
|
This is used to specify an nvram device and optionally the length of the ram
|
|
and read/write offset to use.
|
|
These values are consulted by
|
|
.I readnvram
|
|
(see
|
|
.IR authsrv (2)).
|
|
The most common use of the nvram is to hold a
|
|
.IR secstore (1)
|
|
password for use by
|
|
.IR factotum (4).
|
|
.SS \fLnvr=\fIvalue\fP
|
|
This is used by the WORM file server kernel to locate a file holding information
|
|
to configure the file system.
|
|
The file cannot live on a SCSI disk.
|
|
The default is
|
|
.B fd!0!plan9.nvr
|
|
(sic),
|
|
unless
|
|
.B bootfile
|
|
is set, in which case it is
|
|
.B plan9.nvr
|
|
on the same disk as
|
|
.BR bootfile .
|
|
The syntax is either
|
|
.BI fd! unit ! name
|
|
or
|
|
.BI hd! unit ! name
|
|
where
|
|
.I unit
|
|
is the numeric unit id.
|
|
This variant syntax is a vestige of the file server kernel's origins.
|
|
.SH EXAMPLES
|
|
.PP
|
|
A representative
|
|
.BR plan9.ini :
|
|
.IP
|
|
.EX
|
|
% cat /n/9fat:/plan9.ini
|
|
ether0=type=3C509
|
|
mouseport=ps2
|
|
modemport=1
|
|
serial0=type=generic port=0x3E8 irq=5
|
|
monitor=445x
|
|
vgasize=1600x1200x8
|
|
bootfile=/386/9pcf
|
|
%
|
|
.EE
|
|
.SH "SEE ALSO"
|
|
.IR 9boot (8),
|
|
.IR booting (8),
|
|
.IR boot (8)
|
|
.SH BUGS
|
|
Being able to set the console device to other than a
|
|
display is marginally useful on file servers; MS-DOS
|
|
and the programs which run under it are so tightly bound
|
|
to the display that it is necessary to have a display if any
|
|
setup or reconfiguration programs need to be run.
|
|
Also, the delay before any messages appear at boot time
|
|
is disconcerting, as any error messages from the BIOS
|
|
are lost.
|
|
.PP
|
|
The declaration of a kernel parameter which is a prefix of
|
|
previously declared parameters will delete the previous
|
|
ones. If this is not desired, parameters should be given
|
|
in shortest to longest order.
|