From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 Date: Mon, 21 Feb 1994 11:03:06 -0500 From: Vijay Gill vijay@gl.umbc.edu Subject: Hardware compatibility list Topicbox-Message-UUID: 00b08a3a-eac8-11e9-9e20-41e7f4b1d025 Message-ID: <19940221160306.2XADxSpD3ntflyI5W_aUzTHu7lfB2AG-ej79Nf3swaI@z> Added: Systems - Systems/setups that work with plan 9. The purpose of this list is to maintain a database of hardware that is known to work with plan 9. This should make life easier for those people contemplating the purchase of new hardware. Most of this list is taken directly from what Forsyth sent me. Please do not deluge him with mail, reply to me and I'll try to set up a mechanism to distribute this stuff. The list is starting out for the most selfish of reasons, since I am in the market for some hardware to run plan 9, I thought it would be a good idea to find out what to get. This list will concentrate mostly on the 386/486 clone hardware. While the 386/486 machines are looked upon with derision, they provide the cheapest hardware to run plan 9. However, most of the hardware is only tested with, and comes with drivers for, DOS and Windows, and thus may not work with plan 9. This list details the stuff that works with plan 9. BeginBlurb: Plan 9 on a Mac. No more futzing around. I could deal with plan9 running on the new cheap 68040 Quadra's or the LC's. End Blurb. Note: Our paperwork still hasn't arrived yet. And we even have the hardware available, which I think is a first in the history of our school. Contributors: Most of this hardware list comes from forsyth@minster.york.ac.uk who has done yeoman work to contributing to this list. Actually, come to think of it, his is about the only contribution ;) Here is the list of hardware that will work with plan 9. Other hardware may work with plan 9, but this list will only list stuff that is known to work or stuff that I need confirmation on. ----------------------------------------------------- Bus: ISA VESA EISA (may work with ISA Cards, need confirmation) ----------------------------------------------------- CPU: Intel AMD - To be tested by Forsyth Cyrix - Ditto IBM SLC - Has been tested and is known to work. ------------------------------------------------------ Video Cards: This is the trickiest part. SVGA cards all have different ways of configuring and operating high-resolution modes (higher than 640x480 VGA). ET4000 SVGA cards work. S3 911 cards work, with some changes to devvga.c and lib/vga. The SVGA mode is, ``horrible, just horrible.'' Paradise cards (reportedly) work. Diamond Stealth Pro cards work, with some changes to devvga.c and lib/vga. This is from Gary Capell. ------------------------------------------------------ Ethernet cards: WD SMC NE2000 clones (Reset port address it uses might not work on some clones) 3Com 3C509 Etherlink III (need to get some fixes to use the driver under very heavy loads) 3Com 3C503 -- Avoid this one ------------------------------------------------------------ Hard Disk Controllers: Ultrastor 14F SCSI (driver is available by ftp) Adaptec 1542B/Buslogic 542B (driver is available, but hasn't been used very much) Forsyth has added the driver for the Ultrastor 14F. He has used it on both cpu and terminal machines, and also on the file server, running Fujitsu 2624FA disks, Seagate 3283N and Sun CDROM drives. Standard IDE controllers should work. -------------------------------------------------------------- Memory: 8-16 megs should be adequate. More is better. -------------------------------------------------------------- Modems: High speed modems will work but the kernel does not take advantage of the FIFO's in the 16550 UARTS. Forsyth can supply the diffs and the appropriate changes that will work for `hayes', which work fine upto 38400. ----------------------------------------------------------------------- Diskettes: Stick with 3.5" 1.44 meg or 5.25". Plan 9 does not work too well with 2.88 meg 3.5". ----------------------------------------------------------------------- Disks: The pc system on the distribution (Jan 1993 version) supports IDE disks. The IDE driver has a bug in it that causes it to fail on very old Seagate 42 Meg drives (fixed by Forsyth). Modern IDE drives work just fine. ----------------------------------------------------------------------- Systems: Forsyth has gotten plan 9 running on an IBM 486SLC2/66 (IBM Path chipset) ISA motherboard. This chipset is IBM's own and the CPU is not Intel's. The only trick is that you need to select the Fast mode of the A20 Gate option in the BIOS options. Plan 9 doesn't run long with the `Normal' A20 setting. Also set the OS/2 option as the motherboard manual suggests. Forsyth couldn't figure out what it does, but it is probably a good idea to do it. He is currently running a domain name service on this machine. : Stephen Gallimore has the following setup: Elonex 486/33 8MB RAM, SMC Combo Ethernet card, 210 MB IDE drive. Headland (Video 7) local bus SVGA. There are some problems with kernel crashes on this setup and the video is a bit suspect (pvga/nec4 800x600 setup is being used, this gives the wrong aspect for the monitor). Needs a proper vga database entry for the card. This setup is using an SGI 210/VGX as the fileserver over u9fs, although the local disk is being used as well. : Bernd Waldbauer has plan 9 running on a standard 386DX box, with a noname ET4000 and an SMC Ethernet card. He gets 1024x768 on an EIZO F550i. --- This is the list as it stands. If you have plan 9 running on different hardware, please send me details. War stories welcomed, to go into the war stories list. I presently have Forsyth's war story. More input welcomed. I will be looking at putting this stuff up for anon ftp when I have sufficient volume. If there is sufficient interest, I'll post up the war stories that I have. -- Vijay Gill |The (paying) customer is always right. wrath@cs.umbc.edu | - Piercarlo Grandi vijay@gl.umbc.edu | Eagles may soar, but weasels don't get These are my opinions only. | sucked into jet engines.