From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 Date: Sun, 9 Apr 1995 23:03:19 -0400 From: jmk@plan9.att.com jmk@plan9.att.com Subject: PC-clone hardware Topicbox-Message-UUID: 0c50df98-eac8-11e9-9e20-41e7f4b1d025 Message-ID: <19950410030319.ydlCVJm_iDgsCwv06GnVQy1MOaSHDVRbdj7oL9e8m9U@z> Following is a note about the PC-clone hardware we use. It requires tbl|troff -ms. It doesn't include hardware we haven't integrated yet. --jim ---------------------------cut-here---------------------------------------- .FP lucidasans .SH APPENDIX - What We Use - Last Updated 9-April-95 .SP 3 .LP We assemble our own PC-clones whenever possible for 2 reasons: .IP \(bu we know what's inside; .IP \(bu it's good therapy. .LP We can't do this for laptops and these have typically been the most troublesome. There are a few desktop systems around which were bought assembled and they mostly seem to work OK when we try them. .LP Some items work on the current development system and are not included in the Plan 9 distribution. .LP The opinions and misinformation in here are all mine. .SH Motherboards .LP We like baby-AT format motherboards. There is a commitment to EISA for some home-built boards and commercial fibre interfaces for FDDI and ATM. Until recently we've used the AMI Enterprise IV: .IP \(bu 7 EISA slots, 2 of them with VLB; .IP \(bu SiS chipset; .IP \(bu on-board I/O (SMCxxxxxx); .IP \(bu PS/2 mouse port; .IP \(bu processors up to DX/2-66 (will .I not take a DX/4-100 overdrive, should take a P24T); .IP \(bu x 72-pin SIMM sockets, no pairing necessary. .LP All in all, a fine little board but showing its age. .LP Our commitment to EISA restricts the choices we have for P54C motherboards to those using the Neptune chipset, and they are typically all dual-processor motherboards. We have two, an ASUS PCI/E-P54NP4 and a Gigabyte GA586-ID (although it was sold to us under another name). There's little to choose between the two, both have 6 72-pin SIMM sockets (paired), 256Kb or 512Kb secondary cache and no on-board I/O. It comes down to what you intend to plug in: .KS .TS center; c c c l c c. ASUS PCI/E-P54NP4 Gigabyte GA586-ID _ EISA slots 4 5 PCI slots 4 3 PS/2 port Y N .TE .KE .LP The ASUS has a separate 3.3v power connector, and if your power supply can't provide that, you lose a PCI slot to a voltage regulator card. The Gigabyte has more flexible PCI interrupts, allowing PCI multi-function cards such as the GAxxx-xx multi-I/O card which doesn't require an [E]ISA-slot paddle-card (that in itself doesn't buy you much - if you have a PCI multi-I/O card in the shared PCI slot you can't really use the shared EISA slot for anything other than a paddle-card anyway). .LP Yes, one of these has 2 P54CT processors installed and no, the port is not complete. .SH VGA cards .LP Here's a list of what's in /lib/vgadb with VGA chip type: .KS .TS center; c l l l l l. chip comments STB PowerGraph X-24 S3 86C801 ISA Orchid Fahrenheit 1280 S3 86C805 VLB #9GXE Level-1[126] S3 86C928 VLB #9GXE64 S3 Vision864 PCI, VLB and on motherboard Cardinal VGA765 Tseng Labs ET4000 ISA Hercules Dynamite Power Tseng Labs ET4000/W32p PCI Diamond SpeedStar Pro CL-GD542x ISA and on motherboard Orchid Kelvin 64 CL-GD543x PCI Globalyst 250 (laptop) C&T65540 on motherboard ATI ULtra Pro MACH32 VLB AT&T Globalyst 600 MACH64 on motherboard .TE .KE .LP Support for the ATI MACH32 and MACH64 is minimal, only the dumb VGA mode is used restricting the maximum resolution to 1024x768x8. .LP Most of the Enterprise IV motherboards are have a #9GXE Level-11 VLB, there are also 2 with Level-16's. .LP Subjectively, the Tseng Labs ET4000/W32p gives the best performance under Plan 9, its only drawbacks being the lack of a hardware cursor in 2x8bit mode and a maximum pixel-clock of 135MHz when used with a suitable RAMDAC. .SH Monitors .LP We use the IDEK 8617 and Viewsonic 17 17" monitors, and the Nokia 445X 21". .SH IDE/ATA drives .LP We've used Seagate 2.5" drives on most of the Enterprise IV systems, mainly because once the system is booted we just spin it down; we could do that with a SCSI drive but the Enterprise IV has an on-board IDE controller so we just use that. They are slow, however. .LP We have one Conner CFA850 850Mb EIDE drive hooked up to a CMD604B controller and it has worked nicely so far. There is also a Micropolis 2117 1.7Gb drive. It would not coexist happily with the Conner, it always wanted to be master; the Conner worked fine as a slave. .SH SCSI Controllers .LP We use Buslogic controllers, PCI, EISA and ISA, and the Adaptec 1542 series. Those can all be handled in one driver (although that's not the one in the distribution). There is also an Ultrastor 14F ISA and a 34F VLB controller around which work fine; those controllers may not be easy to get anymore. .SH SCSI Discs .LP We have a completely mixed bag, all the way from systems with a single 200Mb drive on an Adaptec 1542 to one with 4 9Gb Seagate Elite 9's on a Buslogic 747S EISA controller. Most of our drives come from Seagate although there are odd drives around from other manufacturers such as Maxstor and Conner. .LP The only incompatibility has been the dual-ported Seagate fast+wide+differential Elite 9 and a Buslogic 757D fast+wide+differential EISA controller. The single-ported version of the drive works fine; the dual-ported drive has no on-board termination and the conclusion was there is some incompatibility in the way the active termination is done. .SH SCSI CD-ROM .LP We have mostly used the 2x Toshiba 3401, although there is a NEC 74 and 3Xi around which work fine too. The Toshiba lets you read the digital audio over the bus. However, according to our audio-grabbing expert the best drive we have is a 4x Plextor 4-Plex; it can read the digital audio too and positions more accurately than the Toshiba. .SH Non-SCSI CD-ROM .LP We've tried the Mitsumi, Panasonic and Matsushita drives which can be attached to a Sound Blaster audio card. They're slow. .SH Audio .LP Sound Blaster 16 or compatible ( .I not the SBPro). .SH Mouse .LP You just can't get a decent mouse these days. Logitech make OK 3-button mice, but their catalogue keeps changing. PS/2 or serial, it doesn't matter, we handle both. .SH Keyboard .LP You just can't get a decent keyboard these days. We use the Lexmark Quiet-Touch. It has 84 keys, an optional numeric keypad (which we've never bought) and either PS/2 (6-pin) or AT (5-pin) connector. The feel is a bit dull, but it measures 13"x6" which makes up for a lot. .SH Ethernet Adapters .LP The 3Com 3C509 is a fine card, it's fast, autoconfigures, the only resources it uses are 16 I/O ports and it's pretty cheap. Don't bother with the EISA version (3C579), performance is marginally better but it costs a lot more. The PCMCIA version (3C589) also works. .LP Other cards we have are some of the SMC (WD) series of adapters, up to the Elite (but not the Elite Ultra), some NE2000 compatibles (including an NE4100 PCMCIA card) and one Eagle NE3210 EISA card. They all work but have nothing to recommend them over the 3C509. .LP We failed miserably to get the old 3Com 3C503 to work, the NIC kept resetting as soon as we put any load on it. .SH Modems .LP Modems are not something we use much and have no real opinions. Our Plan 9 FAX service uses a MultiTech MT1432. The AT&T Keep-In-Touch PCMCIA modem also works. .SH PCMCIA .LP There's some support for PCMCIA controllers using the Intel 82365SL PCIC controller or compatibles (e.g. Cirrus Logic PD6710/PD6720). Both controllers in laptops and on ISA cards have been used.