Contributed by Nick Sayer <nsayer@FreeBSD.org>. 25 March
1998.
The Specialix SI/XIO and SX multiport cards use the
si driver. A single machine can have
up to 4 host cards. The following host cards are
supported:
ISA SI/XIO host card (2 versions)
EISA SI/XIO host card
PCI SI/XIO host card
ISA SX host card
PCI SX host card
Although the SX and SI/XIO host cards look markedly
different, their functionality are basically the same. The
host cards do not use I/O locations, but instead require a 32K
chunk of memory. The factory configuration for ISA cards
places this at 0xd0000-0xd7fff. They also
require an IRQ. PCI cards will, of course, auto-configure
themselves.
You can attach up to 4 external modules to each host card. The external modules contain either 4 or 8 serial ports. They come in the following varieties:
SI 4 or 8 port modules. Up to 57600 bps on each port supported.
XIO 8 port modules. Up to 115200 bps on each port supported. One type of XIO module has 7 serial and 1 parallel port.
SXDC 8 port modules. Up to 921600 bps on each port supported. Like XIO, a module is available with one parallel port as well.
To configure an ISA host card, add the following line to your kernel configuration file, changing the numbers as appropriate:
device si0 at isa? iomem 0xd0000 irq 11
Valid IRQ numbers are 9, 10, 11, 12 and 15 for SX ISA host cards and 11, 12 and 15 for SI/XIO ISA host cards.
To configure an EISA or PCI host card, use this line:
device si0
After adding the configuration entry, rebuild and install your new kernel.
The following step, is not necessary if you are using
devfs(5) in FreeBSD 5.X.
After rebooting with the new kernel, you need to make the
device nodes in /dev. The MAKEDEV script
will take care of this for you. Count how many total ports
you have and type:
#cd /dev#./MAKEDEV ttyAnncuaAnn
(where nn is the number of
ports)
If you want login prompts to appear on these ports, you
will need to add lines like this to
/etc/ttys:
ttyA01 "/usr/libexec/getty std.9600" vt100 on insecure
Change the terminal type as appropriate. For modems,
dialup or
unknown is fine.
All FreeBSD documents are available for download at https://download.freebsd.org/ftp/doc/
Questions that are not answered by the
documentation may be
sent to <freebsd-questions@FreeBSD.org>.
Send questions about this document to <freebsd-doc@FreeBSD.org>.