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			196 lines
		
	
	
	
		
			7.4 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Text
		
	
	
	
	
	
			
		
		
	
	
			196 lines
		
	
	
	
		
			7.4 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Text
		
	
	
	
	
	
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		CDU31A/CDU33A Driver Info
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		-------------------------
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Information on the Sony CDU31A/CDU33A CDROM driver for the Linux
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kernel.
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   Corey Minyard (minyard@metronet.com)
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   Colossians 3:17
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Crude Table of Contents
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-----------------------
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  Setting Up the Hardware
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  Configuring the Kernel
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  Configuring as a Module
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  Driver Special Features
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This device driver handles Sony CDU31A/CDU33A CDROM drives and
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provides a complete block-level interface as well as an ioctl()
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interface as specified in include/linux/cdrom.h).  With this
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interface, CDROMs can be accessed, standard audio CDs can be played
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back normally, and CD audio information can be read off the drive.
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Note that this will only work for CDU31A/CDU33A drives.  Some vendors
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market their drives as CDU31A compatible.  They lie.  Their drives are
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really CDU31A hardware interface compatible (they can plug into the
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same card).  They are not software compatible.
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Setting Up the Hardware
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-----------------------
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The CDU31A driver is unable to safely tell if an interface card is
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present that it can use because the interface card does not announce
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its presence in any way besides placing 4 I/O locations in memory.  It
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used to just probe memory and attempt commands, but Linus wisely asked
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me to remove that because it could really screw up other hardware in
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the system.
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Because of this, you must tell the kernel where the drive interface
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is, what interrupts are used, and possibly if you are on a PAS-16
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soundcard.
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If you have the Sony CDU31A/CDU33A drive interface card, the following
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diagram will help you set it up.  If you have another card, you are on
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your own.  You need to make sure that the I/O address and interrupt is
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not used by another card in the system.  You will need to know the I/O
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address and interrupt you have set.  Note that use of interrupts is
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highly recommended, if possible, it really cuts down on CPU used.
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Unfortunately, most soundcards do not support interrupts for their
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CDROM interfaces.  By default, the Sony interface card comes with
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interrupts disabled.
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        +----------+-----------------+----------------------+
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        |  JP1     |  34 Pin Conn    |                      |
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        |  JP2     +-----------------+                      |
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        |  JP3                                              |
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        |  JP4                                              |
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        |                                                   +--+
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        |                                                   |  +-+
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        |                                                   |  | |  External
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        |                                                   |  | |  Connector
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        |                                                   |  | |
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        |                                                   |  +-+
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        |                                                   +--+
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        |                                                   |
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        |                                          +--------+
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        |                                          |
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        +------------------------------------------+
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      JP1 sets the Base Address, using the following settings:
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        Address         Pin 1           Pin 2
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        -------         -----           -----
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        0x320           Short           Short
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        0x330           Short           Open
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        0x340           Open            Short
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        0x360           Open            Open
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      JP2 and JP3 configure the DMA channel; they must be set the same.
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        DMA             Pin 1           Pin 2           Pin 3
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        ---             -----           -----           -----
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        1               On              Off             On
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        2               Off             On              Off
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        3               Off             Off             On
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      JP4 Configures the IRQ:
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        IRQ     Pin 1           Pin 2           Pin 3           Pin 4
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        ---     -----           -----           -----           -----
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        3       Off             Off             On              Off
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        4       Off             Off*            Off             On
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        5       On              Off             Off             Off
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        6       Off             On              Off             Off
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                  The documentation states to set this for interrupt
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                  4, but I think that is a mistake.
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Note that if you have another interface card, you will need to look at
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the documentation to find the I/O base address.  This is specified to
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the SLCD.SYS driver for DOS with the /B: parameter, so you can look at
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you DOS driver setup to find the address, if necessary.
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Configuring the Kernel
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----------------------
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You must tell the kernel where the drive is at boot time.  This can be
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done at the Linux boot prompt, by using LILO, or by using Bootlin.
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Note that this is no substitute for HOWTOs and LILO documentation, if
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you are confused please read those for info on bootline configuration
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and LILO.
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At the linux boot prompt, press the ALT key and add the following line
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after the boot name (you can let the kernel boot, it will tell you the
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default boot name while booting):
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	cdu31a=<base address>,<interrupt>[,PAS]
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The base address needs to have "0x" in front of it, since it is in
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hex.  For instance, to configure a drive at address 320 on interrupt 5,
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use the following:
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	cdu31a=0x320,5
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I use the following boot line:
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	cdu31a=0x1f88,0,PAS
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because I have a PAS-16 which does not support interrupt for the
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CDU31A interface.
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Adding this as an append line at the beginning of the /etc/lilo.conf
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file will set it for lilo configurations.  I have the following as the
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first line in my lilo.conf file:
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	append="cdu31a=0x1f88,0"
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I'm not sure how to set up Bootlin (I have never used it), if someone
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would like to fill in this section please do.
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Configuring as a Module
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-----------------------
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The driver supports loading as a module.  However, you must specify
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the boot address and interrupt on the boot line to insmod.  You can't
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use modprobe to load it, since modprobe doesn't support setting
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variables.
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Anyway, I use the following line to load my driver as a module
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  /sbin/insmod /lib/modules/`uname -r`/misc/cdu31a.o cdu31a_port=0x1f88
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You can set the following variables in the driver:
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  cdu31a_port=<I/O address> - sets the base I/O.  If hex, put 0x in
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			      front of it.  This must be specified.
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  cdu31a_irq=<interrupt> - Sets the interrupt number.  Leaving this
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			   off will turn interrupts off.
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Driver Special Features
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-----------------------
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This section describes features beyond the normal audio and CD-ROM
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functions of the drive.
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2048 byte buffer mode
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If a disk is mounted with -o block=2048, data is copied straight from
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the drive data port to the buffer.  Otherwise, the readahead buffer
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must be involved to hold the other 1K of data when a 1K block
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operation is done.  Note that with 2048 byte blocks you cannot execute
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files from the CD.
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XA compatibility
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The driver should support XA disks for both the CDU31A and CDU33A.  It
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does this transparently, the using program doesn't need to set it.
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Multi-Session
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A multi-session disk looks just like a normal disk to the user.  Just
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mount one normally, and all the data should be there.  A special
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thanks to Koen for help with this!
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Raw sector I/O
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Using the CDROMREADAUDIO it is possible to read raw audio and data
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tracks.  Both operations return 2352 bytes per sector.  On the data
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tracks, the first 12 bytes is not returned by the drive and the value
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of that data is indeterminate.
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