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[/] [or1k/] [trunk/] [rc203soc/] [sw/] [uClinux/] [drivers/] [net/] [README.rcpci] - Rev 1777

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Application Information


The included application, called "rcc" (for RedCreek Control), is an 
example of a user-space application (i.e., not running within kernel
space).  It issues ioctl commands to communicate with the PCI driver.  
It can currently report any of the following information:

   - PCI driver information ("getinfo")
   - card statistics ("getstats")
   - card's ip address & netmask ("getipnmask")
   - card's mac address ("getmac")
   - current speed ("getspeed")
   - firmware version string ("getfirmware")
   - status of the link (up or down) ("getstatus")

Also, it can "set" the following parameters:

   - IP and mask
   - mac address
   - link speed
   - promiscuous mode

Example:  rcc eth1 setipnmask="192.168.254.254 255.255.255.0"

Note: rcc's command line parser is very basic. If you type the
command incorrectly, it might result in a core dump.

This program needs to run as root, to avoid encountering permission 
problems.  An alternative is to change the permission and ownership
so that it runs as a setuid root process (for example, "chown 
root.root rcc; chmod u+s rcc").



Quick PCI driver background


The adapter has its own IP and mac addresses which you have to
assign using the RedCreek manager (assuming the adapter is
running 3.X firmware).  Your linux box will not know anything 
about the adapter's IP address -- ie, the adapter will show up 
as a regular nic.  You will assign the linux box IP address using 
the "ifconfig" command, as mentioned below.


To compile the driver, simply type "make".
This, of course, assumes that you have GNU compiler environment
already setup on a linux box.  The .c and .h files were copied 
to a dos filesystem (the floppy), so you may have to use "dos2unix" to 
convert it back to a unix text file.  Keep in mind that the driver
currently works with kernels 2.0.X only.  Furthermore, it was only
tested with kernel 2.0.34.

To load the driver:

"insmod rcpci"

The adapter will show up as a regular nic.  Thus, if you have only
one nic (the pci card) in your box, you would at this point configure
it with the following commands:

mandatory:
"ifconfig eth0 <your linux box IP address (NOT the IP address of the 
                adapter!>"
"route add -net <your network address> eth0"

optional (if you want to be able to access other networks):
"route add default gw <your default gateway IP address> eth0"

Done.  Type "ifconfig" to see "eth0" and the packet count, as well
as the IP address, net mask, etc.

To unload the driver, you first have to shutdown the interface:

"ifconfig eth0 down"

Then you unload the driver with "rmmod rcpci".

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