VMEbus-RAM revision 1.5 1 1.5 andvar $NetBSD: VMEbus-RAM,v 1.5 2023/09/30 20:15:54 andvar Exp $
2 1.1 scw
3 1.1 scw NetBSD/mvme68k: VMEbus RAM card configuration
4 1.1 scw ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
5 1.1 scw
6 1.1 scw NetBSD-mvme68k can be configured to support additional RAM boards
7 1.1 scw accessed over the VMEbus.
8 1.1 scw
9 1.1 scw This file describes where to configure your VMEbus RAM and how to
10 1.1 scw point the kernel in the direction of it.
11 1.1 scw
12 1.1 scw The MVME147 board has a fairly primitive VMEbus controller chip. The
13 1.3 wiz mapping of CPU address to VMEbus address is hardwired and so dictates
14 1.3 wiz what can be seen where by the 68030. From the CPU's perspective, A24
15 1.1 scw space spans 0x00000000 to 0x00ffffff. However, onboard RAM also spans
16 1.1 scw this space. With 8Mb of onboard RAM, only the top 8Mb of VMEbus A24
17 1.1 scw space can be seen. With 16Mb onboard, there is no easy way to get at
18 1.1 scw A24 space at all!
19 1.1 scw
20 1.1 scw The other MVME boards have a more sophisticated VMEbus controller
21 1.1 scw which can remap segments of VMEbus address space anywhere in the CPU's
22 1.1 scw address space. This document will assume the remap is `transparent',
23 1.1 scw ie. no translation is taking place. The same restriction as MVME147
24 1.1 scw applies to these boards in that, without translation, a region of
25 1.1 scw VMEbus address space is masked by onboard RAM. The size of this region
26 1.1 scw depends entirely on the size of onboard RAM.
27 1.1 scw
28 1.1 scw The best place for VMEbus RAM cards is somewhere in A32D32 VMEbus address
29 1.1 scw space. Obviously, if your VMEbus RAM card doesn't respond to that space
30 1.1 scw then you'll have to locate it elsewhere. Typically, you may find it
31 1.1 scw responds to A24D16 only, in which case the CPU-relative address you need
32 1.1 scw to specify below will be in the 16MB region starting at 0xZZZZZZZZ.
33 1.1 scw
34 1.5 andvar For A32D32, choose an address which is reasonably close to the end of the
35 1.1 scw MVME board's RAM. That is, if you have 32MB of onboard RAM, set the
36 1.1 scw VMEbus RAM board to appear at A32:02000000.
37 1.1 scw
38 1.1 scw This starting address needs to be written to the MVME board's NVRAM at
39 1.1 scw address 0xfffe0764 for MVME147, and 0xff, as follows:
40 1.1 scw
41 1.1 scw 147Bug> mm fffe0764 ;L
42 1.1 scw FFFE0764 00000000? 01000000 <cr> <--- you type 01000000
43 1.1 scw FFFE0768 00000000? . <cr>
44 1.1 scw 147Bug>
45 1.1 scw
46 1.1 scw Next, you need to configure the end address of VMEbus RAM. Assuming
47 1.1 scw your RAM card is 8Mb in size, this would be 0x017fffff. You need to
48 1.1 scw write this value to NVRAM address 0xfffe0768, as follows:
49 1.1 scw
50 1.1 scw 147Bug> mm fffe0768 ;L
51 1.1 scw FFFE0768 00000000? 017fffff <cr> <--- you type 017fffff
52 1.1 scw FFFE076c 00000000? . <cr>
53 1.1 scw 147Bug>
54 1.1 scw
55 1.1 scw You could obviously combine the above two steps.
56 1.1 scw
57 1.1 scw If you have more than one VMEbus RAM card, you must configure them so
58 1.1 scw that they appear physically contiguous in A32 address space. So, to add
59 1.1 scw another 8Mb card in addition to the card above, it should be jumpered
60 1.1 scw to start at 0x01800000. In this case, you would change NVRAM location
61 1.1 scw 0xfffe0768 to be 0x01ffffff.
62 1.1 scw
63 1.1 scw If NVRAM location 0xfffe0764 is zero, the kernel assumes you only have
64 1.1 scw onboard RAM and will not attempt to use any VMEbus RAM.
65 1.1 scw
66 1.1 scw
67 1.1 scw Some extra notes on VMEbus RAM cards
68 1.1 scw ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
69 1.1 scw
70 1.1 scw So... You've got your nice shiny VMEbus RAM card up and running with
71 1.1 scw NetBSD, and you're wondering why your system runs slower than it did
72 1.1 scw with less RAM!
73 1.1 scw
74 1.1 scw The simple answer is "Motorola got it wrong". (Or at least that's my
75 1.1 scw opinion. If anyone can cure the following, let me know!)
76 1.1 scw
77 1.1 scw In their infinite wisdom, the designers of the MVME147 decided that
78 1.1 scw they would disable the 68030's cache on *any* access to the VMEbus.
79 1.1 scw The upshot is that the cache only works for onboard RAM, not VMEbus
80 1.1 scw RAM, hence your system runs slower. As far as I can see, the only
81 1.1 scw way to cure this is to physically cut a trace on the circuit board
82 1.1 scw and use the MMU to control caching on a page-by-page basis...
83 1.1 scw
84 1.1 scw Anyhow, hopefully the above instructions have finally put to rest
85 1.1 scw the most asked question about the mvme68k port.
86 1.1 scw
87 1.1 scw Cheers,
88 1.2 keihan Steve Woodford: scw (a] NetBSD.org
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