Linux for the Q40 ================= You may try http://www.geocities.com/SiliconValley/Bay/2602/ for some up to date information. Booter and other tools will be also available from this place or ftp.uni-erlangen.de/linux/680x0/q40/ and mirrors. Hints to documentation usually refer to the linux source tree in /usr/src/linux/Documentation unless URL given. It seems IRQ unmasking can't be safely done on a Q40. IRQ probing is not implemented - do not try it! (See below) For a list of kernel command-line options read the documentation for the particular device drivers. The floppy imposes a very high interrupt load on the CPU, approx 30K/s. When something blocks interrupts (HD) it will lose some of them, so far this is not known to have caused any data loss. On highly loaded systems it can make the floppy very slow or practically stop. Other Q40 OS' simply poll the floppy for this reason - something that can't be done in Linux. Only possible cure is getting a 82072 controller with fifo instead of the 8272A. drivers used by the Q40, apart from the very obvious (console etc.): drivers/char/q40_keyb.c # use PC keymaps for national keyboards serial.c # normal PC driver - any speed lp.c # printer driver genrtc.c # RTC char/joystick/* # most of this should work, not # in default config.in block/q40ide.c # startup for ide ide* # see Documentation/ide.txt floppy.c # normal PC driver, DMA emu in asm/floppy.h # and arch/m68k/kernel/entry.S # see drivers/block/README.fd net/ne.c video/q40fb.c parport/* sound/dmasound_core.c dmasound_q40.c Various other PC drivers can be enabled simply by adding them to arch/m68k/config.in, especially 8 bit devices should be without any problems. For cards using 16bit io/mem more care is required, like checking byte order issues, hacking memcpy_*_io etc. Debugging ========= Upon startup the kernel will usually output "ABCQGHIJ" into the SRAM, preceded by the booter signature. This is a trace just in case something went wrong during earliest setup stages of head.S. **Changed** to preserve SRAM contents by default, this is only done when requested - SRAM must start with '%LX$' signature to do this. '-d' option to 'lxx' loader enables this. SRAM can also be used as additional console device, use debug=mem. This will save kernel startup msgs into SRAM, the screen will display only the penguin - and shell prompt if it gets that far.. Unfortunately only 2000 bytes are available. Serial console works and can also be used for debugging, see loader_txt Most problems seem to be caused by fawlty or badly configured io-cards or hard drives anyway. Make sure to configure the parallel port as SPP and remove IRQ/DMA jumpers for first testing. The Q40 does not support DMA and may have trouble with parallel ports version of interrupts. Q40 Hardware Description ======================== This is just an overview, see asm-m68k/* for details ask if you have any questions. The Q40 consists of a 68040@40 MHz, 1MB video RAM, up to 32MB RAM, AT-style keyboard interface, 1 Programmable LED, 2x8bit DACs and up to 1MB ROM, 1MB shadow ROM. The Q60 has any of 68060 or 68LC060 and up to 128 MB RAM. Most interfacing like floppy, IDE, serial and parallel ports is done via ISA slots. The ISA io and mem range is mapped (sparse&byteswapped!) into separate regions of the memory. The main interrupt register IIRQ_REG will indicate whether an IRQ was internal or from some ISA devices, EIRQ_REG can distinguish up to 8 ISA IRQs. The Q40 custom chip is programmable to provide 2 periodic timers: - 50 or 200 Hz - level 2, !!THIS CANT BE DISABLED!! - 10 or 20 KHz - level 4, used for dma-sound Linux uses the 200 Hz interrupt for timer and beep by default. Interrupts ========== q40 master chip handles only a subset of level triggered interrupts. Linux has some requirements wrt interrupt architecture, these are to my knowledge: (a) interrupt handler must not be reentered even when sti() is called from within handler (b) working enable/disable_irq Luckily these requirements are only important for drivers shared with other architectures - ide,serial,parallel, ethernet. q40ints.c now contains a trivial hack for (a), (b) is more difficult because only irq's 4-15 can be disabled - and only all of them at once. Thus disable_irq() can effectively block the machine if the driver goes asleep. One thing to keep in mind when hacking around the interrupt code is that there is no way to find out which IRQ caused a request, [EI]IRQ_REG displays current state of the various IRQ lines. Keyboard ======== q40 receives AT make/break codes from the keyboard, these are translated to the PC scancodes x86 Linux uses. So by theory every national keyboard should work just by loading the appropriate x86 keytable - see any national-HOWTO. Unfortunately the AT->PC translation isn't quite trivial and even worse, my documentation of it is absolutely minimal - thus some exotic keys may not behave exactly as expected. There is still hope that it can be fixed completely though. If you encounter problems, email me ideally this: - exact keypress/release sequence - 'showkey -s' run on q40, non-X session - 'showkey -s' run on a PC, non-X session - AT codes as displayed by the q40 debugging ROM btw if the showkey output from PC and Q40 doesn't differ then you have some classic configuration problem - don't send me anything in this case