VR(4) BSD Kernel Interfaces Manual VR(4)NAME
vr — VIA Technologies VT3043 and VT86C100A ethernet device driver
SYNOPSIS
device miibus
device vr
DESCRIPTION
The vr driver provides support for PCI ethernet adapters and embedded
controllers based on the VIA Technologies VT3043 Rhine I and VT86C100A
Rhine II fast ethernet controller chips. This includes the D-Link
DFE530-TX, the Hawking Technologies PN102TX, the AOpen/Acer ALN-320, and
various other commodity fast ethernet cards.
The VIA Rhine chips use bus master DMA and have a descriptor layout
designed to resemble that of the DEC 21x4x "tulip" chips. The register
layout is different however and the receive filter in the Rhine chips is
much simpler and is programmed through registers rather than by download‐
ing a special setup frame through the transmit DMA engine. Transmit and
receive DMA buffers must be longword aligned. The Rhine chips are meant
to be interfaced with external physical layer devices via an MII bus.
They support both 10 and 100Mbps speeds in either full or half duplex.
The vr driver supports the following media types:
autoselect Enable autoselection of the media type and options.
The user can manually override the autoselected
mode by adding media options to the /etc/rc.conf
file.
10baseT/UTP Set 10Mbps operation. The mediaopt option can also
be used to select either full-duplex or half-duplex
modes.
100baseTX Set 100Mbps (fast ethernet) operation. The
mediaopt option can also be used to select either
full-duplex or half-duplex modes.
The vr driver supports the following media options:
full-duplex Force full duplex operation
half-duplex Force half duplex operation.
Note that the 100baseTX media type is only available if supported by the
adapter.
For more information on configuring this device, see ifconfig(8). The vr
driver supports polling(4).
DIAGNOSTICS
vr%d: couldn't map memory A fatal initialization error has occurred.
vr%d: couldn't map interrupt A fatal initialization error has occurred.
vr%d: watchdog timeout The device has stopped responding to the network,
or there is a problem with the network connection (cable).
vr%d: no memory for rx list The driver failed to allocate an mbuf for
the receiver ring.
vr%d: no memory for tx list The driver failed to allocate an mbuf for
the transmitter ring when allocating a pad buffer or collapsing an mbuf
chain into a cluster.
vr%d: chip is in D3 power state -- setting to D0 This message applies
only to adapters which support power management. Some operating systems
place the controller in low power mode when shutting down, and some PCI
BIOSes fail to bring the chip out of this state before configuring it.
The controller loses all of its PCI configuration in the D3 state, so if
the BIOS does not set it back to full power mode in time, it won't be
able to configure it correctly. The driver tries to detect this condi‐
tion and bring the adapter back to the D0 (full power) state, but this
may not be enough to return the driver to a fully operational condition.
If you see this message at boot time and the driver fails to attach the
device as a network interface, you will have to perform second warm boot
to have the device properly configured.
Note that this condition only occurs when warm booting from another oper‐
ating system. If you power down your system prior to booting DragonFly,
the card should be configured correctly.
SEE ALSOarp(4), ifmedia(4), miibus(4), netintro(4), ng_ether(4), polling(4),
ifconfig(8)
The VIA Technologies VT86C100A data sheet, http://www.via.com.tw.
HISTORY
The vr device driver first appeared in FreeBSD 3.0.
AUTHORS
The vr driver was written by Bill Paul ⟨wpaul@ctr.columbia.edu⟩.
BUGS
The vr driver always copies transmit mbuf chains into longword-aligned
buffers prior to transmission in order to pacify the Rhine chips. If
buffers are not aligned correctly, the chip will round the supplied buf‐
fer address and begin DMAing from the wrong location. This buffer copy‐
ing impairs transmit performance on slower systems but can't be avoided.
On faster machines (e.g. a Pentium II), the performance impact is much
less noticeable.
BSD November 22, 1998 BSD