| Parport |
| +++++++ |
| |
| The ``parport`` code provides parallel-port support under Linux. This |
| includes the ability to share one port between multiple device |
| drivers. |
| |
| You can pass parameters to the ``parport`` code to override its automatic |
| detection of your hardware. This is particularly useful if you want |
| to use IRQs, since in general these can't be autoprobed successfully. |
| By default IRQs are not used even if they **can** be probed. This is |
| because there are a lot of people using the same IRQ for their |
| parallel port and a sound card or network card. |
| |
| The ``parport`` code is split into two parts: generic (which deals with |
| port-sharing) and architecture-dependent (which deals with actually |
| using the port). |
| |
| |
| Parport as modules |
| ================== |
| |
| If you load the `parport`` code as a module, say:: |
| |
| # insmod parport |
| |
| to load the generic ``parport`` code. You then must load the |
| architecture-dependent code with (for example):: |
| |
| # insmod parport_pc io=0x3bc,0x378,0x278 irq=none,7,auto |
| |
| to tell the ``parport`` code that you want three PC-style ports, one at |
| 0x3bc with no IRQ, one at 0x378 using IRQ 7, and one at 0x278 with an |
| auto-detected IRQ. Currently, PC-style (``parport_pc``), Sun ``bpp``, |
| Amiga, Atari, and MFC3 hardware is supported. |
| |
| PCI parallel I/O card support comes from ``parport_pc``. Base I/O |
| addresses should not be specified for supported PCI cards since they |
| are automatically detected. |
| |
| |
| modprobe |
| -------- |
| |
| If you use modprobe , you will find it useful to add lines as below to a |
| configuration file in /etc/modprobe.d/ directory:: |
| |
| alias parport_lowlevel parport_pc |
| options parport_pc io=0x378,0x278 irq=7,auto |
| |
| modprobe will load ``parport_pc`` (with the options ``io=0x378,0x278 irq=7,auto``) |
| whenever a parallel port device driver (such as ``lp``) is loaded. |
| |
| Note that these are example lines only! You shouldn't in general need |
| to specify any options to ``parport_pc`` in order to be able to use a |
| parallel port. |
| |
| |
| Parport probe [optional] |
| ------------------------ |
| |
| In 2.2 kernels there was a module called ``parport_probe``, which was used |
| for collecting IEEE 1284 device ID information. This has now been |
| enhanced and now lives with the IEEE 1284 support. When a parallel |
| port is detected, the devices that are connected to it are analysed, |
| and information is logged like this:: |
| |
| parport0: Printer, BJC-210 (Canon) |
| |
| The probe information is available from files in ``/proc/sys/dev/parport/``. |
| |
| |
| Parport linked into the kernel statically |
| ========================================= |
| |
| If you compile the ``parport`` code into the kernel, then you can use |
| kernel boot parameters to get the same effect. Add something like the |
| following to your LILO command line:: |
| |
| parport=0x3bc parport=0x378,7 parport=0x278,auto,nofifo |
| |
| You can have many ``parport=...`` statements, one for each port you want |
| to add. Adding ``parport=0`` to the kernel command-line will disable |
| parport support entirely. Adding ``parport=auto`` to the kernel |
| command-line will make ``parport`` use any IRQ lines or DMA channels that |
| it auto-detects. |
| |
| |
| Files in /proc |
| ============== |
| |
| If you have configured the ``/proc`` filesystem into your kernel, you will |
| see a new directory entry: ``/proc/sys/dev/parport``. In there will be a |
| directory entry for each parallel port for which parport is |
| configured. In each of those directories are a collection of files |
| describing that parallel port. |
| |
| The ``/proc/sys/dev/parport`` directory tree looks like:: |
| |
| parport |
| |-- default |
| | |-- spintime |
| | `-- timeslice |
| |-- parport0 |
| | |-- autoprobe |
| | |-- autoprobe0 |
| | |-- autoprobe1 |
| | |-- autoprobe2 |
| | |-- autoprobe3 |
| | |-- devices |
| | | |-- active |
| | | `-- lp |
| | | `-- timeslice |
| | |-- base-addr |
| | |-- irq |
| | |-- dma |
| | |-- modes |
| | `-- spintime |
| `-- parport1 |
| |-- autoprobe |
| |-- autoprobe0 |
| |-- autoprobe1 |
| |-- autoprobe2 |
| |-- autoprobe3 |
| |-- devices |
| | |-- active |
| | `-- ppa |
| | `-- timeslice |
| |-- base-addr |
| |-- irq |
| |-- dma |
| |-- modes |
| `-- spintime |
| |
| .. tabularcolumns:: |p{4.0cm}|p{13.5cm}| |
| |
| ======================= ======================================================= |
| File Contents |
| ======================= ======================================================= |
| ``devices/active`` A list of the device drivers using that port. A "+" |
| will appear by the name of the device currently using |
| the port (it might not appear against any). The |
| string "none" means that there are no device drivers |
| using that port. |
| |
| ``base-addr`` Parallel port's base address, or addresses if the port |
| has more than one in which case they are separated |
| with tabs. These values might not have any sensible |
| meaning for some ports. |
| |
| ``irq`` Parallel port's IRQ, or -1 if none is being used. |
| |
| ``dma`` Parallel port's DMA channel, or -1 if none is being |
| used. |
| |
| ``modes`` Parallel port's hardware modes, comma-separated, |
| meaning: |
| |
| - PCSPP |
| PC-style SPP registers are available. |
| |
| - TRISTATE |
| Port is bidirectional. |
| |
| - COMPAT |
| Hardware acceleration for printers is |
| available and will be used. |
| |
| - EPP |
| Hardware acceleration for EPP protocol |
| is available and will be used. |
| |
| - ECP |
| Hardware acceleration for ECP protocol |
| is available and will be used. |
| |
| - DMA |
| DMA is available and will be used. |
| |
| Note that the current implementation will only take |
| advantage of COMPAT and ECP modes if it has an IRQ |
| line to use. |
| |
| ``autoprobe`` Any IEEE-1284 device ID information that has been |
| acquired from the (non-IEEE 1284.3) device. |
| |
| ``autoprobe[0-3]`` IEEE 1284 device ID information retrieved from |
| daisy-chain devices that conform to IEEE 1284.3. |
| |
| ``spintime`` The number of microseconds to busy-loop while waiting |
| for the peripheral to respond. You might find that |
| adjusting this improves performance, depending on your |
| peripherals. This is a port-wide setting, i.e. it |
| applies to all devices on a particular port. |
| |
| ``timeslice`` The number of milliseconds that a device driver is |
| allowed to keep a port claimed for. This is advisory, |
| and driver can ignore it if it must. |
| |
| ``default/*`` The defaults for spintime and timeslice. When a new |
| port is registered, it picks up the default spintime. |
| When a new device is registered, it picks up the |
| default timeslice. |
| ======================= ======================================================= |
| |
| Device drivers |
| ============== |
| |
| Once the parport code is initialised, you can attach device drivers to |
| specific ports. Normally this happens automatically; if the lp driver |
| is loaded it will create one lp device for each port found. You can |
| override this, though, by using parameters either when you load the lp |
| driver:: |
| |
| # insmod lp parport=0,2 |
| |
| or on the LILO command line:: |
| |
| lp=parport0 lp=parport2 |
| |
| Both the above examples would inform lp that you want ``/dev/lp0`` to be |
| the first parallel port, and /dev/lp1 to be the **third** parallel port, |
| with no lp device associated with the second port (parport1). Note |
| that this is different to the way older kernels worked; there used to |
| be a static association between the I/O port address and the device |
| name, so ``/dev/lp0`` was always the port at 0x3bc. This is no longer the |
| case - if you only have one port, it will default to being ``/dev/lp0``, |
| regardless of base address. |
| |
| Also: |
| |
| * If you selected the IEEE 1284 support at compile time, you can say |
| ``lp=auto`` on the kernel command line, and lp will create devices |
| only for those ports that seem to have printers attached. |
| |
| * If you give PLIP the ``timid`` parameter, either with ``plip=timid`` on |
| the command line, or with ``insmod plip timid=1`` when using modules, |
| it will avoid any ports that seem to be in use by other devices. |
| |
| * IRQ autoprobing works only for a few port types at the moment. |
| |
| Reporting printer problems with parport |
| ======================================= |
| |
| If you are having problems printing, please go through these steps to |
| try to narrow down where the problem area is. |
| |
| When reporting problems with parport, really you need to give all of |
| the messages that ``parport_pc`` spits out when it initialises. There are |
| several code paths: |
| |
| - polling |
| - interrupt-driven, protocol in software |
| - interrupt-driven, protocol in hardware using PIO |
| - interrupt-driven, protocol in hardware using DMA |
| |
| The kernel messages that ``parport_pc`` logs give an indication of which |
| code path is being used. (They could be a lot better actually..) |
| |
| For normal printer protocol, having IEEE 1284 modes enabled or not |
| should not make a difference. |
| |
| To turn off the 'protocol in hardware' code paths, disable |
| ``CONFIG_PARPORT_PC_FIFO``. Note that when they are enabled they are not |
| necessarily **used**; it depends on whether the hardware is available, |
| enabled by the BIOS, and detected by the driver. |
| |
| So, to start with, disable ``CONFIG_PARPORT_PC_FIFO``, and load ``parport_pc`` |
| with ``irq=none``. See if printing works then. It really should, |
| because this is the simplest code path. |
| |
| If that works fine, try with ``io=0x378 irq=7`` (adjust for your |
| hardware), to make it use interrupt-driven in-software protocol. |
| |
| If **that** works fine, then one of the hardware modes isn't working |
| right. Enable ``CONFIG_FIFO`` (no, it isn't a module option, |
| and yes, it should be), set the port to ECP mode in the BIOS and note |
| the DMA channel, and try with:: |
| |
| io=0x378 irq=7 dma=none (for PIO) |
| io=0x378 irq=7 dma=3 (for DMA) |
| |
| ---------- |
| |
| philb@gnu.org |
| tim@cyberelk.net |