diff options
| author | Paul Bolle <pebolle@tiscali.nl> | 2013-05-28 03:29:36 -0400 |
|---|---|---|
| committer | Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org> | 2013-06-03 17:31:39 -0400 |
| commit | e943f58ea84a80cc88dfceb6a5ed788d0ba24a1e (patch) | |
| tree | 2373cc57e4de0f7b192eeeb36bb49760c0ca1345 /Documentation/serial | |
| parent | 20ff2fe60aa86683a68cd369c919ae6a98059c80 (diff) | |
stallion: final cleanup
Support for the Stallion multiport serial drivers was removed in v3.1.
Clean up their last references in the tree: mainly an outdated Kconfig
entry and unneeded documentation.
Signed-off-by: Paul Bolle <pebolle@tiscali.nl>
Acked-by: Arnd Bergmann <arnd@arndb.de>
Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
Diffstat (limited to 'Documentation/serial')
| -rw-r--r-- | Documentation/serial/00-INDEX | 2 | ||||
| -rw-r--r-- | Documentation/serial/stallion.txt | 392 |
2 files changed, 0 insertions, 394 deletions
diff --git a/Documentation/serial/00-INDEX b/Documentation/serial/00-INDEX index f7b0c7dc25ef..1f1b22fbd739 100644 --- a/Documentation/serial/00-INDEX +++ b/Documentation/serial/00-INDEX | |||
| @@ -16,8 +16,6 @@ serial-rs485.txt | |||
| 16 | - info about RS485 structures and support in the kernel. | 16 | - info about RS485 structures and support in the kernel. |
| 17 | specialix.txt | 17 | specialix.txt |
| 18 | - info on hardware/driver for specialix IO8+ multiport serial card. | 18 | - info on hardware/driver for specialix IO8+ multiport serial card. |
| 19 | stallion.txt | ||
| 20 | - info on using the Stallion multiport serial driver. | ||
| 21 | sx.txt | 19 | sx.txt |
| 22 | - info on the Specialix SX/SI multiport serial driver. | 20 | - info on the Specialix SX/SI multiport serial driver. |
| 23 | tty.txt | 21 | tty.txt |
diff --git a/Documentation/serial/stallion.txt b/Documentation/serial/stallion.txt deleted file mode 100644 index 4d798c0cb5cb..000000000000 --- a/Documentation/serial/stallion.txt +++ /dev/null | |||
| @@ -1,392 +0,0 @@ | |||
| 1 | * NOTE - This is an unmaintained driver. Lantronix, which bought Stallion | ||
| 2 | technologies, is not active in driver maintenance, and they have no information | ||
| 3 | on when or if they will have a 2.6 driver. | ||
| 4 | |||
| 5 | James Nelson <james4765@gmail.com> - 12-12-2004 | ||
| 6 | |||
| 7 | Stallion Multiport Serial Driver Readme | ||
| 8 | --------------------------------------- | ||
| 9 | |||
| 10 | Copyright (C) 1994-1999, Stallion Technologies. | ||
| 11 | |||
| 12 | Version: 5.5.1 | ||
| 13 | Date: 28MAR99 | ||
| 14 | |||
| 15 | |||
| 16 | |||
| 17 | 1. INTRODUCTION | ||
| 18 | |||
| 19 | There are two drivers that work with the different families of Stallion | ||
| 20 | multiport serial boards. One is for the Stallion smart boards - that is | ||
| 21 | EasyIO, EasyConnection 8/32 and EasyConnection 8/64-PCI, the other for | ||
| 22 | the true Stallion intelligent multiport boards - EasyConnection 8/64 | ||
| 23 | (ISA, EISA), EasyConnection/RA-PCI, ONboard and Brumby. | ||
| 24 | |||
| 25 | If you are using any of the Stallion intelligent multiport boards (Brumby, | ||
| 26 | ONboard, EasyConnection 8/64 (ISA, EISA), EasyConnection/RA-PCI) with | ||
| 27 | Linux you will need to get the driver utility package. This contains a | ||
| 28 | firmware loader and the firmware images necessary to make the devices operate. | ||
| 29 | |||
| 30 | The Stallion Technologies ftp site, ftp.stallion.com, will always have | ||
| 31 | the latest version of the driver utility package. | ||
| 32 | |||
| 33 | ftp://ftp.stallion.com/drivers/ata5/Linux/ata-linux-550.tar.gz | ||
| 34 | |||
| 35 | As of the printing of this document the latest version of the driver | ||
| 36 | utility package is 5.5.0. If a later version is now available then you | ||
| 37 | should use the latest version. | ||
| 38 | |||
| 39 | If you are using the EasyIO, EasyConnection 8/32 or EasyConnection 8/64-PCI | ||
| 40 | boards then you don't need this package, although it does have a serial stats | ||
| 41 | display program. | ||
| 42 | |||
| 43 | If you require DIP switch settings, or EISA configuration files, or any | ||
| 44 | other information related to Stallion boards then have a look at Stallion's | ||
| 45 | web pages at http://www.stallion.com. | ||
| 46 | |||
| 47 | |||
| 48 | |||
| 49 | 2. INSTALLATION | ||
| 50 | |||
| 51 | The drivers can be used as loadable modules or compiled into the kernel. | ||
| 52 | You can choose which when doing a "config" on the kernel. | ||
| 53 | |||
| 54 | All ISA, and EISA boards that you want to use need to be configured into | ||
| 55 | the driver(s). All PCI boards will be automatically detected when you load | ||
| 56 | the driver - so they do not need to be entered into the driver(s) | ||
| 57 | configuration structure. Note that kernel PCI support is required to use PCI | ||
| 58 | boards. | ||
| 59 | |||
| 60 | There are two methods of configuring ISA and EISA boards into the drivers. | ||
| 61 | If using the driver as a loadable module then the simplest method is to pass | ||
| 62 | the driver configuration as module arguments. The other method is to modify | ||
| 63 | the driver source to add configuration lines for each board in use. | ||
| 64 | |||
| 65 | If you have pre-built Stallion driver modules then the module argument | ||
| 66 | configuration method should be used. A lot of Linux distributions come with | ||
| 67 | pre-built driver modules in /lib/modules/X.Y.Z/misc for the kernel in use. | ||
| 68 | That makes things pretty simple to get going. | ||
| 69 | |||
| 70 | |||
| 71 | 2.1 MODULE DRIVER CONFIGURATION: | ||
| 72 | |||
| 73 | The simplest configuration for modules is to use the module load arguments | ||
| 74 | to configure any ISA or EISA boards. PCI boards are automatically | ||
| 75 | detected, so do not need any additional configuration at all. | ||
| 76 | |||
| 77 | If using EasyIO, EasyConnection 8/32 ISA, or EasyConnection 8/63-PCI | ||
| 78 | boards then use the "stallion" driver module, Otherwise if you are using | ||
| 79 | an EasyConnection 8/64 ISA or EISA, EasyConnection/RA-PCI, ONboard, | ||
| 80 | Brumby or original Stallion board then use the "istallion" driver module. | ||
| 81 | |||
| 82 | Typically to load up the smart board driver use: | ||
| 83 | |||
| 84 | modprobe stallion | ||
| 85 | |||
| 86 | This will load the EasyIO and EasyConnection 8/32 driver. It will output a | ||
| 87 | message to say that it loaded and print the driver version number. It will | ||
| 88 | also print out whether it found the configured boards or not. These messages | ||
| 89 | may not appear on the console, but typically are always logged to | ||
| 90 | /var/adm/messages or /var/log/syslog files - depending on how the klogd and | ||
| 91 | syslogd daemons are setup on your system. | ||
| 92 | |||
| 93 | To load the intelligent board driver use: | ||
| 94 | |||
| 95 | modprobe istallion | ||
| 96 | |||
| 97 | It will output similar messages to the smart board driver. | ||
| 98 | |||
| 99 | If not using an auto-detectable board type (that is a PCI board) then you | ||
| 100 | will also need to supply command line arguments to the modprobe command | ||
| 101 | when loading the driver. The general form of the configuration argument is | ||
| 102 | |||
| 103 | board?=<name>[,<ioaddr>[,<addr>][,<irq>]] | ||
| 104 | |||
| 105 | where: | ||
| 106 | |||
| 107 | board? -- specifies the arbitrary board number of this board, | ||
| 108 | can be in the range 0 to 3. | ||
| 109 | |||
| 110 | name -- textual name of this board. The board name is the common | ||
| 111 | board name, or any "shortened" version of that. The board | ||
| 112 | type number may also be used here. | ||
| 113 | |||
| 114 | ioaddr -- specifies the I/O address of this board. This argument is | ||
| 115 | optional, but should generally be specified. | ||
| 116 | |||
| 117 | addr -- optional second address argument. Some board types require | ||
| 118 | a second I/O address, some require a memory address. The | ||
| 119 | exact meaning of this argument depends on the board type. | ||
| 120 | |||
| 121 | irq -- optional IRQ line used by this board. | ||
| 122 | |||
| 123 | Up to 4 board configuration arguments can be specified on the load line. | ||
| 124 | Here is some examples: | ||
| 125 | |||
| 126 | modprobe stallion board0=easyio,0x2a0,5 | ||
| 127 | |||
| 128 | This configures an EasyIO board as board 0 at I/O address 0x2a0 and IRQ 5. | ||
| 129 | |||
| 130 | modprobe istallion board3=ec8/64,0x2c0,0xcc000 | ||
| 131 | |||
| 132 | This configures an EasyConnection 8/64 ISA as board 3 at I/O address 0x2c0 at | ||
| 133 | memory address 0xcc000. | ||
| 134 | |||
| 135 | modprobe stallion board1=ec8/32-at,0x2a0,0x280,10 | ||
| 136 | |||
| 137 | This configures an EasyConnection 8/32 ISA board at primary I/O address 0x2a0, | ||
| 138 | secondary address 0x280 and IRQ 10. | ||
| 139 | |||
| 140 | You will probably want to enter this module load and configuration information | ||
| 141 | into your system startup scripts so that the drivers are loaded and configured | ||
| 142 | on each system boot. Typically configuration files are put in the | ||
| 143 | /etc/modprobe.d/ directory. | ||
| 144 | |||
| 145 | |||
| 146 | 2.2 STATIC DRIVER CONFIGURATION: | ||
| 147 | |||
| 148 | For static driver configuration you need to modify the driver source code. | ||
| 149 | Entering ISA and EISA boards into the driver(s) configuration structure | ||
| 150 | involves editing the driver(s) source file. It's pretty easy if you follow | ||
| 151 | the instructions below. Both drivers can support up to 4 boards. The smart | ||
| 152 | card driver (the stallion.c driver) supports any combination of EasyIO and | ||
| 153 | EasyConnection 8/32 boards (up to a total of 4). The intelligent driver | ||
| 154 | supports any combination of ONboards, Brumbys, Stallions and EasyConnection | ||
| 155 | 8/64 (ISA and EISA) boards (up to a total of 4). | ||
| 156 | |||
| 157 | To set up the driver(s) for the boards that you want to use you need to | ||
| 158 | edit the appropriate driver file and add configuration entries. | ||
| 159 | |||
| 160 | If using EasyIO or EasyConnection 8/32 ISA boards, | ||
| 161 | In drivers/char/stallion.c: | ||
| 162 | - find the definition of the stl_brdconf array (of structures) | ||
| 163 | near the top of the file | ||
| 164 | - modify this to match the boards you are going to install | ||
| 165 | (the comments before this structure should help) | ||
| 166 | - save and exit | ||
| 167 | |||
| 168 | If using ONboard, Brumby, Stallion or EasyConnection 8/64 (ISA or EISA) | ||
| 169 | boards, | ||
| 170 | In drivers/char/istallion.c: | ||
| 171 | - find the definition of the stli_brdconf array (of structures) | ||
| 172 | near the top of the file | ||
| 173 | - modify this to match the boards you are going to install | ||
| 174 | (the comments before this structure should help) | ||
| 175 | - save and exit | ||
| 176 | |||
| 177 | Once you have set up the board configurations then you are ready to build | ||
| 178 | the kernel or modules. | ||
| 179 | |||
| 180 | When the new kernel is booted, or the loadable module loaded then the | ||
| 181 | driver will emit some kernel trace messages about whether the configured | ||
| 182 | boards were detected or not. Depending on how your system logger is set | ||
| 183 | up these may come out on the console, or just be logged to | ||
| 184 | /var/adm/messages or /var/log/syslog. You should check the messages to | ||
| 185 | confirm that all is well. | ||
| 186 | |||
| 187 | |||
| 188 | 2.3 SHARING INTERRUPTS | ||
| 189 | |||
| 190 | It is possible to share interrupts between multiple EasyIO and | ||
| 191 | EasyConnection 8/32 boards in an EISA system. To do this you must be using | ||
| 192 | static driver configuration, modifying the driver source code to add driver | ||
| 193 | configuration. Then a couple of extra things are required: | ||
| 194 | |||
| 195 | 1. When entering the board resources into the stallion.c file you need to | ||
| 196 | mark the boards as using level triggered interrupts. Do this by replacing | ||
| 197 | the "0" entry at field position 6 (the last field) in the board | ||
| 198 | configuration structure with a "1". (This is the structure that defines | ||
| 199 | the board type, I/O locations, etc. for each board). All boards that are | ||
| 200 | sharing an interrupt must be set this way, and each board should have the | ||
| 201 | same interrupt number specified here as well. Now build the module or | ||
| 202 | kernel as you would normally. | ||
| 203 | |||
| 204 | 2. When physically installing the boards into the system you must enter | ||
| 205 | the system EISA configuration utility. You will need to install the EISA | ||
| 206 | configuration files for *all* the EasyIO and EasyConnection 8/32 boards | ||
| 207 | that are sharing interrupts. The Stallion EasyIO and EasyConnection 8/32 | ||
| 208 | EISA configuration files required are supplied by Stallion Technologies | ||
| 209 | on the EASY Utilities floppy diskette (usually supplied in the box with | ||
| 210 | the board when purchased. If not, you can pick it up from Stallion's FTP | ||
| 211 | site, ftp.stallion.com). You will need to edit the board resources to | ||
| 212 | choose level triggered interrupts, and make sure to set each board's | ||
| 213 | interrupt to the same IRQ number. | ||
| 214 | |||
| 215 | You must complete both the above steps for this to work. When you reboot | ||
| 216 | or load the driver your EasyIO and EasyConnection 8/32 boards will be | ||
| 217 | sharing interrupts. | ||
| 218 | |||
| 219 | |||
| 220 | 2.4 USING HIGH SHARED MEMORY | ||
| 221 | |||
| 222 | The EasyConnection 8/64-EI, ONboard and Stallion boards are capable of | ||
| 223 | using shared memory addresses above the usual 640K - 1Mb range. The ONboard | ||
| 224 | ISA and the Stallion boards can be programmed to use memory addresses up to | ||
| 225 | 16Mb (the ISA bus addressing limit), and the EasyConnection 8/64-EI and | ||
| 226 | ONboard/E can be programmed for memory addresses up to 4Gb (the EISA bus | ||
| 227 | addressing limit). | ||
| 228 | |||
| 229 | The higher than 1Mb memory addresses are fully supported by this driver. | ||
| 230 | Just enter the address as you normally would for a lower than 1Mb address | ||
| 231 | (in the driver's board configuration structure). | ||
| 232 | |||
| 233 | |||
| 234 | |||
| 235 | 2.5 TROUBLE SHOOTING | ||
| 236 | |||
| 237 | If a board is not found by the driver but is actually in the system then the | ||
| 238 | most likely problem is that the I/O address is wrong. Change the module load | ||
| 239 | argument for the loadable module form. Or change it in the driver stallion.c | ||
| 240 | or istallion.c configuration structure and rebuild the kernel or modules, or | ||
| 241 | change it on the board. | ||
| 242 | |||
| 243 | On EasyIO and EasyConnection 8/32 boards the IRQ is software programmable, so | ||
| 244 | if there is a conflict you may need to change the IRQ used for a board. There | ||
| 245 | are no interrupts to worry about for ONboard, Brumby or EasyConnection 8/64 | ||
| 246 | (ISA and EISA) boards. The memory region on EasyConnection 8/64 and | ||
| 247 | ONboard boards is software programmable, but not on the Brumby boards. | ||
| 248 | |||
| 249 | |||
| 250 | |||
| 251 | 3. USING THE DRIVERS | ||
| 252 | |||
| 253 | 3.1 INTELLIGENT DRIVER OPERATION | ||
| 254 | |||
| 255 | The intelligent boards also need to have their "firmware" code downloaded | ||
| 256 | to them. This is done via a user level application supplied in the driver | ||
| 257 | utility package called "stlload". Compile this program wherever you dropped | ||
| 258 | the package files, by typing "make". In its simplest form you can then type | ||
| 259 | |||
| 260 | ./stlload -i cdk.sys | ||
| 261 | |||
| 262 | in this directory and that will download board 0 (assuming board 0 is an | ||
| 263 | EasyConnection 8/64 or EasyConnection/RA board). To download to an | ||
| 264 | ONboard, Brumby or Stallion do: | ||
| 265 | |||
| 266 | ./stlload -i 2681.sys | ||
| 267 | |||
| 268 | Normally you would want all boards to be downloaded as part of the standard | ||
| 269 | system startup. To achieve this, add one of the lines above into the | ||
| 270 | /etc/rc.d/rc.S or /etc/rc.d/rc.serial file. To download each board just add | ||
| 271 | the "-b <brd-number>" option to the line. You will need to download code for | ||
| 272 | every board. You should probably move the stlload program into a system | ||
| 273 | directory, such as /usr/sbin. Also, the default location of the cdk.sys image | ||
| 274 | file in the stlload down-loader is /usr/lib/stallion. Create that directory | ||
| 275 | and put the cdk.sys and 2681.sys files in it. (It's a convenient place to put | ||
| 276 | them anyway). As an example your /etc/rc.d/rc.S file might have the | ||
| 277 | following lines added to it (if you had 3 boards): | ||
| 278 | |||
| 279 | /usr/sbin/stlload -b 0 -i /usr/lib/stallion/cdk.sys | ||
| 280 | /usr/sbin/stlload -b 1 -i /usr/lib/stallion/2681.sys | ||
| 281 | /usr/sbin/stlload -b 2 -i /usr/lib/stallion/2681.sys | ||
| 282 | |||
| 283 | The image files cdk.sys and 2681.sys are specific to the board types. The | ||
| 284 | cdk.sys will only function correctly on an EasyConnection 8/64 board. Similarly | ||
| 285 | the 2681.sys image fill only operate on ONboard, Brumby and Stallion boards. | ||
| 286 | If you load the wrong image file into a board it will fail to start up, and | ||
| 287 | of course the ports will not be operational! | ||
| 288 | |||
| 289 | If you are using the modularized version of the driver you might want to put | ||
| 290 | the modprobe calls in the startup script as well (before the download lines | ||
| 291 | obviously). | ||
| 292 | |||
| 293 | |||
| 294 | 3.2 USING THE SERIAL PORTS | ||
| 295 | |||
| 296 | Once the driver is installed you will need to setup some device nodes to | ||
| 297 | access the serial ports. The simplest method is to use the /dev/MAKEDEV program. | ||
| 298 | It will automatically create device entries for Stallion boards. This will | ||
| 299 | create the normal serial port devices as /dev/ttyE# where# is the port number | ||
| 300 | starting from 0. A bank of 64 minor device numbers is allocated to each board, | ||
| 301 | so the first port on the second board is port 64,etc. A set of callout type | ||
| 302 | devices may also be created. They are created as the devices /dev/cue# where # | ||
| 303 | is the same as for the ttyE devices. | ||
| 304 | |||
| 305 | For the most part the Stallion driver tries to emulate the standard PC system | ||
| 306 | COM ports and the standard Linux serial driver. The idea is that you should | ||
| 307 | be able to use Stallion board ports and COM ports interchangeably without | ||
| 308 | modifying anything but the device name. Anything that doesn't work like that | ||
| 309 | should be considered a bug in this driver! | ||
| 310 | |||
| 311 | If you look at the driver code you will notice that it is fairly closely | ||
| 312 | based on the Linux serial driver (linux/drivers/char/serial.c). This is | ||
| 313 | intentional, obviously this is the easiest way to emulate its behavior! | ||
| 314 | |||
| 315 | Since this driver tries to emulate the standard serial ports as much as | ||
| 316 | possible, most system utilities should work as they do for the standard | ||
| 317 | COM ports. Most importantly "stty" works as expected and "setserial" can | ||
| 318 | also be used (excepting the ability to auto-configure the I/O and IRQ | ||
| 319 | addresses of boards). Higher baud rates are supported in the usual fashion | ||
| 320 | through setserial or using the CBAUDEX extensions. Note that the EasyIO and | ||
| 321 | EasyConnection (all types) support at least 57600 and 115200 baud. The newer | ||
| 322 | EasyConnection XP modules and new EasyIO boards support 230400 and 460800 | ||
| 323 | baud as well. The older boards including ONboard and Brumby support a | ||
| 324 | maximum baud rate of 38400. | ||
| 325 | |||
| 326 | If you are unfamiliar with how to use serial ports, then get the Serial-HOWTO | ||
| 327 | by Greg Hankins. It will explain everything you need to know! | ||
| 328 | |||
| 329 | |||
| 330 | |||
| 331 | 4. NOTES | ||
| 332 | |||
| 333 | You can use both drivers at once if you have a mix of board types installed | ||
| 334 | in a system. However to do this you will need to change the major numbers | ||
| 335 | used by one of the drivers. Currently both drivers use major numbers 24, 25 | ||
| 336 | and 28 for their devices. Change one driver to use some other major numbers, | ||
| 337 | and then modify the mkdevnods script to make device nodes based on those new | ||
| 338 | major numbers. For example, you could change the istallion.c driver to use | ||
| 339 | major numbers 60, 61 and 62. You will also need to create device nodes with | ||
| 340 | different names for the ports, for example ttyF# and cuf#. | ||
| 341 | |||
| 342 | The original Stallion board is no longer supported by Stallion Technologies. | ||
| 343 | Although it is known to work with the istallion driver. | ||
| 344 | |||
| 345 | Finding a free physical memory address range can be a problem. The older | ||
| 346 | boards like the Stallion and ONboard need large areas (64K or even 128K), so | ||
| 347 | they can be very difficult to get into a system. If you have 16 Mb of RAM | ||
| 348 | then you have no choice but to put them somewhere in the 640K -> 1Mb range. | ||
| 349 | ONboards require 64K, so typically 0xd0000 is good, or 0xe0000 on some | ||
| 350 | systems. If you have an original Stallion board, "V4.0" or Rev.O, then you | ||
| 351 | need a 64K memory address space, so again 0xd0000 and 0xe0000 are good. | ||
| 352 | Older Stallion boards are a much bigger problem. They need 128K of address | ||
| 353 | space and must be on a 128K boundary. If you don't have a VGA card then | ||
| 354 | 0xc0000 might be usable - there is really no other place you can put them | ||
| 355 | below 1Mb. | ||
| 356 | |||
| 357 | Both the ONboard and old Stallion boards can use higher memory addresses as | ||
| 358 | well, but you must have less than 16Mb of RAM to be able to use them. Usual | ||
| 359 | high memory addresses used include 0xec0000 and 0xf00000. | ||
| 360 | |||
| 361 | The Brumby boards only require 16Kb of address space, so you can usually | ||
| 362 | squeeze them in somewhere. Common addresses are 0xc8000, 0xcc000, or in | ||
| 363 | the 0xd0000 range. EasyConnection 8/64 boards are even better, they only | ||
| 364 | require 4Kb of address space, again usually 0xc8000, 0xcc000 or 0xd0000 | ||
| 365 | are good. | ||
| 366 | |||
| 367 | If you are using an EasyConnection 8/64-EI or ONboard/E then usually the | ||
| 368 | 0xd0000 or 0xe0000 ranges are the best options below 1Mb. If neither of | ||
| 369 | them can be used then the high memory support to use the really high address | ||
| 370 | ranges is the best option. Typically the 2Gb range is convenient for them, | ||
| 371 | and gets them well out of the way. | ||
| 372 | |||
| 373 | The ports of the EasyIO-8M board do not have DCD or DTR signals. So these | ||
| 374 | ports cannot be used as real modem devices. Generally, when using these | ||
| 375 | ports you should only use the cueX devices. | ||
| 376 | |||
| 377 | The driver utility package contains a couple of very useful programs. One | ||
| 378 | is a serial port statistics collection and display program - very handy | ||
| 379 | for solving serial port problems. The other is an extended option setting | ||
| 380 | program that works with the intelligent boards. | ||
| 381 | |||
| 382 | |||
| 383 | |||
| 384 | 5. DISCLAIMER | ||
| 385 | |||
| 386 | The information contained in this document is believed to be accurate and | ||
| 387 | reliable. However, no responsibility is assumed by Stallion Technologies | ||
| 388 | Pty. Ltd. for its use, nor any infringements of patents or other rights | ||
| 389 | of third parties resulting from its use. Stallion Technologies reserves | ||
| 390 | the right to modify the design of its products and will endeavour to change | ||
| 391 | the information in manuals and accompanying documentation accordingly. | ||
| 392 | |||
