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1 | ======================================================= | ||
2 | Documentation for the NeoMagic 256AV/256ZX sound driver | ||
3 | ======================================================= | ||
4 | |||
5 | You're looking at version 1.1 of the driver. (Woohoo!) It has been | ||
6 | successfully tested against the following laptop models: | ||
7 | |||
8 | Sony Z505S/Z505SX/Z505DX/Z505RX | ||
9 | Sony F150, F160, F180, F250, F270, F280, PCG-F26 | ||
10 | Dell Latitude CPi, CPt (various submodels) | ||
11 | |||
12 | There are a few caveats, which is why you should read the entirety of | ||
13 | this document first. | ||
14 | |||
15 | This driver was developed without any support or assistance from | ||
16 | NeoMagic. There is no warranty, expressed, implied, or otherwise. It | ||
17 | is free software in the public domain; feel free to use it, sell it, | ||
18 | give it to your best friends, even claim that you wrote it (but why?!) | ||
19 | but don't go whining to me, NeoMagic, Sony, Dell, or anyone else | ||
20 | when it blows up your computer. | ||
21 | |||
22 | Version 1.1 contains a change to try and detect non-AC97 versions of | ||
23 | the hardware, and not install itself appropriately. It should also | ||
24 | reinitialize the hardware on an APM resume event, assuming that APM | ||
25 | was configured into your kernel. | ||
26 | |||
27 | ============ | ||
28 | Installation | ||
29 | ============ | ||
30 | |||
31 | Enable the sound drivers, the OSS sound drivers, and then the NM256 | ||
32 | driver. The NM256 driver *must* be configured as a module (it won't | ||
33 | give you any other choice). | ||
34 | |||
35 | Next, do the usual "make modules" and "make modules_install". | ||
36 | Finally, insmod the soundcore, sound and nm256 modules. | ||
37 | |||
38 | When the nm256 driver module is loaded, you should see a couple of | ||
39 | confirmation messages in the kernel logfile indicating that it found | ||
40 | the device (the device does *not* use any I/O ports or DMA channels). | ||
41 | Now try playing a wav file, futz with the CD-ROM if you have one, etc. | ||
42 | |||
43 | The NM256 is entirely a PCI-based device, and all the necessary | ||
44 | information is automatically obtained from the card. It can only be | ||
45 | configured as a module in a vain attempt to prevent people from | ||
46 | hurting themselves. It works correctly if it shares an IRQ with | ||
47 | another device (it normally shares IRQ 9 with the builtin eepro100 | ||
48 | ethernet on the Sony Z505 laptops). | ||
49 | |||
50 | It does not run the card in any sort of compatibility mode. It will | ||
51 | not work on laptops that have the SB16-compatible, AD1848-compatible | ||
52 | or CS4232-compatible codec/mixer; you will want to use the appropriate | ||
53 | compatible OSS driver with these chipsets. I cannot provide any | ||
54 | assistance with machines using the SB16, AD1848 or CS4232 compatible | ||
55 | versions. (The driver now attempts to detect the mixer version, and | ||
56 | will refuse to load if it believes the hardware is not | ||
57 | AC97-compatible.) | ||
58 | |||
59 | The sound support is very basic, but it does include simultaneous | ||
60 | playback and record capability. The mixer support is also quite | ||
61 | simple, although this is in keeping with the rather limited | ||
62 | functionality of the chipset. | ||
63 | |||
64 | There is no hardware synthesizer available, as the Losedows OPL-3 and | ||
65 | MIDI support is done via hardware emulation. | ||
66 | |||
67 | Only three recording devices are available on the Sony: the | ||
68 | microphone, the CD-ROM input, and the volume device (which corresponds | ||
69 | to the stereo output). (Other devices may be available on other | ||
70 | models of laptops.) The Z505 series does not have a builtin CD-ROM, | ||
71 | so of course the CD-ROM input doesn't work. It does work on laptops | ||
72 | with a builtin CD-ROM drive. | ||
73 | |||
74 | The mixer device does not appear to have any tone controls, at least | ||
75 | on the Z505 series. The mixer module checks for tone controls in the | ||
76 | AC97 mixer, and will enable them if they are available. | ||
77 | |||
78 | ============== | ||
79 | Known problems | ||
80 | ============== | ||
81 | |||
82 | * There are known problems with PCMCIA cards and the eepro100 ethernet | ||
83 | driver on the Z505S/Z505SX/Z505DX. Keep reading. | ||
84 | |||
85 | * There are also potential problems with using a virtual X display, and | ||
86 | also problems loading the module after the X server has been started. | ||
87 | Keep reading. | ||
88 | |||
89 | * The volume control isn't anywhere near linear. Sorry. This will be | ||
90 | fixed eventually, when I get sufficiently annoyed with it. (I doubt | ||
91 | it will ever be fixed now, since I've never gotten sufficiently | ||
92 | annoyed with it and nobody else seems to care.) | ||
93 | |||
94 | * There are reports that the CD-ROM volume is very low. Since I do not | ||
95 | have a CD-ROM equipped laptop, I cannot test this (it's kinda hard to | ||
96 | do remotely). | ||
97 | |||
98 | * Only 8 fixed-rate speeds are supported. This is mainly a chipset | ||
99 | limitation. It may be possible to support other speeds in the future. | ||
100 | |||
101 | * There is no support for the telephone mixer/codec. There is support | ||
102 | for a phonein/phoneout device in the mixer driver; whether or not | ||
103 | it does anything is anyone's guess. (Reports on this would be | ||
104 | appreciated. You'll have to figure out how to get the phone to | ||
105 | go off-hook before it'll work, tho.) | ||
106 | |||
107 | * This driver was not written with any cooperation or support from | ||
108 | NeoMagic. If you have any questions about this, see their website | ||
109 | for their official stance on supporting open source drivers. | ||
110 | |||
111 | ============ | ||
112 | Video memory | ||
113 | ============ | ||
114 | |||
115 | The NeoMagic sound engine uses a portion of the display memory to hold | ||
116 | the sound buffer. (Crazy, eh?) The NeoMagic video BIOS sets up a | ||
117 | special pointer at the top of video RAM to indicate where the top of | ||
118 | the audio buffer should be placed. | ||
119 | |||
120 | At the present time XFree86 is apparently not aware of this. It will | ||
121 | thus write over either the pointer or the sound buffer with abandon. | ||
122 | (Accelerated-X seems to do a better job here.) | ||
123 | |||
124 | This implies a few things: | ||
125 | |||
126 | * Sometimes the NM256 driver has to guess at where the buffer | ||
127 | should be placed, especially if the module is loaded after the | ||
128 | X server is started. It's usually correct, but it will consistently | ||
129 | fail on the Sony F250. | ||
130 | |||
131 | * Virtual screens greater than 1024x768x16 under XFree86 are | ||
132 | problematic on laptops with only 2.5MB of screen RAM. This | ||
133 | includes all of the 256AV-equipped laptops. (Virtual displays | ||
134 | may or may not work on the 256ZX, which has at least 4MB of | ||
135 | video RAM.) | ||
136 | |||
137 | If you start having problems with random noise being output either | ||
138 | constantly (this is the usual symptom on the F250), or when windows | ||
139 | are moved around (this is the usual symptom when using a virtual | ||
140 | screen), the best fix is to | ||
141 | |||
142 | * Don't use a virtual frame buffer. | ||
143 | * Make sure you load the NM256 module before the X server is | ||
144 | started. | ||
145 | |||
146 | On the F250, it is possible to force the driver to load properly even | ||
147 | after the XFree86 server is started by doing: | ||
148 | |||
149 | insmod nm256 buffertop=0x25a800 | ||
150 | |||
151 | This forces the audio buffers to the correct offset in screen RAM. | ||
152 | |||
153 | One user has reported a similar problem on the Sony F270, although | ||
154 | others apparently aren't seeing any problems. His suggested command | ||
155 | is | ||
156 | |||
157 | insmod nm256 buffertop=0x272800 | ||
158 | |||
159 | ================= | ||
160 | Official WWW site | ||
161 | ================= | ||
162 | |||
163 | The official site for the NM256 driver is: | ||
164 | |||
165 | http://www.uglx.org/sony.html | ||
166 | |||
167 | You should always be able to get the latest version of the driver there, | ||
168 | and the driver will be supported for the foreseeable future. | ||
169 | |||
170 | ============== | ||
171 | Z505RX and IDE | ||
172 | ============== | ||
173 | |||
174 | There appears to be a problem with the IDE chipset on the Z505RX; one | ||
175 | of the symptoms is that sound playback periodically hangs (when the | ||
176 | disk is accessed). The user reporting the problem also reported that | ||
177 | enabling all of the IDE chipset workarounds in the kernel solved the | ||
178 | problem, tho obviously only one of them should be needed--if someone | ||
179 | can give me more details I would appreciate it. | ||
180 | |||
181 | ============================== | ||
182 | Z505S/Z505SX on-board Ethernet | ||
183 | ============================== | ||
184 | |||
185 | If you're using the on-board Ethernet Pro/100 ethernet support on the Z505 | ||
186 | series, I strongly encourage you to download the latest eepro100 driver from | ||
187 | Donald Becker's site: | ||
188 | |||
189 | ftp://cesdis.gsfc.nasa.gov/pub/linux/drivers/test/eepro100.c | ||
190 | |||
191 | There was a reported problem on the Z505SX that if the ethernet | ||
192 | interface is disabled and reenabled while the sound driver is loaded, | ||
193 | the machine would lock up. I have included a workaround that is | ||
194 | working satisfactorily. However, you may occasionally see a message | ||
195 | about "Releasing interrupts, over 1000 bad interrupts" which indicates | ||
196 | that the workaround is doing its job. | ||
197 | |||
198 | ================================== | ||
199 | PCMCIA and the Z505S/Z505SX/Z505DX | ||
200 | ================================== | ||
201 | |||
202 | There is also a known problem with the Sony Z505S and Z505SX hanging | ||
203 | if a PCMCIA card is inserted while the ethernet driver is loaded, or | ||
204 | in some cases if the laptop is suspended. This is caused by tons of | ||
205 | spurious IRQ 9s, probably generated from the PCMCIA or ACPI bridges. | ||
206 | |||
207 | There is currently no fix for the problem that works in every case. | ||
208 | The only known workarounds are to disable the ethernet interface | ||
209 | before inserting or removing a PCMCIA card, or with some cards | ||
210 | disabling the PCMCIA card before ejecting it will also help the | ||
211 | problem with the laptop hanging when the card is ejected. | ||
212 | |||
213 | One user has reported that setting the tcic's cs_irq to some value | ||
214 | other than 9 (like 11) fixed the problem. This doesn't work on my | ||
215 | Z505S, however--changing the value causes the cardmgr to stop seeing | ||
216 | card insertions and removals, cards don't seem to work correctly, and | ||
217 | I still get hangs if a card is inserted when the kernel is booted. | ||
218 | |||
219 | Using the latest ethernet driver and pcmcia package allows me to | ||
220 | insert an Adaptec 1480A SlimScsi card without the laptop hanging, | ||
221 | although I still have to shut down the card before ejecting or | ||
222 | powering down the laptop. However, similar experiments with a DE-660 | ||
223 | ethernet card still result in hangs when the card is inserted. I am | ||
224 | beginning to think that the interrupts are CardBus-related, since the | ||
225 | Adaptec card is a CardBus card, and the DE-660 is not; however, I | ||
226 | don't have any other CardBus cards to test with. | ||
227 | |||
228 | ====== | ||
229 | Thanks | ||
230 | ====== | ||
231 | |||
232 | First, I want to thank everyone (except NeoMagic of course) for their | ||
233 | generous support and encouragement. I'd like to list everyone's name | ||
234 | here that replied during the development phase, but the list is | ||
235 | amazingly long. | ||
236 | |||
237 | I will be rather unfair and single out a few people, however: | ||
238 | |||
239 | Justin Maurer, for being the first random net.person to try it, | ||
240 | and for letting me login to his Z505SX to get it working there | ||
241 | |||
242 | Edi Weitz for trying out several different versions, and giving | ||
243 | me a lot of useful feedback | ||
244 | |||
245 | Greg Rumple for letting me login remotely to get the driver | ||
246 | functional on the 256ZX, for his assistance on tracking | ||
247 | down all sorts of random stuff, and for trying out Accel-X | ||
248 | |||
249 | Zach Brown, for the initial AC97 mixer interface design | ||
250 | |||
251 | Jeff Garzik, for various helpful suggestions on the AC97 | ||
252 | interface | ||
253 | |||
254 | "Mr. Bumpy" for feedback on the Z505RX | ||
255 | |||
256 | Bill Nottingham, for generous assistance in getting the mixer ID | ||
257 | code working | ||
258 | |||
259 | ================= | ||
260 | Previous versions | ||
261 | ================= | ||
262 | |||
263 | Versions prior to 0.3 (aka `noname') had problems with weird artifacts | ||
264 | in the output and failed to set the recording rate properly. These | ||
265 | problems have long since been fixed. | ||
266 | |||
267 | Versions prior to 0.5 had problems with clicks in the output when | ||
268 | anything other than 16-bit stereo sound was being played, and also had | ||
269 | periodic clicks when recording. | ||
270 | |||
271 | Version 0.7 first incorporated support for the NM256ZX chipset, which | ||
272 | is found on some Dell Latitude laptops (the CPt, and apparently | ||
273 | some CPi models as well). It also included the generic AC97 | ||
274 | mixer module. | ||
275 | |||
276 | Version 0.75 renamed all the functions and files with slightly more | ||
277 | generic names. | ||
278 | |||
279 | Note that previous versions of this document claimed that recording was | ||
280 | 8-bit only; it actually has been working for 16-bits all along. | ||