xref: /openbsd/share/man/man4/vr.4 (revision 264ca280)
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35.Dd $Mdocdate: March 15 2014 $
36.Dt VR 4
37.Os
38.Sh NAME
39.Nm vr
40.Nd VIA Rhine I/II/III 10/100 Ethernet device
41.Sh SYNOPSIS
42.Cd "vr* at pci?"
43.Cd "amphy* at mii?"
44.Cd "icsphy* at mii?"
45.Cd "sqphy* at mii?"
46.Sh DESCRIPTION
47The
48.Nm
49driver provides support for PCI Ethernet adapters and embedded
50controllers based on the VIA Technologies VT3043 Rhine I,
51VT86C100A Rhine II, VT6102 Rhine II, and VT6105/VT6105M Rhine III
52Fast Ethernet controller chips, including the following:
53.Pp
54.Bl -bullet -compact
55.It
56AOpen/Acer ALN-320
57.It
58D-Link DFE-520TX, DFE-530TX
59.It
60Hawking Technologies PN102TX
61.It
62Soekris Engineering lan1741
63.El
64.Pp
65The VIA Rhine chips use bus master DMA and have a software interface
66designed to resemble that of the DEC 21x4x "tulip" chips.
67The major differences are that the receive filter in the Rhine chips is
68much simpler and is programmed through registers rather than by
69downloading a special setup frame through the transmit DMA engine,
70and that on older chips transmit and receive DMA buffers must be
71longword aligned.
72The Rhine chips are meant to be interfaced with external
73physical layer devices via an MII bus.
74They support both 10 and 100Mbps speeds in either full or half duplex.
75.Pp
76The
77.Nm
78driver for the VT6105M controller supports IPv4 IP/TCP/UDP transmit/receive
79checksum offload and VLAN tag insertion and stripping.
80The
81.Nm
82driver additionally supports Wake on LAN (WoL).
83See
84.Xr arp 8
85and
86.Xr ifconfig 8
87for more details.
88.Pp
89The
90.Nm
91driver supports the following media types:
92.Bl -tag -width full-duplex
93.It autoselect
94Enable autoselection of the media type and options.
95The user can manually override
96the autoselected mode by adding media options to the appropriate
97.Xr hostname.if 5
98file.
99.It 10baseT
100Set 10Mbps operation.
101The
102.Ar mediaopt
103option can also be used to select either
104.Ar full-duplex
105or
106.Ar half-duplex
107modes.
108.It 100baseTX
109Set 100Mbps (Fast Ethernet) operation.
110The
111.Ar mediaopt
112option can also be used to select either
113.Ar full-duplex
114or
115.Ar half-duplex
116modes.
117.El
118.Pp
119The
120.Nm
121driver supports the following media options:
122.Bl -tag -width full-duplex
123.It full-duplex
124Force full duplex operation.
125.It half-duplex
126Force half duplex operation.
127.El
128.Pp
129Note that the 100baseTX media type is only available if supported
130by the adapter.
131.Pp
132For more information on configuring this device, see
133.Xr ifconfig 8 .
134.Sh DIAGNOSTICS
135.Bl -diag
136.It "vr0: couldn't map memory"
137A fatal initialization error has occurred.
138.It "vr0: couldn't map interrupt"
139A fatal initialization error has occurred.
140.It "vr0: watchdog timeout"
141The device has stopped responding to the network, or there is a problem with
142the network connection (cable).
143.It "vr0: no memory for rx list"
144The driver failed to allocate an mbuf for the receiver ring.
145.It "vr0: no memory for tx list"
146The driver failed to allocate an mbuf for the transmitter ring when
147allocating a pad buffer or collapsing an mbuf chain into a cluster.
148.El
149.Sh SEE ALSO
150.Xr amphy 4 ,
151.Xr arp 4 ,
152.Xr icsphy 4 ,
153.Xr ifmedia 4 ,
154.Xr intro 4 ,
155.Xr netintro 4 ,
156.Xr pci 4 ,
157.Xr sqphy 4 ,
158.Xr hostname.if 5 ,
159.Xr ifconfig 8
160.Rs
161.%T The VIA Technologies VT86C100A data sheet
162.%U http://www.via.com.tw
163.Re
164.Sh HISTORY
165The
166.Nm
167device driver first appeared in
168.Fx 3.0 .
169.Ox
170support first appeared in
171.Ox 2.5 .
172.Sh AUTHORS
173The
174.Nm
175driver was written by
176.An Bill Paul Aq Mt wpaul@ctr.columbia.edu .
177.Sh CAVEATS
178The
179.Nm
180driver copies transmit mbuf chains into longword-aligned buffers prior
181to transmission in order to pacify the VT3043 and VT86C100A chips.
182If buffers are not aligned correctly, the chip will round the
183supplied buffer address and begin DMAing from the wrong location.
184This buffer copying impairs transmit performance on slower systems but can't
185be avoided.
186On faster machines (e.g., a Pentium II), the performance
187impact is much less noticeable.
188