Automatic merge of /spare/repo/netdev-2.6 branch hdlc

Cette révision appartient à :
2005-06-04 17:03:09 -04:00
révisé par Jeff Garzik
révision 14d8ce70d5
4 fichiers modifiés avec 211 ajouts et 170 suppressions

Voir le fichier

@@ -1,21 +1,21 @@
Generic HDLC layer
Krzysztof Halasa <khc@pm.waw.pl>
January, 2003
Generic HDLC layer currently supports:
- Frame Relay (ANSI, CCITT and no LMI), with ARP support (no InARP).
Normal (routed) and Ethernet-bridged (Ethernet device emulation)
interfaces can share a single PVC.
- raw HDLC - either IP (IPv4) interface or Ethernet device emulation.
- Cisco HDLC,
- PPP (uses syncppp.c),
- X.25 (uses X.25 routines).
1. Frame Relay (ANSI, CCITT, Cisco and no LMI).
- Normal (routed) and Ethernet-bridged (Ethernet device emulation)
interfaces can share a single PVC.
- ARP support (no InARP support in the kernel - there is an
experimental InARP user-space daemon available on:
http://www.kernel.org/pub/linux/utils/net/hdlc/).
2. raw HDLC - either IP (IPv4) interface or Ethernet device emulation.
3. Cisco HDLC.
4. PPP (uses syncppp.c).
5. X.25 (uses X.25 routines).
There are hardware drivers for the following cards:
- C101 by Moxa Technologies Co., Ltd.
- RISCom/N2 by SDL Communications Inc.
- and others, some not in the official kernel.
Generic HDLC is a protocol driver only - it needs a low-level driver
for your particular hardware.
Ethernet device emulation (using HDLC or Frame-Relay PVC) is compatible
with IEEE 802.1Q (VLANs) and 802.1D (Ethernet bridging).
@@ -24,7 +24,7 @@ with IEEE 802.1Q (VLANs) and 802.1D (Ethernet bridging).
Make sure the hdlc.o and the hardware driver are loaded. It should
create a number of "hdlc" (hdlc0 etc) network devices, one for each
WAN port. You'll need the "sethdlc" utility, get it from:
http://hq.pm.waw.pl/hdlc/
http://www.kernel.org/pub/linux/utils/net/hdlc/
Compile sethdlc.c utility:
gcc -O2 -Wall -o sethdlc sethdlc.c
@@ -52,12 +52,12 @@ Setting interface:
* v35 | rs232 | x21 | t1 | e1 - sets physical interface for a given port
if the card has software-selectable interfaces
loopback - activate hardware loopback (for testing only)
* clock ext - external clock (uses DTE RX and TX clock)
* clock int - internal clock (provides clock signal on DCE clock output)
* clock txint - TX internal, RX external (provides TX clock on DCE output)
* clock txfromrx - TX clock derived from RX clock (TX clock on DCE output)
* rate - sets clock rate in bps (not required for external clock or
for txfromrx)
* clock ext - both RX clock and TX clock external
* clock int - both RX clock and TX clock internal
* clock txint - RX clock external, TX clock internal
* clock txfromrx - RX clock external, TX clock derived from RX clock
* rate - sets clock rate in bps (for "int" or "txint" clock only)
Setting protocol:
@@ -79,7 +79,7 @@ Setting protocol:
* x25 - sets X.25 mode
* fr - Frame Relay mode
lmi ansi / ccitt / none - LMI (link management) type
lmi ansi / ccitt / cisco / none - LMI (link management) type
dce - Frame Relay DCE (network) side LMI instead of default DTE (user).
It has nothing to do with clocks!
t391 - link integrity verification polling timer (in seconds) - user
@@ -119,13 +119,14 @@ or
If you have a problem with N2 or C101 card, you can issue the "private"
command to see port's packet descriptor rings (in kernel logs):
If you have a problem with N2, C101 or PLX200SYN card, you can issue the
"private" command to see port's packet descriptor rings (in kernel logs):
sethdlc hdlc0 private
The hardware driver has to be build with CONFIG_HDLC_DEBUG_RINGS.
The hardware driver has to be build with #define DEBUG_RINGS.
Attaching this info to bug reports would be helpful. Anyway, let me know
if you have problems using this.
For patches and other info look at http://hq.pm.waw.pl/hdlc/
For patches and other info look at:
<http://www.kernel.org/pub/linux/utils/net/hdlc/>.