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