1.\" Copyright (c) 1998, 1999 Nicolas Souchu 2.\" All rights reserved. 3.\" 4.\" Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without 5.\" modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions 6.\" are met: 7.\" 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright 8.\" notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. 9.\" 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright 10.\" notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the 11.\" documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution. 12.\" 13.\" THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE AUTHOR AND CONTRIBUTORS ``AS IS'' AND 14.\" ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE 15.\" IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE 16.\" ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE 17.\" FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL 18.\" DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS 19.\" OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) 20.\" HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT 21.\" LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY 22.\" OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF 23.\" SUCH DAMAGE. 24.\" 25.Dd March 1, 1998 26.Dt PPBUS 4 27.Os 28.Sh NAME 29.Nm ppbus 30.Nd Parallel Port Bus system 31.Sh SYNOPSIS 32.Cd "device ppbus" 33.Pp 34.Cd "device lpt" 35.Cd "device plip" 36.Cd "device ppi" 37.Cd "device pps" 38.Cd "device lpbb" 39.Sh DESCRIPTION 40The 41.Em ppbus 42system provides a uniform, modular and architecture-independent 43system for the implementation of drivers to control various parallel devices, 44and to utilize different parallel port chipsets. 45.Sh DEVICE DRIVERS 46In order to write new drivers or port existing drivers, the ppbus system 47provides the following facilities: 48.Bl -bullet -offset indent 49.It 50architecture-independent macros or functions to access parallel ports 51.It 52mechanism to allow various devices to share the same parallel port 53.It 54a user interface named 55.Xr ppi 4 56that allows parallel port access from outside the kernel without conflicting 57with kernel-in drivers. 58.El 59.Ss Developing new drivers 60The ppbus system has been designed to support the development of standard 61and non-standard software: 62.Pp 63.Bl -column "Driver" -compact 64.It Em Driver Ta Em Description 65.It Sy ppi Ta "Parallel port interface for general I/O" 66.It Sy pps Ta "Pulse per second Timing Interface" 67.It Sy lpbb Ta "Philips official parallel port I2C bit-banging interface" 68.El 69.Ss Porting existing drivers 70Another approach to the ppbus system is to port existing drivers. 71Various drivers have already been ported: 72.Pp 73.Bl -column "Driver" -compact 74.It Em Driver Ta Em Description 75.It Sy lpt Ta "lpt printer driver" 76.It Sy plip Ta "lp parallel network interface driver" 77.El 78.Pp 79ppbus should let you port any other software even from other operating systems 80that provide similar services. 81.Sh PARALLEL PORT CHIPSETS 82Parallel port chipset support is provided by 83.Xr ppc 4 . 84.Pp 85The ppbus system provides functions and macros to allocate a new 86parallel port bus, then initialize it and upper peripheral device drivers. 87.Pp 88ppc makes chipset detection and initialization and then calls ppbus attach 89functions to initialize the ppbus system. 90.Sh PARALLEL PORT MODEL 91The logical parallel port model chosen for the ppbus system is the PC's 92parallel port model. 93Consequently, for the i386 implementation of ppbus, 94most of the services provided by ppc are macros for inb() 95and outb() calls. 96But, for another architecture, accesses to one of our logical 97registers (data, status, control...) may require more than one I/O access. 98.Ss Description 99The parallel port may operate in the following modes: 100.Bl -bullet -offset indent 101.It 102compatible mode, also called Centronics mode 103.It 104bidirectional 8/4-bits mode, also called NIBBLE mode 105.It 106byte mode, also called PS/2 mode 107.It 108Extended Capability Port mode, ECP 109.It 110Enhanced Parallel Port mode, EPP 111.It 112mixed ECP+EPP or ECP+PS/2 modes 113.El 114.Ss Compatible mode 115This mode defines the protocol used by most PCs to transfer data to a printer. 116In this mode, data is placed on the port's data lines, the printer status is 117checked for no errors and that it is not busy, and then a data Strobe is 118generated by the software to clock the data to the printer. 119.Pp 120Many I/O controllers have implemented a mode that uses a FIFO buffer to 121transfer data with the Compatibility mode protocol. 122This mode is referred to as 123"Fast Centronics" or "Parallel Port FIFO mode". 124.Ss Bidirectional mode 125The NIBBLE mode is the most common way to get reverse channel data from a 126printer or peripheral. 127Combined with the standard host to printer mode, it 128provides a complete bidirectional channel. 129.Pp 130In this mode, outputs are 8-bits long. 131Inputs are accomplished by reading 1324 of the 8 bits of the status register. 133.Ss Byte mode 134In this mode, the data register is used either for outputs and inputs. 135Then, 136any transfer is 8-bits long. 137.Ss Extended Capability Port mode 138The ECP protocol was proposed as an advanced mode for communication with 139printer and scanner type peripherals. 140Like the EPP protocol, ECP mode provides 141for a high performance bidirectional communication path between the host 142adapter and the peripheral. 143.Pp 144ECP protocol features include: 145.Bl -item -offset indent 146.It 147Run_Length_Encoding (RLE) data compression for host adapters 148.It 149FIFOs for both the forward and reverse channels 150.It 151DMA as well as programmed I/O for the host register interface. 152.El 153.Ss Enhanced Parallel Port mode 154The EPP protocol was originally developed as a means to provide a high 155performance parallel port link that would still be compatible with the 156standard parallel port. 157.Pp 158The EPP mode has two types of cycle: address and data. 159What makes the 160difference at hardware level is the strobe of the byte placed on the data 161lines. 162Data are strobed with nAutofeed, addresses are strobed with 163nSelectin signals. 164.Pp 165A particularity of the ISA implementation of the EPP protocol is that an 166EPP cycle fits in an ISA cycle. 167In this fashion, parallel port peripherals can 168operate at close to the same performance levels as an equivalent ISA plug-in 169card. 170.Pp 171At software level, you may implement the protocol you wish, using data and 172address cycles as you want. 173This is for the IEEE1284 compatible part. 174Then, 175peripheral vendors may implement protocol handshake with the following 176status lines: PError, nFault and Select. 177Try to know how these lines toggle 178with your peripheral, allowing the peripheral to request more data, stop the 179transfer and so on. 180.Pp 181At any time, the peripheral may interrupt the host with the nAck signal without 182disturbing the current transfer. 183.Ss Mixed modes 184Some manufacturers, like SMC, have implemented chipsets that support mixed 185modes. 186With such chipsets, mode switching is available at any time by 187accessing the extended control register. 188.Sh IEEE1284-1994 Standard 189.Ss Background 190This standard is also named "IEEE Standard Signaling Method for a 191Bidirectional Parallel Peripheral Interface for Personal Computers". 192It 193defines a signaling method for asynchronous, fully interlocked, bidirectional 194parallel communications between hosts and printers or other peripherals. 195It 196also specifies a format for a peripheral identification string and a method of 197returning this string to the host outside of the bidirectional data stream. 198.Pp 199This standard is architecture independent and only specifies dialog handshake 200at signal level. 201One should refer to architecture specific documentation in 202order to manipulate machine dependent registers, mapped memory or other 203methods to control these signals. 204.Pp 205The IEEE1284 protocol is fully oriented with all supported parallel port 206modes. 207The computer acts as master and the peripheral as slave. 208.Pp 209Any transfer is defined as a finite state automaton. 210It allows software to 211properly manage the fully interlocked scheme of the signaling method. 212The compatible mode is supported "as is" without any negotiation because it 213is compatible. 214Any other mode must be firstly negotiated by the host to check 215it is supported by the peripheral, then to enter one of the forward idle 216states. 217.Pp 218At any time, the slave may want to send data to the host. 219This is only 220possible from forward idle states (nibble, byte, ecp...). 221So, the 222host must have previously negotiated to permit the peripheral to 223request transfer. 224Interrupt lines may be dedicated to the requesting signals 225to prevent time consuming polling methods. 226.Pp 227But peripheral requests are only a hint to the master host. 228If the host 229accepts the transfer, it must firstly negotiate the reverse mode and then 230starts the transfer. 231At any time during reverse transfer, the host may 232terminate the transfer or the slave may drive wires to signal that no more 233data is available. 234.Ss Implementation 235IEEE1284 Standard support has been implemented at the top of the ppbus system 236as a set of procedures that perform high level functions like negotiation, 237termination, transfer in any mode without bothering you with low level 238characteristics of the standard. 239.Pp 240IEEE1284 interacts with the ppbus system as little as possible. 241That means 242you still have to request the ppbus when you want to access it, the negotiate 243function does not do it for you. 244And of course, release it later. 245.Sh ARCHITECTURE 246.Ss adapter, ppbus and device layers 247First, there is the 248.Em adapter 249layer, the lowest of the ppbus system. 250It provides 251chipset abstraction throw a set of low level functions that maps the logical 252model to the underlying hardware. 253.Pp 254Secondly, there is the 255.Em ppbus 256layer that provides functions to: 257.Bl -enum -offset indent 258.It 259share the parallel port bus among the daisy-chain like connected devices 260.It 261manage devices linked to ppbus 262.It 263propose an arch-independent interface to access the hardware layer. 264.El 265.Pp 266Finally, the 267.Em device 268layer gathers the parallel peripheral device drivers. 269.Ss Parallel modes management 270We have to differentiate operating modes at various ppbus system layers. 271Actually, ppbus and adapter operating modes on one hands and for each 272one, current and available modes are separated. 273.Pp 274With this level of abstraction a particular chipset may commute from any 275native mode to any other mode emulated with extended modes without 276disturbing upper layers. 277For example, most chipsets support NIBBLE mode as 278native and emulated with ECP and/or EPP. 279.Pp 280This architecture should support IEEE1284-1994 modes. 281.Sh FEATURES 282.Ss The boot process 283The boot process starts with the probe stage of the 284.Xr ppc 4 285driver during ISA bus (PC architecture) initialization. 286During attachment of 287the ppc driver, a new ppbus structure is allocated, then probe and attachment 288for this new bus node are called. 289.Pp 290ppbus attachment tries to detect any PnP parallel peripheral (according to 291.%T "Plug and Play Parallel Port Devices" 292draft from (c)1993-4 Microsoft Corporation) 293then probes and attaches known device drivers. 294.Pp 295During probe, device drivers are supposed to request the ppbus and try to 296set their operating mode. 297This mode will be saved in the context structure and 298returned each time the driver requests the ppbus. 299.Ss Bus allocation and interrupts 300ppbus allocation is mandatory not to corrupt I/O of other devices. 301Another 302usage of ppbus allocation is to reserve the port and receive incoming 303interrupts. 304.Pp 305High level interrupt handlers are connected to the ppbus system thanks to the 306newbus 307.Fn BUS_SETUP_INTR 308and 309.Fn BUS_TEARDOWN_INTR 310functions. 311But, in order to attach a handler, drivers must 312own the bus. 313Consequently, a ppbus request is mandatory in order to call the above 314functions (see existing drivers for more info). 315Note that the interrupt handler 316is automatically released when the ppbus is released. 317.Ss Microsequences 318.Em Microsequences 319is a general purpose mechanism to allow fast low-level 320manipulation of the parallel port. 321Microsequences may be used to do either 322standard (in IEEE1284 modes) or non-standard transfers. 323The philosophy of 324microsequences is to avoid the overhead of the ppbus layer and do most of 325the job at adapter level. 326.Pp 327A microsequence is an array of opcodes and parameters. 328Each opcode codes an 329operation (opcodes are described in 330.Xr microseq 9 ) . 331Standard I/O operations are implemented at ppbus level whereas basic I/O 332operations and microseq language are coded at adapter level for efficiency. 333.Sh SEE ALSO 334.Xr lpt 4 , 335.Xr plip 4 , 336.Xr ppc 4 , 337.Xr ppi 4 338.Sh HISTORY 339The 340.Nm 341manual page first appeared in 342.Fx 3.0 . 343.Sh AUTHORS 344This 345manual page was written by 346.An Nicolas Souchu . 347