Annotation of 43BSDTahoe/man/man4/vax/hy.4, revision 1.1.1.1

1.1       root        1: .\" Copyright (c) 1983 Regents of the University of California.
                      2: .\" All rights reserved.  The Berkeley software License Agreement
                      3: .\" specifies the terms and conditions for redistribution.
                      4: .\"
                      5: .\"    @(#)hy.4        6.1 (Berkeley) 5/15/85
                      6: .\"
                      7: .TH HY 4 "May 15, 1985"
                      8: .UC 5
                      9: .SH NAME
                     10: hy \- Network Systems Hyperchannel interface
                     11: .SH SYNOPSIS
                     12: .B "device hy0 at uba0 csr 0172410 vector hyint"
                     13: .SH DESCRIPTION
                     14: The
                     15: .I hy
                     16: interface provides access to a Network
                     17: Systems Corporation Hyperchannel Adapter.
                     18: .PP
                     19: The network to which the interface is attached
                     20: is specified at boot time with an SIOCSIFADDR ioctl.  
                     21: The host's address is discovered by reading the adapter status
                     22: register.  The interface will not transmit or receive
                     23: packets until the network number is known.
                     24: .SH DIAGNOSTICS
                     25: \fBhy%d: unit number 0x%x port %d type %x microcode level 0x%x\fP.
                     26: Identifies the device during autoconfiguration.
                     27: .PP
                     28: \fBhy%d: can't handle af%d\fP.  The interface was handed
                     29: a message with addresses formatted in an unsuitable address
                     30: family; the packet was dropped.
                     31: .PP
                     32: \fBhy%d: can't initialize\fP.
                     33: The interface was unable to allocate UNIBUS resources. This
                     34: is usually due to having too many network devices on an 11/750
                     35: where there are only 3 buffered data paths.
                     36: .PP
                     37: \fBhy%d: NEX - Non Existent Memory\fP.
                     38: Non existent memory error returned from hardware.
                     39: .PP
                     40: \fBhy%d:  BAR overflow\fP.  Bus address register
                     41: overflow error returned from hardware.
                     42: .PP
                     43: \fBhy%d: Power Off bit set, trying to reset\fP.
                     44: Adapter has lost power, driver will reset the bit
                     45: and see if power is still out in the adapter.
                     46: .PP
                     47: \fBhy%d: Power Off Error, network shutdown\fP.
                     48: Power was really off in the adapter, network
                     49: connections are dropped.
                     50: Software does not shut down the network unless
                     51: power has been off for a while.
                     52: .PP
                     53: \fBhy%d: RECVD MP > MPSIZE (%d)\fP.
                     54: A message proper was received that is too big.
                     55: Probable a driver bug.
                     56: Shouldn't happen.
                     57: .PP
                     58: \fBhy%d: xmit error \- len > hy_olen [%d > %d]\fP.
                     59: Probable driver error.
                     60: Shouldn't happen.
                     61: .PP
                     62: \fBhy%d: DRIVER BUG \- INVALID STATE %d\fP.
                     63: The driver state machine reached a non-existent state.
                     64: Definite driver bug.
                     65: .PP
                     66: \fBhy%d: watchdog timer expired\fP.
                     67: A command in the adapter has taken too long to complete.
                     68: Driver will abort and retry the command.
                     69: .PP
                     70: \fBhy%d: adapter power restored\fP.
                     71: Software was able to reset the power off bit,
                     72: indicating that the power has been restored.
                     73: .SH SEE ALSO
                     74: intro(4N), inet(4F)
                     75: .SH BUGS
                     76: If the adapter does not respond to the status command
                     77: issued during autoconfigure, the adapter is assumed down.
                     78: A reboot is required to recognize it.
                     79: .PP
                     80: The adapter power fail interrupt seems to occur
                     81: sporadically when power has, in fact, not failed.
                     82: The driver will believe that power has failed
                     83: only if it can not reset the power fail latch after
                     84: a ``reasonable'' time interval.
                     85: These seem to appear about 2-4 times a day on some machines.
                     86: There seems to be no correlation with adapter
                     87: rev level, number of ports used etc. and whether a
                     88: machine will get these ``bogus powerfails''.
                     89: They don't seem to cause any real problems so they have
                     90: been ignored.

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