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Top Forums Programming Running bin file from a module Post 302506162 by Corona688 on Friday 18th of March 2011 04:55:25 PM
Old 03-18-2011
Quote:
Originally Posted by Chrisdot
Well, I show you "Big picture" as you asked for.

Actors:
User
PC with preinstalled OS: RedHat from 2010year
Network Interface Card (let's call it "NIC") produced in 2011year

Usage model:
1. User plugs NIC to PCIe bus in PC
2. User turns on PC
3. User has got an internet connection

Do you got the idea? Just plug and play - no drivers, no additional installations, etc.
Well that only took three entire pages of begging. THANK YOU.

I think you may be going about this the wrong way still though. The way to do this would be to add general-purpose UEFI support to Linux, not to hack one special thing that supports UEFI. And you'd probably want to use some sort of emulator, not something that converts UEFI code into whatever code your kernel uses.

But the biggest problem is I'm not sure UEFI even applies once an operating system's been loaded. Linux used to support BIOS-mode disk devices, for example, until it became clear that there were just too many corner cases where running in protected mode and controlling your own interrupts and DMA and all that jazz prevented BIOS calls from being able to work the way it was intended no matter how hard you tried to fool them. Sometimes. Very firmware-dependent. So they dropped that and added support for droves of different hard drive controllers instead, and that's how it's worked for a long time. Some coherent standards like AHCI are helping make drivers more generic again though.

You could make something like a DOS around raw UEFI devices -- a small self-contained OS which relies on system firmware to do most of the work. It could be surprisingly sophisticated with the system firmware features available now. Networking and graphics could be sufficient to run a reasonable impression of a web browser to download and save drivers with.

Last edited by Corona688; 03-18-2011 at 06:04 PM..
 

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ESHCONFIG(8)						    BSD System Manager's Manual 					      ESHCONFIG(8)

NAME
eshconfig -- configure Essential Communications' HIPPI network interface SYNOPSIS
eshconfig [-estx] [-b bytes] [-c bytes] [-d filename] [-i usecs] [-m bytes] [-r bytes] [-u filename] [-w bytes] [interface] DESCRIPTION
eshconfig is used to configure device-specific parameters and download new firmware to the Essential Communications RoadRunner-based HIPPI network interface. The interface is very sensitive to the DMA performance characteristics of the host, and so requires careful tuning to achieve reasonable performance. In addition, firmware is likely to change frequently, which necessitates a reasonably easy way to update that firmware. Available operands for eshconfig: -b bytes Adjust the burst size for read (by NIC of host memory) DMA. -c bytes Adjust the burst size for write (by NIC of host memory) DMA. -d filename Filename for file to download into NIC firmware. This must be a file in the standard Essential format, with :04 preceding every line, and a tag line at the end indicating the characteristics of the firmware file. -e Write data to EEPROM. Normally, setting tuning parameters will only persist until the system is rebooted. Setting this parameter ensures that the changes will be written to EEPROM. -i usecs Interrupt delay in microseconds. -m bytes Minimum number of bytes to DMA in one direction (read or write) before allowing a DMA in the other direction. Tuning this prevents one direction from dominating the flow of bytes, and artificially throttling the NIC. -r bytes Bytes before DMA starts for read (from host to NIC). This controls how soon the DMA is triggered; until this many bytes are requested, the DMA will not begin. -s Show statistics for the HIPPI NIC. Repeat the option to suppress non-zero statistics. -t Show current tuning parameters on the host. -u filename Name of file to which the NIC firmware should be uploaded. Not currently supported. -w bytes Number of bytes required before write (from NIC to host) DMA is started. Until this many bytes are ready to be written, the DMA will not start. -x Reset the NIC. This is necessary for the HIPPI-FP support, as ifconfig(8) will no longer physically reset the NIC when the inter- faces goes up and down. Only the super-user may modify the configuration of a network interface. DIAGNOSTICS
Messages indicating the specified interface does not exist or the user is not privileged and tried to alter an interface's configuration. SEE ALSO
esh(4), ifconfig(8) HISTORY
The eshconfig command first appeared in NetBSD 1.4. BSD
June 17, 2005 BSD
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