Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: Sun X4100 graphics
Special Forums Hardware Sun X4100 graphics Post 302583388 by petebarchetta on Tuesday 20th of December 2011 10:13:12 AM
Old 12-20-2011
Sun X4100 graphics

Hello all.
I have a requirement to install a aftermarket video card in the server, can you advise what fits? or if there is a sun riser part which convers the PCIx slot to PCIe
The unit is a standard x4100 with PCIx slots, not an M2 with the PCIe slots.

thanks
 

9 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Solaris

X4100 Bios RAID question

Hi there the Sunfire X4100 has a great tool that you can get to from BIOS called the configuration utility which allows you to set up Disk mirroring (RAID 1) before the OS sees it, which is great and it works a treat, however, we have a large datacentre across multiuple sites and I need to find... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: hcclnoodles
1 Replies

2. Solaris

check firmaware revision on X4100

Hi there I am running solaris 10 on an SunFire x4100 ...(x86 box) Could anybody tell me if there is a way I can check the firmware revision without taking the box down to do it ...eeprom doesnt give me the info I require Cheers (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: hcclnoodles
0 Replies

3. Solaris

How to change boot slot X4100?

Hi everyone, I have a problem which looks like very simple. My SunFire X4100 have 2 disk slots: HDD0, HDD1 and 1 hard disk. I installed OS on the hard disk at HDD0 and now i want to boot it at HDD1. When i change BIOS and begin boot at HDD1 it reset after i chose Solaris 10 at OS selecting... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: tien86
3 Replies

4. Solaris

Does the Sun fire x4100 support HVM?

I have looked all over the bios configuration to enable hardware virtualization and found nothing. Could someone tell if this server support it and if so where I go to enable that feature. By the way this is a x86 server. (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: jsandova
0 Replies

5. Hardware

sun x4100 M2 processors

hi please how to know that a sun x4100 m2 server has one or two processors installed ?? the OS installed on this server is windows 2003 Enterprise Edition. thanks (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: bahjatm
2 Replies

6. OS X (Apple)

[Solved] links2 --enable-graphics from source, configure error: no graphics driver found.

Howdy I am trying to install links2 with graphics support on snow leopard 10.6.8 (xcode installed). I have had the program running last year, also installed from source - but then I had installed some image libraries with mac ports and fink - cannot reproduce that setup. Plus I would like to not... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: butterbaerchen
6 Replies

7. Ubuntu

Ubuntu Install on Sun Fire X4100 network issues

Hi I have two Sun Fire X4100 machines with Ubuntu 12.04 installed on them. I am able to configure the Net Mgt port with an IP address and access the ILOM from the browser. I can also boot the Ubuntu installed and redirect the output. The issue i have is that when i configure the network... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: kaf3773
0 Replies

8. Solaris

Sunfire X4100 server

Hi, I am currently on Sunfire X4100. This server doesn't have CDROM drive. Also I can't get to the OK prompt. From my laptop, I am connected to the management port using the Cisco Blue cable. Please advise how can I get to the OK prompt. Also the server is so loud. Will the FAN cool... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: samnyc
1 Replies

9. Hardware

Multi-bit ECC Error on X4100 M2 Server Sun Fire

I have a problem, I have been installing Redhat Interprise Linux on X4100 M2 Server, when system is reboot after install, the server is restart (reboot) again (alias unlimited). The bios system show message error "Multi-bit ECC Error" and "bank interleave requested but not enable" I have... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: hhaswan
5 Replies
pci(4)																	    pci(4)

NAME
pci, pcie - configuration files for PCI and PCI Express device drivers The Peripheral Component Interconnect (PCI) bus is a little endian bus. PCI Express (PCIe) and PCI-X are successors to PCI. All three types of devices share the same configuration parameters. What is specified here for PCI devices applies to PCI-X 1.0 devices as well. All three types of devices are self-identifying, which means that these devices provide configuration parameters to the system that allow the system to identify the device and its driver. The configuration parameters are represented in the form of name-value pairs that can be retrieved using the DDI property interfaces. See ddi_prop_lookup(9F) for details. The bus properties of PCI devices or logical bus properties of PCIe devices are derived from PCI configuration space, or supplied by the Fcode PROM, if it exists. Therefore, driver configuration files are not necessary for these devices. On some occasions, drivers for PCI and PCIe devices can use driver configuration files to provide driver private properties through the global property mechanism. See driver.conf(4) for further details. Driver configuration files can also be used to augment or override prop- erties for a specific instance of a driver. All bus drivers of PCI and PCIe devices recognize the following properties: reg An arbitrary length array where each element of the array consists of a 5-tuple of 32-bit values. Each array element describes a logi- cally contiguous mappable resource on the PCI bus or PCIe device tree. The first three values in the 5-tuple describe the PCI address of the mappable resource. The first tuple contains the following infor- mation: Bits 0 - 7 8-bit register number Bits 8 - 10 3-bit function number Bits 11 - 15 5-bit device number Bits 16 - 23 8-bit bus number Bits 24 - 25 2-bit address space type identifier Bits 31 - 28 Register number extended bits 8:11 for extended config space. Zero for conventional configuration space. The address space type identifier can be interpreted as follows: 0x0 configuration space 0x1 I/O space 0x2 32-bit memory space address 0x3 64-bit memory space address The bus number is a unique identifying number assigned to each PCI bus or PCIe logical bus within its domain. The device number is a unique identifying number assigned to each device on a PCI bus or PCIe logical bus. Note that a device number is unique only within the set of device numbers for a particular bus or logical bus. Each PCI or PCIe device can have one to eight logically independent functions, each with its own independent set of configuration reg- isters. Each function on a device is assigned a function number. For a device with only one function, the function number must be 0. The register number fields select a particular register within the set of configuration registers corresponding to the selected func- tion. When the address space type identifier indicates configuration space, non-zero register number extended bits select registers in extended configuration space. The second and third values in the reg property 5-tuple specify the 64-bit address of the mappable resource within the PCI or PCIe address domain. The second 32-bit tuple corresponds to the high order four bytes of the 64-bit address. The third 32-bit tuple corre- sponds to the low order bytes. The fourth and fifth 32-bit values in the 5-tuple reg property specify the size of the mappable resource. The size is a 64-bit value, where the fourth tuple corresponds to the high order bytes of the 64-bit size and the fifth corresponds to the low order. The driver can refer to the elements of this array by index, and construct kernel mappings to these addresses using ddi_regs_map_set- up(9F). The index into the array is passed as the rnumber argument of ddi_regs_map_setup(9F). At a high-level interrupt context, you can use the ddi_get* and ddi_put* family of functions to access I/O and memory space. However, access to configuration space is not allowed when running at a high-interrupt level. interrupts This property consists of a single-integer element array. Valid interrupt property values are 1, 2, 3, and 4. This value is derived directly from the contents of the device's configuration-interrupt-pin register. A driver should use an index value of 0 when registering its interrupt handler with the DDI interrupt interfaces. All PCI and PCIe devices support the reg property. The device number and function number as derived from the reg property are used to con- struct the address part of the device name under /devices. Only devices that generate interrupts support an interrupts property. Occasionally it might be necessary to override or augment the configuration information supplied by a PCI or PCIe device. This change can be achieved by writing a driver configuration file that describes a prototype device node specification containing the additional proper- ties required. For the system to merge the prototype node specification into an actual device node, certain conditions must be met. o First, the name property must be identical. The value of the name property needs to match the binding name of the device. The binding name is the name chosen by the system to bind a driver to a device and is either an alias associated with the driver or the hardware node name of the device. o Second, the parent property must identify the PCI bus or PCIe logical bus. o Third, the unit-address property must identify the card. The format of the unit-address property is: DD[,F] where DD is the device number and F is the function number. If the function number is 0, only DD is specified. Example 1: Sample Configuration File An example configuration file called ACME,scsi-hba.conf for a PCI driver called ACME,scsi-hba follows: # # Copyright (c) 1995, ACME SCSI Host Bus Adaptor # ident "@(#)ACME,scsi-hba.conf 1.1 96/02/04" name="ACME,scsi-hba" parent="/pci@1,0/pci@1f,4000" unit-address="3" scsi-initiator-id=6; hba-advanced-mode="on"; hba-dma-speed=10; In this example, a property scsi-initiator-id specifies the SCSI bus initiator id that the adapter should use, for just one particular instance of adapter installed in the machine. The name property identifies the driver and the parent property to identify the particular bus the card is plugged into. This example uses the parent's full path name to identify the bus. The unit-address property identifies the card itself, with device number of 3 and function number of 0. Two global driver properties are also created: hba-advanced-mode (which has the string value on) and hba-dma-speed (which has the value 10 M bit/s). These properties apply to all device nodes of the ACME,scsi-hba. Configuration files for PCIe devices are similar. Shown below is an example configuration file called ACME,pcie-widget.conf for a PCIe driver called ACME,pcie-widget. # # Copyright (c) 2005, ACME PCIe Widget Adapter # ident "@(#)ACME,pcie-widget.conf 1.1 05/11/14" name="ACME,pcie-widget" parent="/pci@780" unit-address="2,1" debug-mode=12; In this example, we provide a property debug-mode for a particular PCIe device. As before, the logical bus is identified by the pathname of the parent of the device. The device has a device number of 2, and a function number of 1. See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes: +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ | ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ |Architecture |SPARC, | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ driver.conf(4), attributes(5), ddi_intr_add_handler(9F), ddi_prop_lookup(9F), ddi_regs_map_setup(9F) IEEE 1275 PCI Bus Binding http://playground.sun.com/1275/bindings/pci/pci-express.txt PCIe devices support an extended configuration space unavailable to PCI devices. While PCIe devices can be operated using a PCI device driver, operating them using a PCIe device driver can make use of the extended properties and features made available only in the extended configuration space. 13 May 2005 pci(4)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 09:12 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy