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PCMCIA(4) Device Drivers Manual PCMCIA(4)

pcmciaintroduction to PCMCIA (PC Card) support

# i386
pcic0 at isa? port 0x3e0 iomem 0xd0000 iosiz 0x10000
pcic1 at isa? port 0x3e2 iomem 0xe0000 iosiz 0x4000
pcic2 at isa? port 0x3e4 iomem 0xe0000 iosiz 0x4000
pcic* at isapnp?
pcic* at pci? dev?
pcmcia* at pcic?


# i386
tcic0 at isa? port 0x240 iomem 0xd0000 iosiz 0x10000
pcmcia* at tcic?


# sparc
tslot* at sbus?
pcmcia* at tslot?


# sparc/sparc64
stp* at sbus?
pcmcia* at stp?


# zaurus
pxapcic0 at pxaip?
pcmcia* at pxapcic?


# all architectures
cbb* at pci?
cardslot* at cbb? flags 0x0000
pcmcia* at cardslot?

The pcmcia subsystem provides machine-independent bus support and drivers for PCMCIA (PC Card) devices.

OpenBSD provides support for the following devices. Note that not all architectures support all devices.

gpr(4)
GemPlus GPR400 smartcard reader

com(4)
serial communications interface

ep(4)
3Com EtherLink III and Fast EtherLink III 10/100 Ethernet device
ne(4)
NE2000 and compatible 10/100 Ethernet device
sm(4)
SMC91C9x and SMC91C1xx-based 10/100 Ethernet device
xe(4)
Xircom-based 16-bit PCMCIA 10/100 Ethernet device

an(4)
Aironet Communications 4500/4800 IEEE 802.11FH/b wireless network device
cnw(4)
Xircom CreditCard Netwave wireless network device
malo(4)
Marvell Libertas IEEE 802.11b/g wireless network device
ray(4)
Raytheon Raylink/WebGear Aviator IEEE 802.11FH wireless network device
wi(4)
WaveLAN/IEEE, PRISM 2-3, and Spectrum24 IEEE 802.11b wireless network device

aic(4)
Adaptec AIC-6260 and AIC-6360 SCSI interface

wdc(4)
WD100x compatible hard disk controller driver

The supported PCMCIA controllers are those that are i82365 compatible.

On some pcmcia adapters, for instance the sbus(4)-based stp(4), the pcmcia bus will be mapped in big-endian format instead of the natural (and preferred) little endian format. Unfortunately such controllers lack the hardware facility to swap bytes, and it is not efficient to convert all drivers to always know about this. While 8 bit drivers can invisibly work on such a bus, 16 bit drivers will need modification to handle this. So far, wi(4) is the only driver to require these modifications.

If the pcmcia adapter is not detected, or if pcmcia events (such as card insertion) do not occur, there may be a PCI card BIOS mapped in the same memory space the pcmcia driver is configured to use (this is often the case with Ethernet card boot ROMs). The output from dmesg(8) should contain a line beginning with “bios0” that lists the memory address and size of mapped regions. If there is a conflict, you can use boot_config(8) to change the iomem parameter of the pcic device to a non-overlapping address, such as 0xd8000 for . Some experimentation may be required to find a working value; in some cases the size parameter of the pcic device may need to be decreased to avoid a conflict.

cardbus(4), intro(4), isa(4)

The pcmcia driver appeared in OpenBSD 2.3.

June 26, 2008 OpenBSD-5.4