Source-Changes-HG archive

[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index][Old Index]

[src/trunk]: src/share/man/man9 The I/O address space of ISA is 16 bits; corr...



details:   https://anonhg.NetBSD.org/src/rev/21fd77298186
branches:  trunk
changeset: 512103:21fd77298186
user:      nathanw <nathanw%NetBSD.org@localhost>
date:      Thu Jul 05 18:01:15 2001 +0000

description:
The I/O address space of ISA is 16 bits; correct this, but add a note
explaining why it is often treated as only having 10 bits of I/O
address space.

diffstat:

 share/man/man9/isa.9 |  10 ++++++----
 1 files changed, 6 insertions(+), 4 deletions(-)

diffs (24 lines):

diff -r 04447ba315f1 -r 21fd77298186 share/man/man9/isa.9
--- a/share/man/man9/isa.9      Thu Jul 05 16:45:23 2001 +0000
+++ b/share/man/man9/isa.9      Thu Jul 05 18:01:15 2001 +0000
@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
-.\"     $NetBSD: isa.9,v 1.1 2001/07/01 04:11:14 gmcgarry Exp $
+.\"     $NetBSD: isa.9,v 1.2 2001/07/05 18:01:15 nathanw Exp $
 .\"
 .\" Copyright (c) 2001 The NetBSD Foundation, Inc.
 .\" All rights reserved.
@@ -127,9 +127,11 @@
 appear on systems without Intel processors.
 .Pp
 The ISA bus has a 16-bit data bus, a 24-bit memory address bus, a
-10-bit I/O address bus and operates at 8MHz.  It provides 15 interrupt
-lines and 8 DMA channels supporting DMA transfers of 64KB or 128KB
-transfers depending on the width of the channel being used.
+16-bit I/O address bus, and operates at 8MHz.  It provides 15
+interrupt lines and 8 DMA channels supporting DMA transfers of 64KB or
+128KB transfers depending on the width of the channel being
+used. Historically, some devices only decoded the 10 lowest bits of
+the I/O address bus, preventing use of the full 16-bit address space.
 .Pp
 On newer machines, the ISA bus is no longer connected directly to the
 host bus, and is usually connected via a PCI-ISA bridge.  Either way,



Home | Main Index | Thread Index | Old Index