PCM-5896 All-in-One Super7 Single Board Computer with LCD, Ethernet, Audio, & 4 COMs
FCC STATEMENT THIS DEVICE COMPLIES WITH PART 15 FCC RULES. OPERATION IS SUBJECT TO THE FOLLOWING TWO CONDITIONS: (1) THIS DEVICE MAY NOT CAUSE HARMFUL INTERFERENCE. (2) THIS DEVICE MUST ACCEPT ANY INTERFERENCE RECEIVED INCLUDING INTERFERENCE THAT MAY CAUSE UNDESIRED OPERATION. THIS EQUIPMENT HAS BEEN TESTED AND FOUND TO COMPLY WITH THE LIMITS FOR A CLASS "A" DIGITAL DEVICE, PURSUANT TO PART 15 OF THE FCC RULES.
Copyright Notice This document is copyrighted, 1999. All rights are reserved. The original manufacturer reserves the right to make improvements to the products described in this manual at any time without notice. No part of this manual may be reproduced, copied, translated, or transmitted in any form or by any means without the prior written permission of the original manufacturer. Information provided in this manual is intended to be accurate and reliable.
A Message to the Customer EMAC Customer Services Each and every EMAC product is built to the most exacting specifications to ensure reliable performance in the harsh and demanding conditions typical of industrial environments. Whether your new EMAC equipment is destined for the laboratory or the factory floor, you can be assured that your product will provide the reliability and ease of operation for which the name EMAC has come to be known. Your satisfaction is our primary concern.
Product Warranty EMAC warrants to you, the original purchaser, that each of its products will be free from defects in materials and workmanship for one year from the date of purchase. This warranty does not apply to any products which have been repaired or altered by persons other than repair personnel authorized by EMAC, or which have been subject to misuse, abuse, accident or improper installation. EMAC assumes no liability under the terms of this warranty as a consequence of such events.
Packing list Before you begin installing your card, please make sure that the following materials have been shipped: • 1 PCM-5896 All-in-One Single Board Computer • 1 Quick Installation Guide • 1 CD-ROM contains the followings: — User’s Manual (this manual in PDF file) — Ethernet drivers and utilities — VGA drivers and utilities — Audio drivers and utilities — Lastest BIOS (as of the CD-ROM was made) The PCM-5896 requires several cables for operation.
Notice Dear Customer, Thank you for purchasing the PCM-5896 board. This user’s manual is designed to help you to get the most out of the PCM-5896, please read it thoroughly before you install and use the board. The product that you have purchased comes with an one-year limited warranty, but EMAC will not be responsible for misuse of the product. Therefore, we strongly urge you to first read the manual before using the product.
Contents Chapter 1: General Information.......................1 Introduction ... ................................................................. 2 Features .................................................................................. 3 Specifications ......................................................................... 4 Board layout ........................................................................... 7 Board dimensions .................................................................
IrDA connector (CN7) ....................................................... 30 Display connectors (CN9, CN12) ..................................... 31 VGA display connector (CN12).............................................. 31 LCD connector (CN9) ............................................................ 32 CD Audio connector (CN10) ............................................. 33 Keyboard and mouse connector (CN11) ......................... 33 Audio connector (CN13) ...................................
Integrated peripherals setup ............................................. 72 Supervisor/User password setting ................................... 75 IDE HDD auto detection ................................................... 77 Save & exit setup ................................................................ 78 Exit without saving ............................................................. 79 Chapter 4: C&T 69000 Flat Panel/CRT controller Display Drivers and Utilities ......... 81 Software drives .......
Appendix A: Programming the Watchdog Timer ........................................... 105 Programming the watchdog timer .................................. 106 How to set the watchdog timer ............................................. 106 Appendix B: Installing PC/104 Modules ........ 109 Installing PC/104 modules ............................................... 110 Appendix c: Optional Extras .......................... 113 PCM-10489-4 Wiring Kit ................................................
CHAPTER General Information 1 This chapter gives background information on the mainboard.
Introduction The PCM-5896 is an all-in-one multi-media Super7 (Pentium) processor based single board computer (SBC) with a 32-bit PCI audio controller, a PCI Flat Panel controller, a PCI 100Base-Tx Ethernet interface, and one PCI expansion slot. With 100MHz system bus, the PCM-5896 achieves outstanding performance that surpasses any other SBC in its class. In addition, the onboard SSD interface supports M-systems DiskOnChip 2000 series, memory capacity from 2 MB to 144 MB. This compact (only 5.
Features • Supports Intel P54C/P55C, AMD K6-2/K6, Cyrix 6x86MX/M II, and IDT Winchip (With system bus frequencies up to 100MHz) • DiskOnChip (SSD) up to 144MB • 64-bit PCI-bus SVGA/LCD controller supports LCD & CRT display • 100Base-Tx Ethernet interface, supports Remote Boot ROM function.
Specifications Standard SBC Functions • CPU: Intel Pentium MMX 166~233MHz, AMD K6-2 266~400MHz, Cyrix M II 233~300 MHz (With system bus frequencies up to 100MHz) • CPU socket: Intel Socket 7 • BIOS: Award 256KB Flash BIOS • Chipset: ALi 1541/1543 • I/O Chipset: ALi 1543/ITE IT8661F. Full 16-bit I/O decoded • Memory: Onboard one 168-pin DIMM socket supports up to 128Mbytes SDRAM • Enhanced IDE: Support up to two IDE devices. Supports Ultra DMA/ 33 mode with data transfer rate up to 33MB/sec.
• Interrupt: 15 interrupt levels (8259 equivalent) • Power management: Supports ATX power supply. Supports PC97, LAN wake up, and modem ring-in functions. I/O peripheral devices support power saving and doze/standby/suspend modes. APM 1.
Expansion Slots • PC/104 connector: One 16-bit 104-pin connector onboard • PCI slot: One 32-bit PCI slot onboard Mechanical and Environmental • Power supply voltage: +5V (4.75V to 5.25V), +12V (11.4V to 12.6V) • Typical power requirement: +5V@8A • Operating temperature: 32 to 140o F (0 to 60o C) • Board size: 8"(L) x 5.75"(W) (203mm x 146mm) • Weight: 1.2 lb. (0.
Board layout Chapter 1 General Information 7
5.08 9.53 95.25 135.89 140.97 146.05 Board dimensions 5.08 3.56 40.64 97.16 100.97 119.38 174.63 177.17 193.04 198.12 203.
CHAPTER Installation 2 This chapter describes how to set up the main board hardware, including instructions on setting jumpers and connecting peripherals, switches, and indicators. Be sure to read all the safety precautions before you begin the installation procedure.
Jumpers and connectors Connectors on the board link it to external devices such as hard disk drives, a keyboard, or floppy drives. In addition, the board has a number of jumpers that allow you to configure your system to suit your application. The following tables list the function of each of the board's jumpers and connectors.
Connectors Label CN1 CN2 CN3 CN5 CN6 CN7 CN8 CN9 CN10 CN11 CN12 CN13 CN14 CN15 CN16 CN17 LED1 U23 Function CPU fan power connector PC/104 connector USB ports connector IDE drive connector Front panel connector IrDA connector ATX power connector LCD display connector CD-ROM signal input connector Keyboard and PS/2 mouse connector VGA display connector Audio connector Printer port connector 100Base-Tx Ethernet connector Serial ports connector Floppy dirve connector Ethernet Tx/Rx/Link LED connector DiskOnCh
Locating jumpers S1 S3 J2 J3 J4 J5 J8 J6 J7 J11 12 PCM-5896 User Manual J12 J10 J9
Locating connectors CN1 CN 3 CN 9 CN 6 CN 5 CN 8 CN 7 CN 2 U23 CN 10 CN11 LED1 CN15 CN 17 CN 13 CN 14 CN 12 CN 16 Chapter 2 Installation 13
Setting jumpers You can configure your card to match the needs of your application by setting jumpers. A jumper is the simplest kind of electric switch. It consists of two metal pins and a small metal clip (often protected by a plastic cover) that slides over the pins to connect them. To “close” a jumper you connect the pins with the clip. To “open” a jumper you remove the clip. Sometimes a jumper will have three pins, labeled 1, 2, and 3. In this case you would connect either pins 1 and 2 or 2 and 3.
CPU installing and upgrading You can upgrade to a more powerful Socket7 CPU at any time. Simply remove the old CPU, install the new one, and set the jumpers for the new CPU speed. Warning! Always disconnect the power cord from your chassis when you are working on it. Do not make connections while the power is on as sensitive electronic components can be damaged by the sudden rush of power. Only experienced electronics personnel should open the PC chassis.
Installing DRAM (DIMMs) System Memory The left edge of the PCM-5896 contains a socket for 168-pin dual inline memory module (DIMM). The socket uses 3.3 V unbuffered synchronous DRAM (SDRAM). DIMM is available in capacities of 16, 32, 64, or 128 MB. The socket can be filled in the DIMM of any size, giving your PCM-5896 single board computer between 16 and 128 MB of memory. Supplementary information about DIMM Your PCM-5896 can accept both regular and PC-100 SDRAM DIMM Module(with or without parity).
Clear CMOS (J2) You can use J2 to clear the CMOS data if necessary. To reset the CMOS data, place a jumper on J2 for just a few seconds, and then remove the jumper.
DOC address select (J3) The DiskOnChip 2000 occupies an 8 Kbyte window in the upper memory address range of D400 to E000. You should ensure this does not conflict with any other device's memory address. J3 controls the memory address of the Flash disk. DiskOnChip 2000 memory address (J3) Memory address (HEX) DISABLE 1 2 3 4 DC00 D400 D800* 1 2 3 4 1 2 3 4 1 2 3 4 * default These addresses might conflict with the ROM BIOS of other peripheral boards.
ATX Soft-Power Switch connector (J4) The ATX Soft-Power switch connector is a 2-pin header. Locate the power switch cable from your system. It is a 2-pin female connector. Plug this connector to the Soft-Power switch connector marked J8. COM2 RS-232/422/485 select (J6, J11) The PCM-5896 COM2 serial port can be selected as RS-232, RS-422, or RS-485 by setting J6 & J11.
LCD clock signal select (J7) You can select the LCD control signal by setting J7. The following charts show the available option. LCD clock signal select (J7) ASHF CLK J7 1 2 3 SHF CLK * 1 2 3 *default LCD driving voltage select (J8) You can select the LCD connector CN9 (pin 5 and pin 6) driving voltage by setting J8. The configurations are as follows: LCD driving voltage select (J8) 5V J8 *default 20 PCM-5896 User Manual 1 2 3 3.
COM3/COM4 RI pin voltage select (J10, J5) The 9th pin of COM3 and COM4 (9-pin D-sub connector) can be selected as RI, +5V, or +12V by setting J10 & J5. COM3 RI pin setting (J10) RI* +5V +12V 1 3 5 1 3 5 1 3 5 2 4 6 2 4 6 2 4 6 J10 COM4 RI pin setting (J5) +5V +12V 1 3 5 RI * 1 3 5 1 3 5 2 4 6 2 4 6 2 4 6 J5 *default Audio output select (J12) You can select the onboard audio output by setting J12.
S1 (2~6) CPU Vcore select S1 must be set to match the CPU type. The table below shows the available configurations. CAUTION: Improper settings may damage the CPU! * S1-2 S1-3 S1-4 S1-5 S1-6 Vcore 1 1 0 1 0 1.8V 1 1 0 1 1 1.85V 1 1 1 0 0 1.9V 1 1 1 0 1 1.95V 1 1 1 1 0 2.0V 1 1 1 1 1 2.05V 0 0 0 0 1 2.1V 0 0 0 1 0 2.2V 0 0 0 1 1 2.3V 0 0 1 0 0 2.4V 0 0 1 0 1 2.5V 0 0 1 1 0 2.6V 0 0 1 1 1 2.7V 0 1 0 0 0 2.
S3 (1~3) CPU clock select CPU core frequency = External CPU clock (60~100 MHz) * CPU frequency ratio (2~5.5X). The following table shows the available CPU external clock configurations. CAUTION: Improper settings may damage the CPU! * S3-1 S3-2 S3-3 C PU PC I Bus 1 1 1 60 MHz 30 MHz 0 1 1 66.8 MHz 33.4 MHz 1 1 0 75 MHz 30 MHz 0 1 0 83.3 MHz 33.3 MHz 1 0 0 90 MHz 30 MHz 0 0 0 100 MHz 33.
S3 (4~6) CPU frequency ratio You can set the CPU frequency ratio from 2 to 5.5 by setting S3 (4~6). CAUTION: Improper settings may damage the CPU! * S3-4 S3-5 S3-6 P 54C P 55C AMD /K6 0 0 1 2 2 2 0 1 1 2.5 2.5 2.5 0 1 0 3 3 3 0 0 0 1.5 3.5 3.5 1 0 1 X X 4 1 1 1 X X 4.5 1 1 0 X X 5 1 0 0 X X 5.
Power connectors (CN8, CN1) ATX power connector (CN8) The ATX power supply uses 20-pin connector shown below. Make sure you plug in the right direction. ATX power connector (CN8) Pin 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Signal N/C N/C GND +5V GND +5 V GND N/C 5V SB +12V Pin 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 Signal N/C -12V GND PON GND GND GND -5V +5V +5V CPU fan power connector (CN1) Plug in the fan cable to the 3-pin fan connector onboard. The fan connector is marked CN1.
USB connector (CN3) The PCM-5896 provides two USB (Universal Serial Bus) interfaces, which give complete plug and play, hot attach/detach for up to 127 external devices. The USB interfaces comply with USB specification Rev. 1.0, and can be disabled in the system BIOS setup.
IDE hard drive connector (CN5) You can attach one or two Enhanced Integrated Device Electronics hard disk drives to the mainboard's internal controller. The mainboard's IDE controller uses a PCI local-bus interface. This advanced interface supports faster data transfer and allows the IDE hard drive to exceed 528 MB. Connecting the hard drive Connecting drives is done in a daisy-chain fashion and requires one of two cables, depending on the drive size. 1.8" and 2.
IDE hard drive connector (CN5) IDE hard drive connector (CN5) Pin 1 3 5 7 9 11 13 15 17 19 21 23 25 27 29 31 33 35 37 39 41 43 Signal IDE RESET DATA 7 DATA 6 DATA 5 DATA 4 DATA 3 DATA 2 DATA 1 DATA 0 SIGNAL GND N/C IO WRITE IO READ IO CHANNEL READY N/C IRQ14 ADDR 1 ADDR 0 HARD DISK SELECT 0 IDE ACTIVE VCC GND 28 PCM-5896 User Manual Pin 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 18 20 22 24 26 28 30 32 34 36 38 40 42 44 Signal GND DATA 8 DATA 9 DATA 10 DATA 11 DATA 12 DATA 13 DATA 14 DATA 15 N/C GND GND GND ALE GND IOCS16 N/C
Front panel connector (CN6) Next you may want to install external LED and switches to monitor and control the mainboard. These features are completely optional. Install them only if you need them. The front panel connector (CN6) is an 8-pin male, dual in-line header and provides connections for a speaker, hard disk access indicator, and an input switch for resetting the card.
IrDA connector (CN7) The IrDA connector (CN7) can be configured to support wireless infrared module, with this module and application software such as laplink or Win95 Direct Cable connection, user can transfer files to or from laptops, notebooks, PDA and printers. This connector supports HPSIR (115.2Kbps, 2 meters), ASK-IR (56Kbps) and Fast IR (4Mbps, 2 meters). Install infrared module onto IrDA connector and enable infrared function from BIOS setup.
Display connectors (CN9, CN12) The mainboard's PCI SVGA interface can drive conventional CRT displays and is capable of driving a wide range of flat panel displays, including electroluminescent (EL), gas plasma, passive LCD, and active LCD displays. The board has two connectors to support these displays, one for standard CRT VGA monitors and one for flat panel displays. VGA display connector (CN12) CN12 is a 16-pin, dual-in-line header used for conventional CRT displays.
LCD connector (CN9) CN9 is a 50-pin, dual-in-line header used for flat panel displays. When the mainboard's power is applied, the control signal is low until just after the relevant flat panel signals are present. Configuration of the VGA interface is done completely via the software utility. You do not have to set any jumpers.
CD Audio connector (CN10) This connector is used to connect to a CD audio cable. CD Audio connector (CN10) Pin 1 2 3 4 Signal CD_L GND CD_R GND Keyboard and mouse connector (CN11) The mainboard provides a keyboard connector which supports both a keyboard and a PS/2 style mouse. In most cases, especially in embedded applications, a keyboard is not used. The standard PC/AT BIOS will report an error or fail during power-on-self-test (POST) after a reset if the keyboard is not present.
Audio connector (CN13) The PCM-5896 provides all major audio signals on a 14-pin flatcable connector, CN13. Attach the Mic In, Line In, and Audio Out to the corresponding pins as shown in the following table.
Parallel port connector (CN14) Normally, the parallel port is used to connect the board to a printer. The mainboard includes an onboard parallel port, accessed through CN14, a 26-pin flat-cable connector. You need an adapter cable if you use a traditional DB-25 connector. The cable has a 26-pin connector on one end and a DB-25 connector on the other. Parallel port IRQ The mainbaord supports one parallel port.
100Base-Tx Ethernet connector (CN15) This 100Base-Tx Ethernet connector is a standard RJ-45 connector. The onboard Realtek RTL8139A fast Ethernet controller supports 10Mb/s and 100 Mb/s N-way auto-negotiation operation.
Serial ports (CN16) The PCM-5896 offers four serial ports, three RS-232 and one RS232/422/485. These ports allow you to connect them to serial devices (mouse, printers, etc.). COM 1-4 RS-232/422/485 serial ports (CN16) COM1, COM2, COM3, COM4 RS-232/422/485 serial port COM1 PIN 1 3 5 7 9 COM2 11 13 15 17 19 SIGNAL DCDA RXDA TXDA DTRA GND DCDB (422TXD-/485DATA-) RXDB (422TXD+/485DATA+) TXDB (422RXD+) DTRB (422RXD-) GND PIN 2 4 6 8 10 SIGNAL DSRA RTSA CTSA RIA N.C.
Floppy drive connector (CN17) You can attach up to two floppy drives to the mainboard controller. You can use any combination of 5¼" (360 KB and 1.2 MB) and/or 3½" (720 KB, 1.44 MB, and 2.88 MB) drives. A 34-pin daisy-chain drive connector cable is required for a dualdrive system. On one end of the cable is a 34-pin flat-cable connector. On the other end are two sets of floppy disk drive connectors.
Floppy drive connector (CN17) Floppy drive connector (CN17) Pin Signal Pin Signal 1 3 5 7 9 11 13 15 17 19 21 23 25 27 29 31 33 GND GND GND GND GND GND GND GND GND GND GND GND GND GND GND GND GND 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 18 20 22 24 26 28 30 32 34 DENSITY SELECT N/C DRIVE TYPE INDEX MOTOR 0 DRIVE SELECT 1 DRIVE SELECT 2 MOTOR 1 DIRECTION STEP WRITE DATA WRITE GATE TRACK 0 WRITE PROTECT READ DATA HEAD DELECT DISK CHANGE Chapter 2 Installation 39
Ethernet LED signal connectors (LED1) The PCM-5896 supports three sets of LED connector for external LED indicators. Ethernet active signal LED Flashing Tx or Rx LEDs indicate that the PCM-5896 is transmitting or receiving data. Ethernet link signal LED A continuously lit LED indicates good linkage between the PCM-5896 and its supporting hub.
DiskOnChip socket (U23) The DiskOnChip 2000 family of products provides a single chip solid-state flash disk in a standard 32-pin DIP package. The DiskOnChip 2000 is a solid-state disk with no moving parts, resulting in a significant reduction in power consumption and an increase in reliability. The DiskOnChip is a small plug and play Flash disk. It is easy to use. And it saves integration overhead. The DiskOnChip 2000 family of products is available in capacities ranging from 2MB up to 144MB, unformatted.
DiskOnChip (DOC) 2000 Installation When the DOC is installed correctly, a DOC will work like an HDD or an FDD. To install the DOC on the mainboard, follow the instructions below: 1. Plug the DOC into the socket. Make sure pin 1 of the DOC is aligned with pin 1 of the socket. 2. Push the DOC into the socket until it is firmly seated in the socket. Caution: the DOC may be permanently damage if it is installed incorrectly. 3. Set the jumper for the memory address of the DOC.
CHAPTER 3 Award BIOS Setup This chapter describes how to configure the BIOS for the PCM-5896.
Starting setup The Award BIOS is immediately activated when you first turn on the computer. The BIOS reads system configuration information in CMOS RAM and begins the process of checking out the system and configuring it through the power-on self test (POST). When these preliminaries are finished, the BIOS seeks an operating system on one of the data storage devices (hard drive, floppy drive, etc.). The BIOS launches the operating system and hands control of system operations to it.
Setup keys These keys helps you navigate in Setup: Up arrow Down arrow Left arrow Right arrow Esc PgDn/+ PgDn/F1 F2 F3 F4 F5 F6 F7 F8 F9 F10 Move to previous item Move to next item Move to the item in the left hand Move to the item in the right hand Main Menu: Quit and not save changes into CMOS RAM Other pages: Exit current page and return to Main Menu Increase the numeric value or make changes Decrease the numeric value or make changes General help, only for Status Page Setup Menu and Option Page Setu
Getting help Press F1 to pop up a small help window that describes the appropriate keys to use and the possible selections for the highlighted item. To exit the Help Window press Esc or the F1 key again. In Case of Problems If, after making and saving system changes with Setup, you discover that your computer no longer is able to boot, the AwardBIOS supports an override to the CMOS settings that resets your system to its default configuration.
Main setup Menu Standard CMOS Options in the original PC AT-compatible BIOS. BIOS Features Award Software enhanced BIOS options. Chipset Features Options specific to your system chipset. Power Advanced Power Management (APM) Management options. PnP/PCI Plug and Play standard and PCI Local Bus Configuration configuration options. Integrated I/O subsystems that depend on the intePeripherals grated peripherals controller in your system. Supervisor/User Change, set, or disable a password.
Load BIOS Defaults Load Setup Defaults Save & Exit Setup Exit Without Save 48 BIOS defaults are factory settings for the most stable, minimal-performance system operations. Setup defaults are factory settings for optimal-performance system operations. Save settings in nonvolatile CMOS RAM and exit Setup. Abandon all changes and exit Setup.
Standard CMOS setup When you choose the STANDARD CMOS SETUP option from the INITIAL SETUP SCREEN menu, the screen below is displayed.
This standard setup menu allows users to configure system components such as the date, time, hard disk drive, floppy drive, display, and memory. Online help for each field can be accessed by pressing F1. Date and Time Configuration The BIOS determines the day of the week from the other date information. This field is for information only. Press the left or right arrow key to move to the desired field (date, month, year).
selecting the drive type are available: 1.Match the specifications of your installed IDE hard drive(s) with the preprogrammed values for drive types 1 through 45. 2.Select USER and enter values into each drive parameter field. 3.Use the IDE HDD AUTO DECTECTION function in Setup. Here is a brief explanation of drive specifications: •Type: The BIOS contains a table of pre-defined drive types.
- LBA (Logical Block Addressing): During drive accesses, the IDE controller transforms the data address described by sector, head, and cylinder number into a physical block address, significantly improving data transfer rates. For drives with greater than 1024 cylinders. Drive A Drive B Select the correct specifications for the diskette drive(s) installed in the computer. None 360K, 5.25 in 1.2M, 5.25 in 720K, 3.5 in 1.44M, 3.5 in 2.88M, 3.
Pannel: This selection item allows user to select LCD BIOS to match the LCD types.
Halt On During the power-on-self-test (POST), the computer stops if the BIOS detects a hardware error. You can tell the BIOS to ignore certain errors during POST and continue the boot-up process. These are the selections: • No errors: POST does not stop for any errors. • All errors If: the BIOS detects any non-fatal error, POST stops and prompts you to take corrective action.
•Extended Memory Above the 1-MB boundary. Early IBM personal computers could not use memory above 1 MB, but current PCs and their software can use extended memory. •Other Memory Between 640 KB and 1 MB; often called High memory. DOS may load terminate-and-stay-resident (TSR) programs, such as device drivers, in this area, to free as much conventional memory as possible for applications. Lines in your CONFIG.SYS file that start with LOADHIGH load programs into high memory.
BIOS features setup By choosing the BIOS FEATURES SETUP option from the INITIAL SETUP SCREEN menu, the screen below is displayed.
The displayed configuration is based on the manufacturer's SETUP DEFAULTS settings. Virus Warning When enabled, you receive a warning message if a program (specifically, a virus) attempts to write to the boot sector or the partition table of the hard disk drive. You should then run an antivirus program. Keep in mind that this feature protects only the boot sector, not the entire hard drive. NOTE: Many disk diagnostic programs that access the boot sector table can trigger the virus warning message.
Swap Floppy Drive This field is effective only in systems with two floppy drives. Selecting enabled assigns physical drive B to logical drive A, and physical drive A to logical drive B. Boot Up Floppy Seek When Enabled, the BIOS tests (seeks) floppy drives to determine whether they have 40 or 80 tracks. Only 360-KB floppy drives have 40 tracks; drives with 720 KB, 1.2 MB, and 1.44 MB capacity all have 80 tracks.
Shadowing copies firmware from ROM into system RAM, where the CPU can read it through the 16-bit or 32-bit DRAM bus. Firmware not shadowed must be read by the system through the 8bit X-bus. Shadowing improves the performance of the system BIOS and similar ROM firmware for expansion peripherals, but it also reduces the amount of high memory (640 KB to 1 MB) available for loading device drivers, etc. Enable shadowing into each section of memory separately.
CHIPSET features setup By choosing the CHIPSET FEATURES SETUP option from the INITIAL SETUP SCREEN menu, the screen below is displayed.
The displayed configuration is based on the manufacturer's SETUP DEFAULTS settings. This section allows you to configure the system based on the specific features of the installed chipset. This chipset manages bus speeds and access to system memory resources, such as SDRAM. It also coordinates communications between the conventional ISA bus and the PCI bus. It must be stated that these items should never need to be altered.
I/O Recovery Time The I/O recovery mechanism adds bus clock cycles between PCIoriginated I/O cycles to the ISA bus. This delay takes place because the PCI bus is so much faster than the ISA bus. Passive Release When Enabled, CPU to PCI bus accesses are allowed during passive release. Otherwise, the arbiter only accepts another PCI master access to local DRAM. Delayed Transaction The chipset has an embedded 32-bit posted write buffer to support delay transactions cycles.
Power management setup By choosing the POWER MANAGEMENT option from the INITIAL SETUP SCREEN menu, the screen below is displayed.
The displayed configuration is based on the manufacturer's SETUP DEFAULTS settings. Power Management This option allows you to select the type (or degree) of power saving for Doze, Standby, and Suspend modes. This table describes each power management mode: Max Saving User Define Min Saving 64 Maximum power savings. Only Available for SL CPUs. Inactivity period is 1 minute in each mode. Set each mode individually. Select time-out periods in the section for each mode, below. Minimum power savings.
PM Control by APM If Advanced Power Management (APM) is installed on your system, selecting Yes gives better power savings. MODEM Use IRQ Name the interrupt request (IRQ) line assigned to the modem (if any) on your system. Activity of the selected IRQ always awakens the system. Video Off Method Determines the manner in which the monitor is blanked. V/H SYNC+Blank System turns off vertical and horizontal synchronization ports and writes blanks to the video buffer.
Standby Mode After the selected period of system inactivity, the CPU clock stops, the hard drive enters an idle state, and the L2 cache enters a powersave mode. All other devices still operate at full speed. Suspend Mode After the selected period of system inactivity, the chipset enters a hardware suspend mode, stopping the CPU clock and possibly causing other system devices to enter power management modes.
PNP/PCI configuration setup By choosing the PNP/PCI CONFIGURATION SETUP option from the initial SETUP SCREEN menu, the screen below is displayed.
The displayed configuration is based on the manufacturer's SETUP DEFAULTS settings. PNP OS Installed Select Yes if the system operating environment is Plug-and-Play aware (e.g., Windows 95). Resources Controlled By The Plug and Play AwardBIOS can automatically configure all the boot and Plug and Play-compatible devices. If you select Auto, all the interrupt request (IRQ) and DMA assignment fields disappear, as the BIOS automatically assigns them.
DMA n Assigned to When resources are controlled manually, assign each system DMA channel as one of the following types, depending on the type of device using the interrupt: Legacy ISA Devices compliant with the original PC AT bus specification, requiring a specific DMA channel PCI/ISA PnP Devices compliant with the Plug and Play standard, whether designed for PCI or ISA bus architecture.
Load BIOS defaults LOAD BIOS DEFAULTS loads the default system values directly from ROM. The BIOS DEFAULTS provides the most stable settings, though they do not provide optimal performance.
Load setup defaults LOAD SETUP DEFAULTS, on the other hand, provides for maximum system performance. If the stored record created by the setup utility becomes corrupted (and therefore unusable), BIOS defaults will load automatically when you turn the power on.
Integrated peripherals setup By choosing the INTEGRATD PERIPHERALS option from the initial SETUP SCREEN menu, the screen below is displayed.
The displayed configuration is based on the manufacturer's SETUP DEFAULSTS settings. On-Chip Primary IDE The onboard chipset contains a PCI IDE interface with support for two IDE channels. Select Enabled to activate the primary and/or secondary IDE interface. Select Disabled to deactivate this interface, if you install a primary and/or secondary add-in IDE interface.
Onboard FDC Controller Select Enabled if your system has a floppy disk controller (FDC) installed on the system board and you wish to use it. If you install an add-in FDC or the system has no floppy drive, select Disabled in this field. Onboard UART Ports (1, 2) Select a logical COM port address for the first and second serial ports. RxD, TxD Active Consult your IR peripheral documentation to select the correct setting of the TxD and RxD signals. ECP Mode Use DMA Select a DMA channel for the port.
Supervisor/User password setting You can set either SUPERVISOR or USER PASSWORD, or both of them. The difference between the two is that the supervisor password allows unrestricted access to enter and change the options of the setup menus, while the user password only allows entry to the program, but not modify options.
When you select this function, a message appears at the center of the screen: ENTER PASSWORD: Type the password, up to eight characters, and press Enter. Typing a password clears any previously entered password from CMOS memory. Now the message changes: CONFIRM PASSWORD: Again, type the password and press Enter. To abort the process at any time, press Esc.
IDE HDD auto detection The IDE HDD AUTO DETECTION utility can automatically detect the IDE hard disk installed in your system. You can use it to selfdetect and/or correct the hard disk type configuration.
Save & exit setup If you select this option and press , the values entered in the setup utility will be recorded in the chipset's CMOS memory. The microprocessor will check this every time you turn your system on and compare this to what it finds as it checks the system. This record is required for the system to operate.
Exit without saving Seleting this option and press lets you exit the setup program without recording any new values or changing old ones.
80 PCM-5896 User Manual
CHAPTER 4 Flat Panel/CRT Controller Display Drivers and Utilities This chapter provides information about: • Driver types and installation Chapter 4 Driver Installation 81
Software drivers This chapter describes the operation and installation of the display drivers supplied on the Supporting CD-ROM that are shipped with your product. The onboard VGA adapter is based on the CHIPS VGA Flat Panel/CRT controller and is fully IBM VGA compatible. This controller offers a large set of extended functions and higher resolutions. If you intend to use your VGA adapter in standard VGA modes only, you do not need to install any of these drivers.
Necessary prerequisites The instructions in this manual assume that you understand elementary concepts of MS-DOS and the IBM Personal Computer. Before you attempt to install any driver from the Supporting CD-ROM, you should: • Know how to copy files from a CD-ROM to a directory on the hard disk • Understand the MS-DOS directory structure If you are uncertain about any of these concepts, please refer to the DOS or OS/2 user reference guides for more information before you proceed with the installation.
Windows® 95 These drivers are designed to work with MicrosoftÒ WindowsÒ . You just install these drivers through the WindowsÒ operating system. Driver installation 1. Install WindowsÒ 95 as you normally would for a VGA display. Click the Start button, go to Settings and click on Control Panel. Choose the Display icon and double click on the icon.
Click the setting buttom, then click the Advanced Properties icon into the Advanced Display properties windows, show as figure2: figure 2 Chapter 4 Driver Installation 85
click on Change Display Type. In the Change Display Type window, click on the Change button under Adapter Type into the select Device window show as figure 3: This will bring up the Select Device window.
2. Place the Supporting CD-ROM in your CD-ROM drive. figure 4 In the Select Device window, click on Have Disk, Select Browse, and find the Win95 driver "chips95.inf" in the Supporting CDROM: cd-rom: \CD ROM\model name\driver\vga driver \win95\chips95.inf and then click OK.
The name of the Chips And Tech "69000 PCI " driver will appear highlighted in the Models list boxfhow as figure.
3. Once the installation is complete, the Advanced display Properties window will reappear.
Click on close to close the window. Then the Display Properties window will reappear.
Click on Apply.
Windows® 3.1 These drivers are designed to work with Microsoft Windows Version 3.1. You should install these drivers through Windows. Driver installation 1. Install Windows as you normally would for a VGA display. Run Windows to make sure that it is working correctly. 2. Place the Supporting CD-ROM into your CD-ROM drive. In Windows Program Manager, choose File from the Options Menu. Then from the pull-down menu, choose Run. At the Command Line prompt, type.
OS/2 These drivers are designed to function with the OS/2 Version 4.0, 3.0 and 2.11 operating systems. To install this driver, do the following steps: 1. Open an OS/2 full screen or windowed session. 2. Place the Supporting CD-ROM into your CD-ROM drive. 3. At the OS/2 command prompt, type the following commands to copy the files to the OS/2 drive: cd-rom:\CD ROM\model name\driver\vga driver\os2\setup.
6. When the installation is complete, you will need to shut down and then restart the system for the changes to take effect. Make sure to remove the installation diskette before restarting the system.
Windows® NT 3.51 These drivers are designed to work with MicrosoftÒ WindowsÒ . Driver installation 1. Install WindowsÒ NT 3.51 as you normally would for a VGA display. Click the Star buttom, go to Settings and click on Control Panel icon. Then choose the Display and double click on the icon. In the Display Properties window, click the Setting buttom, then click the Display Type buttom into the Display Type windows, then click on Change buttom from the Adapter Type icon.
Windows® NT 4.0 Driver installation 1. Install WindowsÒ NT 4.0 as you normally would for a VGA display. Click the Star buttom, go to Settings and click on Control Panel icon. Then choose the Display and double click on the icon. In the Display Properties window, click the Setting buttom, then click the Display Type buttom into the Display Type windows, then click on Change buttom from the Adapter Type icon. And click on Have Disk buttom in the change display window. 2.
C H A P T E R 5 Ethernet Software Configuration This chapter describes how to configure the Etherent Card to match your application requirements.
Ethernet software configuration The onboard Ethernet interface supports all major network operating systems. I/O addresses and interrupts are easily configured via the Award BIOS Setup. To configure the medium type, to view the current configuration, or to run diagnostics, please refer to the following instruction: 1. Power the mainboard on. Ensure that the RSET8139.EXE file is located in the working drive. 2. At the prompt, type RSET8139.EXE and press .
CHAPTER Audio Setup 6 This PCM-5896 is equipped with an audio interface that records and playback CDquality audio. This chapter provides instructions for installing the software drivers on the included CDROM.
Introduction The PCM-5896 on board audio interface provides high-quality stereo sound and FM music synthesis (ESFM) by using the ES1373 audio controller from Creative Labs, Inc. The audio interface can record, compress, and play back voice, sound, and music with built-in mixer control. The PCM-5896 on board audio interface also supports the Plug and Play (PnP) standard and provides PnP configuration for the audio, FM, and MPU-401 logical devices.
Installing the Drivers and the Application After turning on the system, Windows 95 begins loading and starts detecting new hardware installed on the system. Tip: If you want to install the drivers manually, or your Windows 95 does not detect the new audio hardware, please perform the same installation procedure as described in NT 4.0 setion. 1. When Windows 95 detects the presence of the onboard audio chip, it begins to build the ES1373 driver database. The New Hardware Found dialog box displays. 2.
4. Windows 95 makes changes to the system settings and begins detecting the following new hardware components: · Creative Gameport Joystick · SB Audio PCI 64V Legacy Device · Sound Blaster AudioPCI 64V 5. Upon initial installation, the setup process begins setting up the software. 6. Windows 95 makes final changes to the system settings, and you will be prompted to re-boot the system.
Setting Up in NT4.0 Installing the Audio Drivers Follow these steps to install the audio drivers: Driver installation 1. Excute the installation wizard named "CTRUN.EXE" in the following directory: cd-rom : \CD ROM\model name\dirver\Audio\Ctrun "cd-rom" : the drive letter of your CD-ROM drive "model name" : the model number of your product 2. After the Sound Blaster Audio PCI 64V window shows up, click on the Install button. 3. Simply follow the instructions to finish the installation.
104 PCM-5896 User Manual
APPENDIX A Programming the Watchdog Timer The mainboard is equipped with a watchdog timer that resets the CPU or generates an interrupt if processing comes to a standstill for whatever reason. This feature ensures system reliability in industrial stand-alone and unmanned environments.
Programming the watchdog timer How to program the WATCHDOG TIMER 1. To set the time-out interval of watchdog timer: -- output the desired value to port 0x443. Since the data is of 1 byte, the maximum value will be 255. In our design 2 ~ 255 will denote 2 ~ 255 sec. outportb(0x443, 30); // set watchdog to 30 seconds 2. To set the time-out event: -- output data to prot 0x444, • 0: reset system • 1, 2, 3: IRQ 10, 15, 11 respectively • 4: NMI e.g. outportb(0x444, 0); // set time-out event to reset-system 3.
Demo program outportb(0x444, 0): // set time-out event to reset-system outportb(0x443x 10); // set time-out interval to 10 seconds customer_job(); // execute your job here, be sure your job will finished within 10 seconds outportb(0x443, 0); // refresh watchdog timer, otherwise the system will reset after time-out outputb(0x443, 20); // set time-out interval to 20 seconds another_job(); // another job finished in 20 seconds outportb(0x443, 0) // disable watchdog timer ... ...
108 PCM-5896 User Manual
APPENDIX B Installing PC/104 Modules This appendix provides instructions for installing PC/104 modules.
Installing PC/104 modules The PCM-5896's PC/104 connectors give you the flexibility to attach PC/104 expansion modules. These modules perform the functions of traditional plug-in expansion cards, but save space and valuable slots.
PC/104 Mounting Support Female Male Main board PC/104 Module PC/104 Module Mounting Diagram 0.300 3.250 3.775 3.575 3.575 0.200 0.200 0 0 0.200 3.350 3.
112 PCM-5896 User Manual
APPENDIX C Optional Extras Appendix C Optional Extras 113
PCM-10489-4 Wiring Kit The cable kit PCM-10489-4 includes the following cables: Par t No . Cab le d es c r ip t io n 1701440350 2.5" and 1.8" IDE 44-pin, 2 mm, female IDC (350 mm) 1701440500 3.5" IDE (40P) 40-pin, 2.54 mm, female IDC (500 mm) 1701340700 Dual floppy, 3.5" and 5.
Optional USB Cable Optional USB Cable part no.
116 PCM-5896 User Manual