This is the ALPHA version of the ltpc driver. In order to use it, you will need at least version 1.3.3 of the netatalk package, and the Apple or Farallon Localtalk PC card. There are a number of different Localtalk cards for the PC; this driver applies only to the one with the 65c02 processor chip on it. To include it in the kernel, select the CONFIG_LTPC switch in the configuration dialog; at this time (kernel 2.1.23) compiling it as a module will not work. Before starting up the netatalk demons (perhaps in rc.local), you need to add a line such as: /sbin/ifconfig ltalk0 127.0.0.42 The driver will autoprobe, and you should see a message like: "LocalTalk card found at 240, IR9, DMA1." at bootup. The appropriate netatalk configuration depends on whether you are attached to a network that includes appletalk routers or not. If, like me, you are simply connecting to your home Macintoshes and printers, you need to set up netatalk to "seed". The way I do this is to have the lines dummy -seed -phase 2 -net 2000 -addr 2000.26 -zone "1033" ltalk0 -seed -phase 1 -net 1033 -addr 1033.27 -zone "1033" in my atalkd.conf. What is going on here is that I need to fool netatalk into thinking that there are two appletalk interfaces present -- otherwise it refuses to seed. This is a hack, and a more permanent solution would be to alter the netatalk code. Note that the dummy driver needs to accept multicasts also -- earlier versions of dummy.c may need to be patched. If you are attached to an extended appletalk network, with routers on it, then you don't need to fool around with this -- the appropriate line in atalkd.conf is ltalk0 -phase 1 -------------------------------------- Card Configuration: The interrupts and so forth are configured via the dipswitch on the board. Set the switches so as not to conflict with other hardware. Interrupts -- set at most one. If none are set, the driver uses polled mode. Because the card was developed in the XT era, the original documentation refers to IRQ2. Since you'll be running this on an AT (or later) class machine, that really means IRQ9. SW1 IRQ 4 SW2 IRQ 3 SW3 IRQ 9 (2 in original card documentation only applies to XT) DMA -- choose DMA 1 or 3, and set both corresponding switches. SW4 DMA 3 SW5 DMA 1 SW6 DMA 3 SW7 DMA 1 I/O address -- choose one. SW8 220 / 240 -------------------------------------- IP: Many people are interested in this driver in order to use IP when Localtalk, but no Ethernet, is available. While the code to do this is not strictly speaking part of this driver, an experimental version is available which seems to work under kernel 2.0.xx. It is not yet functional in the 2.1.xx kernels. -------------------------------------- BUGS: 2.0.xx: 2.1.xx: The module support doesn't work yet. ______________________________________ THANKS: Thanks to Alan Cox for helpful discussions early on in this work, and to Denis Hainsworth for doing the bleeding-edge testing. -- Bradford Johnson