Updated: 11 December 1998 |
OpenVMS I/O User's Reference Manual
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The LAN drivers can perform logical, virtual, and physical I/O operations. The basic functions are read, write, set mode, set characteristics, sense mode, and sense characteristics. Table 9-11 lists these functions and their codes. The following sections describe these functions in greater detail.
Function Code | Arguments | Type1 | Function Modifiers |
Function |
---|---|---|---|---|
IO$_READLBLK 3 | P1,P2,[P5] | L | IO$M_NOW | Read logical block. |
IO$_READVBLK 3 | P1,P2,[P5] | V | IO$M_NOW | Read virtual block. |
IO$_READPBLK 3 | P1,P2,[P5] | P | IO$M_NOW | Read physical block. |
IO$_WRITELBLK 4 | P1,P2,[P4],P5 | L | IO$M_RESPONSE | Write logical block. |
IO$_WRITEVBLK 4 | P1,P2,[P4],P5 | V | IO$M_RESPONSE | Write virtual block. |
IO$_WRITEPBLK 4 | P1,P2,[P4],P5 | P | IO$M_RESPONSE | Write physical block. |
IO$_SETMODE | P1,[P2],P3 2 | L |
IO$M_CTRL
IO$M_STARTUP IO$M_SHUTDOWN IO$M_ATTNAST IO$M_SET_MAC IO$M_UPDATE_MAP IO$M_ROUTE |
Set controller characteristics and controller state for subsequent operations. |
IO$_SETCHAR | P1,[P2],P3 2 | P |
IO$M_CTRL
IO$M_STARTUP IO$M_SHUTDOWN IO$M_ATTNAST IO$M_SET_MAC IO$M_UPDATE_MAP IO$M_ROUTE |
Set controller characteristics and controller state for subsequent operations. |
IO$_SENSEMODE | [P1],[P2] | L |
IO$M_CTRL
IO$M_SENSE_MAC IO$M_SHOW_MAP IO$M_SHOW_ROUTE |
Sense controller characteristics and return them in specified buffers. |
IO$_SENSECHAR | [P1],[P2] | P |
IO$M_CTRL
IO$M_SENSE_MAC IO$M_SHOW_MAP IO$M_SHOW_ROUTE |
Sense controller characteristics and return them in specified buffers.
|
Although the LAN device drivers do not differentiate among logical,
virtual, and physical I/O functions (all are treated identically), you
must have the required privilege to issue the request. (Logical I/O
functions do not require I/O privilege.)
9.16.1 Read
Read functions directly transfer data from a packet received from another port on the Ethernet into the virtual memory address space of the user process. The operating system provides the following function codes:
Received messages are buffered in system memory and then copied to the user's buffer when a read operation is performed.
The read functions take the following device- or function-dependent arguments:
Figure 9-21 Read Function P5 Buffer
The P1 and P2 arguments must always be specified; the P5 argument is optional. However, if P5 is not specified, you will be unable to determine the source of the received message.
If the size of the user data in a receive message is larger than the value of the NMA$C_PCLI_BUS parameter, the message is not given to the user, even if there is sufficient space in the user's receive buffer.
If the size of the user data in a receive message is larger than the size specified in P2 (and less than or equal to the value of the NMA$C_PCLI_BUS parameter), the P1 buffer is filled and SS$_DATAOVERUN is returned in the I/O status block.
Table 9-12 lists the maximum user data sizes that can be received for CSMA/CD, FDDI, and Token Ring protocols.
Packet Format | CSMA/CD | FDDI | ++Token Ring |
---|---|---|---|
Ethernet format without padding | 1500 | 4470 | ++4418 |
Ethernet format with padding | 1498 | 4468 | ++4416 |
802 format with 1-byte CTL field | 1497 | 4475 | ++4423 |
802 format with 2-byte CTL field | 1496 | 4474 | ++4422 |
802E format | 1492 | 4470 | ++4418 |
On Alpha systems, Table 9-13 lists the maximum user data sizes that can be received for LAN emulation over ATM protocol.
Packet Format | ATM ELAN size: | 1516 | 4544 | 9234 |
---|---|---|---|---|
Ethernet format without padding | 1500 | 4528 | 9218 | |
Ethernet format with padding | 1498 | 4526 | 9216 | |
802 format with 1-byte CTL field | 1497 | 4525 | 9215 | |
802 format with 2-byte CTL field | 1496 | 4524 | 9214 | |
802E format | 1492 | 4520 | 9210 |
For 802 format packets, the P5 buffer always contains the DSAP and SSAP in the bytes at offset 12 and 13. The next one or two bytes (offsets 14 and 15) following the SSAP contain the control field value. For Class I service, the control field value is always 1 byte in length and will always be placed in the byte at offset 14 of this buffer. For user-supplied service, you have to determine the length of the control field value according to the IEEE 802.2 Standard.
On Alpha systems with Token Ring, if received access control (RAC) is on, the first byte of the P5 buffer contains the frame control (FC) field.
For FDDI, if RAC is on, the first byte of the P5 buffer contains the FC field.
The read functions can take the following function modifier:
Write functions provide for the direct transfer of data from the virtual memory address space of the user process to the communications medium. The operating system provides the following function codes:
Transmitted messages are copied from the buffer of the requesting process to a system buffer for transmission.
The write function takes the following device- or function-dependent arguments:
Figure 9-22 Write Function P5 Buffer
Table 9-14 lists the maximum user data sizes that can be specified by P2 and received for CSMA/CD, FDDI, and Token Ring protocols.
Packet Format | CSMA/CD | FDDI | ++Token Ring |
---|---|---|---|
Ethernet format without padding | 1500 | 4470 | ++4418 |
Ethernet format with padding | 1498 | 4468 | ++4416 |
802 format with 1-byte CTL field | 1497 | 4475 | ++4423 |
802 format with 2-byte CTL field | 1496 | 4474 | ++4422 |
802E format | 1492 | 4470 | ++4418 |
On Alpha systems, Table 9-15 lists the maximum user data sizes that can be specified by P2 and received for LAN emulation over ATM protocol.
Packet Format | ATM ELAN size: | 1516 | 4544 | 9234 |
---|---|---|---|---|
Ethernet format without padding | 1500 | 4528 | 9218 | |
Ethernet format with padding | 1498 | 4526 | 9216 | |
802 format with 1-byte CTL field | 1497 | 4525 | 9215 | |
802 format with 2-byte CTL field | 1496 | 4524 | 9214 | |
802E format | 1492 | 4520 | 9210 |
If P2 specifies a message size larger than that allowed, the driver returns the status SS$_IVBUFLEN in the I/O status block.
If the P4 buffer is specified, it must be at least 3 bytes long. The first byte is always the DSAP; the next 2 bytes are used to determine the CTL field value. The DSAP value cannot be the SNAP SAP.
The CTL field value is either a 1-byte or 2-byte value. If the two least significant bits of the low-order byte of the CTL field contain the bit values 11, just the low-order byte of the CTL field is used as the CTL field value. Otherwise, both bytes of the CTL field are used as the CTL field value.
If the driver uses only the low-order byte of the CTL field, you still must pass at least a 3-byte buffer. In this case, the driver uses the low-order byte of the CTL field and ignores the high-order byte.
If Class I service is enabled, only 1-byte CTL field values can be passed. If user-supplied service is enabled, then both 1- and 2-byte CTL field values are valid. If Class I service is enabled, the CTL field value must be one of the three command values: UI, XID, or TEST.
Regarding 802 ports, you can receive packets for the SAP enabled with the IO$_SETMODE or IO$_SETCHAR QIOs and can transmit packets destined for a different SAP. This is similar to an Ethernet port receiving packets for one protocol type and transmitting packets with a different protocol type (which is not possible with the current Ethernet $QIO interface). It is expected that most 802 format applications will want to process only receive packets from a source SAP that matches the SAP enabled on their port. To do this, the read function (see Section 9.16.1) has been enhanced to return the source SAP to you. To verify that the source SAP of an incoming packet matches the SAP enabled on the port, you need only match the source SAP returned by the read function with the SAP enabled on the port.
The write functions can take the following function modifier:
The operating system provides the following two function codes:
Other than the privilege check, these two function codes are treated the same by the LAN drivers. This section refers to the IO$_SETMODE function code only, even though applications can use either function code.
The set mode function code is used to perform many different functions. These different functions are distinguished by the modifiers set with the function code. The LAN drivers support the following set mode requests:
On Alpha systems, the LAN drivers also support the following set mode requests for Token Ring:
The following sections describe these functions in detail.
9.16.3.1 Set Controller Mode
Once a port is created using the $ASSIGN system service, you can set the port attributes and start the port using the requests listed in the previous section. Note that in most cases only IO$_SETMODE!IO$M_CTRL!IO$M_STARTUP is issued because it sets the port attributes and starts the port with one request. IO$_SETMODE!IO$M_CTRL is most often used to modify port attributes after the port has been started.
If the function modifier IO$M_STARTUP is specified, the LAN port is started. If IO$M_STARTUP is not specified, the specified characteristics are modified.
This function takes the following device- or function-dependent argument:
The P2 buffer consists of a series of 6-byte or counted string entries. The first word of each entry contains the parameter identifier (ID) of an attribute, followed by either a longword that contains one of the (binary) values that can be associated with the parameter ID or a counted string. Counted strings consist of a word that contains the size of the character string followed by the character string. Figure 9-23 shows the format for this buffer.
Figure 9-23 P2 Extended Characteristics Buffer
Table 9-16 is an alphabetic listing of the parameter IDs and values that can be specified in the P2 buffer. These parameter IDs are applicable to all LAN controllers, except where otherwise noted. The $NMADEF macro defines these values. The $NMADEF macro is included in the macro library SYS$LIBRARY:LIB.MLB. (Table 9-17 lists the parameters that can be used with each of the packet formats, and indicates which are required, which are optional, and which generate the SS$_BADPARAM error.)
If the status SS$_BADPARAM is returned in the first word of the I/O status block, the second longword contains the parameter ID of the parameter in error.
Parameter ID | Meaning |
---|---|
NMA$C_PCLI_ACC |
+Protocol access mode. This optional parameter determines the access
mode for the protocol type. NMA$C_PCLI_ACC is valid only for ports
using Ethernet packet format.
++NMA$C_PCLI_ACC is valid for ports using Ethernet and 802E. One of the following values can be specified:
+Section 9.14.1.3 provides a description of protocol type sharing. ++Section 9.14.3.1 provides a description of protocol type PID sharing. NMA$C_PCLI_ACC is passed as a longword value. |
NMA$C_PCLI_BFN |
Number of receive buffers to
preallocate (default = 1). NMA$C_PCLI_BFN can have a maximum value of
255. This optional parameter is specified on a per-port basis.
NMA$C_PCLI_BFN is passed as a longword value. NMA$C_PCLI_BFN represents the number of receive messages the LAN driver will hold for a port when the port has no read QIOs posted to the driver. |
NMA$C_PCLI_BUS |
Maximum allowable port receive data size, that is, message length
(default = 512 bytes). NMA$C_PCLI_BUS can have a maximum value of 9234.
This optional parameter is specified on a per-port basis. It is passed as a longword value. Any message received for this port that is larger than this parameter value is discarded. |
NMA$C_PCLI_CCA |
Can change address. This optional parameter enables applications to
start before DECnet starts. DECnet may attempt to set the physical
address of the controller when it starts. CSMA/CD devices support only
one physical address, and so all applications that are using the same
device must also use the same physical address. If applications that do
not use the DECnet address start before DECnet, DECnet is not able to
start on that controller unless the other applications that have
already started have all specified NMA$C_PCLI_CCA to be ON.
This parameter is not applicable to FDDI because FDDI devices can run with more than one physical address. However, no error is returned if this parameter is supplied for FDDI devices. The application receives no indication whatsoever that the physical address has changed. This parameter is passed as a longword. One of the following values can be specified:
|
NMA$C_PCLI_CON 1 |
Controller mode. This optional parameter determines whether transmit
packets are to be looped back at the controller. One of the following
values can be specified:
The only messages looped back are those acceptable to the controller as receive messages, that is, those messages that possess at least one of the following characteristics:
NMA$C_PCLI_CON affects all ports on a single controller. It is passed as a longword value. For the DELUA, DEBNA, DEBNI, DEQTA, PMAD, DEMNA, and DESVA, the following list shows the maximum amount of user data that can be looped:
When the DEUNA is in loopback mode, the driver always enables echo mode (NMA$C_PCLI_EKO is in the ON state). Not all devices support loopback mode. If normal mode is not specified, the request is completed with SS$_BADPARAM status. |
NMA$C_PCLI_CRC 1 |
Cyclic redundancy check (CRC) generation state for transmitted messages
(optional). One of the following values can be specified:
If NMA$C_PCLI_CRC is turned off, all users of the controller must supply the 4-byte CRC value for all messages transmitted. The CRC is passed at the end of the P1 transmit buffer; the additional 4 bytes are included in the size of the P1 buffer. The CRC value is not checked for correctness. For the DEQNA, the DELQA, and the Token Ring devices, the NMA$C_PCLI_CRC parameter cannot be turned off. Not all devices support user-supplied CRC. If a controller generated CRC is specified, the request is completed with SS$_BADPARAM status. |
NMA$C_PCLI_DES |
Shared protocol destination address. Passed as a counted string that
consists of a modifier word (NMA$C_LINMC_SET or NMA$C_LINMC_CLR)
followed by a 6-byte (48-bit) physical destination address. The size of
the counted string must always be 8. NMA$C_PCLI_DES only has meaning
when protocol access (NMA$C_PCLI_ACC) is defined as
shared-with-destination mode (NMA$C_ACC_LIM). The destination address
specified must be a physical address---not a multicast address---and it
must be unique among all ports sharing the same protocol.
NMA$C_PCLI_DES is required when the access mode is defined as
"shared-with-destination."
+NMA$C_PCLI_DES should not be specified on a port where the 802 or 802E packet format is selected (NMA$C_PCLI_FMT is set to NMA$C_LINFM_802 or NMA$C_LINFM_802E). For 802 packet format, the concept of shared protocol type is handled by using group SAPs. ++NMA$C_PCLI_DES should not be specified on a port where the 802 packet format is selected (NMA$C_PCLI_FMT is set to NMA$C_LINFM_802). For 802 packet format, the concept of shared protocol type is handled by using group SAPs. +Section 9.14.1.3 provides a description of protocol type sharing. ++Section 9.14.3.1 provides a description of protocol type PID sharing. |
NMA$C_PCLI_EKO 1 |
Echo mode. Applicable only to the DEUNA device driver.
If echo mode is on, transmitted messages are returned to the sender. This optional parameter controls the condition of the half-duplex bit in the DEUNA mode register. One of the following values can be specified:
If NMA$C_STATE_ON is specified, the only transmitted messages echoed are those acceptable to the DEUNA as receive messages, that is, those messages that have at least one of the following characteristics:
If the DEUNA is placed in loopback mode (NMA$C_LINCN_LOO is specified in the NMA$C_PCLI_CON parameter), the driver enables echo mode. NMA$C_PCLI_EKO affects all ports on a single controller. It is passed as a longword value. |
NMA$C_PCLI_FMT |
Packet format. This optional parameter specifies the packet format as
either Ethernet, IEEE 802, or 802 extended. This characteristic is
passed as a longword value and affects single ports on a single
controller. One of the following values can be specified:
NMA$C_PCLI_PTY, NMA$C_PCLI_ACC, and NMA$C_PCLI_DES should only be specified on those ports where the Ethernet packet format (NMA$C_LINFM_ETH) is selected. NMA$C_PCLI_SRV, NMA$C_PCLI_SAP, and NMA$C_PCLI_GSP should only be specified on those ports where the 802 packet format (NMA$C_LINFM_802) is selected. NMA$C_PCLI_PID should only be specified on those ports where the 802 extended packet format (NMA$C_LINFM_802E) is selected. |
NMA$C_PCLI_GSP |
Group SAP. This is an optional parameter if the 802 packet format is
selected (NMA$C_PCLI_FMT is set to NMA$C_LINFM_802). If the Ethernet or
802 extended packet format is selected, NMA$C_PCLI_GSP cannot be
specified. Group SAPs can be shared among multiple ports on the same
controller. If the 802 packet format is selected, NMA$C_PCLI_GSP
defines up to four 802 group SAPs that are to be enabled for matching
incoming packets to complete read operations on this port. By default,
no group SAPs are enabled.
NMA$C_PCLI_GSP is passed as a longword value and is read as four 8-bit unsigned integers. Each integer must be either a group SAP or zero. To enable a single group SAP on a port, you need only specify the group SAP value to be enabled in one of the four integers and place a value of zero in the three remaining integers. To disable group SAPs on the port, you need only place a value of zero in all four integers and issue the QIO. If this characteristic is correctly specified, any group SAPs that were previously enabled on the port are now replaced by the SAPs specified by the current request. |
NMA$C_PCLI_ILP 1 |
Internal loopback mode. This optional parameter places the device in
internal loopback mode (not for the DEUNA, DEQNA, or DELQA devices).
One of the following values can be specified:
If NMA$C_STATE_ON is specified, the NMA$C_PCLI_CON parameter must be in loopback (NMA$C_LINCN_LOO) mode. When the controller is in loopback mode (generally for testing), it can loop packets in external loopback or internal loopback. This parameter places the controller in one of these loopback modes. NMA$C_PCLI_ILP is passed as a longword value and affects all ports on the controller. Not all devices support loopback mode. If NMA$C_STATE_OFF is not specified, the request is completed with SS$_BADPARAM status. |
NMA$C_PCLI_MCA |
Multicast address (optional). Passed as a counted string
that consists of a modifier word followed by a list of 6-byte (48-bit)
multicast addresses. The value specified in the modifier word
determines whether the addresses are set or cleared. If NMA$C_LINMC_CAL
is specified, all multicast addresses in the list are ignored.
The following mode values can be specified in the low byte of the modifier word:
Note that each LAN controller supports a limited number of multicast addresses. If this limit is exceeded, the LAN driver enables the "accept all multicast" feature on the controller and all multicast packets on the LAN must be filtered by the LAN driver. This may cause a minor performance loss. NMA$C_PCLI_MCA is specified on a per-port basis. |
NMA$C_PCLI_MLT |
Multicast address state.
This optional parameter instructs the controller hardware whether to
accept all multicast addresses for this port. One of the following
values can be specified:
NMA$C_PCLI_MLT can be enabled on more than one port. It only affects those ports on which it is enabled. NMA$C_PCLI_MLT allows you to receive all multicast address packets that also match the port's protocol type, SAP, or protocol identifier. Generally, you enable only your individual set of multicast addresses using the NMA$C_PCLI_MCA parameter, and leave the NMA$C_PCLI_MLT parameter in the off state. There could be a minor performance loss when the NMA$C_PCLI_MLT parameter is in the ON state because the LAN driver may have to process all multicast addresses on the medium; the number of multicast addresses on the line determines the amount of processing required. The NMA$C_PCLI_MLT parameter is passed as a longword value. |
NMA$C_PCLI_PAD |
Use message size field on transmit and receive messages (optional). One
of the following values can be specified:
On CSMA/CD, if padding is enabled on Ethernet format packets, the driver adds a 2-byte count field to the transmitted data. This field allows short packets (packets fewer than 46 bytes long) to be received with the proper length returned by the driver. The minimum Ethernet packet contains 46 bytes of user data. When fewer than 46 bytes are sent, the packet is padded and the receiver always receives 46 bytes of data. When padding is enabled, the maximum message size for transmit or receive operations is 1498 bytes and the minimum is zero bytes. See Section 9.14.1.2 for additional information. NMA$C_PCLI_PAD should be specified only on a port where the Ethernet packet format is selected (NMA$C_PCLI_FMT is set to NMA$C_LINFM_ETH). For FDDI, the same 2-byte count field is added. However, because FDDI packets can be as short as 22 bytes, FDDI transmit requests are never padded. |
NMA$C_PCLI_PHA 1 |
Physical address (optional). It is passed as a counted string that
consists of a modifier word followed by the 48-bit physical address. If
the request is to clear the physical address or to set the physical
address to the default address, the physical address (if present) is
not read.
One of the following mode values can be specified in the low byte of the modifier word:
If not specified for CSMA/CD, the default is the current address set by a previous set mode function on this controller, or the hardware address if no address was defined by a previous set mode function. If not specified for FDDI, the default is the hardware address. The physical address must be passed as a 6-byte (48-bit) quantity. The first byte is the least significant byte. A return value of -1 on a sense mode request implies that a physical address is not defined. The NMA$C_PCLI_PHA parameter affects all ports on a single controller. If the address specified is already being used on the extended LAN, SS$_IVADDR is returned. |
NMA$C_PCLI_PID |
Protocol identifier. This parameter is required for, and valid only on,
ports that use 802 extended format packets. NMA$C_PCLI_PID is passed as
a counted 5-byte string, which is the unique protocol identifier
required for each 802 extended format user.
All protocol identifiers specified on a controller must be unique except when the PID is being shared. NMA$C_PCLI_PID may only be specified on a port when the 802 extended packet format is selected; that is, NMA$C_PCLI_FMT is set to NMA$C_LINFM_802E. |
NMA$C_PCLI_PRM |
Promiscuous mode (optional). One of the following values can be
specified:
Only one port on each controller can be active with promiscuous mode enabled. Enabling promiscuous mode requires PHY_IO privilege. The NMA$C_PCLI_PRM parameter is passed as a longword value. Compaq does not recommend promiscuous mode for normal usage. Some Token Ring devices do not support real promiscuous access to the ring. See Section 9.18.1 for additional information. |
NMA$C_PCLI_PTY |
Protocol type. This value is read as a 16-bit
unsigned integer and must be unique on the controller except when the
protocol type is being shared. For Ethernet format ports, this is a
required parameter.
Valid protocol types are in the range 05-DD through FF-FF. NMA$C_PCLI_PTY may only be specified on a port where the Ethernet packet format is selected (NMA$C_PCLI_FMT is set to NMA$C_LINFM_ETH). NMA$C_PCLI_PTY is passed as a longword value; however, only the low-order word is used. |
++NMA$C_PCLI_RAC |
Receive access control (Token Ring only). This optional parameter
specifies whether the application receives a copy of the access control
(AC) field for each Token Ring frame received. It is passed as a
longword value. It must be passed with one of the following values:
The AC is returned in the P5 buffer. The P5 buffer size for Token Ring should always be a minimum of 54 bytes. This is due to the variable size of the Token Ring header. |
NMA$C_PCLI_RES |
Restart. This optional parameter allows the user to enable the
automatic port restart feature of the LAN
drivers. One of the following values can be specified:
The LAN drivers shut down all users of a controller if there is a fatal error on the controller or if the LAN driver determines that the controller has stopped functioning. All outstanding I/O operations on the LAN driver are completed with either an SS$_ABORT or SS$_TIMEOUT status. All ports that have the NMA$C_PCLI_RES parameter enabled (set to NMA$C_LINRES_ENA) have the port automatically restarted by the LAN driver approximately one second after it has been shut down due to a fatal error. If the user issues read or write QIOs to the port during the time the port is shut down, the driver completes the QIOs with an SS$_OPINCOMPL status. All ports that have the automatic restart feature disabled must be restarted by the application program when the port is shut down by the LAN driver. The application program should wait approximately 2 seconds to allow the LAN driver to stabilize. Once the LAN driver shuts down a port, it attempts a maximum of 30 consecutive automatic restarts. If there are 30 consecutive failures to restart the port, the port remains shut down. Note that it is unusual to have fatal errors on a LAN controller or to have a LAN driver detect that a LAN controller has stopped functioning. Having the ability to automatically restart a user's port makes the program easier to design because the program does not have to take into account the possibility of the LAN driver shutting down the port. |
NMA$C_PCLI_RFC |
Receive frame control (FDDI only). This optional parameter specifies
whether the application receives a copy of the Frame Control (FC) field
for each FDDI frame received. It is passed as a longword value.
However, only the low-order byte is used. It must be passed with one of
the following values:
For $QIO Read operations, the FC is passed to the application in the P5 buffer. The following are the sizes required for the P5 buffer for various packet formats and settings of NMA$C_PCLI_RFC:
Receiving the FC requires one additional byte of space in the P5 buffer. The FC is the first byte in the P5 buffer, immediately preceding the 6-byte destination address. The size of the P5 buffer required does not change from the CSMA/CD sizes if NMA$C_PCLI_RFC is set to NMA$C_STATE_OFF. |
NMA$C_PCLI_SAP |
802 format SAP. This parameter is required if the 802 packet format is
selected (NMA$C_PCLI_FMT is set to NMA$C_LINFM_802).
NMA$C_PCLI_SAP defines an 802 SAP and is read as an 8-bit unsigned
integer. The least significant bit of the SAP must be zero and the SAP
cannot be the null SAP (all 8 bits equal zero) or the SNAP SAP.
NMA$C_PCLI_SAP is passed as a longword value. However, only the
low-order byte is used.
The SAP specified by NMA$C_PCLI_SAP is the SAP used to match incoming packets to complete read requests. It is used as the source SAP (SSAP) in all transmissions (write QIOs). Because it is illegal to transmit using a group SAP as the source SAP, the SAP specified by this NMA$C_PCLI_SAP cannot be a group SAP. NMA$C_PCLI_GSP describes how to set up group SAPs on a port. All individual SAPs specified on a controller must be unique on that controller. Therefore, the SAP specified using the NMA$C_PCLI_SAP parameter is checked for uniqueness on the controller. |
++NMA$C_PCLI_SRMODE |
Sets the source routing (SR) mode for the $QIO user (Token Ring only).
This optional parameter allows the application to perform the source
routing discovery. It must be passed with one of the following values:
The $QIOs exist to further manipulate the source routing cache. Compaq recommends that applications use the NMA$C_SR_TRANSPARENT mode. |
NMA$C_PCLI_SRV |
Port service. This optional parameter specifies the service supplied by
the driver for the port. It can only be specified if the 802 packet
format is selected (NMA$C_PCLI_FMT is set to NMA$C_LINFM_802). This
characteristic is passed as a longword value. One of the following
values can be specified:
See Section 9.14.2.1 for a description of Class I service and Section 9.14.2.2 for a description of user-supplied service. |
++NMC$C_PCLI_XAC | Transmit access control (Token Ring only). This is an optional parameter that enables applications to control the setting of the priority bits in the access control (AC) for frames being transmitted in a $QIO write operation. When set to the wamted value, all subsequent transmits use this AC value. |
NMA$C_PCLI_XFC |
Transmit frame control (FDDI only). NMA$C_PCLI_XFC is an optional
parameter that enables applications to control the setting of the
priority bits in the FC for frames being transmitted in a $QIO write
operation. NMA$C_PCLI_XFC is passed as a longword parameter that has
many valid settings. If specified with a value of zero, the application
supplies an FC value on each $QIO write operation. The FC value to be
used in this case is supplied in the P5 buffer for the $QIO write
operation. If the parameter is specified with a value other than zero,
that value is inserted into the FC field of every transmit by the FDDI
drivers. No FC is present in the P5 buffer for the $QIO write in this
case. If this parameter is not specified, the default setting (zero) of
the priority bits is used.
Regardless of how the FC is supplied, the value specified must be valid. The allowable values for FC are between 50 hexadecimal and 57 hexadecimal. If NMA$C_PCLI_XFC is specified with a nonzero value outside the valid range, the application receives a SS$_BADPARAM error. The priority bits are the three low-order bits. |
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