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OpenBSD/i386 2.2 runs on ISA (AT-Bus), EISA, PCI, and VL-bus systems
with 386-family processors, with or without math coprocessors.  It
does NOT support MCA systems, such as some IBM PS/2 systems.  The
minimal configuration is said to require 4M of RAM and 50M of disk space,
though we do not know of anyone running with a system quite this minimal today.
To install the entire system requires much more disk space, and to run X
or compile the system, more RAM is recommended.  (4M of RAM will
actually allow you to run X and/or compile, but it won't be speedy.
Note that until you have around 16M of RAM, getting more RAM is more
important than getting a faster CPU.)

Supported devices include:
	Floppy controllers.
	MFM, ESDI, IDE, and RLL hard disk controllers.
	SCSI host adapters:
		Adaptec AHA-154xA, -B, -C, and -CF 
		Adaptec AHA-174x
		Adaptec AIC-6260 and AIC-6360 based boards, including
			the Adaptec AHA-152x and the SoundBlaster SCSI
			host adapter.  (Note that you cannot boot from
			these boards if they do not have a boot ROM;
			only the AHA-152x and motherboards using this chip
			are likely to be bootable, consequently.)
		Adaptec AHA-294x[W] cards and some onboard PCI designs using
			the AIC7870 chip.  The 2940AU is known not to perform
			very well with this driver.
		Adaptec AHA-394x[W] cards; two AIC7870 chips with an on-board
			PCI to PCI bridge.
		Adaptec AIC-7770-based SCSI host adapters (including the
			Adaptec AHA-274x, AHA-284x families).
		WD-7000 SCSI host adapters.
		Buslogic 54x (Adaptec AHA-154x clones; driver on kcadp floppy)
		BusLogic 445, 74x, 9xx  (But not the new "FlashPoint" series
			of BusLogic SCSI adapters)
		Symbios Logic (NCR) 53C8xx-based PCI SCSI host adapters
		Ultrastor 14f, 34f, and (possibly) 24f
		Seagate/Future Domain ISA SCSI adapter cards, including
			ST01/02
			Future Domain TMC-885
			Future Domain TMC-950
	MDA, CGA, VGA, SVGA, and HGC Display Adapters.  (Note that not
		all of the display adapters OpenBSD/i386 can work with
		are supported by X.  See the XFree86 FAQ for more
		information.)
	Serial ports:
		8250/16450-based ports
		16550-based ports
		AST-style 4-port serial boards [*]
		BOCA 8-port serial cards [*] 
		Cyclades Cyclom-{4, 8, 16}Y serial boards [*]
		IBM PC-RT 4-port serial boards [*]
	Parallel ports.
	Ethernet adapters:
		AMD LANCE and PCnet-based ISA Ethernet adapters [*], including:
			Novell NE1500T
			Novell NE2100
			Kingston 21xx
		AMD PCnet-based PCI Ethernet adapters, including:
			BOCALANcard/PCI
		AT&T StarLAN 10, EN100, and StarLAN Fiber
		3COM 3c501
		3COM 3c503
		3COM 3c505 [*]
		3COM 3c507
		3COM 3c509, 3c579, 3c589, 3c59x and 3c9xx
		Digital DC21x4x-based PCI Ethernet adapters, including:
			SMC EtherPower 10, 10/100 (PCI only!)
			Znyx ZX34X
			Cogent EM100
			Digital DE450
			Digital DE500
		BICC Isolan [* and not recently tested]
		Intel EtherExpress 16
		SMC/WD 8003, 8013, and the SMC "Elite16" ISA boards
		SMC/WD 8216 (the SMC "Elite16 Ultra" ISA boards)  [X SEE BELOW]
		Novell NE1000, NE2000
		Digital DEFPA PCI FDDI adapters
		Intel EtherExpress 100 Fast Ethernet adapters.
	Tape drives:
		Most SCSI tape drives
		QIC-02 and QIC-36 format (Archive- and Wangtek-
			compatible) tape drives [*] [+]
	CD-ROM drives:
		Mitsumi CD-ROM drives [*] [+]
			[Note: The Mitsumi driver device probe is known 
			to cause trouble with several devices!]
		Most SCSI CD-ROM drives
		Most ATAPI CD-ROM drives
			[Note: With single ATAPI device IDE busses, the
			ATAPI device should be set to SLAVE.]
	Mice:
		"Logitech"-style bus mice [*] [+]
		"Microsoft"-style bus mice [*] [+]
		"PS/2"-style mice [*] [+]
		Serial mice (uses serial port driver)
	Sound Cards:
		SoundBlaster [*] [+]
		Gravis Ulrasound and Ultrasound Max [*] [+]
			[The following drivers are not extensively tested]
		Personal Sound System [*] [+]
		Windows Sound System [*] [+]
		ProAudio Spectrum [*] [+]
	Miscellaneous:
		OPTi(82C929) chipset for multi-interface CD-ROM, and
			sound ISA cards.
		PCI-PCI bridges and cards which include them, such as
			the AHA-394x SCSI host adapter and some
			DC21x4x-based multi-Ethernet cards.
		APM power management.

Drivers for hardware marked with "[*]" are NOT included on the
distribution floppies.  Except as noted above, all other drivers are
present on install floppy.  Also, at the present time, the
distributed kernels support only one SCSI host adapter per machine.
OpenBSD normally allows more, though, so if you have more than one, you
can use all of them by compiling a custom kernel once OpenBSD is
installed.

Support for devices marked with "[+]" IS included in the "generic" kernels,
although it is not in the kernel on the installation floppy.


Hardware the we do NOT currently support, but get many questions
about:
	NCR 5380-based SCSI host adapters.
	QIC-40 and QIC-80 tape drives.  (Those are the tape drives
		that connect to the floppy disk controller.)
	Multiprocessor Pentium and Pentium Pro systems.  (Though they should
		run fine using one processor only.)

We are planning future support for many of these devices.

To be detected by the distributed kernels, the devices must
be configured as follows:

Device		Name	Port	IRQ	DRQ	Misc
------		----	----	---	---	----
Serial ports	pccom0	0x3f8	4		[8250/16450/16550/clones]
		pccom1	0x2f8	3		[8250/16450/16550/clones]
		pccom2	0x3e8	5		[8250/16450/16550/clones]
		pccom3	0x2e8	3		[PCMCIA modem cards]
		ast0	0x1a0	5		[AST 4-port serial card]

Parallel ports	lpt0	0x378	7		[interrupt-driven or polling]
		lpt1	0x278			[polling only]
		lpt2	0x3bc			[polling only]

MFM/ESDI/IDE/RLL hard disk controllers
		wdc0	0x1f0	14		[supports two disks or atapi]
		wdc1	0x170	15		[supports two disks or atapi]

Floppy controller
		fdc0	0x3f0	6	2	[supports two disks]

AHA-154x, AHA-174x (in compatibility mode), or BT-54x SCSI host adapters
		aha0	0x330	any	any
		aha1	0x334	any	any

AHA-174x SCSI host adapters (in enhanced mode)
		ahb0	any	any	any

AHA-284x,274x,2940, aic7770 SCSI host adapters
		ahc0	any	any

BT445, BT74x, or BT9xx SCSI host adapters
		bt0	0x330	any	any
		bt1	0x334	any	any

Ultrastor 14f, 24f (if it works), or 34f SCSI host adapters
		uha0	0x330	any	any
		uha1	0x334	any	any

AHA-152x, AIC-6260- or AIC-6360-based SCSI host adapters
		aic0	0x340	11	6

Seagate ST0[12], Future Domain TMC-8xx based SCSI controllers 
		sea0		5		iomem 0xc8000

Symbios Logic/NCR 53C8xx based PCI SCSI host adapters
		ncr0	any	any	any

WD7000 and TMC-7000 SCSI host adapters
		wds0	0x350	15	6
		wds1	0x358	11	5

SCSI disks	sd0	first SCSI disk (by SCSI id)
		sd1	second SCSI disk (by SCSI id)
		sd2	third SCSI disk (by SCSI id)
		sd3	fourth SCSI disk (by SCSI id)

SCSI tapes	st0	first SCSI tape (by SCSI id)
		st1	second SCSI tape (by SCSI id)

SCSI CD-ROMs	cd0	first SCSI CD-ROM (by SCSI id)
		cd1	second SCSI CD-ROM (by SCSI id)

SMC/WD 8003, 8013, Elite16, and Elite16 Ultra Ethernet boards, 3c503,
Novell NE1000, or NE2000 Ethernet boards
		ed0	0x280	9		iomem 0xd0000
		ed1	0x250	9		iomem 0xd8000
		ed2	0x300	10		iomem 0xcc000 [X SEE BELOW]
		ed3	0x240   9		iomem 0xd8000

3COM 3c501 Ethernet boards
		el0	0x300	9

3COM 3c505/Etherlink+ Ethernet boards
		eg0	0x310	5

3COM 3c509, 3c579, 3c595, 3c900, 3c905 Ethernet boards
		ep0	any	any

AT&T StarLAN 10, EN100, or StarLAN Fiber, or 3COM 3c507 Ethernet boards
		ie0	0x360	7		iomem 0xd0000

EtherExpress boards
		ie1	0x300	10

PCNet-PCI based Ethernet boards; see above for partial list
		le0	any	any	[you must assign an interrupt in your
					 PCI BIOS, or let it do so for you]

DC21x4x based Ethernet boards; see above for partial list
		de0	any	any 	[you must assign an interrupt in your
					 PCI BIOS, or let it do so for you]

Intel EtherExpress 100 Ethernet boards
		fxp0	any	any 	[you must assign an interrupt in your
					 PCI BIOS, or let it do so for you]


SPECIAL CARE FOR SMC ULTRA ELITE
--------------------------------


Note for SMC Elite Ultra ethernet card users:  The Elite Ultra is very
sensitive to how it's i/o port is treated.  Mistreating it can cause
a number of effects -- everything from the card not responding when the
kernel probes, or the soft configuration being corrupted or wiped completely.

By default, the kernel ships with device ed2 configured for the 'default'
Elite Ultra locations, comprising of port 0x300, irq 10, and memory location
0xcc000.  This matches a hard coded jumper on the board as well a common
soft config setting.

Unfortunately, the kernel's autconfiguration process (specifically, some
of the devices it probes for) cause conflicts with the SMC Elite Ultra, and
very often cause it to lose it's configuration and fail it's own probe.
If this happens, you must boot the computer into DOS, and run the EzSetup
program available from SMC.  The complete URL of which is 
ftp://ftp.smc.com/pub/nics/ethernet/elite_ultra/gez122.exe.  This program
will allow you to reconfigure and recover a card that has lost it's
configuration with a minimum of hassle.

In order to avoid blowing away the card, one *must* use the run-time kernel
configuration system when booting the Install kernel.  This is done by
giving the -c flag to the initial boot request.  Following the loading of
the kernel, the user is presented with a

UKC>

prompt.  At this prompt, as variety of commands may be issued, but the
relevant one to getting the SMC Elite Ultra running is 'disable'.  The
wt0, el0, and ie1 devices all need to be disabled.  This is done by typing
'disable' followed by the name of the device, i.e., 'disable wt0', and
pressing return.

If, for some reason, your Elite Ultra is not configured at the 'default'
location the kernel is expecting it, you may also use the 'change' command
in the UKC system to modify where the kernel will look for it.  Typing
'change ed2' will allow you to modify those settings.  Note that running the
card at an i/o port of anything other then 0x300 at this point is not
recommended, and is beyond the scope of this document-- by doing so you
risk other device probes wreaking the havoc we are trying to avoid.

When all three extra devices are disabled and any changes made, the
'quit' command will exit the UKC.  The kernel should then boot, and find
your Elite Ultra on device ed2.