NAME
tl
—
Texas Instruments ThunderLAN 10/100
Ethernet device
SYNOPSIS
tl* at pci?
lxtphy* at mii?
mlphy* at mii?
nsphy* at mii?
tlphy* at mii?
DESCRIPTION
The tl
driver provides support for PCI
Ethernet adapters based on the Texas Instruments ThunderLAN Ethernet
controller chip. This includes a large number of Compaq PCI-bus Ethernet
adapters as well as the integrated Ethernet controllers built in to several
models of Compaq Prosignia servers and Compaq Deskpro desktop machines. This
driver also supports the Olicom OC-2135/2138, OC-2325 and OC-2326 10/100 TX
UTP adapters and the Racore 8165 10/100baseTX and 8148
10baseT/100baseTX/100baseFX multi-personality cards.
The ThunderLAN controller has a standard MII interface that supports up to 32 physical interface devices (PHYs). It also has a built-in 10baseT PHY hardwired at MII address 31, which may be used in some 10Mbps-only hardware configurations. In 100Mbps configurations, a National Semiconductor DP83840A or other MII-compliant PHY may be attached to the ThunderLAN's MII bus. If a DP83840A or equivalent is available, the ThunderLAN chip can operate at either 100Mbps or 10Mbps in either half-duplex or full-duplex modes. The ThunderLAN's built-in PHY and the DP83840A also support autonegotiation.
The tl
driver supports the following media
types:
- autoselect
- Enable autoselection of the media type and options. Note that this option is only available on those PHYs that support autonegotiation. Also, the PHY will not advertise those modes that have been explicitly disabled using the following media options.
- 10baseT
- Set 10Mbps operation.
- 100baseTX
- Set 100Mbps (Fast Ethernet) operation.
- 10base5
- Enable AUI/BNC interface (useful only with the built-in PHY).
The tl
driver supports the following media
options:
- full-duplex
- Force full duplex operation.
- half-duplex
- Force half duplex operation.
- hw-loopback
- Enable hardware loopback mode.
Note that the 100baseTX media type is only available if supported by the PHY. For more information on configuring this device, see ifconfig(8).
DIAGNOSTICS
- tl0: couldn't map memory
- A fatal initialization error has occurred.
- tl0: couldn't map interrupt
- A fatal initialization error has occurred.
- tl0: device timeout
- The device has stopped responding to the network, or there is a problem with the network connection (cable).
- tl0: no memory for rx list
- The driver failed to allocate an mbuf for the receiver ring.
- tl0: no memory for tx list
- The driver failed to allocate an mbuf for the transmitter ring when allocating a pad buffer or collapsing an mbuf chain into a cluster.
SEE ALSO
arp(4), ifmedia(4), intro(4), lxtphy(4), mlphy(4), netintro(4), nsphy(4), pci(4), tlphy(4), hostname.if(5), ifconfig(8)
HISTORY
The tl
device driver first appeared in
FreeBSD 2.2. OpenBSD support
first appeared in OpenBSD 2.4.
AUTHORS
The tl
driver was written by
Bill Paul
<wpaul@ctr.columbia.edu>.