NAME¶
fwohci
—
OHCI FireWire chipset device driver
SYNOPSIS¶
To compile this driver into the kernel, place the following line in your kernel
configuration file:
device
firewire
Alternatively, to load the driver as a module at boot time, place the following
line in
loader.conf(5):
To disable physical access (see
BUGS
section for detail), put the following line in
loader.conf(5):
hw.firewire.phydma_enable=0
HARDWARE¶
The
fwohci
driver provides support for
PCI/CardBus FireWire interface cards. The driver supports the following IEEE
1394 OHCI chipsets:
- Adaptec AHA-894x/AIC-5800
- Apple Pangea
- Apple UniNorth
- Intel 82372FB
- IOGEAR GUF320
- Lucent / Agere FW322/323
- NEC uPD72861
- NEC uPD72870
- NEC uPD72871/2
- NEC uPD72873
- NEC uPD72874
- National Semiconductor CS4210
- Ricoh R5C551
- Ricoh R5C552
- Sony CX3022
- Sony i.LINK (CXD3222)
- Sun PCIO-2 (RIO 1394)
- Texas Instruments PCI4410A
- Texas Instruments PCI4450
- Texas Instruments PCI4451
- Texas Instruments TSB12LV22
- Texas Instruments TSB12LV23
- Texas Instruments TSB12LV26
- Texas Instruments TSB43AA22
- Texas Instruments TSB43AB21/A/AI/A-EP
- Texas Instruments TSB43AB22/A
- Texas Instruments TSB43AB23
- Texas Instruments TSB82AA2
- VIA Fire II (VT6306)
SEE ALSO¶
firewire(4),
fwe(4),
fwip(4),
sbp(4),
fwcontrol(8),
kldload(8)
HISTORY¶
The
fwohci
device driver first appeared in
FreeBSD 5.0.
AUTHORS¶
The
fwohci
device driver was written by
Katsushi Kobayashi and
Hidetoshi Shimokawa.
BUGS¶
The driver allows physical access from any nodes on the bus by default. This
means that any devices on the bus can read and modify any memory space which
can be accessed by an IEEE 1394 OHCI chip. It is allowed mostly for
sbp(4) devices. This should be changed to allow
it only for specific devices. Anyway, FireWire is a bus and not expected to be
connected with un-trustable devices because a node can monitor all the
traffic.