Jan Niehusmann wrote:
> But I have a correction: The problem does not only occurr if the system
> was started automatically by the bios, a manual 'soft off/soft on' sequence
> shows the same effect. Only 'hard off/hard on' (using the switch directly
> on the power supply) seems to work every time.
Can you run the following program when things are working and then when
they are not - i.e.
cmosdump > b4
# soft off / on
cmosdump > after
diff -u b4 after
The low registers (0, & 2 IIRC) are for sec and min, so expect changes
there - but of interest will be any changes in reg 0x0a and 0x0b.
Paul.
/*
*
* A quick hack to dump the CMOS RAM values from 0x0 to 0x7f. Note that
* some CMOS are only 0x40 in size, so edit accordingly. Released to
* the public under the terms and conditions of the Gnu General Public
* License (GPL) included herein by reference.
*
* Compile with:
* gcc -s -N -Wall -O cmosdump.c -o cmosdump
*
* Paul Gortmaker 07/95
*/
#define CMOS_SIZE 0x80
#include <stdio.h>
#include <asm/io.h>
#include <unistd.h>
#include <errno.h>
/*
* <linux/rtc.h> was <linux/mc146818rtc.h> on kernels prior to 2.2.19, so
* just define CMOS_READ/WRITE here independently and avoid the hassle.
*/
#define RTC_PORT(x) (0x70 + (x))
#define CMOS_READ(addr) ({ \
outb_p((addr),RTC_PORT(0)); \
inb_p(RTC_PORT(1)); \
})
#define CMOS_WRITE(val, addr) ({ \
outb_p((addr),RTC_PORT(0)); \
outb_p((val),RTC_PORT(1)); \
})
void binprint (unsigned short value);
void main(void) {
unsigned short addr, val;
val= iopl(3);
if (val) {
perror("iopl");
exit(errno);
}
printf("Addr:\tHex\tDec.\tBinary\n");
for (addr = 0; addr < CMOS_SIZE; addr++) {
val = CMOS_READ(addr);
printf("0x%X:\t0x%X\t%d\t",addr, val, val);
binprint(val);
printf("\n");
}
iopl(0);
} /*end*/
void binprint(unsigned short value) {
int bit;
for (bit=128;bit>0;bit/=2)
printf("%s", (value & bit) ? "1" : "0");
} /* end binprint */
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