On Tue, 2 Jul 2019, Patrick Mackinlay via cctalk wrote:
> For the MIPS Rx3230 systems, which use an M48T02, the mac address should
> be in the first 6 bytes of NVRAM. You can read/write the NVRAM through
> the boot monitor using the “g” (get) and “p” (put) commands. You also
> need to provide t
I’ve only just joined cctalk, so apologies for the delayed response to this
query from May, but I thought the information might be useful to others in
future.
I’m the person working on emulating MIPS workstations in MAME recently, and I’m
a fair way through getting the Rx3230 model to a fully w
Interesting with those MIPS workstations.
Does the firmware (PROM) have any interesting commands?
Like 'pr_tod', 'init_tod', 'init' and so on?
found a PROM monitor reference in http://www.bitsavers.org/pdf/mips/
On Tue, May 14, 2019 at 10:50 PM Ethan O'Toole via cctech
wrote:
>
> > It is a DS1287
On 5/14/19 7:25 AM, Ethan O'Toole wrote:
> Is the NVRAM A ST Microelectronics TimeKeeper or Dallas module or something
> else?
It is a DS1287
The issue is finding out what the contents should be, since it isn't
documented in the surviving manuals.
Some of this was figured out in getting the
It is a DS1287
The issue is finding out what the contents should be, since it isn't
documented in the surviving manuals.
If the MAC address is the only concern, you could fuzz it. Write a pattern
into the chip then if the systems prom monitor or BIOS shows the MAC
locate it. It's probably at t
I have the same problem with a cloned MIPS machine, a Sumitomo
Sumistation SP300. The biggest problem with my machine is that the
NVRAM holds the ethernet address. If it goes flat, there seems to be
no way to reprogram the NVRAM. If you find any solution for this,
please tell me.
Is the NVRAM A
On 5/4/19 10:29 AM, Dennis Grevenstein via cctech wrote:
> I have the same problem with a cloned MIPS machine, a Sumitomo
> Sumistation SP300. The biggest problem with my machine is that the
> NVRAM holds the ethernet address. If it goes flat, there seems to be
> no way to reprogram the NVRAM.
Hi,
On 5/3/19 3:22 PM, Pete Turnbull via cctalk wrote:
> Anyone know much about early MIPS workstations? I'm trying to get a
> MIPS RS2030 to boot, without much luck so far. It goes through the
> selftest but stops with the internal LED display at "5" accompanied by
> a continuous beep.
>
> K
On Sat, May 4, 2019 at 9:42 AM Al Kossow via cctalk
wrote:
>
>
> On 5/4/19 3:00 AM, Pete Turnbull via cctalk wrote:
>
> > Once I can get the machine to stop wailing, that will be useful!
> >
>
> I pulled the frame buffer out of my 2030 and got up as far as the
> monitor on port 0 at 9600. My NVRA
On 5/4/19 3:00 AM, Pete Turnbull via cctalk wrote:
> Once I can get the machine to stop wailing, that will be useful!
>
I pulled the frame buffer out of my 2030 and got up as far as the
monitor on port 0 at 9600. My NVRAM is dead so I'm digging around
trying to find another DS1287. The machin
On 04/05/2019 02:54, Al Kossow via cctalk wrote:
On 5/3/19 3:22 PM, Pete Turnbull via cctalk wrote:
Anyone know much about early MIPS workstations?
RISCos 4.52 src, incl monitor src up now under
http://bitsavers.org/bits/MIPS/RISCos
Once I can get the machine to stop wailing, that will be us
On 04/05/2019 01:54, Al Kossow via cctalk wrote:
I see we all were talking about the M2030 around 3 years ago
http://www.classiccmp.org/pipermail/cctech/2016-May/017829.html
Some useful information in there, but I have the original MIPS keyboard
and mouse.
--
Pete
Pete Turnbull
On Fri, May 3, 2019, 7:53 PM Al Kossow via cctalk
wrote:
>
>
> On 5/3/19 3:22 PM, Pete Turnbull via cctalk wrote:
> > Anyone know much about early MIPS workstations?
>
> RISCos 4.52 src, incl monitor src up now under
> http://bitsavers.org/bits/MIPS/RISCos
I have QIC tapes and a 300mb hard dri
On 5/3/19 3:22 PM, Pete Turnbull via cctalk wrote:
> Anyone know much about early MIPS workstations?
RISCos 4.52 src, incl monitor src up now under
http://bitsavers.org/bits/MIPS/RISCos
On 5/3/19 5:22 PM, Pete Turnbull via cctalk wrote:
> Thanks - that would be very useful, if you have time and suitable hardware.
> I read the pages at geekdot.com a couple of
> weeks ago, but I'd not seen the MAME data. I did find a manual about the ROM
> on Bitsavers recently, so with that
On 04/05/2019 01:04, Al Kossow via cctalk wrote:
On 5/3/19 4:25 PM, Al Kossow via cctalk wrote:
So I'd like to know what the RAM spec really is, whether I need to reprogram
the Dallas chip (and if so what goes
where), and what the diagnostic numbers on the internal LED mean. Anyone?
I th
On 5/3/19 4:25 PM, Al Kossow via cctalk wrote:
>> So I'd like to know what the RAM spec really is, whether I need to reprogram
>> the Dallas chip (and if so what goes
>> where), and what the diagnostic numbers on the internal LED mean. Anyone?
>>
I thought I threw them all away, but i just f
On 5/3/19 4:25 PM, Al Kossow via cctalk wrote:
> http://www.geekdot.com/the-mips-rs2030/
>
> someone else had the same problem in the comments
>
>
also, there is a simulation running in mame
if you look at drivers/mips.cpp you'll find the nvram layout
/*
* The following isn't a re
On 5/3/19 3:22 PM, Pete Turnbull via cctalk wrote:
> Anyone know much about early MIPS workstations? I'm trying to get a MIPS
> RS2030 to boot, without much luck so far. It
> goes through the selftest but stops with the internal LED display at "5"
> accompanied by a continuous beep.
>
> Kno
Anyone know much about early MIPS workstations? I'm trying to get a
MIPS RS2030 to boot, without much luck so far. It goes through the
selftest but stops with the internal LED display at "5" accompanied by a
continuous beep.
Known problems:
- The Dallas DS1287 battery is flat; I can hack a
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