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SBC-PII

Copyright 2000 Computer Dynamics, Inc.

7640 Pelham Road Greenville, SC 29615 864-627-8800

TRADEMARK ACKNOWLEDGMENT HiQColor and TMED are trademarks of Intel Corporation (formerly Chips and Technologies, Inc.) IBM, Enhanced Graphics Adapter and Video Graphics Adapter are trademarks of International Business Machines Corporation. IEEE is a trademark of The Institute Of Electrical And Electronic Engineers, Inc. MS-DOS, Windows, WindowsCE, Win95, Win98 and WinNT are trademarks of Microsoft Corporation. Pentium and Pentium II and Celeron are trademarks of Intel Corporation Phoenix BIOS is a trademark of Phoenix Technologies Ltd. Universal Serial Bus, Specification Copyright Compaq Computer Corporation, Intel Corporation, Microsoft Corporation, NEC Corporation. VESA is a registered trademark and VBE is a trademark of the Video Electronics Standards Association. *All other trademarks are the property of their respective holders. COPYRIGHTS The information contained in this document is not to be used for other than the purpose, for which this document is furnished by Computer Dynamics, Inc. Nor is this document (in whole or in part) to be reproduced or furnished to third parties or made public without the prior express written permission of Computer Dynamics, Inc.

NOTICE Neither Computer Dynamics, Inc. nor any of the contributors to this document makes any warranty or representation (expressed or implied) with respect to the accuracy, completeness, or usefulness of the information contained in this document. Computer Dynamics, Inc. assumes no responsibility for liability or damage of any kind which result from the use of the information contained in this document. The customer should be on notice that many different parties hold patents on products, components, and processes within the personal computer industry. Customers should ensure that their use of the products does not infringe upon any patents. Computer Dynamics, Inc. respects the patent rights of third parties and shall not participate in direct or indirect patent infringement.

SBC-PII Manual Page i Copyright March 2000, Computer Dynamics, Inc. All Rights Reserved 76788748.doc 2001-07-11

REVISION HISTORY
REV A-01 DATE 3/09/00 BY R. W. Wilkins Initial Release DESCRIPTION

SBC-PII Manual Page ii Copyright March 2000, Computer Dynamics, Inc. All Rights Reserved 76788748.doc 2001-07-11

FCC Testing This subassembly is marketed to be sold to equipment manufacturers for incorporation into systems. This equipment is not FCC tested. FCC testing is the responsibility of the final equipment manufacturer.

SBC-PII Manual Page iii Copyright March 2000, Computer Dynamics, Inc. All Rights Reserved 76788748.doc 2001-07-11

TABLE OF CONTENTS
1 INTRODUCTION............................................................................................................1
1.1 Specifications 3

2 HARDWARE CONFIGURATION...................................................................................4
2.1 Ethernet Enable (SF1)........................................................................................................................7 2.2 VGA Panel Select (SF4).....................................................................................................................7 2.3 Panel Power and Backlight Power Sequencing (SF6, SF7)...............................................................8 2.4 COM C and COM D Mode Selection (SF8, 9 and 12)........................................................................9 2.5 Fan Connector (J4 and J7)...............................................................................................................11 2.6 ATX Power Control (J5)...................................................................................................................11 2.7 Speaker Interface (J6)......................................................................................................................11 2.8 IRDA Port (J8)..................................................................................................................................13 2.9 Ethernet LEDs (J9)..........................................................................................................................13 2.10 Ethernet (J10).................................................................................................................................13 2.11 NTSC Video Adapter (J11).............................................................................................................15 2.12 Panel Connector (J12)...................................................................................................................15 2.13 VGA Video Interface (J13).............................................................................................................16 2.14 External Battery (J14).....................................................................................................................17 2.15 ISA/PCI Expansion (J15 and J16)..................................................................................................18 2.16 PS/2 Mouse Connector (J17).........................................................................................................19 2.17 Serial Port Interface (J18, J19, J24 and J25).................................................................................20 2.18 Parallel Port (J20)...........................................................................................................................21 2.19 USB Port (J21) .....................................................................................................................22 2.20 IDE Hard Disk (J22 and J28)..........................................................................................................22 2.20.1 Select IDE hard disk Type.......................................................................................................24 2.20.2 Setting up a Hard Disk for use with MS-DOS..........................................................................24 2.20.3 Setting up a Hard Disk for use with Windows 95 or Windows 98.....................................25 2.21 Power Input (J23)...........................................................................................................................25 2.22 Floppy Interface (J26)....................................................................................................................26 2.23 Keyboard Interface (J27)................................................................................................................27 2.24 System DRAM Installation (U3)......................................................................................................28

3 PRODUCT OVERVIEW................................................................................................29
3.1 SBC I/O Map 29 3.2 Interrupt Assignments......................................................................................................................30 3.3 DMA Assignments............................................................................................................................31

4 PHOENIX BIOS SETUP GUIDE..................................................................................32


4.1 The Menu Bar Navigating the Setup Menus.....................................................................................32 4.1.1 The Legend Bar.........................................................................................................................32 4.1.2 The Field Help Window..............................................................................................................33 4.1.3 The General Help Window.........................................................................................................33 4.2 The Main Menu................................................................................................................................34 4.2.1 Advanced Hard Disk Features...................................................................................................36 4.3 The Advanced Menu .......................................................................................................................38 4.3.1 Integrated Peripherals...............................................................................................................39 4.3.2 Security Control.........................................................................................................................43 4.4 The Power Menu..............................................................................................................................44 4.5 The Boot Menu.................................................................................................................................46 4.6 The Exit Menu..................................................................................................................................47 4.6.1 Exit Saving Changes.................................................................................................................47 4.6.2 Exit Discarding Changes...........................................................................................................48 4.6.3 Load Setup Defaults..................................................................................................................48
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4.6.4 Discard Changes.......................................................................................................................49 4.6.5 Save Changes...........................................................................................................................49

TABLE OF FIGURES
FIGURE 2-1. SBC-PII CONNECTOR LOCATION..........................................................4 FIGURE 2-2 STRAPPING FIELD LOCATIONS..............................................................5 FIGURE 2-3. HORIZONTAL CONNECTORS AND STRAPPING FIELDS....................6 FIGURE 2-4. VERTICAL CONNECTORS AND STRAPPING FIELDS..........................6 FIGURE 2-5. CONNECTOR AND STRAPPING FIELD PIN NUMBERS.........................6 FIGURE 2-6 PANEL SELECT JUMPERS.......................................................................7 FIGURE 2-7. SF6 AND SF7 DEFINITION.......................................................................8 FIGURE 2-8. COM C AND COM D MODE......................................................................9 FIGURE 2-9. SF12 DEFINITION....................................................................................10 FIGURE 2-10. SPEAKER INTERFACE.........................................................................12 FIGURE 2-11. TYPICAL SONALERT CONNECTION..................................................12 FIGURE 2-12. PANEL CONNECTIONS (J12)...............................................................16 FIGURE 2-13. VGA INTERFACE....................................................................................17 FIGURE 2-14. ISA/PCI EXPANSION CONNECTIONS (J15).......................................18 FIGURE 2-15. ISA/PCI EXPANSION CONNECTIONS (J16).......................................19 FIGURE 2-16. FLAT CABLE COM CONNECTIONS....................................................20 FIGURE 2-17. USB INTERFACE....................................................................................22 FIGURE 2-18. FLOPPY DRIVE CABLE........................................................................26 FIGURE 2-19. KEYBOARD CONNECTIONS (J27)......................................................27 FIGURE 2-20. TYPICAL ANNUNCIATOR CONNECTION...........................................28 21 28
SBC-PII Manual Page v Copyright March 2000, Computer Dynamics, Inc. All Rights Reserved 76788748.doc 2001-07-11

TABLES
TABLE 1 POWER CONSUMPTION................................................................................3 TABLE 2 ETHERNET ENABLE.......................................................................................7 TABLE 3 PANEL SELECTION........................................................................................8 TABLE 4 PANEL POWER...............................................................................................9 TABLE 5 BACKLIGHT POWER......................................................................................9 TABLE 6 FAN CONNECTIONS.....................................................................................11 TABLE 7 POWER CONTROL CONNECTIONS............................................................11 TABLE 8 SPEAKER CONNECTIONS...........................................................................12 TABLE 9 IRDA CONNECTIONS...................................................................................13 TABLE 10 ETHERNET LED CONNECTIONS..............................................................13 TABLE 11 10/100BASET CONNECTIONS...................................................................14 TABLE 12 NTSC CONNECTIONS................................................................................15 TABLE 13 BATTERY CONNECTIONS.........................................................................17 TABLE 14 PS/2 MOUSE CONNECTIONS....................................................................19 TABLE 15 RS-422/RS-485 CONNECTIONS.................................................................21 TABLE 16 PRINTER PORT CONNECTIONS...............................................................21 TABLE 17 IDE CONNECTIONS....................................................................................23 TABLE 18 POWER CONNECTIONS............................................................................25 TABLE 19 MEMORY SIZING.........................................................................................28 TABLE 20 I/O ASSIGNMENTS......................................................................................29 TABLE 21 INTERRUPT ASSIGNMENTS......................................................................30 TABLE 22 DMA ASSIGNMENTS..................................................................................31 TABLE 23 DMA PAGE REGISTER ADDRESS............................................................31

SBC-PII Manual Page vi Copyright March 2000, Computer Dynamics, Inc. All Rights Reserved 76788748.doc 2001-07-11

1 INTRODUCTION
The SBC-PII is an industrial-design single board computer with all the functionality of todays best desktop Intel CeleronTM machines. Its standard features include a CeleronTM CPU to 500 MHz, AGP video controller, 10/100BaseT Ethernet, and Universal Serial Bus (USB) ports. The impressive video capabilities of the SBC-PII equip it with leading edge flat panel support, including GUI Accelerator and Multimedia Engine especially for the newer color TFT LCDs. This 64-bit AGP chip includes up to 4Mbytes SDRAM video memory for maximum color depth in all resolutions and operating systems. The CT69000 also supports YUV and NTSC input with RGB conversion for CRT and provides display centering and stretching features for optimal presentation of VGA graphics and text on 800x600 and 1024x768 panels. The SBC-PII offers tremendous memory and storage options, starting with 8Mbytes DRAM, and up to 256 Mbytes with one double sided non-registered DIMM. The IDE hard disk interface supports up to four IDE (ATA/ATAPI) drives. The floppy disk controller supports two 1.44Mbyte or 2.88Mbyte floppy drives. Other I/O features include two USB ports for extra peripheral interfaces, four serial ports (one with IRDA interface), a printer port, plus standard CDI keyboard header, PS/2 mouse and PC speaker. Advanced power management with timed power down, wake-up on LAN, PS/2 mouse or Keyboard triggers. Completing the list of features is PCI/ISA bus expansion using a PISA option card. Features: Intel Celeron Available at 500 MHz, 433 MHz, 400 MHz, 366 MHz, 333 MHz, and 300A MHz core frequencies with 128 KB level-two cache. Binary compatible with applications running on previous members of the Intel microprocessor line DRAM controller SDRAM from 8 to 128 Mbytes or 256 Mbytes (with non-registered DIMMs) up to one double-sided DIMM (2 rows memory) PCI bus interface PCI Rev. 2.1, 3.3V and 5V, 33MHz interface compliant Power Management Functions Stop Clock Grant and Halt special cycle translation (host to PCI Bus) Dynamic power down of idle SDRAM rows Independent, internal dynamic clock gating reduces average power dissipation DPMS for CRT power-down (required for support of EPA Energy-Star program) DDC for CRT Plug-Play & Display Control Supports LAN, PS/2 or keyboard wake up functions Integrated IDE Controller Independent Timing of Up to 4 Drives Front Panel Connector providing access to hardware Reset and IDE activity LED Enhanced DMA Controller System Timer, Refresh Request, Speaker Tone Output USB Two USB Ports for Serial Transfers at 1.5 or 12 Mbit/sec per UHCI Revision 1.1 SMBus Host interface Allows CPU to Communicate via SMBus Slave Interface Allows External SMBus Master to Control Resume Events
SBC-PII Manual Page 1 Copyright March 2000, Computer Dynamics, Inc. All Rights Reserved 76788748.doc 2001-07-11

Real-Time Clock 256-Byte Battery-Back CMOS SRAM High Performance Multimedia Flat Panel/CRT GUI Accelerator Highly integrated design Flat Panel and CRT GUI Accelerator & Multimedia Engine, Palette/DAC, and Clock Synthesizer Hardware Windows Acceleration Transparent System-to-Screen and Screen-to-Screen BitBLT 8/16/24 Color Expansion Optimized for Windows BitBLT format High Performance deep write buffers 170 MHz RAMDAC Hardware Multimedia Support YUV input from System Bus or Video Port Capture / Scaling, Video Zoom up to 8x Display centering and stretching features for optimal fit of VGA graphics and text on 800x600 and 1024x768 panels Optimized for High-Performance Flat Panel Display at 3.3V and 5V 640 x 480 x 24bpp to 1280 x 1024 x 24bpp Flexible On-chip Activity Timer facilitates ordered shutdown of the display system Fully Compatible with IBM VGA Super I/O PC97 compliant hardware 2.88MB floppy disk controller Supports two 360K/ 720K/ 1.2M/ 1.44M/2.88M floppy disk drives Multi-mode high performance parallel port Serial ports four 16C550 compatible, enhanced RS-232 ports Support for SIR or ASKIR IrDA Keyboard Controller Standard keyboard and PS/2 mouse Ethernet Support 10 Mb/s and 100 Mb/s N-way auto-negotiation Support Full duplex flow control(IEEE 802.3x) LED interface for network activity indications PC Expansion Supports PCI - ISA expansion board Licensed BIOS Fan Monitor Power Supply Monitor Dimming controls for LCD backlights Flash drive Disk on a Chip Up to 144Mbytes Compact Flash/ATA Windows CE / 95 / 98 / NT compatible

SBC-PII Manual Page 2 Copyright March 2000, Computer Dynamics, Inc. All Rights Reserved 76788748.doc 2001-07-11

1.1

Specifications

Information presented here is based on standard product, for extreme environment requirements, contact your Computer Dynamics, Inc. Applications Engineer. Product may have to meet other agency requirements depending on application. Product may meet an agencies requirements but not be officially approved by that agency under Computer Dynamics, Inc. Ambient Temperature Operational Humidity Storage Temperature Safety Shock/Vibration EMC Radiation EMC Susceptibility Power Requirements Altitude Reliability Physical 146mm 203mm x x U.S. and Canada +3.3 +5 Vdc, Vdc, 0C to +40C, no 5% to 95% relative

+3.3V Celeron 366 MHz Celeron 466 MHz Celeron 500 MHz 2.0 A 1.8 A 2.1 A

+5V 3.0 A 3.4 A 3.9 A

Table 1 Power Consumption

SBC-PII Manual Page 3 Copyright March 2000, Computer Dynamics, Inc. All Rights Reserved 76788748.doc 2001-07-11

2 HARDWARE CONFIGURATION
Before using your computer you will want to attach your monitor, keyboard, speaker, floppy, IDE drive, printer, and RS-232 devices. The following drawing shows the locations of these connectors and options like IrDA, Ethernet, NTSC board, USB and PISA Riser board.
P r o F r o n t pP a n e l c e s sT o e r m F a n S e n s o r
J 1

C e

k eS r y s t e F a n

I r D

E t h e r n L E D 's
J 9

J 4

J 2

J 5

J 6

J 7

J 8

J 3

E R
J 1 0

t h e r n J - 4 5

a r d

J 1 J 1 2

V
J 1 3

i t o

I n

r
J 1 J 2 3 J 1 J 2 8 4 J 1 J 2 J 1 9 5 5 J 2 J 2 6 0 J 1 6 7 J 2 J 2 1 7 J 2 2 J 2 8 4

x t .

t t e

r y

J 1

c .

I D

BC

M C

AO

C C O

M P R

D F l o p p Ly P I S AD r i v e is e r

C D I T P 1 S / 2 K e y b U a S r Bd o M o u s e

r i.

I D

Figure 2-1. SBC-PII Connector Location

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S t h E n

F 1 e r n e a b l e

S V C E

F 2 i d e o o n t r o l le n a b l e

S P S S P S

F 4 a n e l e l e c t i o F 6 a n e e q u

l P e n

o w c e

S B S

F 7 a c k l i g h t P e q u e n c e

S R C

F 9 T S O M

l e

S R C

F 1 2 S 2 3 O M

/ 4

/ 4 8 R5 d D

S O

F 8 E n M

a b C

le

Figure 2-2 Strapping Field Locations


All connector and strapping field orientations in this manual are relative to the board orientation as pictured in the figures above.

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Unless otherwise specified, horizontal double row connectors and single row strapping fields have pin 1 in the upper right corner or to the right of the strapping field. Horizontal single row connectors have pin 1 to the left. All single row connectors are locking type. Pin 1 always has a square pad. All other pins have round pads.

Figure 2-3. Horizontal Connectors and Strapping Fields.


Also if the connector is vertical, pin 1 is in the bottom right corner.

1 1 1

Figure 2-4. Vertical Connectors and Strapping Fields.


Single row connectors are numbered sequentially from top to bottom or one end to the other. Double row connectors are numbered with all even numbers on one side of the connector and all odd numbers on the other side.

1 3 5 7 9

2 4 6 8 1

1 2 3 4 5

Figure 2-5. Connector and Strapping Field Pin Numbers.

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2.1

Ethernet Enable (SF1)

If the on-board Ethernet connection is not being utilized it may be disabled via SF1. Use this to allow installation of a plug-in Ethernet card or to free an IRQ for other options. Ethernet Disabled Enabled 1-2 X

Table 2 Ethernet Enable

2.2

VGA Panel Select (SF4)

Strapping field SF4 provides power-on default options for video. These straps will be set to the default value at the factory based on the flat panel configuration ordered. Note: Maintaining an up to date chart for video strapping in this manual is not possible due to the constant addition of new flat panel displays supported by the SBC product line. The straps in SF4 are pre-configured for the flat panel in your system. If you are experiencing problems with your flat panel, or if you are implementing a panel and require additional information, contact your Computer Dynamics Applications Engineer with the flat panel specifics. They will provide you with the appropriate information.

8 6 4 2

7 5 3 1

Figure 2-6 Panel Select Jumpers

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General video BIOS panel selections: Panel selected in 69030 configuration #1 #2 #3 #4 #5 #6 #7 #8 #9 #10 #11 #12 #13 #14 #15 #16 SF4 1-2 X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X 3-4 X X 5-6 X X X X 7-8 X X X X X X X X

Table 3 Panel Selection

2.3

Panel Power and Backlight Power Sequencing (SF6, SF7)

Panel Power sequence control is selected with SF6. Backlight Power sequence control is selected with SF7. If you are using a flat panel with SBC-PII, one and only one strap should be placed in this strapping field.

N E

A N

V A

D 3 . 3 B EK NL A V

V E

o lt s E

Figure 2-7. SF6 and SF7 Definition

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Panel power sequencing: Control Signal for Switched Panel Power 3.3V ENAVEE ENABKL ENAVDD 1-2 X 3-4 X X X 5-6 7-8

Table 4 Panel Power


Backlight power sequencing: Control Signal for Switched Backlight 12V 3.3V ENAVEE ENABKL ENAVDD

1-2 X

3-4 X

5-6

7-8

X X

Table 5 Backlight Power


Selecting +3.3Volts forces the panel and/or backlight on continuously. This strapping field is factory set and should not be changed unless your Computer Dynamics Applications Engineer instructs you to.

2.4

COM C and COM D Mode Selection (SF8, 9 and 12)

COM C and COM D are independently selectable as RS-232 or RS-422/RS-485 as shown in the following figure. The factory default is both UARTs are RS-232. Either or both can be converted to RS-422/RS-485 by moving the strap from RS-232 to RS-422/RS-485. SF8 and SF9 will enable or disable the Tx signal for RS-422 or RS-485 mode.

in

e T

le

le

Figure 2-8. COM C and COM D Mode

RS-232/RS-485 (note that RS422 option has to be installed for this strapping to be valid):
SBC-PII Manual Page 9 Copyright March 2000, Computer Dynamics, Inc. All Rights Reserved 76788748.doc 2001-07-11

o n - e n a b le C O M C 1 0 0 o h m t e r m i n a t i n g r e s i s t o r i n R S - 4 8 5 / 4 2 2 m o d e o f f - d i s a b le C O M C 1 0 0 o h m t e r m i n a t i n g r e s i s t o r i n R S - 4 8 5 / 4 2 2 m o d e ( n o t e : f o r R S - 2 3 2 m o d e , le a v e s t r a p o f f . ) o n - C O M C is R S - 2 3 2 o ff - C O M C is R S - 4 8 5 /4 2 2

o n - C O M D is R S - 2 3 2 o ff - C O M D is R S - 4 8 5 /4 2 2 o n - e n a b le C O M D 1 0 0 o h m t e r m i n a t i n g r e s i s t o r i n R S - 4 8 5 / 4 2 2 m o d e o f f - d i s a b le C O M D 1 0 0 o h m t e r m i n a t i n g r e s i s t o r i n R S - 4 8 5 / 4 2 2 m o d e ( n o t e : f o r R S - 2 3 2 m o d e , le a v e s t r a p o f f . )

Figure 2-9. SF12 Definition

The RTS signal on COM C and COM D is used to turn on and off the RS-422/RS-485 driver. The state of RTS is controlled by bit 1 of the UART Modem Control Register (MCR). When bit 1 of the MCR is set to a 0, the RS-422/RS-485 transmitters are on. When bit 1 of the MCR is set to 1, the RS-422/RS-485 transmitters are tri-stated. . Many of the communications programs, provided with a standard PCs, do not toggle RTS correctly for RS-422/RS-485 operation with SBC-PII. RS-422 requires that the driver be on at all times. If you are not writing your own communications program to control RTS, then you will want to disable the RTS signal from COM C and/or COM D by removing the shunt from SF8 and/or SF9. RS-485 requires the RTS signal to control the driver so the shunt must be installed. RS-232 also requires the RTS signal for signaling, so the shunt must be installed. The factory default is both RTS signals is enabled (RS-232 default).

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2.5

Fan Connector (J4 and J7)

Two fan connectors are provided one for the main processor fan (J4) and the other for system heat dissipation. The connectors include a fan tachometer to allow monitoring of fan operation providing ability to disable the system should a fan fail. The connectors are 3 x 1 Straight Locking 0.1 center headers. Pin 1 2 3 Signal Ground +12 Volts Fan Tach

Table 6 Fan Connections 2.6 ATX Power Control (J5)

The ATX Power Control Connector, J5, provides an IDE Activity LED, Power indicator and Soft Reset Switch Connections. The connector is a 5 x 1 straight locking 0.1 center header. Pin 1 2 3 4 5 Function Ground PB Reset N/C IDE Activity +5Vdc

Table 7 Power Control Connections


Connect the Reset Switch to a normally open momentary switch. Grounding the input will hold the SBC-PII in reset. Connect the cathode of an LED to the IDE Activity LED pin and the anode to +5 Volts. The LED will flash when any IDE device is used. Connect the cathode of an LED to the Ground pin and the anode to +5 Volts. Insure that proper current limiting is included in the circuit. The LED will be on whenever power is applied.

2.7

Speaker Interface (J6)

The PC speaker connector, J6, provides an interface to a PC/AT-compatible speaker or annunciator. The connector is a 4 x 1 straight locking 0.1 center header.

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Pin 1 2 3 4

Signal +5 Volts Speaker +12 Volts Sonalert

Table 8 Speaker Connections


A transistor is provided to drive a speaker or annunciator. Attach an 8- speaker (2" to 2.5" are typically used) to the speaker connector as shown.

+ 5 V o l t s

S p e a k e r

Figure 2-10. Speaker Interface


A Sonalert may be connected to either the 5V supply or the 12V supply depending on the requirements of the particular device.

+5 Volts or +12 Volts +

Sonalert

Figure 2-11. Typical Sonalert Connection

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2.8

IRDA Port (J8)

The IRDA port, J8, interfaces with an optical module for wireless communication with other IRDA devices. The connector is a 7 x 1 straight locking 0.1 center header. Contact your Computer Dynamics Applications Engineer for availability and further instructions.

Pin Signal 1 IRRXL 2 Gnd 3 IRTX 4 +5 Volts 5 IRRXH 6 +5 Volts 7 Gnd Table 9 IRDA Connections

2.9

Ethernet LEDs (J9)

The Ethernet LED Connector, J9, provides an Ethernet Activity LED connections for remote display of status. The connector is a 3 x 1 straight locking 0.1 center header. Pin 1 2 3 Function Transmit/Receive LED Link LED +5Vdc

Table 10 Ethernet LED Connections


Connect the cathode of one LED to connector pin 1 and another to connector pin 2, and both of the anodes to +5 Volts. The Link LED will be ON whenever a link has been established and the Transmit/Receive LED will flash when any data transmission is completed.

2.10 Ethernet (J10)


The SBC-PII provides an industry standard RJ-45 connector, J10, for 10 Mb/s and 100 Mb/s operation. It supports N-way auto-negotiation, full duplex flow control in compliance with IEEE 802.3x. It uses PCI bus master data transfers with programmable PCI burst size. Includes 16K boot ROM, interface to 9346 (64 x 16-bit EEPROM) for storage of resource configuration and ID parameters and large independent Rx and Tx FIFOs.
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Three levels of power down modes: sleep, power-down with internal clock running, and power-down with internal clock halted. Digital and Analog loopback capability. Unshielded twisted pair (UTP) cables connect the SBC-PII to other computers, hubs and bulkhead connectors. SBC-PII supports most popular Ethernet networks. The Ethernet Controller option used on SBC-PII is a Plug and Play device and resources can be set by program control. The exact resource utilization varies with system configuration. The Ethernet controller will seek available resources. In addition, the Ethernet Controller can be disabled through user settings in the BIOS Setup and in the Windows95 Control Panel | System | Device Manager. Pin 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Signal Transmit + Transmit Receive + N/C N/C Receive N/C N/C

Table 11 10/100baseT Connections

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2.11 NTSC Video Adapter (J11)


The NTSC option board (available separately) gives SBC-PII the ability to display or input NTSC video signals and other hardware multimedia functions. Accepts YUV input from System Bus or Video Port, performs YUV-RGB Conversion. Zoom Video port with up to 8x Capture / Scaling. Horizontal and Vertical interpolation of video data up to 720 pixels wide. Signal +5 Volts Ground VP00 VP02 VP04 VP06 VP08 VP10 VP12 VP14 N/C HREF VCLK I2C Clock 14.318 MHz Buffered VSYNC Green Midi In or FSX DX SE Audio Ground Right Audio In Pin 1 3 5 7 9 11 13 15 17 19 21 23 25 27 29 31 33 35 37 39 41 43 Pin 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 18 20 22 24 26 28 30 32 34 36 38 40 42 44 Signal +5 Volts Ground VP01 VP03 VP05 VP07 VP09 VP11 VP13 VP15 Ground VREF I2C Data Ground Buffered HSYNC Red Blue Midi Out or FSR DR DCLK Ground Left Audio In

Table 12 NTSC Connections 2.12 Panel Connector (J12)


The video system is a highly integrated design, Flat Panel and CRT GUI Accelerator & Multimedia Engine, Palette/DAC, and Clock Synthesizer. It utilizes Hardware Windows Acceleration, a 64-bit Graphics Engine and up to 4MB EDO, 64-Bit memory interface. Optimized for Windows BitBLT format, System-to-Screen and Screen-to-Screen BitBLT, Source and Destination Transparent.
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Designed for interface to High-Performance Flat Panel Display at 3.3V and 5V. It uses a 24-bit direct interface to color and monochrome, single drive (SS), and dual drive (DD), STN & TFT panels. Offers 8/16/24 Bit color expansion, display centering and stretching features for optimal fit of VGA graphics and text on 800x600 and 1024x768 panels and resolutions up to 1280 x 1024 x 24bpp. Flat-panel displays may be connected to SBC-PII through J12 a 22 x 2, 2mm straight header.

Signal Backlight Power (switched) Ground Panel Power (switched) Enable VEE P00 P02 P04 P06 P08 P10 P12 P14 P16 P18 P20 P22 Ground Shift Clock M Ground Ground Panel Power (unswitched)

Pin 1 3 5 7 9 11 13 15 17 19 21 23 25 27 29 31 33 35 37 39 41 43

Pin 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 18 20 22 24 26 28 30 32 34 36 38 40 42 44

Signal Backlight Power (switched) Ground Panel Power (switched) Ground P01 P03 P05 P07 P09 P11 P13 P15 P17 P19 P21 P23 Ground FLM P Enable Backlight /Shift Clock Panel Power (unswitched)

Figure 2-12. Panel Connections (J12)


The Advanced Power Management feature minimizes power usage in Normal operation, Standby (Sleep) modes and Panel-Off Power-Saving Mode. Offers Flexible On-chip Activity Timer facilitating ordered shutdown of the display system. VESA Standards supported in Panel-Off Power-Saving Mode.

2.13 VGA Video Interface (J13)


The SBC-PII design is a highly integrated design Flat Panel and CRT GUI Accelerator, with Multimedia Engine, Palette/DAC, and Clock Synthesizer, full compatibility with IBM VGA.
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Includes hardware Acceleration, optimized for Windows BitBLT format, 64-bit Graphics Engine, System-to-Screen and Screen-to-Screen BitBLT. Video Acceleration with source and destination Transparent BLT, instant Full Screen Page Flip and read back of CRT Scan line counters. Advanced Power Management feature minimizes power usage with VESA Standards supported. DPMS for CRT power-down (required for support of EPA Energy-Star program), DDC for CRT Plug-Play & Display Control. A VGA monitor is connected to SBC-PII using the VGA adapter cable. This module reroutes the signals from the header connector, J13, a 8 x 2, 0.1 center straight header, to the industry standard 15-pin high density D-type connector as shown in the following figure.

Function Gnd Red DDC Data Gnd Blue Vsync Gnd Gnd

Pin 1 3 5 7 9 11 13 15

Pin 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16

Function N/C Gnd Green Hsync +5VDC N/C DDC Clk Gnd

Pin 1 2 3 4 5

Function Red Green Blue N/C Gnd

Pin 6 7 8 9 10

Function Gnd Gnd Gnd +5VDC Gnd

Pin 11 12 13 14 15

Function N/C DDC Data Hsync Vsync DDC Clk

Figure 2-13. VGA Interface 2.14 External Battery (J14)


If the internal battery is not installed, the SBC-PII board has the external battery option connector. An internal or external 3 Volt battery will need to be installed to maintain the CMOS settings whenever the power is off. The connector is a 3 x 1 straight locking 0.1 center header. Pin 1 2 3 Signal +3 Volts Gnd N/C

Table 13 Battery Connections


SBC-PII Manual Page 17 Copyright March 2000, Computer Dynamics, Inc. All Rights Reserved 76788748.doc 2001-07-11

2.15 ISA/PCI Expansion (J15 and J16)


ISA and PCI Bus-compatible boards can be attached to SBC-PII using the ISA/PCI Riser available from Computer Dynamics. Contact your Computer Dynamics Applications Engineer to order the ISA/PCI Riser. This board plugs into J15 and J16 (2ea. 25 x 4, 2mm connectors). J15
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25

A
GND AD18 AD16 /CBE0 /TRDY /DEVSEL /CBE1 /CBE3 GND /PERR AD14 AD12 AD10 AD08 GND AD06 AD04 AD02 AD00 +5V +5V +5V +5V -12V +12V

B
GND AD19 AD17 /FRAME /IRDY /LOCK /CBE2 /STOP PAR /SERR AD15 AD13 AD11 AD09 GND AD07 AD05 AD03 AD01 +5V +5V +5V +5V -12V +12V

C
+5V IRQ7 IRQ5 /MEMCS16 IRQ10 IRQ11 IRQ12 IRQ14 IRQ15 /MEMR /MEMW /DACK0 DRQ0 /DACK5 DRQ5 /DACK6 DRQ6 /DACK7 DRQ7 GND GND GND GND GND GND

D
+5V /SBHE IRQ6 /IOCS16 /RESET RESERVED RESERVED SA20 SA21 SA22 SA23 SD8 SD9 SD10 SD11 SD12 SD13 SD14 SD15 /MASTER GND GND GND GND GND

Figure 2-14. ISA/PCI Expansion Connections (J15)

SBC-PII Manual Page 18 Copyright March 2000, Computer Dynamics, Inc. All Rights Reserved 76788748.doc 2001-07-11

J16
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25

A
OSC /COM3CS COM3IRQ GND PCICLK-1 PCICLK-2 PCICLK-3 /AUDIOCS GND /REQ0 /REQ1 /REQ2 /XCLS GND AD30 AD28 AD26 GND AD24 AD22 AD20 GND +5V +5V GND

B
GND /COM4CS COM4IRQ GND /PINTA /PINTB /PINTC /PINTD GND GNT0 GNT1 GNT2 RESERVED GND AD31 AD29 AD27 GND AD25 AD23 AD21 TC /DACK2 BALE GND

C
GND IRQ3 RESET /IOCHCHK IRQ9 DRQ2 /SMEMW /SMEMR AEN IOCHRDY DRQ3 /IOW DRQ1 SA19 SA17 SA15 SA13 SA11 SA9 /REFRESH SA7 SA5 SA3 SA1 GND

D
/ZEROWS IRQ4 SD0 SD1 SD2 SD3 SD4 SD5 SD6 SD7 /DACK3 /IOR /DACK1 SA18 SA16 SA14 SA12 SA10 SA8 SYSCLK SA6 SA4 SA2 SA0 GND

Figure 2-15. ISA/PCI Expansion Connections (J16) 2.16 PS/2 Mouse Connector (J17)
The PS/2 mouse connector, J17 on the SBC-PII, is a 4 x 1 straight locking 0.1 center header. The use of an adapter cable available from Computer Dynamics, provides a direct interface to PS/2 mice. The Mouse circuit is compatible with industry standard PS/2 mice. Connections are shown below:

Pin 1 2 3 4

Signal +5 Volts Gnd Data Clock N/C

Pin 4 3 1 5 2,6

Table 14 PS/2 Mouse Connections


SBC-PII Manual Page 19 Copyright March 2000, Computer Dynamics, Inc. All Rights Reserved 76788748.doc 2001-07-11

2.17 Serial Port Interface (J18, J19, J24 and J25)


The SBC-PII has four serial ports that are flat-cable-compatible with the standard PC 9-pin serial connector, as shown in the following figure. COM A (J24) and COM B (J18) are RS232 only, COM C (J25) and COM D (J19) can be configured as RS-232, RS-422 or RS-485. They support 16C550 compatible enhanced serial ports. The connector is a 5 x 2 straight 0.1 center header. The 9-pin D-shell connector is typically a male connector indicating RS-232 DTE.

Pin 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10

Signal DCD DSR Rx Data RTS Tx Data CTS DTR RI GND KEY

Direction In In In Out Out In Out In -Wire 10 Not Connected

Pin 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9

Signal DCD Rx Data Tx Data DTR GND DSR RTS CTS RI

Figure 2-16. Flat Cable COM Connections WARNING


Inserting the serial cable in the keyboard connector or a keyboard cable in the serial port connector may damage either your keyboard or your SBC. COM C and COM D can be configured as RS-422/RS-485. The pin definitions for COM C and COM D change as shown in the following figure. Connections based on signals at the DB-9 end of cable.

SBC-PII Manual Page 20 Copyright March 2000, Computer Dynamics, Inc. All Rights Reserved 76788748.doc 2001-07-11

Pin 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9

RS-232 DCD Rx Data Tx Data DTR Gnd DSR RTS CTS RI

RS-422/RS-485 COM C and COM D only RD TD -

TD + RD +

Table 15 RS-422/RS-485 Connections 2.18 Parallel Port (J20)


A Multi-mode high performance parallel port with base address of 0X0100h-0X0FFCh, 11 IRQ and 4 DMA options. In standard mode it provides bi-directional SPP, in enhanced mode it is EPP V1.7 and EPP V1.9 compatible, and in high-speed mode is ECP, IEEE1284 compliant. The connector is a 13 x 2 straight 0.1 center header. Signal /STB Data 0 Data 1 Data 2 Data 3 Data 4 Data 5 Data 6 Data 7 /ACK Busy PE SLCT Pin 1 3 5 7 9 11 13 15 17 19 21 23 25 Pin 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 18 20 22 24 26 Signal /AFD /ERR /INIT /SLIN Gnd Gnd Gnd Gnd Gnd Gnd Gnd Gnd Reserved

Table 16 Printer Port Connections

SBC-PII Manual Page 21 Copyright March 2000, Computer Dynamics, Inc. All Rights Reserved 76788748.doc 2001-07-11

2.19 USB Port (J21)


The PC industry has long felt a problem with too few interrupts for expansion cards and has developed USB as part of the plan to eliminate this problem. The SBC-PII provides an interface for two USB 1.0 Ports for Serial Transfers at 1.5 or 12 Mbit/sec. Supports Legacy Keyboard and Mouse Software with USB-Based Keyboard and Mouse connections. Complies with UHCI Design Guide, Revision 1.1 interface. The connector is a 5 x 2 straight 0.1 center header. Dual rear bracket connector compatible with the USB Host Cable is available from Computer Dynamics. Port 2 pinout is detailed, Port 1 is the same.

r t

r t

Function +5V fused Port 1 Port 1 + Gnd Gnd

Pin 1 3 5 7 9

Pin 2 4 6 8 10

Function +5V fused Port 2 Port 2 + Gnd Gnd

Pin 1 2 3 4 Shell

Function +5V fused Port 2 Port 2 + Gnd Shield

Figure 2-17. USB Interface

2.20 IDE Hard Disk (J22 and J28)


The SBC-PII supports two IDE interfaces with independent timing of up to 4 Drives. Supports PIO Mode 4 Transfers Up to 14 Mbytes/sec, Ultra DMA/33 Synchronous DMA Mode Transfers Up to 33 Mbytes/sec with an Integrated 8 x 32-Bit Buffer for IDE PCI Burst Transfers. Both of the SBC-PII IDE connectors are 22 x 2, 2mm connectors with power embedded in the connector. Computer Dynamics builds a conversion board to connect 3.5 inch (2 x 20, 0.1 center connector) devices to SBC-PII. J28 is the primary IDE port and J22 is the secondary IDE port.
SBC-PII Manual Page 22 Copyright March 2000, Computer Dynamics, Inc. All Rights Reserved 76788748.doc 2001-07-11

Signal Reset Data07 Data06 Data05 Data04 Data03 Data02 Data01 Data00 Ground DMA REQ /IDE WR /IDE RD IO Channel Ready /DMA ACK INTRQ ADDRESS01 ADDRESS00 /CS0 /ACTIVE +5 Volts Ground

Pin 1 3 5 7 9 11 13 15 17 19 21 23 25 27 29 31 33 35 37 39 41 43

Pin 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 18 20 22 24 26 28 30 32 34 36 38 40 42 44

Signal Ground Data08 Data09 Data10 Data11 Data12 Data13 Data14 Data15 Key N/C Ground Ground Ground Not Connected Ground /IOCS16 Not Connected ADDRESS02 /CS1 Ground +5 Volts Not Connected

Table 17 IDE Connections

INTRQ (pin 31) is IRQ 14 on J22 and IRQ 15 on J28. To install two IDE hard disk drives on a single IDE connector, follow the instructions in the drive manufacturer's manual. Configure the first drive as the Master and the second drive as the Slave. Some drives have shown intolerance to software reset (Ctrl-Alt-Del) and get "disk I/O error" on restart of WinNT. The fix for this is to disable multi-sector transfers in CMOS Setup.

SBC-PII Manual Page 23 Copyright March 2000, Computer Dynamics, Inc. All Rights Reserved 76788748.doc 2001-07-11

2.20.1 Select IDE hard disk Type Before SBC-PII can use the IDE hard disk drive, the BIOS must know the drive type. The BIOS on the SBC contains a setup utility for this purpose. See section 4.

2.20.2 Setting up a Hard Disk for use with MS-DOS Before the IDE hard disk drive can be used by DOS, several setup steps must be completed. The first is low-level formatting. For all IDE hard disk drives purchased directly from CDI, low-level formatting will have been done prior to shipment. Before the IDE hard disk drive can be used, it must be partitioned and formatted. The first of these steps is accomplished by booting the system from floppy and running the partition program FDISK.EXE (FDISK.COM on older versions of MS-DOS). FDISK is discussed in detail in Appendix D of the Microsoft MS-DOS User's Guide and User's Reference. We will not attempt to duplicate that discussion here but will guide you through the basics required to initialize your drive.

CAUTION:

Partitioning a hard-disk will destroy any files that are on it.

With a diskette containing FDISK in your floppy drive, type FDISK and press the "Enter" key. FDISK will provide an option menu. Select the "Create DOS Partition or Logical DOS drive" option. On the next menu, select the "Create Primary DOS Partition" option. When the system asks if you want to use the maximum size DOS partition, answer "Y". The system will reboot afterwards, be sure to have a bootable floppy diskette in the floppy disk drive. Once the drive has been partitioned, each partition must be formatted. For the primary partition, use the command: FORMAT C: /S to both format the partition and install a bootable copy of MS-DOS on the partition. For any remaining partitions or drives, enter the command without the "/S" option (since they don't need MS-DOS). For example, the D: partition would be formatted with: FORMAT D:

CAUTION:

Always specify a drive when formatting to avoid accidentally losing valuable files by formatting the wrong drive.

SBC-PII Manual Page 24 Copyright March 2000, Computer Dynamics, Inc. All Rights Reserved 76788748.doc 2001-07-11

Refer to the Microsoft MS-DOS User's Guide and User's Reference for details on the format process. Once formatted with the "/S" option, you can complete the MS-DOS installation procedure provided with your copy of MS-DOS.

2.20.3 Setting up a Hard Disk for use with Windows 95 or Windows 98 Insert a Windows95 or Windows98 boot disk into the floppy disk drive and reboot your system. When the first screen appears press enter to continue the Windows installation. Select the configure unallocated disk space option, and press enter. The system will reboot automatically, and then format the hard disk for use with Windows. When formatting is complete the installation program will continue to install Windows.

2.21 Power Input (J23)


Power is applied to the SBC-PII through J23. This connector was selected to support the current requirements for SBC-PII. It includes a power return lead for each power connection which can help eliminate power lead related EMI. The connector is an 8 x 1 straight locking 0.156 center square pin header.

Pin 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8

Function +5 Vdc Gnd Gnd +5 Vdc Gnd +12 Vdc Gnd -12 Vdc

Table 18 Power Connections

SBC-PII Manual Page 25 Copyright March 2000, Computer Dynamics, Inc. All Rights Reserved 76788748.doc 2001-07-11

2.22 Floppy Interface (J26)


The SBC-PII includes a 2.88MB floppy disk controller which supports two 360K/ 720K/ 1.2M/ 1.44M/2.88M floppy disk drives. A and B drives can be swapped. It provides support for 3-Mode, enhanced digital data separation and software write protection. The board connector is a 17 x 2 straight locking 0.1 center header. The drive cable for the SBC-PII is identical to that used in an IBM-PC. Wires 10 through 16 are swapped. This swap, or flip, provides the drive select to the drives. Attach drive A on the connector at the end of the cable. Drive B uses the middle connector on the cable. Set the straps or configuration switch on the drives so that both drives are configured as the second drive in the system. Note that 3.5" floppy drives require header-type connectors while 5.25" drives require card-edge connectors.

Rotate Wires 10 through 16 1

SBC-MaX

34 Conductors

Drive B

Drive A

Figure 2-18. Floppy Drive Cable


The BIOS for the SBC-PII must be informed of the types of floppy drives attached to the system. This is accomplished using the BIOS Setup. See Section 3.1.

SBC-PII Manual Page 26 Copyright March 2000, Computer Dynamics, Inc. All Rights Reserved 76788748.doc 2001-07-11

2.23 Keyboard Interface (J27)


The keyboard connector, J27 on the SBC-PII, is a 5 x 2 straight 0.1 center header. The connector provides an interface to PC/AT-compatible keyboards. It is 8042 compatible with 2KB programmable ROM and 256-byte data RAM. A transistor is provided to drive a speaker or annunciator. Attach an 8- speaker (2" to 2.5" are typically used) to the keyboard cable as shown. Annunciators may be connected in place of the speaker. It will need to be connected to either the 5V supply or the 12V supply depending on the requirements of the particular device. An IDE activity indicator LED may be connected to this cable as well.

SBC Pin 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10

Function KB Clock Gnd KB Data +5 Vdc KB Reset HDD LED +12 Vdc Annunciator +5 Vdc Speaker

Keybd Pin 1 4 2 5 3

LED Pin

Spkr Pin

Cathode Anode Alt.Pos Neg Pos Neg

Figure 2-19. Keyboard Connections (J27)

CAUTION: Inserting the keyboard/speaker cable in the serial port connector or a serial
port cable in the keyboard/speaker connector may damage either your keyboard or your SBC.

SBC-PII Manual Page 27 Copyright March 2000, Computer Dynamics, Inc. All Rights Reserved 76788748.doc 2001-07-11

+5 Volts or +12 Volts +

Annunciator

Figure 2-20. Typical Annunciator Connection

2.24 System DRAM Installation (U3)


The SBC-PII supports double sided 168-pin DIMM SDRAM modules providing 8 to 256 Mbytes (with non-registered DIMMs) of system memory. SBC-PII supports 64 bit (Non-ECC) or 72 bit (ECC) SDRAMs. Enhanced SDRAM Open Page Architecture Support for 16- and 64-Mbit DRAM devices with 2k, 4k and 8k page sizes

Incremental Memory 8MB 16MB 32MB 64MB 128MB

DIMM module 1M x 64 or 1M x 72 2M x 64 or 2M x 72 4M x 64 or 4M x 72 8M x 64 or 8M x 72 16M x 64 or 16M x 72

Table 19 Memory Sizing

SBC-PII Manual Page 28 Copyright March 2000, Computer Dynamics, Inc. All Rights Reserved 76788748.doc 2001-07-11

3 PRODUCT OVERVIEW
3.1 SBC I/O Map

The following table shows the SBC-PII I/O map. The addresses used are PC/AT compatible. The SBC-PII uses 16-bit I/O address decoding. If using a Plug & Play operating system, addresses will be assigned by the operating system based on the peripherals installed. The Plug & Play I/O map can be determined through the operating system utilities.

Address
0000-000F 0010-0018 001F 0020-0021 0024-0025 0028-0029 002C-002D 0040-0043 0060 0061 0064 0070-0071 0080 0081-008F 00A0-00A1 00C0-00DF 00F0-00FF 01F0-01F7

Function
DMA Controller 1 Motherboard Resources Motherboard Resources Interrupt Controller 1 Motherboard Resources Motherboard Resources Motherboard Resources Counter Timer Keyboard Controller Motherboard Speaker Keyboard Controller Real-Time Clock / NMI Mask Motherboard Resources DMA Page Register Interrupt Controller 2 DMA Controller 2 Math Co-processor IDE Controller

Address
02E8-02EF 02F8-02FF 0378-037A 03B0-03BB 03C0-03DF 03E8-03EF 03F0-03F5 03F6 03F7 03F8-03FF 04D0-04D1 0CF8-0CFF 1000-103F 1040-104F F800-F8FE FCD0-FCDE FCE0-FCFE

Function
COM D COM B LPT 1 VGA VGA COM C Floppy Controller IDE Controller Floppy Controller COM A Motherboard Resources PCI Bus Motherboard Resources Motherboard Resources Ethernet Controller Ultra-DMA IDE Controller USB Controller

Table 20 I/O Assignments

SBC-PII Manual Page 29 Copyright March 2000, Computer Dynamics, Inc. All Rights Reserved 76788748.doc 2001-07-11

3.2

Interrupt Assignments

The following table shows the SBC-PII I/O interrupt assignments. The interrupts used are PC/AT compatible. If using a Plug & Play operating system, interrupts will be assigned by the operating system based on the peripherals installed. The Plug & Play interrupts can be determined through the operating system utilities. Level NMI 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 Ethernet Controller Math Co-processor IDE Controller USB Controller Diskette Controller Printer Port LPT1 Real-Time Clock Function Parity I/O Channel Check Timer Keyboard (buffer full) Controller Cascade Serial Port COM B Serial Port COM A Software Vector 2H 8H 9H AH BH CH DH EH FH 70H 71H 72H 73H 74H 75H 76H 77H

Table 21 Interrupt Assignments


The industry standard IRQ assignments for COM C and COM D are IRQ4 and IRQ3 respectively. CMOS setup on SBC-PII follows this standard and defaults COM C and COM D as IRQ4 and IRQ3 when shipped from the factory. This causes a conflict in Windows95 and WindowsNT because COM A and COM B claim those IRQs as well. Each COM port 'likes' its own IRQ. To change the IRQ settings for COM C and COM D, first change the values stored in CMOS using the BIOS Setup Program (press F2 during POST before the operating system starts to load). Then change the IRQ settings in Windows95, Control Panel | System | Device Manager. In WindowsNT the setting can be changed in Control Panel | Ports. SBC-PII systems have a Plug & Play option that can be used for COM C and COM D eliminating need for hand configuration. The PC industry has long felt a problem with too few interrupts and has developed USB as part of the plan to eliminate this problem
SBC-PII Manual Page 30 Copyright March 2000, Computer Dynamics, Inc. All Rights Reserved 76788748.doc 2001-07-11

3.3

DMA Assignments

The SBC-PII DMA assignments are listed in the following tables. The SBC-PII supports PCI DMA with 3 PC/PCI channels and distributed DMA protocols simultaneously. It uses fast Type-F DMA for reduced PCI bus useage. DMA Channels 0 through 3 support 8-bit transfers between 8-bit I/O devices and transfers between 8-bit or 16-bit memory. Each channel can transfer 64-kbyte blocks throughout the 16 Mbyte address range of the system on 64-kbyte boundaries. DMA Channel 4 is used to cascade DMA Channels 0 through 3. DMA Channels 5 through 7, support 16-bit transfers between 16-bit I/O and 16-bit memory. Each channel can transfer 128-kbyte blocks throughout the 32-Mbyte-address range of the system on 64 kbyte boundaries. DMA 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Cascade for Controller 1 Floppy Disk Controller Function

Table 22 DMA Assignments


Function DMA 0 DMA 1 DMA 2 DMA 3 DMA 5 DMA 6 DMA 7 Refresh I/O Address 087 083 081 082 08B 089 08A 08F

Table 23 DMA Page Register Address

SBC-PII Manual Page 31 Copyright March 2000, Computer Dynamics, Inc. All Rights Reserved 76788748.doc 2001-07-11

4 Phoenix BIOS Setup Guide


Use the Phoenix BIOS Setup program for: Setting system time and date. Installing new drives for hard disks and floppy disks. Enhancing system performance by controlling advanced features such as shadow memory and cache memory. Configuring system resources. Setting Security Passwords.

4.1

The Menu Bar Navigating the Setup Menus


The Menu Bar at the top of the window lists these selections:
Main Advanced Security Power Boot Exit Use this menu for basic system configuration. Use this menu to set the Advanced Features of the system's chipset. Use this menu to configure User Access Management features. Use this menu to configure Power Management features. Use this menu to select the boot device. Exits the current menu.

Use the left/ right " " arrow keys to make a selection. 4.1.1 The Legend Bar

Use the keys listed in the legend bar on the bottom to make your selections or exit the current menu. The following chart describes the legend keys and their alternates: Key
<F1> or <Alt- H> <Esc> or arrow keys or arrow keys <Tab> or <Shift- Tab> <Home> or <End> <PgUp> or <PgDn> <F5> or <-> <F6> or <+> or <Space> <F9> <F10> <Enter> <Alt- R> Function General Help window. Exit this menu. Select a different menu. Move cursor up and down. Cycle cursor through fields. Move cursor to top or bottom of window. Move cursor to next or previous page. Select the Previous Value for the field. Select the Next Value for the field. Load the Default Configuration values for this menu. Saves current settings and Exits Setup. Execute Command or Select Submenu. Refresh screen.

To select an item, use the arrow keys to highlight the field you want. Then use the plus and minus value keys to select a value for that field. The Save Changes commands in the Exit Menu save the values currently displayed in all the menus. To display a sub menu, use the arrow keys to highlight the sub menu you want, then press <Enter>. A pointer ( ) marks all sub menus.

SBC-PII Manual Page 32 Copyright March 2000, Computer Dynamics, Inc. All Rights Reserved 76788748.doc 2001-07-11

4.1.2

The Field Help Window

The help window on the right side of each menu displays the help text for the currently selected field. It updates as you move the cursor to each field. 4.1.3 The General Help Window

Pressing <F1> or <Alt H> on any menu brings up the General Help window that describes the legend keys and their alternates:

G e n er al H elp

S etu p ch a n g e s syste m b e h a vior b y m o difying the BI O S C o nfiguration. S electing incorrect v alues m a y ca us e syste m b o ot failure; load S etu p D efa ult v alues to recov er.

< U p / D o w n > arro w s select fields in c urrent m e n u . < P g U p / P g D n > m o v e s to previous/ne xt p a g e o n scrollable m e n u s. < H o m e / E n d > m o v e s to top/botto m ite m of c urrent v alue. W ithin a field, < F 5 > or < - > selects n e xt lo wer v alue a n d < S p a c e > selects n e xt high er value. <F6 >, < + >, or

[C o ntinu e ]

The scroll bar on the right of any window indicates that there is more than one page of information in the window. Use <PgUp> and <PgDn> to display all the pages. Pressing <Home> and <End> displays the first and last page. Press <Esc> to exit the current window.

SBC-PII Manual Page 33 Copyright March 2000, Computer Dynamics, Inc. All Rights Reserved 76788748.doc 2001-07-11

4.2

The Main Menu


To start the Phoenix BIOS Setup utility:

1. Turn on or reboot your system. Phoenix BIOS displays this message:


Press < F2 > to enter SET U P

2. Pressing <F2> displays the Main Menu, which looks like this:
P h o e nix BI O S S etu p Utility

Main

Advanced

Security

Power

Boot

Exit Item Specific Help

S yste m Ti m e: S yste m D at e: Le g a c y Diskette A: Le g a c y Diskette B: Pri m ary M a st er: Pri m ary Slave: S e c o n d ar y M a st er: S e c o n d ar y Slave:

[1 6 :19:21] [01/0 1/2 0 0 0] [1.44 M B, 3 ] [Disabled] [N o n e] [N o n e] [N o n e] [N o n e]

<Tab>, <Shift-Tab> or <Enter> selects field

Large Disk Access Mode: Quickboot Mode: Floppy Check:

[Auto] [Enabled] [Disabled]

F 1 H el p E S C E xit

S elect Ite m

S elect M e n u

+/- C h a n g e V alu es E nter S elect S u b-M e n u

F9 S et u p D efa ults F1 0 Previous V alu es

You can make the following selections on the Main Menu itself. Use the sub menus for other selections.
Feature System Time System Date Legacy Diskette A Legacy Diskette B Options HH: MM: SS MM/ DD/ YYYY 360 kB, 5 " 1.2 MB, 5 " 720 kB, 3 " 1.44MB, 3 " 2.88 MB, 3 " Disabled DOS Other Enable Disable Enable Disable Description Set the system time. Set the system date. Select the type of floppy disk drive installed in your system.

Large Disk Access Mode Quickboot Mode Floppy Check

If running other than DOS based system: UNIX, Novell Netware, Etc. select OTHER Allows faster booting of the system. Verification of Floppy type on boot.

SBC-PII Manual Page 34 Copyright March 2000, Computer Dynamics, Inc. All Rights Reserved 76788748.doc 2001-07-11

The Master and Slave settings on the Main Menu control these types of devices: Hard disk drives CD-ROM drives

Phoenix BIOS supports up to two IDE disk adapters, called primary and secondary adapters. Each adapter supports one master drive and one optional slave drive in these possible combinations: 1 Master 1 Master, 1 Slave 2 Masters 2 Masters, 1 Slave 2 Masters, 2 Slaves

There is one IDE connector for each adapter, Primary IDE and Secondary IDE. There can be two connectors on each ribbon cable attached to each IDE connector. When you enter Setup, the Main Menu displays the results of Autotypinginformation each drive provides about its own size and other characteristics and how they are arranged as Masters or Slaves on your machine. Note: Do not attempt to change these settings unless you have an installed drive that does not autotype properly (such as an older hard disk drive that does not support autotyping). If you need to change your drive settings, use the Master or Slave sub-menu as explained in the following.

SBC-PII Manual Page 35 Copyright March 2000, Computer Dynamics, Inc. All Rights Reserved 76788748.doc 2001-07-11

4.2.1

Advanced Hard Disk Features Selecting one of the Master or Slave sub menus on the Main Menu displays this menu:

M ai n

Advanced

P h o e nix BI O S S etu p Utility Power S e c urity B o ot

E xit

Primary Master
T y p e: [User]

Item Specific Help


Atte m p t s to A uto m a tically d ete ct the drive type for drives that co m pl y with A N SI sp e cifications.

Cylinders: Heads: Sectors: Maximum Capacity: Total Sectors: Maximum Capacity:


M ulti- e ct or Tra nsfers: S L B A M o d e C o ntrol:

CHS Format [65536] [16] [63] 0MB LBA Format 0 0MB


[16 S e ctors] [Ena bled]

32 Bit I/O:
Tran sfer M o d e:

[Disabled]
[Fast PIO 4]

Smart Monitoring:

[Disabled]

F 1 H elp E S C E xit

S elect Ite m

S elect M e n u

+/- C h a n g e V alu es E nter S elect S u b-M e n u

F 9 S et u p D ef a ults F 1 0 Previous V alu es

SBC-PII Manual Page 36 Copyright March 2000, Computer Dynamics, Inc. All Rights Reserved 76788748.doc 2001-07-11

Use the following chart to configure the hard disk drive with Advanced Hard Disk Features:
Feature Type Options None User Auto CD-ROM IDE Removable ATAPI Removable Other ATAPI 1 to 65,536 1 to 16 1 to 63 Disabled 2 sectors 4 sectors 8 sectors 16 sectors Enabled Disabled Enabled Disabled Standard Fast PIO 1 Fast PIO 2 Fast PIO 3 Fast PIO 4 FPIO 3 / DMA 1 FPIO 4 / DMA 2 Enable Disable Description None = Autotyping is not able to supply the drive type or end user has selected None, disabling any drive that may be installed. User = You supply the hard disk drive information in the following fields. Auto = Autotyping, the drive Autotypes on each boot. Number of cylinders. Number of read/ write heads. Number of sectors per track. Any selection except Disabled determines the number of sectors transferred per block. Standard is 16 sectors per block. Enabling LBA causes Logical Block Addressing to be used in place of Cylinders, Heads, & Sectors. Enables 32- bit communication between CPU and IDE card. Selects the method for transferring the data between the hard disk and system memory.

Cylinders Heads Sectors/ Track Multi- Sector Transfers

LBA Mode Control 32- Bit I/ O Transfer Mode

Smart Monitoring

Hard drive error monitoring and reporting, when supported by the installed drive.

CAUTION:

Incorrect settings can cause your system to malfunction.

SBC-PII Manual Page 37 Copyright March 2000, Computer Dynamics, Inc. All Rights Reserved 76788748.doc 2001-07-11

4.3

The Advanced Menu


Selecting "Advanced" from menu bar displays a menu like this:
P h o e nix BI O S S etu p Utility Power S e c urity B o ot

M ain

Advanced

E xit Ite m S p e cific H elp

Installed O/S: R e s et C o nfiguration D at a: P CI C o nfiguration I/O D e vice C o nfiguration

[ Win 9 x] [N o]

PS/2 Mouse Configuration Disk-On-Chip Address:


L oc al B u s IDE A d a pt er:

[Disabled]
[Disabled]

F 1 H elp E S C E xit

S elect Ite m

S elect M e n u

+/- C h a n g e V alues E nter S elect S u b- M e n u

F9 S etu p D efa ults F1 0 Previous V alu es

Use the following chart to make your selection:


Feature Installed OS Reset Configuration Data Options Win9X Other Yes No Enabled Disabled Auto Detect Disabled CC00-CDFF D000-D1FF D400-D5FF D800-D9FF DC00-DDFF Disabled Primary Secondary Both Description If your system has a Plug and Play Operating System, Win9x lets the Operating System configure Plug and Play devices not required for boot. Other makes the BIOS configure them. Yes erases all configuration data in ESCD, which stores the configuration settings for non- PnP plug- in devices. Select Yes when required to restore the Manufacturer's defaults. Set whether PS/2 Mouse is always, never or sometimes connected to this system. If Disk-On-Chip is installed, select the address range it will use. If not installed select Disabled.

PS/2 Mouse Disk-On-Chip Address

Local Bus IDE adapter

Allows disable of one or both of the Hard Disk channels.

SBC-PII Manual Page 38 Copyright March 2000, Computer Dynamics, Inc. All Rights Reserved 76788748.doc 2001-07-11

4.3.1

Integrated Peripherals

Selecting "PCI Configuration" from the Advanced menu displays this menu:

M ai n

Advanced

P h o e nix BI O S S etu p Utility Power S e c urity B o ot

E xit

PCI Configuration
P CI/PN P ISA IR Q R e s o ur c e E x clusion P CI/PN P ISA U M B R e gion E x clusion

Item Specific Help


Atte m p t s to A uto m a tically d ete ct the drive type for drives that co m pl y with A N SI sp e cifications.

F 1 H elp E S C E xit

S elect Ite m

S elect M e n u

+/- C h a n g e V alu es E nter S elect S u b-M e n u

F 9 S et u p D ef a ults F 1 0 Previous V alu es

Selecting PCI/PNP ISA Resource Exclusion displays the following menu:

M ai n

Advanced

S e c urity

P h o e nix BI O S S etu p Utility Power B o ot

E xit Ite m S p e cific H elp

P CI/P N P ISA R e s o urc e E x clusion

P CI P CI P CI P CI IR Q IR Q IR Q IR Q IR Q IR Q IR Q

IR Q IR Q IR Q IR Q 3: 4: 5: 7: 9: 1 0: 1 1:

line line line line

1: 2: 3: 4:

[Auto [Auto [Auto [Auto

S elect] S elect] S elect] S elect]

[Available] [Available] [Available] [Available] [Available] [Available] [Available]

P CI d e vices ca n us e h ard w a r e interrupts called IR Qs. A P CI d e vice ca n n ot use IR Q s alread y in us e b y ISA or EIS A d e vices. U s e Auto o nly if n o ISA or Eisa legacy cards are installed.

F 1 H elp E S C E xit

S elect Ite m

S elect M e n u

+/- C h a n g e V alu es E nter S elect S u b-M e n u

F9 S etu p D efa ults F1 0 Previous V alu es

SBC-PII Manual Page 39 Copyright March 2000, Computer Dynamics, Inc. All Rights Reserved 76788748.doc 2001-07-11

Use the following chart in configuring the Resource Exclusions:


Feature PCI IRQ line 1 PCI IRQ line 2 PCI IRQ line 3 PCI IRQ line 4 IRQ 3 IRQ 4 IRQ 5 IRQ 7 IRQ 9 IRQ 10 IRQ 11 Options Disabled Auto Select 3, 4, 5, 7, 9, 10, 11, 12, 14, 15 Available Reserved Description PCI line resource allocation.

Reserve any IRQs in use by ISA or EISA devices. NOTE: * indicates a resource conflict with another device already defined.

CAUTION:

Incorrect settings can cause your system to malfunction.

Selecting PCI/PNP ISA UMB Region Exclusion displays the following menu:

M ai n

Advanced

S e c urity

P h o e nix BI O S S etu p Utility Power B o ot

E xit Ite m S p e cific H elp

P CI/P N P ISA R e gio n E x clusion

C 8 0 0- C B F F: C C 0 0- C F F F: D O O O - D 3 F F: D 4 0 0- D 7 F F: D 8 0 0- D B F F: D C O O - D F F F:

[Available] [Available] [Available] [Available] [Available] [Available]

R e s erv es the sp ecified block of u p p er m e m o r y for us e b y legacy ISA d e vices.

F 1 H elp E S C E xit

S elect Ite m

S elect M e n u

+/- C h a n g e V alu es E nter S elect S u b-M e n u

F9 S etu p D efa ults F1 0 Previous V alu es

SBC-PII Manual Page 40 Copyright March 2000, Computer Dynamics, Inc. All Rights Reserved 76788748.doc 2001-07-11

Use the following chart in configuring the Resource Exclusions:


Feature C800-CBFF CC00-CFFF D000-D3FF D400-D7FF D800-DBFF DC00-DFFF Options Available Reserved Description Reserve any Upper Memory Blocks in use by ISA or EISA devices.

CAUTION:

Incorrect settings can cause your system to malfunction.

Selecting I/O Device Configuration displays the following menu:

M ai n

Advanced

S e c urity

P h o e nix BI O S S etu p Utility Power B o ot

E xit Ite m S p e cific H elp

I/O D e vice C o nfiguration

Le g a c y U S B S u p p ort: O n b o ar d Eth er n et: O n b o ar d A u dio: S erial P ort A: S erial P ort B: M o d e: S erial P ort C: S erial P ort D: P arallel Port A: M o d e: P arallel Port B: Flop p y Disk C o ntroller: B a s e I/O A d dr e ss:

[Ena ble] [Ena ble] [Ena ble] [O S C o ntrolled] [O S C o ntrolled] [Nor m al] [O S C o ntrolled] [O S C o ntrolled] [O S C o ntrolled] [Nor m al] [Disabled] [Ena bled] [Pri m ar y]

Floppy Drive Swap:


F 1 H elp E S C E xit

[Disabled]
+/- C h a n g e V alu es E nter S elect S u b-M e n u F9 S etu p D efa ults F1 0 Previous V alu es

S elect Ite m

S elect M e n u

SBC-PII Manual Page 41 Copyright March 2000, Computer Dynamics, Inc. All Rights Reserved 76788748.doc 2001-07-11

Use the following chart in configuring the I/O Devices: Feature Legacy USB Support Onboard Ethernet Onboard Audio Serial Port Serial Port Serial Port Serial Port Mode A B C D Options Enabled Disabled Enabled Disabled Enabled Disabled OS Controlled Disabled Enabled Auto Normal IrDA ASK-IR 2E8 2F8 3E8 3F8 IRQ 3 IRQ 4 IRQ 9 IRQ 11 OS Controlled Disabled Enabled Auto ECP EPP Output Only Bi-Directional 278 3BC 378 IRQ 5 IRQ 7 DMA 0 DMA 1 DMA 2 DMA 3 Enabled Disabled Primary Secondary Enabled Disabled Description Controls Universal Serial Bus option support Allows disabling of the on-board Ethernet chip Allows disabling of the on-board Sound chip Operating System configures the port Not configured User configured BIOS or OS chooses configuration Serial port settings to enable InfraRed devices When Serial ports are Enabled for user configuration, this selection is available to set Port I/O Address. When Serial ports are Enabled for user configuration, this selection is available to set Port IRQ. Port A and B only have IRQ 3 and 4 available. Operating System configures the port Not configured User configured BIOS or OS chooses configuration Selects Parallel port output mode.

Base I/O Address

Interrupt

Parallel Port A Parallel Port B Mode

Base I/O Address Interrupt DMA Channel

When Parallel port B is enabled, this selection is available to set Port I/O Address. When Parallel port B is enabled, this selection is available to set Port IRQ. When Parallel port B is enabled, this selection is available to set Port DMA Channel. Enable if Floppy Drive is installed. Location in memory where Floppy controller is found. Swaps the identification of Drive A and B.

Floppy Disk Controller Base I/O Address Floppy Drive Swap

CAUTION:

Incorrect settings can cause your system to malfunction.

SBC-PII Manual Page 42 Copyright March 2000, Computer Dynamics, Inc. All Rights Reserved 76788748.doc 2001-07-11

4.3.2

Security Control

Selecting "Security" from the Main menu displays this menu:


P h o e nix BI O S S etu p Utility Power B o ot

M ai n

Advanced

S e c urity

E xit Ite m S p e cific H elp

S u p er visor Pass w o r d Is: U s er P ass w o r d Is: S et S u p er visor P ass w o r d: S et U s er P ass w o r d: P ass w o r d o n B o ot: Fixe d disk b o ot sector: Diskette acc ess:

Clear Clear [Enter] [Enter] [Disabled] [Nor m al] [Su p ervisor]

C o ntrols acc ess rights to setu p a n d us e of this syste m.

F 1 H elp E S C E xit

S elect Ite m

S elect M e n u

+/- C h a n g e V alu es E nter S elect S u b-M e n u

F9 S etu p D efa ults F1 0 Previous V alu es

Use the following chart in configuring the I/O Devices:


Feature Options Description

Supervisor Password Is: Clear Password User Password Is: Clear Password Set Supervisor Password:Enter Set User Password: Enter Password on Boot: Enabled Disabled Fixed disk boot sector: Normal Write Protect Diskette access: User Supervisor

Controls access to the setup utility. Controls access to the system. Used to set or change the Password. Used to set or change the Password. Enables security options at boot up. Write protects the boot sector to protect from Virus. Who has access to Floppy Drive.

CAUTION:

Incorrect settings can cause your system to malfunction.

SBC-PII Manual Page 43 Copyright March 2000, Computer Dynamics, Inc. All Rights Reserved 76788748.doc 2001-07-11

Requesting the setting of a Password will result in the display of this screen:
Set Supervisor Password Enter New Password Confirm New Password [ [ ] ]

4.4

The Power Menu


Selecting "Power Savings" from menu bar displays a menu like this:
Phoenix BIOS Setup Utility Power Boot [Off] [Off] [Off] [Disabled] [Off] [00:00:00] Select Power Management Mode. Choosing modes changes system power management settings. Maximum Power Savings conserves the greatest amount of system power while Maximum Performance conserves power but allows greatest system performance. To alter these settings, choose Customize. To turn off power management, choose OFF.

Main

Advanced

Security

Exit Item Specific Help

Power Saving: Standby Timeout: Auto Suspend Timeout: Hard Disk Timeout: Resume On Time: Resume Time:

F1 Help ESC Exit

Select Item Select Menu

+/- Change Values Enter Select Sub-Menu

F9

Setup Defaults

F10 Previous Values

SBC-PII Manual Page 44 Copyright March 2000, Computer Dynamics, Inc. All Rights Reserved 76788748.doc 2001-07-11

The following chart describe each of the options on this menu:


Feature Power Savings Options Disabled Maximum Performance Maximum Power Savings Customized Description Select Power Management Mode. Choosing modes changes system power management settings. Maximum Power Savings conserves the greatest amount of system power while Maximum Performance conserves power but allows greatest system performance. To alter these settings, choose Customize. To turn off power management, choose OFF. Amount of time the system needs to be in Idle Mode before entering the Standby Mode. Standby Mode turns off various devices in the system, including the screen, until you start using the computer again. Amount of time the system needs to be in Standby before entering Suspend Mode.

Standby Timeout

Auto Suspend Timeout

Hard Disk Drive Timeout

Resume On Time Resume Time

Off 1 Minute 2 Minutes 4 Minutes 6 Minutes 8 Minutes 12 Minutes 16 Minutes Off 5 Minutes 10 Minutes 15 Minutes 20 Minutes 30 Minutes 40 Minutes 60 Minutes Off 10 Seconds 15 Seconds 30 Seconds 45 Seconds 1 Minute 2 Minutes 4 Minutes 6 Minutes 8 Minutes 10 Minutes 15 Minutes On Off 00:00:00

Amount of time the hard disk needs to be inactive before it is turned off.

Enables timed wake up of the system. Set specific time the system is to wake up.

SBC-PII Manual Page 45 Copyright March 2000, Computer Dynamics, Inc. All Rights Reserved 76788748.doc 2001-07-11

4.5

The Boot Menu

After you turn on your computer, it will attempt to load the operating system (such as Windows 95) from the drive of your choice. If it cannot find the operating system on that drive, it will attempt to load it from one or more other drives in the order specified in the Boot Menu. Note: Specifying any drive as a boot drive on the Boot Menu requires the installation of an operating system on that drive. To use another drive as a bootable drive may require your installing the operating system on it. Selecting "Boot" from the Menu Bar displays the Boot menu, which looks like this:
Phoenix BIOS Setup Utility Power Boot [Enabled] [10 Seconds] [Disabled]

Main

Advanced

Security

Exit Item Specific Help

Summary Screen: Summary Delay Network Boot:

+ Removable Devices + Hard Drive ATAPI CD-ROM Drive

Keys used to view or configure devices: <Enter> expands or collapses devices with a + or <Shift+1> enables or disables a device <+> and <-> moves the device up or down

F1 Help ESC Exit

Select Item Select Menu

+/- Change Values Enter Select Sub-Menu

F9 Setup Defaults F10 Previous Values

You can arrange the boot order list at the bottom of this menu to specify the order of the devices from which the BIOS will attempt to boot the Operating System. To move a device, first select it with the up- or- down arrows, and move it up or down using the <+> and <-> keys. Use the following chart in configuring the Boot parameters:
Feature Options Description

Summary Screen Summary Delay Network Boot:

Enabled Disabled 0 30 Seconds Enabled Disabled

Controls display of the setup information screen upon bootup. Controls length of time setup information screen is displayed. Controls whether system can boot from a network drive.

SBC-PII Manual Page 46 Copyright March 2000, Computer Dynamics, Inc. All Rights Reserved 76788748.doc 2001-07-11

4.6

The Exit Menu


Selecting "Exit" from the menu bar displays this menu:
P h o e nix BI O S N ote BI O S 4.0 S et u p C o p yright 1 9 8 5- 9 6 P h o e nix T e c h n ologies Ltd. M ain Advanced Po w e r S a vings B o ot E xit Ite m S p e cific H elp

E xit S a ving C h a n g e s E xit Discarding C h a n g e s Lo a d S etu p D ef a ults Discard C h a n g e s Save Ch a n g e s

E xit S yste m S etu p a n d sav e yo ur ch a n g e s to C M O S .

F1 H elp E S C E xit

S elect Ite m S elect M e n u

+ /- C h a n g e V alues E nt er S elect S u b- M e n u

F9 S et u p D efa ults F1 0 Previous V alu es

The following describes each of the options on this menu:

4.6.1

Exit Saving Changes

After making your selections on the Setup menus, always select "Exit Saving Changes to store the selections in battery-backed CMOS RAM. The next time you boot your computer, the BIOS configures your system according to the Setup selections stored in CMOS. After you save your selections, the program displays this message:

Setup Confirmation Save configuration changes and exit now? [Yes] [No]

If you attempt to exit without saving, the program asks if you want to save before exiting and displays this message:

Setup Warning Configuration has not been saved! Save before exiting? [Yes] [No]
During bootup, Phoenix BIOS attempts to load the values saved in CMOS. If those values cause the system boot to fail, reboot and press <F2> to enter Setup. In Setup, you can get
SBC-PII Manual Page 47 Copyright March 2000, Computer Dynamics, Inc. All Rights Reserved 76788748.doc 2001-07-11

the Default Values (as described below) or try to change the selections that caused the boot to fail. 4.6.2 Exit Discarding Changes

Use this option to exit Setup without storing in CMOS any new selections you may have made. The selections previously in effect remain in effect. Pressing <Enter> will exit Setup and reboot the computer. The program asks if you want to save before exiting and displays this message:

Setup Warning Configuration has not been saved! Save before exiting? [Yes] [No]

4.6.3

Load Setup Defaults

To display the default values for all the Setup menus, select "Load Setup Defaults" from the Exit Menu. The program displays this message:

Setup Confirmation Load default configuration now? [Yes] [No]

If, during bootup, the BIOS program detects a problem in the integrity of values stored in CMOS. The program displays this message: System CMOS checksum bad - run SETUP Press <F1> to resume, <F2> to Setup The CMOS values have been corrupted or modified incorrectly, perhaps by an application program that changes data stored in CMOS. Press <F1> to resume the boot or <F2> to run Setup with the ROM default values already loaded into the menus. You can make other changes before saving the values to CMOS.

SBC-PII Manual Page 48 Copyright March 2000, Computer Dynamics, Inc. All Rights Reserved 76788748.doc 2001-07-11

4.6.4

Discard Changes

To display the previous values for all the Setup menus, select "Discard Changes" from the Exit Menu. The program displays this message:

Setup Confirmation Load previous configuration now? [Yes] [No]

4.6.5

Save Changes

Selecting Save Changes saves all the selections without exiting Setup. You can return to the other menus if you want to review and change your selections. The program displays this message:

Setup Confirmation Save configuration changes now? [Yes] [No]

SBC-PII Manual Page 49 Copyright March 2000, Computer Dynamics, Inc. All Rights Reserved 76788748.doc 2001-07-11

APPENDICES A. ADDITIONAL READING


IBM PC Technical Reference, IBM Corp., 1983. - Complete reference to the PC. There are versions for both the PC/XT and PC/AT. Microprocessor and Peripheral Handbook Volume 1 - Microprocessor, Intel, 1989. This volume contains register definitions for the parts duplicated in the Intel 82443BX and 82371EB. The Programmer's PC Sourcebook, Thom Hogan, Microsoft Press, 1988. This volume contains many tables of useful information on the PC family. It is very handy for the assembly language programmer. The Peter Norton Programmer's Guide to the IBM PC, Peter Norton, Microsoft Press, 1985. This book is an excellent introduction to the logical organization of the PC family. It highlights differences between different versions. Microsoft MS-DOS User's Guide and User's Reference, Microsoft, 1988. This volume is included with each purchase of MS-DOS. It will explain DOS commands and some important operations such as formatting. Programmer's Guide to the EGA and VGA Cards, Richard F. Ferraro, Addison-Wesley Publishing Company, 1988. This volume explains in good detail the function and use of the VGA registers and BIOS calls. Super VGA BIOS Extension VBE Version 1.2, Video Electronics Standards Association (VESA), 1991. This document provides the standardized software interface for VESA VBE compliant Super VGA hardware. Chips and Technologies F82C735 I/O Peripheral Controller with Printgine (Dual Buffered UART, Floppy Disk Controller and Parallel Port with EPP capability), Chips and Technologies 1993. This data sheet provides information on bit assignments and register assignments for the COM ports, configuration of standard/bidirectional parallel ports as well as detailed information on Enhanced Printer Port configuration. C Programmers Guide to Serial Communications, Joe Campbell, Howard W. Sams & Company, 1987. A complete reference to programming asynchronous serial communications.

SBC-PII Manual Page 50 Copyright March 2000, Computer Dynamics, Inc. All Rights Reserved 76788748.doc 2001-07-11

B. MATING CONNECTORS
Reference Designator J4, J7 Function Fanned Heat Sink CDI Part Number 7CRF0-2100-0300 (shell) * 7CRF0-2100-0000 (pin) 7CRF0-2100-0500 (shell) * 7CRF0-2100-0000 (pin) 7CRF0-2100-0400 (shell) * 7CRF0-2100-0000 (pin) 7CRF0-2100-0300 (shell) * 7CRF0-2100-0000 (pin) 7CRF0-0000-4500 7CRF0-0030-4400 7CRF0-0030-4400 7CRF0-0020-1600 7CRF0-2100-0200 (shell) * 7CRF0-2100-0000 (pin) 7CRF0-2100-0400 (shell) * 7CRF0-2100-0000 (pin) 7CRF0-0020-1000 7CRF0-0020-2600 7CRF0-0020-1000 7CRF0-0030-4400 7CRF0-0011-0800 7CRF0-0020-3400 7CRF0-0020-1000 Manufacturer's Part Number Molex 22-01-2037

J5

Front Panel

Molex 22-01-2057

J6

PC Speaker

Molex 22-01-2047

J9

Ethernet LEDs

Molex 22-01-2037

J10 J11 J12 J13 J14

Ethernet NTSC Daughter Board TTL Panel VGA Monitor Ext. Battery

L-COM ECF504-8SK AMP 1-111626-0 AMP 1-111626-0 AMP 499997-3 Molex 22-01-2027

J17

PS/2 Mouse

Molex 22-01-2047

J18, J19, J24, J25 J20 J21 J22, J28 J23 J26 J27

COM A - D Printer USB IDE Drives Power Floppy Drive Keyboard/Speaker

AMP 499997-1 AMP 499997-6 AMP 499997-1 AMP 1-111626-0 JST VHR-8N AMP 499997-8 AMP 499997-1

* Note these connectors have separate pins which must be crimped to the signal wire and then inserted into the shell.

SBC-PII Manual Page 51 Copyright March 2000, Computer Dynamics, Inc. All Rights Reserved 76788748.doc 2001-07-11

C. MECHANICAL OUTLINE

SBC-PII Manual Page 52 Copyright March 2000, Computer Dynamics, Inc. All Rights Reserved 76788748.doc 2001-07-11

COMPUTER DYNAMICS INCORPORATED 7640 Pelham Rd., Greeville, SC 29615 Phone: (864) 627-8800 WARRANTY CDI products are warranted for a period of one year from the date of purchase against all defects in materials and workmanship provided they are properly used and not modified by non-CDI personnel. Subassemblies and items not manufactured by CDI (power supplies, disk drives, etc.) are warranted for the period established by their original manufacturer. CDI will repair or replace the product, provided that it is returned promptly to CDI at the owner's expense. Prior to returning a component or subsystem, the purchaser must obtain a Return Material Authorization number (RMA#) from CDI. All board level products are shipped in an antistatic bag to prevent damage to the electronic components due to electrostatic discharge. Failure to use the bag in shipment will VOID the warranty. No other warranty is expressed or implied. DISCLAIMER CDI makes no representation or warranties with respect to the contents hereof and specifically disclaims any implied warranties of merchantability or fitness for any particular purpose. Further, CDI reserves the right to revise the prices or specifications and to make any changes from time to time in the contents hereof without obligation of CDI to notify any person of such revisions or changes. To Our Customers: It is our intention to provide you with accurate and useful information about our product. Although the information is correct to the best of our knowledge, we cannot assume responsibility for inaccuracies within the manual. We request that you inform us of any errors found, areas difficult to understand or suggestions to improve this manual. Please fill out the bottom portion (using additional sheets if necessary) with your comments and return it to CDI. Thank you. Name: Company: Address: Phone: Product Type: COMMENTS: Card Serial No. Computer Dynamics, Inc. 7640 Pelham Rd. Greenville, S.C. 29615 Phone: (864) 627-8800

SBC-PII Manual Page 53 Copyright March 2000, Computer Dynamics, Inc. All Rights Reserved 76788748.doc 2001-07-11

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