Quoting Corey Osgood <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>: > Joseph Smith wrote: >> Ok, so I tried this and it just returns a "SPD located at 0x69" is >> this correct? >> It is much different than the standard 0x50, etc. Is this because it >> is embedded?? Thanks for all help. >> >> Thanks - Joe >> > > > I'd do an dump first, just to make sure that it really is an spd rom and > not some other device on the smbus. Or else do a dump and try to use it > in the same run, can't really hurt. > > -Corey > > OK, I think I know what is going on here. Here is a dump of my smbus with the legacy bios.
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 a b c d e f 00: XX XX XX XX XX XX XX XX XX XX XX XX XX 10: XX XX XX XX XX XX XX XX XX XX XX XX XX XX XX XX 20: XX XX XX XX XX XX XX XX XX XX XX XX XX UU XX XX 30: XX XX XX XX XX XX XX XX XX XX XX XX XX XX XX XX 40: XX XX XX XX XX XX XX XX XX XX XX XX XX XX XX XX 50: XX XX XX XX XX XX XX XX XX XX XX XX XX XX XX XX 60: XX XX XX XX XX XX XX XX XX 69 XX XX XX XX XX XX 70: XX XX XX XX XX XX XX XX SPD would show up at 0x50 or 0x51 right? It doesn't appear there is SPD on the on-board memory.I only show items at 0x2d (sensor) and 0x69 (clock chip). So where do you think I should go from here? I could set up a *.c file in the mainboard directory to call a function to manually set the correct settings for socket2 (I know what the settings are supposed to be) after raminit.c dynamicly configures the register but before the sdram_enable function is called. It should be fairly simple to do and call from auto.c. What do you think? Thanks - Joe -- linuxbios mailing list linuxbios@linuxbios.org http://www.linuxbios.org/mailman/listinfo/linuxbios