On 27.09.2007 18:21, Robinson Tryon wrote: > On 9/23/07, Uwe Hermann <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: >> To make the tool more useful we need >> >> - As many supported Super I/Os as possible. >> >> Supporting new ones is relatively easy, but a bit time-consuming. >> You have to grab the datasheet, find out the ID/version of the >> Super I/O and add it in the respective file (ite.c for ITE Super I/Os, >> for example). For the dump functionality you have to add a (large) table >> with all registers and their defaults. > > Okay -- I grabbed the code from SVN, compiled it and ran it on a few > computers, but I didn't get any useful output (verbose mode was also > pretty sparse). I assume that this means that my Super I/O chips are > not supported, correct?
Not supported by superiotool, however if there was any output at all, we'd like to know it. That alone would probably help us identify the Super I/O, and from there, adding support is rather easy. > I did some digging online, but I wasn't very successful in finding > datasheets for Super I/Os. If someone could point me in the right > direction, I could take a few datasheets and covert them into the > appropriate tables. Although it would be nifty to add support for > whatever chips are on my motherboards, I'm happy to work on whatever > Super I/Os datasheets are available right now. I can send dozens of ITE data sheets (even for now unavailable chips) your way. What's the vendor of your Super I/O? Carl-Daniel -- linuxbios mailing list linuxbios@linuxbios.org http://www.linuxbios.org/mailman/listinfo/linuxbios