vsnyder@jato.jpl.nasa.gov (Van Snyder) (03/19/91)
Here's the poop on setting the seek step rate for floppies, from page 60 of the Rainbow TOS distribution: "Floprate: - Floprate, XBIOS function 41, checks or sets the seek rate for a floppy drive. This is new; the seek rate must be set with (previously) undocumented variables on earlier versions of TOS. Floprate example. int devno, newrate; oldrate = Floprate(devno,newrate); This returns the current seek rate if newrate is -1, otherwise sets the seek rate to newrate. For doing this with previous versions of TOS, the seekrate byte locations for drive A and B are: OS Version Drive A Drive B ---------- ------- ------- 0x0100 $A09 $A0D 0x0102 $A4F $A53 In either case valid seek rate byte values are: Value Rate ----- ---- 00 6 ms 01 12 ms 02 2 ms 03 3 ms This call does not range check the drive ID or new seek rate. If devno is zero, it assumes drive A:, if nonzero, drive B:." That's 41 decimal. You can get the TOS version from offset 02.w from the place pointed at by 0x4F2.L (_sysbase). -- vsnyder@jato.Jpl.Nasa.Gov ames!elroy!jato!vsnyder vsnyder@jato.uucp
hase@netmbx.UUCP (Hartmut Semken) (03/23/91)
vsnyder@jato.jpl.nasa.gov (Van Snyder) writes: >Here's the poop on setting the seek step rate for floppies, from page 60 >of the Rainbow TOS distribution: >"Floprate: - Floprate, XBIOS function 41, checks or sets the seek > rate for a floppy drive. This is new; the seek rate > must be set with (previously) undocumented variables > on earlier versions of TOS. This is true if You want to set different seek rates for both drives. If You want to set both drives to te same seek rate, place the new seek rate in adress 0x440 (zero: six, 1: 12, 2: 2, 3: 3 milliseconds) and call the function pointed to by the vector in adress 0x46A (hdv_init). This will make new Bios parameter blocks for both drives and tel TOS to use the new seek rate. Works on all TOS versions, cause it uses only documented system variables. hase -- Hartmut Semken, Lupsteiner Weg 67, 1000 Berlin 37 hase@netmbx.UUCP Hi! (Zaphod Beeblebrox)
ytsuji@wucc.waseda.ac.jp (Y.Tsuji Y.Tsuji shagaku) (03/25/91)
I don't bother setting the step rates because nearly all the drives can move from track to track in 3 ms. What you need is to feed the STEP signal of WD1772 to 74123N, a TTL, with C & R for 7.0 ms and let this negate the HD-mode. Just another IC and you can forget how to set the steprate.