On Tue, Dec 08, 2009 at 03:45:19PM -0800, David Bartley wrote:
On Mon, Dec 7, 2009 at 7:02 AM, Luc Verhaegen libv@skynet.be wrote:
On Mon, Nov 30, 2009 at 01:19:23AM -0800, David Bartley wrote:
The way I figured this out was by picking the chip closest to the BIOS (the VT8237A southbridge) and inverting each of the GPIO lines one at a time. The GPIO stuff was gleaned from the VT8237R datasheet since I couldn't find the 'A one anywhere. All in all, a very fun and educating experience; next step, coreboot!
On a related note, reading the flash back seems slightly broken; sometimes the read gets a few bytes wrong.
-- David
- {0x1106, 0x3337, 0x1043, 0x80ed, 0x1106, 0xB188, 0, 0, NULL, NULL, "ASUS", "M2V-MX", board_asus_m2v_mx},
This seems to be a better match:
0x1106, 0x1336, 0x1043, 0x80ed, 0x1106, 0x3288, 0x1043, 0x8249
Confirmed this works. The code checks for the VT8237A ISA bridge in any case.
-- David
Ok, applying your patch with the above id list.
Luc Verhaegen.