Hi James,
You wanted to know if other people are interested. I am one that is interested. I just recently joined the list and am interested in becoming involved in the coding. I will soon have a test machine to play with. I do'nt have much experience in this sort of thing but am very interested in learning and trying to help out where I can. So as far as what the board needs on it, your idea with needing POST in order to help program it, makes sense to me.
Steve
On Sun, 14 Mar 1999, James Oakley wrote:
Matthew Sullivan wrote:
Whilst this is a good idea, it wasn't quite what i was thinking about, for the only reason ... wouldn't this give us flashing problems, or can you also arrange to be able to flash to the '2nd' BIOS ..? (I said I was not much good with digital electronics design ;-))
Does anybody know how, electrically, the flash is erased and reprogrammed? None of my books with BIOS stuff in them mention this. Is it a MEMW or an IOW line? Either way, if you remove the BIOS and place two of them on an appropriate ISA card with a switch on their enable pins, it should be fine (just be careful of the switch position before doing any flashing, of course).
However, assuming that one BIOS can be programmed, and the other maybe read-only?
Simple, don't tie whatever line it is (MEMW/IOW) that enables writes to the flash to the backup bios. And clearly label which socket is which on the silk screen :-)
any design ideas/plans etc... If this works, I'd like to get my hands on a plan ASAP cause this would be just what I need...
Once a list of features is finalised, it's probably a matter of a couple of hours to design the schematic and board (I have an autorouter at work, we've done PCI boards before). Then we can figure how much one of these babies will cost us each (most expensive is the board itself, though there are some cheap solutions out there now, such as ExpressPCB (~US$100 for a couple of boards, most of which is the setup fee, additional boards cost much less)).
We also could etch the boards ourselves, but that way lies madness. It sounds cheap at first but you don't want to try to draw an edgecard connector with a marker (Rat Shack style), and not everyobody has access to a UV oven or a CNC machine.
If you're carful you could even make a business plan & money from it... but more on that when we see what we've got....
Nah, no market for that outside of people like us, I prefer the non-profit approach anyway (why do you think I hang around here?). I propose that any additional electronic design be part of the OpenBIOS project, like what is done by many Linux packages that have specific hardware.
Is anybody else interested? Speak now... please :-)
James Oakley jfunk@roadrunner.nf.net