| R.Marek@sh.cvut.cz | 7f15b66 | 2005-05-26 12:42:19 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1 | Kernel driver eeprom | 
 | 2 | ==================== | 
 | 3 |  | 
 | 4 | Supported chips: | 
 | 5 |   * Any EEPROM chip in the designated address range | 
 | 6 |     Prefix: 'eeprom' | 
 | 7 |     Addresses scanned: I2C 0x50 - 0x57 | 
 | 8 |     Datasheets: Publicly available from: | 
 | 9 |                 Atmel (www.atmel.com), | 
 | 10 |                 Catalyst (www.catsemi.com), | 
 | 11 |                 Fairchild (www.fairchildsemi.com), | 
 | 12 |                 Microchip (www.microchip.com), | 
 | 13 |                 Philips (www.semiconductor.philips.com), | 
 | 14 |                 Rohm (www.rohm.com), | 
 | 15 |                 ST (www.st.com), | 
 | 16 |                 Xicor (www.xicor.com), | 
 | 17 |                 and others. | 
 | 18 |  | 
 | 19 |         Chip     Size (bits)    Address | 
 | 20 |         24C01     1K            0x50 (shadows at 0x51 - 0x57) | 
 | 21 |         24C01A    1K            0x50 - 0x57 (Typical device on DIMMs) | 
 | 22 |         24C02     2K            0x50 - 0x57 | 
 | 23 |         24C04     4K            0x50, 0x52, 0x54, 0x56 | 
 | 24 |                                 (additional data at 0x51, 0x53, 0x55, 0x57) | 
 | 25 |         24C08     8K            0x50, 0x54 (additional data at 0x51, 0x52, | 
 | 26 |                                 0x53, 0x55, 0x56, 0x57) | 
 | 27 |         24C16    16K            0x50 (additional data at 0x51 - 0x57) | 
 | 28 |         Sony      2K            0x57 | 
 | 29 |  | 
 | 30 |         Atmel     34C02B  2K    0x50 - 0x57, SW write protect at 0x30-37 | 
 | 31 |         Catalyst  34FC02  2K    0x50 - 0x57, SW write protect at 0x30-37 | 
 | 32 |         Catalyst  34RC02  2K    0x50 - 0x57, SW write protect at 0x30-37 | 
 | 33 |         Fairchild 34W02   2K    0x50 - 0x57, SW write protect at 0x30-37 | 
 | 34 |         Microchip 24AA52  2K    0x50 - 0x57, SW write protect at 0x30-37 | 
 | 35 |         ST        M34C02  2K    0x50 - 0x57, SW write protect at 0x30-37 | 
 | 36 |  | 
 | 37 |  | 
 | 38 | Authors: | 
 | 39 |         Frodo Looijaard <frodol@dds.nl>, | 
 | 40 |         Philip Edelbrock <phil@netroedge.com>, | 
 | 41 |         Jean Delvare <khali@linux-fr.org>, | 
 | 42 |         Greg Kroah-Hartman <greg@kroah.com>, | 
 | 43 |         IBM Corp. | 
 | 44 |  | 
 | 45 | Description | 
 | 46 | ----------- | 
 | 47 |  | 
 | 48 | This is a simple EEPROM module meant to enable reading the first 256 bytes | 
 | 49 | of an EEPROM (on a SDRAM DIMM for example). However, it will access serial | 
 | 50 | EEPROMs on any I2C adapter. The supported devices are generically called | 
 | 51 | 24Cxx, and are listed above; however the numbering for these | 
 | 52 | industry-standard devices may vary by manufacturer. | 
 | 53 |  | 
 | 54 | This module was a programming exercise to get used to the new project | 
 | 55 | organization laid out by Frodo, but it should be at least completely | 
 | 56 | effective for decoding the contents of EEPROMs on DIMMs. | 
 | 57 |  | 
 | 58 | DIMMS will typically contain a 24C01A or 24C02, or the 34C02 variants. | 
 | 59 | The other devices will not be found on a DIMM because they respond to more | 
 | 60 | than one address. | 
 | 61 |  | 
 | 62 | DDC Monitors may contain any device. Often a 24C01, which responds to all 8 | 
 | 63 | addresses, is found. | 
 | 64 |  | 
 | 65 | Recent Sony Vaio laptops have an EEPROM at 0x57. We couldn't get the | 
 | 66 | specification, so it is guess work and far from being complete. | 
 | 67 |  | 
 | 68 | The Microchip 24AA52/24LCS52, ST M34C02, and others support an additional | 
 | 69 | software write protect register at 0x30 - 0x37 (0x20 less than the memory | 
 | 70 | location). The chip responds to "write quick" detection at this address but | 
 | 71 | does not respond to byte reads. If this register is present, the lower 128 | 
 | 72 | bytes of the memory array are not write protected. Any byte data write to | 
 | 73 | this address will write protect the memory array permanently, and the | 
 | 74 | device will no longer respond at the 0x30-37 address. The eeprom driver | 
 | 75 | does not support this register. | 
 | 76 |  | 
 | 77 | Lacking functionality: | 
 | 78 |  | 
 | 79 | * Full support for larger devices (24C04, 24C08, 24C16). These are not | 
 | 80 | typically found on a PC. These devices will appear as separate devices at | 
 | 81 | multiple addresses. | 
 | 82 |  | 
 | 83 | * Support for really large devices (24C32, 24C64, 24C128, 24C256, 24C512). | 
 | 84 | These devices require two-byte address fields and are not supported. | 
 | 85 |  | 
 | 86 | * Enable Writing. Again, no technical reason why not, but making it easy | 
 | 87 | to change the contents of the EEPROMs (on DIMMs anyway) also makes it easy | 
 | 88 | to disable the DIMMs (potentially preventing the computer from booting) | 
 | 89 | until the values are restored somehow. | 
 | 90 |  | 
 | 91 | Use: | 
 | 92 |  | 
 | 93 | After inserting the module (and any other required SMBus/i2c modules), you | 
 | 94 | should have some EEPROM directories in /sys/bus/i2c/devices/* of names such | 
 | 95 | as "0-0050". Inside each of these is a series of files, the eeprom file | 
 | 96 | contains the binary data from EEPROM. |