4 Address Map and Special Registers

This chapter explains how the four UARTs and special registers are addressed, as well as the layout of those registers. This material will be of interest to programmers writing driver software for the QSC-100.

4.1 Base Address and Interrupt Level (IRQ)

The base address and IRQ used by the QSC-100 are determined by the BIOS or operating system. Each serial port uses 8 consecutive I/O locations. The four ports reside in a single block of I/O space in eight byte increments, for a total of 32 contiguous bytes, as shown in Figure 5.

Port

I/O Address Range

Serial 1

Base Address + 0

to

Base Address + 7

 

 

 

 

Serial 2

Base Address + 8

to

Base Address + 15

 

 

 

 

Serial 3

Base Address + 16

to

Base Address + 23

Serial 4

Base Address + 24

to

Base Address + 31

 

 

 

 

Figure 6 --- Port Address Map

All four serial ports share the same IRQ. The QSC-100 signals a hardware interrupt when any port requires service. The interrupt signal is maintained until no port requires service. Interrupts are level-sensitive on the PCI bus.

The base address and IRQ are automatically detected by the device driversQuatech supplies for various operating systems. For cases where no device driver is available, such as for operation under DOS, Quatech supplies the "QTPCI" DOS software utility for manually determining the resources used. See page 0 for details.

Quatech QSC-100 User's Manual

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Quatech QSC-100 user manual Address Map and Special Registers, Base Address and Interrupt Level IRQ, Port Address Range