This package contains the Linux PCI Utilities, version 1.99.4-alpha. Copyright (c) 1997--1999 Martin Mares All files in this package can be freely distributed and used according to the terms of the GNU General Public License, either version 2 or (at your opinion) any newer version. This is the same distribution policy as for the Linux kernel itself -- see /usr/src/linux/COPYING for details. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ BIG FAT WARNING: This is an ALPHA version. The documentation is out of date and the same holds for spec files and even for this README. And, of course, you should expect this release to contain BUGS. WHY ALPHA? I've split the real PCI access primitives from the rest of the code and created libpci, which supports not only /proc/bus/pci, but also direct hardware access and reading of configuration space dumps and it's intended to work on all Linux versions and even on non-Linux systems, making creation of portable programs communicating with PCI devices possible. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ The Linux PCI Utilities contain various utilities for dealing with the PCI bus in Linux: - lspci: displays detailed information about all PCI busses and devices in the system, replacing the original /proc/pci interface. - setpci: allows to read from and write to PCI device configuration registers. For example, you can adjust the latency timers with it. See manual pages for more details. To compile the package, just run "make". To install it, "make install". You need kernel 2.1.82 or newer to use all functions of this package. For older kernels, only direct hardware access is supported and you must be root to use it. If you have any bug reports or suggestions, send them to the author. If you want, subscribe to linux-pci@atrey.karlin.mff.cuni.cz (send "subscribe linux-pci Your Full Name" to listproc@atrey.karlin.mff.cuni.cz). Release notes about new versions will be send to the list and problems with the Linux PCI support will be probably discussed there, too. You also might want to look at the pciutils web page containing release notes and other news: http://atrey.karlin.mff.cuni.cz/~mj/pciutils.html. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ TODO: - lspci: "scan hard" function - lib: "syscall" access method