T1108 IPX workstation driver installation 1. Insert the T1108 driver diskette into a floppy drive or create a subdirectory on the server hard drive called LAN_DRV_.RAC. 2. If you create the LAN_DRV_.RAC subdirectory on a hard drive, copy the IPXSHELL.OBJ and IPXSHELL.LAN files from the driver diskette to the appropriate subdirectory. 3. Using the Novell WSGEN utility, create the IPX.COM file. Type: WSGEN Press . Follow the menus to highlight the appropriate driver. Select the Racore TMS380/2000 network adapter. For more information regarding WSGEN.EXE, see Novell documentation. 4. Use the Novell JUMPERS utility to select different options. NOTE: The IPX.COM file will be created under the WSGEN subdirectory. Copy the IPX.COM to diskette or to the hard drive to use it. -------------------------------------------------------------------------- Options supported by the T1108 IPX Driver -------------------------------------------------------------------------- The following is a list of defaults and available options when using the Novell WSGEN utility to create the IPX.COM file. . To select other options and/or combinations select option 4, then use the Novell JUMPERS utility. Note: For options 0: Ring Speed = 16Mb/s and Zero Wait Option: I/O Address: Interrupt: DMA: =============================================================== 0 A20h 2 PseudoDMA - 8 bit 1 N/A 2 N/A 3 N/A 4 Self-configured 5 Driver Configurable By Novell's JUMPERS Utility Supported Options For Novell's JUMPERS Utility ============================================================== DMA: Pseudo DMA I/O: 0A20h, 0A40h IRQ: 2(9), 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 10, 11, 12, Not Set Sixteen bit PDMA: No, Yes Zero wait state I/O ports: No, Yes PDMA or PseudoDMA can be configured for either 8 or 16 bit transfers. Consult the documentation accompanying the adapter card to see if the 16 bit mode is supported. All adapters, however, support the 8 bit mode. To enable PDMA using the JUMPERS utility, select DMA=NONE. Zero Wait State I/O Ports can only be enabled on an adapter card running in the 8 bit PseudoDMA mode. A slight increase in performance is possible from adapters running in this mode. Not all host computers are able to support this option. If a system lock up occurs while using this option, discontinue use.