VG4 README.TXT File
+=====================+
| Release Information |
+=====================+
Device Driver Diskette...............................(Version 3.31)
On this diskette you will find device drivers for the VG4 VL-Bus
IDE Disk Controller.
VG4.EXE (Version 3.30) is the installation utility.
VG4.SYS (Version 3.30) is the driver for DOS.
VG4.386 (Version 3.30) is the driver for Microsoft Windows 3.1
and Windows for Workgroups 3.11
VG4FDISK.EXE (Version 1.20) is the drives partition utility
DISK1.NT is the information file for Windows NT driver setup
WIN_NT is the subdirectory containing the driver for Microsoft
Windows NT 3.1 and 3.5
OS2 is the subdirectory containing the driver for IBM OS/2
2.x and WARP
NETWARE is the subdirectory containing the driver for Novell
Netware 3.x and 4.01
UNIX is the subdirectory containing the driver for SCO UNIX
3.2.x and AT&T UNIX SVR 4.0
WIN95 is the subdirectory containing the driver for Microsoft
Windows 95
+====================================================+
| DOS Driver for VG4 VL-Bus IDE Controller |
+====================================================+
Your VG4 disk controller needs the device drivers to take the
advantage of the high performance 32-bit VL-Bus when running under
assorted operating systems.
You can use the installation program "VG4.EXE" to install the DOS
driver and Windows driver automatically(Please refer to the
VG4 Installation Guide for details). If you want to install
the drivers by yourself, please follow the procedures below:
1. Complete the installation steps from (1) to (8) which are described
in the VG4 Installation Guide and boot to the DOS prompt.
2. Copy the driver VG4.SYS to your system in the appropriate path.
3. Add the following statement to your CONFIG.SYS file:
device=C:\VG4\VG4.SYS [/F] [/W] [/P] [/D0:n or /M0:m]
[/D1:n or /M1:m] [/X2]
The parameters F, W and P define the operating mode, and D0, D1, M0,
M1, n, and m define the speed settings of the attached hard drives
NOTE: Only one speed mode can be specified per VL-IDE device. Either
D or M speed mode should be specified on the individual VL-IDE device,
NOT both. It is possible to define different modes for separate
VL-IDE devices. Example: /D0:d /M0:m is illegal
/D0:d /M1:m is legal
F : VG4 controller works in the Fast mode (Default operation
is in Turbo mode).
W : VG4 controller works in the 16-bit data access mode.
Certain motherboard CPUs(for example, IBM 486 SLC2) have a 16-bit
external data bus and cannot operate in the default 32-bit data
access mode.
P : VG4 controller works in the Power-Saving-Detection mode.
This parameter is used when the IDE drive is not fully compatible
with the power saving functions.
D0 : drive 0 PIO speed setting
D1 : drive 1 PIO speed setting
n : drive speed from 0 to 8, or A
0 to 8 : PIO speed level (speed 8 is the so-called MODE 3 timing)
A : IORDY indicator
M0 : drive 0 DMA speed setting
M1 : drive 1 DMA speed setting
m : drive speed from 0 to 8
0 to 8 : DMA speed level
X2 : Disable ISA-IDE IDE HD support (default: Enabled)
In the Fast(F) mode, the VG4 disk controller supports 32-bit
VL-Bus I/O access. In Turbo(T) mode, the VG4 not only supports
32-bit VL-Bus I/O access but also read/write multiple commands. Since
read/write multiple commands allow the host to access disk data in
multiple-sector blocks, the Turbo mode will usually be faster.
Note that not all IDE drives support the read/write multiple commands.
Usually, you may set your VG4 to run in the Turbo mode. When
your system is brought up, the driver VG4.SYS will automatically
issues an Identify Drive command to check if the attached IDE drive(s)
support the read/write multiple commands. In case your drive(s) does
not support the read/write multiple commands, the VG4 disk
controller will automatically be forced to run in the Fast mode.
Please also note: While some IDE drives may respond to the Identify
Drive command and confirm its capability to support the read/write
multiple commands, they may not support the read/write multiple
commands properly. In such cases, you will need to specify the
operating mode as "F" explicitly to ensure reliable operation of such
IDE drives.
Example:
The DOS driver VG4.SYS resides in the root directory of the drive
C:. If you want your VG4 controller to run in the TURBO mode;
drive 0 at speed 3 and drive 1 at speed 5. Please add the following
statement to the file CONFIG.SYS.
device = c:\VG4.SYS /D0:3 /D1:5
If your VG4 controller has to run in the Fast mode, the
statement must be changed to:
device = c:\VG4.SYS /f /D0:3 /D1:5
If the DOS driver is installed manually, you might have the following
three types of prompt messages when you boot up the system.
(a) HDD 0 setting: FAST Mode, Speed 5 by DEVICE DRIVER AUTOMATICALLY
HDD 1 setting: Turbo Mode, DMA Speed 5 by DEVICE DRIVER AUTOMATICALLY
Where the operating mode and the speed parameter may vary with the hard
drive(s) attached. This message will be shown when the device driver is
installed without any user specified parameter and the drive(s)
attached can be found in the internal speed table of the DOS driver.
(b) HDD 0 setting: FAST Mode, Speed 2 by HARDWARE JUMPER SETTING
HDD 1 setting: Turbo Mode, Speed 2 by HARDWARE JUMPER SETTING
+-----------------------------------------------+
| Notice |
| To optimize the performance of your HDD |
| please execute the Installation Utility |
| to reconfigure your device driver |
+-----------------------------------------------+
Where the operating mode and speed parameter may vary with the hard
drive(s) attached. This message will be shown when the HDD(s) can't be
found in the internal speed table. It might appear when the drive(s)
are brand new models for phe device driver, or the device driver is
copied from other PC's hard drive. The Installation Utility stands
for the VG4.EXE.
(c) HDD 0 setting: FAST Mode, Speed 5 by USER DEFINED SETTING
HDD 1 setting: Turbo Mode, Speed 5 by USER DEFINED SETTING
+----------------------------------------------------+
| Notice |
| Please ensure the above setting is your preference. |
| For better reliability and optimized performance |
| please execute the Installation Utility |
| to reconfigure your device driver |
+-----------------------------------------------------+
Where the operating mode and speed parameter may vary with the hard
drive(s) attached. This message will be shown when user defined
parameter is entered with the DOS device driver. The Installation
Utility stands for the VG4.EXE.
Four IDE Drive Note
-------------------
1. The DOS Device driver "VG4.SYS" loads and supports the IDE
hard disks on the secondary ISA-IDE connector. You can connect
up to four IDE Hard disk Drives on your VG4.
2. The Master/Slave drive settings for drives on the ISA-IDE
connector are the same as for VL-IDE connector. There should
be only one master and one slave on the ISA-IDE connector.
3. The ROM BIOS on the VG4 controller supports large IDE
drives on the VL-IDE (J1) connector ONLY.
4. If you would like to connect 3 (or 4) IDE hard disks, make sure the
DOS driver VG4.SYS in installed. Than you can use the
EIFDISK.EXE enclosed in the "Drivers and Installation Utilities"
diskette to partition you 3rd and 4th IDE drives before formatting
them.
IDE CDROM and other IDE Devices
--------------------------------
Other devices such as IDE CDROM and TAPE MUST support IDE ATAPI
interface. The drive manufacturer provides software drivers to
attach these drives.
Be sure to configure the proper master/slave drive settings. On
BOTH PRIMARY and SECONDARY connectors, there is one master and one
slave on EACH connector.
On either PRIMARY or SECONDARY connector, the other IDE device
relies on their supplied drivers. The VG4.SYS driver does
not load support for IDE devices besides IDE hard disks.
When installed on the PRIMARY connector, set in the Mainboard
Bios drive type to "not installed" for the other IDE device and
when necessary, indicate the parameters IRQ14 PORT 1F0 for the
driver installation.
When installed on the SECONDARY connector, indicate IRQ15 and PORT
170 for the driver installation.
+===================================================+
| VG4 device driver for Microsoft Windows 3.1 and|
| Windows for Workgroups 3.11 |
+===================================================+
The file VG4.386 is the Microsoft Windows 3.1 disk driver for the
VG4 disk controller.
While Microsoft Windows version 3.1 supports 32-bit disk access, the
disk data transfer between host and the IDE adapter is still limited
by the 16-bit ISA bus. If you want to speed up your hard drives under
Windows through the 32-bit VL-Bus, you need this driver. In addition,
the driver also allows your host to access the disk data through the
faster "read/write multiple" commands.
If you choose to install the Windows driver manually, you should
complete the installation steps from (1) to (8) which are described
in the VG4 Installation Guide, then follow the steps below:
1. Copy the driver VG4.386 to your system in the appropriate path.
It is recommended that the driver VG4.386 be copied to the
Windows SYSTEM directory.
2. Check if the following lines exit in the [386Enh] section of your
SYSTEM.ini file.
[386Enh]
32BitDiskAccess=ON
device=*int13
If the statements do not exist, add them into the [386Enh] section.
If the statements exist, but 32BitDiskAccess is set to "OFF", change
it to "ON".
3. Delete the "device=*wdctrl" device setting.
Delete the command line "device=*wdctrl" from the [386Enh] section
of your SYSTEM.INI file, if it exists.
4. Install the virtual device "VG4.386".
Add the following command lines in the [386Enh] section of the
SYSTEM.INI file:
device=[drive:][\path\]VG4.386
DisksAccessMode=[Fast|Turbo] [/W] [/D0:n|/M0:m] [/D1:n|/M1:m]
The [drive:] and [\path\] point to the directory that contains
VG4.386 file. Note that the setting must specify the full path
of the device driver VG4.386.
The setting of disk_access_mode specifies the disk access mode as
follows:
Fast : VG4 controller works in the Fast mode
Turbo : VG4 controller works in the Turbo mode
(default mode)
W : VG4 controller works in the 16-bit data access mode.
Certain motherboard CPUs(for example, IBM 486 SLC2) have a
16-bit external data bus and cannot operate in the default
32-bit data access mode.
D0 : drive 0 PIO speed setting
D1 : drive 1 PIO speed setting
n : drive speed from 0 to 8, or A
0 to 8 : PIO speed level(speed 8 is the so-called MODE 3
timing
A : IORDY indicator
M0 : drive 0 DMA speed setting
M1 : drive 1 DMA speed setting
m : drive speed from 0 to 8
0 to 8 : DMA speed level
Note : If no parameter is specified, the VG4 disk
controller will be set to run under the default Turbo
and 32 bit data access mode.
In the Fast(F) mode, the VG4 disk controller supports
32-bit VL-Bus I/O access. In the Turbo(T) mode, the VG4 not
only supports 32 bit VL-Bus I/O access but also read/write multiple
commands. Since read/write multiple commands allow the host to
access disk data in multiple-sector blocks, the Turbo mode will
usually be faster.
Note that not all IDE drives support the read/write multiple
commands. Usually, you may set your VG4 to run in the Turbo
mode. When your system is brought up, the driver VG4.386 will
automatically issue an Identify Drive command to check if the
attached IDE drive(s) support the read/write multiple commands.
In case your drive(s) does not support the read/write multiple
commands, the VG4 disk controller will automatically be
forced to run in the Fast mode.
Please also note: While some IDE drives may respond to the Identify
Drive command and confirm its capability to support the read/write
multiple commands, they may not support the read/write multiple
commands properly. In such cases, you will need to specify the
operating mode as "Fast" explicitly to ensure reliable operation of
such IDE drives.
+=============================+
| Trademark Acknowledgments |
+=============================+
VESA is a registered trademark of the Video Electronics Standards
Association. VL-Bus is a trademark of the Video Electronics Standards
Association.
MS-DOS and Windows are registered trademarks of Microsoft Corporation.
PC, PC-AT and OS/2 are regist red trademarks of IBM Corporation.
UNIX is a registered trademark of American Telephone and Telegraph Corp.
Netware is a registered trademark of Novell Corporation.
Download Driver Pack
After your driver has been downloaded, follow these simple steps to install it.
Expand the archive file (if the download file is in zip or rar format).
If the expanded file has an .exe extension, double click it and follow the installation instructions.
Otherwise, open Device Manager by right-clicking the Start menu and selecting Device Manager.
Find the device and model you want to update in the device list.
Double-click on it to open the Properties dialog box.
From the Properties dialog box, select the Driver tab.
Click the Update Driver button, then follow the instructions.
Very important: You must reboot your system to ensure that any driver updates have taken effect.
For more help, visit our Driver Support section for step-by-step videos on how to install drivers for every file type.