setpci (8)





NAME

       setpci - configure PCI devices


SYNOPSIS

       setpci [options] devices operations...


DESCRIPTION

       setpci is a utility for querying and configuring PCI devices.

       To make use of all the features of this program, you need to have Linux
       kernel 2.1.82 or newer which supports the /proc/bus/pci interface. With
       older  kernels,  the  PCI  utilities have to use direct hardware access
       which is available only to root and it suffers from numerous race  con-
       ditions and other problems.

       All numbers are entered in hexadecimal notation.


OPTIONS

       -v     Tells  setpci  to  be  verbose  and display detailed information
              about configuration space accesses.

       -f     Tells setpci not to complain when there's nothing to do (when no
              devices  are  selected).   This  option  is  intended for use in
              widely-distributed configuration scripts  where  it's  uncertain
              whether the device in question is present in the machine or not.

       -D     `Demo mode' -- simulate configuration space accesses instead  of
              really  doing  them.   It's useful to try setpci -vD to see what
              your complex sequence of setpci operations does before you actu-
              ally execute it.

       --version
              Shows setpci version. This option should be used standalone.


DEVICE SELECTION

       Before each sequence of operations you need to select which devices you
       wish that operation to affect.

       -s [[<bus>]:][<slot>][.[<func>]]
              Select devices in specified bus, slot and function. Each  compo-
              nent  of the device address can be omitted or set as "*" meaning
              "any value". All numbers are hexadecimal.  E.g., "0:" means  all
              devices  on  bus  0,  "0" means all functions of device 0 on any
              bus, "0.3" selects third function of device 0 on all busses  and
              ".4" selects only fourth function of each device.

       -d [<vendor>]:[<device>]
              Select  devices  with  specified vendor and device ID. Both ID's
              are given in hexadecimal and may be  omitted  or  given  as  "*"
              meaning "any value".



REGISTER NAMES

       setpci  knows  the  following configuration register names. See PCI bus
       specs for their precise meaning or consult /usr/include/linux/pci.h for
       few comments.

       VENDOR_ID
       DEVICE_ID
       COMMAND
       STATUS
       REVISION
       CLASS_PROG
       CLASS_DEVICE
       CACHE_LINE_SIZE
       LATENCY_TIMER
       HEADER_TYPE
       BIST
       BASE_ADDRESS_0
       BASE_ADDRESS_1
       BASE_ADDRESS_2
       BASE_ADDRESS_3
       BASE_ADDRESS_4
       BASE_ADDRESS_5
       CARDBUS_CIS
       SUBSYSTEM_VENDOR_ID
       SUBSYSTEM_ID
       ROM_ADDRESS
       INTERRUPT_LINE
       INTERRUPT_PIN
       MIN_GNT
       MAX_LAT
       PRIMARY_BUS
       SECONDARY_BUS
       SUBORDINATE_BUS
       SEC_LATENCY_TIMER
       IO_BASE
       IO_LIMIT
       SEC_STATUS
       MEMORY_BASE
       MEMORY_LIMIT
       PREF_MEMORY_BASE
       PREF_MEMORY_LIMIT
       PREF_BASE_UPPER32
       PREF_LIMIT_UPPER32
       IO_BASE_UPPER16
       IO_LIMIT_UPPER16
       BRIDGE_ROM_ADDRESS
       BRIDGE_CONTROL
       CB_CARDBUS_BASE
       CB_CAPABILITIES
       CB_SEC_STATUS
       CB_BUS_NUMBER
       CB_CARDBUS_NUMBER
       CB_SUBORDINATE_BUS
       CB_CARDBUS_LATENCY
       CB_MEMORY_BASE_0
       CB_IO_LIMIT_1
       CB_IO_LIMIT_1_HI
       CB_SUBSYSTEM_VENDOR_ID
       CB_SUBSYSTEM_ID
       CB_LEGACY_MODE_BASE


PCILIB OPTIONS

       The  PCI  utilities  use PCILIB (a portable library providing platform-
       independent functions for PCI configuration space access)  to  talk  to
       the PCI cards. The following options control parameters of the library,
       especially what access method it uses.  By  default,  PCILIB  uses  the
       first  available access method and displays no debugging messages. Each
       switch is accompanied by a  list  of  hardware/software  configurations
       it's supported in.

       -P <dir>
              Use  Linux  2.1  style  configuration  access to directory <dir>
              instead of /proc/bus/pci. (Linux 2.1 or newer only)

       -H1    Use direct hardware access via Intel configuration mechanism  1.
              (i386 and compatible only)

       -H2    Use  direct hardware access via Intel configuration mechanism 2.
              Warning: This method is able to address only first 16 devices on
              any bus and it seems to be very unrealiable in many cases. (i386
              and compatible only)

       -S     Use PCI access syscalls. (Linux on Alpha and UltraSparc only)

       -F <file>
              Extract all information from given  file  containing  output  of
              lspci  -x. This is very useful for analysis of user-supplied bug
              reports, because you can display the hardware  configuration  in
              any  way  you want without disturbing the user with requests for
              more dumps. (All systems)

       -G     Increase debug level of the library. (All systems)


EXAMPLES

       `setpci -d *:* latency_timer=40' sets the latency timer to 64 (40  hex-
       adecimal).

       `setpci  -s  0  device_id vendor_id' lists ID's of devices in slot 0 in
       all busses.

       `setpci -s 12:3.4 3c.l=1,2,3' writes longword 1 to register  3c,  2  to
       register  3d and 3 to register 3e of device at bus 12, slot 3, function
       4.


SEE ALSO

       lspci(8)