The Davicom DM9008A NDIS CE miniport device driver is used to be
the network component of the Microsoft WinCE.net enables hardware
containing Davicom s fast ethernet controller DM9008A
(1) This pin may function as either a JTAG port or a user I/O pin. If the device is configured to use the JTAG
ports for in-system programming, this pin is not available as a user I/O pin.
(2) The user I/O pin count includes dedicated input pins and all I/O pins.
BlueCore supports a mechanism called Device Firmware Upgrade (DFU) to enable its software and configuration data to be replaced. To guard against unauthorised changes, downloaded files can be verified by means of signatures.
The DFU Tools are a suite of programs that enable firmware and persistent store files to be signed and combined to form DFU files.
This the second tutorial of the Writing Device Drivers series. There seems to be a lot of interest in the topic, so this article will pick up where the first left off. The main focus of these articles will be to build up little by little the knowledge needed to write device drivers. In this article, we will be building on the same example source code used in part one. In this article, we will expand on that code to include Read functionality, Handle Input/Ouput Controls also known as IOCTLs, and learn a bit more about IRPs.
This the third edition of the Writing Device Drivers articles. The first article helped to simply get you acquainted with device drivers and a simple framework for developing a device driver for NT. The second tutorial attempted to show to use IOCTLs and display what the memory layout of Windows NT is. In this edition, we will go into the idea of contexts and pools. The driver we write today will also be a little more interesting as it will allow two user mode applications to communicate with each other in a simple manner. We will call this the “poor man’s pipes” implementation.
This book explains how to write, install, and debug device drivers for Windows 2000. It is intended to be a companion to the Microsoft DDK documentation and software.
Windows 2000 represents a major improvement to previous versions of Windows NT. Device drivers for Windows 2000 may be designed for the new Windows Driver Model (WDM) architecture. If so, the driver will be source compatible with Windows 98. This book covers the new WDM specification.
This book will also prove useful to those studying the internals of Windows 2000, particularly the I/O subsystem and related components.