From: Stephen Leake <stephen.a.leake.1@gsfc.nasa.gov>
Subject: Re: Accessing I/O Ports in Windows NT/2000
Date: 18 Jan 2002 12:22:24 -0500
Date: 2002-01-18T17:26:24+00:00 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <un0zblgkv.fsf@gsfc.nasa.gov> (raw)
In-Reply-To: 3c47dae5.155431437@News.CIS.DFN.DE
dmitry@elros.cbb-automation.de (Dmitry A. Kazakov) writes:
> There was a product by Blue Wave, I believe, called WinRT.
That's Blue Water, and I have a simple Ada binding to part of WinRT
2.0. You can have it if you'd like; drop me an email.
> It contained a primitive Windows driver, which allowed you to
> read/write arbitrary physical memory locations [= your I/O ports]. I
> think all that you will need then is standard Win32 bindings and
> here you are.
Worked nicely for me. Supports interrupts via some bizarre script
language; didn't look like a good idea, so I didn't play with it.
--
-- Stephe
next prev parent reply other threads:[~2002-01-18 17:22 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 9+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2002-01-16 22:19 Accessing I/O Ports in Windows NT/2000 Jeffrey Glenn
2002-01-17 3:41 ` Steve Doiel
2002-01-17 15:35 ` Ted Dennison
2002-01-17 21:26 ` Jeffrey Glenn
2002-01-18 7:09 ` Michael Bode
2002-01-18 8:29 ` Dmitry A. Kazakov
2002-01-18 17:22 ` Stephen Leake [this message]
2002-01-18 15:03 ` Ted Dennison
2002-01-22 7:47 ` Mats Karlssohn
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