Cardctl is used to monitor and control the state of PCMCIA
sockets. If a socket number is specified, the command will be applied
to just one socket; otherwise, all sockets will be affected.
Cardctl is also used to select between multiple PCMCIA
configuration schemes. The current scheme name is passed to the
device option scripts as part of the ``device address'', so the
scripts can use it to choose between different setups.
If cardctl is executed by root, all commands are available. If
it is executed by an unpriviledged user, only the informational
commands are accessible.
Some commands may not work or give misleading results if cardmgr
is not running.
COMMANDS
status
Display the current socket status flags.
config
Display the socket configuration, including power settings, interrupt
and I/O window settings, and configuration registers.
ident
Display card identification information, including product
identification strings, manufacturer ID codes, and function ID codes.
suspend
Shut down and then disable power for a socket.
resume
Restore power to a socket, and re-configure for use.
reset
Send a reset signal to a socket, subject to approval by any drivers
already bound to the socket.
eject
Notify all client drivers that this card will be ejected, then cut
power to the socket.
insert
Notify all client drivers that this card has just been inserted.
scheme
If no scheme name is given,
cardctl
will display the current PCMCIA configuration scheme. If a scheme
name is given,
cardctl
will unconfigure all PCMCIA devices, and reconfigure for the new
scheme.
OPTIONS
-V
Show version information and exit.
-c config
Look for the card configuration database and card configuration
scripts in the specified directory, instead of
/etc/pcmcia.
-f scheme
Use the specified file to keep track of the current configuration
scheme, instead of
/var/lib/pcmcia/scheme.
-s stab
Read current socket information from the specified file, instead of
/var/lib/pcmcia/stab.