58
3
Award BIOS Setup Utility
3.1.4 Integrated Peripherals
The screen above list all the fields available in the Integrated Peripherals
submenu, for ease of reference in this manual. In the actual CMOS setup,
you have to use the scroll bar to view the fields. The settings on the screen
are for reference only. Your version may not be identical to this one.
X
X
CMOS Setup Utility - Copyright (C) 1984-2000 Award Software
Integrated Peripherals
Item Help
Menu Level
↑↓→←
Move
F6:Fail-Safe Defaults
F7:Optimized Defaults
F1:General Help
Enter:Select
F5:Previous Values
+/-/PU/PD:Value F10:Save
ESC:Exit
On-Chip Primary PCI IDE
On-Chip Secondary PCI IDE
IDE Primary Master PIO
IDE Primary Slave PIO
IDE Secondary Master PIO
IDE Secondary Slave PIO
IDE Primary Master UDMA
IDE Primary Slave UDMA
IDE Secondary Master UDMA
IDE Secondary Slave UDMA
USB Controller
USB Keyboard Support
Init Display First
AC97 Audio
AC97 Modem
IDE HDD Block Mode
Keyboard/Mouse Power On
KB Power On Password
KB Power On Hot Key
Onboard FDC Controller
Onboard Serial Port 1
Onboard Serial Port 2
UART2 Mode Select
RxD, TxD Active
IR Transmission Delay
UR2 Duplex Mode
Use IR Pins
Onboard Parallel Port
Parallel Port Mode
EPP Mode Select
ECP Mode Use DMA
PWR Lost Resume State
Game Port Address
Midi Port Address
Midi Port IRQ
Onboard Serial Port 3
Onboard Serial Port 4
Enabled
Enabled
Auto
Auto
Auto
Auto
Auto
Auto
Auto
Auto
Enabled
Disabled
PCI Slot
Auto
Auto
Enabled
Disabled
Enter
Ctrl-F1
Enabled
3F8/IRQ4
2F8/IRQ3
Normal
Hi,Lo
Enabled
Half
IR-Rx2Tx2
378/IRQ7
ECP+EPP
EPP1.7
1
Keep Off
201
290
10
Disabled
Disabled
X
X
X
X
X
On-Chip Primary PCI IDE and On-Chip Secondary PCI IDE
These categories allow you to enable or disable the primary and
secondary IDE controller. The default is Enabled. Select Disabled if
you want to add a different hard drive controller.
IDE Primary Master/Slave PIO and IDE Secondary Master/Slave
PIO
PIO means Programmed Input/Output. Rather than have the BIOS
issue a series of commands to effect a transfer to or from the disk
drive, PIO allows the BIOS to tell the controller what it wants and
then let the controller and the CPU perform the complete task by
themselves. Your system supports five modes, 0 (default) to 4, which