Welcome To The LINUX-DAQ-PCI HOMEPAGE

The Linux-DAQ-PCI project provides Linux device driver products and services
which support PCI-based data acquisition systems. The Linux-DAQ-PCI project continues
to evolve. Each Linux Device driver package is individually tailored to support
a specific DAQ board or board series.

The packages are named following a simple two-part naming convention:
VENDOR-BOARD, where VENDOR designates the board manufacturer, and
BOARD designates the supported board or board family. The following
Linux device driver packages are currently under development:

ADAC-PCI550x

The ADAC-PCI550x Linux Device Driver package supports the ADAC/5500 Series Low-Cost
PCI Data Acquistion Boards. These boards are available from IOTech, Inc.
The ADAC/5500 family includes the ADAC/5500MF, ADAC/5501MF, ADAC/5501MF-V,
ADAC/5503HR, ADAC/5503HR-V. Detailed features and specifications are available
at here.

MCC-PCIDAS1000

The MCC-PCIDAS1000 Linux Device Driver package supports the MCC-PCIDAS1000 Series
Multifunction Analog and Digital I/O boards. These boards are available from
Measurement Computing Corporation (formerly Computer Boards, Inc.). The
PCIDAS1000 series boards which are supported include the PCI-DAS1000, PCI-DAS1001, and PCI-DAS1002.

MCC-PCIDAS6000

The MCC-PCIDAS6000 Linux Device Driver package supports the MCC-PCIDAS6000 Series Multifunction Analog and Digital I/O boards. These boards are available from Measurement Computing Corporation (formerly Computer Boards, Inc.). The\ PCIDAS6000 series boards which are supported include the PCI-DAS6023 and the PCI-DAS6025.

NI-PCIEDAQ

The NI-PCIDAS6000 Linux Device Driver package supports the National Instrumemnts E-Series PCI multifunction data acquisition boards. The currently supported E-Series PCI DAQ boards include PCI-6023E, PCI-6024E, and PCI-6025E. Detailed features and specifications for these low-cost E-Series boards are available here.

These basic Linux Device Driver packages include a single C-language source file with accompanying header file, makefile, scripts to load and unload the modularized driver, and a handful of user-level application programs which make direct calls to device driver to demonstrate and test driver functionality. The basic Linux Device Driver packages are can be downloaded here.

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