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MicroScope

Basic Micro-Scope Info

This document is to familiarize the reader with the Micro-Scope product, and to highlight the overall points. It does not list all of its features and capabilities of the program and is not a substitute for the product manual or hands-on familiarity for anyone who wants a complete understanding of Micro-Scope.

Product Description

Micro-Scope is a software program used to analyze and troubleshoot the hardware in an IBM-type personal computer, or PC*. It comes on a floppy diskette or CD, depending on the version. The full product also includes a carrying case, a spiral-bound manual, and a set of loopback plugs for testing of the serial and parallel ports.

On the floppy or CD is a large assortment of routines to test the various pieces of hardware and to collect information about all parts of the system. There is also a collection of utilities for a variety of tasks that are difficult or impossible to perform without the proper tools. The floppy or CD also has its own bootable operating system, the significance of which will be detailed in the following section.

Navigation is simple and intuitive using either the mouse or arrow keys. All of the features of Micro-Scope are arranged for easy access on one of four main menus. The menus are:

System Configuration
Batch Menu
Diagnostics
Utilities

A fifth menu item called Quit is used to exit the program. Each of the menus has its own section in the following pages.

Bootable Operating System

An operating system (OS) of course is what runs the system, while the applications perform specific tasks that the user wants the computer to do. Desktop operating systems such as Windows and DOS try as much as possible to operate the hardware in the background, so that the users and applications do not have to deal with basic repetitive functions such as managing data on the disk drives or formatting the monitor display, and this tendency has become more pronounced with each new version.

Indeed, if it weren't for this efficiency built into these operating systems, PCs would be much less useful and powerful tools than they are. However, if the application is trying to measure or diagnose the hardware, the desktop operating system's efficiency becomes a barrier to accurate results.

To mention just a couple of examples:

1. There is no way for an application to get an accurate benchmark of CPU speed when the OS is allocating CPU time as it sees fit between the diagnostic application and every other process that might be running in the background.

2. Is a disk failure due to the drive mechanism or the controller? Windows and DOS will report the same result in either case, and there is no way to separate the two while looking through the OS.

The way that Micro-Scope solves this problem is to use an operating system designed from the ground up for a different purpose, which is to give the diagnostic application direct control of the hardware. This operating system, called MicroDOS, was written in Assembler, which is a low-level programming language that let's the programmer say with precision exactly what the software is doing with the hardware at any moment.

MicroDOS was designed by Micro 2000 and is available only with our diagnostic software. It is bootable of course, so that the system under test will boot up with MicroDOS in control rather than the system's installed OS.

An additional benefit to using our proprietary OS is that it doesn't matter what desktop OS is on the computer. It is not necessary for the technician to have a separate diagnostic product for Windows, Linux, etc. because the desktop OS does not get booted during the diagnostic tests.

System Configuration Menu

This menu provides access to a wealth of information about the system hardware. There are 14 selections on the menu, and just one of them, called System Information, supplies identification on every peripheral and major hardware component installed in the PC, conveniently organized into three screens.

The first System Information screen shows about 20 pieces of key information about the processor, BIOS, memory and video. The second screen has details of every disk drive in the machine, including floppy, IDE and SCSI devices, while the third screen lists the CD-ROM drives, ports, and information about the keyboard, NIC, sound card, etc.

Each of the other listings under the System Configuration window will provide detailed information about some aspect of the hardware. Particularly useful for resolving conflicts are the screens that show the assignment of system resources such as IRQs, DMA, ROM addresses and I/O ports. These are active, real-time assignments, which means that if two devices are set to the same IRQ, both will be accurately listed in the display. This is impossible to see with a diagnostic running under Windows or DOS.

The menu item for Partition Table provides data about the Master Boot Record, FAT and other disk configuration parameters for any disk volume in the machine, information which normally is difficult to acquire but vital for fine-tuning the drives. Even hidden and reserved sectors are shown.

Other listings on the System Configuration menu show such things as the CMOS contents (which can be edited), PCI bus configuration, USB controllers, Plug-and-Play devices and much more.

Diagnostics Menu

This menu contains the heart of Micro-Scope, which is, after all, a diagnostic tool. Approximately 150 routines are available to test virtually every hardware component. The many test routines are organized into 13 main menu categories, with numerous sub-menus. In this discussion we will only touch on some of the highlights.

SystemBoard Tests - When this item is selected, a whole series of tests will be done in a matter of seconds, giving a full checkout to the CPU and all of the main chips and control functions located on the motherboard. Individual pass-fail results will be displayed for each function.

Memory Tests - A set of six tests are available that can be run separately on base memory, expanded or extended memory, and cache. This combination of tests can locate any type of hard memory failure, including bad cells, mis-linked bits, refresh problems, parity or addressing errors, etc.

A separate base memory test is available from the start-up screen that tests the location where the diagnostic usually resides. For most competing products, an error in this location would prevent them from loading at all.

Hard Drive Tests - In addition to the expected read, write and seek tests, Micro-Scope has a couple of innovative features. A safe-write test is available that can perform a write test on all or part of a drive without the loss of data that normally occurs during a write test. A controller test can determine whether an error is from the controller or drive mechanism, for any drive type with an external controller.

For convenience, a few disk utilities are found here rather than on the Utility menu. The FORMAT routine can perform a true factory-type low-level format, and is one of the features that truly set Micro-Scope apart from the competition. There are also menu choices to create a 'bad sector' map, or to set the interleave on drive types with adjustable interleave.

Tests for CD-ROM drives, floppies and other removable drives are available from other listings under the diagnostic menu.

Port Testing - Micro-Scope has about the most comprehensive testing available for parallel and serial ports and modems. Each of the data lines and signal lines is individually tested, and for modems there are also tests for dial tone and phone line transmission.

On both serial and parallel ports, the most complete test of the hardware requires connecting the proper loopback plug to the port and selecting the 'external' test so that the signals go out the connector and back in again. A set of plugs for each of the three types of port connectors comes with Micro-Scope.

Video Tests - Under this menu item is a sub-menu listing ten separate tests that can be run on the video function and/or the monitor. These include a couple of pattern tests that are very useful for monitor alignment.

Misc. - Just to let you know they are here, without going into detail, the Diagnostic menu also contains tests for network cards, sound cards (including record/playback functions), USB controllers, keyboard, mouse, joystick, and local printer connections.

Batch Menu

The Batch menu provides access to many of the same routines available on the diagnostic menu. The interface is different however, in two important ways.

First, instead of going right to different groups of tests, the menu has a submenu that allows you to select an assortment of tests, or to select all of the tests. Once started, the entire selection will run without further intervention, whereas on the diagnostic menu it is necessary to select and run the tests one at a time, starting a new test only when the previous one has finished.

This ability to select and run a collection of tests on various parts of the hardware is useful for doing quality control on a new or refurbished system, or for isolating a problem when you aren't sure which part of the hardware is causing it.

The second difference is the choice of how many times to run the selected tests. The options are to run once through and then stop, to run them a specific number of times, or to run in a loop until the test is halted manually. Another option is to run until an error occurs and then halt.

The repeating loop of tests is sometimes the only way to catch an intermittent problem, which by its nature will seldom perform on cue during a single run-through of a test. Also, for quality control of new and refurbished machines it is common practice to let the tests run continuously for 24 hours in a procedure called burn-in. If the hardware has a defect it will usually show up right away, and it's better for this to happen in the lab rather than just after the customer takes it home.

The batch menu also has a feature for collecting reports of the results, which can be saved in a file or sent to a printer.

Utilities Menu

While the routines in this section do not diagnose problems with a pass/fail result, they do facilitate troubleshooting by providing direct access to the hardware that is often impossible to get in any other way. Again, just the highlights will be given.

Memory Display - This tool allows viewing the content of a specified section of RAM in both hexadecimal code and ASCII alphanumeric text. Among other uses, this allows the technician to locate the system BIOS contents, identify unused portions of the adapter ROM area, determine which parts of the Upper Memory Area are in use, etc.

Device Editors - These provide a view of the contents of a selected portion of a drive, and allow it to be edited. The display is similar to the memory display, and a search feature can locate specific content. There are three different utilities, for floppies, hard drives and other removable-media drives. Some uses of this tool include locating an operating system, checking for virus code, cleaning up a corrupted disk, etc.

Benchmarks - A benchmark is a measure of performance, and as part of a diagnostic it allows a degree of analysis beyond what is possible with a pass/fail result. It is the tool of choice for spotting bottlenecks, which is important because a system will only perform as well as its slowest component. Boosting something other than the bottle-necked area will usually be a wasted effort.

The benchmark utility provides measurements for the CPU and NPU processors, fixed disks, CD-ROM drives, memory, and video data transfer rate. The CPU benchmark is a particularly easy way to tell if the processor is being over-clocked. Over-clocking will improve system performance but will shorten the life of the processor chip.

Rebuild Master Boot - Here is another feature that has separated Micro-Scope from the masses. This utility can write a new generic Master Boot Record to the C: drive, to allow the system to boot up again after being infected with a boot virus or suffering other corruption to the Master Boot Record that prevented a boot-up.

Debugging Functions - For the technician who wants truly hands-on control of the hardware, this collection of utilities will allow him or her to execute specific hardware and software interrupts on command, or to read/write single-byte contents from specific I/O ports or RAM locations, including those in protected memory.

Misc. - A Floppy Head Cleaner routine will exercise the device in a particular pattern that provides the best results during head cleaning. The Toggle Attributes utility will change the program from color to monochrome and back again. This is useful when working with a monochrome display and with certain plasma and LED monitors.

Conclusion

That's our overview of Micro-Scope, the industry-leading diagnostic tool for troubleshooting PC hardware. For more information about any of the program features, please refer to the Micro-Scope product manual.

* Micro-Scope is not used on Macintosh personal computers or on IBM's mid-size or mainframe systems.




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