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Setting
Up a Linux Modem |
by:
Stephen
Bucaro |
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Setting Up a Linux Modem
By Stephen Bucaro
Almost all modems manufactured today are
software modems,
usually referred to as "winmodems". Even
though we pay a
lot for a winmodem, they are cheap to manufacture
because
they use very little electronics. The functions
that
should be performed in hardware are emulated
by software.
This places an extra processing burden on
your computer's
CPU. Winmodems will not work with Linux
unless you can
locate a special "Linmodem" driver.
A hardware modem contains its own on-board
controller and
DSP circuits. This takes a major processing
load off your
computer's CPU. A hardware modem will make
your dial-up
connection work much faster. Hardware modems
are difficult
to find and very expensive. Hardware modems
will work with
Linux.
Some hardware modems known to work with
Linux:
Zoom 2920 Fax Modem 56K PCI $76.00
Actiontec PCI56012-01CW 56K Voice Faxmodem
PCI $75.00
ActionTec PCIV921201CW Call Waiting Internal
V.90/V.92 Modem $59.99
On rare occasions Linux will locate and
configure your
modem during installation, but most likely
you will have
to configure it manually. If your computer
is plug-and-play
(PnP) compatible, the BIOS should detect
the modem on
power-up and allocate resources to it. To
determine which
resources were allocated to the modem, log
in as root and
click on the "Terminal emulation program"
button on the
task bar. In the terminal window that appears,
type the
following command:
cat /proc/pci
In the screen output that results, locate
the entry for
your modem. Below is a possible example:
Bus 0, device 9, function 0:
Unknown class: Lucent (ex-AT&T) Microelectronics
Unknown device (rev 0).
Vendor id=11c1. Device id=480.
Medium devsel. Fast back-to-back capable.
IRQ 11
Master Capable. No bursts. Min Gnt=252.
Max Lat=14
Non-prefetchable 32 bit memory at 0x80100000
[0x8010000].
I/O at 0xdc00 [0xdc01]
I/O at 0xe000[0xe001]
I/O at 0xe400[0xe401]
Record the IRQ number and the first I/O
address.
Linux uses a device file to communicate
with a modem.
Device files are located in the /dev directory.
A modem
must use one of the serial ports (/dev/ttyS0
- /dev/ttyS3).
First determine which serial port to use
for the modem.
You should use ttyS1 because ttyS0 is usually
assigned to
a back panel connector.
To configure the serial port, use the setserial
command
with the information that you recorded above.
Using the
example values above, you would type the
following into
the terminal window:
setserial /dev/ttyS1 uart 16550A port 0xdc00
irq 11
You can verify that the modem is working
by sending it the
command to dial. For example type the following
into the
terminal window:
echo "atdt5555555" > /dev/ttyS1
If you hear the modem dial, close the connection
by typing:
echo "atz" > /dev/ttyS1
If you didn't hear the modem dial, make
sure you have the
modem speaker turned on by typing:
echo "atv" > /dev/ttyS1
Then try dialing again.
To have Linux automatically configure your
modem at boot
time, add the setserial line that you used
above to the
file /etc/rc.d/rc.local
Assuming that you are using the GNOME window
manager, click
on the "foot" icon on the taskbar to open
the menu. Select
"Programs" and open the "File Manager".
In File Manager,
navigate to the directory /etc/rc.d and
right-click on the
file rc.local. Select "Open with..." in
the popup menu. In
the "gmc" dialog box, select "gnotepad+"
and click on the
"OK" button. At the bottom of the file,
type the setserial
command line and then save the file.
For complete information about modems related
to Linux,
visit "Winmodems are not Modems" at:
http://www.idir.net/~gromitkc/winmodem.html
Sometimes configuring a modem is not as
easy in Linux as
it is in Windows, but the alternative is
to continue to
use Windows and beg for Bill Gates permission
to upgrade
your hardware (XP product activation).
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how to maintain
your computer and use it more effectively
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http://bucarotechelp.com
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Send a blank
email to bucarotechelp-subscribe@topica.com
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