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Probably not. Please see the section "Which Linmodem hardware is supported?" above,
and check the Linux Modem Compatibility
database
at
Rob Clark's site.
Try setting your BIOS option from "PNP OS" to "non-PNP OS", from "Windows"
to "Other OS", or the equivalent.
Conexant users: See the Conexant section, above.
- If you have an ISA modem, did you use the isapnptools to allocate IRQ and DMA
resources to the card? See "ISA Plug-n-Play", above, for more information.
- Double-check that you created the device file correctly,
and try to eliminate any IRQ conflicts you might have. If all looks well, but
it still doesn't work, check the
Linmodems.org
mailing list to see if someone
else has (and has perhaps fixed) the same problem, or try to fix it yourself
and inform others of your results.
Unresolved symbols are a true danger of version mismatching and are,
in general, bad, but are also almost inevitable with binary modules.
If the fixscript reports unresolved symbols, or the module does not
work despite the unresolved symbols, you may be out of luck with
that kernel/module combination; however,
a few common cases involve symbols like:
-
slhc_xxxx : You probably need to insmod the slhc
module before inserting the modem/ppp modules; using modprobe
rather than insmod should also obviate this problem.
-
printk, jiffies : Your kernel may be compiled with
SMP enabled. None of the binary modules are known to be SMP-safe, and will
probably only work on a single-processor machine with a single-processor
kernel, i.e. SMP disabled. You should try recompiling your kernel or
otherwise obtaining a version with SMP disabled. (Thanks to
Tom Reinertson (treinertson(at)uswest.net))
-
tty_xxxx with esscom.o:
Earlier fixscripts were not able to handle the version-specific symbols
in this module. More recent versions are available at
http://www.test.dclabs.com.au/linmodem/fixscript)
which should be able to fix this module as well.
If a module works in an unstable fashion,
it could be that, under some circumstances, you are avoiding those
symbols, while in others, you slam up against them. Try out different
ppp dialup programs (wvdial, kppp), which call a different set of functions
under similar conditions. It is also possible that the fixscript, which
was designed for the lucent module, is not "fixing" the symbols used
in your module. If you find no combination that works, consider "downgrading"
to a kernel which has a closer version match to that of the module.
- Do you need to give the module a country code parameter? See the appendix.
- Are you using the right driver module? There are a few PCTel drivers
around (see the section "Which Linmodem hardware is supported?" above).
You might try one of the others and see if that helps.
This is an often-reported problem that may have a few, or no, solutions:
- It is possible that the module is installed correctly and is working,
but that you have a problem with your ppp configuration.
In particular, if you find an error in the log along the lines
of "peer is not authorized," try changing "auth" to "noauth"
in /etc/ppp/options, and/or commenting out "auth" and "lock" (by
placing a '#' at the beginning of the line). Corel has a FAQ entry at
http://linux.corel.com/support/html/9314.htm about
this.
- It has been reported that, with some kernel/module mismatches, a program
like
kppp will give this error, while an alternative like wvdial
does not, for the same modules and hardware. You may wish to try a different
ppp dialer and see if that helps.
- Lastly, there is the potential relationship with sound support.
Comparing functionality of ltmodem.o with/without sound
support in the kernels, dial-in is OK, but ppp is NOT achieved for the kernel
without sound support.
Most Linux distributions do deposit a kernel configuration file along
with the kernel. For Debian related distributions, it is the file
/boot/config-version
The positive choices can be quickly displayed with:
grep SOUND /boot/config-version |grep -v not
For the specific example of a 2.2.17 version:
# grep SOUND /boot/config-2.2.17 |grep -v not
CONFIG_SOUND=m
CONFIG_SOUND_OSS=m
CONFIG_SOUND_SB=m
CONFIG_SOUND_MPU401=m
CONFIG_SOUND_YM3812=m
CONFIG_SOUND_VMIDI=m
CONFIG_SOUND_YMPCI=m
CONFIG_LOWLEVEL_SOUND=y
Either CONFIG_SOUND=m or CONFIG_SOUND=yes would show that the kernel
has sound support (as would simple sound output).
If none of these helps, you may wish to consider trying to use a kernel version which
is closer to the module. Otherwise, try the mailing list at
Linmodems.org for help.
There are a couple of possible solutions to this, neither of which may work:
- Try a different ppp dialer (wvdial, kppp).
- Configure the module so that it stays in the kernel, i.e. so that it
is not unloaded.
- Double-check that the modem you have is actually supported by
the module you have. See "Which Linmodem Hardware Is Supported?" above.
- Try to determine at which stage of the installation process
things break down. Check the man pages on the commands used in that
stage and see if you can determine the source of the problem.
If all seems lost, please see the section "Troubleshooting", below , and consider sending
a message with the complete information described there to the
mailing list at
Linmodems.org.
If a contact address is not given above, you can in general assume
that it was probably somebody on contract to the manufacturer, who probably
does not have the
authority the update/release/change the source code, and who probably doesn't
have time to reply to your email in any case. See, for example,
http://lwn.net/1999/1209/a/lucent.html
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