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Re: PNP modem



Robert Henry Rati wrote:

> On Wed, 15 Jul 1998, Jens B. Jorgensen wrote:
>
> > Yup. Under hamm. I've had trouble is isapnp in the past but setting up an internal USR
> > Sportster this time was a breeze and it was actually better since I could use IRQ 5
> > which is non-standard for a serial port (I'm using two other ports already). Does
> > pnpdump find the device?
> >
> > Robert Henry Rati wrote:
> >
> > > Has anyone configured a PNP modem in Linux using PNPISATOOLS?  I have a
> > > 33.6 modem which (unfortunately) is PNP and haven't been able to get Linux
> > > to recognize it.  It should see it on /dev/ttyS1, since it's set for Com
> > > 1.  Also, there were a number of scripts setup to connect you to an isp
> > > when you install Linux.  I ment to go back and read the man page on them,
> > > but I've forgotten when the name was.  I seem to remember con or some
> > > three letter command like that.  Any help there?
> As far as I can tell, pnpdump doesn't find my modem.  That is probably
> because I haven't changed the isapnp.conf file because I don't know what I
> need to change.  I looked at the man pages, but they weren't much help, ad
> looking at the file itself is like reading greek.  I know the settings for
> my modem, but don't know how to put them into isapnp.conf so pnpdump will
> find it.  It's on Com2, Irq 3, and I have the IO address written down.
> What do I need to put in the isapnp.conf to get it to be seen?  Or
> atleast, someplace to start looking for changes?

First, if your modem really is PNP then pnpdump should certainly find it. pnpdump doesn't
use any config file at all. It discovers PNP boards through the process defined in the spec.
Basically, PNP boards are supposed to read/write on a special PNP IO address. It could be
though that after a device is configured it no longer has to look at this port. It could be
that this last statement is true and that your BIOS is PNP aware and is setting up the
hardware before you get the chance to. In this case as long as it assigns the same IO/IRQ
each time (it should as long as you don't add or remove hardware) you don't need to run
isapnp at all, you just need to do 'setserial /dev/ttyS? blah blah'.

--
Jens B. Jorgensen
jjorgens@bdsinc.com



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