Phil Meyer wrote: >> Has Fedora ceased to support Bluetooth? >> >> There does not seem to be any bluez-pin , >> so how is one meant to send the Bluetooth pin to another device? >> >> What happened to hcidump ? >> >> Kdebluetooth seems to have disappeared ... >> > Just a user here, and no expert. > The new versions puts an icon on the Gnome task bar from which most > simple user requirements are met. Very slick! Yes, I found the only way to set the Bluetooth PIN on my laptop was to install bluez-gnome , which as you say installs an applet in the panel which does the trick. However, I don't agree that this is very slick. As a KDE user, I don't see what the bluetooth pin has to do with gnome. Why can't I just write it in a file? > Also, the basic config file structure is still intact for custom > configurations, such as required for Dial Up Networking (DUN) over > bluetooth. I don't know what you mean by "still intact". There used to be an entry for pin-helper in hcid.conf which seems to have disappeared without as far as I can see without any comment. > With DUN set up and bluetooth running, NetworkManager can connect me to > my phone with a single click! > > 1. added a passcode to /etc/bluetooth/hcid.conf How did you "add a passcode"? What exactly does your addition say? > 2. Modified /etc/bluetooth/rfcomm.conf > > # > # RFCOMM configuration file. > # > > rfcomm0 { > # # Automatically bind the device at startup > bind yes; > # > # # Bluetooth address of the device > device 00:07:E0:82:XX:XX; > # > # # RFCOMM channel for the connection > channel 1; > # > # # Description of the connection > comment "Treo 700p Phone"; > } > > The reason you 'bind' to a specific device is for reliability in > creating the connection. This limits my DUN to a single device. Other > types of Bluetooth activity that do not use the rfcomm interface are not > affected. > > 3. use system-config-network to set up the dialup connection with > /dev/rfcomm0 as the modem device. > > All set! Works like a champ, and NetworkManager will now offer this > dial up connection as an option. Sorry, but this sounds slightly crazy to me. I thought the whole point of Bluetooth was that you could pair with different devices. It seems strange to me that you have to specify a particular device in rfcomm.conf . Anyway, how did you find this out? Bluez documentation seems to be years out of date. -- Timothy Murphy e-mail (<80k only): tim /at/ birdsnest.maths.tcd.ie tel: +353-86-2336090, +353-1-2842366 s-mail: School of Mathematics, Trinity College, Dublin 2, Ireland -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list