Ivan
This has reached the limit of my very limited knowledge on this driver
in particular.
You will have to wait for Marv who knows it in depth. At this time, Marv
is on travel.
Jacques
- Drafter - wrote:
Hi! Jacques, I just got to read your mails, you don't have to worry
about me, I will ALWAYS get back to you with the results, and I will
certainly let you people know if my modem starts to work! Thank you
all for helping! But, unfortunately, for now, my modem doesn't work
(yet), but I have plenty of patience, that is, as long as there is
someone willing to help :-)
Here's what I did, folowing Jacques's advice:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
brzi@brzi-linux:~$ sudo ln -s /dev/ttyAGS3 /dev/ttySAG
Password:
brzi@brzi-linux:~$ sudo ln -s /dev/ttyAGS3 /dev/modem
brzi@brzi-linux:~$ sudo wvdialconf /etc/wvdial.conf
Editing `/etc/wvdial.conf'.
Scanning your serial ports for a modem.
ttyS0<*1>: ATQ0 V1 E1 -- failed with 2400 baud, next try: 9600 baud
ttyS0<*1>: ATQ0 V1 E1 -- failed with 9600 baud, next try: 115200 baud
ttyS0<*1>: ATQ0 V1 E1 -- and failed too at 115200, giving up.
Modem Port Scan<*1>: S1 S2 S3 S4 S5 S6 S7 S8
Modem Port Scan<*1>: S9 S10 S11 S12 S13 S14 S15 S16
Modem Port Scan<*1>: S17 S18 S19 S20 S21 S22 S23 S24
Modem Port Scan<*1>: S25 S26 S27 S28 S29 S30 S31 S32
Modem Port Scan<*1>: S33 S34 S35 S36 S37 S38 S39 S40
Modem Port Scan<*1>: S41 S42 S43 S44 S45 S46 S47 SAG
Sorry, no modem was detected! Is it in use by another program?
Did you configure it properly with setserial?
Please read the FAQ at http://open.nit.ca/wiki/?WvDial
If you still have problems, send mail to <wvdial-list@xxxxxxxxxxxx>.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Don't know if this can help, but I did the following commands again:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
brzi@brzi-linux:~$ ls -l /dev/ttyAG*
ls: /dev/ttyAG*: No such file or directory
brzi@brzi-linux:~$ ls -l /dev/ttySAG*
lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 12 2008-01-18 15:11 /dev/ttySAG -> /dev/ttyAGS3
brzi@brzi-linux:~$ ls -l /dev/modem
lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 12 2008-01-18 15:11 /dev/modem -> /dev/ttyAGS3
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Ivan
On 1/17/08, Jacques Goldberg <Jacques.Goldberg@xxxxxxx> wrote:
The problem is here (copied from this mail from you).
BEGIN
brzi@brzi-linux:~$ ls -l /dev/ttyAG*
crw-rw---- 1 root dialout 62, 67 2008-01-17 20:26 /dev/ttyAGS3
brzi@brzi-linux:~$ ls -l /dev/ttySAG*
ls: /dev/ttySAG*: No such file or directory
brzi@brzi-linux:~$ ls -l /dev/modem
ls: /dev/modem: No such file or directory
brzi@brzi-linux:~$
END
The driver is acting as /dev/ttyAGS3
wvdialconf is able to recongnize /dev/modem which does not exist, and
something starting with /dev/ttyS
Thus you just need this command one time for all:
sudo ln -s /dev/ttyAGS3 /dev/ttySAG
and for later convenience with kppp for example
sudo ln -s /dev/ttyAGS3 /dev/modem
Now sudo wvdialconf /etc/wvdial.conf will recognize your modem
You will need to edit /etc/wvdial.conf to insert the phone number,
username and password given by your Internet Service Provider.
You can use sudo gedit /etc/wvdial.conf
Its use is obvious.
In the three lines for phone username and password, you will remove the
; at the beginning of the line, the symbols < and >, and on the right
side of the parameter you will replace the word which was between < > by
its value. Then save and exit gedit, and sudo wvdial should get you
connected.
If you need more help now, please do it quickly because I want to go to
sleep.
Jacques
Ivan,
It is EXCEEDINGLY IMPORTANT for us to know if your Agere 48C works now,
after the addition of the link ln -s /dev/ttyAGS3 /dev/ttySAgr and
likewise to /dev/modem
If this has solved your problem, the driver "make install", or at laest
the README file, must be corrected for that omission.
Thanks
Jacques
- Drafter - wrote:
@Jacques, I did everything U told me to (no modem was detected):
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
brzi@brzi-linux:~$ sudo lsmod | grep agr
brzi@brzi-linux:~$ sudo modprobe agrmodem
brzi@brzi-linux:~$ sudo modprobe agrserial
brzi@brzi-linux:~$ sudo lsmod | grep agr
agrserial 16688 0
agrmodem 1180932 2
brzi@brzi-linux:~$ sudo wvdialconf /etc/wvdial.conf
Editing `/etc/wvdial.conf'.
Scanning your serial ports for a modem.
ttyS0<*1>: ATQ0 V1 E1 -- failed with 2400 baud, next try: 9600 baud
ttyS0<*1>: ATQ0 V1 E1 -- failed with 9600 baud, next try: 115200 baud
ttyS0<*1>: ATQ0 V1 E1 -- and failed too at 115200, giving up.
Modem Port Scan<*1>: S1 S2 S3 S4 S5 S6 S7 S8
Modem Port Scan<*1>: S9 S10 S11 S12 S13 S14 S15 S16
Modem Port Scan<*1>: S17 S18 S19 S20 S21 S22 S23 S24
Modem Port Scan<*1>: S25 S26 S27 S28 S29 S30 S31 S32
Modem Port Scan<*1>: S33 S34 S35 S36 S37 S38 S39 S40
Modem Port Scan<*1>: S41 S42 S43 S44 S45 S46 S47
Sorry, no modem was detected! Is it in use by another program?
Did you configure it properly with setserial?
Please read the FAQ at http://open.nit.ca/wiki/?WvDial
If you still have problems, send mail to <wvdial-list@xxxxxxxxxxxx>.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
brzi@brzi-linux:~$ ls -l /dev/ttyAG*
crw-rw---- 1 root dialout 62, 67 2008-01-17 20:26 /dev/ttyAGS3
brzi@brzi-linux:~$ ls -l /dev/ttySAG*
ls: /dev/ttySAG*: No such file or directory
brzi@brzi-linux:~$ ls -l /dev/modem
ls: /dev/modem: No such file or directory
brzi@brzi-linux:~$
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Regards,
Ivan
On 1/17/08, Jacques Goldberg <Jacques.Goldberg@xxxxxxx> wrote:
Ivan,
Can you please do
sudo lsmod | grep agr
which should show agrmodem.ko and agrserial.ko ?
In case it does not, can you please
sudo modprobe agrmodem
sudo modprobe agrserial
and again sudo lsmod | grep agr in order to verify that the modules
which you compiled are loaded in memory.
At that time
sudo wvdialconf /etc/wvdial.conf
should detect the modem.
From what you reported (see below) you just typed wvdialconf,
not sudo wvdialconf
Furthermore,
What do you see when typing
ls -l /dev/ttyAG*
ls -l /dev/ttySAG*
ls -l /dev/modem
A simple link command may be missing.
Jacques
- Drafter - wrote:
OK, I think I'm getting somewhere now! But, still don't know how to
connect to the Internet.
After installing (as advised by Antonio) "build-essential" and
"setserial" from the ubuntu cd, and downloading
"linux-headers-2.6.15-23-386_2.6.15-23.39_i386.deb" and all the
depends files (command "sudo dpkg -i *.deb"), I was able to execute
"sudo meke module" and "sudo make install", as you can see:
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
brzi@brzi-linux:~$ cd agrsm
brzi@brzi-linux:~/agrsm$ sudo make module
make -C /lib/modules/`uname -r`/build SUBDIRS=/home/brzi/agrsm modules
make[1]: Entering directory `/usr/src/linux-headers-2.6.15-23-386'
CC [M] /home/brzi/agrsm/agrsoftmodem.o
/home/brzi/agrsm/agrsoftmodem.c: In function 'SetAgrModemInterface':
/home/brzi/agrsm/agrsoftmodem.c:106: warning: 'inter_module_put' is
deprecated (declared at include/linux/module.h:575)
/home/brzi/agrsm/agrsoftmodem.c: In function 'modem_init_module':
/home/brzi/agrsm/agrsoftmodem.c:136: warning: 'inter_module_register'
is deprecated (declared at include/linux/module.h:571)
/home/brzi/agrsm/agrsoftmodem.c:137: warning: 'inter_module_register'
is deprecated (declared at include/linux/module.h:571)
/home/brzi/agrsm/agrsoftmodem.c: In function 'modem_cleanup_module':
/home/brzi/agrsm/agrsoftmodem.c:148: warning:
'inter_module_unregister' is deprecated (declared at
include/linux/module.h:572)
/home/brzi/agrsm/agrsoftmodem.c:149: warning:
'inter_module_unregister' is deprecated (declared at
include/linux/module.h:572)
CC [M] /home/brzi/agrsm/serial26.o
/home/brzi/agrsm/serial26.c: In function 'serial8250_config_port':
/home/brzi/agrsm/serial26.c:1998: warning: unused variable 'ret'
/home/brzi/agrsm/serial26.c: At top level:
/home/brzi/agrsm/serial26.c:2090: warning: initialization from
incompatible pointer type
/home/brzi/agrsm/serial26.c:2091: warning: initialization from
incompatible pointer type
/home/brzi/agrsm/serial26.c: In function 'serial8250_exit':
/home/brzi/agrsm/serial26.c:2523: warning: 'inter_module_unregister'
is deprecated (declared at include/linux/module.h:572)
/home/brzi/agrsm/serial26.c:2524: warning: 'inter_module_put' is
deprecated (declared at include/linux/module.h:575)
/home/brzi/agrsm/serial26.c:2525: warning: 'inter_module_put' is
deprecated (declared at include/linux/module.h:575)
/home/brzi/agrsm/serial26.c: In function 'agr_init_module':
/home/brzi/agrsm/serial26.c:2555: warning: 'inter_module_put' is
deprecated (declared at include/linux/module.h:575)
/home/brzi/agrsm/serial26.c:2561: warning: 'inter_module_register' is
deprecated (declared at include/linux/module.h:571)
/home/brzi/agrsm/serial26.c: At top level:
/home/brzi/agrsm/serial26.c:1881: warning:
'serial8250_request_rsa_resource' defined but not used
LD [M] /home/brzi/agrsm/agrmodem.o
LD [M] /home/brzi/agrsm/agrserial.o
Building modules, stage 2.
MODPOST
Warning: could not find /home/brzi/agrsm/.agrmodemlib.o.cmd for
/home/brzi/agrsm/agrmodemlib.o CC /home/brzi/agrsm/agrmodem.mod.o
LD [M] /home/brzi/agrsm/agrmodem.ko
CC /home/brzi/agrsm/agrserial.mod.o
LD [M] /home/brzi/agrsm/agrserial.ko
make[1]: Leaving directory `/usr/src/linux-headers-2.6.15-23-386'
brzi@brzi-linux:~/agrsm$ sudo make install
make -C /lib/modules/`uname -r`/build M="/home/brzi/agrsm" modules_install
make[1]: Entering directory `/usr/src/linux-headers-2.6.15-23-386'
INSTALL /home/brzi/agrsm/agrmodem.ko
INSTALL /home/brzi/agrsm/agrserial.ko
make[1]: Leaving directory `/usr/src/linux-headers-2.6.15-23-386'
if ! /sbin/modprobe -nq agrmodem.ko ; then /sbin/depmod -a; fi
brzi@brzi-linux:~/agrsm$
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
I don't know what to do next, anyway I tried to follow Jacques's
advice to use WvDial, but the next lines show up:
brzi@brzi-linux:~$ wvdialconf
Editing `/etc/wvdial.conf'.
Scanning your serial ports for a modem.
WvModem<*1>: Cannot set information for serial port.
ttyS0<*1>: ATQ0 V1 E1 -- failed with 2400 baud, next try: 9600 baud
ttyS0<*1>: ATQ0 V1 E1 -- failed with 9600 baud, next try: 115200 baud
ttyS0<*1>: ATQ0 V1 E1 -- and failed too at 115200, giving up.
Modem Port Scan<*1>: S1 S2 S3 S4 S5 S6 S7 S8
Modem Port Scan<*1>: S9 S10 S11 S12 S13 S14 S15 S16
Modem Port Scan<*1>: S17 S18 S19 S20 S21 S22 S23 S24
Modem Port Scan<*1>: S25 S26 S27 S28 S29 S30 S31 S32
Modem Port Scan<*1>: S33 S34 S35 S36 S37 S38 S39 S40
Modem Port Scan<*1>: S41 S42 S43 S44 S45 S46 S47
Sorry, no modem was detected! Is it in use by another program?
Did you configure it properly with setserial?
Please read the FAQ at http://open.nit.ca/wiki/?WvDial
If you still have problems, send mail to <wvdial-list@xxxxxxxxxxxx>.
brzi@brzi-linux:~$ wvdial
--> WvDial: Internet dialer version 1.55
--> Cannot open /dev/modem: No such file or directory
--> Cannot open /dev/modem: No such file or directory
--> Cannot open /dev/modem: No such file or directory
On 1/17/08, Antonio Olivares <olivares14031@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Drafter,
Compiling fails because you do not have gcc installed:
This is directly from ScanModem output that you have sent. You need
to do this so that your modem drivers can compile
$ sudo apt-get install gcc-4.0 make
Additionally the package linux-headers-2.6.15-23-386 must be downloaded.
Go to http://packages.ubuntu.com/ and search for linux-headers-2.6.15-23-386
After downloading, it can be installed with:
$ sudo dpkg -i linux-header*.deb
If that is unsuccessful, do try the alternate methods provided below.
\begin{QUOTE}
If compiling a modem driver proves to be necessary, one of the two
procedures must be followed.
If not yet on the Internet, put the Dapper install CD in the drive
Open a terminal and therein:
$ sudo apt-get install gcc-4.0 make
Additionally the package linux-headers-2.6.15-23-386 must be downloaded.
Go to http://packages.ubuntu.com/ and search for linux-headers-2.6.15-23-386
After downloading, it can be installed with:
$ sudo dpkg -i linux-header*.deb
Or alternatively if online through Ethernet do:
$ sudo apt-get update
$ sudo apt-get install build-essential
will do all the necessary installations mentioned above.
In either installation case, set a symbolic link which will be expected later:
$ sudo ln -s /usr/bin/gcc-4.0 /usr/bin/gcc
After check with:
$ ls -l /usr/bin/gcc*
which should display:
lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 16 2006-07-09 21:53 /usr/bin/gcc -> /usr/bin/gcc-4.0
-rwxr-xr-x 1 root root 93584 2006-04-20 18:22 /usr/bin/gcc-4.0
-rwxr-xr-x 1 root root 16245 2006-04-20 18:13 /usr/bin/gccbug-4.0
linux-headers-2.6.15-23-386 resources needed for compiling are not
manifestly ready!
If compiling is necessary packages must be installed, providing:
gcc-4.0 make linux-headers-2.6.15-23-386
If a driver compilation fails, with message including some lack of
some FileName.h (stdio.h for example), then
Some additional kernel-header files need installation to /usr/include.
The minimal additional packages are libc6-dev
and any of its dependents, under Ubuntu linux-libc-dev
If an alternate ethernet connection is available,
$ apt-get update
$ apt-get -s install linux-kernel-devel
will install needed package
For Debian/Ubuntu related distributions, run the following command to
display the needed package list:
Otherwise packages have to be found through http://packages.ubuntu.com
Once downloaded and transferred into a Linux partition,
they can be installed alltogether with:
$ sudo dpkg -i *.deb
\end{QUOTE}
Hope this helps,
Antonio
On 1/16/08, - Drafter - <it.drafter@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
I'm having some hard time installing the driver... It's probably
stupid, but I'm an absolute beginner, so please don't laugh :-)
Here's what I did - step by step:
1) downloaded the file "agrsm-alpha.tar.bz2"
2) copied it to "Home folder"
3) started the terminal
4) gave the command "tar jxf agrsm-alpha.tar.bz2"
5) "cd agrsm" and then "ls", all the files are there!
6) "sudo make module", and it's asking me for the password, which I
successfully entered
7) HERE'S THE PROBLEM: the following line showed up: "sudo: make:
command not found". I also tried "sudo make install", and got the same
message.
P.S.
I also tried to enter the command "sudo make module | tee mywork.txt"
as you advised, but I got the following message:
"sudo: make: command not found
tee: mywork.txt: Permission denied"
The same message shows up for "sudo make install | tee -a mywork.txt".
I know I'm doing something wrong, just don't know what...
On 1/16/08, Jacques Goldberg <Jacques.Goldberg@xxxxxxx> wrote:
- Drafter - wrote:
Absolutelu new in Linux, please help! tnx
ModemData has identified your modem as a Lucent (Agere) 048C supported
by driver AGRSM.
ModemData wrote:
"
AGRSM - At http://phep2.technion.ac.il/linmodems/packages/ltmodem/sv92/
Read Agrsm.txt
"
The first line means: this is the place on the Web where you will find
the driver.
The second line means: when you used scanModem to obtain ModemData.txt,
you found ModemData.txt in a directory named Modem.
This directory contains a file named Agrsm.txt. ModemData.txt asks you
to read it.
If a beginner you are likely find hard to read it ans ask yourself why
should you read it.
So, what you can do at the very beginner level is to download from the
address above the file agrsm-alpha.tar.bz2 into your logon directory
Then give the command
tar jxf agrsm-alpha.tar.bz2
This will create a new subdirectory named agrsm . Enter it with command
cd agrsm
Give the command
ls
to see which files are present in this directory agrsm
One is named README
Read it using the command
less README
With this command named less you can read and read back, go to the
beginning with < and to the end with > , you can use the keyboard
arrows, page up, page down, and you use the space bar to get to the next
page.
Now you are ready to build the driver except that with Ubuntu you must
type the commands as follows:
sudo make module
sudo make install
(the command sudo is not quoted in file README, specific to Debian and
Ubuntu systems).
There are several ways to continue.
kppp suggested in README is reasonable.
I personally prefer using wvdial because it gives many messages and
makes life possible when kppp fails.
Details at: http://linmodems.technion.ac.il/wvdial.html
PLEASE TELL US THE RESULT, SUCCESS OR FAILURE.
If FAILURE, do not write "there is an error" as this gives us no
information. Please write everything you did and all the error messages.
A good way to do it is to give the commands as follows:
sudo make module | tee mywork.txt
sudo make install | tee -a mywork.txt
The | sign is usually above \ on most keyboards (| visible as if cut in
middle)
The tee command will make a copy of the outputs of make module and make
install into the file so that you just need to send us the file.
If you follow my advice to use wvdial (one step, wvdialconf, then wvdial
every time you want to connect) you can again use the tee command to
record the outputs of wvdialconf and wvdial to help us help you.
Jacques