On Mon, Feb 01, 1999 at 09:35:58AM +0000, ktb wrote: > I posted a couple days ago (to Debian User's) about my modem freezing up. I > got a couple > suggestions and am now getting around to trying to solve this problem. > The problem has increased in frequency so that every time after logging > off using "poff" my modem can't be accessed. I have to shut the system > down completely (reboot won't work) and then restart before I can use "pon" > to log on again. In a couple instances I had to shutdown twice in > a row before I could use my modem.
I used to have exactly that problem. When the modem got hung up it wedged and I couldn't get back to it. It's probably been a year since I had to deal with it, though. IIRC it was a U.S. Robotics internal giving me this problem, and it has to do with one of the RS-232 lines being held high when it should go low. This kind of thing is apparently "remembered" in the modem's hardware, and you have to power cycle it to make it let go. This is one reason I wound up going with an external modem -- at least you can cycle that SOB without taking your whole damn machine down. Ironically, I think my current USR external has a dip switch that has to with the assertion of DTR. Maybe the internals do as well, but if so you probably have to use some DOS or Lose32 application to talk to the modem's PROM. Try using the different modem dialer programs (minicom, kermit, etc.). IIRC minicom worked (hung up the modem correctly), but kermit did not. As far as pppd itself goes, try fooling with the "local" option. local Don't use the modem control lines. With this option, pppd will ignore the state of the CD (CarĀ rier Detect) signal from the modem and will not change the state of the DTR (Data Terminal Ready) signal. If local is on in your system (see /etc/ppp/options), try switching it off, and vice versa. If this works, PLEASE let me (and the mailing list) know. I want something about this stuck in every FAQ on earth that has to do with ppp, modems, etc. It frustrated the hell out of me when I had to deal with it. -- G. Branden Robinson | If you have the slightest bit of Debian GNU/Linux | intellectual integrity you cannot [EMAIL PROTECTED] | support the government. cartoon.ecn.purdue.edu/~branden/ | -- anonymous
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