Jonathan Neufeld wrote: > > After installing Debian I installed a new USR Modem (not a winmodem, I'm > sure) in one of my PCI slots. I have an Asus K7V Athlon board with only > PCI, if it makes any difference. I have my BIOS handling Plug-n-play, > and Win98 found the modem and went about installing the correct driver. > Windows says the modem is at COM 5, IRQ 10. Where the heck is COM 5 in > /dev/? Do I need to create a device called /dev/ttyS4, or is COM 5 > somewhere else? Thanks.
"COM 5" doesn't really say anything, IRQ 10 is a start but you should also find the I/O address of the port as well. "COM1" and "COM2" have a generally accepted default settings (and COM3 and COM4 usually mirror them) but nothing is written in stone that says these settings can be something completely different. As for a USR modem, what kind is it? i installed a USR modem rather recently(V90 "faxmodem" i think it was, it wasnt specified as either a sportster or a courier and was indeed a hardware modem). Take out the modem, take note of the FCC ID number on it and look it up here: http://www.o2.net/~gromitkc/20000827a.html many modems(including the USR i installed) have step-by-step installation instructions. NOTE!! you will probably have to play with the PnP settings in the bios. My biggest problem with the USr modem i installed is the system assigned it an I/O address but not an IRQ. It was an award bios and turning "PnP OS" to the other option(forgot if it was enabled or disabled i think it was to "disabled") to get the system to assign it an IRQ. Once that happened i could setserial the serial port and fire it up. altered the system's init scripts to make the change permanent and it works great. nate -- ::: ICQ: 75132336 http://www.aphroland.org/ http://www.linuxpowered.net/ [EMAIL PROTECTED]