Harold R. Grove wrote: > i'm having trouble getting my rt61 based card working under debian etch. > lspci shows i've got the right card: > > 00:0f.0 Network controller: RaLink RT2561/RT61 802.11g PCI > > the steps i've taken so far are > > 1.grab the driver from ralink's website, and untar it. > 2.cd to the 'Module' directory and copy Makefile.6 to Makefile > 3.install the kernel headers, make, gcc, tofrodos, wireless-tools > 4.make the module > 5.copy all of the binary firmware files and configuration file 'rt61sta.dat' > to '/etc/Wireless/RT61STA' > 6.convert the 'rt61sta.dat' file to unix format > 7.copy 'rt61.ko' to '/lib/modules/$(uname -r)/kernel/drivers/net/wireless' > 8.run 'depmod' > 9.run 'modprobe rt61' (no errors) > > the driver says it finds a card, and the ra0 interface shows up, > but 'iwconfig' says that it has no wireless extensions. > running 'ifconfig -a' says that this card has no mac address as well. > > is the firmware for this card not getting loaded?
I cannot answer your question directly, but here are a couple of thoughts. Have you tried the serialmonkey rt2x00 driver? [1] It's also easily available in Etch using module-assistant [2]. Serialmonkey suggest getting the latest firmware [3]. You could also try their configuration advice: After loading the modules the device should be configured for proper behaviour. Before bringing the client interface up, the working mode should be set: $ iwconfig wlan0 mode managed Configuration parts like essid and channel can be set before or after the client interface has been brought up. It is usually a good idea to set the essid: $ iwconfig wlan0 essid myessid In some situations the device also requires the channel to be manually set: $ iwconfig wlan0 channel mychannel To add WEP encryption $ iwconfig wlan0 enc AABBCCDDEE To bring the client interface up: $ ifconfig wlan0 up After the client interface has been brought up, scanning can be performed to check if the desired AP is being detected. $ iwlist wlan0 scan To start an authentication/association attempt, the AP address should be set: $ iwconfig wlan0 ap mybssid [1] http://rt2x00.serialmonkey.com/wiki/index.php?title=Rt2x00_README [2] http://newbiedoc.berlios.de/wiki/How_to_set_up_a_wireless_network_card_using_drivers_from_Debian_packages [3] http://www.ralinktech.com/ Hope that's helpful, -- Chris. -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]