On 22-Jul-2000 adam b. wrote:
> isapnptools works okay, probably.
>
> I have gotten cards to recognize and load drivers, but I have never gotten
> them actually working before giving up.
>
> Be prepared to edit long config files from pnpdump and also you must know
> free IRQs, IO hexes, and Memo
On Sat, Jul 22, 2000 at 04:06:34PM -0400, adam b. wrote
> isapnptools works okay, probably.
>
> I have gotten cards to recognize and load drivers, but I have never gotten
> them actually working before giving up.
>
> Be prepared to edit long config files from pnpdump and also you must know
> free
> isapnptools works okay, probably.
>
> I have gotten cards to recognize and load drivers, but I have never gotten
> them actually working before giving up.
>
I only have one PNP card (my NIC). Works OK for me with the isapnptools.
> Be prepared to edit long config files from pnpdump and als
isapnptools works okay, probably.
I have gotten cards to recognize and load drivers, but I have never gotten
them actually working before giving up.
Be prepared to edit long config files from pnpdump and also you must know
free IRQs, IO hexes, and Memory ranges for all your devices. They will
pr
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
On 30 Aug 1999, Andrew Clark wrote:
> Has anyone had any success getting an SB16 (Vibra 16 really) PnP to work with
> debian, I tried configuring the kernel with the same options that CTCM
> displays when you run it, then booting to DOS, running CTCM and then b
I have one friends with SB16 vibra working with potato/2.2.x. I forgot how
actually we did it.
In kernel config we have
CONFIG_PNP=y
CONFIG_PNP_PARPORT=m
in /etc/modules we have
# /etc/modules: kernel modules to load at boot time.
#
# This file should contain the names of kernel modules that a
On Mon 08/30/99 06:28AM, Andrew Clark wrote:
> Has anyone had any success getting an SB16 (Vibra 16 really) PnP to work with
> debian, I tried configuring the kernel with the same options that CTCM
> displays when you run it, then booting to DOS, running CTCM and then booting
> linux via loadlin (
On Mon, 19 Oct 1998, Adam Greene wrote:
> Is PnP in the production kernels yet?? (I've asked about 3 times and no
> responses. I am preparing to sell a line of Office (Corel WP8.0, etc),
> Graphics (GIMP, NeoGeo Blender, etc), Server (Samba, POP, SMTP, Apache),
> Development (EGC, Perl, etc) comp
On Tue, Sep 15, 1998 at 09:38:37AM -0400, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> i have a pnp SoundBlaster16, which was not in my computer when I installed
> Debian originally.
> trying to configure it I have read through the isapnpconfig stuff.
> What I now know is that to get it to work, I must configure the
On Tue, Sep 15, 1998 at 09:38:37AM -0400, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> i have a pnp SoundBlaster16, which was not in my computer when I installed
> Debian originally.
> trying to configure it I have read through the isapnpconfig stuff.
> What I now know is that to get it to work, I must configure the
On Thu, 16 Jul 1998, Jens B. Jorgensen wrote:
> Robert Henry Rati wrote:
>
> > On Thu, 16 Jul 1998, Jens B. Jorgensen wrote:
> >
> > > Robert Henry Rati wrote:
> > >
> > > > On Wed, 15 Jul 1998, Jens B. Jorgensen wrote:
> > > >
> > > > > Yup. Under hamm. I've had trouble is isapnp in the past but
Robert Henry Rati wrote:
> On Thu, 16 Jul 1998, Jens B. Jorgensen wrote:
>
> > Robert Henry Rati wrote:
> >
> > > On Wed, 15 Jul 1998, Jens B. Jorgensen wrote:
> > >
> > > > Yup. Under hamm. I've had trouble is isapnp in the past but setting up
> > > > an internal USR
> > > > Sportster this time
On Thu, 16 Jul 1998, Jens B. Jorgensen wrote:
> Robert Henry Rati wrote:
>
> > On Wed, 15 Jul 1998, Jens B. Jorgensen wrote:
> >
> > > Yup. Under hamm. I've had trouble is isapnp in the past but setting up an
> > > internal USR
> > > Sportster this time was a breeze and it was actually better si
Robert Henry Rati wrote:
> On Wed, 15 Jul 1998, Jens B. Jorgensen wrote:
>
> > Yup. Under hamm. I've had trouble is isapnp in the past but setting up an
> > internal USR
> > Sportster this time was a breeze and it was actually better since I could
> > use IRQ 5
> > which is non-standard for a se
On Wed, 15 Jul 1998, Jens B. Jorgensen wrote:
> Yup. Under hamm. I've had trouble is isapnp in the past but setting up an
> internal USR
> Sportster this time was a breeze and it was actually better since I could use
> IRQ 5
> which is non-standard for a serial port (I'm using two other ports al
Yup. Under hamm. I've had trouble is isapnp in the past but setting up an
internal USR
Sportster this time was a breeze and it was actually better since I could use
IRQ 5
which is non-standard for a serial port (I'm using two other ports already).
Does
pnpdump find the device?
Robert Henry Rati
Adam Greene wrote:
>
> I've been out of the loop for a while and I am wondering if Plug and Play is
> yet in the kernel??
>
PnP support is in the development kernel (currently 2.1.106) but not in
the
stable kernel (currently 2.0.34). There is a package called isapnptools
that can dete
On Fri, Apr 10, 1998 at 07:36:27PM +0200, Marc van der Vossen wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I'm going to set up my AWE 32 card which is Plug and Pray.
> this is the only PnP card in my computer, does anyone have a config file
> where I can just put my own setting in and it works ?
>
> Any directions installin
On Sat, Jan 17, 1998 at 09:40:12PM -0500, Gerald Wann wrote:
> I am installing Linux on a PnP BIOS machine that currently has
> a modem jumpered for PnP installation. Does Debian Linux
> require any special modules to use such a setup? Is it even
> possible?
>
> (the PnP BIOS installs the modem as
On Wed, 3 Dec 1997, Hamish Moffatt wrote:
: On Tue, Dec 02, 1997 at 08:43:17PM -0600, Charles Read wrote:
: >
: > BTW, how do you talk to a modem from DOS?
: > I want to try what Nathan suggested and see
: > if the modem is a 'WinModem'. How else
: > could you tell if not from DOS?
:
: Another
On Tue, 2 Dec 1997, Charles Read wrote:
: > You mentioned that it doesn't appear in
: > /proc/interrupts; what about /proc/ioports?
:
: Yes, the serial device appears in /proc/ioports
: as:
:
: ...
: 0x3f8: serial (set)
: ...
:
: BTW, how do you talk to a modem from DOS?
: I want to try what N
Charles Read wrote:
>
> > Another test-- can you use the modem with one of Windows'
> > "Standard 28800 modem" type drivers, or do you have
> > to use on specifically for your modem?
>
> A tech-support person at Cybermax Computer, which
> built my system, just told me that all of their 56K modems
> Another test-- can you use the modem with one of Windows'
> "Standard 28800 modem" type drivers, or do you have
> to use on specifically for your modem?
A tech-support person at Cybermax Computer, which
built my system, just told me that all of their 56K modems
are "Windows-based". We walked th
On Tue, Dec 02, 1997 at 09:57:05PM -0600, Charles Read wrote:
> > Another test-- can you use the modem with one of Windows'
> > "Standard 28800 modem" type drivers, or do you have
> > to use on specifically for your modem?
>
> A tech-support person with the company that built
> my system just told
> Another test-- can you use the modem with one of Windows'
> "Standard 28800 modem" type drivers, or do you have
> to use on specifically for your modem?
A tech-support person with the company that built
my system just told me that all 56K modems they
deal with are 'Windows-based'. We walked thr
On Tue, Dec 02, 1997 at 08:43:17PM -0600, Charles Read wrote:
> > You mentioned that it doesn't appear in
> > /proc/interrupts; what about /proc/ioports?
>
> Yes, the serial device appears in /proc/ioports
> as:
>
> ...
> 0x3f8: serial (set)
> ...
Hmmm. That's a good sign. Perhaps there IS an I
On Tue, Dec 02, 1997 at 08:43:17PM -0600, Charles Read wrote:
>
> BTW, how do you talk to a modem from DOS?
> I want to try what Nathan suggested and see
> if the modem is a 'WinModem'. How else
> could you tell if not from DOS?
Another test-- can you use the modem with one of Windows'
"Standard
> You mentioned that it doesn't appear in
> /proc/interrupts; what about /proc/ioports?
Yes, the serial device appears in /proc/ioports
as:
...
0x3f8: serial (set)
...
BTW, how do you talk to a modem from DOS?
I want to try what Nathan suggested and see
if the modem is a 'WinModem'. How else
c
On Tue, Dec 02, 1997 at 04:03:29PM -0600, Charles Read wrote:
> [BTW, what is a 'Legacy device', and why would
> you need it for a PnP modem?]
A legacy device is a non-PnP device. You need to tell your BIOS
about them because it can't detect what IRQs/DMA channels they are using,
and you d
On Tue, 2 Dec 1997, Charles Read wrote:
: Here's what I've done:
:
: 0. I installed isapnptools and set up the
: /etc/isapnp.conf file, which is provided
: below. I based the configuration on the
: readout for my modem within Win95.
: 1. I went through various setserial commands
:
On Sun, Nov 23, 1997 at 10:26:35PM -0600, Charles Read wrote:
> Here's what's happening:
>
> # cu --speed 115200 --line /dev/ttyS1
> cu: open (/dev/ttyS1): Permission denied
> cu: /dev/ttyS1: Line in use
> # dmesg | grep tty
> tty01 at 0x02f8 (irg = 3) is a 16450
> # ls -l /dev/tty01
> ls: /dev/tt
hi,
don't know if this will help at all, but if you're running an award bios
and can upgrade to the latest version (4.51, i believe) it will initialize
the pnp cards for you. i just built a computer with an asus motherboard,
and it initializes my sb32pnp and usr pnp cards so all i have is the
drive
On Sun, 6 Jul 1997, Keith Knipschild wrote:
> I installed and setup Debian Linux, But I would like to setup my PnP
> Modem..
I helped a friend of my with this a couple of weeks ago... I hope I can
remember.
Install isapnptools (it's in admin). Run pnpdump and redirect it's output
to /etc/isapnp
On Sun, 6 Jul 1997, Keith Knipschild wrote:
> Also I heard good things about Midnight Commander, Where
> can I get a Linux version ?
Midnight Commander is a regular debian package. You should be able to
fire up the dselect program and select it and have it installed. The *.deb
archive of mc
Keith Knipschild wrote:
>
> Iam Very new to the UNIX/LINUX OS..
>
> I installed and setup Debian Linux, But I would like
> to setup my PnP Modem..
>
> Is there any software to help me ?
Have you tried to set it up at all yet? Some PnP modems will work if
you simply use the ioport and irq setti
Mo Oishi wrote:
>
> I've just installed isapnptools. It works great on my PnP soundblaster
> clone. The one problem is that now I can't use my non-PnP midi card. The
> midi card just happens to sit at the same irq as the soundcard (which has
> really corny midi emulation). Is there some way to ge
In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
Jason Goldschmidt <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>Hi, does anyone have any experience getting a US Robotics Sportster
>28.8-33.6 PnP modem to work with linux? Or any PnP modem for that matter.
>I've done all the common setup stuff for the modem. I found that if I want
Anyone succeed in getting the Zoom/ComStar 28.8 so-called PnP modem
to work with Linux? (Model #620) This modem insists you use the
"plug-n-play" feature, as it does not have any jumpers you can use to
bypass it.
Under NT, I had to actually run a dos program called "setmodem",
after each time
> Hi, does anyone have any experience getting a US Robotics Sportster
> 28.8-33.6 PnP modem to work with linux? Or any PnP modem for that matter.
> I've done all the common setup stuff for the modem. I found that if I
want
> to use the modem under NT, I have to disable PnP in my bios. But if I do
>
Jason Goldschmidt wrote:
>Hi, does anyone have any experience getting a US Robotics Sportster
>28.8-33.6 PnP modem to work with linux? Or any PnP modem for that matter.
>I've done all the common setup stuff for the modem. I found that if I want
>to use the modem under NT, I have to disable PnP in
Hi,
I do have a US Robotics Sportster 28.8 FAX modem (which _was_
advertized as PnP), and have had no problems getting it to work -- my
ppp-connect-with-diald script is attached below. (It did use to work
without AT&F1M0Y0E1V1Q0&C1&D2S0=0S7=30S13=1 as well).
manoj
#! /bin/sh
#
We generally distribute Linus' sources. When he accepts the PnP patch into
the main source thread you'd see it here. Perhaps he's already done that
for 2.1 .
Bruce
--
Bruce Perens K6BP [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Finger [EMAIL PROTECTED] for PGP public key.
PGP fingerprint = 88 6A 15 D0 65 D4 A3 A
42 matches
Mail list logo