WLAN EMERGENCY!!!!
Rick Stevens
rstevens at vitalstream.com
Thu Feb 26 20:47:03 UTC 2004
Jim Pelton wrote:
> Ah yes. Rick is right. There are a number of (emulators?) out there
> which let you use win drivers under linux. Linuxant makes one called
> driverloader which I have heard good things about. US 20 bucks! I
> suppose this is the best way to get the new cards to work right now,
> unless you are the master hacker
And have access to the API or specs on the chips. So far, I haven't
seen too many 802.11g makers release the specs. Texas Instruments has
said that they _will_not_ release the specs to open source. That means
that none of the new D-Link 802.11g stuff will be available since they
use the TI chipset. Broadcom seems more amenable to open source and I
expect their stuff to be released fairly soon.
> On Thu, 2004-02-26 at 11:47, Rick Stevens wrote:
>
>>Jim Pelton wrote (reformatted for bottom posting):
>>
>>>On Thu, 2004-02-26 at 09:08, Ralph Angenendt wrote:
>>>
>>>
>>>>Javier Gonzalez wrote:
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>>I desperately need a wlan adapter that will work in my Laptop. I have
>>>>>Fedora Core 1 install, and it seems to be better with wlan, but I have
>>>>>still found a card that it's relatively easy to install. I have tried
>>>>>Linksys Instant Wireless ver.3, and Netgear MA401. Netgear just
>>>>>doesn't do a damn thing for me.
>>>>
>>>>The MA401 was recognized by Anaconda, so I cannot see, which problem you
>>>>might have there. Just worked out of the box, so to speak.
>>>>
>>>>You need to modprobe the orinoco_cs and hermes modules for it to work -
>>>>if your PCMCIA stuff is working.
>>>>
>>>>Do you get any errors when you do that?
>>>>
>>>>Ralph
>>
>>>Javier,
>>>I have struggled a little with WLAN cards in my Powerbook (yes yes I
>>>know diff, distro, but same idea). I found that many cards have
>>>different chipsets, but are packaged under the same model (but with
>>>different versions). It's important that you get a card with the Orinoco
>>>PrismII chipset, because it's best supported under linux. There are
>>>other drivers, for other chipsets, but it's hard (at least for a newbie
>>>like I!) to compile them properly. So I would continue with the Linksys
>>>v. 3 card. It's the one I use and it's great!
>>>
>>> Now, check your /etc/sysconfig/pcmcia file. it's should read:
>>>PCMCIA=yes
>>>PCIC=yenta_socket
>>>PCIC_OPTS=-f (i think!)
>>>CORE_OPTS=
>>> When you have changed this file, try restarting pcmcia services with
>>>your card inserted. Now cardmgr should load and you should get two
>>>similar beeps suggesting that cardmgr has recongnized the card as one
>>>which has a driver installed on your system. (I think RH systems have
>>>the orinoco_cs driver (for prismII) installed somewhere as default).
>>> Now you can run redhat-network-config and add the wireless device as
>>>eth1 or whatever is appropriate.
>>
>>One should also examine the ndiswrapper stuff at
>>http://ndiswrapper.sourceforge.net. It allows you to use WXP/2K/2K3
>>drivers (the .inf and .sys files) under a wrapper driver. I use it
>>for my Broadcom BCM94306 802.11g wireless on my Fujitsu laptop.
>>Works fine.
>>----------------------------------------------------------------------
>>- Rick Stevens, Senior Systems Engineer rstevens at vitalstream.com -
>>- VitalStream, Inc. http://www.vitalstream.com -
>>- -
>>- IGNORE that man behind the keyboard! -
>>- - The Wizard of OS -
>>----------------------------------------------------------------------
>>
>
>
>
--
----------------------------------------------------------------------
- Rick Stevens, Senior Systems Engineer rstevens at vitalstream.com -
- VitalStream, Inc. http://www.vitalstream.com -
- -
- Memory is the second thing to go, but I can't remember the first! -
----------------------------------------------------------------------
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