Can I use Conexant V90 56K Data Fax PCI modem?
Can I use Conexant V90 56K Data Fax PCI modem?
Hello all ,
This is my first post here. I am brand new to linux and just got my first copy of puppy 2.15CE bootable with help from the search feature here.
My question today is where can I find out if my modem is compatable with linux? My windows dialog box tells me my modem is a
Conexent V90 DSL 56K Data Fax PCI modem,
the port being used is com 2.
The identifier says its a PCI/CPQ1602.
Will I be able to set this modem up to run on windows and linux both or will I need an external serial modem for linux? A new modem seems to be the recomended fix but I would rather not spend the money if I dont have to.
I am self taught on win98se, I have no official training on computers and by no means an expert so please be easy on me.
Thanks in advance.
This is my first post here. I am brand new to linux and just got my first copy of puppy 2.15CE bootable with help from the search feature here.
My question today is where can I find out if my modem is compatable with linux? My windows dialog box tells me my modem is a
Conexent V90 DSL 56K Data Fax PCI modem,
the port being used is com 2.
The identifier says its a PCI/CPQ1602.
Will I be able to set this modem up to run on windows and linux both or will I need an external serial modem for linux? A new modem seems to be the recomended fix but I would rather not spend the money if I dont have to.
I am self taught on win98se, I have no official training on computers and by no means an expert so please be easy on me.
Thanks in advance.
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working
http://puppylinux.org/wikka/ModemPageWorking
not working
http://puppylinux.org/wikka/ModemPageNonWorking
Hope that helps
http://puppylinux.org/wikka/ModemPageWorking
not working
http://puppylinux.org/wikka/ModemPageNonWorking
Hope that helps
Um, yes I tried it.
I was hopeing it would auto detect but it didnt. I ran the connection wizard and made the best choice I thought was available (TTyslo) and recieved an error message that my choice did not seem to be a modem. I exited without saveing any information so when I try it again I will start completly over again rather than trying to fix my errors.
Thanks.
I was hopeing it would auto detect but it didnt. I ran the connection wizard and made the best choice I thought was available (TTyslo) and recieved an error message that my choice did not seem to be a modem. I exited without saveing any information so when I try it again I will start completly over again rather than trying to fix my errors.
Thanks.
Compac 5868
AMD Athlon-K7 processor 600 MHz
384 MB RAM
Windows 98se
and now puppy 2.15CE
AMD Athlon-K7 processor 600 MHz
384 MB RAM
Windows 98se
and now puppy 2.15CE
Good job, my bad...Twiddle wrote:Um, yes I tried it.
Not sure what dialup program you are using, but I cannot get the default one (gkdial? or something like that) to work with my modem.
So what I use is wvdialup, the old-fashioned one. Try opening a terminal window (the terminal on my puppy is called rxvt but it may be different on yours?) and type "wvdialshell".
After detecting it brings up a window for you to put in a phone, id, password.
It always detects my modem, even when nothing else will.
(sorry if I'm giving bad advice; I'm running an old pup and have not kept up with changes. Try everything everyone else tells you first!)
Hello Twiddle,
If it's the same as this one:
http://www.modem-help.co.uk/CIS/CPQ1602 ... -FCC-.html
the you would need to get the hcf driver from linuxant:
http://www.linuxant.com/drivers/hcf/dow ... taller.php
A couple of issues though. With most pupversions having 2.6 kernels, the linuxant driver is speed-limited to 14.4kbps...snail-pace. (If you were using an older puppy, say pup1.08 with a 2.4 kernel, then the driver isn't speed-limited).
To remove the speed-limit on a 2.6 kernel, you just need to buy a $US20 license.
If it's the same as this one:
http://www.modem-help.co.uk/CIS/CPQ1602 ... -FCC-.html
the you would need to get the hcf driver from linuxant:
http://www.linuxant.com/drivers/hcf/dow ... taller.php
A couple of issues though. With most pupversions having 2.6 kernels, the linuxant driver is speed-limited to 14.4kbps...snail-pace. (If you were using an older puppy, say pup1.08 with a 2.4 kernel, then the driver isn't speed-limited).
To remove the speed-limit on a 2.6 kernel, you just need to buy a $US20 license.
Thanks muggins,
That looks like the one I have. Now let me see. $20.00 for the driver that lets me go more than a snails pace or $20-30 for a new modem and keeping a spare, hmmm....
I think I'll go shopping for an external that I can install in windows as a primary modem and linux will auto detect, That way I should be able to use one modem on a dual boot system. I think I know now why linux people dont like conexant modems.
I'll keep the link just in case.
Thanks
That looks like the one I have. Now let me see. $20.00 for the driver that lets me go more than a snails pace or $20-30 for a new modem and keeping a spare, hmmm....
I think I'll go shopping for an external that I can install in windows as a primary modem and linux will auto detect, That way I should be able to use one modem on a dual boot system. I think I know now why linux people dont like conexant modems.
I'll keep the link just in case.
Thanks
Compac 5868
AMD Athlon-K7 processor 600 MHz
384 MB RAM
Windows 98se
and now puppy 2.15CE
AMD Athlon-K7 processor 600 MHz
384 MB RAM
Windows 98se
and now puppy 2.15CE
Hi Twiddle,
Your options, AFAIK, are:
1) Buy a real external modem & get < 56k
2) Use free conexant driver & puppy with 2.6 kernel & get 14.4k
3) Use free conexant driver & puppy with 2.4 kernel & get < 56k
4) Buy $US20 lunuxant license & pup with 2.6 kernel & get < 56k
With regard to buying a real modem, this thread might be of interest:
http://www.murga-linux.com/puppy/viewto ... 13&t=23746
How did I know of the info on conexant modem? I had one for awhile, but it got retrenched when I upgraded to a 2.6 puppy.
Your options, AFAIK, are:
1) Buy a real external modem & get < 56k
2) Use free conexant driver & puppy with 2.6 kernel & get 14.4k
3) Use free conexant driver & puppy with 2.4 kernel & get < 56k
4) Buy $US20 lunuxant license & pup with 2.6 kernel & get < 56k
With regard to buying a real modem, this thread might be of interest:
http://www.murga-linux.com/puppy/viewto ... 13&t=23746
How did I know of the info on conexant modem? I had one for awhile, but it got retrenched when I upgraded to a 2.6 puppy.
Another option, which we just got working under Debian on a Dell PC:
http://direct2dell.com/one2one/archive/ ... 21325.aspx
You'll need to read the license carefully, but it installed without a hitch for us, even though the modem and PC were not the ones targeted by Dell.
It does have to be compiled on the target PC, and I have no idea of the mechanics involved in getting a .deb installed under Puppy...
http://direct2dell.com/one2one/archive/ ... 21325.aspx
You'll need to read the license carefully, but it installed without a hitch for us, even though the modem and PC were not the ones targeted by Dell.
It does have to be compiled on the target PC, and I have no idea of the mechanics involved in getting a .deb installed under Puppy...
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jcoder24 has been the Conexant HSF/HCF softmodem authority in the past -
http://www.murga-linux.com/puppy/viewtopic.php?t=2258
but I seem to recall that the NON-SPEED-LIMITED Conexant source code which jcoder provides won't compile on modern kernels.
That Dell hsf .deb package looks promising; I just extracted it now and I see that it contains source code, with an automated installer.
For the installer to work you would need to have the Puppy build tools (devx) installed ...
and maybe also the Puppy kernel source installed.
Similarly, ASUS has made available the modem source code for the optional Conexant RD02-D110 modem for the Eee small laptop.
http://www.murga-linux.com/puppy/viewtopic.php?t=2258
but I seem to recall that the NON-SPEED-LIMITED Conexant source code which jcoder provides won't compile on modern kernels.
That Dell hsf .deb package looks promising; I just extracted it now and I see that it contains source code, with an automated installer.
For the installer to work you would need to have the Puppy build tools (devx) installed ...
and maybe also the Puppy kernel source installed.
Similarly, ASUS has made available the modem source code for the optional Conexant RD02-D110 modem for the Eee small laptop.
This is not the crippled version of the driver, it's full speed. There are apparently two versions:
http://linux.dell.com/wiki/index.php/Ub ... dem_Driver
http://linux.dell.com/wiki/index.php/Ub ... dem_Driver
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IF you decide to buy an external modem.
Make sure it is a true hardware modem. An External Serial Port Modem is always a hardware modem. Some of the USB external modems are WinModems, I.E. Softmodems and some of these would never work with Linux.
Also, very important. Make sure your computer has a Serial Port before you buy. Some of the later computers do not have Serial Ports.
Also, very important. Make sure your computer has a Serial Port before you buy. Some of the later computers do not have Serial Ports.
@chicks,
I'm posting this via a, previously defunct, HSF modem, using pup2.16 & 2.6.18.1 kernel, thanks to the link you provided.
And it's not speed limited. The steps I followed were:
1) Extract the .deb & copy across the included ./etc & ./usr directories, to /etc & /usr.
2) I ran hsfconfig, but it complained about missing sysctl. I got this from telemetric_au's .rar package, here:
http://www.murga-linux.com/puppy/viewto ... ch&id=3314
I copied this .rar file to temporary directory /hsf, then extracted this with:
I then needed to give sysctl executable permissions & copy it to /usr/bin:
However testing it, by entering sysctl -h, and it complained of missing library file, libproc.so.3.1.9. telemetric_au had included libproc.so.3.1.8, so I copied this to /usr/lib, & created a symlink:
I then ran hsfconfig again, and just received one complaint, (about Hda support not being active, which jcoder24 explains is about Intel Hda modems, in this thread Here
I then removed my existing modem configuration, (from modem-wizard) then, following jcoder24's advice, added the following lines to /etc/rc.d/rcl.local:
Then I rebooted, and here I am.
I'm posting this via a, previously defunct, HSF modem, using pup2.16 & 2.6.18.1 kernel, thanks to the link you provided.
And it's not speed limited. The steps I followed were:
1) Extract the .deb & copy across the included ./etc & ./usr directories, to /etc & /usr.
2) I ran hsfconfig, but it complained about missing sysctl. I got this from telemetric_au's .rar package, here:
http://www.murga-linux.com/puppy/viewto ... ch&id=3314
I copied this .rar file to temporary directory /hsf, then extracted this with:
Code: Select all
cd /hsf
unrar e *.rar
Code: Select all
chmod +x sysctl
cp sysctl /usr/bin
Code: Select all
cp libproc.so.3.1.8 /usr/lib
ln -s /usr/lib/libproc.so.3.1.8 /usr/lib/libproc.so.3.1.9
I then removed my existing modem configuration, (from modem-wizard) then, following jcoder24's advice, added the following lines to /etc/rc.d/rcl.local:
Code: Select all
rm -f /dev/modem /dev/cuaHSF0 /dev/ttySHSF0 2>/dev/null
hsfconfig --serial
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sysctl and libproc.so are both part of Procps, available as a dotpup heremuggins wrote:... but it complained about missing sysctl.
... it complained of missing library file, libproc.so.3.1.9.
http://www.murga-linux.com/puppy/viewto ... 2543#82543
Found an old modem that seems to be hsf chip. Plugged it in and went through the process. Hsfconfig runs builds module but cant find the modem. Hmm, its out of junk hardware box and looks like one of my cats may have regurgitated on it (they recognize quality) in distant past, so it simply may be junk and not drivers fault. Didnt find any other hsf modems in junk pile, have one hcf modem that I know works cause had it working under Puppy 1.xx. That wasnt a crippled driver, but it still seemed slow if I remember correctly, slower than under windows.
Well, see if windows sees this modem, if not, then it goes into toss pile.
Well, see if windows sees this modem, if not, then it goes into toss pile.