A 2.2.16 series (or later) Linux kernel source tree
An appropriate set of module utilities
gcc version 2.7.x or later
If you are building the ACP Modem driver along with the user space application,
you need to have a complete Linux source tree for your
kernel, not just an up-to-date kernel image.
In the [WORLDTRADE] section of your mwavem.conf file, set the Country=
parameter to your country access code.
| NOTE |
---|
| The mwavem.conf file is installed in the /usr/local/etc directory unless you specified otherwise during the build process |
Country information (including access codes) are listed in the
mwavem.conf file. For example, for France the following section is present:
[Telephony\Country List\33]
CountryCode=00000021
Name=France
SameAreaRule=0FG
LongDistanceRule=0FG
InternationsalRule=00EFG |
To set France to be your configured country in the [WORLDTRADE] section of
mwavem.conf,
An initialization script has been provided which may be used to
to start, stop, or check the status of the ACP Modem driver and application. It has been successfully run on the Debian, Slackware, SuSE, and Red Hat distributions and should run on any of their derivitives. If you are using
the runtime script, it will load the mwave device driver module, configure the serial port, and start the mwave manager for you.
All of the options which can be passed to the device driver module, along with some options for the script itself,
can be configured by uncommenting and editing the appropriate
variables at the beginning of the script.
The mwaved startup script can be found in the src/mwavem directory of the source distribution. If you are running the Red Hat distribution, you can copy the script to your /etc/rc.d/init.d directory and issue the ntsysv command in order to enable it at boot time.
If not using Red Hat, see the documentation for your distribution for information on how to set this up to run at boot time.
It is recommended that you use the provided mwaved script. If you are not using
the script, however, the following sections will describe how to manually start the device driver and application.
To load the mwave device driver use
or
The following arguments may be supplied with the insmod command:
| NOTE |
---|
| The following arguments are not persistent from boot to boot
(i.e. We are not saving them in the BIOS). |
mwave_3780i_irq=5/7/10/11/15
This parameter allows you to configure the IRQ used by the DSP if the DSP IRQ was not set
and stored in BIOS by the Thinkpad™ configuration utility.
mwave_3780i_io=0x130/0x350/0x0070/0xDB0
This parameter allows you to configure the I/O range used by the DSP if the DSP I/O range was not set
and stored in the BIOS by the Thinkpad™ configuration utility.
mwave_uart_irq=3/4
This parameter allows you to configure the IRQ used by the ACP UART if the Mwave's UART
IRQ was not set and stored in BIOS by the Thinkpad™ configuration utility.
mwave_uart_io=0x3f8/0x2f8/0x3E8/0x2E8
This parameter allows you to configure the I/O range used by the ACP UART if the UART I/O
range was not set and stored in BIOS by the Thinkpad™ configuration utility.
The following code is an example of how to run DSP using ttyS1 resources:
insmod mwave mwave_3780i_irq=10 mwave_3780i_io=0x0130 mwave_uart_irq=3 mwave_uart_io=0x2f8 |
| NOTE |
---|
| The mwave is unable to check for resource conflicts. It is
your responsibility to ensure that none of the resources specified conflict with other (commonly PCMCIA) devices. |
You can use the tpctl package on Linux or the Thinkpad™ configuration utility on Windows NT or DOS
to manage the configuration of Thinkpad™ related resources.
Once the ACP device driver is loaded successfully, use the
mwavem command to execute the application.
| NOTE |
---|
| The location of the mwavem.conf file
can be specified as an argument to the mwavem application. If not specified the
default location is assumed to be /usr/local/etc/mwavem.conf unless otherwise changed during the build process. |
Setup the serial driver to recognize the UART provided by the
ACP driver.
setserial /dev/ttyS0 autoconfig |
| NOTE |
---|
| Substitute /dev/ttyS0 to match the serial port you have
configured the DSP to use. |
| NOTE |
---|
| You may wish to create a symbolic link from your modem device to your serial device for convenience. Example: ln -s /dev/ttyS0 /dev/modem |
The ACP Modem is now available for use by your favorite dialing application.