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00-INDEX | D | 08-May-2024 | 1.3 KiB | 43 | 42 | |
CREDITS | D | 08-May-2024 | 1.9 KiB | 71 | 47 | |
HiSax.cert | D | 08-May-2024 | 3.9 KiB | 97 | 77 | |
INTERFACE | D | 08-May-2024 | 27.2 KiB | 760 | 569 | |
INTERFACE.CAPI | D | 08-May-2024 | 14.1 KiB | 356 | 263 | |
INTERFACE.fax | D | 08-May-2024 | 4.5 KiB | 164 | 116 | |
README | D | 08-May-2024 | 28.6 KiB | 600 | 501 | |
README.FAQ | D | 08-May-2024 | 721 | 27 | 17 | |
README.HiSax | D | 08-May-2024 | 23.3 KiB | 660 | 557 | |
README.audio | D | 08-May-2024 | 5.8 KiB | 139 | 109 | |
README.avmb1 | D | 08-May-2024 | 5.5 KiB | 188 | 155 | |
README.concap | D | 08-May-2024 | 10.5 KiB | 260 | 194 | |
README.diversion | D | 08-May-2024 | 6.1 KiB | 128 | 103 | |
README.fax | D | 08-May-2024 | 1.1 KiB | 46 | 27 | |
README.gigaset | D | 08-May-2024 | 17.5 KiB | 422 | 350 | |
README.hfc-pci | D | 08-May-2024 | 1.8 KiB | 42 | 32 | |
README.hysdn | D | 08-May-2024 | 7.8 KiB | 196 | 139 | |
README.mISDN | D | 08-May-2024 | 328 | 7 | 5 | |
README.syncppp | D | 08-May-2024 | 2.1 KiB | 59 | 45 | |
README.x25 | D | 08-May-2024 | 7.1 KiB | 185 | 128 | |
syncPPP.FAQ | D | 08-May-2024 | 7.9 KiB | 225 | 179 |
README
1README for the ISDN-subsystem 2 31. Preface 4 5 1.1 Introduction 6 7 This README describes how to set up and how to use the different parts 8 of the ISDN-subsystem. 9 10 For using the ISDN-subsystem, some additional userlevel programs are 11 necessary. Those programs and some contributed utilities are available 12 at 13 14 ftp.isdn4linux.de 15 16 /pub/isdn4linux/isdn4k-utils-<VersionNumber>.tar.gz 17 18 19 We also have set up a mailing-list: 20 21 The isdn4linux-project originates in Germany, and therefore by historical 22 reasons, the mailing-list's primary language is german. However mails 23 written in english have been welcome all the time. 24 25 to subscribe: write a email to majordomo@listserv.isdn4linux.de, 26 Subject irrelevant, in the message body: 27 subscribe isdn4linux <your_email_address> 28 29 To write to the mailing-list, write to isdn4linux@listserv.isdn4linux.de 30 31 This mailinglist is bidirectionally gated to the newsgroup 32 33 de.alt.comm.isdn4linux 34 35 There is also a well maintained FAQ in English available at 36 http://www.mhessler.de/i4lfaq/ 37 It can be viewed online, or downloaded in sgml/text/html format. 38 The FAQ can also be viewed online at 39 http://www.isdn4linux.de/faq/ 40 or downloaded from 41 ftp://ftp.isdn4linux.de/pub/isdn4linux/FAQ/ 42 43 1.1 Technical details 44 45 In the following Text, the terms MSN and EAZ are used. 46 47 MSN is the abbreviation for (M)ultiple(S)ubscriber(N)umber, and applies 48 to Euro(EDSS1)-type lines. Usually it is simply the phone number. 49 50 EAZ is the abbreviation of (E)ndgeraete(A)uswahl(Z)iffer and 51 applies to German 1TR6-type lines. This is a one-digit string, 52 simply appended to the base phone number 53 54 The internal handling is nearly identical, so replace the appropriate 55 term to that one, which applies to your local ISDN-environment. 56 57 When the link-level-module isdn.o is loaded, it supports up to 16 58 low-level-modules with up to 64 channels. (The number 64 is arbitrarily 59 chosen and can be configured at compile-time --ISDN_MAX in isdn.h). 60 A low-level-driver can register itself through an interface (which is 61 defined in isdnif.h) and gets assigned a slot. 62 The following char-devices are made available for each channel: 63 64 A raw-control-device with the following functions: 65 write: raw D-channel-messages (format: depends on driver). 66 read: raw D-channel-messages (format: depends on driver). 67 ioctl: depends on driver, i.e. for the ICN-driver, the base-address of 68 the ports and the shared memory on the card can be set and read 69 also the boot-code and the protocol software can be loaded into 70 the card. 71 72 O N L Y !!! for debugging (no locking against other devices): 73 One raw-data-device with the following functions: 74 write: data to B-channel. 75 read: data from B-channel. 76 77 In addition the following devices are made available: 78 79 128 tty-devices (64 cuix and 64 ttyIx) with integrated modem-emulator: 80 The functionality is almost the same as that of a serial device 81 (the line-discs are handled by the kernel), which lets you run 82 SLIP, CSLIP and asynchronous PPP through the devices. We have tested 83 Seyon, minicom, CSLIP (uri-dip) PPP, mgetty, XCept and Hylafax. 84 85 The modem-emulation supports the following: 86 1.3.1 Commands: 87 88 ATA Answer incoming call. 89 ATD<No.> Dial, the number may contain: 90 [0-9] and [,#.*WPT-S] 91 the latter are ignored until 'S'. 92 The 'S' must precede the number, if 93 the line is a SPV (German 1TR6). 94 ATE0 Echo off. 95 ATE1 Echo on (default). 96 ATH Hang-up. 97 ATH1 Off hook (ignored). 98 ATH0 Hang-up. 99 ATI Return "ISDN for Linux...". 100 ATI0 " 101 ATI1 " 102 ATI2 Report of last connection. 103 ATO On line (data mode). 104 ATQ0 Enable result codes (default). 105 ATQ1 Disable result codes (default). 106 ATSx=y Set register x to y. 107 ATSx? Show contents of register x. 108 ATV0 Numeric responses. 109 ATV1 English responses (default). 110 ATZ Load registers and EAZ/MSN from Profile. 111 AT&Bx Set Send-Packet-size to x (max. 4000) 112 The real packet-size may be limited by the 113 low-level-driver used. e.g. the HiSax-Module- 114 limit is 2000. You will get NO Error-Message, 115 if you set it to higher values, because at the 116 time of giving this command the corresponding 117 driver may not be selected (see "Automatic 118 Assignment") however the size of outgoing packets 119 will be limited correctly. 120 AT&D0 Ignore DTR 121 AT&D2 DTR-low-edge: Hang up and return to 122 command mode (default). 123 AT&D3 Same as AT&D2 but also resets all registers. 124 AT&Ex Set the EAZ/MSN for this channel to x. 125 AT&F Reset all registers and profile to "factory-defaults" 126 AT&Lx Set list of phone numbers to listen on. x is a 127 list of wildcard patterns separated by semicolon. 128 If this is set, it has precedence over the MSN set 129 by AT&E. 130 AT&Rx Select V.110 bitrate adaption. 131 This command enables V.110 protocol with 9600 baud 132 (x=9600), 19200 baud (x=19200) or 38400 baud 133 (x=38400). A value of x=0 disables V.110 switching 134 back to default X.75. This command sets the following 135 Registers: 136 Reg 14 (Layer-2 protocol): 137 x = 0: 0 138 x = 9600: 7 139 x = 19200: 8 140 x = 38400: 9 141 Reg 18.2 = 1 142 Reg 19 (Additional Service Indicator): 143 x = 0: 0 144 x = 9600: 197 145 x = 19200: 199 146 x = 38400: 198 147 Note on value in Reg 19: 148 There is _NO_ common convention for 38400 baud. 149 The value 198 is chosen arbitrarily. Users 150 _MUST_ negotiate this value before establishing 151 a connection. 152 AT&Sx Set window-size (x = 1..8) (not yet implemented) 153 AT&V Show all settings. 154 AT&W0 Write registers and EAZ/MSN to profile. See also 155 iprofd (5.c in this README). 156 AT&X0 BTX-mode and T.70-mode off (default) 157 AT&X1 BTX-mode on. (S13.1=1, S13.5=0 S14=0, S16=7, S18=7, S19=0) 158 AT&X2 T.70-mode on. (S13.1=1, S13.5=1, S14=0, S16=7, S18=7, S19=0) 159 AT+Rx Resume a suspended call with CallID x (x = 1,2,3...) 160 AT+Sx Suspend a call with CallID x (x = 1,2,3...) 161 162 For voice-mode commands refer to README.audio 163 164 1.3.2 Escape sequence: 165 During a connection, the emulation reacts just like 166 a normal modem to the escape sequence <DELAY>+++<DELAY>. 167 (The escape character - default '+' - can be set in the 168 register 2). 169 The DELAY must at least be 1.5 seconds long and delay 170 between the escape characters must not exceed 0.5 seconds. 171 172 1.3.3 Registers: 173 174 Nr. Default Description 175 0 0 Answer on ring number. 176 (no auto-answer if S0=0). 177 1 0 Count of rings. 178 2 43 Escape character. 179 (a value >= 128 disables the escape sequence). 180 3 13 Carriage return character (ASCII). 181 4 10 Line feed character (ASCII). 182 5 8 Backspace character (ASCII). 183 6 3 Delay in seconds before dialing. 184 7 60 Wait for carrier. 185 8 2 Pause time for comma (ignored) 186 9 6 Carrier detect time (ignored) 187 10 7 Carrier loss to disconnect time (ignored). 188 11 70 Touch tone timing (ignored). 189 12 69 Bit coded register: 190 Bit 0: 0 = Suppress response messages. 191 1 = Show response messages. 192 Bit 1: 0 = English response messages. 193 1 = Numeric response messages. 194 Bit 2: 0 = Echo off. 195 1 = Echo on. 196 Bit 3 0 = DCD always on. 197 1 = DCD follows carrier. 198 Bit 4 0 = CTS follows RTS 199 1 = Ignore RTS, CTS always on. 200 Bit 5 0 = return to command mode on DTR low. 201 1 = Same as 0 but also resets all 202 registers. 203 See also register 13, bit 2 204 Bit 6 0 = DSR always on. 205 1 = DSR only on if channel is available. 206 Bit 7 0 = Cisco-PPP-flag-hack off (default). 207 1 = Cisco-PPP-flag-hack on. 208 13 0 Bit coded register: 209 Bit 0: 0 = Use delayed tty-send-algorithm 210 1 = Direct tty-send. 211 Bit 1: 0 = T.70 protocol (Only for BTX!) off 212 1 = T.70 protocol (Only for BTX!) on 213 Bit 2: 0 = Don't hangup on DTR low. 214 1 = Hangup on DTR low. 215 Bit 3: 0 = Standard response messages 216 1 = Extended response messages 217 Bit 4: 0 = CALLER NUMBER before every RING. 218 1 = CALLER NUMBER after first RING. 219 Bit 5: 0 = T.70 extended protocol off 220 1 = T.70 extended protocol on 221 Bit 6: 0 = Special RUNG Message off 222 1 = Special RUNG Message on 223 "RUNG" is delivered on a ttyI, if 224 an incoming call happened (RING) and 225 the remote party hung up before any 226 local ATA was given. 227 Bit 7: 0 = Don't show display messages from net 228 1 = Show display messages from net 229 (S12 Bit 1 must be 0 too) 230 14 0 Layer-2 protocol: 231 0 = X75/LAPB with I-frames 232 1 = X75/LAPB with UI-frames 233 2 = X75/LAPB with BUI-frames 234 3 = HDLC 235 4 = Transparent (audio) 236 7 = V.110, 9600 baud 237 8 = V.110, 19200 baud 238 9 = V.110, 38400 baud 239 10 = Analog Modem (only if hardware supports this) 240 11 = Fax G3 (only if hardware supports this) 241 15 0 Layer-3 protocol: 242 0 = transparent 243 1 = transparent with audio features (e.g. DSP) 244 2 = Fax G3 Class 2 commands (S14 has to be set to 11) 245 3 = Fax G3 Class 1 commands (S14 has to be set to 11) 246 16 250 Send-Packet-size/16 247 17 8 Window-size (not yet implemented) 248 18 4 Bit coded register, Service-Octet-1 to accept, 249 or to be used on dialout: 250 Bit 0: Service 1 (audio) when set. 251 Bit 1: Service 5 (BTX) when set. 252 Bit 2: Service 7 (data) when set. 253 Note: It is possible to set more than one 254 bit. In this case, on incoming calls 255 the selected services are accepted, 256 and if the service is "audio", the 257 Layer-2-protocol is automatically 258 changed to 4 regardless of the setting 259 of register 14. On outgoing calls, 260 the most significant 1-bit is chosen to 261 select the outgoing service octet. 262 19 0 Service-Octet-2 263 20 0 Bit coded register (readonly) 264 Service-Octet-1 of last call. 265 Bit mapping is the same as register 18 266 21 0 Bit coded register (readonly) 267 Set on incoming call (during RING) to 268 octet 3 of calling party number IE (Numbering plan) 269 See section 4.5.10 of ITU Q.931 270 22 0 Bit coded register (readonly) 271 Set on incoming call (during RING) to 272 octet 3a of calling party number IE (Screening info) 273 See section 4.5.10 of ITU Q.931 274 23 0 Bit coded register: 275 Bit 0: 0 = Add CPN to RING message off 276 1 = Add CPN to RING message on 277 Bit 1: 0 = Add CPN to FCON message off 278 1 = Add CPN to FCON message on 279 Bit 2: 0 = Add CDN to RING/FCON message off 280 1 = Add CDN to RING/FCON message on 281 282 Last but not least a (at the moment fairly primitive) device to request 283 the line-status (/dev/isdninfo) is made available. 284 285 Automatic assignment of devices to lines: 286 287 All inactive physical lines are listening to all EAZs for incoming 288 calls and are NOT assigned to a specific tty or network interface. 289 When an incoming call is detected, the driver looks first for a network 290 interface and then for an opened tty which: 291 292 1. is configured for the same EAZ. 293 2. has the same protocol settings for the B-channel. 294 3. (only for network interfaces if the security flag is set) 295 contains the caller number in its access list. 296 4. Either the channel is not bound exclusively to another Net-interface, or 297 it is bound AND the other checks apply to exactly this interface. 298 (For usage of the bind-features, refer to the isdnctrl-man-page) 299 300 Only when a matching interface or tty is found is the call accepted 301 and the "connection" between the low-level-layer and the link-level-layer 302 is established and kept until the end of the connection. 303 In all other cases no connection is established. Isdn4linux can be 304 configured to either do NOTHING in this case (which is useful, if 305 other, external devices with the same EAZ/MSN are connected to the bus) 306 or to reject the call actively. (isdnctrl busreject ...) 307 308 For an outgoing call, the inactive physical lines are searched. 309 The call is placed on the first physical line, which supports the 310 requested protocols for the B-channel. If a net-interface, however 311 is pre-bound to a channel, this channel is used directly. 312 313 This makes it possible to configure several network interfaces and ttys 314 for one EAZ, if the network interfaces are set to secure operation. 315 If an incoming call matches one network interface, it gets connected to it. 316 If another incoming call for the same EAZ arrives, which does not match 317 a network interface, the first tty gets a "RING" and so on. 318 3192 System prerequisites: 320 321 ATTENTION! 322 323 Always use the latest module utilities. The current version is 324 named in Documentation/Changes. Some old versions of insmod 325 are not capable of setting the driver-Ids correctly. 326 3273. Lowlevel-driver configuration. 328 329 Configuration depends on how the drivers are built. See the 330 README.<yourDriver> for information on driver-specific setup. 331 3324. Device-inodes 333 334 The major and minor numbers and their names are described in 335 Documentation/devices.txt. The major numbers are: 336 337 43 for the ISDN-tty's. 338 44 for the ISDN-callout-tty's. 339 45 for control/info/debug devices. 340 3415. Application 342 343 a) For some card-types, firmware has to be loaded into the cards, before 344 proceeding with device-independent setup. See README.<yourDriver> 345 for how to do that. 346 347 b) If you only intend to use ttys, you are nearly ready now. 348 349 c) If you want to have really permanent "Modem"-settings on disk, you 350 can start the daemon iprofd. Give it a path to a file at the command- 351 line. It will store the profile-settings in this file every time 352 an AT&W0 is performed on any ISDN-tty. If the file already exists, 353 all profiles are initialized from this file. If you want to unload 354 any of the modules, kill iprofd first. 355 356 d) For networking, continue: Create an interface: 357 isdnctrl addif isdn0 358 359 e) Set the EAZ (or MSN for Euro-ISDN): 360 isdnctrl eaz isdn0 2 361 362 (For 1TR6 a single digit is allowed, for Euro-ISDN the number is your 363 real MSN e.g.: Phone-Number) 364 365 f) Set the number for outgoing calls on the interface: 366 isdnctrl addphone isdn0 out 1234567 367 ... (this can be executed more than once, all assigned numbers are 368 tried in order) 369 and the number(s) for incoming calls: 370 isdnctrl addphone isdn0 in 1234567 371 372 g) Set the timeout for hang-up: 373 isdnctrl huptimeout isdn0 <timeout_in_seconds> 374 375 h) additionally you may activate charge-hang-up (= Hang up before 376 next charge-info, this only works, if your isdn-provider transmits 377 the charge-info during and after the connection): 378 isdnctrl chargehup isdn0 on 379 380 i) Set the dial mode of the interface: 381 isdnctrl dialmode isdn0 auto 382 "off" means that you (or the system) cannot make any connection 383 (neither incoming or outgoing connections are possible). Use 384 this if you want to be sure that no connections will be made. 385 "auto" means that the interface is in auto-dial mode, and will 386 attempt to make a connection whenever a network data packet needs 387 the interface's link. Note that this can cause unexpected dialouts, 388 and lead to a high phone bill! Some daemons or other pc's that use 389 this interface can cause this. 390 Incoming connections are also possible. 391 "manual" is a dial mode created to prevent the unexpected dialouts. 392 In this mode, the interface will never make any connections on its 393 own. You must explicitly initiate a connection with "isdnctrl dial 394 isdn0". However, after an idle time of no traffic as configured for 395 the huptimeout value with isdnctrl, the connection _will_ be ended. 396 If you don't want any automatic hangup, set the huptimeout value to 0. 397 "manual" is the default. 398 399 j) Setup the interface with ifconfig as usual, and set a route to it. 400 401 k) (optional) If you run X11 and have Tcl/Tk-wish version 4.0, you can use 402 the script tools/tcltk/isdnmon. You can add actions for line-status 403 changes. See the comments at the beginning of the script for how to 404 do that. There are other tty-based tools in the tools-subdirectory 405 contributed by Michael Knigge (imon), Volker Götz (imontty) and 406 Andreas Kool (isdnmon). 407 408 l) For initial testing, you can set the verbose-level to 2 (default: 0). 409 Then all incoming calls are logged, even if they are not addressed 410 to one of the configured net-interfaces: 411 isdnctrl verbose 2 412 413 Now you are ready! A ping to the set address should now result in an 414 automatic dial-out (look at syslog kernel-messages). 415 The phone numbers and EAZs can be assigned at any time with isdnctrl. 416 You can add as many interfaces as you like with addif following the 417 directions above. Of course, there may be some limitations. But we have 418 tested as many as 20 interfaces without any problem. However, if you 419 don't give an interface name to addif, the kernel will assign a name 420 which starts with "eth". The number of "eth"-interfaces is limited by 421 the kernel. 422 4235. Additional options for isdnctrl: 424 425 "isdnctrl secure <InterfaceName> on" 426 Only incoming calls, for which the caller-id is listed in the access 427 list of the interface are accepted. You can add caller-id's With the 428 command "isdnctrl addphone <InterfaceName> in <caller-id>" 429 Euro-ISDN does not transmit the leading '0' of the caller-id for an 430 incoming call, therefore you should configure it accordingly. 431 If the real number for the dialout e.g. is "09311234567" the number 432 to configure here is "9311234567". The pattern-match function 433 works similar to the shell mechanism. 434 435 ? one arbitrary digit 436 * zero or arbitrary many digits 437 [123] one of the digits in the list 438 [1-5] one digit between '1' and '5' 439 a '^' as the first character in a list inverts the list 440 441 442 "isdnctrl secure <InterfaceName> off" 443 Switch off secure operation (default). 444 445 "isdnctrl ihup <InterfaceName> [on|off]" 446 Switch the hang-up-timer for incoming calls on or off. 447 448 "isdnctrl eaz <InterfaceName>" 449 Returns the EAZ of an interface. 450 451 "isdnctrl delphone <InterfaceName> in|out <number>" 452 Deletes a number from one of the access-lists of the interface. 453 454 "isdnctrl delif <InterfaceName>" 455 Removes the interface (and possible slaves) from the kernel. 456 (You have to unregister it with "ifconfig <InterfaceName> down" before). 457 458 "isdnctrl callback <InterfaceName> [on|off]" 459 Switches an interface to callback-mode. In this mode, an incoming call 460 will be rejected and after this the remote-station will be called. If 461 you test this feature by using ping, some routers will re-dial very 462 quickly, so that the callback from isdn4linux may not be recognized. 463 In this case use ping with the option -i <sec> to increase the interval 464 between echo-packets. 465 466 "isdnctrl cbdelay <InterfaceName> [seconds]" 467 Sets the delay (default 5 sec) between an incoming call and start of 468 dialing when callback is enabled. 469 470 "isdnctrl cbhup <InterfaceName> [on|off]" 471 This enables (default) or disables an active hangup (reject) when getting an 472 incoming call for an interface which is configured for callback. 473 474 "isdnctrl encap <InterfaceName> <EncapType>" 475 Selects the type of packet-encapsulation. The encapsulation can be changed 476 only while an interface is down. 477 478 At the moment the following values are supported: 479 480 rawip (Default) Selects raw-IP-encapsulation. This means, MAC-headers 481 are stripped off. 482 ip IP with type-field. Same as IP but the type-field of the MAC-header 483 is preserved. 484 x25iface X.25 interface encapsulation (first byte semantics as defined in 485 ../networking/x25-iface.txt). Use this for running the linux 486 X.25 network protocol stack (AF_X25 sockets) on top of isdn. 487 cisco-h A special-mode for communicating with a Cisco, which is configured 488 to do "hdlc" 489 ethernet No stripping. Packets are sent with full MAC-header. 490 The Ethernet-address of the interface is faked, from its 491 IP-address: fc:fc:i1:i2:i3:i4, where i1-4 are the IP-addr.-values. 492 syncppp Synchronous PPP 493 494 uihdlc HDLC with UI-frame-header (for use with DOS ISPA, option -h1) 495 496 497 NOTE: x25iface encapsulation is currently experimental. Please 498 read README.x25 for further details 499 500 501 Watching packets, using standard-tcpdump will fail for all encapsulations 502 except ethernet because tcpdump does not know how to handle packets 503 without MAC-header. A patch for tcpdump is included in the utility-package 504 mentioned above. 505 506 "isdnctrl l2_prot <InterfaceName> <L2-ProtocolName>" 507 Selects a layer-2-protocol. 508 (With the ICN-driver and the HiSax-driver, "x75i" and "hdlc" is available. 509 With other drivers, "x75ui", "x75bui", "x25dte", "x25dce" may be 510 possible too. See README.x25 for x25 related l2 protocols.) 511 512 isdnctrl l3_prot <InterfaceName> <L3-ProtocolName> 513 The same for layer-3. (At the moment only "trans" is allowed) 514 515 "isdnctrl list <InterfaceName>" 516 Shows all parameters of an interface and the charge-info. 517 Try "all" as the interface name. 518 519 "isdnctrl hangup <InterfaceName>" 520 Forces hangup of an interface. 521 522 "isdnctrl bind <InterfaceName> <DriverId>,<ChannelNumber> [exclusive]" 523 If you are using more than one ISDN card, it is sometimes necessary to 524 dial out using a specific card or even preserve a specific channel for 525 dialout of a specific net-interface. This can be done with the above 526 command. Replace <DriverId> by whatever you assigned while loading the 527 module. The <ChannelNumber> is counted from zero. The upper limit 528 depends on the card used. At the moment no card supports more than 529 2 channels, so the upper limit is one. 530 531 "isdnctrl unbind <InterfaceName>" 532 unbinds a previously bound interface. 533 534 "isdnctrl busreject <DriverId> on|off" 535 If switched on, isdn4linux replies a REJECT to incoming calls, it 536 cannot match to any configured interface. 537 If switched off, nothing happens in this case. 538 You normally should NOT enable this feature, if the ISDN adapter is not 539 the only device connected to the S0-bus. Otherwise it could happen that 540 isdn4linux rejects an incoming call, which belongs to another device on 541 the bus. 542 543 "isdnctrl addslave <InterfaceName> <SlaveName> 544 Creates a slave interface for channel-bundling. Slave interfaces are 545 not seen by the kernel, but their ISDN-part can be configured with 546 isdnctrl as usual. (Phone numbers, EAZ/MSN, timeouts etc.) If more 547 than two channels are to be bundled, feel free to create as many as you 548 want. InterfaceName must be a real interface, NOT a slave. Slave interfaces 549 start dialing, if the master interface resp. the previous slave interface 550 has a load of more than 7000 cps. They hangup if the load goes under 7000 551 cps, according to their "huptimeout"-parameter. 552 553 "isdnctrl sdelay <InterfaceName> secs." 554 This sets the minimum time an Interface has to be fully loaded, until 555 it sends a dial-request to its slave. 556 557 "isdnctrl dial <InterfaceName>" 558 Forces an interface to start dialing even if no packets are to be 559 transferred. 560 561 "isdnctrl mapping <DriverId> MSN0,MSN1,MSN2,...MSN9" 562 This installs a mapping table for EAZ<->MSN-mapping for a single line. 563 Missing MSN's have to be given as "-" or can be omitted, if at the end 564 of the commandline. 565 With this command, it's now possible to have an interface listening to 566 mixed 1TR6- and Euro-Type lines. In this case, the interface has to be 567 configured to a 1TR6-type EAZ (one digit). The mapping is also valid 568 for tty-emulation. Seen from the interface/tty-level the mapping 569 CAN be used, however it's possible to use single tty's/interfaces with 570 real MSN's (more digits) also, in which case the mapping will be ignored. 571 Here is an example: 572 573 You have a 1TR6-type line with base-nr. 1234567 and a Euro-line with 574 MSN's 987654, 987655 and 987656. The DriverId for the Euro-line is "EURO". 575 576 isdnctrl mapping EURO -,987654,987655,987656,-,987655 577 ... 578 isdnctrl eaz isdn0 1 # listen on 12345671(1tr6) and 987654(euro) 579 ... 580 isdnctrl eaz isdn1 4 # listen on 12345674(1tr6) only. 581 ... 582 isdnctrl eaz isdn2 987654 # listen on 987654(euro) only. 583 584 Same scheme is used with AT&E... at the tty's. 585 5866. If you want to write a new low-level-driver, you are welcome. 587 The interface to the link-level-module is described in the file INTERFACE. 588 If the interface should be expanded for any reason, don't do it 589 on your own, send me a mail containing the proposed changes and 590 some reasoning about them. 591 If other drivers will not be affected, I will include the changes 592 in the next release. 593 For developers only, there is a second mailing-list. Write to me 594 (fritz@isdn4linux.de), if you want to join that list. 595 596Have fun! 597 598 -Fritz 599 600
README.FAQ
1 2The FAQ for isdn4linux 3====================== 4 5Please note that there is a big FAQ available in the isdn4k-utils. 6You find it in: 7 isdn4k-utils/FAQ/i4lfaq.sgml 8 9In case you just want to see the FAQ online, or download the newest version, 10you can have a look at my website: 11http://www.mhessler.de/i4lfaq/ (view + download) 12or: 13http://www.isdn4linux.de/faq/ (view) 14 15As the extension tells, the FAQ is in SGML format, and you can convert it 16into text/html/... format by using the sgml2txt/sgml2html/... tools. 17Alternatively, you can also do a 'configure; make all' in the FAQ directory. 18 19 20Please have a look at the FAQ before posting anything in the Mailinglist, 21or the newsgroup! 22 23 24Matthias Hessler 25hessler@isdn4linux.de 26 27
README.HiSax
1HiSax is a Linux hardware-level driver for passive ISDN cards with Siemens 2chipset (ISAC_S 2085/2086/2186, HSCX SAB 82525). It is based on the Teles 3driver from Jan den Ouden. 4It is meant to be used with isdn4linux, an ISDN link-level module for Linux 5written by Fritz Elfert. 6 7 This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify 8 it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by 9 the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or 10 (at your option) any later version. 11 12 This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, 13 but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of 14 MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the 15 GNU General Public License for more details. 16 17 You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License 18 along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software 19 Foundation, Inc., 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA. 20 21 22Supported cards 23--------------- 24 25Teles 8.0/16.0/16.3 and compatible ones 26Teles 16.3c 27Teles S0/PCMCIA 28Teles PCI 29Teles S0Box 30Creatix S0Box 31Creatix PnP S0 32Compaq ISDN S0 ISA card 33AVM A1 (Fritz, Teledat 150) 34AVM Fritz PCMCIA 35AVM Fritz PnP 36AVM Fritz PCI 37ELSA Microlink PCC-16, PCF, PCF-Pro, PCC-8 38ELSA Quickstep 1000 39ELSA Quickstep 1000PCI 40ELSA Quickstep 3000 (same settings as QS1000) 41ELSA Quickstep 3000PCI 42ELSA PCMCIA 43ITK ix1-micro Rev.2 44Eicon Diva 2.0 ISA and PCI (S0 and U interface, no PRO version) 45Eicon Diva 2.01 ISA and PCI 46Eicon Diva 2.02 PCI 47Eicon Diva Piccola 48ASUSCOM NETWORK INC. ISDNLink 128K PC adapter (order code I-IN100-ST-D) 49Dynalink IS64PH (OEM version of ASUSCOM NETWORK INC. ISDNLink 128K adapter) 50PCBIT-DP (OEM version of ASUSCOM NETWORK INC. ISDNLink) 51HFC-2BS0 based cards (TeleInt SA1) 52Sedlbauer Speed Card (Speed Win, Teledat 100, PCI, Fax+) 53Sedlbauer Speed Star/Speed Star2 (PCMCIA) 54Sedlbauer ISDN-Controller PC/104 55USR Sportster internal TA (compatible Stollmann tina-pp V3) 56USR internal TA PCI 57ith Kommunikationstechnik GmbH MIC 16 ISA card 58Traverse Technologie NETjet PCI S0 card and NETspider U card 59Ovislink ISDN sc100-p card (NETjet driver) 60Dr. Neuhaus Niccy PnP/PCI 61Siemens I-Surf 1.0 62Siemens I-Surf 2.0 (with IPAC, try type 12 asuscom) 63ACER P10 64HST Saphir 65Berkom Telekom A4T 66Scitel Quadro 67Gazel ISDN cards 68HFC-PCI based cards 69Winbond W6692 based cards 70HFC-S+, HFC-SP/PCMCIA cards 71formula-n enternow 72Gerdes Power ISDN 73 74Note: PCF, PCF-Pro: up to now, only the ISDN part is supported 75 PCC-8: not tested yet 76 Eicon.Diehl Diva U interface not tested 77 78If you know other passive cards with the Siemens chipset, please let me know. 79You can combine any card, if there is no conflict between the resources 80(io, mem, irq). 81 82 83Configuring the driver 84---------------------- 85 86The HiSax driver can either be built directly into the kernel or as a module. 87It can be configured using the command line feature while loading the kernel 88with LILO or LOADLIN or, if built as a module, using insmod/modprobe with 89parameters. 90There is also some config needed before you compile the kernel and/or 91modules. It is included in the normal "make [menu]config" target at the 92kernel. Don't forget it, especially to select the right D-channel protocol. 93 94Please note: In older versions of the HiSax driver, all PnP cards 95needed to be configured with isapnp and worked only with the HiSax 96driver used as a module. 97 98In the current version, HiSax will automatically use the in-kernel 99ISAPnP support, provided you selected it during kernel configuration 100(CONFIG_ISAPNP), if you don't give the io=, irq= command line parameters. 101 102The affected card types are: 4,7,12,14,19,27-30 103 104a) when built as a module 105------------------------- 106 107insmod/modprobe hisax.o \ 108 io=iobase irq=IRQ mem=membase type=card_type \ 109 protocol=D_channel_protocol id=idstring 110 111or, if several cards are installed: 112 113insmod/modprobe hisax.o \ 114 io=iobase1,iobase2,... irq=IRQ1,IRQ2,... mem=membase1,membase2,... \ 115 type=card_type1,card_type2,... \ 116 protocol=D_channel_protocol1,D_channel_protocol2,... \ 117 id=idstring1%idstring2 ... 118 119where "iobaseN" represents the I/O base address of the Nth card, "membaseN" 120the memory base address of the Nth card, etc. 121 122The reason for the delimiter "%" being used in the idstrings is that "," 123won't work with the current modules package. 124 125The parameters may be specified in any order. For example, the "io" 126parameter may precede the "irq" parameter, or vice versa. If several 127cards are installed, the ordering within the comma separated parameter 128lists must of course be consistent. 129 130Only parameters applicable to the card type need to be specified. For 131example, the Teles 16.3 card is not memory-mapped, so the "mem" 132parameter may be omitted for this card. Sometimes it may be necessary 133to specify a dummy parameter, however. This is the case when there is 134a card of a different type later in the list that needs a parameter 135which the preceding card does not. For instance, if a Teles 16.0 card 136is listed after a Teles 16.3 card, a dummy memory base parameter of 0 137must be specified for the 16.3. Instead of a dummy value, the parameter 138can also be skipped by simply omitting the value. For example: 139mem=,0xd0000. See example 6 below. 140 141The parameter for the D-Channel protocol may be omitted if you selected the 142correct one during kernel config. Valid values are "1" for German 1TR6, 143"2" for EDSS1 (Euro ISDN), "3" for leased lines (no D-Channel) and "4" 144for US NI1. 145With US NI1 you have to include your SPID into the MSN setting in the form 146<MSN>:<SPID> for example (your phonenumber is 1234 your SPID 5678): 147AT&E1234:5678 on ttyI interfaces 148isdnctrl eaz ippp0 1234:5678 on network devices 149 150The Creatix/Teles PnP cards use io1= and io2= instead of io= for specifying 151the I/O addresses of the ISAC and HSCX chips, respectively. 152 153Card types: 154 155 Type Required parameters (in addition to type and protocol) 156 157 1 Teles 16.0 irq, mem, io 158 2 Teles 8.0 irq, mem 159 3 Teles 16.3 (non PnP) irq, io 160 4 Creatix/Teles PnP irq, io0 (ISAC), io1 (HSCX) 161 5 AVM A1 (Fritz) irq, io 162 6 ELSA PCC/PCF cards io or nothing for autodetect (the iobase is 163 required only if you have more than one ELSA 164 card in your PC) 165 7 ELSA Quickstep 1000 irq, io (from isapnp setup) 166 8 Teles 16.3 PCMCIA irq, io 167 9 ITK ix1-micro Rev.2 irq, io 168 10 ELSA PCMCIA irq, io (set with card manager) 169 11 Eicon.Diehl Diva ISA PnP irq, io 170 11 Eicon.Diehl Diva PCI no parameter 171 12 ASUS COM ISDNLink irq, io (from isapnp setup) 172 13 HFC-2BS0 based cards irq, io 173 14 Teles 16.3c PnP irq, io 174 15 Sedlbauer Speed Card irq, io 175 15 Sedlbauer PC/104 irq, io 176 15 Sedlbauer Speed PCI no parameter 177 16 USR Sportster internal irq, io 178 17 MIC card irq, io 179 18 ELSA Quickstep 1000PCI no parameter 180 19 Compaq ISDN S0 ISA card irq, io0, io1, io (from isapnp setup io=IO2) 181 20 NETjet PCI card no parameter 182 21 Teles PCI no parameter 183 22 Sedlbauer Speed Star (PCMCIA) irq, io (set with card manager) 184 24 Dr. Neuhaus Niccy PnP irq, io0, io1 (from isapnp setup) 185 24 Dr. Neuhaus Niccy PCI no parameter 186 25 Teles S0Box irq, io (of the used lpt port) 187 26 AVM A1 PCMCIA (Fritz!) irq, io (set with card manager) 188 27 AVM PnP (Fritz!PnP) irq, io (from isapnp setup) 189 27 AVM PCI (Fritz!PCI) no parameter 190 28 Sedlbauer Speed Fax+ irq, io (from isapnp setup) 191 29 Siemens I-Surf 1.0 irq, io, memory (from isapnp setup) 192 30 ACER P10 irq, io (from isapnp setup) 193 31 HST Saphir irq, io 194 32 Telekom A4T none 195 33 Scitel Quadro subcontroller (4*S0, subctrl 1...4) 196 34 Gazel ISDN cards (ISA) irq,io 197 34 Gazel ISDN cards (PCI) none 198 35 HFC 2BDS0 PCI none 199 36 W6692 based PCI cards none 200 37 HFC 2BDS0 S+, SP irq,io 201 38 NETspider U PCI card none 202 39 HFC 2BDS0 SP/PCMCIA irq,io (set with cardmgr) 203 40 hotplug interface 204 41 Formula-n enter:now PCI none 205 206At the moment IRQ sharing is only possible with PCI cards. Please make sure 207that your IRQ is free and enabled for ISA use. 208 209 210Examples for module loading 211 2121. Teles 16.3, Euro ISDN, I/O base 280 hex, IRQ 10 213 modprobe hisax type=3 protocol=2 io=0x280 irq=10 214 2152. Teles 16.0, 1TR6 ISDN, I/O base d80 hex, IRQ 5, Memory d0000 hex 216 modprobe hisax protocol=1 type=1 io=0xd80 mem=0xd0000 irq=5 217 2183. Fritzcard, Euro ISDN, I/O base 340 hex, IRQ 10 and ELSA PCF, Euro ISDN 219 modprobe hisax type=5,6 protocol=2,2 io=0x340 irq=10 id=Fritz%Elsa 220 2214. Any ELSA PCC/PCF card, Euro ISDN 222 modprobe hisax type=6 protocol=2 223 2245. Teles 16.3 PnP, Euro ISDN, with isapnp configured 225 isapnp config: (INT 0 (IRQ 10 (MODE +E))) 226 (IO 0 (BASE 0x0580)) 227 (IO 1 (BASE 0x0180)) 228 modprobe hisax type=4 protocol=2 irq=10 io0=0x580 io1=0x180 229 230 In the current version of HiSax, you can instead simply use 231 232 modprobe hisax type=4 protocol=2 233 234 if you configured your kernel for ISAPnP. Don't run isapnp in 235 this case! 236 2376. Teles 16.3, Euro ISDN, I/O base 280 hex, IRQ 12 and 238 Teles 16.0, 1TR6, IRQ 5, Memory d0000 hex 239 modprobe hisax type=3,1 protocol=2,1 io=0x280 mem=0,0xd0000 240 241 Please note the dummy 0 memory address for the Teles 16.3, used as a 242 placeholder as described above, in the last example. 243 2447. Teles PCMCIA, Euro ISDN, I/O base 180 hex, IRQ 15 (default values) 245 modprobe hisax type=8 protocol=2 io=0x180 irq=15 246 247 248b) using LILO/LOADLIN, with the driver compiled directly into the kernel 249------------------------------------------------------------------------ 250 251hisax=typ1,dp1,pa_1,pb_1,pc_1[,typ2,dp2,pa_2 ... \ 252 typn,dpn,pa_n,pb_n,pc_n][,idstring1[,idstring2,...,idstringn]] 253 254where 255 typ1 = type of 1st card (default depends on kernel settings) 256 dp1 = D-Channel protocol of 1st card. 1=1TR6, 2=EDSS1, 3=leased 257 pa_1 = 1st parameter (depending on the type of the card) 258 pb_1 = 2nd parameter ( " " " " " " " ) 259 pc_1 = 3rd parameter ( " " " " " " " ) 260 261 typ2,dp2,pa_2,pb_2,pc_2 = Parameters of the second card (defaults: none) 262 typn,dpn,pa_n,pb_n,pc_n = Parameters of the n'th card (up to 16 cards are 263 supported) 264 265 idstring = Driver ID for accessing the particular card with utility 266 programs and for identification when using a line monitor 267 (default: "HiSax") 268 269 Note: the ID string must start with an alphabetical character! 270 271Card types: 272 273type 274 1 Teles 16.0 pa=irq pb=membase pc=iobase 275 2 Teles 8.0 pa=irq pb=membase 276 3 Teles 16.3 pa=irq pb=iobase 277 4 Creatix/Teles PNP ONLY WORKS AS A MODULE ! 278 5 AVM A1 (Fritz) pa=irq pb=iobase 279 6 ELSA PCC/PCF cards pa=iobase or nothing for autodetect 280 7 ELSA Quickstep 1000 ONLY WORKS AS A MODULE ! 281 8 Teles S0 PCMCIA pa=irq pb=iobase 282 9 ITK ix1-micro Rev.2 pa=irq pb=iobase 283 10 ELSA PCMCIA pa=irq, pb=io (set with card manager) 284 11 Eicon.Diehl Diva ISAPnP ONLY WORKS AS A MODULE ! 285 11 Eicon.Diehl Diva PCI no parameter 286 12 ASUS COM ISDNLink ONLY WORKS AS A MODULE ! 287 13 HFC-2BS0 based cards pa=irq pb=io 288 14 Teles 16.3c PnP ONLY WORKS AS A MODULE ! 289 15 Sedlbauer Speed Card pa=irq pb=io (Speed Win only as module !) 290 15 Sedlbauer PC/104 pa=irq pb=io 291 15 Sedlbauer Speed PCI no parameter 292 16 USR Sportster internal pa=irq pb=io 293 17 MIC card pa=irq pb=io 294 18 ELSA Quickstep 1000PCI no parameter 295 19 Compaq ISDN S0 ISA card ONLY WORKS AS A MODULE ! 296 20 NETjet PCI card no parameter 297 21 Teles PCI no parameter 298 22 Sedlbauer Speed Star (PCMCIA) pa=irq, pb=io (set with card manager) 299 24 Dr. Neuhaus Niccy PnP ONLY WORKS AS A MODULE ! 300 24 Dr. Neuhaus Niccy PCI no parameter 301 25 Teles S0Box pa=irq, pb=io (of the used lpt port) 302 26 AVM A1 PCMCIA (Fritz!) pa=irq, pb=io (set with card manager) 303 27 AVM PnP (Fritz!PnP) ONLY WORKS AS A MODULE ! 304 27 AVM PCI (Fritz!PCI) no parameter 305 28 Sedlbauer Speed Fax+ ONLY WORKS AS A MODULE ! 306 29 Siemens I-Surf 1.0 ONLY WORKS AS A MODULE ! 307 30 ACER P10 ONLY WORKS AS A MODULE ! 308 31 HST Saphir pa=irq, pb=io 309 32 Telekom A4T no parameter 310 33 Scitel Quadro subcontroller (4*S0, subctrl 1...4) 311 34 Gazel ISDN cards (ISA) pa=irq, pb=io 312 34 Gazel ISDN cards (PCI) no parameter 313 35 HFC 2BDS0 PCI no parameter 314 36 W6692 based PCI cards none 315 37 HFC 2BDS0 S+,SP/PCMCIA ONLY WORKS AS A MODULE ! 316 38 NETspider U PCI card none 317 39 HFC 2BDS0 SP/PCMCIA ONLY WORKS AS A MODULE ! 318 40 hotplug interface ONLY WORKS AS A MODULE ! 319 41 Formula-n enter:now PCI none 320 321Running the driver 322------------------ 323 324When you insmod isdn.o and hisax.o (or with the in-kernel version, during 325boot time), a few lines should appear in your syslog. Look for something like: 326 327Apr 13 21:01:59 kke01 kernel: HiSax: Driver for Siemens chip set ISDN cards 328Apr 13 21:01:59 kke01 kernel: HiSax: Version 2.9 329Apr 13 21:01:59 kke01 kernel: HiSax: Revisions 1.14/1.9/1.10/1.25/1.8 330Apr 13 21:01:59 kke01 kernel: HiSax: Total 1 card defined 331Apr 13 21:01:59 kke01 kernel: HiSax: Card 1 Protocol EDSS1 Id=HiSax1 (0) 332Apr 13 21:01:59 kke01 kernel: HiSax: Elsa driver Rev. 1.13 333... 334Apr 13 21:01:59 kke01 kernel: Elsa: PCF-Pro found at 0x360 Rev.:C IRQ 10 335Apr 13 21:01:59 kke01 kernel: Elsa: timer OK; resetting card 336Apr 13 21:01:59 kke01 kernel: Elsa: HSCX version A: V2.1 B: V2.1 337Apr 13 21:01:59 kke01 kernel: Elsa: ISAC 2086/2186 V1.1 338... 339Apr 13 21:01:59 kke01 kernel: HiSax: DSS1 Rev. 1.14 340Apr 13 21:01:59 kke01 kernel: HiSax: 2 channels added 341 342This means that the card is ready for use. 343Cabling problems or line-downs are not detected, and only some ELSA cards can 344detect the S0 power. 345 346Remember that, according to the new strategy for accessing low-level drivers 347from within isdn4linux, you should also define a driver ID while doing 348insmod: Simply append hisax_id=<SomeString> to the insmod command line. This 349string MUST NOT start with a digit or a small 'x'! 350 351At this point you can run a 'cat /dev/isdnctrl0' and view debugging messages. 352 353At the moment, debugging messages are enabled with the hisaxctrl tool: 354 355 hisaxctrl <DriverId> DebugCmd <debugging_flags> 356 357<DriverId> default is HiSax, if you didn't specify one. 358 359DebugCmd is 1 for generic debugging 360 11 for layer 1 development debugging 361 13 for layer 3 development debugging 362 363where <debugging_flags> is the integer sum of the following debugging 364options you wish enabled: 365 366With DebugCmd set to 1: 367 368 0x0001 Link-level <--> hardware-level communication 369 0x0002 Top state machine 370 0x0004 D-Channel Frames for isdnlog 371 0x0008 D-Channel Q.921 372 0x0010 B-Channel X.75 373 0x0020 D-Channel l2 374 0x0040 B-Channel l2 375 0x0080 D-Channel link state debugging 376 0x0100 B-Channel link state debugging 377 0x0200 TEI debug 378 0x0400 LOCK debug in callc.c 379 0x0800 More paranoid debug in callc.c (not for normal use) 380 0x1000 D-Channel l1 state debugging 381 0x2000 B-Channel l1 state debugging 382 383With DebugCmd set to 11: 384 385 0x0001 Warnings (default: on) 386 0x0002 IRQ status 387 0x0004 ISAC 388 0x0008 ISAC FIFO 389 0x0010 HSCX 390 0x0020 HSCX FIFO (attention: full B-Channel output!) 391 0x0040 D-Channel LAPD frame types 392 0x0080 IPAC debug 393 0x0100 HFC receive debug 394 0x0200 ISAC monitor debug 395 0x0400 D-Channel frames for isdnlog (set with 1 0x4 too) 396 0x0800 D-Channel message verbose 397 398With DebugCmd set to 13: 399 400 1 Warnings (default: on) 401 2 l3 protocol descriptor errors 402 4 l3 state machine 403 8 charge info debugging (1TR6) 404 405For example, 'hisaxctrl HiSax 1 0x3ff' enables full generic debugging. 406 407Because of some obscure problems with some switch equipment, the delay 408between the CONNECT message and sending the first data on the B-channel is now 409configurable with 410 411hisaxctrl <DriverId> 2 <delay> 412<delay> in ms Value between 50 and 800 ms is recommended. 413 414Downloading Firmware 415-------------------- 416At the moment, the Sedlbauer speed fax+ is the only card, which 417needs to download firmware. 418The firmware is downloaded with the hisaxctrl tool: 419 420 hisaxctrl <DriverId> 9 <firmware_filename> 421 422<DriverId> default is HiSax, if you didn't specify one, 423 424where <firmware_filename> is the filename of the firmware file. 425 426For example, 'hisaxctrl HiSax 9 ISAR.BIN' downloads the firmware for 427ISAR based cards (like the Sedlbauer speed fax+). 428 429Warning 430------- 431HiSax is a work in progress and may crash your machine. 432For certification look at HiSax.cert file. 433 434Limitations 435----------- 436At this time, HiSax only works on Euro ISDN lines and German 1TR6 lines. 437For leased lines see appendix. 438 439Bugs 440---- 441If you find any, please let me know. 442 443 444Thanks 445------ 446Special thanks to: 447 448 Emil Stephan for the name HiSax which is a mix of HSCX and ISAC. 449 450 Fritz Elfert, Jan den Ouden, Michael Hipp, Michael Wein, 451 Andreas Kool, Pekka Sarnila, Sim Yskes, Johan Myrre'en, 452 Klaus-Peter Nischke (ITK AG), Christof Petig, Werner Fehn (ELSA GmbH), 453 Volker Schmidt 454 Edgar Toernig and Marcus Niemann for the Sedlbauer driver 455 Stephan von Krawczynski 456 Juergen Quade for the Leased Line part 457 Klaus Lichtenwalder (Klaus.Lichtenwalder@WebForum.DE), for ELSA PCMCIA support 458 Enrik Berkhan (enrik@starfleet.inka.de) for S0BOX specific stuff 459 Ton van Rosmalen for Teles PCI 460 Petr Novak <petr.novak@i.cz> for Winbond W6692 support 461 Werner Cornelius <werner@isdn4linux.de> for HFC-PCI, HFC-S(+/P) and supplementary services support 462 and more people who are hunting bugs. (If I forgot somebody, please 463 send me a mail). 464 465 Firma ELSA GmbH 466 Firma Eicon.Diehl GmbH 467 Firma Dynalink NL 468 Firma ASUSCOM NETWORK INC. Taiwan 469 Firma S.u.S.E 470 Firma ith Kommunikationstechnik GmbH 471 Firma Traverse Technologie Australia 472 Firma Medusa GmbH (www.medusa.de). 473 Firma Quant-X Austria for sponsoring a DEC Alpha board+CPU 474 Firma Cologne Chip Designs GmbH 475 476 My girl friend and partner in life Ute for her patience with me. 477 478 479Enjoy, 480 481Karsten Keil 482keil@isdn4linux.de 483 484 485Appendix: Teles PCMCIA driver 486----------------------------- 487 488See 489 http://www.linux.no/teles_cs.txt 490for instructions. 491 492Appendix: Linux and ISDN-leased lines 493------------------------------------- 494 495Original from Juergen Quade, new version KKe. 496 497Attention NEW VERSION, the old leased line syntax won't work !!! 498 499You can use HiSax to connect your Linux-Box via an ISDN leased line 500to e.g. the Internet: 501 5021. Build a kernel which includes the HiSax driver either as a module 503 or as part of the kernel. 504 cd /usr/src/linux 505 make menuconfig 506 <ISDN subsystem - ISDN support -- HiSax> 507 make clean; make zImage; make modules; make modules_install 5082. Install the new kernel 509 cp /usr/src/linux/arch/x86/boot/zImage /etc/kernel/linux.isdn 510 vi /etc/lilo.conf 511 <add new kernel in the bootable image section> 512 lilo 5133. in case the hisax driver is a "fixed" part of the kernel, configure 514 the driver with lilo: 515 vi /etc/lilo.conf 516 <add HiSax driver parameter in the global section (see below)> 517 lilo 518 Your lilo.conf _might_ look like the following: 519 520 # LILO configuration-file 521 # global section 522 # teles 16.0 on IRQ=5, MEM=0xd8000, PORT=0xd80 523 append="hisax=1,3,5,0xd8000,0xd80,HiSax" 524 # teles 16.3 (non pnp) on IRQ=15, PORT=0xd80 525 # append="hisax=3,3,5,0xd8000,0xd80,HiSax" 526 boot=/dev/sda 527 compact # faster, but won't work on all systems. 528 linear 529 read-only 530 prompt 531 timeout=100 532 vga = normal # force sane state 533 # Linux bootable partition config begins 534 image = /etc/kernel/linux.isdn 535 root = /dev/sda1 536 label = linux.isdn 537 # 538 image = /etc/kernel/linux-2.0.30 539 root = /dev/sda1 540 label = linux.secure 541 542 In the line starting with "append" you have to adapt the parameters 543 according to your card (see above in this file) 544 5453. boot the new linux.isdn kernel 5464. start the ISDN subsystem: 547 a) load - if necessary - the modules (depends, whether you compiled 548 the ISDN driver as module or not) 549 According to the type of card you have to specify the necessary 550 driver parameter (irq, io, mem, type, protocol). 551 For the leased line the protocol is "3". See the table above for 552 the parameters, which you have to specify depending on your card. 553 b) configure i4l 554 /sbin/isdnctrl addif isdn0 555 # EAZ 1 -- B1 channel 2 --B2 channel 556 /sbin/isdnctrl eaz isdn0 1 557 /sbin/isdnctrl secure isdn0 on 558 /sbin/isdnctrl huptimeout isdn0 0 559 /sbin/isdnctrl l2_prot isdn0 hdlc 560 # Attention you must not set an outgoing number !!! This won't work !!! 561 # The incoming number is LEASED0 for the first card, LEASED1 for the 562 # second and so on. 563 /sbin/isdnctrl addphone isdn0 in LEASED0 564 # Here is no need to bind the channel. 565 c) in case the remote partner is a CISCO: 566 /sbin/isdnctrl encap isdn0 cisco-h 567 d) configure the interface 568 /sbin/ifconfig isdn0 ${LOCAL_IP} pointopoint ${REMOTE_IP} 569 e) set the routes 570 /sbin/route add -host ${REMOTE_IP} isdn0 571 /sbin/route add default gw ${REMOTE_IP} 572 f) switch the card into leased mode for each used B-channel 573 /sbin/hisaxctrl HiSax 5 1 574 575Remarks: 576a) Use state of the art isdn4k-utils 577 578Here an example script: 579#!/bin/sh 580# Start/Stop ISDN leased line connection 581 582I4L_AS_MODULE=yes 583I4L_REMOTE_IS_CISCO=no 584I4L_MODULE_PARAMS="type=16 io=0x268 irq=7 " 585I4L_DEBUG=no 586I4L_LEASED_128K=yes 587LOCAL_IP=192.168.1.1 588REMOTE_IP=192.168.2.1 589 590case "$1" in 591 start) 592 echo "Starting ISDN ..." 593 if [ ${I4L_AS_MODULE} = "yes" ]; then 594 echo "loading modules..." 595 /sbin/modprobe hisax ${I4L_MODULE_PARAMS} 596 fi 597 # configure interface 598 /sbin/isdnctrl addif isdn0 599 /sbin/isdnctrl secure isdn0 on 600 if [ ${I4L_DEBUG} = "yes" ]; then 601 /sbin/isdnctrl verbose 7 602 /sbin/hisaxctrl HiSax 1 0xffff 603 /sbin/hisaxctrl HiSax 11 0xff 604 cat /dev/isdnctrl >/tmp/lea.log & 605 fi 606 if [ ${I4L_REMOTE_IS_CISCO} = "yes" ]; then 607 /sbin/isdnctrl encap isdn0 cisco-h 608 fi 609 /sbin/isdnctrl huptimeout isdn0 0 610 # B-CHANNEL 1 611 /sbin/isdnctrl eaz isdn0 1 612 /sbin/isdnctrl l2_prot isdn0 hdlc 613 # 1. card 614 /sbin/isdnctrl addphone isdn0 in LEASED0 615 if [ ${I4L_LEASED_128K} = "yes" ]; then 616 /sbin/isdnctrl addslave isdn0 isdn0s 617 /sbin/isdnctrl secure isdn0s on 618 /sbin/isdnctrl huptimeout isdn0s 0 619 # B-CHANNEL 2 620 /sbin/isdnctrl eaz isdn0s 2 621 /sbin/isdnctrl l2_prot isdn0s hdlc 622 # 1. card 623 /sbin/isdnctrl addphone isdn0s in LEASED0 624 if [ ${I4L_REMOTE_IS_CISCO} = "yes" ]; then 625 /sbin/isdnctrl encap isdn0s cisco-h 626 fi 627 fi 628 /sbin/isdnctrl dialmode isdn0 manual 629 # configure tcp/ip 630 /sbin/ifconfig isdn0 ${LOCAL_IP} pointopoint ${REMOTE_IP} 631 /sbin/route add -host ${REMOTE_IP} isdn0 632 /sbin/route add default gw ${REMOTE_IP} 633 # switch to leased mode 634 # B-CHANNEL 1 635 /sbin/hisaxctrl HiSax 5 1 636 if [ ${I4L_LEASED_128K} = "yes" ]; then 637 # B-CHANNEL 2 638 sleep 10; /* Wait for master */ 639 /sbin/hisaxctrl HiSax 5 2 640 fi 641 ;; 642 stop) 643 /sbin/ifconfig isdn0 down 644 /sbin/isdnctrl delif isdn0 645 if [ ${I4L_DEBUG} = "yes" ]; then 646 killall cat 647 fi 648 if [ ${I4L_AS_MODULE} = "yes" ]; then 649 /sbin/rmmod hisax 650 /sbin/rmmod isdn 651 /sbin/rmmod ppp 652 /sbin/rmmod slhc 653 fi 654 ;; 655 *) 656 echo "Usage: $0 {start|stop}" 657 exit 1 658esac 659exit 0 660
README.audio
1$Id: README.audio,v 1.8 1999/07/11 17:17:29 armin Exp $ 2 3ISDN subsystem for Linux. 4 Description of audio mode. 5 6When enabled during kernel configuration, the tty emulator of the ISDN 7subsystem is capable of a reduced set of commands to support audio. 8This document describes the commands supported and the format of 9audio data. 10 11Commands for enabling/disabling audio mode: 12 13 AT+FCLASS=8 Enable audio mode. 14 This affects the following registers: 15 S18: Bits 0 and 2 are set. 16 S16: Set to 48 and any further change to 17 larger values is blocked. 18 AT+FCLASS=0 Disable audio mode. 19 Register 18 is set to 4. 20 AT+FCLASS=? Show possible modes. 21 AT+FCLASS? Report current mode (0 or 8). 22 23Commands supported in audio mode: 24 25All audio mode commands have one of the following forms: 26 27 AT+Vxx? Show current setting. 28 AT+Vxx=? Show possible settings. 29 AT+Vxx=v Set simple parameter. 30 AT+Vxx=v,v ... Set complex parameter. 31 32where xx is a two-character code and v are alphanumerical parameters. 33The following commands are supported: 34 35 AT+VNH=x Auto hangup setting. NO EFFECT, supported 36 for compatibility only. 37 AT+VNH? Always reporting "1" 38 AT+VNH=? Always reporting "1" 39 40 AT+VIP Reset all audio parameters. 41 42 AT+VLS=x Line select. x is one of the following: 43 0 = No device. 44 2 = Phone line. 45 AT+VLS=? Always reporting "0,2" 46 AT+VLS? Show current line. 47 48 AT+VRX Start recording. Emulator responds with 49 CONNECT and starts sending audio data to 50 the application. See below for data format 51 52 AT+VSD=x,y Set silence-detection parameters. 53 Possible parameters: 54 x = 0 ... 31 sensitivity threshold level. 55 (default 0 , deactivated) 56 y = 0 ... 255 range of interval in units 57 of 0.1 second. (default 70) 58 AT+VSD=? Report possible parameters. 59 AT+VSD? Show current parameters. 60 61 AT+VDD=x,y Set DTMF-detection parameters. 62 Only possible if online and during this connection. 63 Possible parameters: 64 x = 0 ... 15 sensitivity threshold level. 65 (default 0 , I4L soft-decode) 66 (1-15 soft-decode off, hardware on) 67 y = 0 ... 255 tone duration in units of 5ms. 68 Not for I4L soft decode (default 8, 40ms) 69 AT+VDD=? Report possible parameters. 70 AT+VDD? Show current parameters. 71 72 AT+VSM=x Select audio data format. 73 Possible parameters: 74 2 = ADPCM-2 75 3 = ADPCM-3 76 4 = ADPCM-4 77 5 = aLAW 78 6 = uLAW 79 AT+VSM=? Show possible audio formats. 80 81 AT+VTX Start audio playback. Emulator responds 82 with CONNECT and starts sending audio data 83 received from the application via phone line. 84General behavior and description of data formats/protocol. 85 when a connection is made: 86 87 On incoming calls, if the application responds to a RING 88 with ATA, depending on the calling service, the emulator 89 responds with either CONNECT (data call) or VCON (voice call). 90 91 On outgoing voice calls, the emulator responds with VCON 92 upon connection setup. 93 94 Audio recording. 95 96 When receiving audio data, a kind of bisync protocol is used. 97 Upon AT+VRX command, the emulator responds with CONNECT, and 98 starts sending audio data to the application. There are several 99 escape sequences defined, all using DLE (0x10) as Escape char: 100 101 <DLE><ETX> End of audio data. (i.e. caused by a 102 hangup of the remote side) Emulator stops 103 recording, responding with VCON. 104 <DLE><DC4> Abort recording, (send by appl.) Emulator 105 stops recording, sends DLE,ETX. 106 <DLE><DLE> Escape sequence for DLE in data stream. 107 <DLE>0 Touchtone "0" received. 108 ... 109 <DLE>9 Touchtone "9" received. 110 <DLE># Touchtone "#" received. 111 <DLE>* Touchtone "*" received. 112 <DLE>A Touchtone "A" received. 113 <DLE>B Touchtone "B" received. 114 <DLE>C Touchtone "C" received. 115 <DLE>D Touchtone "D" received. 116 117 <DLE>q quiet. Silence detected after non-silence. 118 <DLE>s silence. Silence detected from the 119 start of recording. 120 121 Currently unsupported DLE sequences: 122 123 <DLE>c FAX calling tone received. 124 <DLE>b busy tone received. 125 126 Audio playback. 127 128 When sending audio data, upon AT+VTX command, emulator responds with 129 CONNECT, and starts transferring data from application to the phone line. 130 The same DLE sequences apply to this mode. 131 132 Full-Duplex-Audio: 133 134 When _both_ commands for recording and playback are given in _one_ 135 AT-command-line (i.e.: "AT+VTX+VRX"), full-duplex-mode is selected. 136 In this mode, the only way to stop recording is sending <DLE><DC4> 137 and the only way to stop playback is to send <DLE><ETX>. 138 139
README.avmb1
1Driver for active AVM Controller. 2 3The driver provides a kernel capi2.0 Interface (kernelcapi) and 4on top of this a User-Level-CAPI2.0-interface (capi) 5and a driver to connect isdn4linux with CAPI2.0 (capidrv). 6The lowlevel interface can be used to implement a CAPI2.0 7also for passive cards since July 1999. 8 9The author can be reached at calle@calle.in-berlin.de. 10The command avmcapictrl is part of the isdn4k-utils. 11t4-files can be found at ftp://ftp.avm.de/cardware/b1/linux/firmware 12 13Currently supported cards: 14 B1 ISA (all versions) 15 B1 PCI 16 T1/T1B (HEMA card) 17 M1 18 M2 19 B1 PCMCIA 20 21Installing 22---------- 23 24You need at least /dev/capi20 to load the firmware. 25 26mknod /dev/capi20 c 68 0 27mknod /dev/capi20.00 c 68 1 28mknod /dev/capi20.01 c 68 2 29. 30. 31. 32mknod /dev/capi20.19 c 68 20 33 34Running 35------- 36 37To use the card you need the t4-files to download the firmware. 38AVM GmbH provides several t4-files for the different D-channel 39protocols (b1.t4 for Euro-ISDN). Install these file in /lib/isdn. 40 41if you configure as modules load the modules this way: 42 43insmod /lib/modules/current/misc/capiutil.o 44insmod /lib/modules/current/misc/b1.o 45insmod /lib/modules/current/misc/kernelcapi.o 46insmod /lib/modules/current/misc/capidrv.o 47insmod /lib/modules/current/misc/capi.o 48 49if you have an B1-PCI card load the module b1pci.o 50insmod /lib/modules/current/misc/b1pci.o 51and load the firmware with 52avmcapictrl load /lib/isdn/b1.t4 1 53 54if you have an B1-ISA card load the module b1isa.o 55and add the card by calling 56avmcapictrl add 0x150 15 57and load the firmware by calling 58avmcapictrl load /lib/isdn/b1.t4 1 59 60if you have an T1-ISA card load the module t1isa.o 61and add the card by calling 62avmcapictrl add 0x450 15 T1 0 63and load the firmware by calling 64avmcapictrl load /lib/isdn/t1.t4 1 65 66if you have an PCMCIA card (B1/M1/M2) load the module b1pcmcia.o 67before you insert the card. 68 69Leased Lines with B1 70-------------------- 71Init card and load firmware. 72For an D64S use "FV: 1" as phone number 73For an D64S2 use "FV: 1" and "FV: 2" for multilink 74or "FV: 1,2" to use CAPI channel bundling. 75 76/proc-Interface 77----------------- 78 79/proc/capi: 80 dr-xr-xr-x 2 root root 0 Jul 1 14:03 . 81 dr-xr-xr-x 82 root root 0 Jun 30 19:08 .. 82 -r--r--r-- 1 root root 0 Jul 1 14:03 applications 83 -r--r--r-- 1 root root 0 Jul 1 14:03 applstats 84 -r--r--r-- 1 root root 0 Jul 1 14:03 capi20 85 -r--r--r-- 1 root root 0 Jul 1 14:03 capidrv 86 -r--r--r-- 1 root root 0 Jul 1 14:03 controller 87 -r--r--r-- 1 root root 0 Jul 1 14:03 contrstats 88 -r--r--r-- 1 root root 0 Jul 1 14:03 driver 89 -r--r--r-- 1 root root 0 Jul 1 14:03 ncci 90 -r--r--r-- 1 root root 0 Jul 1 14:03 users 91 92/proc/capi/applications: 93 applid level3cnt datablkcnt datablklen ncci-cnt recvqueuelen 94 level3cnt: capi_register parameter 95 datablkcnt: capi_register parameter 96 ncci-cnt: current number of nccis (connections) 97 recvqueuelen: number of messages on receive queue 98 for example: 991 -2 16 2048 1 0 1002 2 7 2048 1 0 101 102/proc/capi/applstats: 103 applid recvctlmsg nrecvdatamsg nsentctlmsg nsentdatamsg 104 recvctlmsg: capi messages received without DATA_B3_IND 105 recvdatamsg: capi DATA_B3_IND received 106 sentctlmsg: capi messages sent without DATA_B3_REQ 107 sentdatamsg: capi DATA_B3_REQ sent 108 for example: 1091 2057 1699 1721 1699 110 111/proc/capi/capi20: statistics of capi.o (/dev/capi20) 112 minor nopen nrecvdropmsg nrecvctlmsg nrecvdatamsg sentctlmsg sentdatamsg 113 minor: minor device number of capi device 114 nopen: number of calls to devices open 115 nrecvdropmsg: capi messages dropped (messages in recvqueue in close) 116 nrecvctlmsg: capi messages received without DATA_B3_IND 117 nrecvdatamsg: capi DATA_B3_IND received 118 nsentctlmsg: capi messages sent without DATA_B3_REQ 119 nsentdatamsg: capi DATA_B3_REQ sent 120 121 for example: 1221 2 18 0 16 2 123 124/proc/capi/capidrv: statistics of capidrv.o (capi messages) 125 nrecvctlmsg nrecvdatamsg sentctlmsg sentdatamsg 126 nrecvctlmsg: capi messages received without DATA_B3_IND 127 nrecvdatamsg: capi DATA_B3_IND received 128 nsentctlmsg: capi messages sent without DATA_B3_REQ 129 nsentdatamsg: capi DATA_B3_REQ sent 130 for example: 1312780 2226 2256 2226 132 133/proc/capi/controller: 134 controller drivername state cardname controllerinfo 135 for example: 1361 b1pci running b1pci-e000 B1 3.07-01 0xe000 19 1372 t1isa running t1isa-450 B1 3.07-01 0x450 11 0 1383 b1pcmcia running m2-150 B1 3.07-01 0x150 5 139 140/proc/capi/contrstats: 141 controller nrecvctlmsg nrecvdatamsg sentctlmsg sentdatamsg 142 nrecvctlmsg: capi messages received without DATA_B3_IND 143 nrecvdatamsg: capi DATA_B3_IND received 144 nsentctlmsg: capi messages sent without DATA_B3_REQ 145 nsentdatamsg: capi DATA_B3_REQ sent 146 for example: 1471 2845 2272 2310 2274 1482 2 0 2 0 1493 2 0 2 0 150 151/proc/capi/driver: 152 drivername ncontroller 153 for example: 154b1pci 1 155t1isa 1 156b1pcmcia 1 157b1isa 0 158 159/proc/capi/ncci: 160 apllid ncci winsize sendwindow 161 for example: 1621 0x10101 8 0 163 164/proc/capi/users: kernelmodules that use the kernelcapi. 165 name 166 for example: 167capidrv 168capi20 169 170Questions 171--------- 172Check out the FAQ (ftp.isdn4linux.de) or subscribe to the 173linux-avmb1@calle.in-berlin.de mailing list by sending 174a mail to majordomo@calle.in-berlin.de with 175subscribe linux-avmb1 176in the body. 177 178German documentation and several scripts can be found at 179ftp://ftp.avm.de/cardware/b1/linux/ 180 181Bugs 182---- 183If you find any please let me know. 184 185Enjoy, 186 187Carsten Paeth (calle@calle.in-berlin.de) 188
README.concap
1Description of the "concap" encapsulation protocol interface 2============================================================ 3 4The "concap" interface is intended to be used by network device 5drivers that need to process an encapsulation protocol. 6It is assumed that the protocol interacts with a linux network device by 7- data transmission 8- connection control (establish, release) 9Thus, the mnemonic: "CONnection CONtrolling eNCAPsulation Protocol". 10 11This is currently only used inside the isdn subsystem. But it might 12also be useful to other kinds of network devices. Thus, if you want 13to suggest changes that improve usability or performance of the 14interface, please let me know. I'm willing to include them in future 15releases (even if I needed to adapt the current isdn code to the 16changed interface). 17 18 19Why is this useful? 20=================== 21 22The encapsulation protocol used on top of WAN connections or permanent 23point-to-point links are frequently chosen upon bilateral agreement. 24Thus, a device driver for a certain type of hardware must support 25several different encapsulation protocols at once. 26 27The isdn device driver did already support several different 28encapsulation protocols. The encapsulation protocol is configured by a 29user space utility (isdnctrl). The isdn network interface code then 30uses several case statements which select appropriate actions 31depending on the currently configured encapsulation protocol. 32 33In contrast, LAN network interfaces always used a single encapsulation 34protocol which is unique to the hardware type of the interface. The LAN 35encapsulation is usually done by just sticking a header on the data. Thus, 36traditional linux network device drivers used to process the 37encapsulation protocol directly (usually by just providing a hard_header() 38method in the device structure) using some hardware type specific support 39functions. This is simple, direct and efficient. But it doesn't fit all 40the requirements for complex WAN encapsulations. 41 42 43 The configurability of the encapsulation protocol to be used 44 makes isdn network interfaces more flexible, but also much more 45 complex than traditional lan network interfaces. 46 47 48Many Encapsulation protocols used on top of WAN connections will not just 49stick a header on the data. They also might need to set up or release 50the WAN connection. They also might want to send other data for their 51private purpose over the wire, e.g. ppp does a lot of link level 52negotiation before the first piece of user data can be transmitted. 53Such encapsulation protocols for WAN devices are typically more complex 54than encapsulation protocols for lan devices. Thus, network interface 55code for typical WAN devices also tends to be more complex. 56 57 58In order to support Linux' x25 PLP implementation on top of 59isdn network interfaces I could have introduced yet another branch to 60the various case statements inside drivers/isdn/isdn_net.c. 61This eventually made isdn_net.c even more complex. In addition, it made 62isdn_net.c harder to maintain. Thus, by identifying an abstract 63interface between the network interface code and the encapsulation 64protocol, complexity could be reduced and maintainability could be 65increased. 66 67 68Likewise, a similar encapsulation protocol will frequently be needed by 69several different interfaces of even different hardware type, e.g. the 70synchronous ppp implementation used by the isdn driver and the 71asynchronous ppp implementation used by the ppp driver have a lot of 72similar code in them. By cleanly separating the encapsulation protocol 73from the hardware specific interface stuff such code could be shared 74better in future. 75 76 77When operating over dial-up-connections (e.g. telephone lines via modem, 78non-permanent virtual circuits of wide area networks, ISDN) many 79encapsulation protocols will need to control the connection. Therefore, 80some basic connection control primitives are supported. The type and 81semantics of the connection (i.e the ISO layer where connection service 82is provided) is outside our scope and might be different depending on 83the encapsulation protocol used, e.g. for a ppp module using our service 84on top of a modem connection a connect_request will result in dialing 85a (somewhere else configured) remote phone number. For an X25-interface 86module (LAPB semantics, as defined in Documentation/networking/x25-iface.txt) 87a connect_request will ask for establishing a reliable lapb 88datalink connection. 89 90 91The encapsulation protocol currently provides the following 92service primitives to the network device. 93 94- create a new encapsulation protocol instance 95- delete encapsulation protocol instance and free all its resources 96- initialize (open) the encapsulation protocol instance for use. 97- deactivate (close) an encapsulation protocol instance. 98- process (xmit) data handed down by upper protocol layer 99- receive data from lower (hardware) layer 100- process connect indication from lower (hardware) layer 101- process disconnect indication from lower (hardware) layer 102 103 104The network interface driver accesses those primitives via callbacks 105provided by the encapsulation protocol instance within a 106struct concap_proto_ops. 107 108struct concap_proto_ops{ 109 110 /* create a new encapsulation protocol instance of same type */ 111 struct concap_proto * (*proto_new) (void); 112 113 /* delete encapsulation protocol instance and free all its resources. 114 cprot may no longer be referenced after calling this */ 115 void (*proto_del)(struct concap_proto *cprot); 116 117 /* initialize the protocol's data. To be called at interface startup 118 or when the device driver resets the interface. All services of the 119 encapsulation protocol may be used after this*/ 120 int (*restart)(struct concap_proto *cprot, 121 struct net_device *ndev, 122 struct concap_device_ops *dops); 123 124 /* deactivate an encapsulation protocol instance. The encapsulation 125 protocol may not call any *dops methods after this. */ 126 int (*close)(struct concap_proto *cprot); 127 128 /* process a frame handed down to us by upper layer */ 129 int (*encap_and_xmit)(struct concap_proto *cprot, struct sk_buff *skb); 130 131 /* to be called for each data entity received from lower layer*/ 132 int (*data_ind)(struct concap_proto *cprot, struct sk_buff *skb); 133 134 /* to be called when a connection was set up/down. 135 Protocols that don't process these primitives might fill in 136 dummy methods here */ 137 int (*connect_ind)(struct concap_proto *cprot); 138 int (*disconn_ind)(struct concap_proto *cprot); 139}; 140 141 142The data structures are defined in the header file include/linux/concap.h. 143 144 145A Network interface using encapsulation protocols must also provide 146some service primitives to the encapsulation protocol: 147 148- request data being submitted by lower layer (device hardware) 149- request a connection being set up by lower layer 150- request a connection being released by lower layer 151 152The encapsulation protocol accesses those primitives via callbacks 153provided by the network interface within a struct concap_device_ops. 154 155struct concap_device_ops{ 156 157 /* to request data be submitted by device */ 158 int (*data_req)(struct concap_proto *, struct sk_buff *); 159 160 /* Control methods must be set to NULL by devices which do not 161 support connection control. */ 162 /* to request a connection be set up */ 163 int (*connect_req)(struct concap_proto *); 164 165 /* to request a connection be released */ 166 int (*disconn_req)(struct concap_proto *); 167}; 168 169The network interface does not explicitly provide a receive service 170because the encapsulation protocol directly calls netif_rx(). 171 172 173 174 175An encapsulation protocol itself is actually the 176struct concap_proto{ 177 struct net_device *net_dev; /* net device using our service */ 178 struct concap_device_ops *dops; /* callbacks provided by device */ 179 struct concap_proto_ops *pops; /* callbacks provided by us */ 180 int flags; 181 void *proto_data; /* protocol specific private data, to 182 be accessed via *pops methods only*/ 183 /* 184 : 185 whatever 186 : 187 */ 188}; 189 190Most of this is filled in when the device requests the protocol to 191be reset (opend). The network interface must provide the net_dev and 192dops pointers. Other concap_proto members should be considered private 193data that are only accessed by the pops callback functions. Likewise, 194a concap proto should access the network device's private data 195only by means of the callbacks referred to by the dops pointer. 196 197 198A possible extended device structure which uses the connection controlling 199encapsulation services could look like this: 200 201struct concap_device{ 202 struct net_device net_dev; 203 struct my_priv /* device->local stuff */ 204 /* the my_priv struct might contain a 205 struct concap_device_ops *dops; 206 to provide the device specific callbacks 207 */ 208 struct concap_proto *cprot; /* callbacks provided by protocol */ 209}; 210 211 212 213Misc Thoughts 214============= 215 216The concept of the concap proto might help to reuse protocol code and 217reduce the complexity of certain network interface implementations. 218The trade off is that it introduces yet another procedure call layer 219when processing the protocol. This has of course some impact on 220performance. However, typically the concap interface will be used by 221devices attached to slow lines (like telephone, isdn, leased synchronous 222lines). For such slow lines, the overhead is probably negligible. 223This might no longer hold for certain high speed WAN links (like 224ATM). 225 226 227If general linux network interfaces explicitly supported concap 228protocols (e.g. by a member struct concap_proto* in struct net_device) 229then the interface of the service function could be changed 230by passing a pointer of type (struct net_device*) instead of 231type (struct concap_proto*). Doing so would make many of the service 232functions compatible to network device support functions. 233 234e.g. instead of the concap protocol's service function 235 236 int (*encap_and_xmit)(struct concap_proto *cprot, struct sk_buff *skb); 237 238we could have 239 240 int (*encap_and_xmit)(struct net_device *ndev, struct sk_buff *skb); 241 242As this is compatible to the dev->hard_start_xmit() method, the device 243driver could directly register the concap protocol's encap_and_xmit() 244function as its hard_start_xmit() method. This would eliminate one 245procedure call layer. 246 247 248The device's data request function could also be defined as 249 250 int (*data_req)(struct net_device *ndev, struct sk_buff *skb); 251 252This might even allow for some protocol stacking. And the network 253interface might even register the same data_req() function directly 254as its hard_start_xmit() method when a zero layer encapsulation 255protocol is configured. Thus, eliminating the performance penalty 256of the concap interface when a trivial concap protocol is used. 257Nevertheless, the device remains able to support encapsulation 258protocol configuration. 259 260
README.diversion
1The isdn diversion services are a supporting module working together with 2the isdn4linux and the HiSax module for passive cards. 3Active cards, TAs and cards using a own or other driver than the HiSax 4module need to be adapted to the HL<->LL interface described in a separate 5document. The diversion services may be used with all cards supported by 6the HiSax driver. 7The diversion kernel interface and controlling tool divertctrl were written 8by Werner Cornelius (werner@isdn4linux.de or werner@titro.de) under the 9GNU General Public License. 10 11 This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify 12 it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by 13 the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or 14 (at your option) any later version. 15 16 This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, 17 but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of 18 MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the 19 GNU General Public License for more details. 20 21 You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License 22 along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software 23 Foundation, Inc., 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA. 24 25Table of contents 26================= 27 281. Features of the i4l diversion services 29 (Or what can the i4l diversion services do for me) 30 312. Required hard- and software 32 333. Compiling, installing and loading/unloading the module 34 Tracing calling and diversion information 35 364. Tracing calling and diversion information 37 385. Format of the divert device ASCII output 39 40 411. Features of the i4l diversion services 42 (Or what can the i4l diversion services do for me) 43 44 The i4l diversion services offers call forwarding and logging normally 45 only supported by isdn phones. Incoming calls may be diverted 46 unconditionally (CFU), when not reachable (CFNR) or on busy condition 47 (CFB). 48 The diversions may be invoked statically in the providers exchange 49 as normally done by isdn phones. In this case all incoming calls 50 with a special (or all) service identifiers are forwarded if the 51 forwarding reason is met. Activated static services may also be 52 interrogated (queried). 53 The i4l diversion services additionally offers a dynamic version of 54 call forwarding which is not preprogrammed inside the providers exchange 55 but dynamically activated by i4l. 56 In this case all incoming calls are checked by rules that may be 57 compared to the mechanism of ipfwadm or ipchains. If a given rule matches 58 the checking process is finished and the rule matching will be applied 59 to the call. 60 The rules include primary and secondary service identifiers, called 61 number and subaddress, callers number and subaddress and whether the rule 62 matches to all filtered calls or only those when all B-channel resources 63 are exhausted. 64 Actions that may be invoked by a rule are ignore, proceed, reject, 65 direct divert or delayed divert of a call. 66 All incoming calls matching a rule except the ignore rule a reported and 67 logged as ASCII via the proc filesystem (/proc/net/isdn/divert). If proceed 68 is selected the call will be held in a proceeding state (without ringing) 69 for a certain amount of time to let an external program or client decide 70 how to handle the call. 71 72 732. Required hard- and software 74 75 For using the i4l diversion services the isdn line must be of a EURO/DSS1 76 type. Additionally the i4l services only work together with the HiSax 77 driver for passive isdn cards. All HiSax supported cards may be used for 78 the diversion purposes. 79 The static diversion services require the provider having static services 80 CFU, CFNR, CFB activated on an MSN-line. The static services may not be 81 used on a point-to-point connection. Further the static services are only 82 available in some countries (for example germany). Countries requiring the 83 keypad protocol for activating static diversions (like the netherlands) are 84 not supported but may use the tty devices for this purpose. 85 The dynamic diversion services may be used in all countries if the provider 86 enables the feature CF (call forwarding). This should work on both MSN- and 87 point-to-point lines. 88 To add and delete rules the additional divertctrl program is needed. This 89 program is part of the isdn4kutils package. 90 913. Compiling, installing and loading/unloading the module 92 Tracing calling and diversion information 93 94 95 To compile the i4l code with diversion support you need to say yes to the 96 DSS1 diversion services when selecting the i4l options in the kernel 97 config (menuconfig or config). 98 After having properly activated a make modules and make modules_install all 99 required modules will be correctly installed in the needed modules dirs. 100 As the diversion services are currently not included in the scripts of most 101 standard distributions you will have to add a "insmod dss1_divert" after 102 having loaded the global isdn module. 103 The module can be loaded without any command line parameters. 104 If the module is actually loaded and active may be checked with a 105 "cat /proc/modules" or "ls /proc/net/isdn/divert". The divert file is 106 dynamically created by the diversion module and removed when the module is 107 unloaded. 108 109 1104. Tracing calling and diversion information 111 112 You also may put a "cat /proc/net/isdn/divert" in the background with the 113 output redirected to a file. Then all actions of the module are logged. 114 The divert file in the proc system may be opened more than once, so in 115 conjunction with inetd and a small remote client on other machines inside 116 your network incoming calls and reactions by the module may be shown on 117 every listening machine. 118 If a call is reported as proceeding an external program or client may 119 specify during a certain amount of time (normally 4 to 10 seconds) what 120 to do with that call. 121 To unload the module all open files to the device in the proc system must 122 be closed. Otherwise the module (and isdn.o) may not be unloaded. 123 1245. Format of the divert device ASCII output 125 126 To be done later 127 128
README.fax
1 2Fax with isdn4linux 3=================== 4 5When enabled during kernel configuration, the tty emulator 6of the ISDN subsystem is capable of the Fax Class 2 commands. 7 8This only makes sense under the following conditions : 9 10- You need the commands as dummy, because you are using 11 hylafax (with patch) for AVM capi. 12- You want to use the fax capabilities of your isdn-card. 13 (supported cards are listed below) 14 15 16NOTE: This implementation does *not* support fax with passive 17 ISDN-cards (known as softfax). The low-level driver of 18 the ISDN-card and/or the card itself must support this. 19 20 21Supported ISDN-Cards 22-------------------- 23 24Eicon DIVA Server BRI/PCI 25 - full support with both B-channels. 26 27Eicon DIVA Server 4BRI/PCI 28 - full support with all B-channels. 29 30Eicon DIVA Server PRI/PCI 31 - full support on amount of B-channels 32 depending on DSPs on board. 33 34 35 36The command set is known as Class 2 (not Class 2.0) and 37can be activated by AT+FCLASS=2 38 39 40The interface between the link-level-module and the hardware-level driver 41is described in the files INTERFACE.fax and INTERFACE. 42 43Armin 44mac@melware.de 45 46
README.gigaset
1GigaSet 307x Device Driver 2========================== 3 41. Requirements 5 ------------ 61.1. Hardware 7 -------- 8 This driver supports the connection of the Gigaset 307x/417x family of 9 ISDN DECT bases via Gigaset M101 Data, Gigaset M105 Data or direct USB 10 connection. The following devices are reported to be compatible: 11 12 Bases: 13 Siemens Gigaset 3070/3075 isdn 14 Siemens Gigaset 4170/4175 isdn 15 Siemens Gigaset SX205/255 16 Siemens Gigaset SX353 17 T-Com Sinus 45 [AB] isdn 18 T-Com Sinus 721X[A] [SE] 19 Vox Chicago 390 ISDN (KPN Telecom) 20 21 RS232 data boxes: 22 Siemens Gigaset M101 Data 23 T-Com Sinus 45 Data 1 24 25 USB data boxes: 26 Siemens Gigaset M105 Data 27 Siemens Gigaset USB Adapter DECT 28 T-Com Sinus 45 Data 2 29 T-Com Sinus 721 data 30 Chicago 390 USB (KPN) 31 32 See also http://www.erbze.info/sinus_gigaset.htm and 33 http://gigaset307x.sourceforge.net/ 34 35 We had also reports from users of Gigaset M105 who could use the drivers 36 with SX 100 and CX 100 ISDN bases (only in unimodem mode, see section 2.5.) 37 If you have another device that works with our driver, please let us know. 38 39 Chances of getting an USB device to work are good if the output of 40 lsusb 41 at the command line contains one of the following: 42 ID 0681:0001 43 ID 0681:0002 44 ID 0681:0009 45 ID 0681:0021 46 ID 0681:0022 47 481.2. Software 49 -------- 50 The driver works with the Kernel CAPI subsystem as well as the old 51 ISDN4Linux subsystem, so it can be used with any software which is able 52 to use CAPI 2.0 or ISDN4Linux for ISDN connections (voice or data). 53 54 There are some user space tools available at 55 http://sourceforge.net/projects/gigaset307x/ 56 which provide access to additional device specific functions like SMS, 57 phonebook or call journal. 58 59 602. How to use the driver 61 --------------------- 622.1. Modules 63 ------- 64 For the devices to work, the proper kernel modules have to be loaded. 65 This normally happens automatically when the system detects the USB 66 device (base, M105) or when the line discipline is attached (M101). It 67 can also be triggered manually using the modprobe(8) command, for example 68 for troubleshooting or to pass module parameters. 69 70 The module ser_gigaset provides a serial line discipline N_GIGASET_M101 71 which uses the regular serial port driver to access the device, and must 72 therefore be attached to the serial device to which the M101 is connected. 73 The ldattach(8) command (included in util-linux-ng release 2.14 or later) 74 can be used for that purpose, for example: 75 ldattach GIGASET_M101 /dev/ttyS1 76 This will open the device file, attach the line discipline to it, and 77 then sleep in the background, keeping the device open so that the line 78 discipline remains active. To deactivate it, kill the daemon, for example 79 with 80 killall ldattach 81 before disconnecting the device. To have this happen automatically at 82 system startup/shutdown on an LSB compatible system, create and activate 83 an appropriate LSB startup script /etc/init.d/gigaset. (The init name 84 'gigaset' is officially assigned to this project by LANANA.) 85 Alternatively, just add the 'ldattach' command line to /etc/rc.local. 86 87 The modules accept the following parameters: 88 89 Module Parameter Meaning 90 91 gigaset debug debug level (see section 3.2.) 92 93 startmode initial operation mode (see section 2.5.): 94 bas_gigaset ) 1=ISDN4linux/CAPI (default), 0=Unimodem 95 ser_gigaset ) 96 usb_gigaset ) cidmode initial Call-ID mode setting (see section 97 2.5.): 1=on (default), 0=off 98 99 Depending on your distribution you may want to create a separate module 100 configuration file like /etc/modprobe.d/gigaset.conf for these. 101 1022.2. Device nodes for user space programs 103 ------------------------------------ 104 The device can be accessed from user space (eg. by the user space tools 105 mentioned in 1.2.) through the device nodes: 106 107 - /dev/ttyGS0 for M101 (RS232 data boxes) 108 - /dev/ttyGU0 for M105 (USB data boxes) 109 - /dev/ttyGB0 for the base driver (direct USB connection) 110 111 If you connect more than one device of a type, they will get consecutive 112 device nodes, eg. /dev/ttyGU1 for a second M105. 113 114 You can also set a "default device" for the user space tools to use when 115 no device node is given as parameter, by creating a symlink /dev/ttyG to 116 one of them, eg.: 117 118 ln -s /dev/ttyGB0 /dev/ttyG 119 120 The devices accept the following device specific ioctl calls 121 (defined in gigaset_dev.h): 122 123 ioctl(int fd, GIGASET_REDIR, int *cmd); 124 If cmd==1, the device is set to be controlled exclusively through the 125 character device node; access from the ISDN subsystem is blocked. 126 If cmd==0, the device is set to be used from the ISDN subsystem and does 127 not communicate through the character device node. 128 129 ioctl(int fd, GIGASET_CONFIG, int *cmd); 130 (ser_gigaset and usb_gigaset only) 131 If cmd==1, the device is set to adapter configuration mode where commands 132 are interpreted by the M10x DECT adapter itself instead of being 133 forwarded to the base station. In this mode, the device accepts the 134 commands described in Siemens document "AT-Kommando Alignment M10x Data" 135 for setting the operation mode, associating with a base station and 136 querying parameters like field strengh and signal quality. 137 Note that there is no ioctl command for leaving adapter configuration 138 mode and returning to regular operation. In order to leave adapter 139 configuration mode, write the command ATO to the device. 140 141 ioctl(int fd, GIGASET_BRKCHARS, unsigned char brkchars[6]); 142 (usb_gigaset only) 143 Set the break characters on an M105's internal serial adapter to the six 144 bytes stored in brkchars[]. Unused bytes should be set to zero. 145 146 ioctl(int fd, GIGASET_VERSION, unsigned version[4]); 147 Retrieve version information from the driver. version[0] must be set to 148 one of: 149 - GIGVER_DRIVER: retrieve driver version 150 - GIGVER_COMPAT: retrieve interface compatibility version 151 - GIGVER_FWBASE: retrieve the firmware version of the base 152 Upon return, version[] is filled with the requested version information. 153 1542.3. CAPI 155 ---- 156 If the driver is compiled with CAPI support (kernel configuration option 157 GIGASET_CAPI) the devices will show up as CAPI controllers as soon as the 158 corresponding driver module is loaded, and can then be used with CAPI 2.0 159 kernel and user space applications. For user space access, the module 160 capi.ko must be loaded. 161 162 Legacy ISDN4Linux applications are supported via the capidrv 163 compatibility driver. The kernel module capidrv.ko must be loaded 164 explicitly with the command 165 modprobe capidrv 166 if needed, and cannot be unloaded again without unloading the driver 167 first. (These are limitations of capidrv.) 168 169 Most distributions handle loading and unloading of the various CAPI 170 modules automatically via the command capiinit(1) from the capi4k-utils 171 package or a similar mechanism. Note that capiinit(1) cannot unload the 172 Gigaset drivers because it doesn't support more than one module per 173 driver. 174 1752.4. ISDN4Linux 176 ---------- 177 If the driver is compiled without CAPI support (native ISDN4Linux 178 variant), it registers the device with the legacy ISDN4Linux subsystem 179 after loading the module. It can then be used with ISDN4Linux 180 applications only. Most distributions provide some configuration utility 181 for setting up that subsystem. Otherwise you can use some HOWTOs like 182 http://www.linuxhaven.de/dlhp/HOWTO/DE-ISDN-HOWTO-5.html 183 184 1852.5. Unimodem mode 186 ------------- 187 In this mode the device works like a modem connected to a serial port 188 (the /dev/ttyGU0, ... mentioned above) which understands the commands 189 190 ATZ init, reset 191 => OK or ERROR 192 ATD 193 ATDT dial 194 => OK, CONNECT, 195 BUSY, 196 NO DIAL TONE, 197 NO CARRIER, 198 NO ANSWER 199 <pause>+++<pause> change to command mode when connected 200 ATH hangup 201 202 You can use some configuration tool of your distribution to configure this 203 "modem" or configure pppd/wvdial manually. There are some example ppp 204 configuration files and chat scripts in the gigaset-VERSION/ppp directory 205 in the driver packages from http://sourceforge.net/projects/gigaset307x/. 206 Please note that the USB drivers are not able to change the state of the 207 control lines. This means you must use "Stupid Mode" if you are using 208 wvdial or you should use the nocrtscts option of pppd. 209 You must also assure that the ppp_async module is loaded with the parameter 210 flag_time=0. You can do this e.g. by adding a line like 211 212 options ppp_async flag_time=0 213 214 to an appropriate module configuration file, like 215 /etc/modprobe.d/gigaset.conf. 216 217 Unimodem mode is needed for making some devices [e.g. SX100] work which 218 do not support the regular Gigaset command set. If debug output (see 219 section 3.2.) shows something like this when dialing: 220 CMD Received: ERROR 221 Available Params: 0 222 Connection State: 0, Response: -1 223 gigaset_process_response: resp_code -1 in ConState 0 ! 224 Timeout occurred 225 then switching to unimodem mode may help. 226 227 If you have installed the command line tool gigacontr, you can enter 228 unimodem mode using 229 gigacontr --mode unimodem 230 You can switch back using 231 gigacontr --mode isdn 232 233 You can also put the driver directly into Unimodem mode when it's loaded, 234 by passing the module parameter startmode=0 to the hardware specific 235 module, e.g. 236 modprobe usb_gigaset startmode=0 237 or by adding a line like 238 options usb_gigaset startmode=0 239 to an appropriate module configuration file, like 240 /etc/modprobe.d/gigaset.conf 241 2422.6. Call-ID (CID) mode 243 ------------------ 244 Call-IDs are numbers used to tag commands to, and responses from, the 245 Gigaset base in order to support the simultaneous handling of multiple 246 ISDN calls. Their use can be enabled ("CID mode") or disabled ("Unimodem 247 mode"). Without Call-IDs (in Unimodem mode), only a very limited set of 248 functions is available. It allows outgoing data connections only, but 249 does not signal incoming calls or other base events. 250 251 DECT cordless data devices (M10x) permanently occupy the cordless 252 connection to the base while Call-IDs are activated. As the Gigaset 253 bases only support one DECT data connection at a time, this prevents 254 other DECT cordless data devices from accessing the base. 255 256 During active operation, the driver switches to the necessary mode 257 automatically. However, for the reasons above, the mode chosen when 258 the device is not in use (idle) can be selected by the user. 259 - If you want to receive incoming calls, you can use the default 260 settings (CID mode). 261 - If you have several DECT data devices (M10x) which you want to use 262 in turn, select Unimodem mode by passing the parameter "cidmode=0" to 263 the appropriate driver module (ser_gigaset or usb_gigaset). 264 265 If you want both of these at once, you are out of luck. 266 267 You can also use the tty class parameter "cidmode" of the device to 268 change its CID mode while the driver is loaded, eg. 269 echo 0 > /sys/class/tty/ttyGU0/cidmode 270 2712.7. Dialing Numbers 272 --------------- 273 The called party number provided by an application for dialing out must 274 be a public network number according to the local dialing plan, without 275 any dial prefix for getting an outside line. 276 277 Internal calls can be made by providing an internal extension number 278 prefixed with "**" (two asterisks) as the called party number. So to dial 279 eg. the first registered DECT handset, give "**11" as the called party 280 number. Dialing "***" (three asterisks) calls all extensions 281 simultaneously (global call). 282 283 This holds for both CAPI 2.0 and ISDN4Linux applications. Unimodem mode 284 does not support internal calls. 285 2862.8. Unregistered Wireless Devices (M101/M105) 287 ----------------------------------------- 288 The main purpose of the ser_gigaset and usb_gigaset drivers is to allow 289 the M101 and M105 wireless devices to be used as ISDN devices for ISDN 290 connections through a Gigaset base. Therefore they assume that the device 291 is registered to a DECT base. 292 293 If the M101/M105 device is not registered to a base, initialization of 294 the device fails, and a corresponding error message is logged by the 295 driver. In that situation, a restricted set of functions is available 296 which includes, in particular, those necessary for registering the device 297 to a base or for switching it between Fixed Part and Portable Part 298 modes. See the gigacontr(8) manpage for details. 299 3003. Troubleshooting 301 --------------- 3023.1. Solutions to frequently reported problems 303 ----------------------------------------- 304 Problem: 305 You have a slow provider and isdn4linux gives up dialing too early. 306 Solution: 307 Load the isdn module using the dialtimeout option. You can do this e.g. 308 by adding a line like 309 310 options isdn dialtimeout=15 311 312 to /etc/modprobe.d/gigaset.conf or a similar file. 313 314 Problem: 315 The isdnlog program emits error messages or just doesn't work. 316 Solution: 317 Isdnlog supports only the HiSax driver. Do not attempt to use it with 318 other drivers such as Gigaset. 319 320 Problem: 321 You have two or more DECT data adapters (M101/M105) and only the 322 first one you turn on works. 323 Solution: 324 Select Unimodem mode for all DECT data adapters. (see section 2.5.) 325 326 Problem: 327 Messages like this: 328 usb_gigaset 3-2:1.0: Could not initialize the device. 329 appear in your syslog. 330 Solution: 331 Check whether your M10x wireless device is correctly registered to the 332 Gigaset base. (see section 2.7.) 333 3343.2. Telling the driver to provide more information 335 ---------------------------------------------- 336 Building the driver with the "Gigaset debugging" kernel configuration 337 option (CONFIG_GIGASET_DEBUG) gives it the ability to produce additional 338 information useful for debugging. 339 340 You can control the amount of debugging information the driver produces by 341 writing an appropriate value to /sys/module/gigaset/parameters/debug, e.g. 342 echo 0 > /sys/module/gigaset/parameters/debug 343 switches off debugging output completely, 344 echo 0x302020 > /sys/module/gigaset/parameters/debug 345 enables a reasonable set of debugging output messages. These values are 346 bit patterns where every bit controls a certain type of debugging output. 347 See the constants DEBUG_* in the source file gigaset.h for details. 348 349 The initial value can be set using the debug parameter when loading the 350 module "gigaset", e.g. by adding a line 351 options gigaset debug=0 352 to your module configuration file, eg. /etc/modprobe.d/gigaset.conf 353 354 Generated debugging information can be found 355 - as output of the command 356 dmesg 357 - in system log files written by your syslog daemon, usually 358 in /var/log/, e.g. /var/log/messages. 359 3603.3. Reporting problems and bugs 361 --------------------------- 362 If you can't solve problems with the driver on your own, feel free to 363 use one of the forums, bug trackers, or mailing lists on 364 http://sourceforge.net/projects/gigaset307x 365 or write an electronic mail to the maintainers. 366 367 Try to provide as much information as possible, such as 368 - distribution 369 - kernel version (uname -r) 370 - gcc version (gcc --version) 371 - hardware architecture (uname -m, ...) 372 - type and firmware version of your device (base and wireless module, 373 if any) 374 - output of "lsusb -v" (if using an USB device) 375 - error messages 376 - relevant system log messages (it would help if you activate debug 377 output as described in 3.2.) 378 379 For help with general configuration problems not specific to our driver, 380 such as isdn4linux and network configuration issues, please refer to the 381 appropriate forums and newsgroups. 382 3833.4. Reporting problem solutions 384 --------------------------- 385 If you solved a problem with our drivers, wrote startup scripts for your 386 distribution, ... feel free to contact us (using one of the places 387 mentioned in 3.3.). We'd like to add scripts, hints, documentation 388 to the driver and/or the project web page. 389 390 3914. Links, other software 392 --------------------- 393 - Sourceforge project developing this driver and associated tools 394 http://sourceforge.net/projects/gigaset307x 395 - Yahoo! Group on the Siemens Gigaset family of devices 396 http://de.groups.yahoo.com/group/Siemens-Gigaset 397 - Siemens Gigaset/T-Sinus compatibility table 398 http://www.erbze.info/sinus_gigaset.htm 399 400 4015. Credits 402 ------- 403 Thanks to 404 405 Karsten Keil 406 for his help with isdn4linux 407 Deti Fliegl 408 for his base driver code 409 Dennis Dietrich 410 for his kernel 2.6 patches 411 Andreas Rummel 412 for his work and logs to get unimodem mode working 413 Andreas Degert 414 for his logs and patches to get cx 100 working 415 Dietrich Feist 416 for his generous donation of one M105 and two M101 cordless adapters 417 Christoph Schweers 418 for his generous donation of a M34 device 419 420 and all the other people who sent logs and other information. 421 422
README.hfc-pci
1The driver for the HFC-PCI and HFC-PCI-A chips from CCD may be used 2for many OEM cards using this chips. 3Additionally the driver has a special feature which makes it possible 4to read the echo-channel of the isdn bus. So all frames in both directions 5may be logged. 6When the echo logging feature is used the number of available B-channels 7for a HFC-PCI card is reduced to 1. Of course this is only relevant to 8the card, not to the isdn line. 9To activate the echo mode the following ioctls must be entered: 10 11hisaxctrl <driver/cardname> 10 1 12 13This reduces the available channels to 1. There must not be open connections 14through this card when entering the command. 15And then: 16 17hisaxctrl <driver/cardname> 12 1 18 19This enables the echo mode. If Hex logging is activated the isdnctrlx 20devices show a output with a line beginning of HEX: for the providers 21exchange and ECHO: for isdn devices sending to the provider. 22 23If more than one HFC-PCI cards are installed, a specific card may be selected 24at the hisax module load command line. Supply the load command with the desired 25IO-address of the desired card. 26Example: 27There tree cards installed in your machine at IO-base addresses 0xd000, 0xd400 28and 0xdc00 29If you want to use the card at 0xd400 standalone you should supply the insmod 30or depmod with type=35 io=0xd400. 31If you want to use all three cards, but the order needs to be at 0xdc00,0xd400, 320xd000 you may give the parameters type=35,35,35 io=0xdc00,0xd400,0xd00 33Then the desired card will be the initialised in the desired order. 34If the io parameter is used the io addresses of all used cards should be 35supplied else the parameter is assumed 0 and a auto search for a free card is 36invoked which may not give the wanted result. 37 38Comments and reports to werner@isdn4linux.de or werner@isdn-development.de 39 40 41 42
README.hysdn
1$Id: README.hysdn,v 1.3.6.1 2001/02/10 14:41:19 kai Exp $ 2The hysdn driver has been written by 3Werner Cornelius (werner@isdn4linux.de or werner@titro.de) 4for Hypercope GmbH Aachen Germany. Hypercope agreed to publish this driver 5under the GNU General Public License. 6 7The CAPI 2.0-support was added by Ulrich Albrecht (ualbrecht@hypercope.de) 8for Hypercope GmbH Aachen, Germany. 9 10 11 This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify 12 it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by 13 the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or 14 (at your option) any later version. 15 16 This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, 17 but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of 18 MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the 19 GNU General Public License for more details. 20 21 You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License 22 along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software 23 Foundation, Inc., 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA. 24 25Table of contents 26================= 27 281. About the driver 29 302. Loading/Unloading the driver 31 323. Entries in the /proc filesystem 33 344. The /proc/net/hysdn/cardconfX file 35 365. The /proc/net/hysdn/cardlogX file 37 386. Where to get additional info and help 39 40 411. About the driver 42 43 The drivers/isdn/hysdn subdir contains a driver for HYPERCOPEs active 44 PCI isdn cards Champ, Ergo and Metro. To enable support for this cards 45 enable ISDN support in the kernel config and support for HYSDN cards in 46 the active cards submenu. The driver may only be compiled and used if 47 support for loadable modules and the process filesystem have been enabled. 48 49 These cards provide two different interfaces to the kernel. Without the 50 optional CAPI 2.0 support, they register as ethernet card. IP-routing 51 to a ISDN-destination is performed on the card itself. All necessary 52 handlers for various protocols like ppp and others as well as config info 53 and firmware may be fetched from Hypercopes WWW-Site www.hypercope.de. 54 55 With CAPI 2.0 support enabled, the card can also be used as a CAPI 2.0 56 compliant devices with either CAPI 2.0 applications 57 (check isdn4k-utils) or -using the capidrv module- as a regular 58 isdn4linux device. This is done via the same mechanism as with the 59 active AVM cards and in fact uses the same module. 60 61 622. Loading/Unloading the driver 63 64 The module has no command line parameters and auto detects up to 10 cards 65 in the id-range 0-9. 66 If a loaded driver shall be unloaded all open files in the /proc/net/hysdn 67 subdir need to be closed and all ethernet interfaces allocated by this 68 driver must be shut down. Otherwise the module counter will avoid a module 69 unload. 70 71 If you are using the CAPI 2.0-interface, make sure to load/modprobe the 72 kernelcapi-module first. 73 74 If you plan to use the capidrv-link to isdn4linux, make sure to load 75 capidrv.o after all modules using this driver (i.e. after hysdn and 76 any avm-specific modules). 77 783. Entries in the /proc filesystem 79 80 When the module has been loaded it adds the directory hysdn in the 81 /proc/net tree. This directory contains exactly 2 file entries for each 82 card. One is called cardconfX and the other cardlogX, where X is the 83 card id number from 0 to 9. 84 The cards are numbered in the order found in the PCI config data. 85 864. The /proc/net/hysdn/cardconfX file 87 88 This file may be read to get by everyone to get info about the cards type, 89 actual state, available features and used resources. 90 The first 3 entries (id, bus and slot) are PCI info fields, the following 91 type field gives the information about the cards type: 92 93 4 -> Ergo card (server card with 2 b-chans) 94 5 -> Metro card (server card with 4 or 8 b-chans) 95 6 -> Champ card (client card with 2 b-chans) 96 97 The following 3 fields show the hardware assignments for irq, iobase and the 98 dual ported memory (dp-mem). 99 The fields b-chans and fax-chans announce the available card resources of 100 this types for the user. 101 The state variable indicates the actual drivers state for this card with the 102 following assignments. 103 104 0 -> card has not been booted since driver load 105 1 -> card booting is actually in progess 106 2 -> card is in an error state due to a previous boot failure 107 3 -> card is booted and active 108 109 And the last field (device) shows the name of the ethernet device assigned 110 to this card. Up to the first successful boot this field only shows a - 111 to tell that no net device has been allocated up to now. Once a net device 112 has been allocated it remains assigned to this card, even if a card is 113 rebooted and an boot error occurs. 114 115 Writing to the cardconfX file boots the card or transfers config lines to 116 the cards firmware. The type of data is automatically detected when the 117 first data is written. Only root has write access to this file. 118 The firmware boot files are normally called hyclient.pof for client cards 119 and hyserver.pof for server cards. 120 After successfully writing the boot file, complete config files or single 121 config lines may be copied to this file. 122 If an error occurs the return value given to the writing process has the 123 following additional codes (decimal): 124 125 1000 Another process is currently bootng the card 126 1001 Invalid firmware header 127 1002 Boards dual-port RAM test failed 128 1003 Internal firmware handler error 129 1004 Boot image size invalid 130 1005 First boot stage (bootstrap loader) failed 131 1006 Second boot stage failure 132 1007 Timeout waiting for card ready during boot 133 1008 Operation only allowed in booted state 134 1009 Config line too long 135 1010 Invalid channel number 136 1011 Timeout sending config data 137 138 Additional info about error reasons may be fetched from the log output. 139 1405. The /proc/net/hysdn/cardlogX file 141 142 The cardlogX file entry may be opened multiple for reading by everyone to 143 get the cards and drivers log data. Card messages always start with the 144 keyword LOG. All other lines are output from the driver. 145 The driver log data may be redirected to the syslog by selecting the 146 appropriate bitmask. The cards log messages will always be send to this 147 interface but never to the syslog. 148 149 A root user may write a decimal or hex (with 0x) value t this file to select 150 desired output options. As mentioned above the cards log dat is always 151 written to the cardlog file independent of the following options only used 152 to check and debug the driver itself: 153 154 For example: 155 echo "0x34560078" > /proc/net/hysdn/cardlog0 156 to output the hex log mask 34560078 for card 0. 157 158 The written value is regarded as an unsigned 32-Bit value, bit ored for 159 desired output. The following bits are already assigned: 160 161 0x80000000 All driver log data is alternatively via syslog 162 0x00000001 Log memory allocation errors 163 0x00000010 Firmware load start and close are logged 164 0x00000020 Log firmware record parser 165 0x00000040 Log every firmware write actions 166 0x00000080 Log all card related boot messages 167 0x00000100 Output all config data sent for debugging purposes 168 0x00000200 Only non comment config lines are shown wth channel 169 0x00000400 Additional conf log output 170 0x00001000 Log the asynchronous scheduler actions (config and log) 171 0x00100000 Log all open and close actions to /proc/net/hysdn/card files 172 0x00200000 Log all actions from /proc file entries 173 0x00010000 Log network interface init and deinit 174 1756. Where to get additional info and help 176 177 If you have any problems concerning the driver or configuration contact 178 the Hypercope support team (support@hypercope.de) and or the authors 179 Werner Cornelius (werner@isdn4linux or cornelius@titro.de) or 180 Ulrich Albrecht (ualbrecht@hypercope.de). 181 182 183 184 185 186 187 188 189 190 191 192 193 194 195 196
README.mISDN
1mISDN is a new modular ISDN driver, in the long term it should replace 2the old I4L driver architecture for passiv ISDN cards. 3It was designed to allow a broad range of applications and interfaces 4but only have the basic function in kernel, the interface to the user 5space is based on sockets with a own address family AF_ISDN. 6 7
README.syncppp
1Some additional information for setting up a syncPPP 2connection using network interfaces. 3--------------------------------------------------------------- 4 5You need one thing beside the isdn4linux package: 6 7 a patched pppd .. (I called it ipppd to show the difference) 8 9Compiling isdn4linux with sync PPP: 10----------------------------------- 11To compile isdn4linux with the sync PPP part, you have 12to answer the appropriate question when doing a "make config" 13Don't forget to load the slhc.o 14module before the isdn.o module, if VJ-compression support 15is not compiled into your kernel. (e.g if you have no PPP or 16CSLIP in the kernel) 17 18Using isdn4linux with sync PPP: 19------------------------------- 20Sync PPP is just another encapsulation for isdn4linux. The 21name to enable sync PPP encapsulation is 'syncppp' .. e.g: 22 23 /sbin/isdnctrl encap ippp0 syncppp 24 25The name of the interface is here 'ippp0'. You need 26one interface with the name 'ippp0' to saturate the 27ipppd, which checks the ppp version via this interface. 28Currently, all devices must have the name ipppX where 29'X' is a decimal value. 30 31To set up a PPP connection you need the ipppd .. You must start 32the ipppd once after installing the modules. The ipppd 33communicates with the isdn4linux link-level driver using the 34/dev/ippp0 to /dev/ippp15 devices. One ipppd can handle 35all devices at once. If you want to use two PPP connections 36at the same time, you have to connect the ipppd to two 37devices .. and so on. 38I've implemented one additional option for the ipppd: 39 'useifip' will get (if set to not 0.0.0.0) the IP address 40 for the negotiation from the attached network-interface. 41(also: ipppd will try to negotiate pointopoint IP as remote IP) 42You must disable BSD-compression, this implementation can't 43handle compressed packets. 44 45Check the etc/rc.isdn.syncppp in the isdn4kernel-util package 46for an example setup script. 47 48To use the MPPP stuff, you must configure a slave device 49with isdn4linux. Now call the ipppd with the '+mp' option. 50To increase the number of links, you must use the 51'addlink' option of the isdnctrl tool. (rc.isdn.syncppp.MPPP is 52an example script) 53 54enjoy it, 55 michael 56 57 58 59
README.x25
1 2X.25 support within isdn4linux 3============================== 4 5This is alpha/beta test code. Use it completely at your own risk. 6As new versions appear, the stuff described here might suddenly change 7or become invalid without notice. 8 9Keep in mind: 10 11You are using several new parts of the 2.2.x kernel series which 12have not been tested in a large scale. Therefore, you might encounter 13more bugs as usual. 14 15- If you connect to an X.25 neighbour not operated by yourself, ASK the 16 other side first. Be prepared that bugs in the protocol implementation 17 might result in problems. 18 19- This implementation has never wiped out my whole hard disk yet. But as 20 this is experimental code, don't blame me if that happened to you. 21 Backing up important data will never harm. 22 23- Monitor your isdn connections while using this software. This should 24 prevent you from undesired phone bills in case of driver problems. 25 26 27 28 29How to configure the kernel 30=========================== 31 32The ITU-T (former CCITT) X.25 network protocol layer has been implemented 33in the Linux source tree since version 2.1.16. The isdn subsystem might be 34useful to run X.25 on top of ISDN. If you want to try it, select 35 36 "CCITT X.25 Packet Layer" 37 38from the networking options as well as 39 40 "ISDN Support" and "X.25 PLP on Top of ISDN" 41 42from the ISDN subsystem options when you configure your kernel for 43compilation. You currently also need to enable 44"Prompt for development and/or incomplete code/drivers" from the 45"Code maturity level options" menu. For the x25trace utility to work 46you also need to enable "Packet socket". 47 48For local testing it is also recommended to enable the isdnloop driver 49from the isdn subsystem's configuration menu. 50 51For testing, it is recommended that all isdn drivers and the X.25 PLP 52protocol are compiled as loadable modules. Like this, you can recover 53from certain errors by simply unloading and reloading the modules. 54 55 56 57What's it for? How to use it? 58============================= 59 60X.25 on top of isdn might be useful with two different scenarios: 61 62- You might want to access a public X.25 data network from your Linux box. 63 You can use i4l if you were physically connected to the X.25 switch 64 by an ISDN B-channel (leased line as well as dial up connection should 65 work). 66 67 This corresponds to ITU-T recommendation X.31 Case A (circuit-mode 68 access to PSPDN [packet switched public data network]). 69 70 NOTE: X.31 also covers a Case B (access to PSPDN via virtual 71 circuit / packet mode service). The latter mode (which in theory 72 also allows using the D-channel) is not supported by isdn4linux. 73 It should however be possible to establish such packet mode connections 74 with certain active isdn cards provided that the firmware supports X.31 75 and the driver exports this functionality to the user. Currently, 76 the AVM B1 driver is the only driver which does so. (It should be 77 possible to access D-channel X.31 with active AVM cards using the 78 CAPI interface of the AVM-B1 driver). 79 80- Or you might want to operate certain ISDN teleservices on your linux 81 box. A lot of those teleservices run on top of the ISO-8208 82 (DTE-DTE mode) network layer protocol. ISO-8208 is essentially the 83 same as ITU-T X.25. 84 85 Popular candidates of such teleservices are EUROfile transfer or any 86 teleservice applying ITU-T recommendation T.90. 87 88To use the X.25 protocol on top of isdn, just create an isdn network 89interface as usual, configure your own and/or peer's ISDN numbers, 90and choose x25iface encapsulation by 91 92 isdnctrl encap <iface-name> x25iface. 93 94Once encap is set like this, the device can be used by the X.25 packet layer. 95 96All the stuff needed for X.25 is implemented inside the isdn link 97level (mainly isdn_net.c and some new source files). Thus, it should 98work with every existing HL driver. I was able to successfully open X.25 99connections on top of the isdnloop driver and the hisax driver. 100"x25iface"-encapsulation bypasses demand dialing. Dialing will be 101initiated when the upper (X.25 packet) layer requests the lapb datalink to 102be established. But hangup timeout is still active. Whenever a hangup 103occurs, all existing X.25 connections on that link will be cleared 104It is recommended to use sufficiently large hangup-timeouts for the 105isdn interfaces. 106 107 108In order to set up a conforming protocol stack you also need to 109specify the proper l2_prot parameter: 110 111To operate in ISO-8208 X.25 DTE-DTE mode, use 112 113 isdnctrl l2_prot <iface-name> x75i 114 115To access an X.25 network switch via isdn (your linux box is the DTE), use 116 117 isdnctrl l2_prot <iface-name> x25dte 118 119To mimic an X.25 network switch (DCE side of the connection), use 120 121 isdnctrl l2_prot <iface-name> x25dce 122 123However, x25dte or x25dce is currently not supported by any real HL 124level driver. The main difference between x75i and x25dte/dce is that 125x25d[tc]e uses fixed lap_b addresses. With x75i, the side which 126initiates the isdn connection uses the DTE's lap_b address while the 127called side used the DCE's lap_b address. Thus, l2_prot x75i might 128probably work if you access a public X.25 network as long as the 129corresponding isdn connection is set up by you. At least one test 130was successful to connect via isdn4linux to an X.25 switch using this 131trick. At the switch side, a terminal adapter X.21 was used to connect 132it to the isdn. 133 134 135How to set up a test installation? 136================================== 137 138To test X.25 on top of isdn, you need to get 139 140- a recent version of the "isdnctrl" program that supports setting the new 141 X.25 specific parameters. 142 143- the x25-utils-2.X package from 144 ftp://ftp.hes.iki.fi/pub/ham/linux/ax25/x25utils-* 145 (don't confuse the x25-utils with the ax25-utils) 146 147- an application program that uses linux PF_X25 sockets (some are 148 contained in the x25-util package). 149 150Before compiling the user level utilities make sure that the compiler/ 151preprocessor will fetch the proper kernel header files of this kernel 152source tree. Either make /usr/include/linux a symbolic link pointing to 153this kernel's include/linux directory or set the appropriate compiler flags. 154 155When all drivers and interfaces are loaded and configured you need to 156ifconfig the network interfaces up and add X.25-routes to them. Use 157the usual ifconfig tool. 158 159ifconfig <iface-name> up 160 161But a special x25route tool (distributed with the x25-util package) 162is needed to set up X.25 routes. I.e. 163 164x25route add 01 <iface-name> 165 166will cause all x.25 connections to the destination X.25-address 167"01" to be routed to your created isdn network interface. 168 169There are currently no real X.25 applications available. However, for 170tests, the x25-utils package contains a modified version of telnet 171and telnetd that uses X.25 sockets instead of tcp/ip sockets. You can 172use those for your first tests. Furthermore, you might check 173ftp://ftp.hamburg.pop.de/pub/LOCAL/linux/i4l-eft/ which contains some 174alpha-test implementation ("eftp4linux") of the EUROfile transfer 175protocol. 176 177The scripts distributed with the eftp4linux test releases might also 178provide useful examples for setting up X.25 on top of isdn. 179 180The x25-utility package also contains an x25trace tool that can be 181used to monitor X.25 packets received by the network interfaces. 182The /proc/net/x25* files also contain useful information. 183 184- Henner 185