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amirante
04-10-2003, 02:42 AM
I have spent several hours reading the forum and most of the faqs and I can't seem to figure this one out. I have narrowed it down to my PCMCIA wireless Orinoco 802.11b card. If I boot "knoppix nopcmcia" everything is fine but, of course, no network connectivity. If I remove the "nopcmcia" I get the following:

**** Begin output ****

PCMCIA starting cardmgr
cardmgr[58] version 3.2.2
... modprobe hermes
... modprobe orinoco
... modprobe orinoco_cs
executing '.network start eth0'
...
cardmgr[58]: + Operation failed
cardmgr[58]: start cmd exited with status 1

**** End output ****

At this point the system hangs.

Any pointers as to how to get past this issue?
Thanks in advance.

Alex

garyng
04-10-2003, 07:12 AM
iwconfig eth0 essid "your essid" enc "s:xxxxx" where xxxxx is the 5 character WEP key

The network will not be functioning properly until the Wi-Fi part is properly configured which the auto script can never handle.

amirante
04-10-2003, 02:59 PM
iwconfig eth0 essid "your essid" enc "s:xxxxx" where xxxxx is the 5 character WEP key

The network will not be functioning properly until the Wi-Fi part is properly configured which the auto script can never handle.


The main problem is that the system is hung at this point. I can't enter any commands. I think I need to address the fact that the PCMCIA wireless card isn't being "configured" appropriately at boot time, thus the need to start with "knoppix nopcmcia".

Are you suggesting I continue to boot with "nopcmcia" and then run iwconfig each time?

garyng
04-10-2003, 06:23 PM
oops. miss the last line. nothing I can help then. May be it is google time to see if someone use similar cards.

4season
04-14-2003, 05:59 PM
If not, then I wonder if your basic card services are flakey. I had LOTS of problems with the system freezing solid until I fixed that. Do an lspci and find out what CardBus chip your notebook uses: My Toshiba Satellite 1115-S103 uses a the 02 Micro OZ6933 which is NOT correctly supported by Knoppix 3.2. My Orinoco-based Speedstream SS1021 card would light up and Cardmgr would appear to run, but the card wasn't recognized, and any attempt to eject, shut down or restart the card would cause the system to hang.

The solution for me was to recompile the kernel with all PCMCIA support turned off. I then applied PCMCIA-CS-3.2.3 separately (orinoco_cs appears to be broken in 3.2.4). I had to edit /etc/modules and change "yenta_socket" to "i82365". At this point, I could shut down and eject cards just fine but the card wasn't being recognized. From there, it was a relatively simple matter of polling the card for it's hardware ID info and entering that into the appropriate data files. Result: 802.11b services work great!

amirante
04-17-2003, 02:22 AM
If not, then I wonder if your basic card services are flakey. I had LOTS of problems with the system freezing solid until I fixed that. Do an lspci and find out what CardBus chip your notebook uses: My Toshiba Satellite 1115-S103 uses a the 02 Micro OZ6933 which is NOT correctly supported by Knoppix 3.2. My Orinoco-based Speedstream SS1021 card would light up and Cardmgr would appear to run, but the card wasn't recognized, and any attempt to eject, shut down or restart the card would cause the system to hang.

The solution for me was to recompile the kernel with all PCMCIA support turned off. I then applied PCMCIA-CS-3.2.3 separately (orinoco_cs appears to be broken in 3.2.4). I had to edit /etc/modules and change "yenta_socket" to "i82365". At this point, I could shut down and eject cards just fine but the card wasn't being recognized. From there, it was a relatively simple matter of polling the card for it's hardware ID info and entering that into the appropriate data files. Result: 802.11b services work great!

The system doesn't boot either w/ or w/o the 802.11 card. BTW, it is not a notebook if that matters. Just a standalone Dell 8100 box.

I did an lspci and it shows:


02:0b.0 CardBus Bridge: TI PCI1225 (rev 01)
02:0b.1 CardBus Bridge: TI PCI1225 (rev 01)


I am hoping to avoid having to recompile kernels, etc.
Then I lose the joy of Knoppix...

Any other thoughts?

KennyP
05-14-2003, 04:11 PM
I have a Toshiba Satellite 1135-S125. It has the same base hardware sans CPU.

I am running Knoppix v3.2 dated 5/3/2003. I think it's a beta. Forgive a newbie!

I do get a warning about the IDE controller right under Tux at boot, but everything works just fine.

I can boot with my Orinoco Gold Card and lease an IP address from my University's unsecured WLAN without problems. I'm going to try and figure out what to do with my home secure stuff, but that's another subject. Of course, anyone willing to help... ;-)

Have you tried updating the WiFi card to it's latest firmware? It might help as I have the latest on my Gold card and it works in an open environment.

I have the CardBus Bridge 02 Micro, Inc. OZ6933 Cardbus Controller (rev 01) and I am able to effortlessly lease an IP on our open WLAN. This is with

For the guy with the Dell, I am going to assume you have an Orinoco Gold or Silver card in a PCMCIA/PCI adapter? Just another point of contention. I'd go with a D-Link PCI adapter as it does not have the PCMCIA card - it's all PCI hardware (no slot). You could also try the firmware update - it can't hurt and you can download the current version just in case.

Overall, I am most impressed with this distro. I took the CD I made yesterday around to our Helpdesk folks showing them what I could do from a boot CD. All of our currently running hardware works without user intervention of any kind. I will be cutting CD's for the Helpdesk as it's a good way to check for simple machine operation and network connectivity. If you boot and can go to www.random.com, you are working just fine IMHO.

Hope this helps!

Kenny P.
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