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406 lines
14 KiB
406 lines
14 KiB
Linux Quicknet-Drivers-Howto
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Quicknet Technologies, Inc. (www.quicknet.net)
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Version 0.3.4 December 18, 1999
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1.0 Introduction
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This document describes the first GPL release version of the Linux
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driver for the Quicknet Internet PhoneJACK and Internet LineJACK
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cards. More information about these cards is available at
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www.quicknet.net. The driver version discussed in this document is
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0.3.4.
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These cards offer nice telco style interfaces to use your standard
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telephone/key system/PBX as the user interface for VoIP applications.
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The Internet LineJACK also offers PSTN connectivity for a single line
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Internet to PSTN gateway. Of course, you can add more than one card
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to a system to obtain multi-line functionality. At this time, the
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driver supports the POTS port on both the Internet PhoneJACK and the
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Internet LineJACK, but the PSTN port on the latter card is not yet
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supported.
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This document, and the drivers for the cards, are intended for a
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limited audience that includes technically capable programmers who
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would like to experiment with Quicknet cards. The drivers are
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considered in ALPHA status and are not yet considered stable enough
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for general, widespread use in an unlimited audience.
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That's worth saying again:
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THE LINUX DRIVERS FOR QUICKNET CARDS ARE PRESENTLY IN A ALPHA STATE
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AND SHOULD NOT BE CONSIDERED AS READY FOR NORMAL WIDESPREAD USE.
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They are released early in the spirit of Internet development and to
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make this technology available to innovators who would benefit from
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early exposure.
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When we promote the device driver to "beta" level it will be
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considered ready for non-programmer, non-technical users. Until then,
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please be aware that these drivers may not be stable and may affect
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the performance of your system.
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1.1 Latest Additions/Improvements
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The 0.3.4 version of the driver is the first GPL release. Several
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features had to be removed from the prior binary only module, mostly
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for reasons of Intellectual Property rights. We can't release
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information that is not ours - so certain aspects of the driver had to
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be removed to protect the rights of others.
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Specifically, very old Internet PhoneJACK cards have non-standard
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G.723.1 codecs (due to the early nature of the DSPs in those days).
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The auto-conversion code to bring those cards into compliance with
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todays standards is available as a binary only module to those people
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needing it. If you bought your card after 1997 or so, you are OK -
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it's only the very old cards that are affected.
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Also, the code to download G.728/G.729/G.729a codecs to the DSP is
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available as a binary only module as well. This IP is not ours to
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release.
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Hooks are built into the GPL driver to allow it to work with other
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companion modules that are completely separate from this module.
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1.2 Copyright, Trademarks, Disclaimer, & Credits
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Copyright
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Copyright (c) 1999 Quicknet Technologies, Inc. Permission is granted
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to freely copy and distribute this document provided you preserve it
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in its original form. For corrections and minor changes contact the
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maintainer at linux@quicknet.net.
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Trademarks
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Internet PhoneJACK and Internet LineJACK are registered trademarks of
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Quicknet Technologies, Inc.
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Disclaimer
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Much of the info in this HOWTO is early information released by
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Quicknet Technologies, Inc. for the express purpose of allowing early
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testing and use of the Linux drivers developed for their products.
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While every attempt has been made to be thorough, complete and
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accurate, the information contained here may be unreliable and there
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are likely a number of errors in this document. Please let the
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maintainer know about them. Since this is free documentation, it
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should be obvious that neither I nor previous authors can be held
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legally responsible for any errors.
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Credits
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This HOWTO was written by:
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Greg Herlein <gherlein@quicknet.net>
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Ed Okerson <eokerson@quicknet.net>
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1.3 Future Plans: You Can Help
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Please let the maintainer know of any errors in facts, opinions,
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logic, spelling, grammar, clarity, links, etc. But first, if the date
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is over a month old, check to see that you have the latest
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version. Please send any info that you think belongs in this document.
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You can also contribute code and/or bug-fixes for the sample
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applications.
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1.4 Where to get things
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You can download the latest versions of the driver from:
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http://www.quicknet.net/develop.htm
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You can download the latest version of this document from:
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http://www.quicknet.net/develop.htm
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1.5 Mailing List
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Quicknet operates a mailing list to provide a public forum on using
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these drivers.
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To subscribe to the linux-sdk mailing list, send an email to:
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majordomo@linux.quicknet.net
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In the body of the email, type:
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subscribe linux-sdk <your-email-address>
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Please delete any signature block that you would normally add to the
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bottom of your email - it tends to confuse majordomo.
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To send mail to the list, address your mail to
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linux-sdk@linux.quicknet.net
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Your message will go out to everyone on the list.
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To unsubscribe to the linux-sdk mailing list, send an email to:
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majordomo@linux.quicknet.net
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In the body of the email, type:
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unsubscribe linux-sdk <your-email-address>
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2.0 Requirements
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2.1 Quicknet Card(s)
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You will need at least one Internet PhoneJACK or Internet LineJACK
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cards. These are ISA or PCI bus devices that use Plug-n-Play for
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configuration, and use no IRQs. The driver will support up to 16
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cards in any one system, of any mix between the two types.
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Note that you will need two cards to do any useful testing alone, since
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you will need a card on both ends of the connection. Of course, if
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you are doing collaborative work, perhaps your friends or coworkers
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have cards too. If not, we'll gladly sell them some!
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2.2 ISAPNP
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Since the Quicknet cards are Plug-n-Play devices, you will need the
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isapnp tools package to configure the cards, or you can use the isapnp
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module to autoconfigure them. The former package probably came with
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your Linux distribution. Documentation on this package is available
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online at:
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http://mailer.wiwi.uni-marburg.de/linux/LDP/HOWTO/Plug-and-Play-HOWTO.html
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The isapnp autoconfiguration is available on the Quicknet website at:
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http://www.quicknet.net/develop.htm
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though it may be in the kernel by the time you read this.
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3.0 Card Configuration
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If you did not get your drivers as part of the linux kernel, do the
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following to install them:
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a. untar the distribution file. We use the following command:
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tar -xvzf ixj-0.x.x.tgz
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This creates a subdirectory holding all the necessary files. Go to that
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subdirectory.
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b. run the "ixj_dev_create" script to remove any stray device
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files left in the /dev directory, and to create the new officially
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designated device files. Note that the old devices were called
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/dev/ixj, and the new method uses /dev/phone.
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c. type "make;make install" - this will compile and install the
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module.
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d. type "depmod -av" to rebuild all your kernel version dependencies.
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e. if you are using the isapnp module to configure the cards
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automatically, then skip to step f. Otherwise, ensure that you
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have run the isapnp configuration utility to properly configure
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the cards.
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e1. The Internet PhoneJACK has one configuration register that
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requires 16 IO ports. The Internet LineJACK card has two
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configuration registers and isapnp reports that IO 0
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requires 16 IO ports and IO 1 requires 8. The Quicknet
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driver assumes that these registers are configured to be
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contiguous, i.e. if IO 0 is set to 0x340 then IO 1 should
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be set to 0x350.
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Make sure that none of the cards overlap if you have
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multiple cards in the system.
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If you are new to the isapnp tools, you can jumpstart
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yourself by doing the following:
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e2. go to the /etc directory and run pnpdump to get a blank
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isapnp.conf file.
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pnpdump > /etc/isapnp.conf
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e3. edit the /etc/isapnp.conf file to set the IO warnings and
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the register IO addresses. The IO warnings means that you
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should find the line in the file that looks like this:
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(CONFLICT (IO FATAL)(IRQ FATAL)(DMA FATAL)(MEM FATAL)) # or WARNING
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and you should edit the line to look like this:
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(CONFLICT (IO WARNING)(IRQ FATAL)(DMA FATAL)(MEM FATAL)) #
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or WARNING
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The next step is to set the IO port addresses. The issue
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here is that isapnp does not identify all of the ports out
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there. Specifically any device that does not have a driver
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or module loaded by Linux will not be registered. This
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includes older sound cards and network cards. We have
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found that the IO port 0x300 is often used even though
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isapnp claims that no-one is using those ports. We
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recommend that for a single card installation that port
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0x340 (and 0x350) be used. The IO port line should change
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from this:
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(IO 0 (SIZE 16) (BASE 0x0300) (CHECK))
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to this:
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(IO 0 (SIZE 16) (BASE 0x0340) )
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e4. if you have multiple Quicknet cards, make sure that you do
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not have any overlaps. Be especially careful if you are
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mixing Internet PhoneJACK and Internet LineJACK cards in
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the same system. In these cases we recommend moving the
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IO port addresses to the 0x400 block. Please note that on
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a few machines the 0x400 series are used. Feel free to
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experiment with other addresses. Our cards have been
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proven to work using IO addresses of up to 0xFF0.
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e5. the last step is to uncomment the activation line so the
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drivers will be associated with the port. This means the
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line (immediately below) the IO line should go from this:
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# (ACT Y)
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to this:
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(ACT Y)
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Once you have finished editing the isapnp.conf file you
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must submit it into the pnp driverconfigure the cards.
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This is done using the following command:
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isapnp isapnp.conf
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If this works you should see a line that identifies the
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Quicknet device, the IO port(s) chosen, and a message
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"Enabled OK".
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f. if you are loading the module by hand, use insmod. An example
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of this would look like this:
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insmod phonedev
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insmod ixj dspio=0x320,0x310 xio=0,0x330
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Then verify the module loaded by running lsmod. If you are not using a
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module that matches your kernel version, you may need to "force" the
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load using the -f option in the insmod command.
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insmod phonedev
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insmod -f ixj dspio=0x320,0x310 xio=0,0x330
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If you are using isapnp to autoconfigure your card, then you do NOT
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need any of the above, though you need to use depmod to load the
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driver, like this:
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depmod ixj
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which will result in the needed drivers getting loaded automatically.
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g. if you are planning on using kerneld to automatically load the
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module for you, then you need to edit /etc/conf.modules and add the
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following lines:
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options ixj dspio=0x340 xio=0x330 ixjdebug=0
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If you do this, then when you execute an application that uses the
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module kerneld will load the module for you. Note that to do this,
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you need to have your kernel set to support kerneld. You can check
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for this by looking at /usr/src/linux/.config and you should see this:
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# Loadable module support
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#
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<snip>
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CONFIG_KMOD=y
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h. if you want non-root users to be able to read and write to the
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ixj devices (this is a good idea!) you should do the following:
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- decide upon a group name to use and create that group if
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needed. Add the user names to that group that you wish to
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have access to the device. For example, we typically will
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create a group named "ixj" in /etc/group and add all users
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to that group that we want to run software that can use the
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ixjX devices.
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- change the permissions on the device files, like this:
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chgrp ixj /dev/ixj*
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chmod 660 /dev/ixj*
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Once this is done, then non-root users should be able to use the
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devices. If you have enabled autoloading of modules, then the user
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should be able to open the device and have the module loaded
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automatically for them.
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4.0 Driver Installation problems.
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We have tested these drivers on the 2.2.9, 2.2.10, 2.2.12, and 2.2.13 kernels
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and in all cases have eventually been able to get the drivers to load and
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run. We have found four types of problems that prevent this from happening.
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The problems and solutions are:
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a. A step was missed in the installation. Go back and use section 3
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as a checklist. Many people miss running the ixj_dev_create script and thus
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never load the device names into the filesystem.
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b. The kernel is inconsistently linked. We have found this problem in
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the Out Of the Box installation of several distributions. The symptoms
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are that neither driver will load, and that the unknown symbols include "jiffy"
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and "kmalloc". The solution is to recompile both the kernel and the
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modules. The command string for the final compile looks like this:
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In the kernel directory:
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1. cp .config /tmp
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2. make mrproper
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3. cp /tmp/.config .
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4. make clean;make bzImage;make modules;make modules_install
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This rebuilds both the kernel and all the modules and makes sure they all
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have the same linkages. This generally solves the problem once the new
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kernel is installed and the system rebooted.
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c. The kernel has been patched, then unpatched. This happens when
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someone decides to use an earlier kernel after they load a later kernel.
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The symptoms are proceeding through all three above steps and still not
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being able to load the driver. What has happened is that the generated
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header files are out of sync with the kernel itself. The solution is
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to recompile (again) using "make mrproper". This will remove and then
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regenerate all the necessary header files. Once this is done, then you
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need to install and reboot the kernel. We have not seen any problem
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loading one of our drivers after this treatment.
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5.0 Known Limitations
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We cannot currently play "dial-tone" and listen for DTMF digits at the
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same time using the ISA PhoneJACK. This is a bug in the 8020 DSP chip
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used on that product. All other Quicknet products function normally
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in this regard. We have a work-around, but it's not done yet. Until
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then, if you want dial-tone, you can always play a recorded dial-tone
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sound into the audio until you have gathered the DTMF digits.
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