Introduction ============ This ebuild installs firmware files necessary for ADI 930/Eagle USB ADSL Modem driver which first appeared in kernel 2.6.16. Configuration ============= Most ADSL modems are connected via the ATM protocol, rather than Ethernet. For ATM, run the following: euse -E atm && emerge net-dialup/ppp net-dialup/ueagle-atm It is necessary to choose an interface number for the connection. This is arbitrary - the only requirement is that the connection number is not already in use. The first available number is 0, and it is usual to choose the lowest unused number. For the purposes of this document, 0 will be chosen. Add the following lines from the appropriate section below to /etc/conf.d/net, then customize them as per the inline comments. a) PPPoATM configuration: config_ppp0='ppp' # Runs /lib/rcscripts/net/pppd.sh # The 2 numbers represent the VPI & VCI of your ISP, and they are separated # by a dot. Ask your ISP about those numbers. link_ppp0='0.38' plugins_ppp0='pppoa' # 'man pppd' shows other options. Compression is disabled because it is # rarely taken advantage of, and may interfere with the connection. # Add option 'usepeerdns' to populate /etc/resolv.conf pppd_ppp0='updetach noauth debug defaultroute noaccomp nobsdcomp noccp nodeflate nopcomp novj novjccomp child-timeout 60' username_ppp0='username@isp.com' # ADSL login, assigned by your ISP password_ppp0='password' # ADSL password, assigned by your ISP # If the kernel modules are not built-in, then they must be loaded # before starting the PPP daemon: function preup() { if [[ "$1" = "ppp0" ]] ; then modprobe -q ueagle-atm return 0 fi } b) PPPoE configuration: # Configure first the RFC2684 bridge interface config_nas0='null' # Use "-e 0" for LLC mux or "-e 1" for VC mux. # The 2 numbers after "-a" represent the VPI & VCI of your ISP, and # they are separated by a dot. Ask your ISP about those numbers. br2684ctl_nas0='-e 0 -a 0.38' config_ppp0='ppp' # Runs /lib/rcscripts/net/pppd.sh link_ppp0='nas0' # The name of the RFC2684 bridge interface plugins_ppp0='pppoe' # 'man pppd' shows other options. Compression is disabled because it is # rarely taken advantage of, and may interfere with the connection. # Add option 'usepeerdns' to populate /etc/resolv.conf pppd_ppp0='updetach noauth debug defaultroute noaccomp nobsdcomp noccp nodeflate nopcomp novj novjccomp child-timeout 60' username_ppp0='username@isp.com' # ADSL login, assigned by your ISP password_ppp0='password' # ADSL password, assigned by your ISP depend_ppp0() { need net.nas0 } # If the kernel modules are not built-in, then they must be loaded # before starting the RFC2684 bridge: function preup() { if [[ "$1" = "nas0" ]] ; then modprobe -q ueagle-atm return 0 fi } Configuration continued ======================= Create a symlink for the new network interface, for it to be enabled by baselayout: cd /etc/init.d && ln -sfn net.lo net.ppp0 If you use PPPoE, you should also create the symlink for the RFC2684 bridge interface: cd /etc/init.d && ln -sfn net.lo net.nas0 The "debug" option adds some extra commentary from pppd regarding the connection to /var/log/messages, e.g.: "sent [LCP ConfReq id=0x1 ]". It is wise to keep the option on permanently, due to its usefulness when debugging. Set RC_NET_STRICT_CHECKING="yes" in /etc/conf.d/rc, to prevent Internet services in /etc/init.d/ from starting before the Internet connection is established. Other options are to start/stop programs in /etc/ppp/ip-{up,down}.local, and to customize initscript dependencies as described in: http://www.gentoo.org/doc/en/handbook/handbook-x86.xml?part=2&chap=4 Starting the Connection ======================= To start manually, with the modem connected: /etc/init.d/net.ppp0 start To start automatically when the PC boots: rc-update add net.ppp0 default Kernel Configuration ==================== The ebuild, during an emerge, checks that the required kernel modules are present. Note that in the list below, "[*]" means that the option is compiled into the kernel, whereas "[M]" means that the option can either be compiled into the kernel, or as a module. Compiling them into the kernel is recommended, to guarantee that the modules are already loaded when they are needed, and it will improve the bootup time by a couple of seconds. In "make menuconfig", you can press "/" and search on e.g. "eagle" to see exactly where an option is - the location of an option and its dependencies can change between kernel versions. Check that the following kernel options are configured as shown (this list includes the prerequisites, e.g. USB_UEAGLEATM depends on USB): Code maturity level options ---> [*] Prompt for development and/or incomplete code/drivers - CONFIG_EXPERIMENTAL Device Drivers ---> Generic Driver Options ---> [ ] Select only drivers that don't need compile-time external firmware (*unselected*) - CONFIG_STANDALONE [*] Hotplug firmware loading support - CONFIG_FW_LOADER Networking ---> [*] Networking support - CONFIG_NET Networking options ---> [*] Packet socket - CONFIG_PACKET [M] Asynchronous Transfer Mode (ATM) - CONFIG_ATM [M] RFC1483/2684 Bridged protocols - CONFIG_ATM_BR2684 (only needed for PPPoE) Device Drivers ---> Network device support ---> [*] Network device support - CONFIG_NETDEVICES [*] PPP (point-to-point protocol) support - CONFIG_PPP [M] PPP Deflate compression - CONFIG_PPP_DEFLATE (only useful if compression is supported - rare) [M] PPP BSD-Compress compression - CONFIG_PPP_BSDCOMP (only useful if compression is supported - rare) [M] PPP over Ethernet - CONFIG_PPPOE (only needed for PPPoE) [M] PPP over ATM - CONFIG_PPPOATM (only needed for PPPoATM) USB support ---> [*] Support for Host-side USB - CONFIG_USB [*] USB device filesystem - CONFIG_USB_DEVICEFS [M] (O or U)HCI HCD support USB DSL modem support ---> [M] USB DSL modem support - CONFIG_USB_ATM [M] ADI 930 and eagle USB DSL modem - CONFIG_USB_UEAGLEATM Troubleshooting =============== Try "emerge ueagle-atm" again, because the ebuild checks that the required kernel modules are present (showing a warning message if appropriate), and creates the firmware files in /lib/firmware/ueagle-atm. If the modem is unresponsive, then run "/etc/init.d/net.ppp0 stop" and unplug the modem for 30 seconds, to drain its memory. Then reconnect the modem to the PC and run "/etc/init.d/net.ppp0 start" To check the modem's connection progress, run: tail -f /var/log/messages /var/log/messages should show e.g.: pppd[nnn]: Plugin pppoatm.so loaded. pppd[nnn]: pppd n.n.n started by root, uid 0 pppd[nnn]: Using interface ppp0 pppd[nnn]: Connect: ppp0 <--> n.nn ADSL line is synchronising DSL line goes up ADSL line is up (nnn Kib/s down | nnn Kib/s up) pppd[nnn]: CHAP authentication succeeded pppd[nnn]: local IP address nnn.nnn.nnn.nnn pppd[nnn]: remote IP address nnn.nnn.nnn.nnn If the authentification fails, then check username_ppp0 and password_ppp0. If the ADSL connection is not established, then check the options in pppd_ppp0. "man pppd" explains all the options in that file. If the ADSL connection seems to have worked, but no websites can be contacted, then check that /etc/resolv.conf is populated, and possibly add the "usepeerdns" option (to use the ISP's DNS) to pppd_ppp0 in /etc/conf.d/net . If the problem is still not resolved, post to the Gentoo Forums at http://forums.gentoo.org/ and ultimately, if there is no answer, file a bug at http://bugs.gentoo.org/ . Compression =========== Some ISPs require compression to be disabled in order for the connection to work, so the default configuration described above disables compression. Few ISPs support ADSL compression anyway. If you are lucky enough to have an ISP which *does* support compression (Google is your best friend for determining this), then compression can be enabled by following these steps: * Compile the kernel modules CONFIG_PPP_DEFLATE and CONFIG_PPP_BSDCOMP (only one is strictly necessary - pppd prefers "deflate" compression). Add them to /etc/modules.autoload.d/kernel-2.6 or /etc/conf.d/net above the "pppoatm" line, if they are not built-in. * Remove the following options in pppd_ppp0: noaccomp nobsdcomp noccp nodeflate nopcomp novj novjccomp * Ensure that "debug" is in the pppd_ppp0 options, to check that compression is being utilized. Note that "module registered" in /var/log/messages only confirms that the kernel module is loaded - it does not indicate that the connection is compressed.