Re: New USB 3G modem



Dan, I am also working with the openWRT router project to get this modem working.

After posting to that forum, someone came forward regarding this modem.
They stated that usb_modeswitch was NOT used for this device and the
modem was to be found on /dev/ttyUSB0. I have noticed that on windows
that the drivers are installed everytime this device is plugged and
this seems to confirm the non-use of usb_modeswitch. Also the is no evidence
of usb_modeswitch in the syslog.

On openWRT I was able to get this to connect once and pass traffic but
it seems that I messed something up later.

Shall I make a copy of the fake driver CD for you now?

Thanks,

Perazim

On Fri, 2011-09-02 at 15:53 +0100, perazim portugalmail pt wrote:
I have a "generic" USB modem labeled "HSDPA  3.5G Wireless Modem" bought
from Deal Extreme in Hong Kong.

It works on Windows XP and installs its own drivers when plugged the
first time.

When plugged to Fedora 14, I see a CDROM detected and a USB storage
device if a microSDHC is plugged into the slot on the modem. I do not
see usb_modeswitch run and NetworkManager does not see this modem.

usb_modeswitch needs the right logic to flip the device to modem mode,
without that there's no change ModemManager can detect the modem,
because it's not a modem yet.  After that, we may need to implement
support for this device's specific quirks.  I usually ask users to
zip/gzip up the contents of the "fake" driver CD and email it to me so
that I can inspect the drivers and the connection manager and determine
what AT commands (and thus what firmware variant) the device uses.  Then
we can implement more than basic support for the device.

Using lsusb I see: ID 0685:7000 with no description whatever. There is
no file by this name in /etc/usb_modeswitch.d/

How do I add this modem to the appropriate tables so that it is
detected?

If there is no entry for that device in usb_modeswitch's /etc directory,
then you'll need to communicate first with the usb_modeswitch project
and determine the sequence to flip the device to modem mode.  That might
include installing a USB sniffer in Windows and sniffing the command
sequences that the driver uses to tell the device to enter modem mode.
The usb_modeswitch project is pretty good about helping people through
that process.  Once that's done, we can proceed with inspecting the
actual modem and determining what we need to do to get it connecting to
the network.

Dan



[Date Prev][Date Next]   [Thread Prev][Thread Next]   [Thread Index] [Date Index] [Author Index]