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authorTilman Schmidt <tilman@imap.cc>2010-07-05 10:19:30 -0400
committerDavid S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>2010-07-07 19:57:56 -0400
commitd9bed6bbd4f2a0120c93fed68605950651e1f225 (patch)
tree2a78fb9a7934268a06ad1482ee5f18ff1f02478b /Documentation/isdn
parent29124c70d779c89e04289468f437c093eb0811df (diff)
isdn/gigaset: remove EXPERIMENTAL tag from GIGASET_CAPI
The CAPI variant of the Gigaset drivers can, in combination with capidrv, now fully replace the legacy ISDN4Linux variant. All reported problems have been fixed. So remove the EXPERIMENTAL tag from the Kconfig option selecting it, and adapt the documentation accordingly to encourage users to switch to it. Impact: documentation/status update, no functional change Signed-off-by: Tilman Schmidt <tilman@imap.cc> Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
Diffstat (limited to 'Documentation/isdn')
-rw-r--r--Documentation/isdn/README.gigaset100
1 files changed, 53 insertions, 47 deletions
diff --git a/Documentation/isdn/README.gigaset b/Documentation/isdn/README.gigaset
index 702c04649915..ef3343eaa002 100644
--- a/Documentation/isdn/README.gigaset
+++ b/Documentation/isdn/README.gigaset
@@ -47,9 +47,9 @@ GigaSet 307x Device Driver
47 47
481.2. Software 481.2. Software
49 -------- 49 --------
50 The driver works with ISDN4linux and so can be used with any software 50 The driver works with the Kernel CAPI subsystem as well as the old
51 which is able to use ISDN4linux for ISDN connections (voice or data). 51 ISDN4Linux subsystem, so it can be used with any software which is able
52 Experimental Kernel CAPI support is available as a compilation option. 52 to use CAPI 2.0 or ISDN4Linux for ISDN connections (voice or data).
53 53
54 There are some user space tools available at 54 There are some user space tools available at
55 http://sourceforge.net/projects/gigaset307x/ 55 http://sourceforge.net/projects/gigaset307x/
@@ -152,61 +152,42 @@ GigaSet 307x Device Driver
152 - GIGVER_FWBASE: retrieve the firmware version of the base 152 - GIGVER_FWBASE: retrieve the firmware version of the base
153 Upon return, version[] is filled with the requested version information. 153 Upon return, version[] is filled with the requested version information.
154 154
1552.3. ISDN4linux 1552.3. CAPI
156 ----------
157 This is the "normal" mode of operation. After loading the module you can
158 set up the ISDN system just as you'd do with any ISDN card supported by
159 the ISDN4Linux subsystem. Most distributions provide some configuration
160 utility. If not, you can use some HOWTOs like
161 http://www.linuxhaven.de/dlhp/HOWTO/DE-ISDN-HOWTO-5.html
162 If this doesn't work, because you have some device like SX100 where
163 debug output (see section 3.2.) shows something like this when dialing
164 CMD Received: ERROR
165 Available Params: 0
166 Connection State: 0, Response: -1
167 gigaset_process_response: resp_code -1 in ConState 0 !
168 Timeout occurred
169 you probably need to use unimodem mode. (see section 2.5.)
170
1712.4. CAPI
172 ---- 156 ----
173 If the driver is compiled with CAPI support (kernel configuration option 157 If the driver is compiled with CAPI support (kernel configuration option
174 GIGASET_CAPI, experimental) it can also be used with CAPI 2.0 kernel and 158 GIGASET_CAPI) the devices will show up as CAPI controllers as soon as the
175 user space applications. For user space access, the module capi.ko must 159 corresponding driver module is loaded, and can then be used with CAPI 2.0
176 be loaded. The capiinit command (included in the capi4k-utils package) 160 kernel and user space applications. For user space access, the module
177 does this for you. 161 capi.ko must be loaded.
178 162
179 The CAPI variant of the driver supports legacy ISDN4Linux applications 163 Legacy ISDN4Linux applications are supported via the capidrv
180 via the capidrv compatibility driver. The kernel module capidrv.ko must 164 compatibility driver. The kernel module capidrv.ko must be loaded
181 be loaded explicitly with the command 165 explicitly with the command
182 modprobe capidrv 166 modprobe capidrv
183 if needed, and cannot be unloaded again without unloading the driver 167 if needed, and cannot be unloaded again without unloading the driver
184 first. (These are limitations of capidrv.) 168 first. (These are limitations of capidrv.)
185 169
186 The note about unimodem mode in the preceding section applies here, too. 170 Most distributions handle loading and unloading of the various CAPI
187 171 modules automatically via the command capiinit(1) from the capi4k-utils
1882.5. Unimodem mode 172 package or a similar mechanism. Note that capiinit(1) cannot unload the
189 ------------- 173 Gigaset drivers because it doesn't support more than one module per
190 This is needed for some devices [e.g. SX100] as they have problems with 174 driver.
191 the "normal" commands.
192 175
193 If you have installed the command line tool gigacontr, you can enter 1762.4. ISDN4Linux
194 unimodem mode using 177 ----------
195 gigacontr --mode unimodem 178 If the driver is compiled without CAPI support (native ISDN4Linux
196 You can switch back using 179 variant), it registers the device with the legacy ISDN4Linux subsystem
197 gigacontr --mode isdn 180 after loading the module. It can then be used with ISDN4Linux
181 applications only. Most distributions provide some configuration utility
182 for setting up that subsystem. Otherwise you can use some HOWTOs like
183 http://www.linuxhaven.de/dlhp/HOWTO/DE-ISDN-HOWTO-5.html
198 184
199 You can also put the driver directly into Unimodem mode when it's loaded,
200 by passing the module parameter startmode=0 to the hardware specific
201 module, e.g.
202 modprobe usb_gigaset startmode=0
203 or by adding a line like
204 options usb_gigaset startmode=0
205 to an appropriate module configuration file, like /etc/modprobe.d/gigaset
206 or /etc/modprobe.conf.local.
207 185
1862.5. Unimodem mode
187 -------------
208 In this mode the device works like a modem connected to a serial port 188 In this mode the device works like a modem connected to a serial port
209 (the /dev/ttyGU0, ... mentioned above) which understands the commands 189 (the /dev/ttyGU0, ... mentioned above) which understands the commands
190
210 ATZ init, reset 191 ATZ init, reset
211 => OK or ERROR 192 => OK or ERROR
212 ATD 193 ATD
@@ -234,6 +215,31 @@ GigaSet 307x Device Driver
234 to an appropriate module configuration file, like /etc/modprobe.d/gigaset 215 to an appropriate module configuration file, like /etc/modprobe.d/gigaset
235 or /etc/modprobe.conf.local. 216 or /etc/modprobe.conf.local.
236 217
218 Unimodem mode is needed for making some devices [e.g. SX100] work which
219 do not support the regular Gigaset command set. If debug output (see
220 section 3.2.) shows something like this when dialing:
221 CMD Received: ERROR
222 Available Params: 0
223 Connection State: 0, Response: -1
224 gigaset_process_response: resp_code -1 in ConState 0 !
225 Timeout occurred
226 then switching to unimodem mode may help.
227
228 If you have installed the command line tool gigacontr, you can enter
229 unimodem mode using
230 gigacontr --mode unimodem
231 You can switch back using
232 gigacontr --mode isdn
233
234 You can also put the driver directly into Unimodem mode when it's loaded,
235 by passing the module parameter startmode=0 to the hardware specific
236 module, e.g.
237 modprobe usb_gigaset startmode=0
238 or by adding a line like
239 options usb_gigaset startmode=0
240 to an appropriate module configuration file, like /etc/modprobe.d/gigaset
241 or /etc/modprobe.conf.local.
242
2372.6. Call-ID (CID) mode 2432.6. Call-ID (CID) mode
238 ------------------ 244 ------------------
239 Call-IDs are numbers used to tag commands to, and responses from, the 245 Call-IDs are numbers used to tag commands to, and responses from, the