LINUX.IE, website of the Irish Linux Users' Group
Tux rules!

   
Home
New Users
Articles
Download
Projects
Community
Vendors

  Print Version
Email to...
 
Archives:


planetILUG

Recent News

News Archive


Join the
ILUG
on FaceBook


Join the
ILUG
on LinkedIn


Join the
ILUG SETI
Group



















 
 :: Mailing Lists

[ILUG] GPRS access via bluetooth on o2

[ILUG] GPRS access via bluetooth on o2

Timothy Murphy tim at birdsnest.maths.tcd.ie
Mon Jul 5 13:09:54 IST 2004


On Monday 05 July 2004 11:05, Keith Davey wrote:

> In case anyone is interested, I managed to connect via gprs on o2 over
> bluetooth from Fedora Core 2.

Your method is more or less exactly what I do.
Just a couple of comments.

(1) I think you have to contact O2 to get GPRS set up.
This doesn't cost anything.

> However, here is my /etc/ppp/peers/gprs2 script:
>
> /dev/rfcomm0 57600
> connect '/usr/sbin/chat -v -f /etc/ppp/chat-gprs2'
> noauth
> defaultroute
> debug

(2) For comparison, here is mine.
I cannot remember why I added all these lines -
they are probably completely unnecessary,

rfcomm0 115200 crtscts
connect '/usr/sbin/chat -v -f /etc/ppp/O2.chat'
debug
modem
lock
receive-all
nodetach
noipdefault
defaultroute
user gprs
password gprs
usepeerdns
nobsdcomp
nodeflate
logfile "/home/tim/ppp.log"
noauth

> And here is the /etc/ppp/chat-gprs2:
>
> TIMEOUT         5
> ECHO            ON
> ABORT           '\nBUSY\r'
> ABORT           '\nERROR\r'
> ABORT           '\nNO ANSWER\r'
> ABORT           '\nNO DIALTONE\r'
> ABORT           '\nRINGING\r\n\r\nRINGING\r'
> ''              \rAT
> TIMEOUT         30
> OK              ATE1
> OK              AT+cgdcont=1,"IP","open.internet"
> OK              ATD*99***1#
>
> These settings work for O2 anyway.

(3) Mine reads

TIMEOUT         5
ABORT           '\nBUSY\r'
ABORT           '\nERROR\r'
ABORT           '\nNO ANSWER\r'
ABORT           '\nNO CARRIER\r'
ABORT           '\nNO DIALTONE\r'
ABORT           '\nRINGING\r\n\r\nRINGING\r'
''              \rAT
TIMEOUT         30
OK              ATH
OK              ATE0
OK              ATV1
OK              'AT+CGDCONT=1,"IP","open.internet","",0,0'
OK              'ATD*99#\r\n'
CONNECT-ATD*99#\r\n-CONNECT             ""

Again, I doubt if the differences matter.
For some reason, half the time I try to connect I get "CONNECT"
and the other half I get "OK";
that's why I try twice (if necessary).

I say (as root) "pppd debug call O2".
This gives a large amount of debug info in /var/log/messages and elsewhere.

> GPRS is billed per meg, so you can stay connected all day, just don't do
> any big downloads.

(4) I'm not sure if this is good advice.
I left mine connected for a couple of hours one day,
and I received a lot of packets, I don't know why.

(5) There is a program GPRS_Easy_Connect (from Hungary)
- you can find it if you google for "GPRS Easy Connect" -
which has settings for all the telecoms round the world,
The program is meant to connect you automatically,
but I prefer your method.

(6) The connection is really slow.
I wonder if it is any faster than just using the phone to dial in?

(7) You probably should have mentioned the Bluez site
<http://sourceforge.net/projects/bluez>
as there is a lot of info there.

Also there are quite a lot of preliminary steps
to get Bluetooth running on the computer
(eg "chkconfig bluetooth on" or "service bluetooth start",
as well as a few settings in modprobe.conf .)


-- 
Timothy Murphy  
e-mail (<80k only): tim /at/ birdsnest.maths.tcd.ie
tel: +353-86-2336090, +353-1-2842366
s-mail: School of Mathematics, Trinity College, Dublin 2, Ireland



More information about the ILUG mailing list
Read this without the formatting.
                                                                                                    

 

Hosted by HEAnet


Maintained by the ILUG website team. The aim of Linux.ie is to support and help commercial and private users of Linux in Ireland. You can display ILUG news in your own webpages, read backend information to find out how. Networking services kindly provided by HEAnet, server kindly donated by Dell. Linux is a trademark of Linus Torvalds, used with permission. No penguins were harmed in the production or maintenance of this highly praised website. Looking for the Indian Linux Users' Group? Try here. If you've read all this and aren't a lawyer: you should be!
RSS Version
Powered by Dell