Airprime Driver For Mac

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Using the AirPrime 5220 1xEV-DO card on Linux Using the Verizon Wireless AirPrime 5220 1xEV-DO Card With Linux Phil Karn has recently begun to deploy the -developed wireless internet service, which they market as. It was first deployed in San Diego and Washington, DC, and on January 9, 2004 Verizon to roll it out nationwide. As of September 2004, I know of one additional city: Las Vegas, NV; Verizon doesn't seem to be announcing specific cities in advance. At present (September 2004), the is the only device available for this service. Verizon officially supports it only on Microsoft Windows, and Apple has a driver for. Fortunately, it isn't hard to get it working on Linux. (Note: AirPrime was acquired by in the summer of 2003).

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Initialization and Setup When you first get the card, you should first set it up on a Windows machine with the supplied software. Once the service has been activated, you can use it on Linux. You won't be able to use the fancy 'connection manager' software supplied with the card, but you can connect to the Internet. And that's all that really counts! Card Architecture It may help to know what's actually inside the 5220 card. It contains a mobile station modem chip that implements the actual 1xEV-DO functionality.

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This chip has a native USB 1.1 interface that emulates two USB serial ports. The first provides a classic serial modem interface that accepts AT commands and PPP data. The second is reserved for diagnostics and is unused.

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To package this chip in a PC Card, AirPrime added a Lucent OHCI (Compaq-style) USB 1.1 host controller and a Cardbus interface. The MSM is hardwired to the USB host controller as its only slave device. The 5220 card cannot make voice calls. Several other features of the MSM 5500 are also unavailable.

To get the card going on Linux, you first must install the Linux driver for the OHCI USB host adapter and then a Linux USB driver for the MSM itself. Finally, the Linux point-to-point protocol daemon pppd can be configured to place calls over the MSM's virtual serial port. Checking The Card If you don't already have PCMCIA/Cardbus support on your Linux laptop, turn it on. When you insert the card, it will appear (like any Cardbus device) as a PCI device. Here is how the card appears on an IBM Thinkpad T23 running the 2.4.24 kernel: # lspci -vv -s06:00.0 06:00.0 USB Controller: Lucent Microelectronics USS-312 USB Controller (rev 10) (prog-if 10 OHCI) Subsystem: Lucent Microelectronics USS-312 USB Controller Control: I/O- Mem+ BusMaster- SpecCycle- MemWINV- VGASnoop- ParErr- Stepping- SERR- FastB2B- Status: Cap+ 66Mhz- UDF- FastB2B- ParErr- DEVSEL=medium TAbort- SERR- # Installing the USB Host Adapter Driver The Lucent OHCI USB host controller in the 5220 card is supported by the stock Linux usb-ohci driver.

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So your first step is to build and install this driver if you don't already have it on your system. Ensure that your Linux kernel.config file contains either CONFIGUSBOHCI=m or CONFIGUSBOHCI=y. I personally prefer to build my drivers as modules ( CONFIGUSBOHCI=m), as that's more flexible than hardwiring them into the kernel.

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If you configure the OHCI driver as a module, you can either set up the Linux hotplug subsystem to load it on demand when this card is inserted or you can append usb-ohci to /etc/modules so that it will be loaded at boot time. Since changes to /etc/modules require a reboot to take effect, you can avoid a reboot by also manually installing the module into your running kernel with the command modprobe usb-ohci. Note that you will need to be root both to edit /etc/modules and to run the modprobe command.