| September 21, 1999 |
| |
| Copyright (c) 1998 Corey Thomas (corey@world.std.com) |
| |
| This file is the documentation for the Raylink Wireless LAN card driver for |
| Linux. The Raylink wireless LAN card is a PCMCIA card which provides IEEE |
| 802.11 compatible wireless network connectivity at 1 and 2 megabits/second. |
| See http://www.raytheon.com/micro/raylink/ for more information on the Raylink |
| card. This driver is in early development and does have bugs. See the known |
| bugs and limitations at the end of this document for more information. |
| This driver also works with WebGear's Aviator 2.4 and Aviator Pro |
| wireless LAN cards. |
| |
| As of kernel 2.3.18, the ray_cs driver is part of the Linux kernel |
| source. My web page for the development of ray_cs is at |
| http://world.std.com/~corey/raylink.html and I can be emailed at |
| corey@world.std.com |
| |
| The kernel driver is based on ray_cs-1.62.tgz |
| |
| The driver at my web page is intended to be used as an add on to |
| David Hinds pcmcia package. All the command line parameters are |
| available when compiled as a module. When built into the kernel, only |
| the essid= string parameter is available via the kernel command line. |
| This will change after the method of sorting out parameters for all |
| the PCMCIA drivers is agreed upon. If you must have a built in driver |
| with nondefault parameters, they can be edited in |
| /usr/src/linux/drivers/net/pcmcia/ray_cs.c. Searching for module_param |
| will find them all. |
| |
| Information on card services is available at: |
| http://pcmcia-cs.sourceforge.net/ |
| |
| |
| Card services user programs are still required for PCMCIA devices. |
| pcmcia-cs-3.1.1 or greater is required for the kernel version of |
| the driver. |
| |
| Currently, ray_cs is not part of David Hinds card services package, |
| so the following magic is required. |
| |
| At the end of the /etc/pcmcia/config.opts file, add the line: |
| source ./ray_cs.opts |
| This will make card services read the ray_cs.opts file |
| when starting. Create the file /etc/pcmcia/ray_cs.opts containing the |
| following: |
| |
| #### start of /etc/pcmcia/ray_cs.opts ################### |
| # Configuration options for Raylink Wireless LAN PCMCIA card |
| device "ray_cs" |
| class "network" module "misc/ray_cs" |
| |
| card "RayLink PC Card WLAN Adapter" |
| manfid 0x01a6, 0x0000 |
| bind "ray_cs" |
| |
| module "misc/ray_cs" opts "" |
| #### end of /etc/pcmcia/ray_cs.opts ##################### |
| |
| |
| To join an existing network with |
| different parameters, contact the network administrator for the |
| configuration information, and edit /etc/pcmcia/ray_cs.opts. |
| Add the parameters below between the empty quotes. |
| |
| Parameters for ray_cs driver which may be specified in ray_cs.opts: |
| |
| bc integer 0 = normal mode (802.11 timing) |
| 1 = slow down inter frame timing to allow |
| operation with older breezecom access |
| points. |
| |
| beacon_period integer beacon period in Kilo-microseconds |
| legal values = must be integer multiple |
| of hop dwell |
| default = 256 |
| |
| country integer 1 = USA (default) |
| 2 = Europe |
| 3 = Japan |
| 4 = Korea |
| 5 = Spain |
| 6 = France |
| 7 = Israel |
| 8 = Australia |
| |
| essid string ESS ID - network name to join |
| string with maximum length of 32 chars |
| default value = "ADHOC_ESSID" |
| |
| hop_dwell integer hop dwell time in Kilo-microseconds |
| legal values = 16,32,64,128(default),256 |
| |
| irq_mask integer linux standard 16 bit value 1bit/IRQ |
| lsb is IRQ 0, bit 1 is IRQ 1 etc. |
| Used to restrict choice of IRQ's to use. |
| Recommended method for controlling |
| interrupts is in /etc/pcmcia/config.opts |
| |
| net_type integer 0 (default) = adhoc network, |
| 1 = infrastructure |
| |
| phy_addr string string containing new MAC address in |
| hex, must start with x eg |
| x00008f123456 |
| |
| psm integer 0 = continuously active |
| 1 = power save mode (not useful yet) |
| |
| pc_debug integer (0-5) larger values for more verbose |
| logging. Replaces ray_debug. |
| |
| ray_debug integer Replaced with pc_debug |
| |
| ray_mem_speed integer defaults to 500 |
| |
| sniffer integer 0 = not sniffer (default) |
| 1 = sniffer which can be used to record all |
| network traffic using tcpdump or similar, |
| but no normal network use is allowed. |
| |
| translate integer 0 = no translation (encapsulate frames) |
| 1 = translation (RFC1042/802.1) |
| |
| |
| More on sniffer mode: |
| |
| tcpdump does not understand 802.11 headers, so it can't |
| interpret the contents, but it can record to a file. This is only |
| useful for debugging 802.11 lowlevel protocols that are not visible to |
| linux. If you want to watch ftp xfers, or do similar things, you |
| don't need to use sniffer mode. Also, some packet types are never |
| sent up by the card, so you will never see them (ack, rts, cts, probe |
| etc.) There is a simple program (showcap) included in the ray_cs |
| package which parses the 802.11 headers. |
| |
| Known Problems and missing features |
| |
| Does not work with non x86 |
| |
| Does not work with SMP |
| |
| Support for defragmenting frames is not yet debugged, and in |
| fact is known to not work. I have never encountered a net set |
| up to fragment, but still, it should be fixed. |
| |
| The ioctl support is incomplete. The hardware address cannot be set |
| using ifconfig yet. If a different hardware address is needed, it may |
| be set using the phy_addr parameter in ray_cs.opts. This requires |
| a card insertion to take effect. |