linux/Documentation/networking/ray_cs.txt

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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.