Difference between revisions of "How to make use of IrDA"
(→ISA PnP patch) |
(→ISA PnP patch) |
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setpnp requires a kernel with PNP-BIOS support compiled in, which the {{Redhat}} and {{Fedora}} kernels lack. Even if your distribution does enable PNP-BIOS support, ACPI-PNP will disable it. | setpnp requires a kernel with PNP-BIOS support compiled in, which the {{Redhat}} and {{Fedora}} kernels lack. Even if your distribution does enable PNP-BIOS support, ACPI-PNP will disable it. | ||
− | === ISA PnP | + | === ISA PnP Support === |
− | + | Starting with the 2.6.17-rc1 kernel, the nsc-ircc driver has ISA PnP support, and seperate patching is no longer required. | |
− | 2.6 kernel | + | |
+ | If you have an older 2.6 kernel, here are some patches, that allow the loading of the driver without the BIOS, setpnp or tpctl hacks.<br /> | ||
You will still have to call setserial and set the dongle_id parameter, as shown below. | You will still have to call setserial and set the dongle_id parameter, as shown below. | ||
* [http://steffenpingel.de/patches/nsc-ircc-pnp.diff 2.6.10 patch] | * [http://steffenpingel.de/patches/nsc-ircc-pnp.diff 2.6.10 patch] | ||
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This patch seems '''necessary''' in some cases (e.g., ThinkPad {{T43}} and kernel 2.6.14 and 2.6.15). | This patch seems '''necessary''' in some cases (e.g., ThinkPad {{T43}} and kernel 2.6.14 and 2.6.15). | ||
− | |||
− | |||
===Kernel configuration=== | ===Kernel configuration=== |
Revision as of 23:07, 4 April 2006
The purpose of this document is to get the IrDA hardware in your ThinkPad operational, setting up communication to other devices is not covered. However, the external links section can prove useful for this. |
Serial IR (SIR)
SIR is limited to serial datarates up to 115.2Kb/s
Kernel configuration
Linux 2.4 kernel config
Edit /etc/modules.conf and add the following lines
alias tty-ldisc-11 irtty alias char-major-161 ircomm-tty
Linux 2.6 kernel config
Edit /etc/modprobe.conf and add the following lines
alias tty-ldisc-11 irtty-sir alias char-major-161 ircomm-tty
Fast IR (FIR)
FIR is the preferred mode of IrDA operation and operates at a bandwidth of 4 Mbps
BIOS settings
Main problem here is that the chips FIR mode needs to be activated. On most ThinkPads, the easiest way to activate FIR mode is by entering BIOS setup during boot-up by pressing F1 when prompted. Then, selecting 'Config' followed by 'Infrared' will allow you to control the IrDA operation. Here you will need to select the option to Enable the infra-red port, and ensure the proper resources are set (typically: IO 0x2f8 and IRQ 3). Be sure to save the changes, and then Exit.
PnP settings from Linux
If changing the BIOS setting is not an option or if the settings cannot be altered, as on some older ThinkPads, the FIR mode can be activated from Linux with one of the following (this needs to be done on every boot):
- setpnp as part of the old pcmcia-utils source package
- tpctl, but only for some old ThinkPads
setpnp requires a kernel with PNP-BIOS support compiled in, which the Red Hat and Fedora kernels lack. Even if your distribution does enable PNP-BIOS support, ACPI-PNP will disable it.
ISA PnP Support
Starting with the 2.6.17-rc1 kernel, the nsc-ircc driver has ISA PnP support, and seperate patching is no longer required.
If you have an older 2.6 kernel, here are some patches, that allow the loading of the driver without the BIOS, setpnp or tpctl hacks.
You will still have to call setserial and set the dongle_id parameter, as shown below.
- 2.6.10 patch
- 2.6.12-rc6 patch
- 2.6.12 patch (applies cleanly to 2.6.12 through 2.6.15)
- patches as accepted upstream for 2.6.17 (2.6.16-git15): nsc-ircc.cand nsc-ircc.h
This patch seems necessary in some cases (e.g., ThinkPad T43 and kernel 2.6.14 and 2.6.15).
Kernel configuration
Linux 2.4 kernel config
Edit /etc/modules.conf and add the following lines
alias irda0 nsc-ircc options nsc-ircc dongle_id=0x09 io=0x2f8 irq=3 dma=3 pre-install nsc-ircc setserial /dev/ttyS1 uart none port 0 irq 0
Linux 2.6 kernel config
Edit /etc/modprobe.conf and add the following lines
alias irda0 nsc-ircc options nsc-ircc dongle_id=0x09 io=0x2f8 irq=3 dma=3 install nsc-ircc /bin/setserial /dev/ttyS1 uart none port 0 irq 0; /sbin/modprobe --ignore-install nsc-ircc
The install line is a work-around for the 8250 serial driver taking over the device, and may not be needed in certain distributions.
Gentoo kernel config
Edit / Create /etc/modules.d/nsc-irrc and add the following lines
alias irda0 nsc-ircc options nsc-ircc dongle_id=0x09 io=0x2f8 irq=3 dma=3
Edit /etc/modules.autoload.d/kernel-2.6 and add the following lines
nsc-ircc
If you have serial support build in the kernel, switch it to a module and add it after nsc-ircc to advoid io base and irq conflict. For kernel 2.4, same as 2.6 changing the path to modules.autoload.d/kernel-2.4.
Debian Sarge/Etch kernel config
Install irda-utils and set it up for serial port emulation. Edit /etc/modprobe.d/irda-utils and add/change the following lines:
alias irda0 nsc-ircc options nsc-ircc dongle_id=0x09 io=0x2f8 irq=3 dma=3
Edit / create /etc/modules.conf and add the following line before any references to 8250*, if any:
nsc-ircc
Make sure that module-init-tools has a chance to iterate over /etc/modules.conf before udev does the initial pci hotplug (this is a problem at least in Debian Sarge, when using backported udev packages):
# cp /etc/rcS.d/S20module-init-tools /etc/rcS.d/S03module-init-tools
Note that at S03, module-init-tools cannot run depmod for you, so either do it manually before you reboot into a new kernel, or reboot twice to get it to work right. This is also the reason for using cp instead of mv.
If you have the regular serial port drivers as modules, that's it. Otherwise, try adding the install line described in the Linux 2.6 kernel config section, above, or compile them as modules instead of built-in.
Known problems
- If the FIR mode is not activated, attempts to load the nsc-ircc module will result in an error in syslog of "Wrong chip version ff".
- After suspend the nsc-ircc module needs to be manually reloaded
- If module reloading does not work after a suspend, try reactivating the IrDA port as well:
rmmod nsc_ircc echo disable > /sys/devices/pnp0/00\:0d/resources echo activate > /sys/devices/pnp0/00\:0d/resources modprobe nsc_ircc
- The value pnp0/00\:0d can vary - look for a resources file containing the appropriate irq/dma/io values, e.g., using
# grep 0x2f8 /sys/devices/pnp*/*/resources
.
Some other things you might want to do with IrDA
- add fast PPP support:
# modprobe irnet
- if needed, limit further the size of the transmit window
# echo 1 > /proc/sys/net/irda/max_tx_window
LIRC and IrDA
Usually, IrDA port's are not compatible with LIRC, but you may have luck using lirc_sir.
If loading the lirc_sir module shows something like the following in # dmesg
output, you are lucky and can use LIRC with the IrDA port to remote control your ThinkPad.
lirc_sir: I/O port 0x02f8, IRQ 3. lirc_sir: Installed.
External Sources
- Linux-IrDA Project (External)
- Linux PCMCIA Project (External)
- tpctl homepage (External)
- Linux Infrared Remote Control (External)