Hello, Werner.

First, thank you for putting together the Infrared HOWTO.

I read it over the weekend, and tried everything in it. (I wasn't kidding.) I tried 
both FIR and SIR. Sometimes (but not always) I could see irdadump output, but never 
did the packets pass through the infrared port.

My attempt to install another Linux OS on some free space was an unmitigated disaster. 
Mandrake's partition program munged the partition table. I thought I might be able to 
save something, but I spent the second half of the night and most of the day today 
rebuilding my Debian system.

Sometime during the night it occurred to me to check Dell's web site for BIOS updates. 
There have been several since I bought the laptop, so I flashed the latest BIOS before 
I began installing Woody. When debconf asked me about irda, I sat up straight and put 
my Palm near the IR port. The Palm saw the light, bright and strong! (This with kernel 
2.2.19.)

Unfortunately when I got a 2.4 kernel up I was again unable to make IR work.

So now I'm way back before square one. :)

-- 
Kevin McKinley



On Tue, 28 May 2002 09:05:26 +0200
Werner Heuser <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> ...
> > In /etc/irda.conf I've tried /dev/ircomm0, /dev/ircomm1, /dev/ttyS0-4, and irda0 
>as the IR device.
> ...
> 
> Hi,
> 
> there are two different methods for IrDA support: SIR and FIR.
> 
> First you should try SIR: IrDA via serial port emulation.
> Therefore an (additional) tty has to show up during startup.
> Do a `dmesg | grep tty' and check whether there is a tty
> additional to the serial port (if your notebook has one).
> The BIOS should enable SIR or Standard IrDA therefore.
> 
> If this doesn't work, try FIR. Check the IrDA chip
> used in your notebook with `findchip -v'.
> 
> Details you may find in the InfraRed-HOWTO
> http://mobilix.org/howtos.html
> 
> Werner


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