On Tue, 19 Aug 2003, Don Lewis wrote: > On 19 Aug, Lars Eighner wrote: > > This has been answered by somebody on some forum, but I lost it.
> If you manually dial using cu or tip, what connection speed does the > modem report? Oh geez, pull out the manual and spend all night trying to figure out how to config cu or tip, whatever they are! > > BAUD=9600 PARITY=N WORDLEN=8 > > DIAL=TONE ON HOOK CID=0 > It is somewhat worrysome that your modem is reporting 9600 BAUD in the > fixed DTE speed setting. I don't know about USR Internal modems, but at > least some implementations will pace the data flow rate to the reported > DTE speed to avoid overwhelming the host with quick bursts of > interrupts. This might be the reason for your slow connection speeds. Hmmm. Of course this is "on hook." I obtained these values using minicom. I don't know how to talk to the modem when it is connected to somewhere, or more to the point how to query it. I assumed the 9600 here was just the default for talking to the serial port, not the pass-through. > It's been a while since I've used the proper incantation to reset the > speed on a USR modem, but I think with a serial modem, the procedure was > to connect to the modem, repeatedly type AT to get its attention, put it > in variable speed mode, reconnect at the desired speed, and set &B1 to > get it back to fixed rate. Probably something similar will work with an > internal modem. The modem will probably peek at the UART speed control > register to pick up the desired DTE rate and save it to its non-volatile > memory. -- Lars Eighner [EMAIL PROTECTED] -finger for geek code- http://www.io.com/~eighner/index.html 8800 N IH35 APT 1191 AUSTIN tx 78753-5266 _______________________________________________ [EMAIL PROTECTED] mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-hackers To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"