John Hasler wrote -
> Martin Bialasinski writes:
> > What I mean is that you shouldn't send the \d.
> He isn't sending \d. To chat '\d' means pause one second. Some ISP's get
> confused if chat exits and lets pppd start sending packets before they
> finish authenticating. The pause gives them ti
Martin Bialasinski writes:
> What I mean is that you shouldn't send the \d.
He isn't sending \d. To chat '\d' means pause one second. Some ISP's get
confused if chat exits and lets pppd start sending packets before they
finish authenticating. The pause gives them time to get their act
together.
>> "MB" == Martin Bialasinski <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>> "SC" == Sudhakar Chandrasekharan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
SC> Oct 3 09:26:08 cabrio chat[1127]: Password:
SC> Oct 3 09:26:08 cabrio chat[1127]: -- got it
SC> Oct 3 09:26:08 cabrio chat[1127]: send (??)
SC> Oct 3 09:26:08 ca
>> "SC" == Sudhakar Chandrasekharan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
SC> Oct 3 09:26:08 cabrio chat[1127]: Password:
SC> Oct 3 09:26:08 cabrio chat[1127]: -- got it
SC> Oct 3 09:26:08 cabrio chat[1127]: send (??)
SC> Oct 3 09:26:08 cabrio chat[1127]: send (\d)
Make you r last line in the ch
Guess what I'm saying is just garbage,
but sincerely garbage anyway ;-)
I'd been sticked on such LCP fail and other PPP troubles for
nearly one month when installing my first Linux
distribution, which is Slackware 3.4.
And finally I got through by setserial /dev/modem irq
as the same as what I set
5 matches
Mail list logo