On Fri, 2006-08-25 at 07:01 +0530, Puneit Singh wrote:
Hello I have a bluetooth enabled nokia phone which can be used to connect to internet by using Bluetooth Dial up networking service. In order to do that, I should be able to add the Nokia bluetooth modem in SUSE 10.1 (Using KDE) How do I do it
Until the phone company brings my adsl line, that's what I'm doing. You need two files: /etc/ppp/peers/gprs: # $Id: gprs,v 1.4 2004/04/28 08:40:32 mcfrisk Exp $ # # File: # gprs # # Description: # Serial cable, IrDA, Bluetooth and USB pppd options for GPRS phones. # See 'man pppd' for detailed option descriptions. # Most GPRS phones don't reply to LCP echo's #lcp-echo-failure 0 #lcp-echo-interval 0 lcp-max-configure 20 lcp-max-failure 20 # Keep pppd attached to the terminal: # Comment this to get daemon mode pppd nodetach # Debug info from pppd: # Comment this off, if you don't need more info passive debug debug debug debug # Show password in debug messages show-password # Connect script: # scripts to initialize the GPRS modem and start the connection, # wvdial command is for Orange SPV while other phones should work with chat #connect /etc/ppp/peers/gprs-connect-chat connect '/usr/sbin/chat -v -f /etc/ppp/peers/chatscript-gprs' #connect "/usr/bin/wvdial --chat --config /etc/ppp/peers/gprs-wvdial.conf radiolinja_usb_orange_spv" # Disconnect script: # AT commands used to 'hangup' the GPRS connection. #disconnect /etc/ppp/peers/gprs-disconnect-chat # Serial device to which the GPRS phone is connected: # /dev/ttyS0 for serial port (COM1 in Windows), # /dev/ircomm0 for IrDA, # /dev/ttyUB0 for Bluetooth (Bluez with rfcomm running) and # /dev/ttyUSB0 for USB #/dev/ttyS0 # serial port one #/dev/ttyS1 # serial port two #/dev/ircomm0 # IrDA serial port one /dev/rfcomm0 # Bluetooth serial port one #/dev/ttyUSB0 # USB serial device, for example Orange SPV # Serial port line speed 115200 # fast enough #57600 # perhaps usefull with IrDA as some phones don't like # speeds higher than this # Hardware flow control: # Use hardware flow control with cable, Bluetooth and USB but not with IrDA. crtscts # serial cable, Bluetooth and USB, on some occations with IrDA too #nocrtscts # IrDA # Ignore carrier detect signal from the modem: #local +pap # IP addresses: # - accept peers idea of our local address and set address peer as 10.0.0.1 # (any address would do, since IPCP gives 0.0.0.0 to it) # - if you use the 10. network at home or something and pppd rejects it, # change the address to something else #:10.0.0.1 # pppd must not propose any IP address to the peer! noipdefault # Accept peers idea of our local address ipcp-accept-local # Add the ppp interface as default route to the IP routing table defaultroute # Newer pppd's also support replacing the default route, if one is # already present, when the GPRS connetion should be set as the default route # to the network #replacedefaultroute # DNS servers from the phone: # some phones support this, some don't. #usepeerdns # ppp compression: # ppp compression may be used between the phone and the pppd, but the # serial connection is usually not the bottleneck in GPRS, so the # compression is useless (and with some phones need to disabled before # the LCP negotiations succeed). novj nobsdcomp novjccomp nopcomp noaccomp # The phone is not required to authenticate: noauth # Username and password: # If username and password are required by the APN, put here the username # and put the username-password combination to the secrets file: # /etc/ppp/pap-secrets for PAP and /etc/ppp/chap-secrets for CHAP # authentication. See pppd man pages for details. # Example, Radiolinja operator pap-secrets: # "rlnet" * "internet" * #user "rlnet" #user None # The persist tries to reopen the connection if it is dropped. This # is usefull for example with a Nokia 7650 which only manages to # 'dial' with every second attempt or when the network likes to drop the # connection every now and then. It's not fun when the over-night # 'apt-get dist-upgrade -d -y' fails constantly... #persist #maxfail 99 # Asyncmap: # some phones may require this option. #asyncmap 0xa0000 # No magic: # some phones may require this option. #nomagic # Require PAP authentication: # some phones may require this option. #require-pap and /etc/ppp/peers/chatscript-gprs - this is a bit more tricky because it contains settings specific to your provider. The AT commands might differ slightly. Mine looks like this: TIMEOUT 12 "" ATZ OK ATH OK ATE1 OK 'AT+CBST=0,0,1;+CHSN=0,0,0,0;+CGDCONT=,,"internet"' OK ATD*99***1# TIMEOUT 22 CONNECT "" Now, open two consoles. In one type: rfcomm connect rfcomm0 to create a link via bluetooth to your phone, and then in a second console: pppd call gprs. Mine doesn't pick up DNS settings from the phone company, so I have to edit /etc/resolv.conf manually. Hope this helps. If anyone knows how to Yast-ify this, please let me know. The modem module has space for AT commands, but only three lines. Hans