modprobe
brad.mugleston at comcast.net
brad.mugleston at comcast.net
Wed Dec 8 05:10:31 UTC 2004
I know I'm suppose to bottom post but I'm kind of starting over.
1 - cleaned out all ndiswrapper (reversed everything).
2 - using UP2DATE upgraded to the newest kernel and source
3 - found an RPM that is suppose to fix the 4K limit
4 - make my symbolic link to the new kernel as instructed (I've
been doing reboots to make sure the latest is running)
5 - got up to make install and got a warning about being unable
to do something with variable get_user_size - being a warning I
took note.
6 - got to the mdoprobe ndiswrapper step and got an error about
get_user_size and there I sit.
SUggestions? I checked the FAQ and didn't see this I will do
more of a search when my grandson falls asleep (need more light
in the room).
Thanks,
Brad
On Mon, 6 Dec 2004, Rick Stevens wrote:
> Mark Knecht wrote:
> > On Sat, 4 Dec 2004 23:52:19 -0700 (MST), brad.mugleston at comcast.net
> > <brad.mugleston at comcast.net> wrote:
> >
> >>ok, I downloaded and built my own kernel package. Went through
> >>everything as before and got to "modprobe ndiswrapper" which
> >>worked this time (one more step done) Looked in the system log
> >>and didn't find the message about ndiswrapper being loaded.
> >>
> >>I had gotten the warning that I only had a 4k stack size and I
> >>may have problems - it didn't lock up or anything like it said it
> >>just didn't work.
> >>
> >>So I have two questions
> >>
> >>1 - any good instructions on how to get the stack size larger?
> >
> >
> > Not that I know of. I thought it might be a kernel config option but I
> > can't find it this morning.
>
> You must rebuild the kernel to go back to the old 8K stack size. There
> is no other way to do it. ndiswrapper >0.80 works fine with a 4K stack.
>
> >>2 - I've read the install instructions a number of times and each
> >>time I find something else I probably need to do. It says to
> >>make sure I have the "Wireless Tools" installed. What are those
> >>and how do I tell if I have them installed. If they aren't
> >>installed where do I get them to install them?
> >
> >
> > Here's one link. Sorry this isn't easier on FC. It's trivial on Gentoo.
> >
> > http://www.hpl.hp.com/personal/Jean_Tourrilhes/Linux/Tools.html
>
> ndiswrapper is not a difficult thing to build or install. There are
> several prerequisites:
>
> 1. You MUST have the kernel source installed for the kernel you are
> planning to have the driver run on.
>
> 2. You must be RUNNING that kernel before you build ndiswrapper. The
> Makefile for ndiswraper does a "uname -r" to see which kernel to build
> for (or you can bugger the Makefile to make it use the one you want).
>
> 3. You must have the gone through at least the equivalent of "make
> config" on the kernel source to configure it for your usage. This
> can be done by copying the appropriate config file from /boot and
> to the kernel source directory's ".config" file and executing "make
> oldconfig".
>
> 4. You can then build ndiswrapper. Don't forget to do "make install".
> You will find the driver installed as
>
> /lib/modules/`uname -r`/kernel/misc/ndiswrapper.ko
>
> 5. Now it's installed. You can follow the rest of the instructions in
> the README/INSTALL files.
> ----------------------------------------------------------------------
> - Rick Stevens, Senior Systems Engineer rstevens at vitalstream.com -
> - VitalStream, Inc. http://www.vitalstream.com -
> - -
> - Death is nature's way of dropping carrier -
> ----------------------------------------------------------------------
>
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--
Brad Mugleston, KI0OT
There are 10 types of people in this world. Those that
understand binary and those that don't.
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