Lonni J Friedman wrote: > On 6/26/06, Jeff Vian <jvian10@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> On Mon, 2006-06-26 at 11:34 -0700, Lonni J Friedman wrote: >> > If you mean the windows driver that ndiswrapper is using, that hasn't >> > changed in ages, and I don't see a newer one recommended on the >> > ndiswrapper website. >> > >> Yes, I did mean the windows drive, and a simple erase and reinstall >> _may_ fix the issue. I recall seeing occasionally warnings from >> ndiswrapper that changes required a reinstall of the windows driver and >> sure enough it worked. > > Perhaps things were different when you last used ndiswrapper, or maybe > the windows driver that you were using was different than mine. For > me, the "installation" is copying the dll to a specfic place on the > fileysystem. There's nothing else to uninstall or reinstall. More > importantly, the driver gets loaded just fine in 1.18, its just not > working properly. Thanks though. > >From the ndiswrapper Wiki:http://ndiswrapper.sourceforge.net/mediawiki/index.php/Installation Install Windows driver Important: Do NOT use the drivers on your CD. They may work, but you may experience kernel crashes, etc., if the driver on your CD has not been tested. Instead, you need to download the appropriate Windows XP driver for your card from the wiki entry list. To identify the driver that you need, first identify the card you have with 'lspci' and note the first column such as 0000:00:0c.0 and then find out the PCI ID of the card that with 'lspci -n' corresponding to the first column of 'lspci' output. The PCI ID is third column or fourth in some distributions and of the form '104c:8400'. Now you need to get the Windows driver for this chipset. In the list, find out an entry for the same PCI ID, and download the driver corresponding to it. Unpack the Windows driver with unzip/cabextract/unshield tools, and find the INF file (.INF or .inf extension) and the SYS file (.SYS or .sys extension). If there are multiple INF/SYS files, you may look in the list if there are any hints about which of them should be used. Make sure the INF file, SYS file and any BIN files (For example, TI drivers use BIN firmware) files are all in one directory. Now use the 'ndiswrapper' tool to install the driver with ndiswrapper -i filename.inf This copies all necessary files to /etc/ndiswrapper and creates the config files for your card. After installing you can run ndiswrapper -l to see the status of your installed drivers. If you have installed the correct driver you should see something like this Installed ndis drivers: bcmwl5 driver present, hardware present Where 'present' means that you have a card that can be used with the driver installed. In this case, broadcom driver bcmwl5 is used. If you see 'cannot locate lspci. Unable to see if hardware is present', you need to install the pciutils package. Mikkel -- Do not meddle in the affairs of dragons, for thou art crunchy and taste good with Ketchup!