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needed, but I wanted to be able to use the GUI and various server features.) Because I was using the desktop computer as a gateway to the Internet, that computer also had a wired Ethernet card that was connected to my DSL modem to provide a route to the Internet for any computers on my wired or wireless networks. Insert wireless cards To physically install the wireless cards, follow the directions that come with the cards. For my laptop, I simply inserted one Orinoco card into a PCMCIA slot. For the desktop computer, I powered down, inserted the PCI adapter into a vacant slot, powered up, and inserted the other Orinoco PCMCIA card into the adapter. Load the modules The cardmgr daemon monitors the PCMCIA slots on computers that have them. If a card is recognized and listed in the PCMCIA database when the card is inserted, the appropriate module is loaded. You should also hear two beeps to indicate that the card has been recognized. On my laptop, my Orinoco wireless card was recognized and its modules loaded. On my desktop computer (with the PCI adapter), the card was not recognized, so I had to do some extra configuration. PCMCIA only To see what modules are loaded after a card is inserted on a computer that has only PCMCIA slots, type the lsmod command. In my example, because the Orinoco card uses the wvlan_cs module, output from the lsmod command includes the following lines: # lsmod wvlan_cs 23296 1 ds 7056 1 [wvlan_cs] pcmcia_core 41600 0 [wvlan_cs ds yenta_socket] You can see that the wvlan_cs module is loaded and that the referring modules include the ds module (PC Card Driver Services module) and pcmcia_core module. If you are using a different card, you may instead see one of the following modules: airo_cs, wavelan_cs, orinoco_cs, ray_cs, or netwave_cs. PCMCIA with adapter card If your computer has only ISA or PCI slots, you will need an adapter to use your PCMCIA wireless LAN card. When I installed a PCI adapter card, because Linux didn’t detect my card, the PCMCIA wireless LAN card wasn’t detected either. Therefore, I added the following lines to the /etc/sysconfig/pcmcia file so that the PCI adapter card would be recognized and the PCMCIA service would start automatically at boot time: PCMCIA=yes PCIC=i82365 The i82365 driver is a PCMCIA controller driver that includes the Yenta register specification. Yenta is used for CardBus bridges made by Cirrus Logic for a variety of manufacturers (Texas Instruments, IBM, Toshiba and others). The Orinoco PCI adapter was detected as a Texas Instruments PCI-1410 CardBus Controller. (To see the options available with the i82365 driver, type man i82365). Check that the cards are working If the modules have been loaded properly, the cardmgr should recognize each card and start up the Ethernet interface for it. To check that this happened, restart the interface as follows:
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