Subject: ip connection with pppd and pap
To: None <wrstuden@loki.stanford.edu, port-mac68k@NetBSD.ORG>
From: Brian Wildasinn <bwildasi@csulb.edu>
List: port-mac68k
Date: 11/01/1997 16:07:14
 Hi Bill!

Bill Studenmund wrote thus:

>
>     #Oct 28 17:20:07 mynamepppd[215]:pppd2.3.1 Started by root uid0
>     #Oct 28 17:20:07 mynamepppd[215]:Connect: pppp0 <--> /dev/tty00
>     #Oct 28 17:20:07 mynamepppd[215]:Serial line is looped back
>     #Oct 28 17:20:07 mynamepppd[215]:Connection terminated.
>     #Oct 28 17:20:07 mynamepppd[215]:Disconnect script failed.
>
>
> Sounds like you're talking to a command line, not a ppp daemon. Get the sample
> script & see if maybe it sends "ppp" here.
>

 Sample script? Do you mean the modem string supplied by the
manufacturer? If so,  the one below is from USRobotics for the Sportster
attched to this Q700, which BTW works fine since I'm using it right now
under MacOS7.5.--And this is using the NeXT machine, which has made a
pap connection using ppp, something which i yet can't do under netbsd.


> on, which sets the user account for authentication, is the option you want.
>
>
>     disconnect /etc/ppp/ppp-down
>     debug kdebug 1
>     #-----------------> ppp-chat
>     ABORT BUSY
>     ABORT "NO CARRIER"
>     ABORT "NO DIAL"
>     TIMEOUT 10
>     "" ATZ OK AT&FE1V1Q0&A3&B1&H1&R2&D0&C1X4S0=0S7=90 OK
>     ATDT$NUMBER
>     TIMEOUT 60
>     CONNECT ""
>
>
> Looks fine for a pap-only server. But check the sample your modem folks give
> you.
>


Or, if your talking about zterms string received from my school's ip
connection, then

>           Using ZTerm here's what my school's computer says:
>
>                  ---------------example #1:
>                   AT&FE1V1Q0&A3&B1&H1&R2&D0&C1x450.
>
>
>                  CONNECT 33600/ARQ/V34/LAPM/V42BIS CSULB
>
>                  AutoProtocolDetect - Begin protocol or enter 4 returns for
>                 interactive
>                   mode.
>


  I might be misunderstanding your comments regarding "sample script".

Any help helps!

Sincerely,
Brian Wildasinn
bwildasi@csulb.edu