| simple isdn4linux PPP FAQ .. to be continued .. not 'debugged'  | 
 | ------------------------------------------------------------------- | 
 |  | 
 | Q01: what's pppd, ipppd, syncPPP, asyncPPP ?? | 
 | Q02: error message "this system lacks PPP support" | 
 | Q03: strange information using 'ifconfig' | 
 | Q04: MPPP?? What's that and how can I use it ... | 
 | Q05: I tried MPPP but it doesn't work  | 
 | Q06: can I use asynchronous PPP encapsulation with network devices | 
 | Q07: A SunISDN machine can't connect to my i4l system | 
 | Q08: I wanna talk to several machines, which need different configs | 
 | Q09: Starting the ipppd, I get only error messages from i4l | 
 | Q10: I wanna use dynamic IP address assignment  | 
 | Q11: I can't connect. How can I check where the problem is. | 
 | Q12: How can I reduce login delay?  | 
 |  | 
 | ------------------------------------------------------------------- | 
 |  | 
 | Q01: pppd, ipppd, syncPPP, asyncPPP .. what is that ? | 
 |    what should I use? | 
 | A: The pppd is for asynchronous PPP .. asynchronous means | 
 |    here, the framing is character based. (e.g when | 
 |    using ttyI* or tty* devices) | 
 |  | 
 |    The ipppd handles PPP packets coming in HDLC | 
 |    frames (bit based protocol) ... The PPP driver | 
 |    in isdn4linux pushes all IP packets direct | 
 |    to the network layer and all PPP protocol | 
 |    frames to the /dev/ippp* device.  | 
 |    So, the ipppd is a simple external network | 
 |    protocol handler. | 
 |  | 
 |    If you login into a remote machine using the | 
 |    /dev/ttyI* devices and then enable PPP on the | 
 |    remote terminal server -> use the 'old' pppd | 
 |  | 
 |    If your remote side immediately starts to send | 
 |    frames ... you probably connect to a  | 
 |    syncPPP machine .. use the network device part | 
 |    of isdn4linux with the 'syncppp' encapsulation | 
 |    and make sure, that the ipppd is running and  | 
 |    connected to at least one /dev/ippp*. Check the  | 
 |    isdn4linux manual on how to configure a network device. | 
 |  | 
 | -- | 
 |  | 
 | Q02: when I start the ipppd .. I only get the | 
 |    error message "this system lacks PPP support" | 
 | A: check that at least the device 'ippp0' exists. | 
 |    (you can check this e.g with the program 'ifconfig') | 
 |    The ipppd NEEDS this device under THIS name ..  | 
 |    If this device doesn't exists, use: | 
 | 	isdnctrl addif ippp0 | 
 | 	isdnctrl encap ippp0 syncppp | 
 | 	... (see isdn4linux doc for more) ... | 
 | A: Maybe you have compiled the ipppd with another | 
 |    kernel source tree than the kernel you currently | 
 |    run ...  | 
 |  | 
 | -- | 
 |  | 
 | Q03: when I list the netdevices with ifconfig I see, that | 
 |    my ISDN interface has a HWaddr and IRQ=0 and Base  | 
 |    address = 0  | 
 | A: The device is a fake ethernet device .. ignore IRQ and baseaddr | 
 |    You need the HWaddr only for ethernet encapsulation. | 
 |     | 
 | -- | 
 |  | 
 | Q04: MPPP?? What's that and how can I use it ... | 
 |  | 
 | A: MPPP or MP or MPP (Warning: MP is also an  | 
 |    acronym for 'Multi Processor') stands for | 
 |    Multi Point to Point and means bundling | 
 |    of several channels to one logical stream. | 
 |    To enable MPPP negotiation you must call the | 
 |    ipppd with the '+mp' option.  | 
 |    You must also configure a slave device for | 
 |    every additional channel. (see the i4l manual | 
 |    for more) | 
 |    To use channel bundling you must first activate | 
 |    the 'master' or initial call. Now you can add  | 
 |    the slave channels with the command: | 
 |        isdnctrl addlink <device> | 
 |    e.g: | 
 |        isdnctrl addlink ippp0 | 
 |    This is different from other encapsulations of | 
 |    isdn4linux! With syncPPP, there is no automatic | 
 |    activation of slave devices. | 
 |  | 
 | -- | 
 |  | 
 | Q05: I tried MPPP but it doesn't work .. the ipppd | 
 |    writes in the debug log something like: | 
 |    .. rcvd [0][proto=0x3d] c0 00 00 00 80 fd 01 01 00 0a ... | 
 |    .. sent [0][LCP ProtRej id=0x2 00 3d c0 00 00 00 80 fd 01 ... | 
 |  | 
 | A: you forgot to compile MPPP/RFC1717 support into the | 
 |    ISDN Subsystem. Recompile with this option enabled. | 
 |  | 
 | -- | 
 |  | 
 | Q06: can I use asynchronous PPP encapsulation | 
 |    over the network interface of isdn4linux .. | 
 |  | 
 | A: No .. that's not possible .. Use the standard | 
 |    PPP package over the /dev/ttyI* devices. You | 
 |    must not use the ipppd for this. | 
 |     | 
 | -- | 
 |  | 
 | Q07: A SunISDN machine tries to connect my i4l system, | 
 |    which doesn't work. | 
 |    Checking the debug log I just saw garbage like: | 
 | !![ ... fill in the line ... ]!! | 
 |  | 
 | A: The Sun tries to talk asynchronous PPP ... i4l | 
 |    can't understand this ... try to use the ttyI* | 
 |    devices with the standard PPP/pppd package | 
 |  | 
 | A: (from Alexanter Strauss: ) | 
 | !![ ... fill in mail ]!! | 
 |  | 
 | -- | 
 |  | 
 | Q08: I wanna talk to remote machines, which need | 
 |    a different configuration. The only way | 
 |    I found to do this is to kill the ipppd and | 
 |    start a new one with another config to connect | 
 |    to the second machine.  | 
 |  | 
 | A: you must bind a network interface explicitly to | 
 |    an ippp device, where you can connect a (for this | 
 |    interface) individually configured ipppd. | 
 |  | 
 | -- | 
 |  | 
 | Q09: When I start the ipppd I only get error messages | 
 |    from the i4l driver ..  | 
 |  | 
 | A: When starting, the ipppd calls functions which may  | 
 |    trigger a network packet. (e.g gethostbyname()). | 
 |    Without the ipppd (at this moment, it is not | 
 |    fully started) we can't handle this network request. | 
 |    Try to configure hostnames necessary for the ipppd | 
 |    in your local /etc/hosts file or in a way, that | 
 |    your system can resolve it without using an | 
 |    isdn/ippp network-interface. | 
 |  | 
 | -- | 
 |  | 
 | Q10: I wanna use dynamic IP address assignment ... How  | 
 |    must I configure the network device. | 
 |  | 
 | A: At least you must have a route which forwards | 
 |    a packet to the ippp network-interface to trigger | 
 |    the dial-on-demand. | 
 |    A default route to the ippp-interface will work. | 
 |    Now you must choose a dummy IP address for your | 
 |    interface. | 
 |    If for some reason you can't set the default | 
 |    route to the ippp interface, you may take any  | 
 |    address of the subnet from which you expect your | 
 |    dynamic IP number and set a 'network route' for | 
 |    this subnet to the ippp interface. | 
 |    To allow overriding of the dummy address you | 
 |    must call the ipppd with the 'ipcp-accept-local' option. | 
 |  | 
 | A: You must know, how the ipppd gets the addresses it wanna | 
 |    configure. If you don't give any option, the ipppd | 
 |    tries to negotiate the local host address! | 
 |    With the option 'noipdefault' it requests an address | 
 |    from the remote machine. With 'useifip' it gets the | 
 |    addresses from the net interface. Or you set the address | 
 |    on the option line with the <a.b.c.d:e.f.g.h> option. | 
 |    Note: the IP address of the remote machine must be configured | 
 |    locally or the remote machine must send it in an IPCP request. | 
 |    If your side doesn't know the IP address after negotiation, it | 
 |    closes the connection! | 
 |    You must allow overriding of address with the 'ipcp-accept-*' | 
 |    options, if you have set your own or the remote address  | 
 |    explicitly. | 
 |  | 
 | A: Maybe you try these options .. e.g:    | 
 |  | 
 |     /sbin/ipppd :$REMOTE noipdefault /dev/ippp0 | 
 |  | 
 |    where REMOTE must be the address of the remote machine (the | 
 |    machine, which gives you your address) | 
 |  | 
 | -- | 
 |  | 
 | Q11: I can't connect. How can I check where the problem is. | 
 |  | 
 | A: A good help log is the debug output from the ipppd... | 
 |    Check whether you can find there: | 
 |    - only a few LCP-conf-req SENT messages (less then 10) | 
 |      and then a Term-REQ: | 
 |      -> check whether your ISDN card is well configured | 
 |         it seems, that your machine doesn't dial | 
 |         (IRQ,IO,Proto, etc problems) | 
 |         Configure your ISDN card to print debug messages and | 
 |         check the /dev/isdnctrl output next time. There | 
 |         you can see, whether there is activity on the card/line. | 
 |    - there are at least a few RECV messages in the log: | 
 |      -> fine: your card is dialing and your remote machine | 
 |         tries to talk with you. Maybe only a missing  | 
 |         authentication. Check your ipppd configuration again. | 
 |    - the ipppd exits for some reason: | 
 |      -> not good ... check /var/adm/syslog and /var/adm/daemon. | 
 |         Could be a bug in the ipppd. | 
 |  | 
 | -- | 
 |  | 
 | Q12: How can I reduce login delay? | 
 |  | 
 | A: Log a login session ('debug' log) and check which options  | 
 |   your remote side rejects. Next time configure your ipppd | 
 |   to not negotiate these options. Another 'side effect' is, that | 
 |   this increases redundancy. (e.g your remote side is buggy and | 
 |   rejects options in a wrong way). | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 |  |