Hi Peter, I tried minicom hooked up to a terminal to see if the baud rate can be changed and it looks like it can't. No matter what speed I set in minicom, it comes out 9600. I'm not sure this is a library or kernel problem. A quick look through the bug reports didn't show anything.
Bob. Q89029292 wrote: > Hi Robert, > > Are there any bug reports for this? > > Try minicom, just to confirm whether pppd's responsible, if minicom works > at > higher port speeds then try apt-get install ppp, I know the connection > will be slow but ppp is only small. This will upgrade ppp which should > hopefully do the trick.~ > > Probably not much point playing with the source unless you can confirm the > problem exists with the latest code. > > Welcome to 2001, > > Best Regards, > > Peter Firmstone. > > On Sat, 30 Dec 2000, Robert Reif wrote: > > > Hi, > > > > I'm having a problem getting a modem connection speed other than > > 9600. I hacked pppd to print out the termios speeds and they are being > > set properly. I also hacked chat to print out the connection speed and > > it is always 9600 regardless of the speed set in the file in > > /etc/ppp/peers. > > I double check the connection speed with ping which always gives the > > same results. > > > > I have tried different modems and different firmware loads with the same > > > > result. The modems work fine on NT. Both modems used to work with > > 2.1 and with woody up to about two months ago. I'm currently using a > > standard 2.2 off a cd. > > > > I could go back to 2.1 or I could borrow an rs232 analyzer and keep > > hacking > > at the source but I thought I would check if anyone has any suggestions > > before > > I dig into it further. > > > > Thanks, > > > > Bob. > > > > > > -- > > To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] > > with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED] > > > >

