On 10/02/2016 3:39 AM, Dan Williams wrote: > On Tue, 2016-02-09 at 11:27 +1100, Brendan Simon (eTRIX) wrote: >> On 9/02/2016 9:08 AM, Dan Williams wrote: >>> On Tue, 2016-02-09 at 07:31 +1100, Brendan Simon (eTRIX) wrote: >>>> I have a number or remotely deployed arm embedded linux systems >>>> that >>>> uses a 3G modem via USB to post http information once per second. >>>> The >>>> modem goes down from time to time. One reason is we assert the >>>> power >>>> reset line on the modem once a day (as I've been told that the >>>> modems >>>> need to be reset periodically, otherwise functionality degrades >>>> or >>>> eventually lost). The other reasons I am not sure of (service >>>> provider >>>> initiated? bugs in the application code? >>>> >>>> The modem can be off for many hours before eventually >>>> reconnecting >>>> (possibly by watchdog reboot) which is not acceptable for our >>>> real >>>> -time >>>> monitoring application. >>>> >>>> Does MM automatically try to re-establish a connection if it sees >>>> the >>>> connection go down, or the modem is reset? >>>> >>>> Are there recommended or suggested MM settings such that MM will >>>> continually try to reconnect if the modem goes down then back up? >>> This is left up to the connection manager that controls >>> ModemManager >>> and tells it to connect. So whatever you're using to tell >>> ModemManager >>> to start the data connection, that's the thing that would monitor >>> for >>> the modem being disconnected and periodically restart the data >>> connection. >> I created a NetworkManager broadband connection in a Debian virtual >> machine with a modem connected (dev kit). I then copied the file >> that >> was created >> (/etc/NetworkManager/system-connections/telstra-mobile-broadband-1) >> into >> my build system which will populate my target rootfs for the embedded >> system. >> >> I found that the modem was not coming up at boot, but would come up >> if I >> used the `nmtui-connect` utility to activate the connection. A >> systemd >> service was created to bring up the modem at boot time (a one-shot >> script, which brings the modem down then up then calls `nmcli d >> connect >> cdc-wdm0`). >> >> The scirpt works but I'm not sure if it's the `right way` to get the >> modem up automatically. One interesting thing which may be a clue is >> that the modem connection does not appear in the `nmtui-edit` >> utility, >> but does appear in the `nmtui-connect` utility. Is this expected ? >> Also the LAN connection shows up in both utilities but there a >> connection file does not exist in /etc/NetworkManager/system >> -connections/ >> >> I presume NetworkManager is starting and managing the connection, >> yes? >> How do I get it to auto-reconnect when the connection goes down or is >> not available? We are looking at running a custom script invoked via >> cron every minute, but that seems a bit hacky. > What version of NM? There have been improvements to the autoconnect > logic for WWAN recently in NM, especially if the SIM has a PIN enabled. > Aside from bugs, we would expect NM to periodically retry the > connection if it fails.
The following Debian Jessie packages are installed. network-manager 0.9.10.0-7 modemmanager 1.4.0-1 There is no PIN enabled on the SIM cards. I suspect that there is something not configured properly with NM as it doesn't recognise that I have a broadband connection if I invoke `nmtui-edit`. However it does know about the connection if I invoke `nmtui-connect`. Is the file in /etc/NetworkManager/system-connections/ all that I need, or is there another NM config file that needs to know about the connection? Is the `uuid` field in the connections file significant? Does it need to match something on my system? The `uuid` field is set to the same on all the boxes. Thanks, Brendan.
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