Am Samstag, 28. November 2015, 13:03:44 schrieben Sie: > Ah, right. I was probably using qmi-proxy without thinking about it. Looks > like you get a reply to your get-current-settings, but it is picked up by > the client doing follow-network. > > Try using the -p option everywhere
Yes, tschakka! hpmini:~ # qmicli -p -d /dev/cdc-wdm0 --client-cid=1 --client-no-release-cid --wds-get-current-settings[/dev/cdc-wdm0] Current settings retrieved: IP Family: IPv4 IPv4 address: 10.210.7.179 IPv4 subnet mask: 255.255.255.248 IPv4 gateway address: 10.210.7.177 IPv4 primary DNS: 10.74.210.210 IPv4 secondary DNS: 10.74.210.211 MTU: 1500 Domains: none [/dev/cdc-wdm0] Client ID not released: Service: 'wds' CID: '1' ip addr add 10.210.7.179/255.255.255.248 dev wwan0 ip link set up wwan0 ip route add default via 10.210.7.177 It works (tested only IPv4, LTE) with the following devices: *Telekom Speedstick LTE alias Huawei E398 *Vodafone K 5005 alias Huawei E398 modified *Telekom Speedstick II alias ONE TOUCH L100V LTE *MC 7304 *Vodafone K 5006Z alias ZTE MF821V *O2 ZTE MF821D *4G-Systems XS-stick W100 LTE (version 2) I made also speedtests, all values are are ok. ( ~30Mbit/s up and down, maybe limited by the browser/ performance of the netbook) Only one thing did never work: crtl+c for disconnecting has crashed qmicli with segfault. I would be very happy if somebody tells me the steps for testing with PDP- context IPv4v6. Have a nice Advent, Thomas PS: Is it also relevant for the MBIM-devices? _______________________________________________ networkmanager-list mailing list networkmanager-list@gnome.org https://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/networkmanager-list