Re: [Freedos-user] Wherefore art thou, packet driver? (was: Re: A little help here)
Don't forget you can use ndis (LAN manager) and odi (Novell netware) drivers as packet drivers in DOS. With some additional tools. Am 22.08.2014 um 07:53 schrieb Louis Santillan lpsan...@gmail.com: There's 100 PCI drivers here (http://www.classiccmp.org/dunfield/dos/pktdrv.zip). On Thu, Aug 21, 2014 at 9:23 PM, Rugxulo rugx...@gmail.com wrote: Hi, N.B. The OP's subject line is too vague. You'd probably get more help with a more specific description of the problem. Some people don't have time to pore over all the various threads. Anyways, please keep reading below, I'll (weakly) respond inline. On Mon, Aug 18, 2014 at 3:50 AM, Mateusz Viste mate...@viste.fr wrote: The PCNTPK driver is meant to be used only on computers with the AMD PC-NET network card (which is also emulated by VirtualBox). You most probably have a different network card - what you need is to know exactly what network card you have (vendor/model), and then look for a matching packet driver. A packet driver is what makes it possible for TCP stacks under DOS to use networking. Mateusz Georg Potthast has some packet drivers mirrored on his website: http://www.georgpotthast.de/sioux/packet.htm He also has NICSCAN, which maybe will help ease your search: http://www.georgpotthast.de/sioux/pktdrv/nicscan.zip But don't get your hopes up too high, a lot of (wired) network cards these days probably aren't well-supported on DOS, if at all. Blame your manufacturer directly (write them an email, offer to pay them, etc). Keep reading below. On 08/18/2014 10:44 AM, Thsise Faek wrote: I just installed freedos on a computer (not VirtualBox, real install) and ive been trying to set up the network. What kind of computer? What network card? What does Linux detect it has? dmesg | grep eth0? Just like in the instructions, I went into the autoexec.bat, and removed the REM from REM LH PCNTPK INT=0x60. It gave me this error during startup (PCNTPK-DOS-015: Device not found.) Removing the LH and leaving only PCNTPK INT=0x60 gave me the same error during startup. Because of this I cant use any network functions. How do I fix this? Well, the obvious answer (that you seem to avoid, why?) is to use an emulator / hypervisor like VirtualBox. It works there, at least. I know that's not necessarily ideal, but it's better than nothing. Some of the more obvious packet drivers are in the set from Crynwr: http://www.ibiblio.org/pub/micro/pc-stuff/freedos/files/distributions/1.1/repos/net/crynwr.zip However, once again, you have to know exactly what you want and how to set it up. I don't remember the details on searching for specific PCI IDs, so you'll have to hope that someone like Eric Auer or Bernd Blauw chime in here. Presumably you use something like PCISLEEP or BERNDPCI: 1). http://ericauer.cosmodata.virtuaserver.com.br/soft/pcisleep-2005mar12.zip 2). http://ericauer.cosmodata.virtuaserver.com.br/soft/specials/berndpci.zip Wasn't there some database of all the various PCI devices? Was it some website? Anyone remember? (Probably Eric does.) Hmmm, maybe this is it: http://pciids.sourceforge.net/ Hope some of this helps! Please report back to us with your results (successes, failures). -- Slashdot TV. Video for Nerds. Stuff that matters. http://tv.slashdot.org/ ___ Freedos-user mailing list Freedos-user@lists.sourceforge.net https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/freedos-user -- Slashdot TV. Video for Nerds. Stuff that matters. http://tv.slashdot.org/ ___ Freedos-user mailing list Freedos-user@lists.sourceforge.net https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/freedos-user -- Slashdot TV. Video for Nerds. Stuff that matters. http://tv.slashdot.org/ ___ Freedos-user mailing list Freedos-user@lists.sourceforge.net https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/freedos-user
Re: [Freedos-user] Wherefore art thou, packet driver?
Is there a tutorial for using NDIS2 drives with freedos? I usualy use www.netbootdisk.com but it would be nice to be able to do it manualy Alain Em 22-08-2014 03:17, Ulrich Hansen escreveu: Don't forget you can use ndis (LAN manager) and odi (Novell netware) drivers as packet drivers in DOS. With some additional tools. Am 22.08.2014 um 07:53 schrieb Louis Santillan lpsan...@gmail.com: There's 100 PCI drivers here (http://www.classiccmp.org/dunfield/dos/pktdrv.zip). On Thu, Aug 21, 2014 at 9:23 PM, Rugxulo rugx...@gmail.com wrote: Hi, N.B. The OP's subject line is too vague. You'd probably get more help with a more specific description of the problem. Some people don't have time to pore over all the various threads. Anyways, please keep reading below, I'll (weakly) respond inline. On Mon, Aug 18, 2014 at 3:50 AM, Mateusz Viste mate...@viste.fr wrote: The PCNTPK driver is meant to be used only on computers with the AMD PC-NET network card (which is also emulated by VirtualBox). You most probably have a different network card - what you need is to know exactly what network card you have (vendor/model), and then look for a matching packet driver. A packet driver is what makes it possible for TCP stacks under DOS to use networking. Mateusz Georg Potthast has some packet drivers mirrored on his website: http://www.georgpotthast.de/sioux/packet.htm He also has NICSCAN, which maybe will help ease your search: http://www.georgpotthast.de/sioux/pktdrv/nicscan.zip But don't get your hopes up too high, a lot of (wired) network cards these days probably aren't well-supported on DOS, if at all. Blame your manufacturer directly (write them an email, offer to pay them, etc). Keep reading below. On 08/18/2014 10:44 AM, Thsise Faek wrote: I just installed freedos on a computer (not VirtualBox, real install) and ive been trying to set up the network. What kind of computer? What network card? What does Linux detect it has? dmesg | grep eth0? Just like in the instructions, I went into the autoexec.bat, and removed the REM from REM LH PCNTPK INT=0x60. It gave me this error during startup (PCNTPK-DOS-015: Device not found.) Removing the LH and leaving only PCNTPK INT=0x60 gave me the same error during startup. Because of this I cant use any network functions. How do I fix this? Well, the obvious answer (that you seem to avoid, why?) is to use an emulator / hypervisor like VirtualBox. It works there, at least. I know that's not necessarily ideal, but it's better than nothing. Some of the more obvious packet drivers are in the set from Crynwr: http://www.ibiblio.org/pub/micro/pc-stuff/freedos/files/distributions/1.1/repos/net/crynwr.zip However, once again, you have to know exactly what you want and how to set it up. I don't remember the details on searching for specific PCI IDs, so you'll have to hope that someone like Eric Auer or Bernd Blauw chime in here. Presumably you use something like PCISLEEP or BERNDPCI: 1). http://ericauer.cosmodata.virtuaserver.com.br/soft/pcisleep-2005mar12.zip 2). http://ericauer.cosmodata.virtuaserver.com.br/soft/specials/berndpci.zip Wasn't there some database of all the various PCI devices? Was it some website? Anyone remember? (Probably Eric does.) Hmmm, maybe this is it: http://pciids.sourceforge.net/ Hope some of this helps! Please report back to us with your results (successes, failures). -- Slashdot TV. Video for Nerds. Stuff that matters. http://tv.slashdot.org/ ___ Freedos-user mailing list Freedos-user@lists.sourceforge.net https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/freedos-user -- Slashdot TV. Video for Nerds. Stuff that matters. http://tv.slashdot.org/ ___ Freedos-user mailing list Freedos-user@lists.sourceforge.net https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/freedos-user -- Slashdot TV. Video for Nerds. Stuff that matters. http://tv.slashdot.org/ ___ Freedos-user mailing list Freedos-user@lists.sourceforge.net https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/freedos-user -- Slashdot TV. Video for Nerds. Stuff that matters. http://tv.slashdot.org/ ___ Freedos-user mailing list Freedos-user@lists.sourceforge.net https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/freedos-user
Re: [Freedos-user] Wherefore art thou, packet driver?
Hi Alain Am 22.08.2014 um 14:28 schrieb Alain Mouette ala...@pobox.com: Is there a tutorial for using NDIS2 drives with freedos? I usualy use www.netbootdisk.com but it would be nice to be able to do it manualy I once wrote a (maybe a biit lengthy) tutorial at: http://www.freedos.org/wiki/index.php/Networking_FreeDOS_-_NDIS_driver_installation In short (ten steps): 1. Find the .dos driver for your card. Among your drivers installation files, look for a directory called NDIS2. 2. Get Microsofts free MS Client, f.i. from http://www.ibiblio.org/pub/micro/pc-stuff/freedos/ftp.gcfl.net/pub/freedos/ms-clients/msclient/DSK3-1.EXE 3. move it to a temporary folder and run dsk3-1.exe 4. expand -r protman.do_ 5. expand -r protman.ex_ 6. Move protman.dos, protman.exe and netbind.com to a permanent directory f.i. C:\NET 7. Get dis_pkt.dos from http://www.ibiblio.org/pub/micro/pc-stuff/freedos/files/net/dis_pkt11.zip and copy it to C:\NET 8. Make a file C:\NET\PROTOCOL.INI with the content [protman] DriverName=PROTMAN$ [EL3C574] DriverName=EL3C574$ [PKTDRV] drivername=PKTDRV$ bindings=EL3C574 intvec=0x60 chainvec=0x68 and replace EL3C574 with the name of your .dos-driver without the .dos ending. Sometimes your .dos-driver comes with a .txt file that contains the exact info. 9. Add the following lines to FDCONFIG.SYS: DEVICEHIGH=C:\NET\PROTMAN.DOS /I:C:\NET DEVICEHIGH=C:\NET\EL3C574.DOS DEVICEHIGH=C:\NET\DIS_PKT.DOS 10. Add the following line to AUTOEXEC.BAT: C:\NET\NETBIND.COM That's it. Please correct me, if anything is wrong or just different. It's been some time. Ulrich Em 22-08-2014 03:17, Ulrich Hansen escreveu: Don't forget you can use ndis (LAN manager) and odi (Novell netware) drivers as packet drivers in DOS. With some additional tools. Am 22.08.2014 um 07:53 schrieb Louis Santillan lpsan...@gmail.com: There's 100 PCI drivers here (http://www.classiccmp.org/dunfield/dos/pktdrv.zip). On Thu, Aug 21, 2014 at 9:23 PM, Rugxulo rugx...@gmail.com wrote: Hi, N.B. The OP's subject line is too vague. You'd probably get more help with a more specific description of the problem. Some people don't have time to pore over all the various threads. Anyways, please keep reading below, I'll (weakly) respond inline. On Mon, Aug 18, 2014 at 3:50 AM, Mateusz Viste mate...@viste.fr wrote: The PCNTPK driver is meant to be used only on computers with the AMD PC-NET network card (which is also emulated by VirtualBox). You most probably have a different network card - what you need is to know exactly what network card you have (vendor/model), and then look for a matching packet driver. A packet driver is what makes it possible for TCP stacks under DOS to use networking. Mateusz Georg Potthast has some packet drivers mirrored on his website: http://www.georgpotthast.de/sioux/packet.htm He also has NICSCAN, which maybe will help ease your search: http://www.georgpotthast.de/sioux/pktdrv/nicscan.zip But don't get your hopes up too high, a lot of (wired) network cards these days probably aren't well-supported on DOS, if at all. Blame your manufacturer directly (write them an email, offer to pay them, etc). Keep reading below. On 08/18/2014 10:44 AM, Thsise Faek wrote: I just installed freedos on a computer (not VirtualBox, real install) and ive been trying to set up the network. What kind of computer? What network card? What does Linux detect it has? dmesg | grep eth0? Just like in the instructions, I went into the autoexec.bat, and removed the REM from REM LH PCNTPK INT=0x60. It gave me this error during startup (PCNTPK-DOS-015: Device not found.) Removing the LH and leaving only PCNTPK INT=0x60 gave me the same error during startup. Because of this I cant use any network functions. How do I fix this? Well, the obvious answer (that you seem to avoid, why?) is to use an emulator / hypervisor like VirtualBox. It works there, at least. I know that's not necessarily ideal, but it's better than nothing. Some of the more obvious packet drivers are in the set from Crynwr: http://www.ibiblio.org/pub/micro/pc-stuff/freedos/files/distributions/1.1/repos/net/crynwr.zip However, once again, you have to know exactly what you want and how to set it up. I don't remember the details on searching for specific PCI IDs, so you'll have to hope that someone like Eric Auer or Bernd Blauw chime in here. Presumably you use something like PCISLEEP or BERNDPCI: 1). http://ericauer.cosmodata.virtuaserver.com.br/soft/pcisleep-2005mar12.zip 2). http://ericauer.cosmodata.virtuaserver.com.br/soft/specials/berndpci.zip Wasn't there some database of all the various PCI devices? Was it some website? Anyone remember? (Probably Eric does.) Hmmm, maybe this is it: http://pciids.sourceforge.net/ Hope some of this helps! Please report back to us with your results (successes, failures).
Re: [Freedos-user] Wherefore art thou, packet driver?
Thanks, I will test :) Alain Em 22-08-2014 11:22, Ulrich escreveu: Hi Alain Am 22.08.2014 um 14:28 schrieb Alain Mouette ala...@pobox.com: Is there a tutorial for using NDIS2 drives with freedos? I usualy use www.netbootdisk.com but it would be nice to be able to do it manualy I once wrote a (maybe a biit lengthy) tutorial at: http://www.freedos.org/wiki/index.php/Networking_FreeDOS_-_NDIS_driver_installation In short (ten steps): 1. Find the .dos driver for your card. Among your drivers installation files, look for a directory called NDIS2. 2. Get Microsofts free MS Client, f.i. from http://www.ibiblio.org/pub/micro/pc-stuff/freedos/ftp.gcfl.net/pub/freedos/ms-clients/msclient/DSK3-1.EXE 3. move it to a temporary folder and run dsk3-1.exe 4. expand -r protman.do_ 5. expand -r protman.ex_ 6. Move protman.dos, protman.exe and netbind.com to a permanent directory f.i. C:\NET 7. Get dis_pkt.dos from http://www.ibiblio.org/pub/micro/pc-stuff/freedos/files/net/dis_pkt11.zip and copy it to C:\NET 8. Make a file C:\NET\PROTOCOL.INI with the content [protman] DriverName=PROTMAN$ [EL3C574] DriverName=EL3C574$ [PKTDRV] drivername=PKTDRV$ bindings=EL3C574 intvec=0x60 chainvec=0x68 and replace EL3C574 with the name of your .dos-driver without the .dos ending. Sometimes your .dos-driver comes with a .txt file that contains the exact info. 9. Add the following lines to FDCONFIG.SYS: DEVICEHIGH=C:\NET\PROTMAN.DOS /I:C:\NET DEVICEHIGH=C:\NET\EL3C574.DOS DEVICEHIGH=C:\NET\DIS_PKT.DOS 10. Add the following line to AUTOEXEC.BAT: C:\NET\NETBIND.COM That's it. Please correct me, if anything is wrong or just different. It's been some time. Ulrich Em 22-08-2014 03:17, Ulrich Hansen escreveu: Don't forget you can use ndis (LAN manager) and odi (Novell netware) drivers as packet drivers in DOS. With some additional tools. Am 22.08.2014 um 07:53 schrieb Louis Santillan lpsan...@gmail.com: There's 100 PCI drivers here (http://www.classiccmp.org/dunfield/dos/pktdrv.zip). On Thu, Aug 21, 2014 at 9:23 PM, Rugxulo rugx...@gmail.com wrote: Hi, N.B. The OP's subject line is too vague. You'd probably get more help with a more specific description of the problem. Some people don't have time to pore over all the various threads. Anyways, please keep reading below, I'll (weakly) respond inline. On Mon, Aug 18, 2014 at 3:50 AM, Mateusz Viste mate...@viste.fr wrote: The PCNTPK driver is meant to be used only on computers with the AMD PC-NET network card (which is also emulated by VirtualBox). You most probably have a different network card - what you need is to know exactly what network card you have (vendor/model), and then look for a matching packet driver. A packet driver is what makes it possible for TCP stacks under DOS to use networking. Mateusz Georg Potthast has some packet drivers mirrored on his website: http://www.georgpotthast.de/sioux/packet.htm He also has NICSCAN, which maybe will help ease your search: http://www.georgpotthast.de/sioux/pktdrv/nicscan.zip But don't get your hopes up too high, a lot of (wired) network cards these days probably aren't well-supported on DOS, if at all. Blame your manufacturer directly (write them an email, offer to pay them, etc). Keep reading below. On 08/18/2014 10:44 AM, Thsise Faek wrote: I just installed freedos on a computer (not VirtualBox, real install) and ive been trying to set up the network. What kind of computer? What network card? What does Linux detect it has? dmesg | grep eth0? Just like in the instructions, I went into the autoexec.bat, and removed the REM from REM LH PCNTPK INT=0x60. It gave me this error during startup (PCNTPK-DOS-015: Device not found.) Removing the LH and leaving only PCNTPK INT=0x60 gave me the same error during startup. Because of this I cant use any network functions. How do I fix this? Well, the obvious answer (that you seem to avoid, why?) is to use an emulator / hypervisor like VirtualBox. It works there, at least. I know that's not necessarily ideal, but it's better than nothing. Some of the more obvious packet drivers are in the set from Crynwr: http://www.ibiblio.org/pub/micro/pc-stuff/freedos/files/distributions/1.1/repos/net/crynwr.zip However, once again, you have to know exactly what you want and how to set it up. I don't remember the details on searching for specific PCI IDs, so you'll have to hope that someone like Eric Auer or Bernd Blauw chime in here. Presumably you use something like PCISLEEP or BERNDPCI: 1). http://ericauer.cosmodata.virtuaserver.com.br/soft/pcisleep-2005mar12.zip 2). http://ericauer.cosmodata.virtuaserver.com.br/soft/specials/berndpci.zip Wasn't there some database of all the various PCI devices? Was it some website? Anyone remember? (Probably Eric does.) Hmmm, maybe this is it: http://pciids.sourceforge.net/ Hope some of this helps! Please report back to us with your