Configuring ISA and PCMCIA/CardBus adapters
The
Network Configuration Manager
presents you with a list of
supported adapters arranged by vendor. Select the adapter from
the list that most closely corresponds to the one in your
machine. If the Network Configuration Manager can search
for your adapter, it asks if you want to search for it.
Configuring PCMCIA/CardBus wireless adapters
If you are configuring a PCMCIA/CardBus
802.11b wireless network adapter,
there are several configuration parameters,
listed in
``Wireless network adapter configuration parameters'',
that you need to set in the
Network Configuration Manager.
After you have selected the adapter to configure,
click on the Advanced Options button.
Wireless network adapter configuration parameters
Parameter
|
Type
|
Values
|
Default Setting
|
ESSID
|
text
|
a-z, A-Z
|
Wireless
|
MODE
|
enum
|
Demo_Ad_hoc,
IEEE_Ad_hoc,
Managed
|
Managed
|
RATE
|
enum
|
1, 2, 5, 11, auto
|
auto
|
CHANNEL
|
int
|
1-11
|
6
|
ENCRYPTION
|
int
|
0, 40, 128
|
0
|
40 BIT KEY
|
text
|
0-9, a-f
|
0123456789
|
128 BIT KEY
|
text
|
0-9, a-f
|
0123456789abcdef0123456789
|
These parameters control the following aspects of
a wireless network adapter:
ESSID -- Extended Service Set ID-
This parameter defines the ID of the wireless network,
which allows you to isolate multiple wireless networks.
MODE-
This parameter defines the operating mode of the wireless
network. Values include:
Demo_Ad_hoc-
This is the pre-IEEE version of point-to-point mode.
Also known as the ``point-to-point'' mode.
IEEE_Ad_hoc-
This is the IEEE version of the point-to-point mode.
Also known as ``point-to-point'' mode.
Managed-
Also known as ``Infrastructure'' mode. Use this
setting for a wireless network that is managed by
an Access Point.
RATE-
This parameter defines the baud rate (Mb/s) to be used.
CHANNEL-
This parameter sets the RF channel.
Similar to a wireless telephone, you need to change
this parameter if you experience interference with
other devices.
ENCRYPTION-
This parameter is for Wired Equivalent Privacy (WEP),
defining the encryption mode to be used.
You can specify:
0-
for no encryption
40-
for 40-bit mode
128-
for 128-bit mode
NOTE:
40-bit mode is sometimes referred to as 64-bit mode.
128-bit mode is sometimes called 104-bit mode.
40 BIT KEY-
This parameter defines the 40-bit WEP key.
10 characters x 4 bits/character = 40 bits
128 BIT KEY-
This parameter defines the 128-bit WEP key.
26 characters x 4 bits/character = 104 bits.
See also:
Next topic:
Searching for adapters
Previous topic:
Configuring adapters in PCI, EISA, and MCA machines
© 2003 Caldera International, Inc. All rights reserved.
SCO OpenServer Release 5.0.7 -- 11 February 2003