U3G(4) | Device Drivers Manual | U3G(4) |
u3g
— USB support
for 3G datacards
To compile this driver into the kernel, place the following lines in your kernel configuration file:
device usb
device ucom
device u3g
Alternatively, to load the driver as a module at boot time, place the following line in loader.conf(5):
u3g_load="YES"
If neither of the above is done, the driver will automatically be loaded by devd(8) when the device is connected.
The u3g
driver provides support for the
multiple USB-to-serial interfaces exposed by many 3G USB/PCCard modems.
The device is accessed through the ucom(4) driver which makes it behave like a tty(4).
The u3g
driver supports the following
adapters:
(See /sys/dev/usb/serial/u3g.c for the complete list of supported cards for each vendor mentioned above.)
The supported 3G cards provide the necessary modem port for ppp, or mpd connections as well as extra ports (depending on the specific device) to provide other functions (additional command port, diagnostic port, SIM toolkit port).
In some of these devices a mass storage device supported by the umass(4) driver is present which contains Windows and Mac OS X drivers. The device starts up in disk mode (TruInstall, ZeroCD, etc.) and requires additional commands to switch it to modem mode. If your device is not switching automatically, please try to add quirks. See usbconfig(8) and usb_quirk(4).
Connect to the Internet using the default configuration:
ppp -background u3g
tty(4), ucom(4), usb(4), usb_quirk(4), devd(8), ppp(8), usbconfig(8)
The u3g
driver appeared in
FreeBSD 7.2, is based on the
uark(4) driver, and written by Andrea
Guzzo
<aguzzo@anywi.com> in
September 2008.
The u3g
driver was written by
Andrea Guzzo
<aguzzo@anywi.com>
and Nick Hibma
<n_hibma@FreeBSD.org>.
Hardware for testing was provided by AnyWi Technologies, Leiden, NL.
The automatic mode switch from disk mode to modem mode does not work unless the driver is either built into the kernel or loaded before the device is connected.
September 11, 2018 | Debian |