Editing N900 USB networking

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This page describes how to enable Networking on the [[Nokia N900|N900]] via [[USB]], '''to share your PC's internet to N900 via USB'''. The first part describes how to configure the N900. The second part describes how to configure various PC platforms to share internet. This article is based on the [[USB networking|Maemo 4.x USB networking article]]. It is also possible to use the N900 as a [[N900 USB router|USB router]], to share N900 internet to PC.
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This page describes how to enable Networking on the [[Nokia N900|N900]] via [[USB]]. The first part describes how to configure the N900 as a USB pluggable network device. The second part describes how to configure various platforms to use the Nokia N900 as a network device. This article is based on the [[USB networking|Maemo 4.x USB networking article]]. It is also possible to use the N900 as a [[N900 USB router|USB router]].
You might want to use the N900 as a USB network device to log into your N900 remotely, or to transfer data from your N900 to another computer, in a situation where wifi or Bluetooth are not an option. If you wish to connect your N900 to a Linux machine over TCP/IP, the [http://maemo.org/development/documentation/pc_connectivity/ PC connectivity] section in the Maemo SDK documentation also contains useful information.
You might want to use the N900 as a USB network device to log into your N900 remotely, or to transfer data from your N900 to another computer, in a situation where wifi or Bluetooth are not an option. If you wish to connect your N900 to a Linux machine over TCP/IP, the [http://maemo.org/development/documentation/pc_connectivity/ PC connectivity] section in the Maemo SDK documentation also contains useful information.
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To automatically setup usb0 when entering PC suite mode edit the file <code>/etc/default/usbnetwork</code> and set the variable <code>USBNETWORK_ENABLE</code>.
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To automatically setup usb0 when entering PC suite mode change the last few lines of <code>/usr/sbin/pcsuite-enable.sh</code> by adding the "ifup usb0" line.
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<pre>
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logger "$0: sent SIGUSR1 to syncd"
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ifup usb0
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exit 0
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</pre>
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And, to automatically down your usb0 interface when leaving PC suite mode, add to <code>/usr/sbin/pcsuite-disable.sh</code>
<pre>
<pre>
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# Automatically enable USB network when PC Suite mode is active (default disabled)
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ifdown usb0
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USBNETWORK_ENABLE=1
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exit 0
</pre>
</pre>
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Add the following lines to <code>/usr/sbin/pcsuite-enable.sh</code> (Do not forget to change the ip address so it matches the one configured on your host's usb port.) (pcsuite-enable.sh is called by the ke-recv which handles memory card mounting, USB mass storage logic, and some other things, based on HAL.)
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Add the following lines to <code>/usr/sbin/pcsuite-enable.sh</code> (Do not forget to change the ip address so it matches the one configured on your host's usb port.)
<pre>
<pre>
run-standalone.sh dbus-send --type=method_call --system --dest=com.nokia.icd /com/nokia/icd com.nokia.icd.connect string:DUMMY uint32:0
run-standalone.sh dbus-send --type=method_call --system --dest=com.nokia.icd /com/nokia/icd com.nokia.icd.connect string:DUMMY uint32:0
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  ifconfig n900
  ifconfig n900
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=== Automatic configuration with Ubuntu 12.04 ===
 
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Create the file /etc/udev/rules.d/nokia-n900.rules and add this (single) line:
 
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<pre>
 
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ACTION=="add", DRIVERS=="usb", ATTRS{idVendor}=="0421", ATTRS{idProduct}=="01c8", ATTRS{manufacturer}=="Nokia", ATTRS{product}=="N900 (PC-Suite Mode)", NAME="usb0", RUN+="/sbin/ifup usb0"
 
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</pre>
 
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NetworkManager must be told to ignore usb0.  Use ifconfig to get the MAC address of usb0, and add these lines to /etc/NetworkManager/NetworkManager.conf:
 
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<pre>
 
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[keyfile]
 
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unmanaged-devices=mac:XX:XX:XX:XX:XX:XX # replace X's with usb0 MAC address
 
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</pre>
 
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Add the following lines to /etc/network/interfaces:
 
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<pre>
 
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# N900 on usb0
 
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allow-hotplug usb0
 
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iface usb0 inet static
 
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  address 192.168.2.14 
 
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  netmask 255.255.255.0
 
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</pre>
 
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Restart the affected services:
 
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sudo service udev restart
 
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sudo service network-manager restart
 
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</pre>
 
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Now when you connect the N900 via USB and select PC Suite Mode, usb0 will be up and configured.
 
=== Automatic configuration with Ubuntu 9.10/10.04/11.10 ===
=== Automatic configuration with Ubuntu 9.10/10.04/11.10 ===
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</pre>
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<strong>For Ubuntu 11.10</strong>, put these lines to /etc/udev/rules.d/99-nokia-n900.rules
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For 11.10, put these lines to /etc/udev/rules.d/99-nokia-n900.rules
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<pre>
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SUBSYSTEM=="net", ACTION=="add", ATTRS{idVendor}=="0421", ATTRS{idProduct}=="01c8", ATTRS{manufacturer}=="Nokia", ATTRS{product}=="N900 (PC-Suite Mode)", NAME="usb0", RUN+="/sbin/ifconfig usb0 192.168.2.14 up"
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SUBSYSTEM=="net", ACTION=="add", ATTRS{idVendor}=="0421", ATTRS{idProduct}=="01c8", ATTRS{manufacturer}=="Nokia", ATTRS{product}=="N900 (PC-Suite Mode)", NAME="usb0", RUN+="/sbin/ifconfig usb0 192.168.2.14 up", RUN+="/sbin/iptables -A POSTROUTING -t nat -s 192.168.2.15/32 -j MASQUERADE"
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</pre>
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and don't modify <code>/etc/network/interfaces</code> in the way above, because you will make the boot slow with the message "waiting for network configuration". But for forwarding you should add to <code>/etc/sysctl.conf</code>
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<pre>
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net.ipv4.ip_forward=1
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</pre>
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The Network Manager on Ubuntu 11.10 won't auto detect this <code>usb0</code> interface, you will have to check it via <code>ping</code> or via Network Tools.
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<strong>For Ubuntu 11.04</strong>, just plug the USB cable in, with already-configured N900,the Network Manager will auto handle <code>usb0</code> interface.
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and don't modify <code>/etc/network/interfaces</code> in the way above, because you will make the boot slow with the message "waiting for network configuration".
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<strong>For Ubuntu 9.10 (NOT 10.04)</strong> you have to fix <code>/etc/init/network-interface.conf</code>, change the line:
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For 9.10 (NOT 10.04) you have to fix <code>/etc/init/network-interface.conf</code>, change the line:
  stop on net-device-removed INTERFACE=$INTERFACE
  stop on net-device-removed INTERFACE=$INTERFACE
with:
with:
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(Note the difference: net-device-remove'''d''')
(Note the difference: net-device-remove'''d''')
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<strong>For all versions:</strong> You have to reload udev rules with:
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You have to reload udev rules with:
  udevadm control --reload-rules
  udevadm control --reload-rules

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