📚 LinuxDocs
Topics:
All Pages8021X HOWTOACP ModemACPI HOWTOADSL Bandwidth Man..ATA RAID HOWTOATM Linux HOWTOAX25 HOWTOAccessibility Dev ..Accessibility HOWTOAdv Bash Scr HOWTOAdv Routing HOWTOAntares RAID sparc..Apache Compile HOWTOApache WebDAV LDAP..Assembly HOWTOAstronomy HOWTOAthlon Powersaving..Authentication Gat..Autodir HOWTOAviation HOWTOAvr Microcontrolle..BRIDGE STP HOWTOBTTVBackspaceDeleteBandwidth Limiting..Bangla HOWTOBash Prompt HOWTOBattery PoweredBelarusian HOWTOBelgian HOWTOBeowulf HOWTOBocaBogoMipsBootdisk HOWTOBridgeC++ dlopenC C++Beautifier HO..C editing with VIM..CDROM HOWTOCDServer HOWTOCable ModemCaudium HOWTOClone HOWTOCompaq Remote Insi..Compaq T1500 HOWTOConexant+Rockwell ..Cryptoloop HOWTODB2 HOWTODHCPDSL HOWTODVD Playback HOWTODebian Binary Pack..Debian JigdoDebian and Windows..Disk Encryption HO..Disk on Chip HOWTODocBook Demystific..DocBook InstallDocBook OpenJade S..Ecology HOWTOEmacspeak HOWTOEncourage Women Li..Encrypted Root Fil..Euro Char SupportEvent HOWTOFedora Multimedia ..Finnish HOWTOFirewall PiercingFlash Memory HOWTOFont HOWTOFramebuffer HOWTOGCC HOWTOGIS GRASSGlibc Install HOWTOHOWTO HOWTOHOWTO INDEXHP HOWTOHandspring VisorHard Disk UpgradeHardware HOWTOHighQuality Apps H..Home Electrical Co..IBM7248 HOWTOIO Perf HOWTOIP AliasIP Masquerade HOWTOIRCImplement Sys Call..Indic Fonts HOWTOInfrared HOWTOIngresII HOWTOInstall StrategiesInstallation HOWTOInstallfest HOWTOIntkeybItalian HOWTOJabber Server Farm..JavaStation HOWTOKerberos Infrastru..Kernel HOWTOKerneldKodak Digitalcam H..LDAP HOWTOLDP Reviewer HOWTOLILO crash rescue ..LVM HOWTOLeased LineLegoLinksys Blue Box R..Linux+Win95Linux+Win9x+Grub H..Linux+Windows HOWTOLinux Complete Bac..Linux Crash HOWTOLinux Gamers HOWTOLinux Modem SharingLinux Promise RAID..Linux i386 Boot Co..LinuxGL QuakeWorld..Lotus DominoR5MILO HOWTOMMBase Inst HOWTOMP3 CD BurningMail User HOWTOMajordomo MajorCoo..Man PageMasquerading Simpl..Medicine HOWTOMindTerm SSH HOWTOMobile IPv6 HOWTOMock MainframeModule HOWTOModulesMotorola Surfboard..Mozilla OptimizationMulti Distro DevNCURSES Programmin..NFS HOWTONFS Root Client mi..NIS HOWTONetMeeting HOWTONetwork boot HOWTONvidia OpenGL Conf..OLSR IPv6 HOWTOOnline Troubleshoo..Oracle 9i Fedora 3..PA RISC Linux Boot..PCTel MicroModem C..PHP Nuke HOWTOPPP HOWTOPagerPalmOS HOWTOPartitionPartition Mass Sto..Partition Mass Sto..Partition RescuePine ExchangePortSlavePost Installation ..Postfix Cyrus Web ..Pre Installation C..Print2WinPrinting HOWTOProcess AccountingProgram Library HO..Proxy ARP SubnetQmail ClamAV HOWTOQmail VMailMgr Cou..Querying libiptc H..RPM HOWTOReading List HOWTORedHat CD HOWTOReliance HOWTORemote BridgingRemote Serial Cons..SCSI 2.4 HOWTOSCSI Generic HOWTOSLIP PPP EmulatorSRM HOWTOSSL Certificates H..Scanner HOWTOScientific Computi..Scripting GUI TclTkSecure CVS PserverSecure Programs HO..Security HOWTOSecurity Quickstar..Security Quickstar..Serial Laplink HOWTOSerial Programming..Slovak HOWTOSmall MemorySmart Card HOWTOSoftware Proj Mgmt..Software Release P..Sound HOWTOSpam Filtering for..Speech Recognition..SquashFS HOWTOSybase ASA HOWTOSybase ASE HOWTOSybase PHP ApacheTCP Keepalive HOWTOTamil Linux HOWTOTimePrecision HOWTOTimeSys Linux Inst..Token RingTraffic Control HO..Traffic Control tc..UPS HOWTOUnix Hardware Buye..Unix and Internet ..UpgradeUsenet News HOWTOUser Authenticatio..VB6 to TclVMS to Linux HOWTOVPN HOWTOValgrind HOWTOVideoLAN HOWTOVim HOWTOVirtual WebWebcam HOWTOWikiText HOWTOWindows Newsreader..Wireless Link sys ..Wireless Sync HOWTOXDM XtermXDMCP HOWTOXFree Local multi ..XFree86 HOWTOXFree86 R200XFree86 Second MouseXFree86 Video Timi..XML RPC HOWTOXWindow Overview H..XWindow User HOWTOXinerama HOWTOXterminalsHtml singleI810 HOWTOLibdc1394 HOWTOOpenMosix HOWTOPhhttpd HOWTOPpp sshText

1. Introduction

This document was written to assist the Linux user in setting up the Motorola Surfboard 4100 and 4200 series cable modems, and includes information on configuring a DHCP client, enabling the device with or without USB support and troubleshooting.

1.1. Copyright Information

This document is Copyright 2003 by Howard Shane.

Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.2 or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation with no Invariant Sections, no Front-Cover Texts, and no Back-Cover Texts. A copy of the license can be found in Appendix A.

1.2. Disclaimer

No liability for the contents of this document can be accepted. Use the concepts, examples and other content entirely at your own risk. As this is a new edition, there may be technical or other inaccuracies that may result in the loss of irreplaceable data. In any case, proceed with caution, and realize that although errors are highly unlikely, the author can accept no responsibility for them.

All copyrights are held by their by their respective owners, unless specifically noted otherwise. Use of a term in this document should not be regarded as affecting the validity of any trademark or service mark.

Naming of particular products or brands should not be seen as endorsements.

1.3. New Versions

This is the initial release.

The latest version number of this document can be found here.

1.4. Credits

I would like to thank Brad Hards, the primary author of the Linux CDCEther kernel driver for graciously volunteering several useful bits of information.

Also, I would like to thank Marla, who has cheerily tolerated the time I've spent sifting through documentation and endless typing while completing this and other projects. Without you I'm lost.

1.5. Feedback

Please send any additions or comments pertaining to this document to the following email address: . If you have an earlier (e.g., 3000 series) or later (e.g. 5000) series Surfboard and have it working in linux, please contact me with any model-specific setup information so we can update this document! .:: telegra.ph ::. .:: www.arc.agric.za ::.

1.6. Conventions Used in this Document

The following conventions are used in this document and are outlined here for those who may not yet have a complete understanding of how to access and control the underlying operating system in Linux, which is almost always the bash shell. .:: kenhrao.com ::. .:: prosinrefgi.wixsite.com ::.

First, filenames are referenced in a paragraph like so: /path/file

Commands in Linux are executed (or 'called') at the command prompt, otherwise known as the 'command line.' If you are in the non-graphical (text-based) environment you will usually be presented the bash shell prompt which is a dollar sign:

$

...or the hash mark:

#

...if you have logged in as root or have acquired root, or 'superuser' privileges. You can also access the bash shell in the X window system, otherwise known as X or X11, with an xterm or similar X-terminal-emulator. Commands to be performed at the bash prompt, but referenced in a paragraph of this document, usually look like this: do this now

Commands and/or the resulting output of commands may also be outlined with screen output in their own paragraph or heading:

$ date
Sun Jul 27 22:37:11 CDT 2003

When a command is written in front of the bash prompt (e.g. [ArXiv: TCP IP Analysis] $ date above), it is assumed the [Return] or [Enter] key has been depressed after the command, possibly followed by the output on a new line (e.g., as in the date in the above example).

Share or Research:

Share on FB Post to X LinkedIn 🤖 Ask AI about this