Man Linux: Main Page and Category List

NAME

       wvdial - PPP dialer with built-in intelligence.

SYNOPSIS

       wvdial [ OPTIONS ] [ SECTION ] ...

DESCRIPTION

       wvdial  is an intelligent PPP dialer, which means that it dials a modem
       and starts PPP in order to connect to the Internet.   It  is  something
       like  the  chat(8) program, except that it uses heuristics to guess how
       to dial and log into your server rather than forcing  you  to  write  a
       login script.

       When   wvdial   starts,   it   first   loads   its  configuration  from
       /etc/wvdial.conf and ~/.wvdialrc which contains basic information about
       the  modem  port,  speed, and init string, along with information about
       your Internet Service Provider (ISP), such as the  phone  number,  your
       username, and your password.

       Then  it  initializes  your  modem and dials the server and waits for a
       connection (a CONNECT string  from  the  modem).   It  understands  and
       responds to typical connection problems (like BUSY and NO DIALTONE).

       Any  time  after  connecting,  wvdial  will  start PPP if it sees a PPP
       sequence from the server.  Otherwise, it tries to convince  the  server
       to start PPP by doing the following:

       ·   responding to any login/password prompts it sees;

       ·   interpreting “choose one of the following”-style menus;

       ·   eventually,  sending  the  word  “ppp”  (a  common  terminal server
           command).

       If all of this fails, wvdial just runs pppd(8) and hopes for the  best.
       It  will  bring  up  the connection, and then wait patiently for you to
       drop the link by pressing CTRL-C.

OPTIONS

       Several options are recognized by wvdial.

       -c, --chat
              Run wvdial as a chat replacement from within  pppd,  instead  of
              the more normal method of having wvdial negotiate the connection
              and then call pppd.

       -C, --config=CONFIGFILE
              Run wvdial with CONFIGFILE as the configuration file, instead of
              /etc/wvdial.conf.   This  is  mainly  useful only if you want to
              have per-user configurations, or you want to avoid having  dial-
              up  information  (usernames,  passwords,  calling  card numbers,
              etc.) in a system wide configuration file.

       -n, --no-syslog
              Don’t output debug information to the syslog daemon (only useful
              together with --chat).

       wvdial  is  normally run without command line options, in which case it
       reads  its  configuration  from  the  [Dialer  Defaults]   section   of
       /etc/wvdial.conf.   (The configuration file is described in more detail
       in wvdial.conf(5) manual page.)

       One or more SECTIONs  of  /etc/wvdial.conf  may  be  specified  on  the
       command  line.   Settings  in  these sections will override settings in
       [Dialer Defaults].

       For example, the command:
              wvdial phone2
       will read default options from  the  [Dialer  Defaults]  section,  then
       override  any  or  all  of  the options with those found in the [Dialer
       phone2] section.

       If more than one section is specified, they are processed in the  order
       they  are given.  Each section will override all the sections that came
       before it.

       For example, the command:
              wvdial phone2 pulse shh
       will read default options from  the  [Dialer  Defaults]  section,  then
       override  any  or  all  of  the options with those found in the [Dialer
       phone2] section, followed by the [Dialer pulse] section, and lastly the
       [Dialer shh] section.

       Using  this method, it is possible to easily configure wvdial to switch
       between different  internet  providers,  modem  init  strings,  account
       names,  and so on without specifying the same configuration information
       over and over.

BUGS

       “Intelligent” programs are frustrating  when  they  don’t  work  right.
       This  version  of  wvdial  has  only  minimal  support for disabling or
       overriding its “intelligence”, with the “Stupid Mode”, “Login  Prompt”,
       and  “Password Prompt” options.  So, in general if you have a nice ISP,
       it will probably work, and if you have a weird ISP, it might not.

       Still, it’s not much good if it doesn’t work for you, right?  Don’t  be
       fooled  by  the  fact  that  wvdial finally made it to version 1.00; it
       could well contain many bugs and misfeatures.  Let us know if you  have
       problems by sending e-mail to <wvdial-list@lists.nit.ca>.

       You may encounter some error messages if you don’t have write access to
       /etc/ppp/pap-secrets and /etc/ppp/chap-secrets.  Unfortunately, there’s
       really no nice way around this yet.

FILES

       /etc/wvdial.conf
              Configuration  file  which  contains  modem,  dialing, and login
              information. See wvdial.conf(5).

       /dev/ttyS*
              Serial port devices.

       /etc/ppp/peers/wvdial
              Required for correct authentication in  pppd  version  2.3.0  or
              newer.

       /etc/ppp/{pap,chap}-secrets
              Contains  a  list  of  usernames  and passwords used by pppd for
              authentication.  wvdial maintains this list automatically.

AUTHORS

       Dave Coombs and Avery Pennarun for Net  Integration  Technologies.   We
       would also like to thank SuSE and RedHat for adding a number of various
       cool features to wvdial.  Thanks guys!

SEE ALSO

       wvdial.conf(5), wvdialconf(1), pppd(8), chat(8).