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Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Mandrake and Windows XP networking Post 48512 by kickyr on Tuesday 9th of March 2004 12:53:50 PM
Old 03-09-2004
Mandrake and Windows XP networking

I have a main computer which is running windows xp and has my internet connection. I also have my laptop which is running mandrake 9.0. I am completely new to lunix and was wondering how to network the two together so i can share my modem (can't afford broadband yet) In windows xp there were no drivers for my network card on the laptop that is why i decided to try Lunix and Mandrake 9.0 was the easiest to get hold of. Eventually i want both computers to be running just lunix as i have found it to be pretty cool.

Any help on my network problem would be greatly appreciated.

cheers
 

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SynCE(7)						       http://www.synce.org/							  SynCE(7)

NAME
SynCE - A project for connecting to devices running Microsoft Windows Mobile. DESCRIPTION
The SynCE project aims to provide libraries and tools to connect to and synchronise with PDA's and other devices running Microsoft Windows Mobile, or Windows CE. The main components include :- libsynce Core library that provides various support services and functions. librapi2 Core library implementing the RAPI protocol, equivalent to rapi.dll on a Windows OS. RAPI is used for most kinds of interaction with a WM device. This library actually implements two versions of the protocol. RAPI 1 is used for devices up to and including CE 5.0, with RAPI 2 coming into use from 5.1 (WM5). librra Library implementing RRA (Remote Replication Agent), a protocol used for synchronisation. This protocol is used for all data synchronisa- tion until WM5, at which point Airsync is used for the majority. RRA is still used for file synchronisation however. dccm The dccm daemon negotiates the initial connection with a WM device, and may provide keep-alive signals and client connections, depending on the device version and flavour of dccm. There have been a number of dccm 'flavours'. The original, also known as synce-dccm, is now considered obsolete and should not be used. Vdccm is a natural progression of dccm which is not greatly used anymore. Odccm is the most common in use at the moment, and uses dbus to provide connections to both legacy and modern devices. Hal-dccm is a new option that integrates the dccm functionality into hal to provide a more platform consistent interface. The following steps are required to get started with SynCE: (1) Ensure the rndis kernel module or a serial connection mechanism is installed To use advanced network features (rndis) with a WM5 or later device, which is recommended, you must use the usb-rndis-[lite|ng] driver from SynCE. For older devices or to use serial with WM5, if synce-hal is not used you will require the synce-serial package. You will of course also need a dccm daemon, synce-hal or odccm is recommended. (2) Start the connection daemon (as root) If using odccm, this daemon must run as the root user. With synce-hal, dccm will be started as required. Older dccm implementations must be run as your user. (3) Run tools that access the device (as user) See for example pls(1) and pcp(1). See http://www.synce.org/ for more information about the SynCE project. AUTHOR
This manual page was written by David Eriksson <twogood@users.sourceforge.net>. It was later updated by Jonny Lamb <jonnylamb@jonny- lamb.com> and Mark Ellis <mark@mpellis.org.uk>. SEE ALSO
odccm(1) The SynCE project November 2002 SynCE(7)
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