How to tether your Nokia N95s Internet connection to your laptop via Bluetooth in Linux ¾î¶»°Ô ³ëÆ®ºÏ¿¡ ºí·çÅõ½º¸¦ ÅëÇØ ³ëŰ¾Æ´Â ¸®´ª½º¿¡¼­ ±ÍÇÏÀÇ ÀÎÅÍ³Ý ¿¬°áÀ» ¹åÁÙ·Î N95s

by Ken Murray on October 27, 2008 ÄË ¸Ó·¹ÀÌ 2008³â 10¿ù 27ÀÏ¿¡ ÀÇÇØ

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Sometimes you end up somewhere with your laptop where you just can¡¯t find any open WiFi. Luckily you have a Nokia N95 and a Bluetooth adapter. ´ÙÇàÈ÷µµ ´ç½ÅÀÌÇØ¾ßÇÏ´Â ³ëŰ¾Æ N95¿Í ºí·çÅõ½º ¾î´ðÅÍ. I¡¯m going to show you how to tether your N95 to your laptop via Bluetooth the quick and dirty command line way, as well as the prettier GUI way. ³»°¡ ¾ó¸¶³ª ´ç½ÅÀÇ ³ëÆ®ºÏ PC¸¦ ºí·çÅõ½º¸¦ ÅëÇØ»Ó¸¸ ¾Æ´Ï¶óµíÇÑ GUI¸¦ ½Å¼ÓÇÏ°í ´õ·¯¿î ¹æ¹ýÀº ¸í·ÉÁÙ ¹æ¹ý N95ÀÇ ÇѰ踦 º¸¿©ÁÖ°Ú´Ù. In these examples I am running Fedora 9 and Gnome. ³»°¡ ±×³ðÀ» ½ÇÇà ¿ÀÀü 9 Æäµµ¶ó ÀÌ·¯ÇÑ ¿¹°¡ ÀÖÀ½.

Warning: You probably only want to do this if you have a decent data plan. °æ°í : ¸¸¾à ´ç½ÅÀÌ ±¦ÂúÀº µ¥ÀÌÅ͸¦ °èȹÀ» °¡Áö°í ´ç½ÅÀº ¾Æ¸¶ À̰ÍÀ»ÇÏ±æ ¿øÇØ¿ä. Using 3G data can result in a very large bill! 3 ¼¼´ëÀÇ µ¥ÀÌÅ͸¦ »ç¿ëÇÏ¿© ¸Å¿ì Å« ÁöÆó°¡ ¹ß»ýÇÒ ¼öÀÖ½À´Ï´Ù!

  1. The first thing you need to do is make sure your N95 is paired with your laptop. ´ç½ÅÀÌ ÇÒ N95ÀÇ ³ëÆ®ºÏ°ú °áÇյǾî ÀÖ´ÂÁö È®ÀÎÇÏ¿© ÇÊ¿äÇÑ °¡Àå ¸ÕÀúÇÏ´Â ÀÏÀÌÀÖ´Ù. This is far easier than I expected. ¿¹»óº¸´Ù ½Ã°£ÀÌ ÈξÀ ´õ ½±½À´Ï´Ù. As long as you have the gnome-bluetooth package installed, it¡¯s as simple as initiating the pairing from your phone and entering the same passkey on both the phone and the computer when prompted. ¸¸Å­ ±×³ð - ºí·çÅõ½º ÆÐŰÁö¸¦ ¼³Ä¡Çß´Ù¸é, ±×°ÍÀº °£´ÜÇÑÀ̾ßÇ϶ó´Â ¸Þ½ÃÁö°¡ ³ªÅ¸³ª¸é Æä¾î¸µ¿Í µ¿ÀÏÇÑ ¾ÏÈ£¸¦ ÀÔ·ÂÇÏ¿© ÈÞ´ë ÀüÈ­¿¡¼­ ¸ðµÎ ÈÞ´ë ÀüÈ­¿Í ÄÄÇ»ÅÍ¿¡ ½ÃÀÛÇß´Ù. You also need to have the ppp package and the wvdial package installed. PPP´Â ¶ÇÇÑ ÆÐŰÁö ¹× wvdial ÆÐŰÁö°¡ ¼³Ä¡µÇ¾î ÀÖ¾î¾ßÇÕ´Ï´Ù. If you don¡¯t, you can simply run, as root in a terminal window, yum install ppp wvdial (or use whatever package manager comes w/ your Linux distro). ±×·¸°ÔÇÏÁö ¾ÊÀ¸¸é, ´ç½ÅÀº ´Ü¼øÈ÷ Å͹̳ΠÀ©µµ¿ì¿¡¼­ ·çÆ®·Î, ³È (¶Ç´Â ¹«¾ùÀ» ÆÐŰÁö °ü¸®ÀÚ¸¦ »ç¿ëÇÏ¿© ¼³Ä¡¸¦ ½ÇÇàÇÒ ¼öÀÖ½À´Ï´Ù PPP¸¦ wvdial ½Â ¿À¸é / ´ç½ÅÀÇ ¸®´ª½º ¹èÆ÷ÆÇ).
  2. Now that both devices are paired, open a terminal window and run hcitool scan to discover your phones Bluetooth MAC address. ÀÌÁ¦´Â µÑ´Ù ½ÖÀ¸·Î ¿¬°áÇÏ´Â ÀåÄ¡, Å͹̳ΠâÀ» ¿­°í ½ÇÇà hcitool ºí·çÅõ½º MAC ÁÖ¼Ò¸¦ ±ÍÇÏÀÇ ÈÞ´ë ÀüÈ­¸¦ ¹ß°ßÇÒ ½ºÄµ. This section applies to both the command line and GUI parts of this tutorial. ÀÌ ¼½¼ÇÀ» ¸ðµÎ ¸í·ÉÁÙÀÌ Æ©Å丮¾óÀÇ GUI¸¦ ºÎǰ¿¡ Àû¿ëµË´Ï´Ù.

    [user@radon ~]$ hcitool scan [¶óµ· @ »ç¿ëÀÚ ~] $ hcitool ½ºÄµ
    Scanning ¡¦ ½ºÄµ ...
    00:22:66:9F:83:37 N95 00:22:66:9¿© : 83:37 N95ÀÇ

  3. Next we use sdptool to find out the channel for the Dial-Up Networking service. ´ÙÀ½¿¡ ¿ì¸®°¡ sdptool - ¼­ºñ½º ÀüÈ­ Á¢¼Ó ³×Æ®¿öÅ· ä³ÎÀ» ã¾Æ³» »ç¿ëÇÕ´Ï´Ù.

    [user@radon ~]$ sdptool browse 00:22:66:9F:83:37 [¶óµ· @ »ç¿ëÀÚ ~] $ sdptool 00:22:66:9¿© ã¾Æº¸±â : 83:37
    Browsing 00:22:66:9F:83:37 ¡¦ 00:22:66:9¿© : 83:37 ºê¶ó¿ì¡ ...
    Service Name: Dial-Up Networking ¼­ºñ½º À̸§ : ´ÙÀ̾ó - ³×Æ®¿öÅ·
    Service RecHandle: 0¡¿1004a ¼­ºñ½º RecHandle : 0 ¡¿ 1004a
    Service Class ID List: ¼­ºñ½º Ŭ·¡½º ID Á¤°¡ :
    ¡°Dialup Networking¡± (0¡¿1103) "ÀüÈ­ Á¢¼Ó ³×Æ®¿öÅ·"(0 ¡¿ 1103)
    Protocol Descriptor List: ÇÁ·ÎÅäÄÝÀ» ¼³¸í Á¤°¡ :
    ¡°L2CAP¡± (0¡¿0100) "L2CAP"(0 ¡¿ 0100)
    ¡°RFCOMM¡± (0¡¿0003) "RFCOMM"(0 ¡¿ 0003)
    Channel: 2 ä³Î : 2
    Language Base Attr List: ¾ð¾î ÀÚ·áÀÇ attr Á¤°¡ :
    code_ISO639: 0¡¿454e code_ISO639 : 0 ¡¿ 454e
    encoding: 0¡¿6a ÀÎÄÚµù : 0 ¡¿ 6a°¡
    base_offset: 0¡¿100 base_offset : 0 ¡¿ 100
    Profile Descriptor List: ÇÁ·ÎÇÊ ¼³¸í Á¤°¡ :
    ¡°Dialup Networking¡± (0¡¿1103) "ÀüÈ­ Á¢¼Ó ³×Æ®¿öÅ·"(0 ¡¿ 1103)
    Version: 0¡¿0100 ¹öÀü : 0 ¡¿ 0100

  4. There will probably be a few screens of output. ¾Æ¸¶ ¸î È­¸é Ãâ·ÂµË´Ï´Ù. I have only included the relevant part in the above example. ³­ ´ÜÁö À§ÀÇ ¿¹Á¦¿¡¼­ °ü·Ã ºÎºÐÀ» Æ÷ÇÔ½ÃÄ×½À´Ï´Ù. Note that the Dial-Up Networking service is on channel 2 . ±× ÀüÈ­ Á¢¼Ó ³×Æ®¿öÅ· ¼­ºñ½º - UpÀ» ä³Î 2¿¡¼­µË´Ï´Ù.
  5. Using your favorite text editor, as root, edit /etc/bluetooth/rfcomm.conf and make it look like the following, substituting your phones MAC address and channel number. , ·çÆ®·Î,À» / etc / ºí·çÅõ½º / rfcomm.conf ¼öÁ¤ÇÏ°í ±×°ÍÀ» ´ÙÀ½Ã³·³ º¸À̰Ô, ±ÍÇÏÀÇ ÈÞ´ë ÀüÈ­·Î ´ëü MAC ÁÖ¼Ò¿Í Ã¤³Î ¹øÈ£ ÁÁ¾ÆÇÏ´Â ÅØ½ºÆ® ÆíÁý±â¸¦ »ç¿ëÇÕ´Ï´Ù.
  6. #
    # RFCOMM configuration file. # RFCOMM ±¸¼º ÆÄÀÏÀÔ´Ï´Ù.
    #

    rfcomm0 { rfcomm0 (
    bind yes; ¹ÙÀεù ¿¹;
    device 00:22:66:9F:83:37; ÀåÄ¡ 00:22:66:9¿© : 83:37;
    channel 2; ä³Î 2;
    } )

  7. Save your rfcomm.conf and exit your text editor. ±ÍÇÏÀÇ rfcomm.conf ÀúÀåÇϰí ÅØ½ºÆ® ÆíÁý±â¸¦ Á¾·áÇÕ´Ï´Ù.
  8. As root, restart the bluetooth service: ·çÆ®·Î¼­, ºí·çÅõ½º ¼­ºñ½º¸¦ ´Ù½Ã ½ÃÀÛÇÕ´Ï´Ù :

    [root@radon ~]# service Bluetooth restart [¶óµ· @ ·çÆ® ~] # ¼­ºñ½º´Â ºí·çÅõ½º¸¦ ´Ù½Ã ½ÃÀÛ
    Stopping Bluetooth services: [ OK ] ¸ØÃáÀÇ ºí·çÅõ½º ¼­ºñ½º : [È®ÀÎ]
    Starting Bluetooth services: [ OK ] ºí·çÅõ½º ¼­ºñ½º¸¦ ½ÃÀÛ : [È®ÀÎ]

  9. We have now created a Bluetooth serial port at /dev/rfcomm0 that will be persistent through reboots. ¿ì¸®´Â Áö±Ý / dev/rfcomm0°¡ ÀçºÎ ÆÃÀ» ÅëÇØ Áö¼ÓµÈ´Ù¿¡¼­ ºí·çÅõ½º ½Ã¸®¾ó Æ÷Æ®¸¦ ¸¸µé¾ú½À´Ï´Ù. This is the port you will use as a ¡°modem¡± during the rest of the configuration. ÀÌ ´ç½Å¿¡°Ô "¸ðµ©"±¸¼ºÀÇ ³ª¸ÓÁö ±â°£ µ¿¾È »ç¿ëÇÏ½Ç Æ÷Æ®ÀÔ´Ï´Ù.

Now we move on to the quick and dirty command line setup. ÀÌÁ¦ ¿ì¸®¿¡ ´ëÇÑ ½Å¼ÓÇÏ°í ´õ·¯¿î Ä¿¸Çµå ¶óÀÎ ¼³Ä¡·Î À̵¿ÇÕ´Ï´Ù. Feel free to skip to the GUI setup below if you aren¡¯t very comfortable with the command line. ¾Æ·¡ÀÇ GUI ¼³Ä¡¸¦ °Ç³Ê ¸Å¿ì Ä¿¸Çµå ¶óÀΰú Æí¾ÈÇÏÁö ¾ÊÀº °æ¿ì ¹«·á·Î º¸³»ÁֽʽÿÀ.

Command Line Method ¸í·ÉÁÙ ¹æ¹ý
GUI Method GUI¸¦ ¹æ¹ý


Command Line Method ¸í·ÉÁÙ ¹æ¹ý

  1. Edit /etc/wvdial.conf and make it look like this: Àº / etc / wvdial.conf ÆíÁýÇϰíÀÌó·³ º¸ÀÌ°Ô :
  2. Modem = /dev/rfcomm0 ¸ðµ© = / dev/rfcomm0
    Baud = 460800 º¸¿Àµå = 460,800
    SetVolume = 0 SetVolume = 0
    Dial Command = ATDT ´ÙÀ̾ó ¸í·É = ATDT
    Init1 = ATZ Init1 = ATZ
    Init3 = ATM0 Init3 = ATM0
    FlowControl = CRTSCTS FlowControl = CRTSCTS

    [Dialer Bluetooth] [´ÙÀÌ¾ó·¯ ºí·çÅõ½º]
    Username = user »ç¿ëÀÚ = »ç¿ëÀÚ
    Password = pass ºñ¹Ð ¹øÈ£¸¦ Åë°ú =
    Phone = *99***1# ÀüÈ­ = * 99 *** 1 #
    Stupid Mode = 1 ¹Ùº¸ ¸ðµå = 1
    Init1 = ATZ Init1 = ATZ
    Inherits = Modem0 »ó¼Ó = Modem0

  3. I¡¯m using Rogers Wireless in Canada and the above is the minimum configuration that works for me. ³ª´Â ij³ª´Ù¿¡¼­ À§ÀÇ ·ÎÀú½º ¿ÍÀ̾½º¸¦ »ç¿ëÇϴµ¥ ÃÖ¼Ò ±¸¼ºÀÔ´Ï´Ù ³ª¸¦ À§ÇØ ÀÛµ¿ÇÕ´Ï´Ù. Literally Username = user and Password = pass. ¾ÆÀ̵ð = »ç¿ëÀÚ À̸§°ú ºñ¹Ð ¹øÈ£¸¦ ±×´ë·Î Åë°ú =. You may need to make changes to the Username, Password, and Phone lines. ´ç½ÅÀº ¾ÆÀ̵ð, ºñ¹Ð ¹øÈ£¸¦ º¯°æÇÏ·Á¸é, ±×¸®°í ÀüÈ­ ¶óÀÎÀÌ ÇÊ¿äÇÒ ¼öÀÖ½À´Ï´Ù. Contact your wireless provider for the correct details. Á¤È®ÇÑ ¼¼ºÎ »çÇ×À»À§ÇÑ ¹«¼± Á¦°ø ¾÷ü¿¡ ¹®ÀÇÇϽʽÿÀ.
  4. I also had to create a script called /etc/ppp/ip-up.local to make the automatic DNS configuration work. ¶ÇÇÑ ½ºÅ©¸³Æ®¿Í / etc / ppp / IP¸¦ - DNS ±¸¼ºÀ» ÀÚµ¿À¸·Î ÀÛµ¿Çϵµ·Ï ¸¸µé¶ó´Â up.localÇß´Ù. Here¡¯s my ip-up.local: ¿©±â¿¡ ³» IP - up.localÀÇ :
  5. #!/bin/bash #! / ºó / bash´Â
    #

    PATH=/sbin:/usr/sbin:/bin:/usr/bin ÀÌ PATH = / sbin :¿¡¼­´Â / usr / sbin : / ºóÇϽʽÿÀ : / usr / ºó
    export PATH ¼öÃâÀÌ PATH
    echo ¡°# created by pppd¡± > /etc/resolv.conf "ÇÏ¿© ¸¸µç # ¸Þ¾Æ¸®"> / etc ÇØ´ç pppd / resolv.conf ÆÄÀÏ
    echo ¡°nameserver ${DNS1}¡± >> /etc/resolv.conf "³×ÀÓ $ (DNS1)">> / etc / resolv.conf ÆÄÀÏ ¸Þ¾Æ¸®
    echo ¡°nameserver ${DNS2}¡± >> /etc/resolv.conf "³×ÀÓÀ» $ (DNS2)">> / etc / resolv.conf ÆÄÀÏ ¸Þ¾Æ¸®
    chmod go+r /etc/resolv.conf + RÀ» °¡Áö´Â / etc chmod¸¦ / resolv.conf ÆÄÀÏ

    Don¡¯t forget to chmod 755 /etc/ppp/ip-up.local chmod¸¦ÇÏ´Â °ÍÀ» ÀØÁö ¸¶½Ê½Ã¿À 755¿Í / etc / ppp / IP¸¦ - up.local

  6. Unfortunately I have not been able to connect as a normal user in this configuration so you¡¯ll have to connect as root. ±×·¡¼­ ·çÆ®·Î ¿¬°áÇØ¾ßÇÕ´Ï´Ù ºÒÇàÈ÷µµ ³ª´ÂÀÌ ±¸¼º¿¡¼­ ÀÏ¹Ý »ç¿ëÀÚ·Î ¿¬°áÇÒ ¼ö¾ø½À´Ï´Ù.

    [root@radon ~]# wvdial Bluetooth [¶óµ· @ ·çÆ® ~] # wvdial ºí·çÅõ½º
    –> WvDial: Internet dialer version 1.60 -> WvDial : ÀÎÅÍ³Ý ÀüÈ­ °É±â ¹öÀü 1.60
    –> Cannot get information for serial port. -> Á÷·Ä Æ÷Æ®¿¡ ´ëÇÑ Á¤º¸¸¦ ¾òÀ» ¼ö¾ø½À´Ï´Ù.
    –> Initializing modem. -> ÃʱâÈ­ ¸ðµ©.
    –> Sending: ATZ -> º¸³»±â : ATZ
    ATZ
    OK ¿ÀŬ¶óÈ£¸¶

    –> Sending: ATM0 -> º¸³»±â : ATM0
    ATM0
    OK ¿ÀŬ¶óÈ£¸¶
    –> Modem initialized. -> ¸ðµ©À» ÃʱâÈ­ÇÕ´Ï´Ù.
    –> Sending: ATDT*99***1# -> º¸³»±â : ATDT * 99 *** 1 #
    –> Waiting for carrier. -> Ç×°ø ±â´Ù ¸®¸é¼­.
    ATDT*99***1# ATDT * 99 *** 1 #
    CONNECT Á¢¼Ó
    ~[7f]}#@!}!} } }2}#}$@#}!}$}%\}¡±}&} }*} } g}%~ ~ [Ãþ ]}#@!}!})) 2 }#}$@#}!}$}% \ }"}&}) *)) G Á¶) % ~
    –> Carrier detected. -> ij¸®¾î¸¦ ¹ß°ßÇß½À´Ï´Ù. Starting PPP immediately. Áï½Ã PPP¸¦ ½ÃÀÛÇß´Ù.
    –> Starting pppd at Sun Oct 19 16:48:56 2008 -> ½ã 10¿ù 19ÀÏ 16½Ã 48ºÐ 56ÃÊ 2008 pppd ½ÃÀÛ
    –> Pid of pppd: 8028 -> pppdÀÇ PID : 8028
    –> Using interface ppp0 -> ÀÎÅÍÆäÀ̽º¸¦ »ç¿ë ppp0
    –> local IP address 172.28.53.106 -> ·ÎÄà IP ÁÖ¼Ò¸¦ 172.28.53.106
    –> remote IP address 10.6.6.6 -> ¿ø°Ý IP ÁÖ¼Ò°¡ 10.6.6.6
    –> primary DNS address 207.181.101.4 -> ÁÖ DNS ÁÖ¼Ò¸¦ 207.181.101.4
    –> secondary DNS address 207.181.101.5 -> º¸Á¶ DNS ÁÖ¼Ò¸¦ 207.181.101.5

  7. I removed the lines containing unprintable characters, but otherwise you should see something very similar to above. ¾Ë¾Æ¿ä,ÇÏÁö¸¸ ¶óÀÎÀ» Á¦°ÅÇÏÁö ¾ÊÀº ¹®ÀÚ°¡ Æ÷ÇÔµÈ ´Þ¸® ¹º°¡ ¸Å¿ì À§¿Í °°Àº Á¤º¸°¡ Ç¥½ÃµË´Ï´Ù. Note that wvdial stays in the foreground. Âü°í wvdial Àü°æ¿¡ ±×´ë·Î ³²¾ÆÀÖ½À´Ï´Ù. This is so you can disconnect by simply pressing Ctrl-C. ÀÌ ¶§¹®¿¡ ´Ü¼øÈ÷ Ctrl - C¸¦ ´­·¯ ²÷À» ¼öÀÖ´Ù´Â °ÍÀÔ´Ï´Ù.
  8. You can verify that you are online by switching to a new terminal window and running ifconfig. ´ç½ÅÀÌ »õ Å͹̳ΠâÀ» ½ÇÇàÇÏ¿© ½ºÀ§Äª ¹× ifconfig´Â ¿Â¶óÀο¡¼­ È®ÀÎÇÒ ¼öÀÖ½À´Ï´Ù.

    [root@radon ~]# ifconfig [¶óµ· @ ·çÆ® ~] ifconfig´Â #
    lo Link encap:Local Loopback ½Î´Ù ¸µÅ© Encap : ·ÎÄà ·çÇÁ¹é
    inet addr:127.0.0.1 Mask:255.0.0.0 INET ¼Ò : 127.0.0.1 ¸¶½ºÅ© : 255.0.0.0
    inet6 addr: ::1/128 Scope:Host inet6 ¼Ò : : : 1 / 128 ¹üÀ§ : È£½ºÆ®
    UP LOOPBACK RUNNING MTU:16436 Metric:1 ·çÇÁ¹é ³ª¿À´Â MTU¸¦ ¾÷ : 16,436 ¸ÞÆ®¸¯ : 1
    RX packets:12767 errors:0 dropped:0 overruns:0 frame:0 RX¿¡ ÆÐŶ : 12767 ¿À·ù : 0 ¶³¾î¶ß : 0 ¿À¹ö·± : 0 ÇÁ·¹ÀÓ : 0
    TX packets:12767 errors:0 dropped:0 overruns:0 carrier:0 ÅØ»ç½º ÆÐŶ : 12767 ¿À·ù : 0 ¶³¾î¶ß : 0 ¿À¹ö·± : 0 Åë½Å»ç : 0
    collisions:0 txqueuelen:0 Ãæµ¹ : 0 txqueuelen : 0
    RX bytes:714652 (697.9 KiB) TX bytes:714652 (697.9 KiB) RX¿¡ ¹ÙÀÌÆ® : 714652 (697.9 KiB), ÅØ»ç½º ¹ÙÀÌÆ® : 714652 (697.9 KiB)

    ppp0 Link encap:Point-to-Point Protocol ¸µÅ© ppp0 Encap :À§ÇÑ Point - to - Æ÷ÀÎÆ® ÇÁ·ÎÅäÄÝ
    inet addr:172.28.53.106 PtP:10.6.6.6 Mask:255.255.255.255 INET ¼Ò : 172.28.53.106 PtP : 10.6.6.6 ¸¶½ºÅ© : 255.255.255.255
    UP POINTOPOINT RUNNING NOARP MULTICAST MTU:1500 Metric:1 POINTOPOINT ³ª¿À´Â NOARP ¸ÖƼ ij½ºÆ® MTU´Â À§ÂÊ : 1500 ¸ÞÆ®¸¯ : 1
    RX packets:4 errors:0 dropped:0 overruns:0 frame:0 RX¿¡ ÆÐŶ : 4 ¿À·ù : 0 ¶³¾î¶ß : 0 ¿À¹ö·± : 0 ÇÁ·¹ÀÓ : 0
    TX packets:5 errors:0 dropped:0 overruns:0 carrier:0 ÅØ»ç½º ÆÐŶ : 5 ¿À·ù : 0 ¶³¾î¶ß : 0 ¿À¹ö·± : 0 Åë½Å»ç : 0
    collisions:0 txqueuelen:3 Ãæµ¹ : 0 txqueuelen : 3
    RX bytes:64 (64.0 b) TX bytes:94 (94.0 b) RX¿¡ ¹ÙÀÌÆ® : 64 (64.0 b)´Â ÅØ»ç½º ¹ÙÀÌÆ® : 94 (94.0 b)´Â

    [root@radon ~]# ping simplehelp.net [¶óµ· @ ·çÆ® ~] # ping ¸í·É simplehelp.net
    PING simplehelp.net (74.52.95.42) 56(84) bytes of data. µ¥ÀÌÅÍÀÇ PINGÀ» simplehelp.net (74.52.95.42) 56 (84) ¹ÙÀÌÆ®.
    64 bytes from 2a.5f.344a.static.theplanet.com (74.52.95.42): icmp_seq=1 ttl=46 time=110 ms 2a.5f.344a.static.theplanet.com (74.52.95.42) : icmp_seq = 1¿¡¼­ 64 ¹ÙÀÌÆ® °³ TTL = 46 ½Ã°£ = 110 msÀÇ
    64 bytes from 2a.5f.344a.static.theplanet.com (74.52.95.42): icmp_seq=2 ttl=46 time=102 ms 2a.5f.344a.static.theplanet.com (74.52.95.42) : icmp_seq = 2 ¹ÙÀÌÆ®¿¡¼­ 64 °³ TTL = 46 ½Ã°£ = 102 msÀÇ
    64 bytes from 2a.5f.344a.static.theplanet.com (74.52.95.42): icmp_seq=3 ttl=46 time=164 ms 2a.5f.344a.static.theplanet.com (74.52.95.42) : icmp_seq = 3¿¡¼­ 64 ¹ÙÀÌÆ® °³ TTL = 46 ½Ã°£ = 164 msÀÇ
    64 bytes from 2a.5f.344a.static.theplanet.com (74.52.95.42): icmp_seq=4 ttl=46 time=130 ms 2a.5f.344a.static.theplanet.com (74.52.95.42) : icmp_seq = 4 ¹ÙÀÌÆ®¿¡¼­ 64 °³ TTL = 46 ½Ã°£ = 130 msÀÇ
    64 bytes from 2a.5f.344a.static.theplanet.com (74.52.95.42): icmp_seq=5 ttl=46 time=149 ms 2a.5f.344a.static.theplanet.com (74.52.95.42) : icmp_seq = 5¿¡¼­ 64 ¹ÙÀÌÆ® °³ TTL = 46 ½Ã°£ = 149 msÀÇ
    ^C ^ C
    — simplehelp.net ping statistics — - simplehelp.net¿¡¼­ ping Åë°è -
    5 packets transmitted, 5 received, 0% packet loss, time 4513ms 5, 0 % ÆÐŶ ¼Õ½Ç, ½Ã°£À̹ÞÀº 5 ÆÐŶÀ» Àü¼Û, 4513ms
    rtt min/avg/max/mdev = 102.061/131.349/164.376/23.190 ms RTT ºÐ / Æò±Õ / ÃÖ´ë / mdev = 102.061/131.349/164.376/23.190 Ž»ö

  9. Once you are finished online, don¡¯t forget to switch back to the terminal where you ran wvdial and press Ctrl-C. ÈÄ¿¡´Â Å͹̳ÎÀ» ¾îµð·Î µµ¸Á - C¸¦ ´Ù½Ã ÀüȯÇϸé Ctrl ۸¦ wvdial ÀØÁö ¸»°í ¿Â¶óÀÎÀ¸·Î ¸¶¹«¸®µË´Ï´Ù.

    ^CCaught signal 2: Attempting to exit gracefully¡¦ ^ CCaught ½ÅÈ£ 2 : Á¤»óÀûÀ¸·Î Á¾·áÇÏ·Á°í ½Ãµµ ...
    –> Terminating on signal 15 -> ½ÅÈ£°¡ 15 ÀÏ Á¾·á
    –> Connect time 5.8 minutes. - 5.8 ºÐ Á¤µµ ½Ã°£À» ¿¬°á>.
    –> Disconnecting at Sun Oct 19 16:54:48 2008 -> ½ã 10¿ù 19ÀÏ 16½Ã 54ºÐ 48ÃÊ 2008 ºÐ¸®


GUI Method GUI¸¦ ¹æ¹ý

Now, if all that command line stuff scares you, here¡¯s how to make it work using Gnome¡¯s GUI: Áö±Ý, ¸¸¾à ±× Ä¿¸Çµå ¶óÀÎÀÇ ¸ðµç ¹°°Ç, ¿©±â ¹«¼­¿ö ±×³ðÀÇ GUI¸¦ »ç¿ëÇÏ¿© ¾î¶»°Ô ÀÛµ¿ÇϰÔÇÏ·Á¸é :

  1. Click System -> Administration -> Network ½Ã½ºÅÛÀ» ´©¸¨´Ï´Ù -> °ü¸® -> ³×Æ®¿öÅ©
  2. You will be asked to enter your root password. ±ÍÇÏÀÇ ·çÆ® ¾ÏÈ£¸¦ ÀÔ·ÂÇ϶ó´Â ¸Þ½ÃÁö°¡ Ç¥½ÃµË´Ï´Ù. Enter it and click OK . ±×°ÍÀ» ÀÔ·ÂÇϰí È®ÀÎÀ» Ŭ¸¯ÇÕ´Ï´Ù.
  3. Now you can see a list of installed network devices. Áö±Ý ¼³Ä¡µÇ¾îÀÖ´Â ³×Æ®¿öÅ© ÀåÄ¡ÀÇ ¸ñ·ÏÀ» º¼ ¼öÀÖ½À´Ï´Ù. Click on the Hardware tab. Çϵå¿þ¾î ÅÇÀ» Ŭ¸¯ÇϽʽÿÀ.

  4. click to enlarge Ŭ¸¯ÇϽøé È®´ëµË´Ï´Ù

  5. Now click the New button, select Modem , and click OK . ÀÌÁ¦ »õ ÆÄÀÏ ¹öưÀ» Ŭ¸¯, ¸ðµ©À» ¼±ÅÃÇϰí È®ÀÎÀ» ´©¸¨´Ï´Ù.
  6. Change the Modem Device to /dev/rfcomm0. ÇÏ·Á¸é ¸ðµ© ÀåÄ¡ º¯°æ / dev/rfcomm0. If /dev/rfcomm0 is not available in the list, just type it in. Click OK . ¸¸¾à / dev/rfcomm0 ¸ñ·Ï¿¡ ÀÔ·ÂÇϱ⸸ÇÏ¸é ±×°ÍÀ» ¾ÈÀ¸·Î »ç¿ëÇÒ ¼ö¾ø½À´Ï´Ù È®ÀÎÀ» Ŭ¸¯ÇÕ´Ï´Ù.
  7. Now click the Devices tab. ÀÌÁ¦ ÀåÄ¡ ÅÇÀ» Ŭ¸¯ÇϽʽÿÀ.

  8. click to enlarge Ŭ¸¯ÇϽøé È®´ëµË´Ï´Ù


    click to enlarge Ŭ¸¯ÇϽøé È®´ëµË´Ï´Ù

  9. Click the New button, select Modem connection, and click Forward . New ¹öưÀ» Ŭ¸¯ÇÏ¿© ¼±ÅÃÇÕ´Ï´Ù ¸ðµ© ¿¬°á, ±×¸®°í Æ÷¿öµå¸¦ ´©¸¨´Ï´Ù.

  10. click to enlarge Ŭ¸¯ÇϽøé È®´ëµË´Ï´Ù

  11. All I needed to do to make my Rogers Wireless connection work was enter *99***1# as the Phone Number, user as the Login Name, and pass as the Password. ¸ðµÎ ³»°¡ ÇØ¾ßÇÒÀÏ ³» ·ÎÀú½º ¹«¼± ¿¬°á ÀÛ¾÷ * *** 1 # 99¸¦ ÀÔ·ÂÇÏ°Ô ÀüÈ­ ¹øÈ£, »ç¿ëÀÚÀÇ ·Î±×ÀÎ À̸§°ú ºñ¹Ð ¹øÈ£·Î Åë°úÇß´Ù. I also chose to name this connection Bluetooth. ¶ÇÇÑ ºí·çÅõ½ºÀÌ ¿¬°á À̸§À» ¼±ÅÃÇß´Ù. Click Forward . Æ÷¿öµå¸¦ Ŭ¸¯ÇϽʽÿÀ.

  12. click to enlarge Ŭ¸¯ÇϽøé È®´ëµË´Ï´Ù

  13. I left these options at their defaults. ³­ ±×µéÀÇ ±âº»°ªÀÌ ¿É¼ÇÀ» ¶°³µ´Ù. Click Forward . Æ÷¿öµå¸¦ Ŭ¸¯ÇϽʽÿÀ.

  14. click to enlarge Ŭ¸¯ÇϽøé È®´ëµË´Ï´Ù

  15. We¡¯ve finished creating the connection. ¿ì¸®°¡ ±× ¿¬°áÀ» ¸¸µå´Â ³¡³Â½À´Ï´Ù. Click Apply . Àû¿ëÀ» Ŭ¸¯ÇÕ´Ï´Ù.

  16. click to enlarge Ŭ¸¯ÇϽøé È®´ëµË´Ï´Ù

  17. Click the X in the top right corner to close this window. ¿À¸¥ÂÊ »ó´Ü ¸ð¼­¸®¿¡ÀÖ´Â X¸¦ Ŭ¸¯ÇÏ¿©ÀÌ Ã¢À» ´Ý½À´Ï´Ù.

  18. click to enlarge Ŭ¸¯ÇϽøé È®´ëµË´Ï´Ù

  19. Click Yes to save the changes. ´ÙÀ½ ¿¹¸¦ ´­·¯ º¯°æ ³»¿ëÀ» ÀúÀåÇÕ´Ï´Ù.
  20. Click OK . È®ÀÎÀ» Ŭ¸¯ÇÕ´Ï´Ù. No, we won¡¯t need to restart the computer. ¾Æ´Ï, ¿ì¸®´Â ÄÄÇ»Å͸¦ ´Ù½Ã ½ÃÀÛÇÒ ÇÊ¿ä´Â¾ø½À´Ï´Ù.

  21. click to enlarge Ŭ¸¯ÇϽøé È®´ëµË´Ï´Ù

  22. So, let¡¯s use our newly created connection. ±×·¡¼­, ¿ì¸®°¡ »õ·Î ¸¸µç ¿¬°áÀ» »ç¿ëÇÏÀÚ. Click System -> Administration -> Network Device Control . ½Ã½ºÅÛÀ» ´©¸¨´Ï´Ù -> °ü¸® -> ³×Æ®¿öÅ© ÀåÄ¡¸¦ Á¦¾îÇÕ´Ï´Ù.
  23. Select the Bluetooth connection you just created and click Activate . ´ç½ÅÀº ´ÜÁö ¸¸µé¾ú Ȱ¼ºÈ­¸¦ Ŭ¸¯ ºí·çÅõ½º ¿¬°áÀ» ¼±ÅÃÇÕ´Ï´Ù.

  24. click to enlarge Ŭ¸¯ÇϽøé È®´ëµË´Ï´Ù

  25. Notice how the Bluetooth connection has changed from Inactive to Active . ÅëÁö ¹æ¹ý¿¡ ºí·çÅõ½º ¿¬°áÀÌ ºñȰ¼º¿¡¼­ ActiveÀ¸·Î ¹Ù²î¾ú½À´Ï´Ù.

  26. click to enlarge Ŭ¸¯ÇϽøé È®´ëµË´Ï´Ù

  27. Open Firefox and visit http://www.simplehelp.net. Firefox¸¦ ¿­°í ¹æ¹® http://www.simplehelp.net.

  28. click to enlarge Ŭ¸¯ÇϽøé È®´ëµË´Ï´Ù

  29. When you are finished online, go back to the Network Device Control window, select the Active Bluetooth connection and click Deactivate . ¸¶ÃÆÀ¸¸é ¿Â¶óÀÎ, ´Ù½Ã ³×Æ®¿öÅ© ÀåÄ¡ Á¦¾î â, ¾×Ƽºê ºí·çÅõ½º ¿¬°á µ¿ÀÛÀ» ¼±ÅÃÇϰí À̵¿À» ´©¸¨´Ï´Ù.

  30. click to enlarge Ŭ¸¯ÇϽøé È®´ëµË´Ï´Ù

  31. Verify that the Bluetooth connection is indeed Inactive, then close the Network Device Control window. ³×Æ®¿öÅ© ÀåÄ¡ Á¦¾î âÀ» ´ÝÀ¸Àº ºí·çÅõ½º ¿¬°áÀ» ½ÇÁ¦·Î ¿î¿µ ÁßÁöµÇ¸é, ±×¶§ È®ÀÎÇÕ´Ï´Ù.

  32. click to enlarge Ŭ¸¯ÇϽøé È®´ëµË´Ï´Ù

  33. Some of you may be wondering why I chose not to use Network Manager. ¿©·¯ºÐ Áß ¸î¸îÀº ¿Ö ³»°¡ ³×Æ®¿öÅ© °ü¸®ÀÚ¸¦ »ç¿ëÇÏÁö ¾Ê±â·Î ±Ã±ÝÇÑ ¼öÀÖ½À´Ï´Ù. It¡¯s quite simply due to the fact that mobile broadband support in Network Manager is in it¡¯s infancy and I found it to be virtually unusable. ±×°ÍÀº ¾ÆÁÖ °£´ÜÇÏ°Ô »ç½ÇÀ» Áö¿øÇÏ´Â ¸ð¹ÙÀÏ ±¤´ë¿ª ³×Æ®¿öÅ© °ü¸®ÀÚ¿¡¼­ ¿µ¾Æ±â¿¡ÀÌ°í ³ª´Â ±×°ÍÀ¸·Î ÀÎÇØ »ç½Ç»ó »ç¿ëÇÒ ¼ö ¾ø°ÔµÈ´Ù´Â °ÍÀ» ¹ß°ß. Once Network Manager¡¯s mobile broadband support becomes better, I¡¯ll rewrite this tutorial based on it. ÀÏ´Ü ³×Æ®¿öÅ© °ü¸®ÀÚÀÇ ¸ð¹ÙÀÏ ±¤´ë¿ªÀ» Áö¿ø ÀÚüÀÎ, ³ª´Â ±×°ÍÀÌ ÀÔ¹®¼­¸¦ ±â¹ÝÀ¸·Î ÀçÀÛ ¼ºÇÕ´Ï´Ù.
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