After reading the experiences about installing ADSL service
from USWest, I hope I can provide some useful information
to others with pending installations or who are considering
signing up for the service.
USWest people are not uniformly trained on ADSL, and even
those who are, are generally PC/Windows centric.
Within the 14-state area served by USWest, ADSL service is
not uniformly available. In addition, USWest is offering some
promotions that may differ from one area to another. If you
are interested in signing up for ADSL service, going through
the USWest web site, http://www.uswest.com/
is a good place to start.
When you sign up for the service, you must also designate
an ISP. If your ISP supports ADSL then some of the information
here, particularly about bridging and DHCP, will be determined
by your ISP and may be different. My ISP does not yet support
ADSL, so I signed up with uswest.net in a package deal that
USWest calls MegaPak ™.
Installation services are offered and I would recommend that
you accept the installation service. The technician that comes
to your house will check out the line and make sure that the
ADSL signaling is working correctly. The technician will also
have a PC laptop computer and also an extra Cisco 675 bridger/router.
The technician can use the PC laptop to configure the Cisco
675, saving you the serial cable hassle.
What You Get
When you sign up for service, USWest will ship you a Cisco
675 ADSL bridger/router. USWest insists on calling this an
ADSL modem, although it certainly doesn't fit the usual definition
of a modem. This is exactly the same unit as the NetSpeed
202/204, just renamed since Cisco purchased NetSpeed. Along
with the Cisco 675 there will be some documentation, three
telephone line filters, a female DB9 to RJ45 serial cable,
a crossover RJ45-RJ45 10baseT Ethernet cable, a two pair RJ11-RJ11
telephone cable, a wall mount telephone plate incorporating
a filter, and some extra short telephone cables.
The Cisco 675 is designed to connect to your computer via
Ethernet. The crossover cable that comes with it is so that
you can hook the 675 directly to your computer's Ethernet
10baseT interface without a hub. If you have a hub because
you have a printer connected by 10baseT Ethernet and/or additional
computers on a 10baseT Ethernet LAN, you have to look at the
hub to see if it has an uplink connector port. If it does,
the uplink connector port is a crossover port and will accept
the crossover cable that comes with the Cisco 675. Yes, that
does give you a double crossover, but it works and saves you
the $10 for another cable.
If your hub doesn't have an RJ45 uplink port, or you just
want to connect the Cisco 675 to one of the regular 10baseT
ports, you must use a regular 10baseT cable that you may already
have, or will have to purchase separately.
Although the Cisco 675 does have Telnet and Web interfaces
for configuration, it is really designed for configuration
via its built-in serial interface. The only problem is that
this serial port uses a RJ45 connector! The Cisco 675 comes
packaged with a female DB9 to RJ45 cable that is designed
to connect to the serial port on a PC. So how do you connect
it to a Mac?
Well, if you took my advice and signed up for the installation
service, don't sweat it. The technician will arrive with a
laptop PC, do the configuration for you with the laptop, and
you don't ever have to worry about how to hook the serial
port up to your Mac.
Once the Cisco 675 is configured, it is unlikely that you
will ever have reason to use the serial port in the future.
The serial port is not connected for normal operation, only
for configuration.
If you do want to hook it up to your Mac, MacWarehouse sells
an adapter cable Din8M to DB9M, 6 ft, ACC1312 for $9.99. You
can then hook the adapter cable to your Mac modem or printer
serial interface, and the Cisco cable will attach to the male
DB9 on the end of the adapter cable. Other options would include
adapter cables that are generally available at CompUSA where
you can get a Din8M to DB25 modem cable that is a widely available
Mac adapter cable, and then get a DB25 to DB9M adapter that
is a widely available PC adapter.
Installation
The documentation that arrives from USWest is confusing and
sometimes contradictory. In addition, the Cisco 675 Installation
and Operation Manual covers all the features of the unit,
but offers no examples or explanation as to under what circumstances
one would use any particular configuration or option.
The one correct piece of documentation is a thin booklet
entitled "MegaPak Installation Guide". I'll be referring
to that later.
Follow the instructions and diagrams in Chapter 3 of the
Cisco Installation Manual to hook the Cisco 675 up to your
Mac. Remember, if you connect it directly to your computer
10baseT interface you must use the crossover cable that came
with the 675. If you hook the Cisco 675 to an Ethernet hub
you can use the crossover cable to plug into the uplink port,
or you must use a regular 10baseT cable to plug into one of
the standard ports.
The discussion on Microfilters on page 3-8 of the Cisco 675
Installation Manual is very important. The Cisco 675 will
not successfully set up ADSL communications if even one telephone
is connected to the line without a filter. Where you hook
up the filters depends on how your telephones are wired and
is another good reason to use the installation service that
USWest offers.
The diagram on page 3-8 of the manual illustrates a common
wiring scheme where the telephone outlets throughout the house
are daisy chained one to the next. In this case, you must
install a microfilter between every phone and its wall outlet.
If you have a wall mounted phone, that's why they supplied
one filtered wall plate. If you have more than 3 phones, you
may need more than the 3 filters that came with your installation
kit. You can get more from USWest, or the technician will
also have some additional filters.
Another way that telephones can be wired is that each telephone
outlet in the house may have its own wire back to the telephone
network interface (that's the box the telephone company provides
that's generally on the outside of your house). If you have
a lot of wires (or the same number of wires as you have telephone
outlets) coming to the telephone network interface, then you
may have this type of wiring scheme. In that case, the technician
can install a junction block with a single filter between
the telephone network interface and all of your phone wires,
EXCEPT the wire that goes to the outlet you will use for the
Cisco 675. There must NOT be a filter on that line, or it
won't work.
If you plug the Cisco 675 up to the phone line and the WAN
LED blinks green and never shows steady green, then your filters
are not properly installed (or you could have line problems).
Another good reason to use the installation service. When
you first turn it on, the alarm light will go on briefly,
the WAN light will blink, but if everything's OK it should
shine steadily within about 30 seconds or so.
Configuring the Cisco 675
At this point I am assuming you have installed the Cisco
675, connected via Ethernet to your computer or your Ethernet
hub, connected it to the phone line and gotten a steady green
WAN LED, and have the serial port connected to your Mac modem
or printer port.
Configuring the Cisco 675 via the serial port requires a
terminal program. The one I used is ZTERM that's available
as shareware and downloadable over the net from a variety
of places including download.com. Configure the terminal package
to use whatever port you've hooked the serial cable up to,
and set the serial interface to a speed of 38400, no parity,
one stop bit.
The instructions in Section 4.5 of the Cisco Installation
manual on how to logon to the operating system contained in
the Cisco 675 are complete and easy to follow. Simply press
RETURN several times until you see the login: prompt from
the Cisco 675.
If the prompt doesn't appear after pressing RETURN several
times, try unplugging the power from the Cisco 675, and then
plugging it back in (that's the only way it can be turned
on or off) When the Cisco 675 is powered up it will send "HELLO"
through the serial port. Whether you see the hello or not,
try pressing RETURN again until you see the login: prompt.
The following now applies to configuring the Cisco 675 for
use with USWest.net. You may get different instructions from
your ISP.
The whole discussion in the Cisco 675 Installation Manual
about the various things that can be set up is very complete
so far as the commands and their syntax, but is utterly lacking
in why you would do any of them and of no help at all in which
ones you should do.
This is where the "MegaPak Installation Guide"
comes in. Look in Section IX Appendix-Cisco/NetSpeed External
DSL Modem Configuration. The ONLY thing you have to do is
set the Cisco 675 to RFC1483 bridging mode. And then don't
forget to WRITE the change to NVRAM and reboot the Cisco 675
or turn it off and then on again for the change to take effect.
That's all.
You don't need to set an IP address for the Cisco 675, you
don't need to configure the WAN 0-0 or eth 0-x ports, or any
of the other stuff that's documented in the Cisco 675 Installation
Manual. Don't be confused by the fact that USWest will also
have sent you a stapled set of pages titled "MegaBit
Services User Guide" that says that you will need an
IP address and subnet mask from your ISP. When I set up to
use uswest.net, I didn't need any of that. Again, if you are
using a different ISP, they may tell you to do things differently.
Configuring Your Mac
This assumes that you are using Open Transport and the Mac
TCP/IP control panel.
Open the TCP/IP control panel and select ConfigurationsÉ
from the File pull down menu. You will see a file selection
box. Highlight Default, and click on Duplicate. You will get
a dialogue box asking you to name the new configuration file.
I named mine USWEST.
After naming the new configuration, click on Make Active.
In the configuration dialogue box select Ethernet as the connection
option, and DHCP as the Configure option. No other entries
are required. Click the close box, save the changes, and reboot
your machine. Technically, rebooting shouldn't be necessary,
but my machine doesn't always request an IP address from the
DHCP server when I just close the control panel.
You should now be up and running. You should be able to run
Netscape and experience the rather breathtaking speed of ADSL.
You will have to configure Netscape, or whatever programs
you use for email and news to the USWest.net mail and news
server names. One brief side note, the documentation I got
from USWest giving my logon name, password, mail server and
news server, gave incorrect names for the email server. I
had to call uswest.net technical support to get the correct
email server name. Since the server name seems specific to
my city, I won't list it here, as yours will most likely be
different. Just be aware that if your documentation lists
"mail" as the server name, it's most likely wrong.
I hope this helps cut through the confusing mass of documentation
and misinformation. Setting up the Cisco 675 is really quite
simple, but the filters are so essential that I think it pays
to use the USWest installation service.
Rick Geiger was Manager of Advanced Development of
the Apple II Division at Apple in the early 80's, and General
Manager of the Amiga development. Rick is now chief Technology
Officer for Itron developing largest wide area wireless IP
networks in the world for utility meter data collection.
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