This is the output of lsusb
:
ID 07d0:4959 Dazzle Kingsun KS-959 Infrared Adapter
After the insertion of the adapter, udev
will automatically load the kernel modules irda and ks959_sir. In /var/log/syslog
we read:
[ 3431.686628] usb 1-5: New USB device found, idVendor=07d0, idProduct=4959 [ 3431.686637] usb 1-5: New USB device strings: Mfr=1, Product=2, SerialNumber=0 [ 3431.686640] usb 1-5: Product: USB to IRDA [ 3431.686642] usb 1-5: Manufacturer: Kingsun CO. [ 3431.795253] NET: Registered protocol family 23 [ 3431.833083] KingSun KS-959 IRDA/USB found at address 3, Vendor: 7d0, Product: 4959 [ 3431.833083] ks959_sir: IrDA: Registered KingSun KS-959 device irda0 [ 3431.833083] usbcore: registered new interface driver ks959-sir
The irda0 device just created is a network device, we can see it with ifconfig -a
. The kernel exposes some info at /sys/class/net/irda0/
.
To use the adapter as a serial port, we need to load the kernel module ircomm-tty, the module will create several devices /dev/ircomm*
, those are the serial devices we will use.
Now we run the irattach
program to bring the irda0 port up and to link the Linux-IrDA stack to that port:
irattach irda0
Because the kernel module is loaded automatically by udev
, we don't need to declare the irda0 alias nor the kernel module options into /etc/modprobe.d/irda-utils
. irattach
will just bring up the interface and set some sysctl.
Now we can use the serial device /dev/ircomm0
, e.g with pilot-xfer
or with minicom(1)
:
pilot-memos -p /dev/ircomm0