Solution to the "1802: Unauthorized network card" problem in recent thinkpad systems

From: Tisheng Chen
Date: Sun Jun 13 2004 - 02:41:25 EST


In recent IBM thinkpad systems, there is a limit to
allowed MiniPCI wireless cards. When an unauthorized
card is plugged in, the system doesn't boot and
halt with an error message like:

ERROR
1802: Unauthorized network card is plugged in
Power off and remove the miniPCI network card.

I met this 1802 error problem several months ago, and
since then my wifi card was used in a very clumsy and
inconvenient way. I used to boot to LILO menu or
Windows system first, then suspend and plug
in the card. After that, when the system is awake, the
card is working.

Recently, I learned two solutions to attack this
problem. One is to crack the BIOS by modifying the
PCI_ID list of allowed cards in the BIOS, as
suggested by Paul Sladen and Matthew Garrett.
(Reference:
http://www.paul.sladen.org/thinkpad-r31/wifi-card-pci-ids.html)

The other way is unbelievably simple. There is a byte
in CMOS which controls whether an "unauthorized" card
is allowed or not. That's 0x6a, actually only
the bit 0x80. The program to unlock the authorization
mechanism is like (asm):

MOV DX,0070
MOV AL,6A
OUT DX,AL
MOV DX,0071
IN AL,DX
OR AL,80
OUT DX,AL
MOV AX,4C00
INT 21

The program can be downloaded from:
http://jcnp.pku.edu.cn/~shadow/1802/no-1802.com
To use this program, you need to boot to DOS.

The CMOS solution is safe, but I'm not sure that it
works for all recent thinkpads and all cards. The BIOS
crack sure does, however it is difficult
and dangerous.

Sincerely,
Tisheng





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