Broadcom brightening.

I saw something interesting in my email today — apparently Rawhide (which is rolling toward next week’s Beta release of Fedora 12 even as we speak) and Fedora 11 have received the b43-openfwwf package, which supports a bunch of Broadcom wireless models. You can find out more information about b43-openfwwf at the OpenFWWF website, including a list of models supported and expected results.

What this means is that if you’re one of the folks who either (1) doesn’t have a choice of a more free software-friendly wireless in your computer, or (2) didn’t make the sustainable choice of a free software-friendly wireless, you’re no longer stuck with having to drag out fwcutter to slice firmware out of another driver. Although there might be some limitations in the modes that b43-openfwwf supports, your out of the box experience in Fedora 12 — and in Fedora 11 if you install directly with updates — will be quite improved!

Thank you to Peter Lemenkov for getting this package into Fedora!

3 Comments

  1. Jeff Sandys said,

    October 15, 2009 @ 2:57 pm

    But doesn’t b43-openfwwf still need the broadcom firmware like fwcutter? Or does it work out of the box? I hate updating my laptop because I lose the wireless internet and have to ‘sneaker-net’ the broadcom firmware before I can do anything else.

  2. Rahul Sundaram said,

    October 15, 2009 @ 8:24 pm

    You might want to note that this is reverse engineered firmware. Broadcom is not brightening yet.

  3. Paul said,

    October 19, 2009 @ 7:32 am

    @Rahul: No need, you’ve done it for me. :-) As I did note, this is a stopgap for people who’ve made what I think is a bad purchasing decision, to support a notoriously free software unfriendly hardware vendor. At least with b43-openfwwf, they’re not stuck in the cold having to carve out firmware.

    @Jeff: Yes, it works out of the box on a number of Broadcom wireless chipsets. Not every one, but quite a few. By the way, if you had a separate /home partition and just stored the firmware in your personal directory, you wouldn’t need to sneakernet anything, just recopy after installation. Hope that helps!

RSS feed for comments on this post

© 2009-2010 Paul W. Frields License: CC BY-NC-SA 3.0. Some rights reserved.

Switch to our mobile site