- #Insignia usb 2.0 to ethernet adapter nintendo switch install#
- #Insignia usb 2.0 to ethernet adapter nintendo switch Patch#
- #Insignia usb 2.0 to ethernet adapter nintendo switch Pc#
- #Insignia usb 2.0 to ethernet adapter nintendo switch iso#
#./asix_eepromtool -d XXXX:YYY -w myeeprom.bin -s 256 Write the new eeprom data to USB adapter You'll be updating those 8 characters ( 4 for VID and 4 for PID) in GHEX from whatever is there now to: This is the same VID/PID from the read/dump command as well. Find the VID/PID you identified earlier from lsusb command. File Open.browse for your myeeprom.bin file. First, make a copy of your myeeprom.bin file incase you made a bad edit. To edit the myeeprom.bin file to spoof the VID/PID we'll need a hexeditor Youll have a new file (myeeprom.bin) in the directory you are in. ** ( where XXXX:YYY is the current VID/PID that you saw from 'lsubsb' command in last step) #./asix_eepromtool -d XXXX:YYY -r myeeprom.bin -s 256 Note the ID: 1234:ABCD for your USB ethernet adapter Output should list out various "BUS 00X DEVICE XXX: ID: XXX:" lines.look the line that likely shows the brand of your USB adapter.TPLink, JUE, UGREEN.etc
#Insignia usb 2.0 to ethernet adapter nintendo switch install#
Inside Debian, open Activities-> TerminalĮnter root password from install steps above. Select VM, select your VM name from earlier, hit OK. VMware Workstation should prompt you if you want to connect the adapter to HOST or to VM/Guest Plug USB Ethernet adapter into your workstation. Download the attached precompiled asix_eepromtool binary onto your VM If needed right click Desktop and select display settings to increase the screen resolution. Once machine reboots after install, youll be prompted to login with the username you created. Let Debian install.~10mins depending on your system. This is the 'main' user account we will be logging into Create a separate user, set password for user. Power ON VM, Debian install process will boot New disk, 20GB, do NOT allocate now(thin provisioned is OK). NAT networking, LSI controller, SCSI disk. just to make sure the VM runs smooth enough. Name your VM and choose location to store VM files(doesnt matter where)
#Insignia usb 2.0 to ethernet adapter nintendo switch iso#
Point the installer disc image prompt to the Debian ISO you downloaded earlier so we can mount the image at startup. the most important thing to look for is that the adapter is based on ASIX chipset. This guide 'should' work with other ASIX AX88772 Chipset based adapters. "UGREEN Ethernet Adapter USB 2.0 to 10/100 Network RJ45 LAN Wired Adapter Compatible for Nintendo Switch, Wii, Wii U, MacBook, Chromebook, Windows, Mac OS, Surface, Linux ASIX AX88772 Chipset (Black)"
The steps and guide below will facilitate the flashing of the UGREEN USB Ethernet adapter that's readily available on Amazon(USA) for ~$12 at the time of this writing. It seems PCM4 strictly looks for this VID/PID when a USB ethernet adapter is attached and rarely works with any adapter attached if the VID/PID doesnt match what it expects.
The chipset inside the DLink DUB-E100 is an ASIX AX88772 - with a specific VendorID and ProductID (VID/PID) that identifies it as a DLink unit. This is where this guide comes into play.
#Insignia usb 2.0 to ethernet adapter nintendo switch Pc#
Using other adapters results in the PC not able to telnet into PCM. There are various other USB ethernet adapters available on Amazon/Ebay/BestBuy/OfficeDepot but PCM4 will only 'talk' to specific vendor devices(such at the DLink unit). The 'go-to' adapter is usually the DLilnk DUB-E100 adapter however this adapter is now EOL and hard to get.
#Insignia usb 2.0 to ethernet adapter nintendo switch Patch#
One of the requirements to enable your PC/Notebook to talk to PCM4 is to have a supported ASIX chipset based USB Ethernet adapter that gets plugged into the USB port in the glove box along with a CAT5 patch cable into your PC to complete the connection. PCM coding/flashing to enable NAV/AndroidAuto/CarPlay and various other options is available from folks on the forums. DIY - 718 Cayman PCM4 USB Ethernet Coding Adapter - EEPROM VID/PID Flash (github)