ThinkPad mobile Internet

Many Lenovo ThinkPads come with a mobile broadband modem. By inserting a SIM card into the modem, it is possible to use a cellular network to connect to the internet.

ModemManager-handled devices

Newer Quectel modems (for example, the Quectel EM120R-GL on X13 Gen2 and X1C Gen9) can be set by ModemManager.

Install modemmanager and enable it.

Then it can be set via CLI or GUI interface.

For example, on KDE Plasma:

In System Settings > Connections, click the plus sign in the lower right corner to create a new link, select Mobile Broadband > Create, follow the steps below:

Set up mobile broadband connection > any GSM device

Country > country_code

Provider > provider_name

Select your plan > My plan is not listed

APN > apn.number

Note: The provider and APN can be found in Windows under Settings > Network and Internet > Cellular Network > Carrier Settings: provider can be found in Active Network, and the APN can be found in Internet APN > Default Access Point > Views

QMI protocol modems

Requirements

The broadband modems in older ThinkPads use the QMI modem protocol — see "an introduction to libqmi" by a ModemManager developer for more information. These modems will show up as /dev/cdc-wdm on the filesystem.

It is not possible to initialize a QMI modem for use on Linux. Use Windows to activate the modem using Lenovo's activation app (or web search for "Lenovo mobile broadband" for the correct app for your modem). The modem will not work until it has been correctly initialized using the app.

Procedure

Install the libqmi package, which provides the qmicli and qmi-network programs. Also install net-tools for the helper script, which uses the ifconfig command.

Said helper script for qmi-network is available on GitHub. Save the script to somewhere in your $PATH, then review the script and make it executable. The values of some of the variables might need to be changed, especially WWAN_DEV which can be found via ip a (device name start with ).

Load the kernel modules and qcserial:

# modprobe qmi_wwan
# modprobe qcserial

Also read the README on the GitHub page of the QMI helper for any further prerequisites. In particular, you may need to set the APN provided by your cellular internet provider in .

/etc/qmi-network.conf
APN=foo.bar.net

Finally, running should start the cellular internet connection.

Gobi modems

This method is an alternative for some QMI modems.

First of all you need to make sure what model your modem is. Open your ThinkPad's backplate and look for an IC or FCC ID. For this example we are going to use GOBI2000 (IC: 2723A-GOBI2000, FCC ID: J9CGOBI2000-L)

Enable your modem device from you BIOS I/O settings.

Download the driver installer executable from https://support.lenovo.com/us/en/downloads/ds001302 and extract it with Wine. It will unpack the drivers to . The unpacker will prompt you to install the drivers automatically after unpacking, but if you need the installer again it is in previously mentioned folder. The installer will in turn unpack the firmware images to .

Now refer to the reference information on what firmware you want/need. Generally you are good to go with the Generic UMTS and Default Firmware (Forlders 6 an UMTS).

Install . Now copy the 3 previous firmware files to (if the folder does not exist, create it). Insert your sim card to the port found under your battery pack and restart. Your modem should now show up in your network manager.

Tip: Some firmwares are provided by the gobi-firmwareAUR package.

See: https://www.thinkwiki.org/wiki/Qualcomm_Gobi_2000

Getting around BIOS-level whitelist restrictions

In newer ThinkPad models, it is normally impossible to swap the LTE modem for a supported one due to BIOS-level restrictions ("whitelists" of allowed M.2 expansion cards) implemented in all modern Lenovo laptops. However, a method has been found to configure any Sierra Wireless EM73xx/EM74xx modem to "evade" the whitelist checks, so these modems can be used normally.

We will assume the model to be here.

General description

Use AT command to disable the modem's USB fast enumeration feature. The modem will take a significantly longer time to appear on the USB bus and the firmware will "miss" the modem at boot time.

Alternatively, use AT!CUSTOM="FASTENUMEN",2 to selectively enable USB fast enumeration for warm boots only. The modem will reappear faster on S3 resume but still evade the whitelist checks on regular boots and reboots (the mechanism of this effect is not fully clear to the author).

This comes with a downside: because the firmware does not "see" the modem, it will not export the WWAN rfkill but instead it will unconditionally assert the pin of the M.2 slot, forcing the modem into "airplane mode". Use AT command to configure the modem to ignore this pin.

Step-by-step

Boot the laptop with the stock modem in place and WWAN card access enabled in BIOS setup.

Suspend the laptop (make sure it is configured to use S3).

Hot-swap the stock Fibocom modem with the Sierra Wireless one, then resume. Whitelists are not consulted at S3 resume.

Check that the modem is present on the USB bus:

Remember the VID (vendor ID) of the modem ( in this example).

Stop if it is running.

Optionally, update the modem firmware with the tool:

# cd /path/to/extracted/firmware
# qmi-firmware-update -d 1199 -u *.cwe *.nvu

Change the modem's USB composition to enable AT command ports:

# qmicli -d /dev/cdc-wdm1 --dms-swi-set-usb-composition=8

Power-cycle the modem as advised by qmicli:

# qmicli -d /dev/cdc-wdm1 --dms-set-operating-mode=offline
# qmicli -d /dev/cdc-wdm1 --dms-set-operating-mode=reset

Wait for the modem to reappear, then verify:

Verify that the three serial ports , /dev/ttyUSB1 and are now available (assuming you do not have any other USB-serial converters plugged in):

# ls -l /dev/ttyUSB*
crw-rw---- 1 root uucp 188, 0 Feb 14 20:11 /dev/ttyUSB0
crw-rw---- 1 root uucp 188, 1 Feb 14 20:11 /dev/ttyUSB1
crw-rw---- 1 root uucp 188, 2 Feb 14 20:11 /dev/ttyUSB2

Attach to with a serial terminal emulator of your choice (e. g. ):

# screen /dev/ttyUSB2 115200

Enter the AT commands (note that you do not need to type , the replies are included here as part of a session transcript):

Enable command echo (if echo is initially disabled, you will not see this command as you type it):

ATE1
OK

Unlock engineering commands:

AT!ENTERCND="A710"
OK

Check customization options (these are the author's options):

AT!CUSTOM?
!CUSTOM: 
             GPSENABLE          0x01
             GPSSEL             0x01
             IPV6ENABLE         0x01
             SIMLPM             0x01
             SINGLEAPNSWITCH    0x01


OK

Configure USB fast enumeration (swap for if you want to play it safe):

AT!CUSTOM="FASTENUMEN",2
OK

Verify, it should now show the option alongside others:

AT!CUSTOM?
!CUSTOM: 
             GPSENABLE          0x01
             GPSSEL             0x01
             IPV6ENABLE         0x01
             SIMLPM             0x01
             FASTENUMEN         0x02
             SINGLEAPNSWITCH    0x01


OK

Configure the modem to ignore W_DISABLE:

AT!PCOFFEN=2
OK

Verify:

AT!PCOFFEN?
2
   
OK

Reset the modem:

AT!RESET
OK

the terminal will disconnect after a while.

Wait for the modem to reappear, then verify configuration by rebooting / powering down / hard resetting the laptop.

Remarks

For more information (including the original thought process that led to this discovery), see these lenovo threads and this reddit thread.

You may also apply other useful configuration options described here.

Troubleshooting

Ensure that you have initialized the modem on Windows.

WWAN/LTE GUI

Install NetworkManager and to make your life easier finding the correct APN for your SIM card.

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gollark: I managed to work a 3D printer from CC via one.
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gollark: Which uses a different, fully sandboxed VM so you can even use `debug`.

See also

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