The next chapter in wireless problems: difference between Fedora 9 and Ubuntu 8.10?
Don Levey
lug-TwWeWiF2EGRi+ztankeudA at public.gmane.org
Wed Nov 5 09:56:57 EST 2008
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A followup:
Don Levey wrote:
> Matthew Gillen wrote:
>> Don Levey wrote:
>>> It's a built-in 802.11a/b/g card in my Acer laptop. It
>>> identifies in Network Settings as Intel PRO/Wireless 3945ABG.
>> ...
>>> When I logged in again as myself (into KDE) I tried to connect
>>> via the Network Manager applet. However, even though it saw the
>>> previously-configured connection (and I was asked for the
>>> password) it refused to connect. Instead I was continually
>>> prompted for the WPA password.
>
>> I have a dell that uses the iwl4965 driver, and I have issues
>> similar to what you describe when I've booted with wireless off via
>> the hardware kill-switch, then turn it on. Wireless will work if
>> it doesn't use WPA, but I have a heck of time trying to
>> authenticate to WPA networks. It works just fine if wireless is
>> enabled at boot time.
>
>> So I wouldn't rule out it being a driver issue.
>
> The hardware kill switch... I remember that I used to have problems
> if it weren't enabled at the right time during startup. There are
> certain times where hitting that switch will work - just after the
> POST, after udev is enabled. I've gotten used to hitting that as a
> matter of course.
>
>
>> Do it the other way around (try your normal user, then the new test
>> user) and see if the test user fails to connect.
>
>
> As for the sequence of users, if the first user I try upon startup is
> the test user, it works. If the first user I try is the normal
> user, I am unsuccessful and there's no "carry-through".
>
After more testing last night, it seems there *is* some carry-through.
If I try to login first as my normal user (and fail to connect), logging
out and in again as the test user fails each time. It seems I must use
the test user FIRST.
What's more, though I didn't repeat this enough times for me to be
comfortable being definitive, it seems that I must do a proper logout
for the connection to carry over. If I do <ctrl><alt><bkspace> to
restart X and force a login prompt, the connection doesn't make it through.
It seems my next step will be to start moving files in my home directory
out of the way. Perhaps I can find something that makes a difference
here - unless there's a central file with individual users' settings for
Network Manager that I've failed to find.
Thanks again,
-Don
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