Yea I wanted to try your script but I kept getting connection refused. Try attaching it to your post.Originally Posted by Emerick
Yea I wanted to try your script but I kept getting connection refused. Try attaching it to your post.Originally Posted by Emerick
"We do not want a world in which the guarantee that we will not die of starvation is bought by accepting the risk of dying of boredom." -Vaneigem
Very strange.Originally Posted by dejitarob
I put the file on this message, and i edit the other post.
You need to edit some vars on the file, and need to be root.
I don't think that driver version is a problem. I guess that the hotplug support is an issue as I have to disable the hotplug to make Ubuntu boot. I am new to Linux and never build the Linux kernel before. What does this kernel option mean?Originally Posted by luca_linux
Thanks!
hshen
If you've never recompiled the kernel before, yours has already included that option by default, so don't worry about. Anyway, try to update the driver.Originally Posted by hshen
Yeah, it's better to remove the old firmware files.Originally Posted by MechR
About the second point, you're right, in fact, as said in the howto, you need to copy the files to one directory to another...
Sorry, I was unclear I meant that even though I had moved the files as instructed, Linux kept looking in the wrong places until I ran depmod.Originally Posted by luca_linux
I completely removed the old drivers and firmware and installed all of the new stuff. Here's the errors that I'm getting:
Please help me!jon@UbuntuMonkey:~$ dmesg | grep ipw
ipw2200: Intel(R) PRO/Wireless 2200/2915 Network Driver, 1.0.4
ipw2200: Copyright(c) 2003-2004 Intel Corporation
ipw2200: Detected Intel PRO/Wireless 2200BG Network Connection
ipw2200: failed to send ASSOCIATE command
ipw2200: failed to send SSID command
ipw2200: failed to send SYSTEM_CONFIG command
ipw2200: ipw_send_system_config failed
ipw2200: failed to send SSID command
ipw2200: failed to send SSID command
ipw2200: No space for Tx
ipw2200: failed to send SSID command
ipw2200: No space for Tx
ipw2200: failed to send SSID command
ipw2200: No space for Tx
ipw2200: failed to send SSID command
ipw2200: No space for Tx
ipw2200: failed to send SSID command
ipw2200: No space for Tx
ipw2200: failed to send SSID command
ipw2200: No space for Tx
ipw2200: failed to send SSID command
ipw2200: No space for Tx
ipw2200: failed to send SSID command
Originally Posted by juicewvu
Ok i crawled through the post and i have no clue how to make the systemlink correctly I think i have the kernel headers updated i ran this command
btw im a complete newb when it comes to linux and driversCode:$ sudo apt-get install linux-headers-2.6.10-5-386
Somehow the new firmware (2.3) and the new drivers (1.0.6) make all the difference. I had no trouble compiling them using the same settings I've been using.
However, an old problem is popping back up. I can't connect to a WiFi router that is using DHCP and WEP. It just times out. Any suggestions?
*EDIT* I got it working. Forgot about changing the router to Open System for WEP Authentication Type. Oops.
Originally Posted by ChamPro
Last edited by ChamPro; May 24th, 2005 at 02:34 AM.
I rolled back to 1.0.3 and everything almost works. I am able to connect and what not, but I don't get a response when doing a ping. It does the DNS resolution, but that's all. Any suggestions?
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