Woops, didn't see that one, I thought since Ubuntu is based of Debian the networking forum was the right place.
After having a look at (the end of)...
Type: Posts; User: bartgrefte; Keyword(s):
Woops, didn't see that one, I thought since Ubuntu is based of Debian the networking forum was the right place.
After having a look at (the end of)...
Until a couple of months ago I was using router-distro IPFire which had a handy webpage where I could enter local IP-addresses and names (like devicehostname.mydomain.com) after which...
Well, then who's to believe, Wireshark that indicates it arrives or the DHCP-server that doesn't seem to pick it up?
But I've managed to work around the problem. I disabled the graphical Network...
As I already said ;) , I checked with Wireshark to see if the DHCP Offer package arrives as a response to Kubuntu's DHCP Discover package, it does and contains all required data: The offered...
Recently I set up a VLAN that will be used by guests once I get an access point with guest network functionality.
To test the VLAN-setup, I configured the ASIX AX88179 USB3-Gb network adapter...
A while ago I started looking into how to recompile the kernel, initially because it didn't came with support for DFS in the Atheros drivers, for some reason that particular option is disabled.
...
A while ago I read that apt has the option to exclude packages from an apt-get upgrade. But what about do-release-upgrade, does that command have a similar option? do-release-upgrade --help didn't...
My laptop has a BIOS, not UEFI....As far as I know. Now that I think of it, I'm not entirely sure, would have to check. It's a Lenovo G780 series laptop. To make things a little complicated, it is...
A while ago I installed Kubuntu next to W7 on my laptop and Grub2 detected W7 without any issues.
Recently I added W10 to the dual boot and that's where it gets a little weird.
First of, the not...
I was considering writing a tl;dr, but I think the title of this topic covers that :)
Now for the longer version:
With a bit of help I managed to set up a 5GHz access point in Ubuntu Server 14.10...
Just now I tried setting up an access point on the 5GHz band and it failed with this
Line 7: unknown configuration item 'ieee80211ac'
and this
ACS was disabled on your build, rebuild hostapd...
Well, I went from pfSense to IPFire for 2 reasons:
- The *BSD atheros driver was buggy at best and (back then) it didn't have 802.11n-features;
- pfSense suddenly started sending about 10,000 DHCP...
After being used to the webinterfaces of pfSense and IPFire, I am switching to Ubuntu Server 14.10, without a webinterface. Meaning writing iptables firewall rules by myself.
Now that isn't too...
The "why" is simple:
http://www.ravenslair.nl/GoT2/wifi2013-scan.jpg
The 2nd AP will be working on the 5GHz band, which is free and legal to use here and not so crowded:biggrin:. But the 2.4GHz...
Hi :)
I've been Googling for something but found surprisingly very little.
How does one set two wifi cards at the same time as access point?
From what I've read, hostapd should be able to do...
Would this howto also work with Debian?