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Thread: How To: Manual Network Configuration without the need for Network Manager

  1. #1
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    How To: Manual Network Configuration without the need for Network Manager

    In setting up their wireless connection for the first time, Im discovering many individuals having problems connecting through Network Manager or other GUI wireless connection tools. In fact my Network Manager is intermittently buggy, connecting sometimes and not others. This guide benefits all users in case the GUI tools are not working, and is useful for testing a wireless connection during initial installation of wireless drivers since it provides for good debugging output.

    Clarification to those about to read this Guide
    1. This method provides the most low level method to establish your network connection. It is the least common denominator. It does not use any reference to the /etc/network/interfaces file, as this file requires a method that is more high level.
    2. If you are interested in making modifications to your /etc/network/interfaces guide to establish your connection, possibly Weiman01's guide covering this topic would be more applicable to your situation: http://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=318539. This method however uses processes that are more high level. If editing or use of the /etc/network/interfaces file fails, I would recommend reading the guide provided below, as it is "lower level".

    Unencrypted/ WEP / WPA (PSK and EAP-TLS) connections will be covered in this guide.
    This guide is for anyone attempting to establish a network connection manually at the command line.

    Pre-requisites
    1. Properly installed network driver -- This guide can be used to troubleshoot driver installation to see if it is properly functioning
    2. The ESSID of your router must be broadcasted and not hidden
    3. Knowlege of your wireless cards driver (please see Prerequisite #4 to determine driver). Those using the r8187/r818x driver please see the end of the guide
    4. Knowledge of your wireless card's Interface Name - The user must know the proper interface of the wireless connection (wlan0, eth1, rausb1, etc). To discover this information, at command line type:

    Code:
    lshw -C network
    There may be multiple interfaces listed, however look under the section appropriate to your wireless device for the line labeled logical name. Here is an example:

    Code:
      *-network               
           description: Wireless interface
           product: BCM4306 802.11b/g Wireless LAN Controller
           vendor: Broadcom Corporation
           physical id: 0
           bus info: pci@06:00.0
           logical name: wlan0
           version: 03
           serial: 00:12:17:35:17:10
           width: 32 bits
           clock: 33MHz
           capabilities: bus_master cap_list ethernet physical wireless
           configuration: broadcast=yes driver=ndiswrapper+lsbcmnds driverversion=1.48rc1+Cisco-Linksys ,LLC.,02/1 ip=192.168.1.101 latency=64 multicast=yes wireless=IEEE 802.11g
           resources: iomemory:3c000000-3c001fff irq:11
    In the example above the interface name is wlan0. I will refer to the interface name throughout the rest of this guide as <interface>.

    Attention All Users: Please Read
    ****All users of Atheros or Intel Chipsets (ipw****) -- Although lshw may list your interface as wmaster0 or wifi0 -- PLEASE NOTE this refers to the actual assigned interface name to the device, HOWEVER you interact through an assigned VIRTUAL INTERFACE!!!. Your will NEVER USE wmaster0 or wifi0 as the device name. If you type iwconfig, this may give you information on the assigned virtual interface used to access the physical device. -- BOTTOM LINE -- You will never use wmaster0 or wifi0 as the interface name, rather some other interface such as wlan0 of eth1. Please check ifconfig or iwconfig for cross referencing!!


    ***Please note -- as there exist exceptions to every rule, an exception applies to Atheros chipset employing the madwifi kernel module. Atheros cards are typically identified as wifi0. This is the physical logical name of the device. When working with madwif modules however, one or more virtual interfaces are made for every actual device. All configurations must be completed using the virutal interface device rather than the actual interface to the device. In most cases, Atheros chipsets will need to use the ath0 interface rather than the wifi0 interface.

    For people first setting up their connection, please note that the above also lists the driver used for the network card. In the example above, the driver used is ndiswrapper. If your network device comes back UNCLAIMED or there is no driver listed, then you have not correctly installed the driver for your device. You must review the procedures for installation of your wireless driver.

    For those wanting to use static IP addresses, please see section at bottom of guide regarding configuration for static IP addresses

    __________________________________________________ __________________________
    Unencrypted Connection

    All commands typed at the command line:
    Code:
    sudo ifconfig <interface> down
    sudo dhclient -r <interface>
    sudo ifconfig <interface> up
    sudo iwconfig <interface> essid "ESSID_IN_QUOTES"
    sudo iwconfig <interface> mode Managed
    sudo dhclient <interface>
    __________________________________________________ __________________________
    WEP Connection

    You must have either your 64bit or 128 bit HEX Key or the ASCII Equivalent of your HEX Key.

    Code:
    sudo ifconfig <interface> down
    sudo dhclient -r <interface>
    sudo ifconfig <interface> up
    sudo iwconfig <interface> essid "ESSID_IN_QUOTES"
    sudo iwconfig <interface> key HEX_KEY <<<-------- If using ASCII Equivalent, this is s:ASCII_KEY (please make note of the prefix s:)
    ****Additional Comand that may be needed  -- sudo iwconfig <interface> key open  <<<----See note below
    sudo iwconfig <interface> mode Managed
    sudo dhclient <interface>
    ***The security mode may be open or restricted, and its meaning depends on the card used. With most cards, in open mode no authentication is used and the card may also accept non-encrypted sessions, whereas in restricted mode only encrypted sessions are accepted and the card will use authentication if available.
    __________________________________________________ __________________________
    WPA Connection - WPA-PSK or WPA2-PSK (PSK=Pre-Shared Key) or WPA-EAP-TLS

    For uses of Ra-based chipsets: rt61, rt73, rt2500 please skip directly to the WPA Section entitled WPA with Ra based chipsets

    Requirements: In most cases the wpa_supplicant package is required in order to connect via WPA. If you have a working ethernet or unencrypted/WEP wireless connection, this package may be installed via:
    Code:
    sudo aptitude install wpasupplicant
    If only wireless is available, I would recommend that an unencrypted connection first by established and tested first before directly proceeding to make a WPA connection. WPA adds another layer of complexity.

    WPA-PSK - Covers WPA(1) and WPA(2)

    1. Creation of /etc/wpa_supplicant.conf file

    At command line:
    Code:
    gksu gedit /etc/wpa_supplicant.conf
    Inside the file add the following for WPA(1):

    Code:
    ap_scan=1
    ctrl_interface=/var/run/wpa_supplicant 
    
    network={
            ssid="ESSID_IN_QUOTES"
            scan_ssid=0
            proto=WPA
            key_mgmt=WPA-PSK
            psk="ASCII PSK Password in Quotes"
            pairwise=TKIP
            group=TKIP
    }
    For WPA(2) (see this thread: http://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=607410):
    Code:
    ctrl_interface=/var/run/wpa_supplicant
    
    network={
            ssid="ESSID_IN_QUOTES"
            psk="ASCII PSK Password in Quotes"
            key_mgmt=WPA-PSK
            proto=RSN WPA
            pairwise=CCMP TKIP
            group=CCMP TKIP
    }
    ***Word of caution -- In some cases I have found WPA(2) to have different settings than the above. Some Broadcom cards use the pairwise/group TKIP cipher for WPA2 rather than CCMP. I would suggest all initially use WPA(1) and then later convert to WPA2 since some variations to the above may be needed

    **WPA2 capabilities must also be built-into the driver set used with your hardware. If using ndiswrapper with an old windows driver, the driver may not contain code for wpa2.

    2. Connect via command line
    Code:
    sudo ifconfig <interface> down
    sudo dhclient -r <interface>
    sudo wpa_supplicant -D<****see footer below***> -i<interface> -c/etc/wpa_supplicant.conf -dd 
    
    ***Note that starting with the -dd flag will create a lot of debuggin output.
    If you choose to use the -dd flag to troubleshoot your connection, you must 
    open up a separate terminal and type the rest of the commands listed below in a
    separate terminal window.  You can also replace the -dd flag with the -B flag to
    send the process to the background, avoiding the need to open up a separate
    terminal window (however no debugging output will be generated) 
    
    sudo dhclient <interface>
    ***footer
    The value listed here is dependent on the driver you have installed. Typing man wpa_supplicant at command line will give you the full gamut of choices however most recent versions of wpa_supplicant only recognize wext as the appropriate value (Despite all the information on the internet). If you would like to verify what drivers besides wext your installed version of wpa_supplicant recognizes, type at the command line:
    wpa_supplicant -l
    And look specifically at the section called drivers:

    Here is what my stock wpa_supplicant lists for its drivers:

    drivers:
    wext = Linux wireless extensions (generic)
    atmel = ATMEL AT76C5XXx (USB, PCMCIA)
    wired = wpa_supplicant wired Ethernet driver

    Other drivers can be compiled into wpa_supplicant if you compile wpa_supplicant, however please not that in recent kernel versions this is unnecessary. wext will work for ndiswrapper, madwifi, intel, etc.

    WPA-PSK with Ra Based Chipsets

    Ra cards do not require the wpa_supplicant package to use WPA. Here is how to connect from the command line with these cards:
    References: http://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.p...=serial+monkey, http://rt2x00.serialmonkey.com/wiki/...owto#Using_WPA

    WPA-PSK(1)
    Code:
    sudo ifconfig <interface> down
    sudo dhclient -r <interface>
    sudo ifconfig <interface> up
    sudo iwconfig <inteface> essid "ESSID_IN_QUOTES"
    sudo iwpriv <interface> set AuthMode=WPAPSK
    sudo iwpriv <interface> set EncrypType=TKIP
    sudo iwpriv <interface> set WPAPSK="YOUR_WPA_PSK_KEY"
    sudo dhclient <interface>
    For WPA-PSK(2), I have no working configuration yet. If someone would like to help me refine these instructions for WPA2 with Ra-based chipsets, I would appreciate your help!

    WPA EAP-TLS
    Information Provided Referenced from http://www.codealias.info/technotes/...x_client_setup
    Thanks to CodeAlias for Providing Information

    1. Prepare TLS Certificates

    EAP-TLS requires client TLS certificates to be installed in the system. You need to ask the administrators in your institution to provide you your own TLS certificate.

    In the most common cases, your admin will issue you a .p12 file and a password.

    We need to create three files from this .p12 certificate

    These files are cacert.pem, cert.pem and key.pem (The names may vary). Assuming that your certificate file name is example.p12, run the following :
    Code:
     openssl pkcs12  -in example.p12  -out cacert.pem -cacerts -nokeys 
     openssl pkcs12  -in example.p12  -out cert.pem -clcerts -nokeys
     openssl pkcs12  -in example.p12  -out key.pem -nocerts
    Put the three generated files somewhere in the file system of your wireless device (e.g /etc/certs)

    2. Configuration of the wpa_supplicant.conf file

    Edit the wpa_supplicant configuration file (e.g. /etc/wpa_supplicant.conf), ant put the following:

    Code:
      network={
          ssid="ESSID_IN_QUOTES"
          scan_ssid=1
          key_mgmt=WPA-EAP
          pairwise=CCMP TKIP
          group=CCMP TKIP
          eap=TLS
          identity="XXXXX@yourdomain.com"
          ca_cert="/etc/certs/cacert.pem"
          client_cert="/etc/certs/cert.pem"
          private_key="/etc/certs/key.pem"
          private_key_passwd="YOUR-PASSWORD"
       }
    ---“YOUR-PASSWORD” is the password provided by your administrator when your received your .p12 certificate

    3. Connect via the command line
    Code:
    sudo ifconfig <interface> down
    sudo dhclient -r <interface>
    sudo wpa_supplicant -D<****see footer below***> -i<interface> -c/etc/wpa_supplicant.conf -dd 
    
    ***Note that starting with the -dd flag will create a lot of debuggin output.
    If you choose to use the -dd flag to troubleshoot your connection, you must 
    open up a separate terminal and type the rest of the commands listed below in a
    separate terminal window.  You can also replace the -dd flag with the -B flag to
    send the process to the background, avoiding the need to open up a separate
    terminal window (however no debugging output will be generated) 
    
    sudo dhclient <interface>
    ***footer
    The value listed here is dependent on the driver you have installed. Typing man wpa_supplicant at command line will give you the full gamut of choices however most recent versions of wpa_supplicant only recognize wext as the appropriate value (Despite all the information on the internet). If you would like to verify what drivers besides wext your installed version of wpa_supplicant recognizes, type at the command line:
    wpa_supplicant -l
    And look specifically at the section called drivers:

    Here is what my stock wpa_supplicant lists for its drivers:

    drivers:
    wext = Linux wireless extensions (generic)
    atmel = ATMEL AT76C5XXx (USB, PCMCIA)
    wired = wpa_supplicant wired Ethernet driver

    Other drivers can be compiled into wpa_supplicant if you compile wpa_supplicant, however please not that in recent kernel versions this is unnecessary. wext will work for ndiswrapper, madwifi, intel, etc.
    __________________________________________________ __________________________
    A successful connection in all cases will similarly result in: (Example Provided Below):
    Code:
    user@computer:~$ sudo dhclient wlan0
    There is already a pid file /var/run/dhclient.pid with pid 134993416
    Internet Systems Consortium DHCP Client V3.0.4
    Copyright 2004-2006 Internet Systems Consortium.
    All rights reserved.
    For info, please visit http://www.isc.org/sw/dhcp/
    
    Listening on LPF/wlan0/00:12:17:35:17:10
    Sending on   LPF/wlan0/00:12:17:35:17:10
    Sending on   Socket/fallback
    DHCPDISCOVER on wlan0 to 255.255.255.255 port 67 interval 4
    DHCPDISCOVER on wlan0 to 255.255.255.255 port 67 interval 7
    DHCPDISCOVER on wlan0 to 255.255.255.255 port 67 interval 7
    DHCPOFFER from 192.168.1.1
    DHCPREQUEST on wlan0 to 255.255.255.255 port 67
    DHCPACK from 192.168.1.1
    bound to 192.168.1.101 -- renewal in 299133 seconds.
    The computer in this example has received an IP address of 192.168.1.101

    __________________________________________________ __________________________
    Users of RTL 8180, RTL8185, RTL 8187 using the built in native r8187 / r818x drivers

    By default the r8187 and r818x drivers are blacklisted due to a know bug. These drivers are usuable however with a twist to the above methods

    If you want to try using these drivers, please load the kernel modules:
    Code:
    sudo modprobe r818x
    sudo modprobe r8187
    These drivers require a bogus or extra letter be suffixed to the essid name in order for these drivers to work
    For example if your are trying to connect to a router with essid=Router, at he command line you would type essid=Routerx. Notice the extra x or bogus character. I have provided an example using the unencrypted connection procedure below, however this extra character needs to be used if attempting to connect to all network types (unencrypted/ WEP / WPA)

    Code:
    sudo ifconfig <interface> down
    sudo dhclient -r <interface>
    sudo ifconfig <interface> up
    sudo iwconfig <interface> essid "Routerx"
    sudo iwconfig <interface> mode Managed
    sudo dhclient <interface>
    If these drivers work for you, and you would like these drivers to load automatically at startup for you, avoiding to have to type sudo modprobe everytime, please edit your blacklist file:

    Code:
    gksu gedit /etc/modprobe.d/blacklist
    And comment out (or prefix the following lines with a # sign). You want the following lines to appear as below:
    Code:
    #blacklist r8187
    #blacklist r818x

    __________________________________________________ __________________________
    Static IP Addresses

    Im going to give an example of how to configure your interface using a static IP address using an unencrypted wireless connection. The two lines highlighted below however can be used with WEP and WPA connections. Values in italics must be customized to meet your particular situation

    Code:
    sudo ifconfig <interface> down
    sudo dhclient -r <interface>
    sudo ifconfig <interface> 192.168.1.100 netmask 255.255.255.0 up
    sudo route add default gw 192.168.1.1
    sudo iwconfig <interface> essid "ESSID_IN_QUOTES"
    sudo iwconfig <interface> mode Managed
    If when using static IP addresses you are getting a problem with name resolution, you will have to specifiy specific dns (domain name servers) in order to translate URLs to IP addresses. Unfortunately there is not an easy way to configure this from the command line. This requires that you edit the /etc/resolv.conf file and manually enter the domain name server(s) you want to use. In many cases users can specifiy their router, their internet service providers dns servers, or use opendns (or use all three). Up to three nameservers can be specified.

    Code:
    sudo gedit /etc/resolv.conf
    and add the nameservers you want to use, one to a line, in the following format.
    Code:
    nameserver <nameserver>
    ***Spaceboy909 has also reported that when using this technique with static IP addresses, network manager has to be uninstalled because it keeps trying to reset the connection. In order to uninstall networkmanager:

    In Ubuntu:
    Code:
    sudo aptitude uninstall network-manager-gnome
    In Kbuntu:
    Code:
    sudo aptitude uninstall knetworkmanager
    __________________________________________________ _________________________
    Setting the Wireless Interface to Connect at Boot ***Courtesy of Maricaibo

    If you are successful in bringing up the Interface Manually, the commands may be placed inside the /etc/rc.local file to run the commands at boot, and establish a wireless connection. There is no GUI to give visual confirmation of the connection. The user should type ifconfig at the command line to verify an IP address has indeed been granted by the router.

    The process of adding the commands to the /etc/rc.local file is documented below (this connects to an unencrypted network -- to connect to a WEP or WPA encrypted network, some modifications as used above will need to be added):

    Code:
    gksu gedit /etc/rc.local
    This opens up the file in the gedit utility and allows you to make changes and save the file

    Code:
    ifconfig <wired network connection interface> down
    ifconfig <wireless network connection interface> down
    dhclient -r <wireless_interface>
    iwconfig <wireless_interface> essid <router name>
    iwconfig <wireless_interface> mode Managed
    ifconfig <wireless_interface> up
    dhclient <wireless_interface>
    Be sure this text goes into the /etc/rc.local file BEFORE the line reading "exit 0".

    Save and close the /etc/rc.local file.

    Open up a Terminal window (the shell) and type in:

    Code:
    sudo chmod +x /etc/rc.local
    This command turns the rc.local file into an executable that will run at startup. Here's an example of what the /etc/rc.local file should contain. Your device names may be different:

    Code:
    #
    # rc.local
    #
    # This script is executed at the end of each multiuser runlevel.
    # Make sure that the script will "exit 0" on success or any other
    # value on error.
    #
    # In order to enable or disable this script just change the execution
    # bits.
    #
    # By default this script does nothing.
    
    ifconfig eth0 down
    ifconfig wlan0 down
    dhclient -r wlan0
    iwconfig wlan0 essid "ESSID_IN_QUOTES"
    iwconfig wlan0 mode Managed
    ifconfig wlan0 up
    dhclient wlan0
    
    exit 0
    NOTE: The first line in the rc.local file downs your wired connection, so if for some reason you need the wired connection back just open up a Terminal window (shell) and type:

    sudo <wired_interface> up
    sudo dhclient <wired_interface>
    __________________________________________________ __________________________
    Useful Commands

    ifconfig - lists IP address (similar to ipconfig in Windows)
    iwlist scan - shows wireless networks that are available in the area along with basic encryption information
    lshw -C network - Shows interface and driver associated with each networking device
    lspci -nn - Shows hardware connected to the pci bus
    lsusb - Shows USB connected hardware
    lshw -C usb - Additional info on USB related hardware (good for USB dongles)
    cat /etc/modprobe.d/blacklist - List modules that will not be loaded by the Operating System at boot time
    lsmod - lists currently loaded kernel modules. (Example usage - lsmod | grep ndiswrapper)
    route -n - Lists kernel IP routing table -- Good for troubleshooting problems with the gateway (netstat -rn = equivalent command)
    sudo route add default gw 192.168.1.1 - Example of how to set the default gateway to 192.168.1.1
    sudo route del default gw 192.168.1.1 - Example of how to delete the default gateway setting
    sudo modprobe ***** - Loads the kernel module **** . (Example usage - sudo modprobe ndiswrapper, sudo modprobe r818x, sudo modprobe ath_pci)
    sudo modprobe -r **** - Unloades the kernel module ****. (Example usage - sudo modprobe -r ndiswrapper)
    sudo ifup/ifdown <interface> - Brings up/down the interface and clears the routing table for the specified interface
    sudo ifconfig <interface> up/down - Brings up/down the interface for the specified interface
    sudo dhclient <interface> - Request IP address from DNS server for specified interface
    sudo dhclient -r <interface> - Release IP address associated with specified interface
    sudo iptables -L - Lists firewall rules
    dmesg | more - Lists boot log -- good for troubleshooting problems with modules/drivers not being loaded
    uname -r - Displays kernel version
    /etc/iftab (Feisty and pre-releases (Edgy, etc)) - /etc/udev/rules.d/70-persistent-net.rules (Gutsy) - File which assigns logical names (eth0, wlan0, etc) to MAC addresses
    cat /etc/resolv.conf - Lists DNS servers associated with network connections (Network Manager)
    /etc/dhcp3/dhclient.conf - File which sets or modifies dns (domain name servers) settings

    __________________________________________________ __________________________
    WPA_SUPPLICANT.CONF - Good Description and Explanations of All Available Options that can be Placed with the wpa_supplicant.conf file
    http://hostap.epitest.fi/cgi-bin/vie...?revision=HEAD

    __________________________________________________ __________________________
    References for Specific Wireless Chipsets - Please see Link if Your Specific Chipset is Not Working with Above Tutorial's Instructions

    Official Broadcom site for bcm43xx firmware - http://linuxwireless.org/en/users/Drivers/b43
    Broadcom 64bit Drivers for Use with Ndiswrapper - http://www.linuxant.com/driverloader/drivers.php
    Broadcom Guid for Ubuntu Hardy/Intrepid and Ibex -- A very informative sight! - http://linuxfans.betaserver.org/inde...ides&Itemid=61 - Author Ayuthia

    Ra chipsets - Serial Monkey Drivers - rt2500, rt73, rt61, rt2570 drivers - http://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.p...=serial+monkey - Author diepruis
    rt2500 chipsets with the Serial Monkey rt2500 CVS driver - http://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.p...ghlight=rt2500 - Author zoiks
    Ralink RT2860 (m)PCI(e) (RT2760/RT2790/RT2860/RT2890) - http://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=1045703 - Author Fass
    Rutilt - A Network Manager Like GUI for Ra Chipsets - http://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.p...ghlight=rutilt - Author sulilogs
    Ndiswrapper Official Compatibility Reference - http://linuxfans.betaserver.org/ndis_drivers/toc.html - Author Ayuthia (Borrowed from the Ex-Official Ndiswrapper Site)
    Ndiswrapper installation for Broadcom chipsets - http://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=475963 - Author Jamie Jackson
    Ndiswrapper General Installation Guide - SVN, Troubleshooting Tips (My Personal Guide) - http://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=574501 - Author KevDog
    Madwifi website for certain Atheros Chipsets - http://madwifi.org/ -- If your Atheros chipset is listed on this website - it should work out of the box with installation of the linux restricted drivers package for your kernel version
    Atheros 5006eg Chipset work-around - Card apparently listed as 5007eg - http://ubuntuforums.org/showpost.php...5&postcount=14 - Author ugm6hr
    Does your madwifi connection keep dropping??? Possible solution -- http://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=540101 = Author robnz/tranalbert
    Realtek win98 driver - http://www.majorgeeks.com/Realtek_RT...0XP_d5165.html - For use with ndiswrapper if native r818x, r8187 driver is buggy
    Realtek win98 driver installation - http://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.p...highlight=8187 - Author Panurge
    Realtek - Installation with Native Driver - http://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=567505
    Realtek 8187B Native Patch for Realtek 818x USB Devices -- Relevant only to rtl8187B USB wireless devices - Toshiba Laptops - http://www.datanorth.net/~cuervo/rtl8187b/ - Author Cuervo

    __________________________________________________ __________________________
    Wireless Security
    WPA with EAP-TLS - http://www.codealias.info/technotes/...x_client_setup

    __________________________________________________ __________________________
    Other Interesting Sites

    Control Programs Kept in Swap vs Memory - http://ubuntuforums.org/showpost.php...&postcount=150
    If your Wireless Freezes after Suspend/Resume - Check here - http://ubuntuforums.org/showpost.php...7&postcount=12 - Author Harty83
    DNS related problems?? - Configuration for OpenDNS servers - http://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=543659 - Author noob12
    Turn off/Disable IPv6 - http://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=282034 - Author handy
    General Linux Page Discussing Network Setups - Default Gateways - http://linux-ip.net/html/basic-changing.html
    Log Files -- Your Friend to Debug almost anything on your System - https://help.ubuntu.com/community/Li...f98267e009db55
    Using OpenVPN to bridge networks - http://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=752127 - Author SpaceTeddy
    Last edited by kevdog; May 25th, 2009 at 08:08 PM. Reason: Updated for Hardy and Intrepid kernel changes

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Feb 2007
    Location
    Florence, SC
    Beans
    9
    Distro
    Ubuntu 7.10 Gutsy Gibbon

    Re: How To: Troubleshoot your Wireless Network Connection - Connecting at Command Li

    Excellent post! Worked as advertised! I had been using the NetworkManager but all of a sudden, it stopped wanting to connect to my wireless. These instructions got me connected once again. Thanks a lot!!

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Oct 2005
    Beans
    222
    Distro
    Gutsy Gibbon Testing

    Re: How To: Troubleshoot your Wireless Network Connection - Connecting at Command Li

    After upgrading to gutsy my WIFI broke after the first reboot. The output from the first command is:

    Code:
    darren@BeggarBox:~$ sudo lshw -C network
      *-network               
           description: Network controller
           product: PRO/Wireless 3945ABG Network Connection
           vendor: Intel Corporation
           physical id: 0
           bus info: pci@0000:0b:00.0
           version: 02
           width: 32 bits
           clock: 33MHz
           capabilities: pm msi pciexpress bus_master cap_list
           configuration: driver=ipw3945 latency=0 module=ipw3945
           ...
    Notice it is not given a logical name. How do I set it back to being eth1? /etc/iftab seems to be the best option, but I dont know the mac address. Any ideas?

    It doesn't seem like /etc/iftab is used anymore, back to square one....
    Last edited by Beggar; October 12th, 2007 at 09:45 PM.

  4. #4
    Join Date
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    7,958
    Distro
    Ubuntu Mate 16.04 Xenial Xerus

    Re: How To: Troubleshoot your Wireless Network Connection - Connecting at Command Li

    Beggar

    Interesting situation you present, cant say that Ive ever seen your situation before .. so its kind of neat. What does
    dmesg

    say after you boot. Anything about the interface. Does
    ifconfig
    lend any clues.

    My forte is not with the ipw drivers. I think noob12 is much better in this area than I.

  5. #5
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    Re: How To: Troubleshoot your Wireless Network Connection - Connecting at Command Li

    My wireless (eth1) has gone upon the latest "partial upgrade" of the gutsy preview I've been using for a couple of weeks.

    ~$ dmesg|grep ipw2200
    [ 18.384000] ipw2200: Intel(R) PRO/Wireless 2200/2915 Network Driver, 1.2.0kmprq
    [ 18.384000] ipw2200: Copyright(c) 2003-2006 Intel Corporation
    [ 18.628000] ipw2200: Detected Intel PRO/Wireless 2915ABG Network Connection
    [ 18.872000] ipw2200: Unable to load ucode: -62
    [ 18.872000] ipw2200: Unable to load firmware: -62
    [ 18.872000] ipw2200: failed to register network device
    [ 18.872000] ipw2200: probe of 0000:02:01.0 failed with error -5

  6. #6
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    Re: How To: Troubleshoot your Wireless Network Connection - Connecting at Command Li

    If you have an older kernel version installed (ie you upgraded from feisty), press the ESC key when booting to enter the grub menu and see if you can use the ipw driver in an older kernel version. One other option, although its pretty drastic would be to compile your own vanilla kernel. I think (not certain), that the ipw drives are included by default, but confirm this. The masterkernel thread is a good place to start in the forums.

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    Re: How To: Troubleshoot your Wireless Network Connection - Connecting at Command Li

    Mine loads fine, but then I found this little gem a few lines down.

    Code:
    [   16.088000] ipw3945: Radio Frequency Kill Switch is On:
    [   16.088000] Kill switch must be turned off for wireless networking to work.
    Might be hard for me to turn my kill switch off however, considering I don't have one...

    ----

    Scratch that, I didnt notice it, but since the gutsy upgrade my function keys work. Apparently right after the upgrade I used fn-f2 instead of ctrl-f2, fn-f2 is my computers wifi killswitch.
    Boy do I feel stupid. I only spent 5+ hours trying to fix that. Hard to debug something you dont think works suddenly getting fixed on you...
    Last edited by Beggar; October 12th, 2007 at 10:50 PM.

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    Re: How To: Troubleshoot your Wireless Network Connection - Connecting at Command Li

    Quote Originally Posted by kevdog View Post
    If you have an older kernel version installed (ie you upgraded from feisty), press the ESC key when booting to enter the grub menu and see if you can use the ipw driver in an older kernel version...
    Luck would have it, I just removed the older kernels yesterday. Have rebooted a couple of times since then with everything working fine. But ran the latest updates (some sort of a partial upgrade) just today, and that did the wireless in.

    Oh well, gonna have another look. Thanks for your suggestions.

  9. #9
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    Re: How To: Troubleshoot your Wireless Network Connection - Connecting at Command Li

    Hi,

    Just wanted to say thanks for the post, kevdog.

    I just followed your advice to connect to my girlfriend's WRT54G v8 with WPA1. It was working under Windows, but not (K)ubuntu. The only oddity I found is that I have to use the wext driver instead of ipw when running wpa_supplicant, even though I have an Intel 2915 card in my laptop. I found that out by reading the output of wpa_supplicant with the -Dipw option.

    Thanks again!

  10. #10
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    Re: How To: Troubleshoot your Wireless Network Connection - Connecting at Command Li

    Hmm, I guess you are right

    wext is for any generic linux driver.
    ipw is for the intel ipw 2100 and 2200 driver.

    Good thing you read the man pages since this part of configuring the wpa_supplicant.conf file can be a little tricky

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