On Nov 30, 2007 8:43 AM, Tom Stewart <fedora@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > I've installed F8 on an IBM ThinkPad R40 with an IBM High Rate > wireless card. The wireless card is recognized as an Atheros AR5212. > NetworkManager starts up fine, and I can connect to unencrypted AP's > OK (like my neighbor's), but I can't connect to protected networks > (like mine). > > I've previously had Windows XP then Ubuntu on this box, and neither > had a problem connecting, so I am pretty confident that it's not a > hardware/compatibility issue. I've configured wpa_supplicant to run > via Service Configuration, which tells me that it is running. WPA > passphrases seem to get stored in the keyring OK. > > In attempting to troubleshoot this, here's what I've discovered. When > booting, there is a fairly long delay, which causes the Details window > to pop up automatically. The delay is in starting wpa_supplicant, and > in fact, an error is noted: > > Starting wpa_supplicant: /etc/wpa_supplicant/wpa_supplicant.conf, , > dbus_bus_get[ctrl_iface_dbus]: No such file or directory > > Now, there is a file /etc/wpa_supplicant/wpa_supplicant.conf, owned by > root and with rw permissions for owner. I haven't touched this, and I > assume it is correct. So I wonder if the dbus_bus_get[ctrl_iface_dbus] > is the thing that's complaining. Searching on that string yields [1] > some source code: > > /* Get a reference to the system bus */ > dbus_error_init(&error); > iface->con = dbus_bus_get(DBUS_BUS_SYSTEM, &error); > dbus_error_free(&error); > if (!iface->con) { > perror("dbus_bus_get[ctrl_iface_dbus]"); > wpa_printf(MSG_ERROR, "Could not acquire the system bus."); > goto fail; > } > > which looks like it might print that string followed by an error, but > then it should also be displaying (somewhere?) the "Could not acquire > the system bus." which I haven't found. > > The other data point I have is that in the system log, when attempting > to connect, I see the following error msg: > > Nov 18 20:56:29 think NetworkManager: <info> Device 'wlan0' DHCP > transaction took too long (>45s), stopping it. > > Can anyone help me get my wireless up and running on this guy? Where > do I go next? > > [1] > http://www.koders.com/c/fid085500CFE02FD84CFEB332AE71A50A1E37F81D1A.aspx?s=base64 > > --Tom > > > -- > fedora-list mailing list > fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx > To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list > Hi Tom Stewart! I am working on the same problem, so far I have not gotten arround to trying the results of the following research. For what it is worth: Here: http://forums.fedoraforum.org/showthread.php?t=171361 I found: Originally Posted by c0d3g33k Yes, you can use the old NetworkManager, and yes it does work better than the current P.O.S. ... err, ummm, work in progress. You have to uninstall the current NetworkManager and dependencies, then find a Fedora mirror that still has the 7.90 test release and install the networkmanager components. You'll suffer from constant nagging from the Update utility, but your wireless networking will actually be functional. NOTE!!!!: Download the necessary packages first if your network connection depends on NetworkManager. I don't recall exactly what is removed, but a "yum erase NetworkManager" will take care of the dependencies for you. >From the Fedora 7.90 mirror download: NetworkManager knetworkmanager krb5-auth-dialog dhcdbd dhclient If you are running Gnome, you probably want to grab NetworkManager-glib and NetworkManager-gnome too (I'm running KDE, so don't need them). Install them using "yum localinstall <packages>" and enjoy functional networking again. BINGO! Thanks man. This worked like a charm. The only difference was, I used rpm instead of yum. I was having issues with yum wanting to remove pidgin as well. Just as a note, pidgin still works (just opened it and things logged in, nothing more). Here's what I ran: sudo rpm --nodeps -e NetworkManager NetworkManager-glib NetworkManager-gnome krb5-auth-dialog nautilus-sendto Hopefully, they'll get that fixed very soon and release an update. Not sure why this wasn't noticed in the release candidates? Anyway, makes me feel better. Lol... I was thinking it was something much more. Another Path: Jacques B Nov 9 Reply Got wireless to work with WPA-PSK. The solution was at http://fedoraforum.org/forum/showpost.php?p=857006&postcount=52 As root I edited /etc/wpa_supplicant/wpa_supplicant.conf so that it contained the following: ctrl_interface=/var/run/wpa_supplicant ctrl_interface_group=wheel network={ ssid="your ssid" psk="your passphrase" key_mgmt=WPA-PSK proto=WPA } The first two lines were already there. I added the remaining lines as per the the instructions on the site above. I then ran # ifconfig wlan0 up # wpa_supplicant -Dwext -iwlan0 -c/etc/wpa_supplicant.conf -dd (the process didn't exit so it seemed, but after doing the next command successfully I was able to close this window anyhow). Then in another terminal window as root I ran # dhclient wlan0 I could then close both the windows and the wireless worked. I went into system-config-network-gui (either via command line or via System, Administrator, Network) and ensured that my wireless card was checked off so that it will start up on reboot (haven't rebooted yet but I am fairly confident it will work - if not I will repost to that effect - otherwise it worked). Jacques B. Good Hunting! Tod -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list