On Fri, Jan 13, 2017 at 12:33 PM, Gary Stainburn <gary@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > Also, it was suggested that I use nmcli in a cronjob to re-activate it if > it > drops. I can check to see if it's still active by 'grep'ing the IP > address, > but I don't know the nmcli to re-activate an existing WIFI connection. > > Can anyone help here too, just in case I can't fix the real problem I have a wireless connection named "AndroidAP-notepro" So I can run # nmcli con show --active | grep AndroidAP-notepro AndroidAP-notepro 62d0fc1f-91b8-4c07-baf0-323cf1c108d1 802-11-wireless wlp3s0 # You can check exit code and number of lines. If number of lines is 0, it means the connection is not active and you can try to activate it and get exit code of the command # nmcli con up AndroidAP-notepro Also, it could be useful to know what value you have for "connection.autoconnect" for this connection. If it is yes, in theory it should automatically reactivate when it returns available. In my case my AndroidAP-notepro connection is to be manually activated and in fact I have # nmcli con show AndroidAP-notepro | grep connection.autoconnect: connection.autoconnect: no # In case you also have autoconnect set to no, If you don't have a gui you should be able to set it up with # nmcli con mod AndroidAP-notepro connection.autoconnect yes HIH, Gianluca _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx https://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos