On 10/22/07, Jason Taylor <jmtaylor90@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
I've already been (almost) convinced that this is a noise message
during my testing, and although the message appears, the wireless
may actually not be disabled. Hence the test I propose below...
In the meantime... I wonder if its related to this posting:
http://www.bughost.org/pipermail/power/2007-June/000492.html
On 10/22/07, Fulko Hew <fulko.hew@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>
> On 10/22/07, Mary Ellen Foster <mefoster@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> > On 22/10/2007, Fulko Hew <fulko.hew@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> > > a) when I start NetworkManager(Dispatcher) and KNetworkManager,
> > > KNetworkManager does not list my wired eth0, and does not list
> > > any wireless networks.
> >
> > Are you using knetworkmanager on Rawhide? As far as I know,
> > knetworkmanager doesn't work with the newest NetworkManager and you
> > should use nm-applet instead.
>
> Yes, I was trying to use knetworkmanager.
>
> I tried nm-applet last week, and that didn't work for me,
> so I gave up on it. But today... IT WORKS! :-)
>
> So... as it stands:
>
> a) I appear to have wireless working now.
> b) use 'nm-applet', not 'knetworkmanager'
>
> but...
>
> c) The wireless LED on the laptop no longer shows any network activity.
> d) Fn-F2 no longer disables (controls) wireless
> e) When I try to use Fn-F2, it is ignored, wireless continues to work,
> and /var/log/messages complains with:
>
> Oct 22 12:50:36 fulkol kernel: iwl3945: Radio Frequency Kill Switch is On:
> Oct 22 12:50:36 fulkol kernel: Kill switch must be turned off for wireless
> networking to work.
After doing a little research this appears to be a known issue. The
kernel appears to not be able to differentiate between hardware
killswitches and software killswitches, hence the conflicting dmesg
information and actual configuration. It should be noted this is stuff
I have observed and no documentation seems to be around to prove or
disprove.
I've already been (almost) convinced that this is a noise message
during my testing, and although the message appears, the wireless
may actually not be disabled. Hence the test I propose below...
In the meantime... I wonder if its related to this posting:
http://www.bughost.org/pipermail/power/2007-June/000492.html
While the LED"s don't seem to light up appropriately, if you
do a:
'echo 2 > /sys/bus/pci/drivers/iwl3945/0000:0c: 00.0'
the Fn + F2 should appropriately activate and deactivate, however as I
mentioned, at least on my laptop the LED doesn't work.
Tonight, I'm going to go through all the conditions w.r.t.:
- BIOS,
- Fn-F2 usage,
- /var/log/messages (what messages do I get)
- nm-applet (are networks visible)
- connectivity (can I actually associate, etc.)
and come up with a table of results for posting.
And finally, although the LED doesn't light... It used to.
therefore it is a regression in F8T3, and will hopefully be addressed.
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