On Fri, Nov 14, 2008 at 10:46:41PM -0700, Michal Jaegermann wrote: > Different subject as the original thread is way too long and goes in > different directions. :-) > > On linux-kernel mailing list there are currently messages about bugs > in wifi support for Aspire One. See http://lkml.org/lkml/2008/11/14/214 > and the thread appears to start at http://lkml.org/lkml/2008/11/10/220 > That looks like relevant. Interesting. The only thing I've run into is that the 2.6.27 kernel has apparently dropped support for the little sysctl lines that made the wireless LED work. I've used both the 8GB SSD and the hard drive version. The only trouble I had with Fedora and wireless--but again, I do it manually--was that the live CD, and only the live CD, couldn't connect to a WPA2 network. Another fellow had the same issue, and we both found that with the first upgrade, it was fixed. On occasion, after one upgrade or another, it would get a connection the first time around--that is, wpa_supplicant would work, but for whatever reason, it couldn't get a DHCP address. This was always fixed with a reboot. However, lately, it's been rather smooth. I haven't had any trouble with any of the distros with a 2.6.26 or 2.6.27 kernel and the realtek. The only one that was a problem was CentOS, which uses a 2.6.18 or something like that. It was a fairly major problem as the included r8169 module would cause a core dump, but it's reasonably trivial to fix. I suspect one reason for my lack of problems is that by using command line tools it's relatively easy to see where the problem occurs. Again, I've left NM out of the equation--not because of any dislike for it in particular, but just because I have many sessions where I don't start X. I don't know if it works without X, and never checked as the other tools work for me. In Ubuntu, which I keep on the machine as some of my users have it, I do usually boot into their default Gnome and use it. It's more a of a pain, as it doesn't remember the (hidden) SSID and I have to reset it each time, but it works well enough. As for the Ubuntu page--it would be better, if they're recommending MadWifi if they keep it up to date. If you follow their advice, don't do wget. Go to the page containing the tarball and get the latest. Frankly, if one is going to use MadWifi, I think my own page is better and more up to date. http://home.roadrunner.com/~computertaijutsu/rhwireless.html#5007 On the other hand, lately, I've gotten equal or better performance from the ath5k module, with the added advantage that it doesn't require a recompile (which is trivial and takes about 2 minutes) with each kernel upgrade. At any rate, in my experience, Fedora 10, as soon as one installs, then upgrades, the live CD, works pretty well. I'm not sure about the various tools, NM, or system-network-config. I simply don't use them in most cases. I realize that sounds a bit elitist, but it's not meant to be. Most of what I learned about Unix like systems was on FreeBSD, and when a job change brought me back to the Linux world (and when I'd been in it before, the various tools were far less reliable, so back then one was more prone to rely on manually editing config files) it was just easier to continue doing so rather than learn another set of tools. If it were me, and I needed a static address, the easiest thing for me to do would be edit /etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/ifcfg-eth0, disable NM, enable network and the problem would be solved. As it is, I use it in various places, sometimes with wired, sometimes wireless, and with DHCP, so I have my little scripts and wpa.confs (because it's easier, if checking with wpa_supplicant in the foreground to type -cwpa.conf than -cwpa_supplicant.conf) :) I suspect part of Ann's problem is that she's getting too much input from too many directions. So, I'll shut up now. (BTW, good call, IMHO to start a new thread. As you said, it's getting out of hand.) Maybe one called dissing NM and another called in defense of NM? whimsically yours, -- Scott Robbins PGP keyID EB3467D6 ( 1B48 077D 66F6 9DB0 FDC2 A409 FA54 EB34 67D6 ) gpg --keyserver pgp.mit.edu --recv-keys EB3467D6 Angel: I've been around death before. A lot. I've lost people. I've killed people... Cordelia: And you are dead. -- fedora-test-list mailing list fedora-test-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-test-list