> I did not say that the RTL8187{B,L} cannot be used as an AP! I said that rtl8187 > cannot. The capitalization is important. With caps, it refers to a device; > without implies a driver. > > I am not sure how well an RTL8187L would work as it only has a single transmit > queue, but perhaps it would work. > > If you think there is a "crime against technology", then you need to be the one > to make the necessary changes to rtl8187. After all, the source is open. > > Larry > The driver as distributed with the distros cannot provided AP functionality, this is true. However one only needs to patch in the proper call functions for AP functionality to work, which is what I did with the power functions. The patch is available on the Realtek site but is formatted for kernal ver 2.something and thus most be painstakingly edited in. This means that the driver as provided by the manufacturer, which was also provided as open source, utilized these functions and more. But as this chipset is now considered legacy by the manufacturer they no longer update the driver, thus breaking compatibility with new generations of linux. I see this as a "crime against technology", and the comment that compatibility will 'never' come because the ability is and was available in these prior versions, all be it patched. This means that very little work needs to be done by someone who knows what they are doing. As for myself, I only 'almost' know what I'm doing and can't provide the technical expertise required to build a reliable enough driver to be given to the distros, nor do I have the repute to suggest an integration. It's also a crime that the windows drivers continue to be updated, at the least a newish win 7 is available, but the linux community does not wish to peruse greater functionality. While I can't substantiate this with any degree of certainty I do recall an Ubuntu mod saying that they will never provider greater support because the primary use for the Alfa adapters, which was the primary purchaser of said chipsets, is for hacking purposes. This is a tragedy as the rtl8187, or any in that series, as well as the Alfa adapters can and do provide an excellent platform for many wifi needs. I also should address the transmit issue as well if I'm to maintain any credibility. High priority kernal patches can be used to provide one's software router with appropriate timing. In fact there were, perhaps are, a lot of 'very cheep' wifi router which had limited capabilities in their chipsets but made up for those deficiencies with software 'cheats'. At this moment I'm serving my 'very' small town with free wifi internet through a Windows XP Aspire One, with routing provided by my dedicated linux soft router. Despite the slowness of the laptop, idiocies of windows, and other drawbacks with my setup I've had up to 30 people surfing at once with a peek of 50 or so sitting authenticated. It's a shame I can't integrate my soft-router and my soft-AP into one unit without having to downgrade to an earlier release or having an aneurysm because I'm staring at code during my few free time hours. -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-wireless" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html