wpa_supplicant with ipw3945
Kevin J. Cummings
cummings at kjchome.homeip.net
Fri May 25 01:05:24 UTC 2007
John Dey wrote:
> Kevin,
>
> I can't believe it--It worked like a charm. Out with wpa_supplicant and
> in with NetworkManagerDispatcher and NetworkManager. They had been
> installed but were not running. The new serverst asked me to enter a
> key ring which, for now, I declined. I really would like to know what
> is going on. I thought I was entering a key but it looks like the code
> was interpreted as a passphrase. The key seems to show from the command
> 'iwconfig eth1'. I will play around with it a little bit when I have
> time but it is satisfying to make the connection. Thanks you very much
> for your assistance.
The "key ring" is gnome-keyring. It manages your network password
(similar to storing ssh passwords). The keyring itself is protected by
a passphrase of your choosing. After entering your passphrase, any
stored passwords (like your WPA key) are given to the NetworkManager
automatically for *that* ESSID which you saved the key for. It
(gnome-keyring) will save as many different keys for as many different
Wi-Fi networks that you may use from time to time.
> John
>
> On May 24, 2007, at 5:16 PM, Kevin J. Cummings wrote:
>
>> John Dey wrote:
>>> Hi,
>>>
>>> I have a wireless working on fc6 i386 without encryption When I set the
>>> linksys router to:
>>>
>>> securtiy mode: wpa2 persenal
>>> wpa algorithm: TKIP+AEP
>>> Group key renewal: 3600
>>>
>>> Then I set the key and other items in wpa_supplicant.conf and try to
>>> start wpa_supplicant with -D ipw3945 I get an error that ipw3945 is not
>>> supported.
>>
>> Don't run wpa_supplicant. Instead, run NetworkManagerDispatcher and
>> NetworkManager from the NetworkManager RPM. Each runs as a service.
>> You can find them in core. You might also want the NetworkManager-gnome
>> if you want it to run in your task bar.
>>
>>> I am not very familiar with encrypted wireless. Is there a good Howto?
>>> Any guidance will greatly appreciated. Thanks.
>>
>> Its not that much different than un-encrypted wireless. It requires
>> more iwconfig commands to be entered in order to work. Are you familiar
>> with the iwconfig command? It can show you the current state of your
>> wireless chip as the system sees it.
>>
>> And if you are still having problems, look at your /var/log/messages
>> file for messages about your hardware.
>>
>>> John
>>
>> --
>> Kevin J. Cummings
>> kjchome at rcn.com
>> cummings at kjchome.homeip.net
>> cummings at kjc386.framingham.ma.us
>> Registered Linux User #1232 (http://counter.li.org)
>>
>> --
>> fedora-list mailing list
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>>
>
--
Kevin J. Cummings
kjchome at rcn.com
cummings at kjchome.homeip.net
cummings at kjc386.framingham.ma.us
Registered Linux User #1232 (http://counter.li.org)
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