On 19/09/12 22:59, Dean Ramsden wrote:
On 19/09/12 22:02, Peter Merchant wrote:
On 19/09/12 17:21, Peter Merchant wrote:
On 18/09/12 21:50, Dean Ramsden wrote:
On 18/09/12 09:59, Peter Merchant wrote:
On 17/09/12 18:43, Dean Ramsden wrote:
On 17/09/12 17:47, Peter Merchant wrote:
On 17/09/12 13:46, Dean Ramsden wrote:
On 17/09/12 12:17, Peter Merchant wrote:
Hi, I have been trying to get an obscure PCMCIA card working
under ndiswrapper and I now have it recognised, but it doesn't
connect. I have discovered that the existing config files
were for the usual wireless device that I use and MAC address
specific. I have moved them.
When I try and use the Windows Wireless Drivers program from
the menu, and select the configure driver option, it is greyed
out and I cannot use it. Any thoughts, aside from pulling back
one of the other configs and changing MAC address?
This is on an ancient x30 thinkpad running xUbuntu 12.04.
Yes, The PCMCIA card has a power LED and a Link LED. The Power one
comes on after the Modprobe Ndiswrapper command.
PM.
I'm guessing you've seen this:
https://help.ubuntu.com/community/WifiDocs/Driver/Ndiswrapper and
followed it through. By the sounds of it, the card should be
working fine. I would try changing the MAC address on an existing
config file and see if that works.
What kind of network are you trying to connect to and what security
does it have?
Cheers,
Dean
--
Yes, That is the link that I have been trying to use.
My home network has WPA2 encryption and eventually I want to connect
to that. I have fired up a netgear router with Default
configuration, no security, at the moment as a first step. When I do
iwconfig it shows me an ESSID: off/any.
As I noted earlier when I try and use the wireless config tool, all
options are greyed out so I can't edit anything. That's why I want
to find a config file to edit manually.
Above all I am concerned that usually I use a zd1211 wireless USB
stick and it's configuration might be mucking up or somehow
affecting my set-up for the PCMCIA card.
Cheers,
Peter
*** Correction. when I tried to use the wireless configuration
manager out of Ndisgtk it was greyed out.
When I used it from the status line it was OK, I was able to create a
new connection to the NETGEAR, and it showed in iwconfig, and the
link LED flashed. revisiting the configuration showed it to be in
ad-hoc mode rather than infrastructure (I don't know why) and
changing that lost the ability to flash the Link LED.
Problem is, when I was at Clives the other day, we changed the essid
of the Netgear, and I don't remember what to. Time to get the
cable out.
PM.
I wouldn't worry about the greyed-out options on NdisGTK for the
moment, the device seems to be set-up correctly. Which program are you
using to manage your internet connections?
You can look for wifi networks from the command line with 'iwlist
wlan0 scan'.
Dean
Not worrying about those, as the network manager from teh status line
works - Not sure what program it is though.
Here is what I get when it tries to connect:
mike@Pegasus:~$ iwconfig
wlan2 IEEE 802.11g ESSID:"NETGEAR"
Mode:Managed Frequency:2.462 GHz Access Point: 00:09:5B:66:27:69
Bit Rate=1 Mb/s Sensitivity=-200 dBm
RTS thr=2346 B Fragment thr=2346 B
Power Management:off
Link Quality:0 Signal level:0 Noise level:0
Rx invalid nwid:0 Rx invalid crypt:0 Rx invalid frag:0
Tx excessive retries:0 Invalid misc:0 Missed beacon:0
lo no wireless extensions.
irda0 no wireless extensions.
eth0 no wireless extensions.
The worrisome thing is that the address given for teh access point is
not the address of either of my access points. The Netgear ends in CF:DA
and the 3Com in 89:2C. It is not the MAC of the PCMCIA Card either. My
next step is to edit that in the configuration file ineo the MAC of my
Netgear router.
Cheers.
But what a pain....
Peter
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