I have wireless working (b43legacy driver for the Dell Wireless Broadcom) through a static configuration in /etc/conf.d/net - basically:
essid_wlan0="myWLAN" key_MYWLAN="somekey" config_MYWLAN=( "dhcp" ) preferred_APS= ( "myWLAN" ) I would like to use a tool like WPA Supplicant instead so I can have a more dynamic configuration. I've tried to setup WPA supplicant but haven't been able to get it to work. My last attempt was with: modules=( "wpa_supplicant" ) wpa_supplicant_wlan0="-Dwext" wpa_timeout_wlan0=15 I also tried the iwconfig setup: modules=( "iwconfig" ) iwconfig_wlan0="mode managed" wpa_timeout_wlan0=15 Both these were based on configurations I found while researching gentoo wireless configurations: http://en.gentoo-wiki.com/wiki/Wireless_Networking the wpa_supplicant man page possibly suggests uses "-Dbroadcom", but the following supports "-Dwext" since I have the b43legacy driver working (firmware extracted using b43-fwcutter a while back; dmesg reports version 0x127). http://linuxwireless.org/en/users/Drivers/b43 I have both the iwconfig utilities and wpa supplicant installed. When I used wpa supplicant with either configuration it would just keep searching. Now, my wireless configuration is currently WEP; and I'd like to upgrade to WPA/WPA2 once I can get a wireless tool on the system as well. Is there anything I'm doing wrong with the configuration above? Also - what is the correct GUI for configuring connections under KDE4? I know of the WPA Supplicant GUI; and the GNOME GUI; but would like something under more directly KDE4. KNemo just puts up monitors that are pretty useless (though look pretty). TIA, Ben P.S. It seems my Linksys WRT54G v3 needs a firmware update for WPA2. So right now, I'd just like to be able to configure dynamically for my WEP network; then I'll focus on going to WPA/WPA2.

