On Fri, 2009-04-24 at 14:16 -0400, Derek Atkins wrote: > Dan Williams <[email protected]> writes: > > > On Thu, 2009-04-23 at 11:29 -0400, Derek Atkins wrote: > >> Dan Williams <[email protected]> writes: > >> > >> > On Mon, 2009-04-20 at 16:15 -0500, Bryan Duff wrote: > >> >> My situation is that I have a number of accessible access points for > >> >> me. > >> >> > >> >> I'll connect to the AP I want, but at some interval NetworkManager > >> >> re-scans available AP's and picks an unencrypted AP (that I don't > >> >> want). So I have to then, via nm-applet, reselect the AP I want to > >> >> use. > >> > > >> > So if NM is connecting to it, you must have selected it sometime before. > >> > If you won't want to connect to it, you can remove its configuration in > >> > the connection editor, and NM won't connect to it automatically any > >> > more. > >> > >> That didn't work for me.. Even after removing all remnants NM still > >> wanted to connect to a local "linksys" network, no matter what I told > >> it. > > > > When you say "NM", do you mean NetworkManager itself in the logs said it > > was trying to connect, or do you mean you saw the BSSID of the linksys > > ap in the results for "iwconfig" at some point? Was that linksys > > connection a system connection? > > Yes, I mean Network Manager itself connected to the linksys even though > I erased it. I even stopped NM, killed nm-applet, killed gconf, deleted > all the files, and restarted everything, and it *still* connected to > the linksys network against my wishes.
When you say "killed gconf", you mean 'rm -rf ~/.gconf' and then 'killall -TERM gconfd-2' or something else? > I shouldn't have any system connections.. At least I'm pretty sure I > never set any up. How do I check? If you run the connection editor, you'll see all the connections defined on your system. Dan _______________________________________________ NetworkManager-list mailing list [email protected] http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/networkmanager-list
