El 18/8/21 a les 18:21, papapep ha escrit:
> On 18/8/21 18:08, Narcis Garcia wrote:
>> He provat amb 3 ordinadors portàtils a activar el «Punt d'accés Wifi»
>> que ofereix el panell de paràmetres del Gnome.
>> A tots els casos resulta molt senzill, i tots els sistemes Android
021 at 18:08, Narcis Garcia wrote:
>
>> He provat amb 3 ordinadors portàtils a activar el «Punt d'accés Wifi»
>> que ofereix el panell de paràmetres del Gnome.
>> A tots els casos resulta molt senzill, i tots els sistemes Android que
>> he provat s'hi connecten bé i arri
On 18/8/21 18:08, Narcis Garcia wrote:
He provat amb 3 ordinadors portàtils a activar el «Punt d'accés Wifi»
que ofereix el panell de paràmetres del Gnome.
A tots els casos resulta molt senzill, i tots els sistemes Android que
he provat s'hi connecten bé i arriben a Internet.
PERÒ no amb
On Wed, 18 Aug 2021 at 18:08, Narcis Garcia wrote:
> He provat amb 3 ordinadors portàtils a activar el «Punt d'accés Wifi»
> que ofereix el panell de paràmetres del Gnome.
> A tots els casos resulta molt senzill, i tots els sistemes Android que
> he provat s'hi connecten bé i arribe
He provat amb 3 ordinadors portàtils a activar el «Punt d'accés Wifi»
que ofereix el panell de paràmetres del Gnome.
A tots els casos resulta molt senzill, i tots els sistemes Android que
he provat s'hi connecten bé i arriben a Internet.
PERÒ no amb sistemes Debian ni Ubuntu.
Perquè?
Porto anys
I have a laptop Dell Inspiron 5770 with wifi QCA9377 and bluetooth Qualcomm
Atheros.
Some details:
# lsusb
Bus 001 Device 004: ID 0cf3:e009 Qualcomm Atheros Communications
# lshw -class network
*-network
description: Wireless interface
product: QCA9377 802.11ac Wireless Network
On Thu, 5 Aug 2021 10:30:42 +0300
Gunnar Gervin wrote:
> Hi again, experts.
> Please advice how fix it.
> WiFi gone.
> I used ethernet cable to reinstall Debian i386 32b Buster. Now WiFi won't
> turn on. In Xfce desktop "Advanced Network Manager" shows the WiFi
> p
Hi again, experts.
Please advice how fix it.
WiFi gone.
I used ethernet cable to reinstall Debian i386 32b Buster. Now WiFi won't
turn on. In Xfce desktop "Advanced Network Manager" shows the WiFi
provider, but "Save" button's grey passive; not possible to turn on.
Installed
Le 15/07/2021 à 10:11, I.N.R.I. a écrit :
J'utilise Debian 11 RC2 sur mon ordinateur portable HP pavillon modèle
HP 15P R7 et je n'ai pas de prise en charge des drivers de BT WiFi et
Carte vidéo HD.
Tape lspci dans un terminal, pour savoir ce qu'il y a sous le capot et
poste la réponse ici
Debian a écrit :
> Salut,
>
> J'utilise la version 9.13 de Raspbian sur un RPi 3 en tant que point
> d'accès WiFi et il fonctionne toujours parfaitement avec hostapd via
> RaspAP (https://github.com/RaspAP/raspap-webgui).
>
> $ openssl version
> OpenSSL 1.1.0l 10 Sep 201
Salut,
J'utilise la version 9.13 de Raspbian sur un RPi 3 en tant que point
d'accès WiFi et il fonctionne toujours parfaitement avec hostapd via
RaspAP (https://github.com/RaspAP/raspap-webgui).
$ openssl version
OpenSSL 1.1.0l 10 Sep 2019
$ rfkill list
0: phy0: Wireless LAN
Soft
>
> question :
>
> -a) RX || TX (?) cf conf
>
> -b) capabilités (classe ?) de la carte wifi
>
> -c) y a-t-il une bouse nommée "nm" (network manager) ?
>
> https://askubuntu.com/questions/472794/hostapd-error-nl80211-could-not-configure-driver-
Bonjour à tous,
J'utilise depuis des années un rPI 3 comme point d'accès wifi. Ça
fonctionne parfaitement bien. Ou plutôt, ça fonctionnait jusqu'à ce
matin où j'ai dû mettre à jour openssl. Plutôt que de faire dans le
détail, j'ai fait un
apt update/apt dist-upgrade
On Thu 10 Jun 2021 at 17:33:53 (-0700), L L wrote:
> I'm writing a script that generates a randomized valid MAC address and
> assigns it to the wireless card. It would be nice to make it run
> automatically as part of connecting to an access point. What will I have to
> edit to make this happen?
On 6/11/21 8:33 AM, L L wrote:
I'm writing a script that generates a randomized valid MAC address and
assigns it to the wireless card. It would be nice to make it run
automatically as part of connecting to an access point. What will I have
to edit to make this happen?
Luke
somthing like
I'm writing a script that generates a randomized valid MAC address and
assigns it to the wireless card. It would be nice to make it run
automatically as part of connecting to an access point. What will I have to
edit to make this happen?
Luke
On Mon, May 24, 2021 at 09:50:04PM -0400, Polyna-Maude Racicot-Summerside wrote:
>
>
> On 2021-05-24 1:16 p.m., Henning Follmann wrote:
> > On Mon, May 24, 2021 at 12:24:30PM -0400, Polyna-Maude Racicot-Summerside
> > wrote:
[...]
> >>
> >> What a crazy thing here...
> >> Now desktop
Polyna-Maude Racicot-Summerside wrote:
> You are exactly pointing to a real solution here.
> It's jumping pretty fast to conclusion about Gnome itself being the
> cause of any type of network problem.
Sorry for the sarcasm and it might be inappropriate on the list, but I can
not hold it :D
Gnome
te:
>>>
> [...]
>>>
>>> I finally narrowed the problem to one specific source by installing
>>> Windows 10 and KDE Neon in parallel to my Debian. After booting into
>>> either of them and using 5G WiFi band my IPv6 address is visible from
the
>>
ork by using CLI tools like iwconfig
directly.
3rd look at the logs.
>> CLI utilities confirm that my IPv6 is enabled and that WiFi interface
>> is assigned an IPv6 address. One for 2.4G band & a different one for
>> 5G band.
>
> I suspect that this is part of your p
you are using is your problem. Re-installing
Debian, and doing all the customization one usually does after a new
installation sounds to me like a lot of work for an unsure outcome.
> CLI utilities confirm that my IPv6 is enabled and that WiFi interface
> is assigned an IPv6 address. One for 2
one specific source by installing
> > Windows 10 and KDE Neon in parallel to my Debian. After booting into
> > either of them and using 5G WiFi band my IPv6 address is visible from the
> > outside world as expected. Thus now I know that both my adapter and its
>
> > L
>>> Debian Buster on Dell M4800 Mobile Workstation, Intel Corporation
>>> Wireless 7260 (rev bb) WiFi adapter. The ISP modem offers 2 WiFi bands:
>>> 2.4G & 5G. The system connects automatically to 5G. 2.4G is reserved
>>> for my printer use. Email client - Evoluti
On Sun, 23 May 2021 21:53:45 -0700, David Christensen wrote:
> On 5/23/21 4:55 PM, Juan R. de Silva wrote:
>> Help needed from somebody with the better networking knowledge than
>> mine.
>>
>> Debian Buster on Dell M4800 Mobile Workstation, Intel Corporation
>
On 5/23/21 4:55 PM, Juan R. de Silva wrote:
Help needed from somebody with the better networking knowledge than mine.
Debian Buster on Dell M4800 Mobile Workstation, Intel Corporation
Wireless 7260 (rev bb) WiFi adapter. The ISP modem offers 2 WiFi bands:
2.4G & 5G. The system conn
Help needed from somebody with the better networking knowledge than mine.
Debian Buster on Dell M4800 Mobile Workstation, Intel Corporation
Wireless 7260 (rev bb) WiFi adapter. The ISP modem offers 2 WiFi bands:
2.4G & 5G. The system connects automatically to 5G. 2.4G is reserved for
On 4/19/21 5:24 AM, Barak A. Pearlmutter wrote:
I have a smart TV which includes a browser. (An LG running WebOS, as
it happens.) It can, of course, display video streams from a given
URL. So I'm hoping someone has figured out a way to create a virtual
display on a Debian computer which streams
On Mon, 19 Apr 2021 10:49:06 -0300
Eduardo M KALINOWSKI wrote:
>
>
> There are some wireless hdmi kits, you plug one in the computer, one
> in the display, and it works like a cable, but without the actual
> cable. You should be able to find them on Amazon and other stores.
> I've never tried
Barak A. Pearlmutter wrote:
> I'd like to use the TV as an extra display for my laptop. Basically,
> as if it were connected with an HDMI cable, but over the network. And
> use both displays, the same way one usually uses two displays.
>
> Unless there's a usage of x11vnc that I don't
> not support stretching your desktop to it) and it has a Java viewer
> applet that can be used to connect to it from a web browser.
There's a good chance the browser hardcoded in the TV doesn't support
Java applets.
Stefan
On Lu, 19 apr 21, 14:17:05, Barak A. Pearlmutter wrote:
> I'd like to use the TV as an extra display for my laptop. Basically,
> as if it were connected with an HDMI cable, but over the network. And
> use both displays, the same way one usually uses two displays.
It seems you mean to expand your
> There are some wireless hdmi kits, you plug one in the computer, one in the
> display, and it works like a cable, but without the actual cable. You should
> be able to find them on Amazon and other stores. I've never tried them,
> though.
Sure, that would work!
But it does seem a shame to
On 19/04/2021 12:24, Barak A. Pearlmutter wrote:
> I have a smart TV which includes a browser. (An LG running WebOS, as
> it happens.) It can, of course, display video streams from a given
> URL. So I'm hoping someone has figured out a way to create a virtual
> display on a Debian computer which
On 19/04/2021 08:24, Barak A. Pearlmutter wrote:
I have a smart TV which includes a browser. (An LG running WebOS, as
it happens.) It can, of course, display video streams from a given
URL. So I'm hoping someone has figured out a way to create a virtual
display on a Debian computer which streams
I'd like to use the TV as an extra display for my laptop. Basically,
as if it were connected with an HDMI cable, but over the network. And
use both displays, the same way one usually uses two displays.
Unless there's a usage of x11vnc that I don't understand, there are
two issues with using
On Lu, 19 apr 21, 12:24:21, Barak A. Pearlmutter wrote:
> I have a smart TV which includes a browser. (An LG running WebOS, as
> it happens.) It can, of course, display video streams from a given
> URL. So I'm hoping someone has figured out a way to create a virtual
> display on a Debian computer
I have a smart TV which includes a browser. (An LG running WebOS, as
it happens.) It can, of course, display video streams from a given
URL. So I'm hoping someone has figured out a way to create a virtual
display on a Debian computer which streams its contents out as a live
video stream on some
On 25/03/2021, Susmita/Rajib wrote:
> I find from the Debian page that the safest chipsets are as follows:
> carl9170 Atheros Communications AR9170 chipset
> prism2_usb Intersil Prism 2/2.5/3 chipsets
> rndis_wlan Broadcom BCM4320 chipset
> rt2500usb Ralink RT2500USB/RT2571 chipset
> rtl8187
On Thu, Mar 25, 2021, 7:02 PM Cmdte Alpha Tigre Z
wrote:
> El jue, 25 mar 2021 a las 17:31, Kenneth Parker ()
> escribió:
> > On Thu, Mar 25, 2021, 12:09 PM David Wright
> wrote:
> >> But it appears that I might need to point out that it's very easy and
> >> quick to re-collect a failing
El jue, 25 mar 2021 a las 17:31, Kenneth Parker () escribió:
> On Thu, Mar 25, 2021, 12:09 PM David Wright wrote:
>> But it appears that I might need to point out that it's very easy and
>> quick to re-collect a failing installation log at any time if the
>> "original" ones were lost/overwritten
On Thu, 25 Mar 2021 17:22:12 +0100, Sven Joachim wrote:
> To: debian-user@lists.debian.org
> Subject: Re: Could a product with Chipset information for USB WiFi
> Message-id: <[] 87sg4jryob@turtle.gmx.de>
> Mail-followup-to: debian-user@lists.debian.
On Thu, Mar 25, 2021, 12:09 PM David Wright
wrote:
> On Wed 24 Mar 2021 at 22:25:42 (-0600), Charles Curley wrote:
> > On Wed, 24 Mar 2021 22:52:31 -0500 David Wright wrote:
> >
> > > ... [W]e haven't yet been shown any direct evidence of
> > > which module drives the 8723, nor of what firmware
ptop has the annoying habit of booting up
>> with the wifi blocked. (It has a pair of insanely placed toggling
>> buttons/lights for wifi and bluetooth, and I've never figured out
>> what the wifi light correlates with.) I know nothing about the R51
>> and whether there are any fir
I agree with Mr. Charles Curley and Mr. David Wright.
Following those advices will help more the "debugging" process.
On Wed, 24 Mar 2021 22:52:31 -0500
David Wright wrote:
> My newly oldest computer, an Acer TravelMate 3201XCi,
> built in 2004, contains one of these. If it's of any use to Charles,
> I can warn that this laptop has the annoying habit of booting up
> with the wifi blocked. (I
On 2021-03-25 18:15 +0530, Susmita/Rajib wrote:
> Could you please suggest me an USB WiFi dongle that is recommended by
> Debian and available in India?
> https://wiki.debian.org/WiFi#USB_Devices
> and
> https://wiki.debian.org/DeviceDatabase/USB
>
> Problem with Amazon
On Wed 24 Mar 2021 at 22:25:42 (-0600), Charles Curley wrote:
> On Wed, 24 Mar 2021 22:52:31 -0500 David Wright wrote:
>
> > ... [W]e haven't yet been shown any direct evidence of
> > which module drives the 8723, nor of what firmware it uses.
> > (These can easily be determined from dmesg when
On 25/03/2021, "Andrew M.A. Cater" wrote:
> To: debian-user@lists.debian.org
> Subject: Re: Could a product with Chipset information for USB WiFi
> access dongle be advised please?
> From: "Andrew M.A. Cater"
> Date: Thu, 25 Mar 2021 13:24:08 +
On Thu, Mar 25, 2021 at 06:15:16PM +0530, Susmita/Rajib wrote:
> My illustrious List Members and our Problem Solvers, Debian.org,
>
> This issue arose because of my need to bypass the non-accessible WiFi
> network through the native card on my HP laptop. The network strength
> is
My illustrious List Members and our Problem Solvers, Debian.org,
This issue arose because of my need to bypass the non-accessible WiFi
network through the native card on my HP laptop. The network strength
is raed by network manager applet, but data can't be exchanged.
Could you please suggest me
On Wed, 24 Mar 2021 22:52:31 -0500
David Wright wrote:
> ... [W]e haven't yet been shown any direct evidence of
> which module drives the 8723, nor of what firmware it uses.
> (These can easily be determined from dmesg when the installed
> system is running.)
Also, more detail from
h bug-fixing process
> sending some installation log information to narrow what the developers
> should be looking for. As for the reproduction of the bug, I think one
> would need a similar hardware configuration to reach the problem;
> at least you need the WiFi device, so it would be g
the developers
should be looking for. As for the reproduction of the bug, I think one
would need a similar hardware configuration to reach the problem;
at least you need the WiFi device, so it would be good if you could provide
more details, if you have the time, of course.
Have a good day.
On Tue, Mar 23, 2021, 6:03 AM Brian wrote:
> On Mon 22 Mar 2021 at 20:26:47 -0400, Kenneth Parker wrote:
>
> > I think my best, followup is to state "how to recreate the problem"
>
> Indeed. I should not have offered the advice in that manner
> and tone. Aplologies.
>
Absolutely accepted. No
On Mon 22 Mar 2021 at 20:26:47 -0400, Kenneth Parker wrote:
> I think my best, followup is to state "how to recreate the problem"
Indeed. I should not have offered the advice in that manner
and tone. Aplologies.
--
Brian.
Thanks. I submitted "how to Recreate". Text file of submission is in
another reply.
Kenneth Parker
On Mon, Mar 22, 2021, 9:11 PM Greg Wooledge wrote:
> On Mon, Mar 22, 2021 at 08:26:47PM -0400, Kenneth Parker wrote:
> > I think my best, followup is to state "how to recreate the problem".
> >
I submitted the following Text to Bug 985755. Text File has How to
Recreate the Problem.
Kenneth Parker
1. Have Laptop, with the following WiFi Hardware (as per lspci Command):
> Network controller: Realtek Semiconductor Co., Ltd. RTL8723DE
802.11b/g/n PCIe Adapter
2. Use Netinst
On Mon, Mar 22, 2021 at 08:26:47PM -0400, Kenneth Parker wrote:
> I think my best, followup is to state "how to recreate the problem".
>
> The Bug Report looks like a "temporary email list". Is that true? Can I
> "submit updates"?
Yes, you can reply to the bug to add information to the bug
On Mon, 22 Mar 2021 22:51:18 +
Brian wrote:
> > I'm not so sure that's a tangent, as d-i appears to use
> > wpasupplicant to set up connections.
>
> How can it set up a connection if there isn't an interface to connect
> to?
Because I'm not sure that's what's happening.
What I see
On Mon, Mar 22, 2021, 6:58 PM Brian wrote:
> On Mon 22 Mar 2021 at 18:12:08 -0400, Kenneth Parker wrote:
>
> > On Mon, Mar 22, 2021, 3:54 PM Charles Curley <
> > charlescur...@charlescurley.com> wrote:
> >
> > > On Mon, 22 Mar 2021 14:52:26 -0400
> > > Kenneth Parker wrote:
> > >
> > > > >
On Mon, Mar 22, 2021, 6:52 PM Charles Curley <
charlescur...@charlescurley.com> wrote:
> On Mon, 22 Mar 2021 16:44:12 -0400
> Kenneth Parker wrote:
>
> > My issue now, is that the results of netinst doesn't have all the
> > pieces, needed for WiFi. For example,
On Mon 22 Mar 2021 at 18:12:08 -0400, Kenneth Parker wrote:
> On Mon, Mar 22, 2021, 3:54 PM Charles Curley <
> charlescur...@charlescurley.com> wrote:
>
> > On Mon, 22 Mar 2021 14:52:26 -0400
> > Kenneth Parker wrote:
> >
> > > > ...I'd suggest you file a bug
> > > > against debian-installer,
On Mon, 22 Mar 2021 16:44:12 -0400
Kenneth Parker wrote:
> My issue now, is that the results of netinst doesn't have all the
> pieces, needed for WiFi. For example, I can't find wpasupplicant.
*You* can't find wpasupplicant, or the debian installer (d-i) can't
find wpasupplicant? M
On Mon 22 Mar 2021 at 16:33:03 -0600, Charles Curley wrote:
> On Mon, 22 Mar 2021 20:59:33 +
> Brian wrote:
>
> > > My issue now, is that the results of netinst doesn't have all the
> > > pieces, needed for WiFi. For example, I can't find wpasupplicant.
&g
On Mon, 22 Mar 2021 20:59:33 +
Brian wrote:
> > My issue now, is that the results of netinst doesn't have all the
> > pieces, needed for WiFi. For example, I can't find wpasupplicant.
>
> Tangential.
I'm not so sure that's a tangent, as d-i appears to use wpasu
On Mon, Mar 22, 2021, 3:54 PM Charles Curley <
charlescur...@charlescurley.com> wrote:
> On Mon, 22 Mar 2021 14:52:26 -0400
> Kenneth Parker wrote:
>
> > > ...I'd suggest you file a bug
> > > against debian-installer, preferably with reportbug immediately
> > > after completing the installation.
u file a bug
> > > > against debian-installer, preferably with reportbug immediately
> > > > after completing the installation.
> > > >
> > >
> > > That's next on my list.
> >
> > Please let us know the bug number. I have a similar
> been loaded? Have you tried loading firmware as David Wright
> outlines?
>
I loaded "incomplete" (I think) firmware and, as noted in my response to
Charles, am fighting with getting the commands, needed to navigate WiFi.
But it sounds like a good time to go back to a networked system and figure
out how to put in an intelligent Bug Report.
> Brian.
>
Kenneth Parker
>
gt; > after completing the installation.
> > >
> >
> > That's next on my list.
>
> Please let us know the bug number. I have a similar issue and may be
> able to provide more data.
>
I am still mucking around, trying to get WiFi working.
I guess that I should pu
On Mon 22 Mar 2021 at 14:52:26 -0400, Kenneth Parker wrote:
> On Mon, Mar 22, 2021 at 7:06 AM Andrei POPESCU
> wrote:
[...]
> > ...I'd suggest you file a bug
> > against debian-installer, preferably with reportbug immediately after
> > completing the installation.
> >
>
> That's next on my
On Mon, 22 Mar 2021 14:52:26 -0400
Kenneth Parker wrote:
> > ...I'd suggest you file a bug
> > against debian-installer, preferably with reportbug immediately
> > after completing the installation.
> >
>
> That's next on my list.
Please let us know the bug number. I have a similar issue and
ote: It took about a minute on the "Detect Network Hardware" step,
> > before continuing, and only finding Ethernet.
>
Same behavior.
> So what is special about the RTL8723DE WiFi Adapter? (After Installation,
> > I can find it, and the Realtek Firmware works).
On Mon 22 Mar 2021 at 09:39:54 -0500, David Wright wrote:
> On Sun 21 Mar 2021 at 21:48:30 (-0400), Kenneth Parker wrote:
> > On Sun, Mar 21, 2021, 9:24 PM Robbi Nespu wrote:
> > > On 22/3/2021 6:27 am, Kenneth Parker wrote:
> > > >
> > > > Both his L
On Sun 21 Mar 2021 at 21:48:30 (-0400), Kenneth Parker wrote:
> On Sun, Mar 21, 2021, 9:24 PM Robbi Nespu wrote:
> > On 22/3/2021 6:27 am, Kenneth Parker wrote:
> > >
> > > Both his Lenovo, and my HP Laptop have the same WiFi hardware, found via
> > > a &qu
in the Expert Text Install).
Try a more recent weekly image, it should have a slightly newer kernel.
> One note: It took about a minute on the "Detect Network Hardware" step,
> before continuing, and only finding Ethernet.
>
> So what is special about the R
On Sun, Mar 21, 2021, 9:24 PM Robbi Nespu wrote:
> On 22/3/2021 6:27 am, Kenneth Parker wrote:
> > Hello,
> >
> > Later this week, I will be helping a friend install Debian onto a Lenovo
> > Ideapad Laptop. This will be in a Public Space with, only WiFi
> avai
On Sun 21 Mar 2021 at 18:27:22 (-0400), Kenneth Parker wrote:
>
> Later this week, I will be helping a friend install Debian onto a Lenovo
> Ideapad Laptop. This will be in a Public Space with, only WiFi available.
>
> Both his Lenovo, and my HP Laptop have the same WiFi hard
On 22/3/2021 6:27 am, Kenneth Parker wrote:
Hello,
Later this week, I will be helping a friend install Debian onto a Lenovo
Ideapad Laptop. This will be in a Public Space with, only WiFi available.
Both his Lenovo, and my HP Laptop have the same WiFi hardware, found via
a "lspci&quo
On 3/21/21 3:27 PM, Kenneth Parker wrote:
Hello,
Later this week, I will be helping a friend install Debian onto a Lenovo
Ideapad Laptop. This will be in a Public Space with, only WiFi available.
Both his Lenovo, and my HP Laptop have the same WiFi hardware, found via a
"lspci&quo
e step, to find,
> > and configure the Network, but only finds the Ethernet Port which, for
> the
> > purposes of my test, has no Cable attached. So, obviously, the Network
> > Configuration fails!
> >
> > I was ready for it to Find the WiFi, and had, in advance, popu
Ethernet Port which, for the
> purposes of my test, has no Cable attached. So, obviously, the Network
> Configuration fails!
>
> I was ready for it to Find the WiFi, and had, in advance, populated the
> /firmware directory of a USB Thumbdrive, but it never gets to the step,
> where it is a
Hello,
Later this week, I will be helping a friend install Debian onto a Lenovo
Ideapad Laptop. This will be in a Public Space with, only WiFi available.
Both his Lenovo, and my HP Laptop have the same WiFi hardware, found via a
"lspci" command:
> Network controller: Realtek Sem
Personne n'à donc connu ce petit outils qui faisait radar sonore ?
Bien à vous
Le ven. 12 mars 2021 à 15:30, David Martin a
écrit :
> Bonjour,
>
> Dans une autre vie il existait un outils wifi sur woody ou sarge qui avait
> une fonction sonore et qui beepais si on s'eloignait plus
On Mon, Mar 15, 2021, 4:44 PM Anssi Saari wrote:
> Kenneth Parker writes:
>
> > That brings up a question: Do Debian and Devuan (Debian fork without
> SystemD) use the same Kernels?
> >
> > (And I may be able to answer my own question when I get home, as I run
> both).
>
> At least the
Kenneth Parker writes:
> That brings up a question: Do Debian and Devuan (Debian fork without
> SystemD) use the same Kernels?
>
> (And I may be able to answer my own question when I get home, as I run both).
At least the versions look similar, 4.19 in stable and 5.10 from
backports.
On Mon, Mar 15, 2021, 12:45 PM Anssi Saari wrote:
> Tixy writes:
>
> > That doesn't seem to be the standard method for the last 9 years,
> > see...
> >
> > https://lwn.net/Articles/518942/
> > https://lkml.org/lkml/2013/8/5/175
>
> Thanks.
>
> > Maybe the old ways are still enabled in Debian
Tixy writes:
> That doesn't seem to be the standard method for the last 9 years,
> see...
>
> https://lwn.net/Articles/518942/
> https://lkml.org/lkml/2013/8/5/175
Thanks.
> Maybe the old ways are still enabled in Debian and used in some cases?
> My bullseye kernel does have the kernel config
On Sat, 2021-03-13 at 10:04 +0200, Anssi Saari wrote:
> deloptes writes:
>
> > Anssi Saari wrote:
> >
> > > udevadm trigger is the command to run to simulate plugging in the wifi
> > > adapter after you have the firmware available. I don't think modprobe
&g
deloptes writes:
> Anssi Saari wrote:
>
>> udevadm trigger is the command to run to simulate plugging in the wifi
>> adapter after you have the firmware available. I don't think modprobe
>> loads firmware.
>
> loading the driver, loads the firmware
> unloading
On Sat 13 Mar 2021 at 00:11:36 (+0100), deloptes wrote:
> Anssi Saari wrote:
>
> > udevadm trigger is the command to run to simulate plugging in the wifi
> > adapter after you have the firmware available. I don't think modprobe
> > loads firmware.
>
> loading
Anssi Saari wrote:
> udevadm trigger is the command to run to simulate plugging in the wifi
> adapter after you have the firmware available. I don't think modprobe
> loads firmware.
loading the driver, loads the firmware
unloading the driver, unloads the firmware
both done with modp
El vie, 12 mar 2021 a las 14:04, Brian () escribió:
> 'ip a' should show all available interfaces.
user@debian:~$ ip a
1: lo: mtu 65536 qdisc noqueue state UNKNOWN
group default qlen 1000
link/loopback 00:00:00:00:00:00 brd 00:00:00:00:00:00
inet 127.0.0.1/8 scope host lo
n't show anything. I ran udevadm, I don't remember how,
> to see if the USB WiFi adapter was detected; it was and also
> the module r8712u was loaded for it.
udevadm trigger is the command to run to simulate plugging in the wifi
adapter after you have the firmware available. I don't thin
, but I couldn't.
> > Here is what I already have tried:
> >
> > 1-. Downloaded package firmware-realtek from package.debian.org.
>
> Ok. May also be done with 'apt download firmware-realtek'.
That would work if I already had Debian with internet connection.
I can't use apt for a
Bonjour,
Dans une autre vie il existait un outils wifi sur woody ou sarge qui avait
une fonction sonore et qui beepais si on s'eloignait plus ou moins de la
borne wifi ou l'on était connecté. Comme un radar. gadget mais rigolo,
j'aimerai la retrouver.
Vous souvenez-vous de cet outil ? Impossible
On Fri 12 Mar 2021 at 14:04:14 +, Brian wrote:
> On Thu 11 Mar 2021 at 20:38:04 -0400, Cmdte Alpha Tigre Z wrote:
>
> > 4-. Executed: sudo apt install firmware-realtek
>
> I think that is incorrect. If you are in the same directory as
> firmware-realtek, I'd do 'sudo apt install
, Wicd didn't show anything. I ran udevadm, I don't remember how,
> to see if the USB WiFi adapter was detected; it was and also
> the module r8712u was loaded for it.
>
> I need some help here, please. I don't want to use a non-free firmware
> live image. Thanks.
'ip a' should show all available interfaces.
--
Brian.
9x
https://wiki.debian.org/rtl819x#supported-r8712u
> There are also USB WiFi adapters that simply don't play with Linux.
I wish this is not the case.
IL Ka writes:
> 1-. Downloaded package firmware-realtek from package.debian.org.
> 2-. Booted Debian Live.
> 3-. Copied package from hard disk to the desktop (apt complains when
> I load it directly).
> 4-. Executed: sudo apt install firmware-realtek
> 5-. Executed: sudo depmod -a
> 6-.
ep -i RTL8191
* Realtek RTL8192SE/RTL8191SE firmware, version 4.816.2011
root@orca:~#
I say, possibly, because Realtek firmware is screwy.
There are also USB WiFi adapters that simply don't play with Linux.
--
Does anybody read signatures any more?
https://charlescurley.com
https://charlescurley.com/blog/
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