9.1-RELEASE-p4 on amd64. This is a laptop with an Atheros 9280 wireless
chip in a domestic setting with a single router and a cable modem.
I have never had to use wireless before, but am now in another room. I
have followed the handbook, and it seems to be working well. One question
though:
On Wednesday, July 10, 2013, Walter Hurry wrote:
9.1-RELEASE-p4 on amd64. This is a laptop with an Atheros 9280 wireless
chip in a domestic setting with a single router and a cable modem.
I have never had to use wireless before, but am now in another room. I
have followed the handbook, and
to find about your devices, and check you've a driver to use them:
pciconf -lv
Samuel Martín Moro
{EPITECH.} tek5
CamTrace S.A.S
(+033) 1 41 38 37 60
1 Allée de la Venelle
92150 Suresnes
FRANCE
Nobody wants to say how this works.
Maybe nobody knows ...
On Tuesday 21 September 2010 04:12:45, William Kindler wrote:
-- I have 2 wireless adapter that I am able to use for my system. One is
a usb device, a D-Link DWA130, and the other is a PCI device, a Netgear
WN311T. I can find no information about Linux or UNIX support, or
drivers for either,
On Mon, 20 Sep 2010 21:12:45 -0500
William Kindler williamkind...@att.net articulated:
-- I have 2 wireless adapter that I am able to use for my system. One
is a usb device, a D-Link DWA130, and the other is a PCI device, a
Netgear WN311T. I can find no information about Linux or UNIX
-- I have 2 wireless adapter that I am able to use for my system. One is
a usb device, a D-Link DWA130, and the other is a PCI device, a Netgear
WN311T. I can find no information about Linux or UNIX support, or
drivers for either, on your website or on the respective manufacturer's
sites,
Hello Chip,
On Fri, 30 Apr 2010 18:03:21 -0700
Chip Camden sterl...@camdensoftware.com wrote:
On Apr 30 2010 13:39, S Roberts wrote:
Hello Chip,
Good to hear from you..,
On Thu, 29 Apr 2010 15:52:13 -0700
Chip Camden sterl...@camdensoftware.com wrote:
On Apr 26 2010
Hello Chip,
Good to hear from you..,
On Thu, 29 Apr 2010 15:52:13 -0700
Chip Camden sterl...@camdensoftware.com wrote:
On Apr 26 2010 22:00, Carl Chave wrote:
More info: I found the following in the output of pciconf -vl:
no...@pci0:2:0:0: class=0x028000 card=0x10891a3b
On Apr 30 2010 13:39, S Roberts wrote:
Hello Chip,
Good to hear from you..,
On Thu, 29 Apr 2010 15:52:13 -0700
Chip Camden sterl...@camdensoftware.com wrote:
On Apr 26 2010 22:00, Carl Chave wrote:
More info: I found the following in the output of pciconf -vl:
On Apr 26 2010 22:00, Carl Chave wrote:
More info: I found the following in the output of pciconf -vl:
no...@pci0:2:0:0: class=0x028000 card=0x10891a3b chip=0x002b168c
rev=0x01 hdr=0x00
vendor = 'Atheros Communications Inc.'
class = network
From here:
On Apr 26 2010 22:00, Carl Chave wrote:
More info: I found the following in the output of pciconf -vl:
no...@pci0:2:0:0: class=0x028000 card=0x10891a3b chip=0x002b168c
rev=0x01 hdr=0x00
vendor = 'Atheros Communications Inc.'
class = network
From here:
On Apr 25 2010 22:15, Kevin Kinsey wrote:
Let me preface my commentary with I'm way out of my league, so #include
disclaimer.h and all that ...
For starters, in re: above, didn't someone suggest libpciaccess as the
source for scanpci? I can't tell if you are misunderstanding what S
More info: I found the following in the output of pciconf -vl:
no...@pci0:2:0:0: class=0x028000 card=0x10891a3b chip=0x002b168c
rev=0x01 hdr=0x00
vendor = 'Atheros Communications Inc.'
class = network
From here:
http://www.pcidatabase.com/vendor_details.php?id=174
On Apr 24 2010 23:51, S Roberts wrote:
I believe its been bundled into the libpciaccess port:
http://www.freebsd.org/cgi/cvsweb.cgi/ports/devel/libpciaccess/
Doesn't seem to be there, and google isn't being helpful. A search of
freshports.org didn't turn up anything either. Searching
Chip Camden wrote:
On Apr 24 2010 23:51, S Roberts wrote:
I believe its been bundled into the libpciaccess port:
http://www.freebsd.org/cgi/cvsweb.cgi/ports/devel/libpciaccess/
Doesn't seem to be there, and google isn't being helpful. A search of
freshports.org didn't turn up anything
Hello Chip,
On Sun, 25 Apr 2010 12:10:40 -0700
Chip Camden sterl...@camdensoftware.com wrote:
On Apr 24 2010 23:51, S Roberts wrote:
I believe its been bundled into the libpciaccess port:
http://www.freebsd.org/cgi/cvsweb.cgi/ports/devel/libpciaccess/
Doesn't seem to be there, and
On Apr 25 2010 21:26, S Roberts wrote:
Hmmm.., you sure your ports system is installed / up-to-date there?
Do you have any of the docs that would have shipped with the notebook?
If not, I searched ASUS, and found a link to the English version manual
here:
On Apr 25 2010 16:18, Chip Camden wrote:
On Apr 25 2010 21:26, S Roberts wrote:
Hmmm.., you sure your ports system is installed / up-to-date there?
Do you have any of the docs that would have shipped with the notebook?
If not, I searched ASUS, and found a link to the English version
Chip Camden wrote:
On Apr 25 2010 16:18, Chip Camden wrote:
On Apr 25 2010 21:26, S Roberts wrote:
Hmmm.., you sure your ports system is installed / up-to-date there?
Do you have any of the docs that would have shipped with the notebook?
If not, I searched ASUS, and found a link to the
A new notebook (ASUS K72F) has integrated wireles networking. The technical
specifications are sadly lacking, so I don't know what chipset. The
wired ethernet appears to use uath, but that's not working as a wlandev.
Since most everything else is Intel, I figured it could be an Intel
chipset,
Hello Chip,
On Sat, 24 Apr 2010 13:39:47 -0700
Chip Camden sterl...@camdensoftware.com wrote:
A new notebook (ASUS K72F) has integrated wireles networking. The
technical specifications are sadly lacking, so I don't know what
chipset. The wired ethernet appears to use uath, but that's
On Apr 24 2010 13:39, Chip Camden wrote:
A new notebook (ASUS K72F) has integrated wireles networking. The technical
specifications are sadly lacking, so I don't know what chipset. The
wired ethernet appears to use uath, but that's not working as a wlandev.
Since most everything else is
On Apr 24 2010 21:55, S Roberts wrote:
snip
Easiest option would be to run a livecd of another more populous *nix
flavour and see what it makes of the hardware.
Needless to say, if you're so bold, you **can** always load windows
and let window tell you what it is ;-)
Regards,
S Roberts
Hello Chip,
On Sat, 24 Apr 2010 14:00:29 -0700
Chip Camden sterl...@camdensoftware.com wrote:
On Apr 24 2010 13:39, Chip Camden wrote:
A new notebook (ASUS K72F) has integrated wireles networking. The
technical specifications are sadly lacking, so I don't know what
chipset. The wired
On Apr 24 2010 22:07, S Roberts wrote:
Not a whole lot there..,
Does scanpci -v tell you any more details about the hardware?
Regards,
S Roberts
I don't seem to have scanpci on my system, nor do I see it in the ports
tree -- where would I find it?
Thanks
--
Sterling (Chip) Camden
Hello Chip,
On Sat, 24 Apr 2010 15:00:34 -0700
Chip Camden sterl...@camdensoftware.com wrote:
On Apr 24 2010 22:07, S Roberts wrote:
Not a whole lot there..,
Does scanpci -v tell you any more details about the hardware?
Regards,
S Roberts
I don't seem to have scanpci
Hello!
I need to connect my laptop to the wireless NIC on my FreeBSD 6.0-STABLE
gateway.
It's ral0, and I've set it to ad-hoc mode. My laptop, running Windows XP, can
see
the network bsd but not ping it / connect to it.
I used some ascii2hex converter that I found online to turn the wep key
I used some ascii2hex converter that I found online to turn the wep key
1n4te
into 316E3474410D0B.
From ifconfig(8) manual page (my emphasis):
wepkey key|index:key
Set the selected WEP key. If an index is not given, key 1 is
set. A WEP key will be either 5 or
I am using a routerboard 14 on freebsd 6.0.
I have Senoa 5354 card installed and setup as an AP an all works fine.
I use exactly the same setup with a cm9 card and i get exactly nothing.
Tried setting it to be an AP client and it sees nothing.
The lights on the routerboard keep flashing
Hey all,
I'm trying to get wifi working in freebsd 5.2.1. This card WAS working
in 4.9 and 4.10, but I get an error similar to:
Error: busy bit won't clean on wi0
Or something to that effect. If I boot the system without the card, I
can see it and make lights blink, but it never associates to
I recently changed from a regular ADSL account, to a wireless account. I
have a modem-router in one device (2wire). This modem has two Ethernet
connections, one of which I am using for this computer. I have five
computers using FreeBSD, and I have a key to open reception. Could someone
be so kind
kind of a keep-alive ticket to the client every 2 minutes, and
if the client does not respond, the lease is revoked.
This functionality seems to rely on some non-standard features of the
Microsoft Windows 2K/XP dhcp client, or wireless networking driver,
since the same problem occurs on Macs
On Feb 26, 2004, at 10:47 AM, Tiarnan O'Corrain wrote:
According to Orange WiFi, this is because the DHCP server sends
some kind of a keep-alive ticket to the client every 2 minutes, and
if the client does not respond, the lease is revoked.
This functionality seems to rely on some non-standard
Dirk-Willem van Gulik [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
On Feb 26, 2004, at 10:47 AM, Tiarnan O'Corrain wrote:
According to Orange WiFi, this is because the DHCP server sends
some kind of a keep-alive ticket to the client every 2 minutes, and
if the client does not respond, the lease is revoked.
I am a Linux user trying Freebsd. I've installed 5.1 on two machines, one of
shich is connected to a wireless network through a TI pci cardbus adapator
and an Avaya Silver Wireless Network Card. The card is recognised, the
configuration settings appear to be correct but ifconfig -a shows that
On Monday, 1 December 2003 at 18:16:10 +1100, Darryl Barlow wrote:
I am a Linux user trying Freebsd. I've installed 5.1 on two machines, one of
shich is connected to a wireless network through a TI pci cardbus adapator
and an Avaya Silver Wireless Network Card. The card is recognised, the
On Mon, Nov 24, 2003 at 06:26:09AM -0500, Bruce Mackay wrote:
I'm no networking guru but I had similar issues trying to get my network up
and running. I ran route add default 192.168.1.1 at the command prompt which
started to let me ping my router. I guess in your case you probably
On Mon, Nov 24, 2003 at 09:03:29AM +0200, Kim Fredenberg wrote:
sudo ifconfig wi0 ssid kieran
I still cannot ping either by ip or dns. Here is the output of
ifconfig:
What are you trying to ping, your gateway or something in the Internet?
If your pinging outside of your network your route
sudo ifconfig wi0 ssid kieran
I still cannot ping either by ip or dns. Here is the output of
ifconfig:
What are you trying to ping, your gateway or something in the Internet?
If your pinging outside of your network your route (default gateway)
settings
might be incorrect. Try pinging
On Mon, 24 Nov 2003 01:51:39 -0500
William O'Higgins [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
After much effort I found a wireless PCMCIA card that is supported by
FreeBSD. Now I have to get connected to a wireless network, and I need
some help.
I have read man wi, and the Handbook, but I'm still missing
After much effort I found a wireless PCMCIA card that is supported by
FreeBSD. Now I have to get connected to a wireless network, and I need
some help.
I have read man wi, and the Handbook, but I'm still missing something.
When I stick in the card in it is recognized and here is the output of
that use that driver
I've just moved into an apartment in which drilling and running wires is
taboo. Has anyone delved successfully into the realms of wireless
networking their FreeBSD groups? My main server is running 4.8-STABLE, and
I have a client machine running 5.1-RELEASE (which has
I've just moved into an apartment in which drilling and running wires is taboo. Has
anyone delved successfully into the realms of wireless networking their FreeBSD
groups? My main server is running 4.8-STABLE, and I have a client machine running
5.1-RELEASE (which has been suspect to a lack
On Mon, Nov 03, 2003 at 10:14:19AM -0800, John DeStefano wrote:
I've just moved into an apartment in which drilling and running wires is taboo. Has
anyone delved successfully into the realms of wireless networking their FreeBSD
groups? My main server is running 4.8-STABLE, and I have
Toni Schmidbauer wrote:
On Mon, Nov 03, 2003 at 10:14:19AM -0800, John DeStefano wrote:
I've just moved into an apartment in which drilling and
running wires is taboo. Has anyone delved successfully into
the realms of wireless networking their FreeBSD groups? My
main server is running 4.8
On Wed, 29 Oct 2003 04:42 am, you wrote:
On Mon, Oct 27, 2003 at 09:10:22PM +1000, David Lodeiro wrote:
If you want to see my rc.conf reguarding this machine to make it easier
to set up, let me know.
I just bought one of these and I'd be interested in seeing your rc.conf.
Thanks much,
]
Mail-Followup-To: Free BSD Questions list [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Wireless networking hardware recomendations?
I've got to set up a wireless network. I plan on using a FreeBSD machine as
the access point. It will be the gateway between an existing network, and a
new subnet dedicated to various
I've got to set up a wireless network. I plan on using a FreeBSD machine as
the access point. It will be the gateway between an existing network, and a
new subnet dedicated to various 802.11/B (and later perhaps /G) enabled
devices.
I'm looking ofr recomendations for hardware on the FreeBSD end.
Jaguar.
I'd like to try and get the HP on the network. I got a Linksys PCI card
(WMP11) and installed it. I checked the kernel config and it included wi,
awi, an, etc. This lead me to believe that wireless networking was
configured into the kernel. However, the system doesn't seem
Airport base
station w/ iMac and iBook, both running Mac OS 10.2.3 Jaguar.
I'd like to try and get the HP on the network. I got a Linksys PCI
card
(WMP11) and installed it. I checked the kernel config and it
included wi,
awi, an, etc. This lead me to believe that wireless networking
on the network. I got a Linksys PCI
card (WMP11) and installed it. I checked the kernel config and it
included wi, awi, an, etc. This lead me to believe that wireless
networking was configured into the kernel. However, the system doesn't
seem to recognize the PCI card. I'm unsure, however, whether
Hi everybody,
Is there any way to get list of all SSIDs, which are present in given
area, with the tools provided by FreeBSD.
I'm not sure that is possible at all, but a colleague of mine insist
that he was seen such tool for Windows.
To Unsubscribe: send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
with
Angelin Lazarov Lalev [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Hi everybody,
Is there any way to get list of all SSIDs, which are present in given area,
with the tools provided by FreeBSD.
I'm not sure that is possible at all, but a colleague of mine insist that he
was seen such tool for Windows.
I am trying to set up an ad-hoc network with some Dell c600 Latitudes in a
school lab. One of the machines (A) is plugged into the school's DHCP
network via an average, everyday ethernet card. It has no problem accessing
the internet, etc.
However, system A also has a Cisco Aironet 350
I'm getting my hands on a 802.11a wireless network card and a base
station (both from Dell) and was wondering if it will work on my FreeBSD
laptop (dell Latitude C840).
Any ideas or links to check out?
~ Matthew
To Unsubscribe: send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
with unsubscribe
and a base
station (both from Dell) and was wondering if it will work on my FreeBSD
laptop (dell Latitude C840).
Any ideas or links to check out?
~ Matthew
To Unsubscribe: send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
with unsubscribe freebsd-questions in the body of the message
end of Wireless
under 4.6
Ray
On Thu, 2002-07-25 at 16:29, MET wrote:
Does FreeBSD allow and or follow the standards for wireless networking?
- Matthew
/**
Matthew Metnetsky
[EMAIL PROTECTED
then. It's much
better under 4.6
Ray
On Thu, 2002-07-25 at 16:29, MET wrote:
Does FreeBSD allow and or follow the standards for
wireless networking?
- Matthew
/**
Matthew Metnetsky
[EMAIL
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