Just FYI, I have noticed a change in this behaviour with OS2008 (at
least in RX-44_2008SE_1.2007.42-18).
All the root certs that ship with OS2008 are pre-set to be Trusted for WLAN
(not for E-mail or Browser).
So there should no longer be a need to manually set the WLAN Trust checkbox,
unless
technut wrote:
> One last thought... when you imported that cert, did you import it to
> the User or the Authorities section? Should be Authorities.
Yes, it went into Authorities.
> technut wrote:
>> Sorry, I can only tell you what worked for me.
>> a) The only way I know of to be sure which CA
One last thought... when you imported that cert, did you import it to
the User or the Authorities section? Should be Authorities.
technut wrote:
> Sorry, I can only tell you what worked for me.
> a) The only way I know of to be sure which CA root cert to Trust is by
> asking your system guys w
Sorry, I can only tell you what worked for me.
a) The only way I know of to be sure which CA root cert to Trust is by
asking your system guys which cert vendor is providing the cert for the
Radius server. In your case if they are acting as their own CA, then
their root cert needs to imported
technut wrote:
> Did you follow the steps in my first answer? ie. Go into Control panel
> / Certificate manager / Authorities tab Select the cert and choose
> Trust, then check the WLAN box.
Yep. Mail, Browser, and WLAN were already checked.
> Worked for me on N800 / OS2007.
That's what
Maybe the bug is solved for N800, but not for 770. I have the same problem,
and there is no way to make it work :(
2007/11/14, technut <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
>
> Did you follow the steps in my first answer? ie. Go into Control panel
> / Certificate manager / Authorities tab Select the cert an
Did you follow the steps in my first answer? ie. Go into Control panel
/ Certificate manager / Authorities tab Select the cert and choose
Trust, then check the WLAN box.
Worked for me on N800 / OS2007.
Peter Flynn wrote:
> technut wrote:
>> You get the "can't find a certificate to valida
It was my understanding that the issue you are experiencing was a
known bug in the current OS release.
Have you searched Bugzilla for outstanding. WPA bugs?
--
=Wayne
On 11/13/07, Peter Flynn <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> technut wrote:
> > You get the "can't find a certificate to validate the
technut wrote:
> You get the "can't find a certificate to validate the server" error
> message if you either don't have the matching root cert, or if it isn't
> enabled for WLAN connections.
>
> If you can figure out which CA your Radius server certificate is from
> (eg. Entrust? Verisign? ask
technut wrote:
> You get the "can't find a certificate to validate the server" error
> message if you either don't have the matching root cert, or if it isn't
> enabled for WLAN connections.
>
> If you can figure out which CA your Radius server certificate is from
> (eg. Entrust? Verisign? ask
You get the "can't find a certificate to validate the server" error
message if you either don't have the matching root cert, or if it isn't
enabled for WLAN connections.
If you can figure out which CA your Radius server certificate is from
(eg. Entrust? Verisign? ask the Radius admin guys), the
Kalle Valo wrote:
> "ext Peter Flynn" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
>> Pretty much everything is working on my N800, including all my WEP
>> connections. WPA, however, is not.
>>
>> The campus LAN uses a hidden SSID and requires my MAC address and
>> provides a username and password. This works
Kalle Valo wrote:
> I think you should try with client auth disabled, because you have
> disabled similar sounding setting (Client Cert) from Network Manager.
I tried that today, everything else as-was, and it complained that I
didn't have a CA certificate to validate the server.
So "Require cl
"ext Peter Flynn" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>> I think you should try with client auth disabled, because you have
>> disabled similar sounding setting (Client Cert) from Network Manager.
>
> From memory, I tired it, but the result was that it then doesn't prompt
> for any password, and a passw
Kalle Valo wrote:
> "ext Peter Flynn" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
>> Pretty much everything is working on my N800, including all my WEP
>> connections. WPA, however, is not.
>>
>> The campus LAN uses a hidden SSID and requires my MAC address and
>> provides a username and password. This works
"ext Peter Flynn" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Pretty much everything is working on my N800, including all my WEP
> connections. WPA, however, is not.
>
> The campus LAN uses a hidden SSID and requires my MAC address and
> provides a username and password. This works fine in WPA Enterprise
> u
On Thu, 25 Oct 2007 19:33:17 -0700, Fred Chittenden wrote
> On Fri, 26 Oct 2007 00:46:30 +0100
> Peter Flynn <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > Pretty much everything is working on my N800, including all my WEP
> > connections. WPA, however, is not.
> >
> > The campus LAN uses a hidden SSID and re
On Fri, 26 Oct 2007 00:46:30 +0100
Peter Flynn <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Pretty much everything is working on my N800, including all my WEP
> connections. WPA, however, is not.
>
> The campus LAN uses a hidden SSID and requires my MAC address and
> provides a username and password. This work
Pretty much everything is working on my N800, including all my WEP
connections. WPA, however, is not.
The campus LAN uses a hidden SSID and requires my MAC address and
provides a username and password. This works fine in WPA Enterprise
using Network-Manager on my Ubuntu Gutsy laptop:
Network N
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