Thanks so much The wifi works for a few minutes, or even an hour or so, before it stops. Sometimes I get to load a single webpage, sometimes several websites. I tried running without X11, so no browser, etc. Ping worked, but later the wifi still dropped out
I reset the router, but still drops out Those terminal details are here: https://gitlab.com/gratis/wifi-dfly/-/blob/master/details rc.conf is this, but have tried variations on that: wpa_supplicant_enable="YES" #wpa_supplicant_program="/usr/sbin/wpa_supplicant" #wpa_supplicant_program="/raven/sbin/wpa_supplicant" wpa_supplicant_program="/usr/local/sbin/wpa_supplicant" wlans_iwm0="wlan0" ifconfig_wlan0="WPA DHCP" dhcp_client="dhcpcd" dhcpcd_enable="YES" loader.conf: legal.intel_iwm.license_ack=1 if_iwm_load="YES" iwm7260fw_load="YES" On Fri, 17 Apr 2020 at 05:55, Jonathan Engwall <[email protected]> wrote: > > Hello Tse, > If it works a little then stops that is one thing. But if it is not actually > working at all when it should you can try a few different things. So can you > clarify: does it work for a few minutes then stop; does it say it is working > but then prove not too; or does it seem to work only until you need more than > today's headline story or the Google splash? > Why is your wifi on a NIC and a PCIE? Does this make sense? The OS is looking > for it, and it is not there. Where is it really, that is the question I > think. But this is not the only possibility. > PCIE lanes lead to NICs which are physical components, on the other hand a > MAC is an IPV6 address; IPV6 is not exactly necessary, you can turn it off. > This was not the first hint of trouble, maybe it is something else. > You may need only update ipfw3. If you can access the router, reset it. > To get a bigger picture in a terminal type: "ifconfig", "dmesg", and "netstat > -a | less" then share the results. > Jonathan Engwall
