Le -10/01/-28163 20:59, Marcus Better a écrit :
On 2010-02-15 17:38, Frédéric Massot wrote:
The workaround is to set the ipcp-max-failure pppd option to something
higher like 30. This works in most of the reported cases.
I tested the pppd option ipcp-max-failure to 30 and it changes
nothing,
Marcus Better a écrit :
On 2010-02-19 18:10, Frédéric Massot wrote:
Excuse the question, but are you sure you changed it in the right place
so it took effect? If unsure, please post the new log.
I uncommented the line ipcp-max-failure 30 in file /etc/ppp/options.
Even after restarting the
On 2010-02-19 18:10, Frédéric Massot wrote:
Excuse the question, but are you sure you changed it in the right place
so it took effect? If unsure, please post the new log.
I uncommented the line ipcp-max-failure 30 in file /etc/ppp/options.
Even after restarting the PC does not change.
The
Marcus Better a écrit :
On 2010-02-15 17:38, Frédéric Massot wrote:
The workaround is to set the ipcp-max-failure pppd option to something
higher like 30. This works in most of the reported cases.
I tested the pppd option ipcp-max-failure to 30 and it changes
nothing, I am obliged to launch
On 2010-02-15 17:38, Frédéric Massot wrote:
The workaround is to set the ipcp-max-failure pppd option to something
higher like 30. This works in most of the reported cases.
I tested the pppd option ipcp-max-failure to 30 and it changes
nothing, I am obliged to launch twice NM for the
Package: network-manager
Version: 0.7.2-2
Severity: normal
Hi,
To connect to the network (Connexion GSM SFR) with Huawei E220 3G USB modem, I
have to run twice NetworkManager:
The first time is quite long:
~# NM_SERIAL_DEBUG=1 NM_PPP_DEBUG=1 /usr/sbin/NetworkManager --no-daemon
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