Brian and others, thanks much I got network up and working last night. One thing I did was to turn the wpa-psk field contents into hex and store it that way in /etc/network/interfaces since /etc/network/interfaces has to be world-readable.

On Tue, 13 Dec 2016, Brian wrote:

Date: Tue, 13 Dec 2016 07:55:26
From: Brian <a...@cityscape.co.uk>
To: debian-user@lists.debian.org
Subject: Re: network setup
Resent-Date: Tue, 13 Dec 2016 12:55:43 +0000 (UTC)
Resent-From: debian-user@lists.debian.org

If all you want is a single wireless connection which is activated when
the machine boots you do not need a wpa_supplicant.conf. Everything can
be done in /etc/network/interfaces. It is the simplest, most hassle-free
and most straightforward way to proceed.

First check that network-manager is not managing the interface you are
going to define in /e/n/i. /etc/NetworkManager/NetworkManager.conf needs
to have

[main]
plugins=ifupdown,keyfile

[ifupdown]
managed=false

Also check the wireless interface name with 'ifconfig -a'. Previously
you said it was wlx00c0ca364bd2.

Now, into /etc/network/interfaces put

allow-hotplug wlx00c0ca364bd2
iface wlx00c0ca364bd2 inet dhcp
        wpa-ssid whatever
        wpa-psk  whatever

This is all you require in the file.

Reboot or use 'ifup -v wlx00c0ca364bd2'.


On Tue 13 Dec 2016 at 06:10:16 -0500, Jude DaShiell wrote:

I'm trying for a single wireless connection.
I wrote some stuff in /etc/network/interfaces and wrote some things in
/etc/wpa_supplicant/wpa_supplicant.conf and found command line documentation
for bringing an internet connection up incomplete. Iwconfig has to be given
the interface and told just about everything I put into
/etc/network/interfaces but at least iwconfig preserves what I tell it
across reboots.  When I had a graphical user interface environment up I used
a terminal and ran nmtui with no success too, so I've been around the block.



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