On Sun, Jul 22, 2007 at 06:02:21PM -0400, Dan Williams wrote: > On Sun, 2007-07-22 at 13:39 -0400, Patrick Hi wrote: > > So do you guys think it's just the weak signal strength and > > interference that is causing the disconnections? If so, what should I > > do about it. Would a different router help (mine's a westell > > versalink). I have the same problem only on all three computers > > running linux and connecting to my wireless network. The iMac has no > > problems, and when booted into windows the computers have no problem > > keeping connected. I just want to find some answers. > > Weak signal strength could cause them if you're at the margins of the > network, and the driver looses sync with the AP. But if you still get > disconnections (ie, iwevent shows SIOCSIWAP events of 00:00:00:00:00:00) > when you're right next to the AP then we really need debug logs from the > driver to figure out why it thinks it's being kicked.
Mine is not weak signal. I'm just a few feet from a Netgear WG302 and nm-applet shows all bars solid and something like 80%. My other linux laptop running Sarge and an Apple iBook don't have this problem. The linux laptop is not using wpa_supplicant, either. Can you explain how to generate useful debug logs? I have an Atheros a/b/g/n card on a Thinkpad T60p using WPA-PSK. Also, would it be helpful to disable NetworkManager to manually config the card? I'm not clear how to do this (I was using a prism-based card before without WPA). Plus, I'm not clear how to monitor the card to see if there are any drop-outs. The nm-applet makes it easy to see when the connection is lost, of course. -- Bill Moseley [EMAIL PROTECTED] _______________________________________________ NetworkManager-list mailing list NetworkManager-list@gnome.org http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/networkmanager-list