Re: [gentoo-user] Wireless connection.
On Tuesday 23 September 2003 02:29 pm, Prabhat Gupta wrote: > Dave, > > I did repatch the kernel and also build the driver. I didn't do make > mrproper though. > > The wireless connection works but I have to stop it and then start > again. > > /etc/init.d/net.eth1 stop > /etc/init.d/net.eth1 start > > Prabhat Sounds like the interface is being brought up when the module is loaded during boot. Try moving 'modprob islpci_cb' to /etc/conf.d/local.start instead of having the module loaded in /etc/modules.autoload/kernel-2.x. /etc/conf.d/local.start should be the last script to execute before the login prompt. Dave -- [EMAIL PROTECTED] mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] Wireless connection.
Brian P.D. Smyth wrote: Prabhat Gupta wrote: Hi, I installed a netgear 802.11g card on my laptop for wireless access. With latest vanilla-source (~x86) everything was working fine. Then, I changed the kernel to latest gentoo-sources (~x86). Now the wireless connection doesn't connect automatically after boot. I have added it to the default runlevel. Now everytime, I have to start it explcitly by: /etc/init.d/net.eth1 stop /etc/init.d/net.eth1 start I have to stop first, cause it say it is already started. What could be the problem. I will appreciate any help. Thanks Prabhat -- [EMAIL PROTECTED] mailing list Prabhat, I have faced the same problem and here's what I had to do: 1) rc-update del wlan default 2) rc-update add wlan boot On my system the net.wlan0 script was running before wlan was loaded. Removing wlan from the default runlevel and adding it to boot ensured that wlan was started first. Let me know if it works, Regards, Brian Prabhat, Disregard my suggestion. Sorry. I didn't realize that you aren't using linux-wlan-ng. Brian -- Registerred Linux User #22 -- [EMAIL PROTECTED] mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] Wireless connection.
Prabhat Gupta wrote: Hi, I installed a netgear 802.11g card on my laptop for wireless access. With latest vanilla-source (~x86) everything was working fine. Then, I changed the kernel to latest gentoo-sources (~x86). Now the wireless connection doesn't connect automatically after boot. I have added it to the default runlevel. Now everytime, I have to start it explcitly by: /etc/init.d/net.eth1 stop /etc/init.d/net.eth1 start I have to stop first, cause it say it is already started. What could be the problem. I will appreciate any help. Thanks Prabhat -- [EMAIL PROTECTED] mailing list Prabhat, I have faced the same problem and here's what I had to do: 1) rc-update del wlan default 2) rc-update add wlan boot On my system the net.wlan0 script was running before wlan was loaded. Removing wlan from the default runlevel and adding it to boot ensured that wlan was started first. Let me know if it works, Regards, Brian -- Registerred Linux User #22 -- [EMAIL PROTECTED] mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] Wireless connection.
Dave, I did repatch the kernel and also build the driver. I didn't do make mrproper though. The wireless connection works but I have to stop it and then start again. /etc/init.d/net.eth1 stop /etc/init.d/net.eth1 start Prabhat David Mallwitz wrote: Prabhat Gupta wrote: I am using: http://ruslug.rutgers.edu/~mcgrof/802.11g/ dirver for that PCMCIA card. There is a dependency in the /etc/init.d/net.eth1 for PCMCIA. I don't know what else to add there :( Prabhat Repatch the kernel and rebuild the driver. Every time you upgrade your kernel you will have to do this. Dave -- [EMAIL PROTECTED] mailing list -- P r a b h a t G u p t a /\/\* Senior Software Engineer Alternative System Concepts, Inc. www.ascinc.com 22 Haverhill Road Windham, NH 03087 Phone: (603) 437-2234 (o) -- [EMAIL PROTECTED] mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] Wireless connection.
Prabhat Gupta wrote: I am using: http://ruslug.rutgers.edu/~mcgrof/802.11g/ dirver for that PCMCIA card. There is a dependency in the /etc/init.d/net.eth1 for PCMCIA. I don't know what else to add there :( Prabhat Repatch the kernel and rebuild the driver. Every time you upgrade your kernel you will have to do this. Dave -- [EMAIL PROTECTED] mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] Wireless connection.
I am using: http://ruslug.rutgers.edu/~mcgrof/802.11g/ dirver for that PCMCIA card. There is a dependency in the /etc/init.d/net.eth1 for PCMCIA. I don't know what else to add there :( Prabhat [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: On Tue, Sep 23, 2003 at 02:38:09PM -0400, Prabhat Gupta wrote: Hi, I installed a netgear 802.11g card on my laptop for wireless access. With latest vanilla-source (~x86) everything was working fine. Then, I changed the kernel to latest gentoo-sources (~x86). Now the wireless connection doesn't connect automatically after boot. I have added it to the default runlevel. Now everytime, I have to start it explcitly by: /etc/init.d/net.eth1 stop /etc/init.d/net.eth1 start I have to stop first, cause it say it is already started. What could be the problem. I will appreciate any help. If this were a Prism-based card using the linux-wlan-ng ebuild, I'd say that you need to be sure to start up the wireless LAN (/etc/init.d/wlan) before you start up the network device. This could be accomplished by adding a dependency in /etc/init.d/net.eth1. Since you're not using that particular software... the best I can do is an educated guess: you might have a similar dependency for that software. That is, there might be some other system that has to start up first for eth1 to come up properly. Nathan Meyers [EMAIL PROTECTED] -- [EMAIL PROTECTED] mailing list -- P r a b h a t G u p t a /\/\* Senior Software Engineer Alternative System Concepts, Inc. www.ascinc.com 22 Haverhill Road Windham, NH 03087 Phone: (603) 437-2234 (o) -- [EMAIL PROTECTED] mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] Wireless connection.
On Tue, Sep 23, 2003 at 02:38:09PM -0400, Prabhat Gupta wrote: > Hi, > > I installed a netgear 802.11g card on my laptop for wireless access. > With latest vanilla-source (~x86) everything was working fine. > Then, I changed the kernel to latest gentoo-sources (~x86). Now the > wireless connection doesn't connect automatically after boot. I have > added it to the default runlevel. > > Now everytime, I have to start it explcitly by: > > /etc/init.d/net.eth1 stop > /etc/init.d/net.eth1 start > > I have to stop first, cause it say it is already started. What could be > the problem. I will appreciate any help. If this were a Prism-based card using the linux-wlan-ng ebuild, I'd say that you need to be sure to start up the wireless LAN (/etc/init.d/wlan) before you start up the network device. This could be accomplished by adding a dependency in /etc/init.d/net.eth1. Since you're not using that particular software... the best I can do is an educated guess: you might have a similar dependency for that software. That is, there might be some other system that has to start up first for eth1 to come up properly. Nathan Meyers [EMAIL PROTECTED] -- [EMAIL PROTECTED] mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] Wireless connection. [CORRECTION]
I upgraded to GS-SOURCES Prabhat Gupta wrote: Hi, I installed a netgear 802.11g card on my laptop for wireless access. With latest vanilla-source (~x86) everything was working fine. Then, I changed the kernel to latest gentoo-sources (~x86). Now the wireless connection doesn't connect automatically after boot. I have added it to the default runlevel. Now everytime, I have to start it explcitly by: /etc/init.d/net.eth1 stop /etc/init.d/net.eth1 start I have to stop first, cause it say it is already started. What could be the problem. I will appreciate any help. Thanks Prabhat -- [EMAIL PROTECTED] mailing list -- P r a b h a t G u p t a /\/\* Senior Software Engineer Alternative System Concepts, Inc. www.ascinc.com 22 Haverhill Road Windham, NH 03087 Phone: (603) 437-2234 (o) -- [EMAIL PROTECTED] mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] Wireless connection slow
Orinoco silver cards with the pcmcia-cs drivers. I've built myself a linux access point with an old computer. Elvis On Thursday 20 March 2003 02:04 pm, Cedric Veilleux wrote: > May I ask which brand / model you're using and which linux drivers/software > you need for it? > > I think that 500 kbps is actually good.. I don't get near that, even when > both devices are inches away.. > > Thanks, > > cedric > > Le 20 Mars 2003 05:03, Xabier Ochotorena a écrit : > > -BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- > > Hash: SHA1 > > > > El Jueves, 20 de Marzo de 2003 08:35, Gwendolyn van der Linden escribió: > > > Are your sure the numbers are in the same unit? On a 11 Mbit/s wlan a > > > transfer rate of 500 Kbyte/s is quite reasonable... > > > > > > I get about 500 Kbyte/s on my wlan, which triggered my question. > > > > On my 10 Mbit/s ethernet lan I get 1.1 Mbyte/s easily, obtaining less > > than half of it in a theorically faster net doesn't sound reasonable to > > me. > > > > Regards, > > Xabi. > > > > > > - -- > > > > GnuPG signed and encrypted email preferred > > http://pgp.mit.edu:11371/pks/lookup?op=get&search=0x093F978B > > Key fingerprint = B3C5 0C7B 1587 071C 3D9C 545A 72FC 0234 093F 978B > > > > -BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE- > > Version: GnuPG v1.2.1 (GNU/Linux) > > > > iD8DBQE+eZH4cvwCNAk/l4sRAuGhAJ0XR1VTfjoZqMr73f78fcnjLzRHLQCfQKGh > > o3J+KwoOHfLMKRYmFzNZGoU= > > =9Sa8 > > -END PGP SIGNATURE- > > -- > [EMAIL PROTECTED] mailing list -- [EMAIL PROTECTED] mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] Wireless connection slow
May I ask which brand / model you're using and which linux drivers/software you need for it? I think that 500 kbps is actually good.. I don't get near that, even when both devices are inches away.. Thanks, cedric Le 20 Mars 2003 05:03, Xabier Ochotorena a écrit : > -BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- > Hash: SHA1 > > El Jueves, 20 de Marzo de 2003 08:35, Gwendolyn van der Linden escribió: > > Are your sure the numbers are in the same unit? On a 11 Mbit/s wlan a > > transfer rate of 500 Kbyte/s is quite reasonable... > > > > I get about 500 Kbyte/s on my wlan, which triggered my question. > > On my 10 Mbit/s ethernet lan I get 1.1 Mbyte/s easily, obtaining less than > half of it in a theorically faster net doesn't sound reasonable to me. > > Regards, > Xabi. > > > - -- > > GnuPG signed and encrypted email preferred > http://pgp.mit.edu:11371/pks/lookup?op=get&search=0x093F978B > Key fingerprint = B3C5 0C7B 1587 071C 3D9C 545A 72FC 0234 093F 978B > > -BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE- > Version: GnuPG v1.2.1 (GNU/Linux) > > iD8DBQE+eZH4cvwCNAk/l4sRAuGhAJ0XR1VTfjoZqMr73f78fcnjLzRHLQCfQKGh > o3J+KwoOHfLMKRYmFzNZGoU= > =9Sa8 > -END PGP SIGNATURE- -- [EMAIL PROTECTED] mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] Wireless connection slow
On Thursday 20 March 2003 15:00, Xabier Ochotorena wrote: > > > Since AFAIK wireless is half duplex you cannot acheive this speed. > > =>+-500KB is acceptable but this varies according to signal > > strength,number of hosts in the network,obstacles,etc... > > Half duplex means only one of the peers (this is P2P connection case) can > transmit at the same time. A tipical download only requires ACK's from our > machine and that doesn't make the transfer rate drop to half. I repeat that > my _ethernet_ (sorry Elvis, not a wireless one) LAN of 10 Mbit/s HalfDuplex > (as reported by mii-diag) achieves 1.1Mbyte/s without effort. A!No wireless connection... Try doing this: Take the 50Ohm terminator out of your rg-58 (assuming you're not using utp) and see what happens next. Say...cant browse the web at those amazing speeds of 1.1Mbyte/s,uh?:) Its called reflection. In a wireless RF connection you have: -Refraction -Reflection -Interferences (usualy dont affect 10base2 due to cable shielding) -Attenuation due to property of the medium (air) In wlan if one client says ACK and the other receives ACKCC"##"" he will ask :"could you please repeat that?" This is why you dont achieve such speeds with wireless rf connection.Good antennas (or well designed internal antennas),low SWR,etc will improve speed and distance. This is why some wlan hardware is more expensive than others Apart from that keeping objects away from the antenna (at least) 1 wavelength can also improve Tx/Rx.1 wl for 2.4Ghz is ~ 0.125 meters > I don't know if this would help but trying definitely won't hurt :) Anyway > take on account that the two machines are side-by-side so no interferences > should happen. > The right tweakings will help to improve. Best Regards, João Seabra -- [EMAIL PROTECTED] mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] Wireless connection slow
On Thursday 20 March 2003 10:00 am, Xabier Ochotorena wrote: > Anyway > take on account that the two machines are side-by-side so no interferences > should happen. That is simply not true. Interference can be coming from the motherboard. -- Hi, I am a .signature virus. Please copy me into your ~/.signature and send me to all your contacts. After a month or so log in as root and do a rm / -rf. Or ask your administrator to do so... -- [EMAIL PROTECTED] mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] Wireless connection slow
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1 El Jueves, 20 de Marzo de 2003 13:58, João Seabra escribió: > 11Mbit/s is +- 1.4Mbyte/s. Agreed. > Since AFAIK wireless is half duplex you cannot acheive this speed. > =>+-500KB is acceptable but this varies according to signal > strength,number of hosts in the network,obstacles,etc... Half duplex means only one of the peers (this is P2P connection case) can transmit at the same time. A tipical download only requires ACK's from our machine and that doesn't make the transfer rate drop to half. I repeat that my _ethernet_ (sorry Elvis, not a wireless one) LAN of 10 Mbit/s HalfDuplex (as reported by mii-diag) achieves 1.1Mbyte/s without effort. > You can try to tweak it by changing preamble type and fragmentation > settings I don't know if this would help but trying definitely won't hurt :) Anyway take on account that the two machines are side-by-side so no interferences should happen. Best regards, Xabi. - -- GnuPG signed and encrypted email preferred http://pgp.mit.edu:11371/pks/lookup?op=get&search=0x093F978B Key fingerprint = B3C5 0C7B 1587 071C 3D9C 545A 72FC 0234 093F 978B -BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE- Version: GnuPG v1.2.1 (GNU/Linux) iD8DBQE+edeHcvwCNAk/l4sRAl6UAKCkWaFIGN990vAh8iC2Xgmxo/dmSgCgl3JC 7ksO8Yp3f/KNLxZK/h87B80= =8Q/W -END PGP SIGNATURE- -- [EMAIL PROTECTED] mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] Wireless connection slow
On Thursday 20 March 2003 07:35, Gwendolyn van der Linden wrote: > > Just finished setting up a wireless network at home but its > > much slower then > > the theoretical 11M. I have the two computers 25.4 cm (10 > > inches) from each > > other and I get a rate of ~500K. The two computers are > > side-by-side and I am > > wondering if this might be a problem. > 11Mbit/s is +- 1.4Mbyte/s. Since AFAIK wireless is half duplex you cannot acheive this speed. =>+-500KB is acceptable but this varies according to signal strength,number of hosts in the network,obstacles,etc... You can try to tweak it by changing preamble type and fragmentation settings Best Regards, João Seabra -- [EMAIL PROTECTED] mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] Wireless connection slow
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1 El Jueves, 20 de Marzo de 2003 08:35, Gwendolyn van der Linden escribió: > Are your sure the numbers are in the same unit? On a 11 Mbit/s wlan a > transfer rate of 500 Kbyte/s is quite reasonable... > > I get about 500 Kbyte/s on my wlan, which triggered my question. On my 10 Mbit/s ethernet lan I get 1.1 Mbyte/s easily, obtaining less than half of it in a theorically faster net doesn't sound reasonable to me. Regards, Xabi. - -- GnuPG signed and encrypted email preferred http://pgp.mit.edu:11371/pks/lookup?op=get&search=0x093F978B Key fingerprint = B3C5 0C7B 1587 071C 3D9C 545A 72FC 0234 093F 978B -BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE- Version: GnuPG v1.2.1 (GNU/Linux) iD8DBQE+eZH4cvwCNAk/l4sRAuGhAJ0XR1VTfjoZqMr73f78fcnjLzRHLQCfQKGh o3J+KwoOHfLMKRYmFzNZGoU= =9Sa8 -END PGP SIGNATURE- -- [EMAIL PROTECTED] mailing list
RE: [gentoo-user] Wireless connection slow
> Just finished setting up a wireless network at home but its > much slower then > the theoretical 11M. I have the two computers 25.4 cm (10 > inches) from each > other and I get a rate of ~500K. The two computers are > side-by-side and I am > wondering if this might be a problem. Are your sure the numbers are in the same unit? On a 11 Mbit/s wlan a transfer rate of 500 Kbyte/s is quite reasonable... I get about 500 Kbyte/s on my wlan, which triggered my question. Gwendolyn. -- [EMAIL PROTECTED] mailing list