keyering problem with network manager applet 0.7.1
Hi, I use network manager applet 0.7.1. I had set the automatic wireless connection to my my wireless network (WPA key secured). Recently, I get the following problem: At the automatic connection, I get the message: Network manager applet (/usr/bin/mn-applet) needs default keyering. As I don't know what it is to type it and then, deny or OK, it doesn't get connected to my wireless network. How could I solve the problem? Look forward to your reply, Carol ___ NetworkManager-list mailing list NetworkManager-list@gnome.org http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/networkmanager-list
Re: NetworkManager and domain names
--On Friday, December 04, 2009 16:34:48 -0800 Dan Williams d...@redhat.com wrote: On Sun, 2009-11-29 at 18:40 +, Alex Buell wrote: I use NetworkManager with three's mobile broadband. I have just found out that it is not able to obtain a domain name with dhcpcd. Any ideas how I can force NetworkManager into getting a domain name from three's DHCP servers? Thanks for any advice given! I'm curious as to what domain name you'd expect to see, snd what it would do for you? Rick Remember that cellular mobile broadband doesn't actually use DHCP at all; the DHCP or PPP session is between you and the 3G device itself. What happens over the air is not DHCP, but a GPRS PDP context setup between the 3G device and the network that does not include the domain name. You *may* be able to obtain a domain name through reverse-DNS, which NM may already be doing if you haven't set a persistent machine hostname through /etc/hostname or wherever. Dan ___ NetworkManager-list mailing list NetworkManager-list@gnome.org http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/networkmanager-list ___ NetworkManager-list mailing list NetworkManager-list@gnome.org http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/networkmanager-list
Re: NM deleting WPA key secret in Fedora 12?
On Fri, 04 Dec 2009 12:25:26 -0800 Dan Williams d...@redhat.com wrote: On Thu, 2009-12-03 at 15:03 +, Brian Morrison wrote: Brian Morrison wrote: The fix was to paste my WPA key into the entry field after using the edit menu for my home SSID and then going to the advanced tab (at least I think that's it, don't have it in front of me just now). There is only an SSID stored, no BSSID. I should have added that clicking on the network SSID in the NM applet's left click menu does nothing, it doesn't bring up a dialog asking for the connection's secrets and in fact it does precisely nothing. If this ever happened in F11 then I would be prompted for the WPA PSK which no longer happens. This is odd, but before we do anything else, can you try the NM in updates-testing? I haven't seen this at all but it could point to keyring issues since the WPA passphrase is stored in the keyring. Right. I have now seen a second case of this, the symptoms were sudden loss of network throughput but NM and the Netspeed applet both showed the connection still working. Reselecting my home SSID from the list in NM's left click menu resulted in an attempt to reconnect that never succeeded. On opening the WPA settings via NM's right-click edit menu the passphrase was blank. Re-entering it sorted the problem out. I see there is a new wpa-supplicant in updates-testing, do I need that too? I will restart with the updated NM and see if anything has changed. -- Brian ___ NetworkManager-list mailing list NetworkManager-list@gnome.org http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/networkmanager-list
Re: NetworkManager and domain names
On Sat, 2009-12-05 at 09:54 +, Rick Jones wrote: --On Friday, December 04, 2009 16:34:48 -0800 Dan Williams d...@redhat.com wrote: On Sun, 2009-11-29 at 18:40 +, Alex Buell wrote: I use NetworkManager with three's mobile broadband. I have just found out that it is not able to obtain a domain name with dhcpcd. Any ideas how I can force NetworkManager into getting a domain name from three's DHCP servers? Thanks for any advice given! I'm curious as to what domain name you'd expect to see, snd what it would do for you? I'd expect to see something like hostname.wibble.three.com etc., the reason why I ask is because Evolution likes to have a FQDN when posting to news via leafnode which I use on my laptop. If there's no FQDN or an invalid one, leafnode refuses to accept any posts. This is only a problem when away from home. When at home I do have a proper FQDN from my router. -- http://www.munted.org.uk One very high maintenance cat living here. ___ NetworkManager-list mailing list NetworkManager-list@gnome.org http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/networkmanager-list
[PATCH] v3 Disabling/enabling notifications in NM 0.7.2
Sure, I can roll v3 of my patch with these new changes, I'll have it sorted over the weekend. OK, here's v3 of my patch for the notifications, it's been cut down considerably. Thanks, it works quite nicely! Regards, Alex -- http://www.munted.org.uk One very high maintenance cat living here. diff -uNr network-manager-applet-0.7.2.orig/src/applet.c network-manager-applet-0.7.2/src/applet.c --- network-manager-applet-0.7.2.orig/src/applet.c 2009-11-23 19:27:58.0 + +++ network-manager-applet-0.7.2/src/applet.c 2009-12-05 13:23:02.941969584 + @@ -479,6 +479,12 @@ strcmp (id, PREF_DISABLE_DISCONNECTED_NOTIFICATIONS)) return; + if ((strcmp (id, PREF_DISABLE_CONNECTED_NOTIFICATIONS) == 0) + || (strcmp (id, PREF_DISABLE_DISCONNECTED_NOTIFICATIONS) == 0)) + gtk_check_menu_item_set_active( + GTK_CHECK_MENU_ITEM( +applet-notifications_enabled_item), FALSE); + gconf_client_set_bool (applet-gconf_client, id, TRUE, NULL); } @@ -1352,6 +1358,22 @@ nm_client_sleep (applet-nm_client, !state); } + +static void +nma_set_notifications_enabled_cb (GtkWidget *widget, NMApplet *applet) +{ + gboolean state; + + g_return_if_fail (applet != NULL); + + state = gtk_check_menu_item_get_active (GTK_CHECK_MENU_ITEM (widget)); + + gconf_client_set_bool(applet-gconf_client, + PREF_DISABLE_CONNECTED_NOTIFICATIONS, !state, NULL); + gconf_client_set_bool(applet-gconf_client, + PREF_DISABLE_DISCONNECTED_NOTIFICATIONS, !state, NULL); +} + /* * nma_menu_show_cb * @@ -1580,6 +1602,20 @@ nma_menu_add_separator_item (GTK_WIDGET (menu)); + /* Toggle connection notifications item */ + applet-notifications_enabled_item = gtk_check_menu_item_new_with_mnemonic (_(Enable connection notifications)); + if (!gconf_client_get_bool(applet-gconf_client, PREF_DISABLE_CONNECTED_NOTIFICATIONS, NULL)) + gtk_check_menu_item_set_active( GTK_CHECK_MENU_ITEM (applet-notifications_enabled_item), TRUE); + + id = g_signal_connect (applet-notifications_enabled_item, + toggled, + G_CALLBACK (nma_set_notifications_enabled_cb), + applet); + applet-notifications_toggled_id = id; + gtk_menu_shell_append (menu, applet-notifications_enabled_item); + + nma_menu_add_separator_item (GTK_WIDGET (menu)); + /* 'Connection Information' item */ applet-info_menu_item = gtk_image_menu_item_new_with_mnemonic (_(Connection _Information)); g_signal_connect_swapped (applet-info_menu_item, diff -uNr network-manager-applet-0.7.2.orig/src/applet.h network-manager-applet-0.7.2/src/applet.h --- network-manager-applet-0.7.2.orig/src/applet.h 2009-11-23 19:27:58.0 + +++ network-manager-applet-0.7.2/src/applet.h 2009-12-05 13:18:23.912011524 + @@ -139,6 +139,10 @@ guint networking_enabled_toggled_id; GtkWidget * wifi_enabled_item; guint wifi_enabled_toggled_id; + + GtkWidget *notifications_enabled_item; + guint notifications_toggled_id; + GtkWidget * info_menu_item; GtkWidget * connections_menu_item; ___ NetworkManager-list mailing list NetworkManager-list@gnome.org http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/networkmanager-list
Re: NetworkManager and domain names
--On Saturday, December 05, 2009 12:51:27 + Alex Buell alex.bu...@munted.org.uk wrote: On Sun, 2009-11-29 at 18:40 +, Alex Buell wrote: I use NetworkManager with three's mobile broadband. I have just found out that it is not able to obtain a domain name with dhcpcd. Any ideas how I can force NetworkManager into getting a domain name from three's DHCP servers? Thanks for any advice given! I'm curious as to what domain name you'd expect to see, snd what it would do for you? I'd expect to see something like hostname.wibble.three.com etc., the reason why I ask is because Evolution likes to have a FQDN when posting to news via leafnode which I use on my laptop. If there's no FQDN or an invalid one, leafnode refuses to accept any posts. This is only a problem when away from home. When at home I do have a proper FQDN from my router. OK, thanks. I just wondered, as I've never perceived a need for a FQDN when using a mobile link. I don't use Evolution. I do find an irritating problem with 3 in that sometimes it fails to provide DNS addresses, and I have to disconnect and re-connect to pick them up. I'm pretty sure it's not a NM issue, just something glitchy with their connections or maybe the sh*t ZTE modem. :(. Seems to be worse with low signal strength, so maybe the link just loses the info. and never re-tries. Do you ever get that? Cheers, Rick ___ NetworkManager-list mailing list NetworkManager-list@gnome.org http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/networkmanager-list
Re: NetworkManager and domain names
On Sat, 2009-12-05 at 13:34 +, Rick Jones wrote: OK, thanks. I just wondered, as I've never perceived a need for a FQDN when using a mobile link. I don't use Evolution. Evolution works just fine, the problem is with only posts to newsgroups that needs a FQDN. I do find an irritating problem with 3 in that sometimes it fails to provide DNS addresses, and I have to disconnect and re-connect to pick them up. I'm pretty sure it's not a NM issue, just something glitchy with their connections or maybe the sh*t ZTE modem. :(. Seems to be worse with low signal strength, so maybe the link just loses the info. and never re-tries. Do you ever get that? Yes, loads. Rather than disconnecting, I plonk the correct DNS addresses into /etc/resolv.conf whenever that happens. Usually I get the 10.x.x.x ones or even more curiouser, the 4.3.2.1 ones. Any ideas why? It's weird! -- http://www.munted.org.uk One very high maintenance cat living here. ___ NetworkManager-list mailing list NetworkManager-list@gnome.org http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/networkmanager-list
Re: OpenSSH VPN support
Hi, On Thu, 03 Dec 2009, Darren Albers wrote: This sounds great to me! I have been considering trying OpenSSH VPN's but never bothered since OpenVPN worked so well with Network Manager. I might give it a shot now, I would encourage you to continue, there are certainly people out there who could use this. I don't really have any technical comments to make but I'd like to say: Yeah me too! Please do this! I promise to use it lots!!! As a regular user of multiple ssh port forwards, an ssh VPN always sounded like a great idea. A one-click setup sounds even better. A further thought in case there's some way to facilitate it. I tend to ssh into a bastion host which in turn allows me to ssh into a private host further into the network. I daisy chain port forwards across the two ssh sessions. I haven't tried but if it were possible to daisy-chain a VPN through two or more ssh sessions that would be great and if your gnome setup could somehow facilitate that, that would make things even more interesting. Gavin ___ NetworkManager-list mailing list NetworkManager-list@gnome.org http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/networkmanager-list
Re: traditional static ip with nm
On Fri, 4 Dec 2009, Dan Williams wrote: NM natively supports static IP addresses; so you can either configure them via /etc/network/interfaces as you normally would, or you can use nm-connection-editor along with the 'keyfile' plugin to set up a system-wide configuration for your machines without touching /e/n/i. My problem with that approach is that the network goes down when the console is logged out. -- David Griffith dgri...@cs.csubak.edu A: Because it fouls the order in which people normally read text. Q: Why is top-posting such a bad thing? A: Top-posting. Q: What is the most annoying thing in e-mail? ___ NetworkManager-list mailing list NetworkManager-list@gnome.org http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/networkmanager-list