> Even adding "debug" keyword did not assure me
> whether the problem is with my password definition:
> wpakey s3cur3-as-#311, for illustration (was not sure
> if the '#' has to be escaped somehow); or somewhere
> else. Finally, it was the latter, but it took me a while
> to realize that.
.. or
Theo de Raadt wrote:
> > > As i said, my config with # in the password worked
> > > without any escaping or quoting needed.
> > >
> >
> > i understood from your mail that you'd had to escape it.
>
> that is correct.
...
now i'm jealous, i want to be able to read other
people's thoughts too.
> > As i said, my config with # in the password worked
> > without any escaping or quoting needed.
> >
>
> i understood from your mail that you'd had to escape it.
that is correct.
furthermore, some things don't have perfect escaping.
not everything is perfect.
On Thu, Aug 11, 2016 at 03:53:12PM +, Michal Bozon wrote:
> > On Mon, Aug 08, 2016 at 10:23:22AM +0200, Michal Bozon wrote:
> > > Hi, I've had an issue connecting to a wireless network
> > > (by doas sh /etc/netstart $if). Its password contained
> > > '#' character(s).
> > >
> > > Even adding
> On Mon, Aug 08, 2016 at 10:23:22AM +0200, Michal Bozon wrote:
> > Hi, I've had an issue connecting to a wireless network
> > (by doas sh /etc/netstart $if). Its password contained
> > '#' character(s).
> >
> > Even adding "debug" keyword did not assure me
> > whether the problem is with my
On Mon, Aug 08, 2016 at 10:23:22AM +0200, Michal Bozon wrote:
> Hi, I've had an issue connecting to a wireless network
> (by doas sh /etc/netstart $if). Its password contained
> '#' character(s).
>
> Even adding "debug" keyword did not assure me
> whether the problem is with my password
Hi, I've had an issue connecting to a wireless network
(by doas sh /etc/netstart $if). Its password contained
'#' character(s).
Even adding "debug" keyword did not assure me
whether the problem is with my password definition:
wpakey s3cur3-as-#311, for illustration (was not sure
if the '#' has to
7 matches
Mail list logo