Re: howto ignore rfkill switch

2009-07-28 Thread Marc Herbert
Dan Williams wrote : You've flipped the rfkill switch, thus you do not want to use wifi. With all due respect, you are wrong. If you do actually want to use wifi, there are other, better mechanisms to just kill the card you don't want to use. blacklisting does not qualify as better.

Re: howto ignore rfkill switch

2009-07-28 Thread Brian Morrison
Marc Herbert wrote: rfkill is *not* the mechanism to disable a specific card completely. Yes it is. A hardware switch is great. It is so more intuitive than any software interface, since it just looks like the good old ON/OFF button that everybody understands since they were three years

Re: howto ignore rfkill switch

2009-07-28 Thread Marcel Holtmann
Hi Brian, rfkill is *not* the mechanism to disable a specific card completely. Yes it is. A hardware switch is great. It is so more intuitive than any software interface, since it just looks like the good old ON/OFF button that everybody understands since they were three years

Re: Network Manager does not find system wide connections

2009-07-28 Thread Hadmut Danisch
Dan Williams wrote: You'll want to start looking in the keyfile's system-settings/plugins/keyfile/plugin.c dir_changed() function. That function is called whenever inotify sees new files or changes in the config directory. Does that function get called when the new file appears there?