I'm trying to get an old computer living again for a friend. It's an old laptop with a P3, 800MHz processor and 256mb Ram. Puppy installs well and runs perfectly, with one exception. Wireless.
I've got two wireless usb devices. The first is an old MN-510, which is a usb device with a prism2 chipset. The second is a new rtl8188. The first one installs fine, but doesn't offer WPA2 support. The second one installs fine when I use the two .pets that exist for the rtl8192 (apparently the same chipset) and the right version of puppy for the .pet's, but it also doesn't do WPA2.
I've tried Wary 4.2, and the most recent lucid and wary releases with all the combinations of the above, and whenever I can get it to recognize the device, I get a message saying WPA is not supported. It lets me try anyway, and it's able to scan and ID the networks just fine. When I try to connect to a WPA2 network, though, the progress bar times out and never gets past 'scanning'.
Anybody have a solution? I apologize if there's any missing information, and please ask if there's something I missed.
Wpa2 troubles
- dennis-slacko531
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You didn't mention entering the long ID number...
When I first got my modem from CenturyLink in January, I tried a wireless connection unsuccessfully with a 3-yr old HP laptop --- (NOT PUPPY FAULT) --- MY FAULT --- I think we forget there's a long alpha numeric number on the bottom of your router. You only need to enter it once, but I went one month without wireless -- because I just couldn't imagine entering THAT LONG NUMBER..... Embarrassing? Yes.
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- Joined: Sun 20 Mar 2011, 20:53
Dennis -- I appreciate the help, but I don't think that's the case here, although I could be wrong. I believe you're talking about the key, which ive reset to a password of mine.
In the network setup, it only has a field for SSID and one for the key, and I've got both. It seems to be a driver issue: I've had the exact same setup (with the prism 2 USB) working with damn small Linux, but as that distro is dead, I'm trying for puppy.
I've searched a lot, and not come up with anything. Anybody have an idea?
In the network setup, it only has a field for SSID and one for the key, and I've got both. It seems to be a driver issue: I've had the exact same setup (with the prism 2 USB) working with damn small Linux, but as that distro is dead, I'm trying for puppy.
I've searched a lot, and not come up with anything. Anybody have an idea?
- cowboy
- Posts: 250
- Joined: Thu 03 Feb 2011, 22:04
- Location: North America; the Western Hemisphere; Yonder
wpa2 troubles
I've found that some...some...of my wireless problems come down to what my router is doing, not what is occuring with my distro. You can try changing the WPA2 setting in your router - some allow either aes+tkip encryption, others can be also broadcast solely in AES only. Sometimes, changing to AES only on your router can make a difference with newer kernels.
also, I've had luck with the following re: the endless "scanning". Most of the newer kernels come with power management set to on for wlan0. Most older dongles and cards simply can't function with power management setting on. Try booting into a Live CD, and then setup your wlan0 setting, and then when the wireless starts the endless scanning, open a terminal as root and type in "sudo iwconfig wlan0 power off". The "sudo" may or may not be necessary depending on what you are running. I've had success with this on several older cards, and most of the newer 'buntus, buntu variants, and puppies.
also, I've had luck with the following re: the endless "scanning". Most of the newer kernels come with power management set to on for wlan0. Most older dongles and cards simply can't function with power management setting on. Try booting into a Live CD, and then setup your wlan0 setting, and then when the wireless starts the endless scanning, open a terminal as root and type in "sudo iwconfig wlan0 power off". The "sudo" may or may not be necessary depending on what you are running. I've had success with this on several older cards, and most of the newer 'buntus, buntu variants, and puppies.
[i]"you fix what you can fix and you let the rest go.."[/i] - Cormac McCarthy - No Country For Old Men.