On Sun, 5/15/11, Camaleón <noela...@gmail.com> wrote: > > On Sun, 15 May 2011 04:11:50 -0700, Dr. Jennifer Nussbaum wrote: > > > --- On Sun, 5/15/11, Camaleón <noela...@gmail.com> wrote: > > >> > Hi. Yesterday i sent a message about having trouble > >> with finding the > >> > driver for my ralink card. I got help with that but > >> now its "working" > >> > but not in any good way. > >> > >> (...) > >> > >> I would first check for a possible driver conflict: > >> > >> lsmod | grep rt2 > >> > >> There should be only one kernel module loaded for the card which is > >> "rt2800pci". If you see another modules, you may need to blacklist > >> them. > > > > Hm--I see a whole bunch of stuff. Which are the wrong ones, and how do i > > blacklist them? > > Good question :-) > > The working one has to be "rt2800pci" but I'm not sure if this module > automatically chainloads the other one ("rt2x00pci") :-? > > Well, you can try first to unload all of them: > > modprobe -r rt2x00pci > modprobe -r rt2800pci
I had to do this in the reverse order, but then it worked. "lsmod | grep rt2" came up blank. > And then load just the one it works: > > modprobe rt2800pci > > Then check again the listed modules: > > lsmod | grep rt2 > > If there are only "rt2800*" modules loaded try to setup the card again. This brought me back t othe same place as before, with the same long list of things from lsmod. And the problems were the same, i.e. no sign of the 802.11n network, and uselessly slow connection speed on the 802.11g. I assume its the same thing, but i have a directory in a Samba share, and when i try to go into it its incredibly slow, like 30 seconds before an "ls" responds. Its instant when i am connected with Ethernet. What to try now? Thanks! -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: http://lists.debian.org/516461.7208...@web161306.mail.bf1.yahoo.com