On Tue, 03 Jul 2007 06:08:17 -0700, "Drew Tomlinson"
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> said:
> For the archives... Ditching wpa_supplicant in favor of iwconfig
> (wireless tools port) solved my problems. Only downside is that I am
> unable to use WPA-PSK authentication. Maybe a future version of
> wpa_supp
On 6/27/2007 7:45 AM Drew Tomlinson said the following:
On 6/27/2007 1:12 AM Alan McKinnon said the following:
On Wednesday 27 June 2007, Randy Barlow wrote:
Drew Tomlinson wrote:
I ran tcpdump on eth1 and no packets are leaving the interface.
Thus I assume that's why I'm not getting
On 6/27/2007 1:12 AM Alan McKinnon said the following:
On Wednesday 27 June 2007, Randy Barlow wrote:
Drew Tomlinson wrote:
I ran tcpdump on eth1 and no packets are leaving the interface.
Thus I assume that's why I'm not getting an address.
I don't know how to solve your proble
On Wednesday 27 June 2007, Randy Barlow wrote:
> Drew Tomlinson wrote:
> > I ran tcpdump on eth1 and no packets are leaving the interface.
> > Thus I assume that's why I'm not getting an address.
>
> I don't know how to solve your problem, but I don't think DHCP is at
> the TCP layer of your networ
Drew Tomlinson wrote:
I ran tcpdump on eth1 and no packets are leaving the interface. Thus I
assume that's why I'm not getting an address.
I don't know how to solve your problem, but I don't think DHCP is at the
TCP layer of your network, and so you shouldn't see packets for DHCP
there. DHCP
I have a Gateway 6454 laptop with 2.6.21-gentoo-r3 amd64 kernel running.
I am trying to set up the wireless network. I have never done this
before so I started with the Handbook's Wireless Networking section. I
begin by attempting to figure out what network card I have. lspci
reports the wire
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