On 7/5/06, A. R. wrote: > > > So, my question is, once I install ndiswrapper and the driver, do I then > > follow the wiki for either wireless-tools or (preferred) > > wpa-supplicant? Is there anything else I have to do or install? > > > > Regards, > > > > Colleen > > > > Hello, > > May I suggest that you try first with wireless-tools? > > > Things you need to know: > 1. The interface id of the wireless card (eth0, eth1, wlan0 etc...) > 2. The "essid" of the wireless access point you are connecting to. > 3. The encryption key (if any) for wireless access (WEP) > > Once you have those you can run the following commands (after you have > emerged wireless-tools) Using eth1 as the interface for example: > > iwconfig eth1 essid > iwconfig eth1 key > dhcpcd eth1 Okay, I emerged ndiswrapper which also emerged wireless-tools. I haven't yet created any configuration files. However, if I run iwconfig, this is what I get: localhost ~ # iwconfig lo no wireless extensions. eth0 no wireless extensions. wlan0 IEEE 802.11g ESSID:"beam26wireless" Mode:Managed Frequency:2.437 GHz Access Point: 00:13:10:99:9C:BF Bit Rate:54 Mb/s Tx-Power:25 dBm RTS thr:2347 B Fragment thr:2346 B Encryption key:off Power Management:off Link Quality:100/100 Signal level:-60 dBm Noise level:-256 dBm Rx invalid nwid:0 Rx invalid crypt:0 Rx invalid frag:0 Tx excessive retries:0 Invalid misc:0 Missed beacon:0 So, I assume that eth1 would be replaced by wlan0 in the commands above, correct? If this works, then depending on how you want to configure your box > you may want to set all this configuration in the file > /etc/conf.d/wireless (BTW, please take a look at the file > /etc/conf.d/wireless.example, it does have very good comments that > would make this very understandable), or you may want to go for > wpa_supplicant. Well, I already have wireless-tools on my laptop because it was installed with ndiswrapper. As you note, my access point (a wireless cable/DSL router) is recognized and I realize that there isn't an encryption key set. The thing is, I *have* looked at /etc/conf.d/wireless.example and it may as well be hieroglyphics. I don't know which section to alter. Right now, if I'm on my laptop, I want to be able to connect to the access point in my apartment. However, if I'm at someplace that has wireless access, I want to be able to scan for an available network. So, I don't know what section to changed. I'm just a user and not a network person, so further help would be appreciated. Regards, Colleen >