just wanted to give 11.2 beta a shot. I downloaded and installed build 0268 (think that was Milestone 6)The install went as smooth as possible except one thing: the wifi. My adapter (Atheros) was perfectly detected and identified, using ATH9K module, my router was well detected too, but once I entered the WEP key I was prompted to enter it again and again…so connecting was a no go. may be something went wrong with KWallet…not sure. I deleted the connection and recreated it without using KWallet (I guess the system can store the wep key without it) but I kept being prompted for the key…thanks for letting me know if I missed something or if that was a bug of the beta
ps: I don’t have Suse currently installed; as I couldn’t connect I had to remove the install and go back to my current distro. So if there is a 100% fix for that WEP key issue, I might install again.
A lot of people are having very similar problems with Networkmanager under KDE4. Best solution - go to Yast-Network Settings-Global Options. Change Network Setup Method to ‘Traditional Method with ifup’. Install WICD.
thanks for the feedback guys. I tried the traditional network management instead of Suse “Networkmanager”…didn’t work either but from your posts I think I should have installed an additional package :
I got wpa and web 128 bit working on network manager
I think wpa is more secure so I am using that
set the security mode on your router
delete your wireless connection
add the connection
wireless security wpa/wpa2 personal enter password the same that is on your router wep enter password. authentication shared key. My router is belkin
I have the WRT54GS (running DD-WRT, my firmware of choice) and I use WPA for all the wireless connections. Currently, it’s one laptop (running XP) and my desktop (triple-boots 7 x64 RTM, openSuSE 11.2 M7 x64 KDE, and Kubuntu 9.4 x64). The desktop has both wired and wireless connections to the same router (wired is the default), and no problems configuring the wireless connection. If your wireless adapter is picked up, you can select from available networks by right-clicking on the network icon and selecting Connect to Other Network; then, follow the prompts. No need to even visit Yast.
I am facing the same problem with 11.2 M6. No matter how many times I enter the WEP key, it keeps asking it again.
Once thing though; after I enter the key, it seems iwconfig shows that the wireless interface is configured properly and thereafter knetworkmanager applet shows the status as ‘Obtaining Network Address’ (which means it is attempting DHCP). After doing this for a while, it fails and asks for the WEP key again.
This is pretty much the same problem I have had with network manager. Nothing I did would make it work, after spending, literally, days trying to figure it out I installed WICD which autoconnected straight away, and I haven’t looked back. There are so many problems with Networkmanager under KDE4, it seems to either works well, not at all or, goes good/bad depending on the weather, or moon phase. Given all these problems I really think that the continuing use of NM as the default in openSUSE and other distros should be seriously reconsidered. Wireless problems are the major cause of stress with laptop users, but when the programme being used is problematic at best, then it time to reconsider its use. Some distros and DMs are defaulting to WICD, mainly because it is a rock solid and dependable solution. openSUSE should do the same.
I’ve got the same thing here on 11.2 RC1 KDE (64-bit, HP Pavilion dv4 with a Broadcom card). It has successfully connected to an unsecured network with spaces in the SSID and a WPA network without spaces in the SSID. The WEP network I’m trying to connect to has a space in the SSID.
I tried the “ifup” connection and that didn’t work either. So I am blocked until I can get to a wired network and install more software (typing this from Windows).
On 10/17/2009 03:46 PM, znmeb wrote:
>
> I’ve got the same thing here on 11.2 RC1 KDE (64-bit, HP Pavilion dv4
> with a Broadcom card). It has successfully connected to an unsecured
> network with spaces in the SSID and a WPA network without spaces in the
> SSID. The WEP network I’m trying to connect to has a space in the SSID.
>
>
> I tried the “ifup” connection and that didn’t work either. So I am
> blocked until I can get to a wired network and install more software
> (typing this from Windows).
>
> Is this in Bugzilla? If not, why not?
Probably because you have not entered it. I can connect with RC1 KDE
or Gnome, NetworkManager, and a Broadcom card to networks with WEP,
WPA, WPA2, and no encryption, thus I’m not sure what your problem is.
I have not done it with a space in the SSID, but that should not be a
problem.