Hi, thanks for your reply! No, there are no single/double-quotes, apostrophes, or dollar signs. The password contains a-z, A-Z, 0-9, and _ only.
Another thing I noticed but didn't mention is that in the ssid list, it splits the ssid into two entries in the menu. There's a "," in the ssid name and that's where the split occurs. No "," is shown in either menu entry. Maybe the ssid list is comma-separated rather than using a character that can't or is less likely to appear in a ssid? This seems to just be a cosmetic issue but could confuse users as to which entry to select in cases like that. Since my primary problem is the password preseeding and unrelated to this, I didn't mention it before. Thanks! On Wed, Nov 10, 2021 at 10:59 AM Steve McIntyre <st...@einval.com> wrote: > > On Wed, Nov 10, 2021 at 10:07:41AM -0800, VDRU VDRU wrote: > >Hi. > > > >Using the Debian testing net installer iso. I have a wifi password > >that is 60 chars long that contains underscores. When I preseed it > >with "d-i netcfg/wireless_wpa <password>", the installer spits out an > >error that the password is either too long (>64 chars) or too short > >(<8 chars). Neither is true and if I enter it manually instead of > >preseeding it, there's no problem. I have tried preseeding the > >password with and without quotes around it with no success. The only > >thing that comes to mind is maybe the underscores (or special chars in > >general) are not handled correctly by the installer..? I'm not sure a > >bug report is warranted just yet so I'm hoping to get feedback on the > >above before going that route. > > Hmmm, that's odd. I have to ask - does your long password contain > quotes (' or ") or $ symbols? Although the netcfg code here is in C, > it may end up using backend interfaces that might be confused by those > special characters. I have not tested this locally, but that would be > my immediate suspicion based on what you're describing... > > -- > Steve McIntyre, Cambridge, UK. st...@einval.com > "Arguing that you don't care about the right to privacy because you have > nothing to hide is no different than saying you don't care about free > speech because you have nothing to say." > -- Edward Snowden >