On Thu, 2004-01-01 at 01:36, Xavier Maillard wrote: > > >> Maybe you can send to me either your /etc/pcmcia/config.opts and tell > >> me how you did configure you WIFI card (using /etc/network/interfaces > >> or using the built-in /etc/pcmcia/wireless.opts ?). > > > > I use whereami (I wrote it). Essentially this uses > > /etc/pcmcia/wireless.opts, but these have not changed for me to go > > from > > 2.4.23 -> 2.6.0. > > whereami ? What's that ? If you use Debian and wireless-tools you > should use /etc/network/interfaces file no ? Can you tell me more about > whereami and how to use it then ?
Whereami is used to have the laptop automatically detect where it is, and reconfigure itself to suit that location. There are a few other packages that also try and do this also, but naturally I use my own :-) My detection goes something like this: - If we are connected to a wired network - If we can get a DHCP address - Figure out which location we are at based on the address - Else - Do other things (ping, arping, ...) to figure the location - ElseIf we have wireless devices plugged in - Loop through our wireless networks and see if any work - Else - We are at the "no location" location. And then various actions happen depending on which location I was at, and which location I am at now. All a gross oversimplification, of course. Cheers, Andrew. ------------------------------------------------------------------------- Andrew @ Catalyst .Net .NZ Ltd, PO Box 11-053, Manners St, Wellington WEB: http://catalyst.net.nz/ PHYS: Level 2, 150-154 Willis St DDI: +64(4)916-7201 MOB: +64(21)635-694 OFFICE: +64(4)499-2267 What are they doing now? http://schoolreunions.co.nz/ -------------------------------------------------------------------------