Rusty Carruth: > > kernel: Loaded prism54 driver, version 1.2 > kernel: PCI Enabling device 0000:09:00.00 (0000 -> 0002) > kernel: ACPI: PCI Interrupt ...blah... > pci.agent[4578]: prism54: loaded successfully
Congratulations, you have a working wifi card. > ifconfig eth2 up > > and suddenly it says 'IEEE 802.11b/g' instead of 'NOT READY!' > Thats a BIG improvement. > > I then tried 'iwlist eth2 scan', and get no scan results (Oh, > the green light is STILL off!) The light is switched off when you are in monitor mode. Maybe you switched to monitor before scanning? > ! linksys A N 006 178 T4 192.168.1.102 234B > ! HOLZ A O 006 121 0.0.0.0 70B > ! argoweb A O 006 119 0.0.0.0 0B > <no ssid> P N --- 5 0.0.0.0 0B > linksys_SES_51740 A O 006 1 0.0.0.0 0B Looks fine. I Like that 'linksys' thing. ;-) > and then suddenly kismet died, with: > > /usr/bin/kismet: line 80: 4818 Segmentation fault ${BIN}/kismet_client May be just a problem with kismet (although it never crashed for me). > So, I tried airsnort again and: > > Oooh! Look! AirSnort is now seeing packets! It says: > 00:0f:b5:EF:..... CAME... Thu, Sep 1 00:57... channel 10, 195 packets, > 1 encrypted, 0 interesting, 1 unique > FF:FF:FF:FF... 46 packets, 0 encrypt, 0 interesting, 0 uniq. > > (It is interesting to me that airsnort only sees one (or maybe that's > two) things, but kismet saw 3 (or is that 5???)) Last time I used it, airsnort wasn't able to enable "channel hopping" on the card- That may be the reason for the smaller number of packets. Kismet can do this (you may have noticed how the channel displayin kismet is permanently changing - lock it with 'L'). Anyway, airsnort is not a network detector, but a WEP key cracker. Should you want to do this, you better collect packets with kismet and use aircrack (only with permission of the network owner, of course). > I don't have any permission to connect anywhere yet, so I won't > try till I can run over to my neighbors, but I *think* we're up... > Especially since ifconfig says that we've gotten 1.3 MiB from 13016 received > packets (now, I wonder why I sent 5 packets? hmmm) DHCP? > So, apparently the Netgear 802.11g card with NO info on where it was > made is a prism54g card and sort of works. Good to hear. J. -- I often blame my shortcomings on my upbringing. [Agree] [Disagree] <http://www.slowlydownward.com/NODATA/data_enter2.html>
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