I don't believe you have to use anything besides what wireless-tools provides for every card. I am using WPA with my ralink based card with the following entry in /etc/network/interfaces:
iface eth1 inet dhcp pre-up ifconfig eth1 up pre-up iwpriv eth1 set AuthMode=WPAPSK pre-up iwpriv eth1 set EncrypType=TKIP pre-up iwconfig eth1 essid "youressid" pre-up iwpriv eth1 set WPAPSK="yourkey" I don't even have wpa_supplicant installed. If you need any additional info, just ask. Am Mittwoch, 19. Oktober 2005 00:23 schrieb Freddie Cash: > On October 18, 2005 03:01 pm, Joe Emenaker wrote: > > I get the impression that, among other services (like choosing an > > access point and setting your keys, etc. for it), the big feature of > > wpa_supplicant is that it provides software WPA for cards that don't > > support it in their hardware. > > > > In my case, I have hardware that *does* have WPA on the card, and > > wpa_supplicant doesn't seem to be pairing up with my AP. So, I wanted > > to use the WPA built into the card. What tools do I use to set the key > > for WPA? Do I use the same ones as for WEP (like iwconfig), or what? > > You have to use a supplicant in order to use WPA. The most common, best > supported, supplicant is wpa_supplicant. There's also xsupplicant > (although I believe the WPA support was removed in the latest releases) > and hostapd. > > If it's not syncing to the AP, play with the ap_scan setting and scan_ssid > setting in /etc/wpa_supplicant.conf. > > And use the wpa_cli to see exactly what's going on with the WPA > handshakes. -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]