On Tuesday 27 Sep 2011 12:19:06 Alan McKinnon wrote: > On Mon, 26 Sep 2011 18:43:13 -0700 > Mark Knecht <markkne...@gmail.com> wrote: > > On Mon, Sep 26, 2011 at 5:14 PM, Alan McKinnon > > <alan.mckin...@gmail.com> wrote: > > > On Tue, 27 Sep 2011 07:08:05 +0700
> > Reading the wicd homepage it looks like it could help, but how many > > hours am I going to have to invest to get it running? Understand that > > I've already dumped maybe 10 hours into getting here. I figure I'll > > need another 10 hours of work - reading web pages, trying things out > > and failing - before I feel like I should ask a question here, so > > that's 20 hours minimum. Please understand that wireless was working > > on this machine in Windows in under 10 minutes - not 20 hours! Well, it could as little as 10 minutes to configure the /etc/conf.d scripts, for a particular AP (less than a minute if you've done it before) although it could take as long as 20 hours if you *want* to become expert at the most convoluted configurations. > Windows does it the right way for a mobile workstation, and wicd > follows the same general idea. I am not sure that the vanilla scripts are much different to be honest (except that they don't come with a GUI). > At boot-up , a wicd daemon starts, this is the thing that does the > heavy lifting and runs as root. > > When the user's DE starts, you run the wicd-client. It comes with a > sensible config dialog where you set sensible stuff like > wired interface takes priority over wireless > use wireless APs that have been sen before in preference to new ones > buttons to define pre-and post-connect scripts if you need them > when the client has decided what it's gonna do with your connections, > it requests the daemon to do it. It's all very well-thought out and > obviously designed with the needs of laptop users in mind. Sort of like > NetworkManager working properly without the issues of NetworkManager. I have used NetworkManager in Kubuntu, but don't recall having any problems with it. > For me, it all just worked out of the box and connected every time to > all APS - WEP, WPA, even the weird funky corporate BS thingy someone > installed at work. Took about 10 minutes :-) Same here with the gentoo scripts and wpa_cli, or wpa_gui - should I fancy a GUI to look at. Obviously wicd seems to be more user friendly than fiddling around with init.d scripts and permutations, but in my head it's just a front end to such scripts and wpa_supplicant . . . Have I got this wrong? PS. I'm not advocating the use of anything other than the tool that suits each user - thankfully Gentoo still gives us options in this area. ;-) -- Regards, Mick
signature.asc
Description: This is a digitally signed message part.