> That documentation is highly out dated. NetworkManager is doing WPA for > a long time now (I've been using it more then a year and it had > supported WPA all along).
I just managed to make it run. I must say, even if in version 0.7.0 (I'm using Fedora 8), it's not the most stable application I've seen. BTW, how do you make it work without using X? (init level 3, X not running). > NetworkManager is actually a service that your distro should run in its > SysV boot sequence (or whatever they use to boot), and then it has a > user application (nm-applet for gnome, knetworkmanager for KDE) that is > running in each user's session that offers an interface for the user to > select networks and input configuration and security details - and the > application talks with the service over dbus so you'd need the > message-bus service to also work. > > Any recent Fedora (7 and above I think) should have that configuration > by default. Yeah, the fun part is that with Cisco aironet Wifi which is built on my thinkpad, it specifically says that WPA is supported, but not according to NetworkManager.. Thanks for the help. Hetz -- Skepticism is the lazy person's default position. my blog (hebrew): http://benhamo.org ================================================================= To unsubscribe, send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with the word "unsubscribe" in the message body, e.g., run the command echo unsubscribe | mail [EMAIL PROTECTED]