I copied the default interfaces file back and it didn't help. Should I try
it with just the eth0 like you stated earlier, rr does it need each device
there? I only have 2 eht0 for the wired, and wlan0 for the wireless but the
default file has a bunch of eths.
They are all now set like:
auto eth0
iface eth0 inet dhcp
Still not connecting to anything. I can see the network in the network
manager, usually, but it doesn't connect. I don't receive an IP and I can't
ping the router.
Thank you for the help.
On 3/30/07, Brian Murray <email address hidden> wrote:
>
> My point is that network manager will _not_ manage your interface if it
> is configured more than what I showed earlier. Network manager via
> gnome-keyring will remember the network information you have in both of
> your interfaces files.
>
> --
> Sees wireless networks but wont connect
> https://launchpad.net/bugs/98612
>
I copied the default interfaces file back and it didn't help. Should I try
it with just the eth0 like you stated earlier, rr does it need each device
there? I only have 2 eht0 for the wired, and wlan0 for the wireless but the
default file has a bunch of eths.
They are all now set like:
auto eth0
iface eth0 inet dhcp
Still not connecting to anything. I can see the network in the network
manager, usually, but it doesn't connect. I don't receive an IP and I can't
ping the router.
Thank you for the help.
On 3/30/07, Brian Murray <email address hidden> wrote: /launchpad. net/bugs/ 98612
>
> My point is that network manager will _not_ manage your interface if it
> is configured more than what I showed earlier. Network manager via
> gnome-keyring will remember the network information you have in both of
> your interfaces files.
>
> --
> Sees wireless networks but wont connect
> https:/
>