I can reproduce this problem on an Eee 1001p associating with a WPA-PSK CCMP network. Not sure what the exact chipset is; atheros something.
However, I reckon it's a wpa-supplicant problem. At the right point in the associate/disassociate cycle I did a kill -STOP on wpa_supplicant, and the network stayed connected. Feels like wpa-supplicant is deliberately asking the interface to disassociate for some reason.
I can reproduce this problem on an Eee 1001p associating with a WPA-PSK CCMP network. Not sure what the exact chipset is; atheros something.
However, I reckon it's a wpa-supplicant problem. At the right point in the associate/ disassociate cycle I did a kill -STOP on wpa_supplicant, and the network stayed connected. Feels like wpa-supplicant is deliberately asking the interface to disassociate for some reason.