[Wolves] sudo apt-get update

Ron Wellsted ron at wellsted.org.uk
Thu Apr 23 14:40:43 UTC 2009


On Thu, Apr 23, 2009 at 02:39:08AM -0700, Steve Wilson wrote:
> 
> > Steve Wilson wrote ...
> > wlan0     Link encap:Ethernet  HWaddr 00:11:3b:10:6c:8f  
> >           inet addr:192.168.2.3  Bcast:192.168.2.255  Mask:255.255.255.0
> >           inet6 addr: fe80::211:3bff:fe10:6c8f/64 Scope:Link
> >           UP BROADCAST RUNNING MULTICAST  MTU:1500  Metric:1
> >           RX packets:48318 errors:0 dropped:0 overruns:0 frame:0
> >           TX packets:24879 errors:0 dropped:0 overruns:0 carrier:0
> >           collisions:0 txqueuelen:1000 
> >           RX bytes:68190308 (68.1 MB)  TX bytes:2120114 (2.1 MB)
> 
> > Ron wrote ...
> >>Ah-ha! this could be a problem with the wireless drivers
> 
> Thanks for the feedback Ron. May I ask what it is about the above that leads you to that conclusion though? On the face of it, there appears to have been data both transmitted and received - no???
> 
> After a lightning introduction to the wonders of ping the network information window last night in the pub (thanks guys) I am now able to reveal that when both my XP laptop and Ubuntu desktop are connected to the wireless router (no encryption, DHCP), pinging each machine's IP address results in a reply. This means (I believe) that each machine's TCP/IP stack is OK, but does it also mean that the wireless drivers are installed and working OK?? Anyway, pinging the router's IP address (the gateway) gets a reply for the XP but not the Ubuntu. I know it was redundant, but further tests revealed a reply from an open DNS server for the XP but none for Ubuntu. 
> 
> Have looked in sources.list.d but the directory is empty.
> 
> Have looked at resolv.conf and seen that the one and only nameserver specified is the gateway address. Doing an ipconfig /all on the XP machine reveals a list of 4 nameservers, with the gateway at the top, and the other 3 all ipv6 addresses. I thought Ubunbtu had IPv6 enabled by default (Y/N?). I googled and came up with the suggestion of entering about:config into Firefox and searching for 'ipv6'. There was no entry in my file. Does this mean that it's on or off? If IPv6 is not enabled, could it be that Ubuntu is simply not able to understand the addresses the router is passing??
> 
> I'm going to try entering an open DNS server into reslov.conf, but I see from the note at the top of the file that any change may well be overwritten anyway.
> 
> >> try connecting directly with a cable.
> 
> Not possible I'm afraid - the router's next door.
> 
> >>It maybe worth re-installing the box as the PXE based install I did
> was purely to test the boxes worked.<<
> 
> I may well do that later this morning. But for nw I'd like to bash on - it's quite educational :-)
> 
Part of the problem could be that the USB ports are only V1.1 - 12MB/s
while (assuming 802.1g) the WiFi could be much faster.

-- 
Ron Wellsted
ron at wellsted.org.uk http://www.wellsted.org.uk
N 52.567623, W 2.136111 Linux Counter No. 202120
Ekiga: 645022
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