On Tuesday 13 January 2009 17:18:09 Anne Wilson wrote: > On Tuesday 13 January 2009 15:26:09 Anne Wilson wrote: > > On Tuesday 13 January 2009 14:13:01 Todd Denniston wrote: > > > Anne Wilson wrote, On 01/13/2009 03:29 AM: > > > > On Monday 12 January 2009 18:56:34 Anne Wilson wrote: > > > >> Does anyone know how to get the wifi indicator working on the Acer > > > >> Aspire One? I've done a lot lof work with the wifi today, then > > > >> suddenly, an hour or so ago, I saw the signal bars drop from 4 to 1. > > > >> Then I lost the connection. > > > >> > > > >> Nothing has changed, in terms of location or additional equipment in > > > >> the room, and attempting to re-start the connection tells me that it > > > >> has been disconnected. I've tried fiddling with that switch again, > > > >> but there is no way of knowing whether it is active or not. > > > > > > > > <sigh> I hate mysteries. This morning the netbook connected to the > > > > wireless router at bootup. I've still no idea what went wrong > > > > yesterday, or why I couldn't scan for a connection. It's as though > > > > something turns wifi off and it can't be turned back one. > > > > > > > > Personally I think it's another form of rsibreak :-) > > > > > > > > Anne > > > > > > As we all use computers here, we could all occasionally benefit from an > > > rsi time out. :} > > > > > > Assuming you shut the machine down last night after the net stopped > > > working, _perhaps_ it would be useful keep track of what the > > > room/computer temperature and uptime is each time it stops working > > > (from a cold boot) ... It could be that a component is getting hot, or > > > saturated in another way that has a hysteresis curve. > > > > Room temperature is not likely to be a problem - it wouldn't have varied > > more than 1'C all day. However, I will be keeping an eye on uptime - > > thanks for the reminder about that one. > > > > > Did you also shutdown the router last night too? > > > > No, the router is 24/7, and gets a reboot maybe 6 times/year. > > > > > Have you done anything to see if someone else may be attempting to > > > use/abuse your router, like look at it's recent IDS logs? > > > > The router mails me with reports of unusual activity. Nothing has shown > > up there, although I've had the routine daily report. Again, due to > > physical location, this is unlikely to be the problem (and this laptop > > continued to work with the router the whole of the time). > > > > > Might try transferring a couple of fedora install DVD isos across it > > > into /dev/null, or some other throw away storage on the machine, to see > > > if it can only handle so many bits before needing reset. > > > > > > Just ideas. > > > > And all worth considering. Also, an off-list message suggested to me > > that I should keep an eye on whether it coincided with meal-preparation > > times, due to microwave oven usage. Again, this laptop has never > > suffered from that, but I haven't ruled it out. > > > > If I find any evidence to even suggest a likely explanation I'll report > > back. > > The connection is lost again - at approximately the same time as yesterday. > This time I can say for certain that microwave oven activity is not the > cause. > > Most of the day I have seen a 90% strength connection. As 8 hours uptime > approached it suddenly dropped to 14%. I carried on working, including > downloading and installing an rpm, for about half an hour. Then I went for > my daily half-hour walk. When I came back the connection was lost and it > could not connect again. The symptoms are identical to yesterday. > > Using system-config-services I saw that netfs was marked as dead. That > suggested to me that it should be running, so I started it. netplugd is > marked as disabled but running, as is network. To be on the safe side I > restarted both. I also restarted NetworkManager. I'd appreciate comments > and guidance on these and any other services that could be implicated. > > I am now going to power down the netbook and leave it until after dinner. > I'll power it up again in about 1.5 hours. If it connects then I will > suspect a component heat problem, although I can feel no heat worth calling > from the case. > Lots more testing went on. I now have good log output which I've attached to https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=472248 Meanwhile, my logwatch report has come in. Could these entries have any bearing? kdm: :0: PAM adding faulty module: /lib/security/pam_gnome_keyring.so: 6 Time(s) kdm: :0: PAM unable to dlopen(/lib/security/pam_gnome_keyring.so): /lib/security/pam_gnome_keyring.so: cannot open shared object file: No such file or directory: 6 Time(s) Certainly gnome-keyring is used by NetworkManager. If it's likely to be involved, I'll add this output to the bug report. Anne
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