On Wed, 4 Apr 2018 14:03:34 +0200 "Carlos E. R." <robin.listas@telefonica.net> wrote:
On 04/04/2018 1:27, Carlos E. R. wrote:
On 2018-04-04 00:46, Knurpht @ openSUSE wrote:
Op dinsdag 3 april 2018 23:48:05 CEST schreef Carlos E. R.:
On 2018-04-03 22:33, James Knott wrote:
On 04/03/2018 04:06 PM, Carlos E. R. wrote:
> That's the way it works here. No matter which address I use, > when both > connections are up, I can connect.
And how do you manage to do it automatically?
It just works with Linux, but not Windows.
On my "stable" partition, I have both eth0 and WiFi connections have the same IP and they collide, I get martians and failed connections. I have to disable one manually.
Again, you don't give them the same address. Give them different addresses. Then whether WiFi alone or both are connected, you can use the Wifi address.
But I insist I want to have the same address, and I do. I "simply" disable manually the WiFi when I notice.
I would like WiFi to detect the situation and disable itself automatically, on Linux. On Windows I do not care, but I think it disables itself automatically. I would have to confirm. "I think" ? Proof, Carlos, ICT is about 'true/false', '0/1', not about what one thinks or believes ( to remember ). Confirm this for yourself before posting, it would make the discussion much easier.
Common, man! I will of course confirm, but not today. I would have to reboot the machine and I don't intend to do it now. Please be patient.
Well, testing on Windows now.
I start with WiFi, then connect the cable: the network applet changes the icon to denote that ethernet and not wifi is in use now. However, the information on click seems to indicate that both are active. I log out and back in as another user, and now the network applet clearly indicates that the WiFi is not active. The machine lamp indicates that WiFi is powered.
I try again. Disconnect cable, WiFi icon appears on applet. I connect the cable back. The command "ipconfig" on terminal instantly shows that the WiFi IP has disappeared. Icon shows "cable". And detailed information shows that only ethernet is connected.
So it is confirmed: on this triple boot laptop, Windows 10 automatically disconnects the WiFi on ethernet cable connect. Different IP.
Which means it breaks your connections. That's the annoying part of this "feature" on Windows. Now I remember why it was broken there. You need same IP to do this. Thanks Michal -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse-factory+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse-factory+owner@opensuse.org