Hi everybody, I got 64 bit encryption between my laptop and my access point working but there is a problem. The password is OK, and I can ping from my laptop to my network with 64-bit WEP enabled. Others on my network can ping the laptop without any problems. The trouble arises when I try to use the link for something useful, like surfing the web. Web pages come over very slowly if they complete at all. On a wired system, the page comes over quickly, so its not the other end of the Internet causing the problem. If I turn off WEP, everything is great. Also, I seem totally unable to make 128 or 256 bit encryption work at all (not even a successful ping) despite the fact that both sides agree on the password. What should I check? I am using the orinoco_cs driver in the 2.4.18 kernel. My hardware is the Linksys WPC11 (version 3.0) and the Linksys WAP11 version 2.2 Thanks, Andy -- Andy Stewart, Founder Worcester Linux Users' Group Worcester, MA USA http://www.wlug.org
On Fri, Jul 19, 2002 at 11:42:33PM -0400, Andy Stewart wrote:
Hi everybody,
I got 64 bit encryption between my laptop and my access point working but there is a problem.
The password is OK, and I can ping from my laptop to my network with 64-bit WEP enabled. Others on my network can ping the laptop without any problems.
The trouble arises when I try to use the link for something useful, like surfing the web. Web pages come over very slowly if they complete at all. On a wired system, the page comes over quickly, so its not the other end of the Internet causing the problem.
If I turn off WEP, everything is great.
Also, I seem totally unable to make 128 or 256 bit encryption work at all (not even a successful ping) despite the fact that both sides agree on the password.
What should I check? I am using the orinoco_cs driver in the 2.4.18 kernel. My hardware is the Linksys WPC11 (version 3.0) and the Linksys WAP11 version 2.2
AFAIK, the orinoco_cs driver only supports the standard 802.11b WEP encryption keys which are 40 bits. While several vendors support 128 or higher encryption in their cards and access points, they use proprietary extensions to the protocol (and their hardware and windows drivers) to make that happen. The new 802.11a standard supports longer encryption keys, but there are no linux drivers for that hardware yet (again, AFAIK). If you need to use better wireless encryption than 802.11b _today_, you probably have to do that with Windows. Best Regards, Keith -- LPIC-2, MCSE, N+ Right behind you, I see the millions Got spam? Get spastic http://spastic.sourceforge.net
participants (2)
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Andy Stewart
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Keith Winston