Difference between revisions of "Networkmanager kovan wifi"
(Created page with "From http://newton.cx/~peter/work/?p=409 : You want to create a file in /etc/NetworkManager/system-connections/, named whatever you like. It should be owner root:root and mode 6...") |
(No difference)
|
Latest revision as of 00:19, 30 December 2012
From http://newton.cx/~peter/work/?p=409 :
You want to create a file in /etc/NetworkManager/system-connections/, named whatever you like. It should be owner root:root and mode 600. The contents should look like:
[connection] id=Argh uuid=11111111-1111-1111-1111-111111111111 type=802-11-wireless timestamp=0 [802-11-wireless] ssid=SEE BELOW mode=infrastructure security=802-11-wireless-security [802-11-wireless-security] key-mgmt=wpa-psk psk=YOUR-NETWORKS-PASSWORD-IN-PLAINTEXT [ipv4] method=auto
The SSID is specified as a byte string. If your SSID is expressible in ASCII you can generate this with a Python snippet like: ';'.join(str(ord(c)) for c in 'SSID')+';'. For instance, the network ‘Sample’ is expressed as “83;97;109;112;108;101;“. No quotation marks are used in the config file.
NetworkManager appears to monitor the system-connections directory, and may initially reject your file if it doesn’t have the restrictive permissions it wants. Editing the file after the permissions have been changed causes that to be reloaded. The command “nmcli con up id Argh” should activate the connection.