???????? os2-wireless_users@2rosenthals.com ????? #3498
???: Christian Langanke <os2-wireless_users@2rosenthals.com> ?? ????
?????????
???: os2-wireless_users-owner <os2-wireless_users-owner@2rosenthals.com>
??: [OS2Wireless] Wireless LAN Monitor
??: Thu, 25 Nov 2004 18:47:50 +0100
??: os2-wireless_users@2rosenthals.com

Neil Waldhauer wrote:

On Thu, 25 Nov 2004 09:44:27 -0600, Stuart Updike <stuupdike@mindspring.com>
wrote:

 

I would think you could still use your scripts to change to the wireless card, in which case you should set XWLAN to lan1.  That is essentially what I've been doing with my T21.
   


You are right. If I continue to use my scripts, then networking continues as
normal. But I had hoped that my scripts functionality would have been included
in the new XWLAN.

XWLAN calls scripts on "disconnect" and "connect". Are these events when the
card is inserted and ejected? Can I call my scripts from XWLAN?

Neil
 

Hmm, I do not remember what your scripts are doing, and I think you should not be require to use scripts to configure the lan interface of the TCP/IP interface of your Wireless LAN device (also not the script solution that XWLAN offers) - I think we discussed that once. If you have a cabled interface on your notebook as well, this should not disturb, unless you don't configure it. In any case it is highly recommended to notconfigure the TCP/IP interface within the TCP/IP configuration program.

In order to find out which TCP/IP lan interface is boud to your Wireless LAN device, just open MPTS and check the adapter number left to the entry "TCP/IP" protocol underneath the driver for your Wireless LAN device. When you then select this interface in the TCP/IP properties page, XWLAN should be able to configure this interface. But after having made that change, nothing happens, until you take further action.

Taken that you are in range of the hotspot that the selected access point would match to, you would reconfigure (in this case reissue the DHCP request) by selecting "TCP/IP interface - (re)configure..

Instead, in order to connect to any hotspot, select the menu item "Public hotspot". This will automatically launch a DHCP request. Only when this returns successfully, the IP interface is being configured (not by XWLAN, but rather by the DHCP client daemon),  and only after _that_ has succeded, XWLAN will call its script (once you have configured that) for the connect event. So the script events connect and disconnect are not to configure or unconfigure the LAN interface of the Wireless LAN device, instead they are called when the configuration has succeeded or the IP interface was unconfigured.

After having connected to a public hotspot, you then may want to create a dedicated connection profile out of the connection, just by selection the appropriate menu item within the hotspot menu.

Please let me know it it works.

bye, Christian

-------------------------------------------------

Christian Langanke
COS2E & CWSE
Team OS/2 Ruhr e.V.
cla@clanganke.de





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