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| --- | ||
| title: Wireless Troubleshooting | ||
| title: Wireless and Basic Troubleshooting | ||
| description: > | ||
| If you’re having problems with your wireless Internet connection, take a look at the suggestions in this article. | ||
| If your computer can’t connect to wireless networks or the connection is unstable, use this guide to diagnose and resolve the issue. | ||
| keywords: | ||
| - wireless | ||
| - wifi | ||
| - Wi-Fi | ||
| - support | ||
| - System76 | ||
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@@ -16,43 +16,197 @@ section: network-troubleshooting | |
| tableOfContents: true | ||
| --- | ||
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| WiFi issues are influenced by many different factors, including: | ||
| If your computer can’t connect to wireless networks or the connection is unstable, use this guide to diagnose and resolve the issue. | ||
| Start with the quick checks, then follow the targeted diagnostic and recovery steps. | ||
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Member
There was a problem hiding this comment. Choose a reason for hiding this commentThe reason will be displayed to describe this comment to others. Learn more. Having this as a line break without being a new paragraph looks weird when rendered.
I'd suggest either making it one paragraph (with no line breaks) or separate paragraphs (with a blank line in between). Saying "start with the quick checks, then follow the targeted diagnostic and recovery steps" doesn't seem very useful when there aren't headers in the article called "quick checks" and "targeted diagnostic and recovery steps" to jump to. It's also fairly redundant with the previous sentence. These two lines can probably be simplified to sound more natural. Something like this would be fine:
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| - Hardware (WiFi card, access point) | ||
| - Settings at both ends of the connection | ||
| - The local environment | ||
| --- | ||
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| ## Initial Troubleshooting | ||
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| 1.Reboot the router/modem and the computer. | ||
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Member
There was a problem hiding this comment. Choose a reason for hiding this commentThe reason will be displayed to describe this comment to others. Learn more. Please put a space after the |
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| 2.Toggle Airplane Mode by pressing **Fn + F11 →.** | ||
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Member
There was a problem hiding this comment. Choose a reason for hiding this commentThe reason will be displayed to describe this comment to others. Learn more. What is the |
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| 3.If your Wi-Fi issues started after an update, try removing the backported Wi-Fi driver using the command line. Open the Terminal by pressing Super+t and type the following and press Enter: | ||
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Member
There was a problem hiding this comment. Choose a reason for hiding this commentThe reason will be displayed to describe this comment to others. Learn more. This suggestion needs to be more targeted. This is also a run-on sentence with multiple |
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| ```bash | ||
| sudo apt remove backport-iwlwifi-dkms | ||
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Member
There was a problem hiding this comment. Choose a reason for hiding this commentThe reason will be displayed to describe this comment to others. Learn more. Do not include spaces at the beginning of a command. The only thing that would do is prevent the command from showing up in the user's |
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| ``` | ||
| Then restart your computer. | ||
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| 4.Temporarily use a phone hotspot to confirm whether the network or your computer is the issue. | ||
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| 5.[Boot from a Live USB](https://support.system76.com/articles/live-disk) of your distribution to determine whether the issue exists outside your installed system. | ||
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| ## Router and Access Point Recommendations | ||
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| Make sure your access point is configured for stability and compatibility. | ||
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Member
There was a problem hiding this comment. Choose a reason for hiding this commentThe reason will be displayed to describe this comment to others. Learn more. This looks like an unordered list. If this is how you want to organize the section, then you should format it as a Markdown unordered list by starting each list item with |
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| Use 2.4 GHz channels 1, 6, or 11 to minimize overlap. | ||
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| Set the channel width to 20 MHz for crowded networks. | ||
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| For 5 GHz, use an explicit channel instead of “Auto” when troubleshooting. | ||
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| Use mixed mode (b/g/n/ax) if devices vary by generation. | ||
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| If a single device struggles, temporarily set your router to a common mode and test. | ||
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Member
There was a problem hiding this comment. Choose a reason for hiding this commentThe reason will be displayed to describe this comment to others. Learn more. This step is vague. I can't tell what exactly it's suggesting, and I'm not sure readers would be able to tell, either. What does "a common mode" mean? |
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| Avoid complex access point features such as | ||
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Member
There was a problem hiding this comment. Choose a reason for hiding this commentThe reason will be displayed to describe this comment to others. Learn more. You can't just end a sentence in the middle with no punctuation. Use a colon if you're about to list things. |
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| Band steering | ||
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Member
There was a problem hiding this comment. Choose a reason for hiding this commentThe reason will be displayed to describe this comment to others. Learn more. If you convert the rest of the section to an unordered list, then you can indent these items with four spaces to make them sub-items. |
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| Aggressive airtime fairness | ||
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| Deep MAC filtering | ||
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| Ensure your device’s MAC address isn’t being filtered | ||
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Member
There was a problem hiding this comment. Choose a reason for hiding this commentThe reason will be displayed to describe this comment to others. Learn more. This sentence is also missing punctuation. |
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| Check with | ||
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| ```bash | ||
| ip link show | grep ether | ||
| ``` | ||
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| Then confirm that address is allowed in your router’s admin panel. | ||
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Member
There was a problem hiding this comment. Choose a reason for hiding this commentThe reason will be displayed to describe this comment to others. Learn more. "that address" is a little informal and unclear. I'd suggest changing the "Check with" line to "Check your MAC address with:" to make it more clear what address you're talking about. |
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| You can also confirm what channel and frequency your connection is using: | ||
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| ```bash | ||
| iw dev | ||
| iwlist wlan0 scan | grep -E 'SSID|Channel|Frequency' | ||
| ``` | ||
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| ## Device-Level Checks and Commands | ||
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| These commands help verify whether your wireless card and drivers are functioning correctly. | ||
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| ```bash | ||
| ip a | ||
| ``` | ||
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| List all network interfaces and IP addresses confirms your Wi-Fi interface (usually wlp2s0 or wlan0) is recognized. | ||
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Member
There was a problem hiding this comment. Choose a reason for hiding this commentThe reason will be displayed to describe this comment to others. Learn more. This sentence isn't grammatically valid. You could make the first word "listing" instead of "list," but I'd instead make the suggestion more active by changing "confirms" to "to confirm". Put the interface names inside of single backticks to mark them as verbatim code. |
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| ```bash | ||
| iw dev | ||
| ``` | ||
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| Show wireless devices and their states. | ||
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Member
There was a problem hiding this comment. Choose a reason for hiding this commentThe reason will be displayed to describe this comment to others. Learn more. If you're going to list out what commands do, put the descriptions before the commands and use colons instead of periods. |
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| ```bash | ||
| sudo rfkill list | ||
| ``` | ||
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| Check for hardware or software Wi-Fi blocks. | ||
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| ```bash | ||
| nmcli device status | ||
| ``` | ||
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| Check NetworkManager device states. | ||
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| ```bash | ||
| sudo systemctl restart NetworkManager | ||
| ``` | ||
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| Restart the network stack (safe to run anytime). | ||
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Member
There was a problem hiding this comment. Choose a reason for hiding this commentThe reason will be displayed to describe this comment to others. Learn more. The grammar here's a little murky, but to be safe and look less informal, I'd recommend changing |
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| ## Basic Troubleshooting | ||
| ```bash | ||
| journalctl -b | grep -i network | ||
| ``` | ||
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| View network-related boot logs. | ||
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| ```bash | ||
| dmesg | grep -i -E 'wifi|wlan|firmware|ieee80211|rtl|brcm|ath' | ||
| ``` | ||
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| View driver and firmware kernel logs. | ||
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| To collect diagnostic info automatically: | ||
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| ```bash | ||
| sudo dmesg | grep -i wlan > ~/wireless-dmesg.txt | ||
| ``` | ||
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| ## Driver and Firmware Checks | ||
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| If the device is detected but unstable, verify the driver and firmware setup. | ||
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| Confirm the kernel has loaded the correct driver and firmware. | ||
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Member
There was a problem hiding this comment. Choose a reason for hiding this commentThe reason will be displayed to describe this comment to others. Learn more. Why do you need to tell people to verify the driver and firmware, then to confirm the driver and firmware in the next sentence? |
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| Check for missing firmware messages: | ||
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| ```bash | ||
| dmesg | grep -i firmware | ||
| ``` | ||
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| Reinstall firmware packages: | ||
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| ```bash | ||
| sudo apt update | ||
| sudo apt install --reinstall linux-firmware | ||
| ``` | ||
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| Test with a different router or mobile hotspot. | ||
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| Try a Live USB session to determine if the issue is system-specific. | ||
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Member
There was a problem hiding this comment. Choose a reason for hiding this commentThe reason will be displayed to describe this comment to others. Learn more. Do you want to link to the Live USB article like you did earlier? (But also, why are you suggesting it again here when it was listed as a basic step earlier?) |
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| ## NetworkManager and Configuration Tips | ||
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| NetworkManager controls Wi-Fi connections on most Linux systems. | ||
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Member
There was a problem hiding this comment. Choose a reason for hiding this commentThe reason will be displayed to describe this comment to others. Learn more. It might be safer to make this a more qualified statement like "NetworkManager controls Wi-Fi connections on many Linux systems, including on Pop!_OS and Ubuntu systems by default." |
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| If you’re having problems, try these steps first: | ||
| Restart NetworkManager: | ||
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| - Try unplugging the wireless router or modem to reboot it. | ||
| - Try airplane mode by pressing <kbd>Fn</kbd>+<kbd>F11</kbd>, waiting 10s, then disabling. | ||
| - Try rebooting the computer. | ||
| ```bash | ||
| sudo systemctl restart NetworkManager | ||
| ``` | ||
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| Delete and recreate saved connections: | ||
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| ```bash | ||
| nmcli connection delete <SSID> | ||
| nmcli device wifi connect <SSID> | ||
| ``` | ||
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| For unstable networks, set IPv6 to “Ignore” in the network settings | ||
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Member
There was a problem hiding this comment. Choose a reason for hiding this commentThe reason will be displayed to describe this comment to others. Learn more. You need a colon at the end of this sentence since it's describing what the following steps will do. |
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| 1. Open Settings → Network. | ||
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Member
There was a problem hiding this comment. Choose a reason for hiding this commentThe reason will be displayed to describe this comment to others. Learn more. Get rid of the empty lines between these three list items (the Markdown renderer will put less empty space between them that way). |
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| 2. Select your Wi-Fi connection. | ||
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| 3. Go to IPv6 tab → change method to Ignore. | ||
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Member
There was a problem hiding this comment. Choose a reason for hiding this commentThe reason will be displayed to describe this comment to others. Learn more. I'd say "the IPv6 tab" instead of just "IPv6 tab", and "the method" instead of just "method" unless you want to also capitalize that setting name. |
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| ## Bluetooth and Airplane Mode Interactions | ||
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| If Wi-Fi disappears when Bluetooth is active: | ||
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| Some router settings can cause problems. Try adjusting your access point to these settings: | ||
| ```bash | ||
| sudo rfkill list | ||
| sudo systemctl restart bluetooth | ||
| ``` | ||
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| - WPA2-AES is preferred over WPA/WPA2 mixed mode or TKIP. | ||
| - A channel width of 20 MHz in the 2.4 GHz band is more stable than automatic 20/40 MHz or fixed 40 MHz. | ||
| - Set 2.4Ghz and 5Ghz SSID names differently. | ||
| - Pick a fixed channel. Use either 1, 6, or 11 in the 2.4 Ghz band, rather than automatic selection. | ||
| - Check if the router is set to N speeds only. Auto B/G/N is preferred. | ||
| - Lower the max/burst speeds, turn off channel bonding, and reduce channel width. Setting the speed to 600 Mb/s or 450 Mb/s will use spread frequencies to achieve those speeds and may decrease stability. Try setting it to 289/300 Mb/s (N speed) or or 54 Mb/s (G speed). | ||
| - After making these changes, reboot the router. | ||
| You can also disable Bluetooth coexistence in the Intel Wi-Fi driver configuration file: | ||
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| If the issues started after you applied updates, try running this command to make sure a bad WiFi driver has not been installed, then reboot your computer: | ||
| ```bash | ||
| sudo gedit /etc/modprobe.d/iwlwifi.conf | ||
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Member
There was a problem hiding this comment. Choose a reason for hiding this commentThe reason will be displayed to describe this comment to others. Learn more. Gedit isn't present by default anymore in Pop!_OS 24.04. We might need to consider a different way to tell people to edit configuration files. Since this instruction is just adding a line, it can probably be done with a single Bash command. |
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| ``` | ||
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| Add the following line: | ||
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| ```bash | ||
| sudo apt remove backport-iwlwifi-dkms | ||
| options iwlwifi bt_coex_active=0 | ||
| ``` | ||
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| Save, then reboot. | ||
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| ## Advanced Troubleshooting | ||
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| If the above steps aren't working, or you would like to fine tune and improve you connection, see the following steps. | ||
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| ### Regulatory Domain | ||
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| In many cases, it's recommended to explicitly set the WiFi regulatory domain. Check yours with this command: | ||
| In many cases, it's recommended to explicitly set the Wi-Fi regulatory domain. Check yours with this command: | ||
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| ```bash | ||
| sudo iw reg get | ||
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@@ -107,7 +261,7 @@ If you have trouble with a Bluetooth headset and keeping a steady downlink speed | |
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| ### Power Management | ||
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| Another way to help with Wifi issues is to turn off power management for the hardware. To do so, edit the configuration file with this command: | ||
| Another way to help with Wi-Fi issues is to turn off power management for the hardware. To do so, edit the configuration file with this command: | ||
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| ```bash | ||
| sudo gedit /etc/NetworkManager/conf.d/default-wifi-powersave-on.conf | ||
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Member
There was a problem hiding this comment. Choose a reason for hiding this commentThe reason will be displayed to describe this comment to others. Learn more. Diddo on the above regarding Gedit. |
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@@ -118,7 +272,7 @@ And change the file to read (effective upon reboot): | |
| > \[connection\] | ||
| > wifi.powersave = 2 | ||
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| If `tlp` is installed, take a look at the settings file found here for additional Wifi power saving being enabled: | ||
| If `tlp` is installed, take a look at the settings file found here for additional Wi-Fi power saving being enabled: | ||
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| ```bash | ||
| sudo gedit /etc/default/tlp | ||
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@@ -144,7 +298,7 @@ sudo wavemon | |
| iwevent | ||
| ``` | ||
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| Run this command to watch what the Wifi hardware is doing. Pay attention to the disconnect reasons, and ignore the scans. | ||
| Run this command to watch what the Wi-Fi hardware is doing. Pay attention to the disconnect reasons, and ignore the scans. | ||
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| ```bash | ||
| sudo systemctl restart NetworkManager | ||
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@@ -186,15 +340,19 @@ This will reinstall network-manager, which can fix some network issues. | |
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| ## Additional Info | ||
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| Wifi Speeds and Frequencies: | ||
| Wi-Fi Speeds and Frequencies: | ||
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| - 54 Mb/s uses the 802.11g & 802.11b standards. | ||
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| - 145 Mb/s and 300 Mb/s modes use the 802.11n standard and 20MHz or 40MHz bandwidths. | ||
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| - 300Mbps / 40Mhz will provide the maximum performance in most cases. | ||
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| - 145Mbps / 20MHz will work better in areas with more access points. | ||
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| - 450Mbps uses a 60Mhz channel width and 600Mbps uses a 80Mhz channel width, and is typically less stable. | ||
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| The name of the Linux driver for Intel Wifi cards is called <u>iwlwifi</u> and is included in the kernel by default. All information about the driver can be found here: | ||
| The name of the Linux driver for Intel Wi-Fi cards is called <u>iwlwifi</u> and is included in the kernel by default. All information about the driver can be found here: | ||
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| [wireless.wiki.kernel.org/en/users/drivers/iwlwifi](https://wireless.wiki.kernel.org/en/users/drivers/iwlwifi) | ||
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@@ -206,4 +364,8 @@ Sometimes the newest version of the firmware will clear up occasional bugs. Ple | |
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| ### Windows Dual Boot | ||
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| If you are dual booting Windows, you may lose access to your wifi card entirely after running driver/OS updates in Windows. You may be able to gain access to your wifi card again by disabling "Fast Startup" in the Windows power options before booting back into Pop!_OS. | ||
| If you are dual booting Windows, you may lose access to your Wi-Fi card entirely after running driver/OS updates in Windows. You may be able to gain access to your Wi-Fi card again by disabling "Fast Startup" in the Windows power options before booting back into Pop!_OS. | ||
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Member
There was a problem hiding this comment. Choose a reason for hiding this commentThe reason will be displayed to describe this comment to others. Learn more. I'd shorten "you are" to "you're" here. |
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| ## Contact System76 Support | ||
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| If you purchased a System76 computer and you’ve tried all the steps above, but your wireless connection still isn’t working as expected, please collect the output from the diagnostic commands and contact [System76 Support](https://system76.com/contact/support) | ||
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Member
There was a problem hiding this comment. Choose a reason for hiding this commentThe reason will be displayed to describe this comment to others. Learn more. The last sentence needs punctuation at the end. I'd suggest making the link include the word |
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This new name doesn't make sense to me. "Basic Wireless Troubleshooting" would make more grammatical sense than "Wireless and Basic Troubleshooting." But does adding the word "basic" add any value or make this article easier for people to find?