Talk:XFCE: Difference between revisions

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Yes, I use WiFi-Radar fairly successfully. I also selected a profile, clicked "edit", opened "Connection Commands", and added the line "/etc/init.d/NetworkManager stop" in the "Before" area, and this allows me to connect to an open wifi link without killing NetworkManager first in terminal, but I havent tried it with a locked node yet. See other comment below re: accessing built-in tools.
Yes, I use WiFi-Radar fairly successfully. I also selected a profile, clicked "edit", opened "Connection Commands", and added the line "/etc/init.d/NetworkManager stop" in the "Before" area, and this allows me to connect to an open wifi link without killing NetworkManager first in terminal, but I havent tried it with a locked node yet. See other comment below re: accessing built-in tools.
:[[User:Sunglint|Sunglint]] 16:00, 17 March 2008 (CST)
:[[User:Sunglint|Sunglint]] 16:00, 17 March 2008 (CST)



I initially was able to get wifi-radar working fine with my parents encrypted network but once I rebooted it no longer connects. it says "Connected to mynetwork ip(None)". I'm at a loss.


== Automount of SD-cards (and other usb-mounted memory) ==
== Automount of SD-cards (and other usb-mounted memory) ==

Revision as of 21:54, 27 March 2008

why bother with system-config-services, when one can simply use chkconfig?


Anyone else having trouble with Gtk*** cannot open display because of an MIT_MAGIC-COOKIE-1 authentication error? It happens when I add wifi-radar -d to the automatically starting applications and disable the network manager. I notice that I am no longer XX-XX-XX-XX but localhost and thereafter dhcppc3 (once wifi-radar connects)?

I am losing the mouse cursor in XFCE, after following the instructions exactly. Everything works - it's just that the mouse cursor disappears, making everything a bit pointless. Any ideas?

Gian Pablo: I had the lost mouse problem and couldn't figure it out. I reflashed the OLPC to build 656. I did an olpc-update to update1.691, reinstalled XFCE, and everything worked fine from then on. (Except wifi-radar, which has never worked.)

Wifi-Radar and Connectivity

Is anybody using Wifi-Radar successfully? If so, with what sort of network connection? Is anybody successfully using another method?

I am able to connect to my personal WAP using the method described on the Manual Wireless Association page. I've created a script as follows (run as root):

/sbin/dhclient -r #turn off dhcp if on
/sbin/service NetworkManager stop
/sbin/service network stop
/sbin/iwconfig eth0 essid "mywapname" key 26hexdigitkey
sleep 5 #iwconfig comes right back, let connection settle
/sbin/dhclient -1 eth0

This proves I can connect, but is obviously not a great long term solution.

When I run wifi-radar it fails to establish a DHCP connection. It fails so poisonously that I have to turn the XO off before my script will connect again. I am running my WAP with WEP 26 digit password.

Thanks - Rmyers (Bob Myers)


- I feel like this section on wifi radar and getting wifi up and running needs greater expansion. I was able to follow every step of this short guide quite easily, but I couldn't get this wifi to work at all. My WPA setup wasn't able to connect, and there are a great deal of options in the Wifi Radar that are completely foreign to someone whose never used it before. Looking at some of the XO Laptop forums there are solutions to this problem, but they deal with hand editing files and wpa_supplicant.conf and all sorts of tricky stuff that isn't covered in this wiki. This feels like a specific case solution anyway, and would not be appropriate if you wanted to go to a cafe or something.

As well this wiki page doesn't explain why it's sometimes necessary to disable network manager, or why wifi radar is better than network manager either.

Tavis 24.84.198.63 04:53, 6 March 2008 (EST)

Yes, I use WiFi-Radar fairly successfully. I also selected a profile, clicked "edit", opened "Connection Commands", and added the line "/etc/init.d/NetworkManager stop" in the "Before" area, and this allows me to connect to an open wifi link without killing NetworkManager first in terminal, but I havent tried it with a locked node yet. See other comment below re: accessing built-in tools.

Sunglint 16:00, 17 March 2008 (CST)


I initially was able to get wifi-radar working fine with my parents encrypted network but once I rebooted it no longer connects. it says "Connected to mynetwork ip(None)". I'm at a loss.

Automount of SD-cards (and other usb-mounted memory)

After changing my .xsession to launch xfce, I found that my SD-cards are no longer mounted. Further investigation showed that it is the Journal activity that is in charge of auto mounting the internal and external usb-memory as they are inserted into the computer. So how do you get the corresponding functionality when running xfce? It would be great if this was explained on this page.

done --24.196.150.22 12:00, 22 February 2008 (EST)
Thanks! --Dov 02:38, 24 February 2008 (EST)

Accessing Built-in tools via XFCE

I know that there are a variety of built-in applications that are accessible via or as activities in Sugar. I'd like to be able to access these in XFCE, either by terminal call or (ideally) as icon/shortcut in the menu. For instance, I want to read a pdf, and I know that I can in "read", but how to open one in XFCE? And how to tell firefox where the pdf reader is? I realize that Sugar is a great environment, and laud the awesome work done in the entire project, but I must echo other calls for an "adult" implementation. This could hopefully be a script that installs xfce, sets up .xsession, and adds the links mentioned above. Then at reboot in XFCE implement a session-manager type choice for the reboot.

Sunglint 16:05, 17 March 2008 (CST)