Network configuration/Wireless
The main article on network configuration is Network configuration.
Configuring wireless is a two-part process; the first part is to identify and ensure the correct driver for your wireless device is installed (they are available on the installation media, but often have to be installed explicitly), and to configure the interface. The second is choosing a method of managing wireless connections. This article covers both parts, and provides additional links to wireless management tools.
The #iw section describes how to manually manage your wireless network interface / your wireless LANs using iw. The Network configuration#Network managers section describes several programs that can be used to automatically manage your wireless interface, some of which include a GUI and all of which include support for network profiles (useful when frequently switching wireless networks, like with laptops).
Device driver
The default Arch Linux kernel is modular, meaning many of the drivers for machine hardware reside on the hard drive and are available as modules. At boot, udev takes an inventory of your hardware and loads appropriate modules (drivers) for your corresponding hardware, which will in turn allow creation of a network interface.
Some wireless chipsets also require firmware, in addition to a corresponding driver. Many firmware images are provided by the linux-firmware package; however, proprietary firmware images are not included and have to be installed separately. This is described in #Installing driver/firmware.
Check the driver status
To check if the driver for your card has been loaded, check the output of the or command, depending on if the card is connected by PCI(e) or USB. You should see that some kernel driver is in use, for example:
Also check the output of the ip link
command to see if a wireless interface was created; usually the naming of the wireless network interfaces starts with the letter "w", e.g. wlan0
or . Then bring the interface up with:
# ip link set interface up
For example, assuming the interface is wlan0
, this is .
Check kernel messages for firmware being loaded:
If there is no relevant output, check the messages for the full output for the module you identified earlier ( in this example) to identify the relevant message or further issues:
If the kernel module is successfully loaded and the interface is up, you can skip the next section.
Installing driver/firmware
Check the following lists to discover if your card is supported:
- See the table of existing Linux wireless drivers and follow to the specific driver's page, which contains a list of supported devices. There is also a List of Wi-Fi Device IDs in Linux.
- The Ubuntu Wiki has a good list of wireless cards and whether or not they are supported either in the Linux kernel or by a user-space driver (includes driver name).
- Linux Wireless Support and The Linux Questions' Hardware Compatibility List (HCL) also have a good database of kernel-friendly hardware.
Note that some vendors ship products that may contain different chip sets, even if the product identifier is the same. Only the usb-id (for USB devices) or pci-id (for PCI devices) is authoritative.
If your wireless card is listed above, follow the #Troubleshooting drivers and firmware subsection of this page, which contains information about installing drivers and firmware of some specific wireless cards. Then check the driver status again.
If your wireless card is not listed above, it is likely supported only under Windows (some Broadcom, 3com, etc). For these, you can try to use #ndiswrapper.
Utilities
Just like other network interfaces, the wireless ones are controlled with ip from the package.
Managing a wireless connection requires a basic set of tools. Either use a network manager or use one of the following directly:
Software | Package | WEXT | nl80211 | WEP | WPA/WPA2 | Archiso |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
wireless_tools1 | wireless_tools | Yes | Yes | Yes | ||
iw | iw | Yes | Yes | Yes | ||
wpa_supplicant | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | ||
iwd | Yes | Yes | Yes |
- Deprecated.
Note that some cards only support WEXT.
iw and wireless_tools comparison
The table below gives an overview of comparable commands for iw and wireless_tools. See iw replaces iwconfig for more examples.
iw command | wireless_tools command | Description |
---|---|---|
iw dev wlan0 link | iwconfig wlan0 | Getting link status. |
iw dev wlan0 scan | iwlist wlan0 scan | Scanning for available access points. |
iw dev wlan0 set type ibss | iwconfig wlan0 mode ad-hoc | Setting the operation mode to ad-hoc. |
iw dev wlan0 connect your_essid | iwconfig wlan0 essid your_essid | Connecting to open network. |
iw dev wlan0 connect your_essid 2432 | iwconfig wlan0 essid your_essid freq 2432M | Connecting to open network specifying channel. |
iw dev wlan0 connect your_essid key 0:your_key | iwconfig wlan0 essid your_essid key your_key | Connecting to WEP encrypted network using hexadecimal key. |
iwconfig wlan0 essid your_essid key s:your_key | Connecting to WEP encrypted network using ASCII key. | |
iw dev wlan0 set power_save on | iwconfig wlan0 power on | Enabling power save. |
iw
Examples in this section assume that your wireless device interface is and that you are connecting to WiFi access point. Replace both accordingly.
Get the name of the interface
To get the name of your wireless interface, do:
$ iw dev
The name of the interface will be output after the word "Interface". For example, it is commonly wlan0
.
Get the status of the interface
To check link status, use the following command.
$ iw dev interface link
You can get statistic information, such as the amount of tx/rx bytes, signal strength etc., with the following command:
$ iw dev interface station dump
Activate the interface
Some cards require that the kernel interface be activated before you can use iw or wireless_tools:
# ip link set interface up
To verify that the interface is up, inspect the output of the following command:
The UP
in is what indicates the interface is up, not the later .
Discover access points
To see what access points are available:
# iw dev interface scan | less
The important points to check:
- SSID: the name of the network.
- Signal: is reported in a wireless power ratio in dBm (e.g. from -100 to 0). The closer the negative value gets to zero, the better the signal. Observing the reported power on a good quality link and a bad one should give an idea about the individual range.
- Security: it is not reported directly, check the line starting with . If there is , for example , then the network is protected somehow.
- If you see an
RSN
information block, then the network is protected by Robust Security Network protocol, also known as WPA2. - If you see an information block, then the network is protected by Wi-Fi Protected Access protocol.
- In the
RSN
and blocks, you may find the following information:- Group cipher: value in TKIP, CCMP, both, others.
- Pairwise ciphers: value in TKIP, CCMP, both, others. Not necessarily the same value than Group cipher.
- Authentication suites: value in PSK, 802.1x, others. For home router, you will usually find PSK (i.e. passphrase). In universities, you are more likely to find 802.1x suite which requires login and password. Then you will need to know which key management is in use (e.g. EAP), and what encapsulation it uses (e.g. PEAP). See #WPA2 Enterprise and Wikipedia:Authentication protocol for details.
- If you see neither
RSN
nor blocks but there is , then WEP is used.
- If you see an
Set operating mode
You might need to set the proper operating mode of the wireless card. More specifically, if you are going to connect an ad-hoc network, you need to set the operating mode to :
# iw dev interface set type ibss
Connect to an access point
Depending on the encryption, you need to associate your wireless device with the access point to use and pass the encryption key:
- No encryption
# iw dev ''interface'' connect "''your_essid''"
- WEP
- using a hexadecimal or ASCII key (the format is distinguished automatically, because a WEP key has a fixed length):
- using a hexadecimal or ASCII key, specifying the third set up key as default (keys are counted from zero, four are possible):
- Other
- iw can only handle WEP. To connect using other encryption schemes, see the section on #Authentication below.
Regardless of the method used, you can check if you have associated successfully:
# iw dev interface link
Authentication
WPA2 Personal
WPA2 Personal, a.k.a. WPA2-PSK, is a mode of Wi-Fi Protected Access.
You can authenticate to WPA2 Personal networks using wpa_supplicant or iwd, or connect using a network manager. If you only authenticated to the network, then to have a fully functional connection, you will still need to assign the IP address(es) and routes either manually or using a DHCP client.
WPA2 Enterprise
WPA2 Enterprise is a mode of Wi-Fi Protected Access. It provides better security and key management than WPA2 Personal, and supports other enterprise-type functionality, such as VLANs and NAP. However, it requires an external authentication server, called RADIUS server, to handle the authentication of users. This is in contrast to Personal mode which does not require anything beyond the wireless router or access points (APs), and uses a single passphrase or password for all users.
The Enterprise mode enables users to log onto the Wi-Fi network with a username and password and/or a digital certificate. Since each user has a dynamic and unique encryption key, it also helps to prevent user-to-user snooping on the wireless network, and improves encryption strength.
This section describes the configuration of network clients to connect to a wireless access point with WPA2 Enterprise mode. See Software access point#RADIUS for information on setting up an access point itself.
For a comparison of protocols, see the following table.
MS-CHAPv2
WPA2-Enterprise wireless networks demanding MSCHAPv2 type-2 authentication with PEAP sometimes require in addition to the stock ppp package. netctl seems to work out of the box without ppp-mppe, however. In either case, usage of MSCHAPv2 is discouraged as it is highly vulnerable, although using another method is usually not an option.
eduroam
eduroam is an international roaming service for users in research, higher education and further education, based on WPA2 Enterprise.
Manual/automatic setup
- wpa_supplicant can be configured directly by its configuration file or using its CLI/GUI front ends and used in combination with a DHCP client. See the examples in for configuring the connection details.
- iwd#WPA Enterprise
- NetworkManager can create WPA2 Enterprise profiles with nmcli or the graphical front ends. nmtui does not support this (NetworkManager issue 376), but may use existing profiles.
- ConnMan needs a separate configuration file before connecting to the network. See and ConnMan#Connecting to eduroam (802.1X) for details.
- netctl supports wpa_supplicant configuration through blocks included with . See netctl.profile(5) for details.
WPA3 Personal
WPA3 Personal, a.k.a. WPA3-SAE, is a mode of Wi-Fi Protected Access.
wpa_supplicant supports WPA3 Personal ( is enabled in since version 2:2.9-4).
iwd supports WPA3 since version 0.7.
Tips and tricks
Respecting the regulatory domain
The regulatory domain, or "regdomain", is used to reconfigure wireless drivers to make sure that wireless hardware usage complies with local laws set by the FCC, ETSI and other organizations. Regdomains use ISO 3166-1 alpha-2 country codes. For example, the regdomain of the United States would be "US", China would be "CN", etc.
Regdomains affect the availability of wireless channels. In the 2.4GHz band, the allowed channels are 1-11 for the US, 1-14 for Japan, and 1-13 for most of the rest of the world. In the 5GHz band, the rules for allowed channels are much more complex. In either case, consult this list of WLAN channels for more detailed information.
Regdomains also affect the limit on the effective isotropic radiated power (EIRP) from wireless devices. This is derived from transmit power/"tx power", and is measured in dBm/mBm (1dBm=100mBm) or mW (log scale). In the 2.4GHz band, the maximum is 30dBm in the US and Canada, 20dBm in most of Europe, and 20dBm-30dBm for the rest of the world. In the 5GHz band, maximums are usually lower. Consult the wireless-regdb for more detailed information (EIRP dBm values are in the second set of brackets for each line).
Misconfiguring the regdomain can be useful - for example, by allowing use of an unused channel when other channels are crowded, or by allowing an increase in tx power to widen transmitter range. However, this is not recommended as it could break local laws and cause interference with other radio devices.
The kernel loads the database directly when wireless-regdb is installed. For direct loading, the kernel should, for security's sake, be configured with set to yes to allow for cryptographic verification of the database. This is true of the stock Arch kernel, but if you are using an alternate kernel, or compiling your own, you should verify this. More information is available at this guide.
To configure the regdomain, install wireless-regdb and reboot (to reload the module and all related drivers). Check the boot log to make sure that the database is loaded and key verified by :
# dmesg | grep cfg80211
The current regdomain can be set to the United States with:
# iw reg set US
And queried with:
$ iw reg get
However, setting the regdomain may not alter your settings. Some devices have a regdomain set in firmware/EEPROM, which dictates the limits of the device, meaning that setting regdomain in software can only increase restrictions, not decrease them. For example, a CN device could be set in software to the US regdomain, but because CN has an EIRP maximum of 20dBm, the device will not be able to transmit at the US maximum of 30dBm.
For example, to see if the regdomain is being set in firmware for an Atheros device:
# dmesg | grep ath:
For other chipsets, it may help to search for "EEPROM", "regdomain", or simply the name of the device driver.
To see if your regdomain change has been successful, and to query the number of available channels and their allowed transmit power:
$ iw list | grep -A 15 Frequencies:
A more permanent configuration of the regdomain can be achieved through editing and uncommenting the appropriate domain.
wpa_supplicant can also use a regdomain in the country=
line of .
It is also possible to configure the cfg80211 kernel module to use a specific regdomain by adding, for example, as module options. The module option is inherited from the old regulatory implementation and in modern kernels act as a userspace regulatory hint as if it came through through utilities like and wpa_supplicant
.
Rfkill caveat
Many laptops have a hardware button (or switch) to turn off the wireless card; however, the card can also be blocked by the kernel. This can be handled by rfkill. To show the current status:
If the card is hard-blocked, use the hardware button (switch) to unblock it. If the card is not hard-blocked but soft-blocked, use the following command:
# rfkill unblock wifi
Hardware buttons to toggle wireless cards are handled by a vendor specific kernel module. Frequently, these are WMI modules. Particularly for very new hardware models, it happens that the model is not fully supported in the latest stable kernel yet. In this case, it often helps to search the kernel bug tracker for information and report the model to the maintainer of the respective vendor kernel module, if it has not happened already.
Power saving
Troubleshooting
This section contains general troubleshooting tips, not strictly related to problems with drivers or firmware. For such topics, see next section #Troubleshooting drivers and firmware.
Temporary internet access
If you have problematic hardware and need internet access to, for example, download some software or get help in forums, you can make use of Android's built-in feature for internet sharing via USB cable. See Android tethering#USB tethering for more information.
Observing logs
A good first measure to troubleshoot is to analyze the system's logfiles first. In order not to manually parse through them all, it can help to open a second terminal/console window and watch the kernels messages with
# dmesg -w
while performing the action, e.g. the wireless association attempt.
When using a tool for network management, the same can be done for systemd with
# journalctl -f
Frequently, a wireless error is accompanied by a deauthentication with a particular reason code, for example:
wlan0: deauthenticating from XX:XX:XX:XX:XX:XX by local choice (reason=3)
Looking up the reason code might give a first hint. Maybe it also helps you to look at the control message flowchart, the journal messages will follow it.
The individual tools used in this article further provide options for more detailed debugging output, which can be used in a second step of the analysis, if required.
Failed to get IP address
- If getting an IP address repeatedly fails using the default client, try installing and using instead. Do not forget to select dhclient as the primary DHCP client in the connection manager.
- If you can get an IP address for a wired interface and not for a wireless interface, try disabling the wireless card's power saving features (specify instead of ).
- If you get a timeout error due to a waiting for carrier problem, then you might have to set the channel mode to
auto
for the specific device:
# iwconfig wlan0 channel auto
Before changing the channel to auto, make sure your wireless interface is down. After it has successfully changed it, you can bring the interface up again and continue from there.
Valid IP address but cannot resolve host
If you are on a public wireless network that may have a captive portal, make sure to query an HTTP page (not an HTTPS page) from your web browser, as some captive portals only redirect HTTP. If this is not the issue, check if you can resolve domain names, it may be necessary to use the DNS server advertised via DHCP.
Setting RTS and fragmentation thresholds
Wireless hardware disables RTS and fragmentation by default. These are two different methods of increasing throughput at the expense of bandwidth (i.e. reliability at the expense of speed). These are useful in environments with wireless noise or many adjacent access points, which may create interference leading to timeouts or failing connections.
Packet fragmentation improves throughput by splitting up packets with size exceeding the fragmentation threshold. The maximum value (2346) effectively disables fragmentation since no packet can exceed it. The minimum value (256) maximizes throughput, but may carry a significant bandwidth cost.
# iw phy0 set frag 512
RTS improves throughput by performing a handshake with the access point before transmitting packets with size exceeding the RTS threshold. The maximum threshold (2347) effectively disables RTS since no packet can exceed it. The minimum threshold (0) enables RTS for all packets, which is probably excessive for most situations.
# iw phy0 set rts 500
Cause #1
If your journal says and you lose your Wi-Fi connection, it is likely that you have a bit too aggressive power-saving on your Wi-Fi card. Try disabling the wireless card's power saving features (specify instead of ).
If your card does not support enabling/disabling power save mode, check the BIOS for power management options. Disabling PCI-Express power management in the BIOS of a Lenovo W520 resolved this issue.
Cause #2
If you are experiencing frequent disconnections and your journal shows messages such as
try changing the channel bandwidth to 20MHz
through your router's settings page.
Cause #3
On some laptop models with hardware rfkill switches (e.g., Thinkpad X200 series), due to wear or bad design, the switch (or its connection to the mainboard) might become loose over time resulting in seemingly random hardblocks/disconnects when you accidentally touch the switch or move the laptop. There is no software solution to this, unless your switch is electrical and the BIOS offers the option to disable the switch. If your switch is mechanical (and most are), there are lots of possible solutions, most of which aim to disable the switch: Soldering the contact point on the mainboard/wifi-card, gluing or blocking the switch, using a screw nut to tighten the switch or removing it altogether.
Cause #4
Another cause for frequent disconnects or a complete failure to connect may also be a sub-standard router, incomplete settings of the router, interference by other wireless devices or low quality signal.
To troubleshoot, first try to connect to the router with no authentication and by getting closer to it.
If that works, enable WPA/WPA2 again but choose fixed and/or limited router settings. For example:
- If the router is considerably older than the wireless device you use for the client, test if it works with setting the router to one wireless mode
- Disable mixed-mode authentication (e.g. only WPA2 with AES, or TKIP if the router is old)
- Try a fixed/free channel rather than "auto" channel (maybe the router next door is old and interfering)
- Disable WPS
- Change the router's 5 GHz channel(s) to a non-DFS (Dynamic Frequency Selection) channel. Connections on such channels may be dropped or suddenly switched due to interference from nearby weather radar.
- Try setting your client to 2.4 GHz only instead of letting it choose what it thinks is best between 5 GHz and 2.4 GHz (the later has a lower throughput but will provide a more stable connection over longer distances)
- Disable channel bandwidth (lower throughput but less likely collisions) with
- If the router has quality of service settings, check completeness of settings (e.g. Wi-Fi Multimedia (WMM) is part of optional QoS flow control. An erroneous router firmware may advertise its existence although the setting is not enabled)
Cause #5
On some wireless network adapters (e.g. Qualcomm Atheros AR9485), random disconnects can happen with a DMA error:
A possible workaround is to disable the Intel IOMMU driver (DMA), adding to the kernel parameters .
Cause #6
If you are using a device with and iwlmvm
for wireless connectivity, and your Wi-Fi card appears to disappear when on battery power (perhaps after a reboot or resuming from suspend), this can be fixed by configuring power saving settings in iwlmvm.
Create the file if it does not exist already, then add the following line to it:
A power_scheme
of 1 sets iwlmvm to "Always Active." Available options are:
Value | Description |
---|---|
1 | Always Active |
2 | Balanced |
3 | Low-power |
Cause #7
If your device undergoes long periods of inactivity (e.g. a file server), the disconnection may be due to power saving, which will block incoming traffic and prevent connections. Try disabling power saving for the interface:
# iw dev interface set power_save off
You can create a udev rule to do this on boot, see Power management#Network interfaces.
Wi-Fi networks invisible because of incorrect regulatory domain
If the computer's Wi-Fi channels do not match those of the user's country, some in-range Wi-Fi networks might be invisible because they use wireless channels that are not allowed by default. The solution is to configure the regulatory domain correctly; see #Respecting the regulatory domain.
Troubleshooting drivers and firmware
This section covers methods and procedures for installing kernel modules and firmware for specific chipsets, that differ from generic method.
See Kernel modules for general information on operations with modules.
rt2x00
Unified driver for Ralink chipsets (it replaces , , , etc). This driver has been in the Linux kernel since 2.6.24, you only need to load the right module for the chip: , , , or rt73usb
which will autoload the respective modules too.
A list of devices supported by the modules is available at the project's homepage.
- Additional notes
- Since kernel 3.0, rt2x00 includes also these drivers:
rt2800pci
, . - Since kernel 3.0, the staging drivers and are replaced by the mainline drivers
rt2800pci
and . - Some devices have a wide range of options that can be configured with . These are documented in the source tarballs available from Ralink.
rt3090
For devices which use the rt3090 chipset, it should be possible to use the rt2800pci
driver; however, it does not work with this chipset very well (e.g. sometimes it is not possible to use higher rate than 2Mb/s).
rt3290
The rt3290 chipset is recognised by the kernel rt2800pci
module. However, some users experience problems and reverting to a patched Ralink driver seems to be beneficial in these cases.
rt3573
New chipset as of 2012. It may require proprietary drivers from Ralink. Different manufacturers use it; see the Belkin N750 DB wireless usb adapter forums thread.
mt7612u
New chipset as of 2014, released under their new commercial name Mediatek. It is an AC1200 or AC1300 chipset. Manufacturer provides drivers for Linux on their support page. As of kernel 5.5 it should be supported by the included driver.
rtl8192cu
The driver is now in the kernel, but many users have reported being unable to make a connection although scanning for networks does work.
includes many patches; try this if it does not work fine with the driver in kernel.
rtl8723ae/rtl8723be
The rtl8723ae
and modules are included in the mainline Linux kernel.
Some users may encounter errors with powersave on this card. This is shown with occasional disconnects that are not recognized by high level network managers (netctl, NetworkManager). This error can be confirmed by running as root or as root and looking for output related to powersave and the rtl8723ae
/ module. If you have this issue, use the kernel option which should prevent the WiFi card from automatically sleeping and halting connection. See Kernel module#Setting module options.
If you have poor signal, perhaps your device has only one physical antenna connected, and antenna autoselection is broken. You can force the choice of antenna with or ant_sel=2
kernel option.
rtl88xxau
Realtek chipsets rtl8811au, rtl8812au, rtl8814au and rtl8821au designed for various USB adapters ranging from AC600 to AC1900. Several packages provide various kernel drivers, these require DKMS (the package and the kernel headers installed):
Chipset | Package | Notes |
---|---|---|
rtl8811au, rtl8812au, rtl8821au | Aircrack-ng kernel module for 8811au, 8812au and 8821au chipsets with monitor mode and injection support. | |
rtl8812au | Latest official Realtek driver version for rtl8812au only. | |
rtl8811au, rtl8821au | Newer driver version for rtl8821au. | |
rtl8814au | Possibly works for rtl8813au too. |
rtl8811cu/rtl8821cu
rtl8821cu-dkms-gitAUR provides a kernel module for the Realtek 8811cu and 8821cu chipset.
This requires DKMS, so make sure you have your proper kernel headers installed.
If no wireless interface shows up even though the module is loaded, you may need to manually specify the option . Try e.g. , other values might also work. See Kernel module#Setting module options for details.
rtl8821ce
provides a kernel module for the Realtek 8821ce chipset found in the Asus X543UA.
This requires DKMS, so make sure you have your proper kernel headers installed.
rtl8822bu
provides a kernel module for the Realtek 8822bu chipset found in the Edimax EW7822ULC USB3, Asus AC53 Nano USB 802.11ac and TP-Link Archer T3U adapter.
This requires DKMS, so make sure you have your proper kernel headers installed.
rtl8xxxu
Issues with the mainline kernel module may be solved by compiling a third-party module for the specific chipset. The source code can be found in GitHub repositories.
Some drivers may be already prepared in the AUR, e.g. .
RTW88
An RTW88 kernel module patchset has been recently posted to the kernel mailing list, which should hopefully make it into the mainstream kernel.
Upstream kernels or those with the patchset will support most RTW88 chip devices if configured and compiled to do so. linux-zen and both include these patches, with the packaged version already having the module built.
The driver supports: 882BE, 8822BU, 8822CE, 8822CU, 8723DE, 8723DU, 8821CE, and 8821CU.
Atheros
The MadWifi team currently maintains three different drivers for devices with Atheros chipset:
- is an old, obsolete driver. Not present in Arch kernel since 2.6.39.1.
- is a newer driver which replaces the driver. Currently a better choice for some chipsets, but not all chipsets are supported (see below)
- is the newest of these three drivers. It is intended for newer Atheros chipsets. All of the chips with 802.11n capabilities are supported.
There are some other drivers for some Atheros devices. See Linux Wireless documentation for details.
ath5k
External resources:
If you find web pages randomly loading very slow, or if the device is unable to lease an IP address, try to switch from hardware to software encryption by loading the module with option. See Kernel modules#Setting module options for details.
Some laptops may have problems with their wireless LED indicator flickering red and blue. To solve this problem, do:
# echo none > /sys/class/leds/ath5k-phy0::tx/trigger # echo none > /sys/class/leds/ath5k-phy0::rx/trigger
For alternatives, see this bug report.
ath9k
External resources:
As of Linux 3.15.1, some users have been experiencing a decrease in bandwidth. In some cases, this can fixed by setting the option for the module. See Kernel module#Setting module options.
An ath9k mailing list exists for support and development related discussions.
Power saving
Although Linux Wireless says that dynamic power saving is enabled for Atheros ath9k single-chips newer than AR9280, for some devices (e.g. AR9285), powertop might still report that power saving is disabled. In this case, enable it manually.
On some devices (e.g. AR9285), enabling the power saving might result in the following error:
The solution is to set the option for the module; see Kernel module#Setting module options.
iwlegacy
iwlegacy is the wireless driver for Intel's 3945 and 4965 wireless chips. The firmware is included in the linux-firmware package.
udev should load the driver automatically, otherwise load or manually. See Kernel modules for details.
If you have problems connecting to networks in general (e.g. random failures with your card on bootup or your link quality is very poor), try to disable 802.11n:
/etc/modprobe.d/iwl4965.conf
options iwl4965 11n_disable=1
If the failures persist during bootup and you are using Nouveau driver, try enabling early KMS to prevent the conflict .
iwlwifi
iwlwifi is the wireless driver for Intel's current wireless chips, such as 5100AGN, 5300AGN, and 5350AGN. See the full list of supported devices. The firmware is included in the linux-firmware package. The may contain some updates sooner.
If you have problems connecting to networks in general or your link quality is very poor, try to disable 802.11n, and perhaps also enable software encryption:
If you have a problem with slow uplink speed in 802.11n mode, for example 20Mbps, try to enable antenna aggregation:
Do not be confused with the option name, when the value is set to it does not disable anything but re-enables transmission antenna aggregation.
In case this does not work for you, you may try disabling power saving for your wireless adapter.
Some have never gotten this to work. Others found salvation by disabling N in their router settings after trying everything. This is known to have been the only solution on more than one occasion. The second link there mentions a 5ghz option that might be worth exploring.
If you have an 802.11ax (WiFi 6) access point and have problems detecting the beacons or an unreliable connection, review Intel Article 54799.
Bluetooth coexistence
If you have difficulty connecting a bluetooth headset and maintaining good downlink speed, try disabling bluetooth coexistence :
/etc/modprobe.d/iwlwifi.conf
options iwlwifi bt_coex_active=0
Firmware issues
You may have some issue where the driver outputs stack traces & errors, which can cause some stuttering.
Alternatively, you may simply experience miscellaneous issues (e.g. connection issues on 5GHz, random disconnections, no connection on resume).
To confirm it is the cause of the issues, downgrade the package linux-firmware.
If confirmed, move the buggy firmware files so that an older version is loaded (to be able to have an up to date linux-firmware since it is not only providing firmware updates for your Intel WiFi card):
# for i in {64..73} ; do mv /usr/lib/firmware/iwlwifi-ty-a0-gf-a0-$i.ucode.xz /usr/lib/firmware/iwlwifi-ty-a0-gf-a0-$i.ucode.xz.bak ; done
To avoid having to repeat these steps manually after each update, use the array in with a wildcard to block their installation. See pacman#Skip files from being installed to system.
Adapter not detected after booting from Windows
If the WiFi adapter is not getting detected after finishing a session in Windows, this might be due to Windows' Fast Startup feature which is enabled by default. Try disabling Fast Startup. The iwlwifi kernel driver wiki has an entry for this.
Disabling LED blink
iwlegacy
and iwlwifi
drivers.The default settings on the module are to have the LED blink on activity. Some people find this extremely annoying. To have the LED on solid when Wi-Fi is active, you can use the systemd-tmpfiles:
Run for the change to take effect, or reboot.
To see all the possible trigger values for this LED:
# cat /sys/class/leds/phy0-led/trigger
Broadcom
See Broadcom wireless.
Tenda w322u
Treat this Tenda card as an device. See #rt2x00.
orinoco
This should be a part of the kernel package and be installed already.
Some Orinoco chipsets are Hermes II. You can use the driver instead of and gain WPA support. To use the driver, blacklist first.
prism54
The driver p54
is included in kernel, but you have to download the appropriate firmware for your card from this site and install it into the directory.
zd1211rw
zd1211rw is a driver for the ZyDAS ZD1211 802.11b/g USB WLAN chipset, and it is included in recent versions of the Linux kernel. See for a list of supported devices. You only need to install the firmware for the device, provided by the package.
hostap_cs
Host AP is a Linux driver for wireless LAN cards based on Intersil's Prism2/2.5/3 chipset. The driver is included in Linux kernel.
ndiswrapper
Ndiswrapper is a wrapper script that allows you to use some Windows drivers in Linux. You will need the .inf and .sys files from your Windows driver.
Follow these steps to configure ndiswrapper.
- Install ndiswrapper-dkms.
- Install the driver to :
- List all installed drivers for ndiswrapper:
$ ndiswrapper -l
- Let ndiswrapper write its configuration in :
The ndiswrapper install is almost finished; you can load the module at boot.
Test that ndiswrapper will load now:
# modprobe ndiswrapper # iwconfig
and wlan0 should now exist. If you have problems, some help is available at: ndiswrapper howto and ndiswrapper FAQ.
See also
- The Linux Wireless project
- Aircrack-ng guide on installing drivers
- Wireless Device Database Wiki (This fork is hosted by wi-cat.ru since the original wiki has shut down. There are two less complete versions available: TechInfoDepot, deviwiki)