I'd like to connect to a wireless access point from the command-line. Ideally, I'd only need the name of the AP. But the hardware-address would work as well.
I know I can use nmcli
to connect to a managed network connection, but in my case, the access point may not be configured for Network-Manager yet (See the difference between the output of nm-tool
and nmcli con
).
Example output of nmcli
:
Auto pwln 3a3d62b1-bbdf-4f76-b4d2-c211fd5cfb03 802-11-wireless [...]
Wired Network aa586921-accf-4932-98c4-c873c310f08e 802-3-ethernet [...]
Cisco-UDP Uni 7f94847b-04dc-40b7-9955-5246fb77cc65 vpn [...]
T-mobile (D1) 867f345a-cbbf-4bd4-b883-a5e5ae0932f0 gsm [...]
Example output of nm-tool
:
State: connected
- Device: eth1 [Auto pwln] ----------------------------------------------------
[...]
Wireless Access Points (* = current AP)
*pwln: Infra, [...], Freq 2472 MHz, Rate 54 Mb/s, Strength 80 WPA WPA2
WLAN: Infra, [...], Freq 2422 MHz, Rate 54 Mb/s, Strength 20 WPA WPA2
[...]
How do I connect to an access point that may or may not be known to NM?
Extra: Finding out if the connection needs a pass-phrase, and submitting it on the command-line as well would be great too (that is to say It'd be nice if network-manager wouldn't pop open any keyring dialogues or errors on the gui)
You can do this directly using
nmcli
, even if the connection isn't configured in Network Manager yet:If you don't want to have the wireless password stored in your history in recent versions (maybe newer than mentioned below) you can add
--ask
to have nmcli prompt you for missing information it needs.This facility was added in Network Manager 0.9.6, so this only works in Ubuntu 12.10 or later.
You can also get a list of available access points with:
You can use
cnetworkmanager
for this.Edit:
After some investigation it becomes clear that it is impossible to run two "user configuration providers" (an application listening at a certain dbus address) at the same time, and cnetworkmanager needs to act as such a "configuration provider" (at least until the connection is set up).
Now, what you can do is add the information for the connection to gconf under the
/system/networking/connections
key (you can do that from the commandline or a script), and then use dbus or a command-line tool like cnetworkmanager or nmcli to connect to it. Maybe you'll also have to add the key to the user's keyring first (to avoid password popups).But of course that won't work on a desktop that uses another NM-client than nm-applet (e.g. KDE). You would have to figure out how to provide a config for them too...
Edit 2:
It seems like it might be possible via
org.freedesktop.NetworkManagerUserSettings
on the system DBus, but this is all poorly documented IMO...You might want to read about configuration settings and the DBus interface spec.
And here is a relevant example (maybe you want to set up a user connection instead of a system connection though)
You can use iwconfig (wifitools) for wep encryption, or wpa_supplicant for wpa and wep, also you use wicd-curses if you're looking for something easier, good luck =)
You can check out iwconfig and iwlist:
There are many options. Check out Wireless Tools for Linux for more.