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How to create an ad-hoc wireless network in Ubuntu
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This should be very easy but I am finding it quite hard in Ubuntu.
I want to create a network so that I can connect other devices to my computer wirelessly. I do not need an internet connection, I just need an ad-hoc network from my Ubuntu computer which is running Gnome.
These directions are inaccurate, there is no "Use as a..." in step 4.
These directions imply that I can not change the automatically generated password for the Wi-Fi network. Also, see below, the network disappears after a few minutes.
The closest I have found is clicking the "hamburger nav" in settings and clicking "Turn On Wi-Fi hotspot" (pictured):
This does create an ad-hoc network but:
- The name of the nework is fixed (can't change it)
- The password is fixed (can't change it)
- After about 20 seconds the hotspot menu (pictured below) goes away and I can't connect any devices to it even when it does appear.
Why is this so ghetto? I could do this on mac in about 10 seconds.
How can I rename the ad-hoc network and how do I make it persist (i.e. not go anywhere)?
The output of dpkg -l *dnsmasq*
is as follows:
Desired=Unknown/Install/Remove/Purge/Hold
| Status=Not/Inst/Conf-files/Unpacked/halF-conf/Half-inst/trig-aWait/Trig-pend
|/ Err?=(none)/Reinst-required (Status,Err: uppercase=bad)
||/ Name Version Architecture Description
+++-==============-============-============-=================================
un dnsmasq <none> <none> (no description available)
un dnsmasq-base <none> <none> (no description available)
networking gnome network-manager
add a comment |
This should be very easy but I am finding it quite hard in Ubuntu.
I want to create a network so that I can connect other devices to my computer wirelessly. I do not need an internet connection, I just need an ad-hoc network from my Ubuntu computer which is running Gnome.
These directions are inaccurate, there is no "Use as a..." in step 4.
These directions imply that I can not change the automatically generated password for the Wi-Fi network. Also, see below, the network disappears after a few minutes.
The closest I have found is clicking the "hamburger nav" in settings and clicking "Turn On Wi-Fi hotspot" (pictured):
This does create an ad-hoc network but:
- The name of the nework is fixed (can't change it)
- The password is fixed (can't change it)
- After about 20 seconds the hotspot menu (pictured below) goes away and I can't connect any devices to it even when it does appear.
Why is this so ghetto? I could do this on mac in about 10 seconds.
How can I rename the ad-hoc network and how do I make it persist (i.e. not go anywhere)?
The output of dpkg -l *dnsmasq*
is as follows:
Desired=Unknown/Install/Remove/Purge/Hold
| Status=Not/Inst/Conf-files/Unpacked/halF-conf/Half-inst/trig-aWait/Trig-pend
|/ Err?=(none)/Reinst-required (Status,Err: uppercase=bad)
||/ Name Version Architecture Description
+++-==============-============-============-=================================
un dnsmasq <none> <none> (no description available)
un dnsmasq-base <none> <none> (no description available)
networking gnome network-manager
Edit your question and show medpkg -l *dnsmasq*
.
– heynnema
1 hour ago
@heynnema I updated my question with the output of that command.
– Startec
1 hour ago
add a comment |
This should be very easy but I am finding it quite hard in Ubuntu.
I want to create a network so that I can connect other devices to my computer wirelessly. I do not need an internet connection, I just need an ad-hoc network from my Ubuntu computer which is running Gnome.
These directions are inaccurate, there is no "Use as a..." in step 4.
These directions imply that I can not change the automatically generated password for the Wi-Fi network. Also, see below, the network disappears after a few minutes.
The closest I have found is clicking the "hamburger nav" in settings and clicking "Turn On Wi-Fi hotspot" (pictured):
This does create an ad-hoc network but:
- The name of the nework is fixed (can't change it)
- The password is fixed (can't change it)
- After about 20 seconds the hotspot menu (pictured below) goes away and I can't connect any devices to it even when it does appear.
Why is this so ghetto? I could do this on mac in about 10 seconds.
How can I rename the ad-hoc network and how do I make it persist (i.e. not go anywhere)?
The output of dpkg -l *dnsmasq*
is as follows:
Desired=Unknown/Install/Remove/Purge/Hold
| Status=Not/Inst/Conf-files/Unpacked/halF-conf/Half-inst/trig-aWait/Trig-pend
|/ Err?=(none)/Reinst-required (Status,Err: uppercase=bad)
||/ Name Version Architecture Description
+++-==============-============-============-=================================
un dnsmasq <none> <none> (no description available)
un dnsmasq-base <none> <none> (no description available)
networking gnome network-manager
This should be very easy but I am finding it quite hard in Ubuntu.
I want to create a network so that I can connect other devices to my computer wirelessly. I do not need an internet connection, I just need an ad-hoc network from my Ubuntu computer which is running Gnome.
These directions are inaccurate, there is no "Use as a..." in step 4.
These directions imply that I can not change the automatically generated password for the Wi-Fi network. Also, see below, the network disappears after a few minutes.
The closest I have found is clicking the "hamburger nav" in settings and clicking "Turn On Wi-Fi hotspot" (pictured):
This does create an ad-hoc network but:
- The name of the nework is fixed (can't change it)
- The password is fixed (can't change it)
- After about 20 seconds the hotspot menu (pictured below) goes away and I can't connect any devices to it even when it does appear.
Why is this so ghetto? I could do this on mac in about 10 seconds.
How can I rename the ad-hoc network and how do I make it persist (i.e. not go anywhere)?
The output of dpkg -l *dnsmasq*
is as follows:
Desired=Unknown/Install/Remove/Purge/Hold
| Status=Not/Inst/Conf-files/Unpacked/halF-conf/Half-inst/trig-aWait/Trig-pend
|/ Err?=(none)/Reinst-required (Status,Err: uppercase=bad)
||/ Name Version Architecture Description
+++-==============-============-============-=================================
un dnsmasq <none> <none> (no description available)
un dnsmasq-base <none> <none> (no description available)
networking gnome network-manager
networking gnome network-manager
edited 1 hour ago
Startec
asked 3 hours ago
StartecStartec
3842317
3842317
Edit your question and show medpkg -l *dnsmasq*
.
– heynnema
1 hour ago
@heynnema I updated my question with the output of that command.
– Startec
1 hour ago
add a comment |
Edit your question and show medpkg -l *dnsmasq*
.
– heynnema
1 hour ago
@heynnema I updated my question with the output of that command.
– Startec
1 hour ago
Edit your question and show me
dpkg -l *dnsmasq*
.– heynnema
1 hour ago
Edit your question and show me
dpkg -l *dnsmasq*
.– heynnema
1 hour ago
@heynnema I updated my question with the output of that command.
– Startec
1 hour ago
@heynnema I updated my question with the output of that command.
– Startec
1 hour ago
add a comment |
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
Install dnsmasq-base
. This should take care of your problem.
sudo apt-get update
# update the software database
sudo apt-get install dnsmasq-base
# install dnsmasq-base
That fixed it. I still can't set the password or network name (bummer) but now it stays open and I can connect. I have no idea why you knew that would fix it but thank you.
– Startec
1 hour ago
@Startec you're very welcome!
– heynnema
1 hour ago
add a comment |
For connecting an Android tablet with bvnc, Ad-hoc is not the way to go. Instead, Right Click on the networkicon, and in the drop-down menu, select Edit connections/ under WI-FI tab, mode dropdown, select Infrastructure (instead of Ad-hoc), then under IPV4 settings, connection method, set it to shared with other computers. Then the Android tablet could see the network, and connect wirelessly.
where are these options. I don't see "Edit connections" anywhere under WI-FI tab, not any option for Ad-hoc (see above picture).
– Startec
1 hour ago
add a comment |
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2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
Install dnsmasq-base
. This should take care of your problem.
sudo apt-get update
# update the software database
sudo apt-get install dnsmasq-base
# install dnsmasq-base
That fixed it. I still can't set the password or network name (bummer) but now it stays open and I can connect. I have no idea why you knew that would fix it but thank you.
– Startec
1 hour ago
@Startec you're very welcome!
– heynnema
1 hour ago
add a comment |
Install dnsmasq-base
. This should take care of your problem.
sudo apt-get update
# update the software database
sudo apt-get install dnsmasq-base
# install dnsmasq-base
That fixed it. I still can't set the password or network name (bummer) but now it stays open and I can connect. I have no idea why you knew that would fix it but thank you.
– Startec
1 hour ago
@Startec you're very welcome!
– heynnema
1 hour ago
add a comment |
Install dnsmasq-base
. This should take care of your problem.
sudo apt-get update
# update the software database
sudo apt-get install dnsmasq-base
# install dnsmasq-base
Install dnsmasq-base
. This should take care of your problem.
sudo apt-get update
# update the software database
sudo apt-get install dnsmasq-base
# install dnsmasq-base
answered 1 hour ago
heynnemaheynnema
22k32361
22k32361
That fixed it. I still can't set the password or network name (bummer) but now it stays open and I can connect. I have no idea why you knew that would fix it but thank you.
– Startec
1 hour ago
@Startec you're very welcome!
– heynnema
1 hour ago
add a comment |
That fixed it. I still can't set the password or network name (bummer) but now it stays open and I can connect. I have no idea why you knew that would fix it but thank you.
– Startec
1 hour ago
@Startec you're very welcome!
– heynnema
1 hour ago
That fixed it. I still can't set the password or network name (bummer) but now it stays open and I can connect. I have no idea why you knew that would fix it but thank you.
– Startec
1 hour ago
That fixed it. I still can't set the password or network name (bummer) but now it stays open and I can connect. I have no idea why you knew that would fix it but thank you.
– Startec
1 hour ago
@Startec you're very welcome!
– heynnema
1 hour ago
@Startec you're very welcome!
– heynnema
1 hour ago
add a comment |
For connecting an Android tablet with bvnc, Ad-hoc is not the way to go. Instead, Right Click on the networkicon, and in the drop-down menu, select Edit connections/ under WI-FI tab, mode dropdown, select Infrastructure (instead of Ad-hoc), then under IPV4 settings, connection method, set it to shared with other computers. Then the Android tablet could see the network, and connect wirelessly.
where are these options. I don't see "Edit connections" anywhere under WI-FI tab, not any option for Ad-hoc (see above picture).
– Startec
1 hour ago
add a comment |
For connecting an Android tablet with bvnc, Ad-hoc is not the way to go. Instead, Right Click on the networkicon, and in the drop-down menu, select Edit connections/ under WI-FI tab, mode dropdown, select Infrastructure (instead of Ad-hoc), then under IPV4 settings, connection method, set it to shared with other computers. Then the Android tablet could see the network, and connect wirelessly.
where are these options. I don't see "Edit connections" anywhere under WI-FI tab, not any option for Ad-hoc (see above picture).
– Startec
1 hour ago
add a comment |
For connecting an Android tablet with bvnc, Ad-hoc is not the way to go. Instead, Right Click on the networkicon, and in the drop-down menu, select Edit connections/ under WI-FI tab, mode dropdown, select Infrastructure (instead of Ad-hoc), then under IPV4 settings, connection method, set it to shared with other computers. Then the Android tablet could see the network, and connect wirelessly.
For connecting an Android tablet with bvnc, Ad-hoc is not the way to go. Instead, Right Click on the networkicon, and in the drop-down menu, select Edit connections/ under WI-FI tab, mode dropdown, select Infrastructure (instead of Ad-hoc), then under IPV4 settings, connection method, set it to shared with other computers. Then the Android tablet could see the network, and connect wirelessly.
edited 36 mins ago
answered 1 hour ago
ubfan1ubfan1
10k41730
10k41730
where are these options. I don't see "Edit connections" anywhere under WI-FI tab, not any option for Ad-hoc (see above picture).
– Startec
1 hour ago
add a comment |
where are these options. I don't see "Edit connections" anywhere under WI-FI tab, not any option for Ad-hoc (see above picture).
– Startec
1 hour ago
where are these options. I don't see "Edit connections" anywhere under WI-FI tab, not any option for Ad-hoc (see above picture).
– Startec
1 hour ago
where are these options. I don't see "Edit connections" anywhere under WI-FI tab, not any option for Ad-hoc (see above picture).
– Startec
1 hour ago
add a comment |
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Edit your question and show me
dpkg -l *dnsmasq*
.– heynnema
1 hour ago
@heynnema I updated my question with the output of that command.
– Startec
1 hour ago