Broadcom Wireless PCI Card BMC4360 14e4:43a0 cannot get drivers workingUnable to get Broadcom wireless...
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Broadcom Wireless PCI Card BMC4360 14e4:43a0 cannot get drivers working
Unable to get Broadcom wireless drivers working on Arch LinuxInstall Drivers Offline Arch LinuxBroadcom driver on Kali LinuxBluetooth: can't find default controllerBroadcom wireless driver source vs dkmsBroadcom BCM94352HMB wifi card not workingCant find package for wireless network card, Arch-linuxClarification required for NIC being usedUnable to get Broadcom wireless drivers working on Arch Linuxwifi not working, lenovo G50-70Difficulty in loading iwlwifi network driver in Parabola
.everyoneloves__top-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__mid-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__bot-mid-leaderboard:empty{ margin-bottom:0;
}
I have a problem similar to this:
Unable to get Broadcom wireless drivers working on Arch Linux
But in my case, loading the broadcom-wl-dkms driver did not work. I am new to this, so maybe the solution is quite simple (hopefully).
What I did so far:
I installed various drivers with yaourt and pacman, ending up with the broadcom-wl-dkms driver.
When I list the available internet devices with ip link I still only get two results, the lo and the chipset of my motherboard (where the LAN´s plugged in and works just fine).
With lsmod I thought I would get a list of all active drivers, but the broadcom-wl-dkms is not shown there.
What do I have to do in order to get the drivers all set up and running?
Ah, running wifi-menu gives me returns in bright red INVALID INTERFACE SPECIFICATIONS but I'm guessing that's just because it can't see any wireless networking devices.
I read quite a lot of posts but nothing really helped so far (And yes, I checked the Arch Wiki beforehand).
Does it have something to do with the driver being restrictively licensed drivers?
Output of lspci -knn | grep net -A2 :
00:1f.6 Ethernet controller [0200]: Intel Corporation Ethernet
Connection (2) I219-V [8086:15b8] (rev 31) Subsystem: Micro-Star
International Co., Ltd. [MSI] Ethernet Connection (2) I219-V
[1462:7a12] Kernel driver in use: e1000e Kernel modules: e1000e
Fascinating: output of lspci -knn|grep Net -A2:
07:00.0 Network controller: Broadcom Limited BCM4360 802.11ac Wireless
Network Adapter (rev 03)
Running lsmod | grep wl produces no result. How do I load the driver?
arch-linux wifi drivers configuration broadcom
add a comment |
I have a problem similar to this:
Unable to get Broadcom wireless drivers working on Arch Linux
But in my case, loading the broadcom-wl-dkms driver did not work. I am new to this, so maybe the solution is quite simple (hopefully).
What I did so far:
I installed various drivers with yaourt and pacman, ending up with the broadcom-wl-dkms driver.
When I list the available internet devices with ip link I still only get two results, the lo and the chipset of my motherboard (where the LAN´s plugged in and works just fine).
With lsmod I thought I would get a list of all active drivers, but the broadcom-wl-dkms is not shown there.
What do I have to do in order to get the drivers all set up and running?
Ah, running wifi-menu gives me returns in bright red INVALID INTERFACE SPECIFICATIONS but I'm guessing that's just because it can't see any wireless networking devices.
I read quite a lot of posts but nothing really helped so far (And yes, I checked the Arch Wiki beforehand).
Does it have something to do with the driver being restrictively licensed drivers?
Output of lspci -knn | grep net -A2 :
00:1f.6 Ethernet controller [0200]: Intel Corporation Ethernet
Connection (2) I219-V [8086:15b8] (rev 31) Subsystem: Micro-Star
International Co., Ltd. [MSI] Ethernet Connection (2) I219-V
[1462:7a12] Kernel driver in use: e1000e Kernel modules: e1000e
Fascinating: output of lspci -knn|grep Net -A2:
07:00.0 Network controller: Broadcom Limited BCM4360 802.11ac Wireless
Network Adapter (rev 03)
Running lsmod | grep wl produces no result. How do I load the driver?
arch-linux wifi drivers configuration broadcom
add a comment |
I have a problem similar to this:
Unable to get Broadcom wireless drivers working on Arch Linux
But in my case, loading the broadcom-wl-dkms driver did not work. I am new to this, so maybe the solution is quite simple (hopefully).
What I did so far:
I installed various drivers with yaourt and pacman, ending up with the broadcom-wl-dkms driver.
When I list the available internet devices with ip link I still only get two results, the lo and the chipset of my motherboard (where the LAN´s plugged in and works just fine).
With lsmod I thought I would get a list of all active drivers, but the broadcom-wl-dkms is not shown there.
What do I have to do in order to get the drivers all set up and running?
Ah, running wifi-menu gives me returns in bright red INVALID INTERFACE SPECIFICATIONS but I'm guessing that's just because it can't see any wireless networking devices.
I read quite a lot of posts but nothing really helped so far (And yes, I checked the Arch Wiki beforehand).
Does it have something to do with the driver being restrictively licensed drivers?
Output of lspci -knn | grep net -A2 :
00:1f.6 Ethernet controller [0200]: Intel Corporation Ethernet
Connection (2) I219-V [8086:15b8] (rev 31) Subsystem: Micro-Star
International Co., Ltd. [MSI] Ethernet Connection (2) I219-V
[1462:7a12] Kernel driver in use: e1000e Kernel modules: e1000e
Fascinating: output of lspci -knn|grep Net -A2:
07:00.0 Network controller: Broadcom Limited BCM4360 802.11ac Wireless
Network Adapter (rev 03)
Running lsmod | grep wl produces no result. How do I load the driver?
arch-linux wifi drivers configuration broadcom
I have a problem similar to this:
Unable to get Broadcom wireless drivers working on Arch Linux
But in my case, loading the broadcom-wl-dkms driver did not work. I am new to this, so maybe the solution is quite simple (hopefully).
What I did so far:
I installed various drivers with yaourt and pacman, ending up with the broadcom-wl-dkms driver.
When I list the available internet devices with ip link I still only get two results, the lo and the chipset of my motherboard (where the LAN´s plugged in and works just fine).
With lsmod I thought I would get a list of all active drivers, but the broadcom-wl-dkms is not shown there.
What do I have to do in order to get the drivers all set up and running?
Ah, running wifi-menu gives me returns in bright red INVALID INTERFACE SPECIFICATIONS but I'm guessing that's just because it can't see any wireless networking devices.
I read quite a lot of posts but nothing really helped so far (And yes, I checked the Arch Wiki beforehand).
Does it have something to do with the driver being restrictively licensed drivers?
Output of lspci -knn | grep net -A2 :
00:1f.6 Ethernet controller [0200]: Intel Corporation Ethernet
Connection (2) I219-V [8086:15b8] (rev 31) Subsystem: Micro-Star
International Co., Ltd. [MSI] Ethernet Connection (2) I219-V
[1462:7a12] Kernel driver in use: e1000e Kernel modules: e1000e
Fascinating: output of lspci -knn|grep Net -A2:
07:00.0 Network controller: Broadcom Limited BCM4360 802.11ac Wireless
Network Adapter (rev 03)
Running lsmod | grep wl produces no result. How do I load the driver?
arch-linux wifi drivers configuration broadcom
arch-linux wifi drivers configuration broadcom
edited Aug 17 '18 at 12:08
Jeff Schaller♦
46k1165150
46k1165150
asked Apr 26 '18 at 7:23
T.m ChronosT.m Chronos
467
467
add a comment |
add a comment |
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
I finally got it working.
My working environment: 4.16.5-1-ARCH [rname -r]
My Desktop: GNOME
My Network-Env.: network-manager-applet 1.8.11dev+12+ga37483c1-1
My Wlan-Card: Broadcom Limited BCM4360 802.11ac Wireless Network Adapter [14e4:43a0] [lspci -vnn -d 14e4:]
What I did:
I looked at https://wireless.wiki.kernel.org/en/users/Drivers/b43#Supported_devices[/url:2j8cyqph] to find compatible drivers, which in my case turned out to be none but the wl package (install with pacman -S broadcom-wl). Make sure everything is up-to-date with sudo pacman -Sy, after that make sure your filesystem is all good with sudo pacman filesystem linux (which it wasn't in my case ;)). Check if your systems version uname -r && pacman -Q linux. Reboot. This already solved it, as the new kernel update brought some changes to
b43-firmware broadcom-wl nvidia
rmmod b43 b43legacy bcm43xx bcma brcm80211 brcmfmac brcmsmac ssb wl 117
modprobe wl
did change nothing for me, but you can try /(as mentioned in the wiki ->https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Broadcom_wireless)
You might have to restart Network Manager: systemctl restart NetworkManager.service
What might have helped was installing linux headers: sudo pacman -S linux-headers
I don't know for sure what changed it to working, I guess it was the kernel update.
I have Broadcom BCM43142 chip and I can verify that the above approach works. @T.m Chronos, many thanks!
– freerunner
Mar 29 at 21:09
add a comment |
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1 Answer
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oldest
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1 Answer
1
active
oldest
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active
oldest
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active
oldest
votes
I finally got it working.
My working environment: 4.16.5-1-ARCH [rname -r]
My Desktop: GNOME
My Network-Env.: network-manager-applet 1.8.11dev+12+ga37483c1-1
My Wlan-Card: Broadcom Limited BCM4360 802.11ac Wireless Network Adapter [14e4:43a0] [lspci -vnn -d 14e4:]
What I did:
I looked at https://wireless.wiki.kernel.org/en/users/Drivers/b43#Supported_devices[/url:2j8cyqph] to find compatible drivers, which in my case turned out to be none but the wl package (install with pacman -S broadcom-wl). Make sure everything is up-to-date with sudo pacman -Sy, after that make sure your filesystem is all good with sudo pacman filesystem linux (which it wasn't in my case ;)). Check if your systems version uname -r && pacman -Q linux. Reboot. This already solved it, as the new kernel update brought some changes to
b43-firmware broadcom-wl nvidia
rmmod b43 b43legacy bcm43xx bcma brcm80211 brcmfmac brcmsmac ssb wl 117
modprobe wl
did change nothing for me, but you can try /(as mentioned in the wiki ->https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Broadcom_wireless)
You might have to restart Network Manager: systemctl restart NetworkManager.service
What might have helped was installing linux headers: sudo pacman -S linux-headers
I don't know for sure what changed it to working, I guess it was the kernel update.
I have Broadcom BCM43142 chip and I can verify that the above approach works. @T.m Chronos, many thanks!
– freerunner
Mar 29 at 21:09
add a comment |
I finally got it working.
My working environment: 4.16.5-1-ARCH [rname -r]
My Desktop: GNOME
My Network-Env.: network-manager-applet 1.8.11dev+12+ga37483c1-1
My Wlan-Card: Broadcom Limited BCM4360 802.11ac Wireless Network Adapter [14e4:43a0] [lspci -vnn -d 14e4:]
What I did:
I looked at https://wireless.wiki.kernel.org/en/users/Drivers/b43#Supported_devices[/url:2j8cyqph] to find compatible drivers, which in my case turned out to be none but the wl package (install with pacman -S broadcom-wl). Make sure everything is up-to-date with sudo pacman -Sy, after that make sure your filesystem is all good with sudo pacman filesystem linux (which it wasn't in my case ;)). Check if your systems version uname -r && pacman -Q linux. Reboot. This already solved it, as the new kernel update brought some changes to
b43-firmware broadcom-wl nvidia
rmmod b43 b43legacy bcm43xx bcma brcm80211 brcmfmac brcmsmac ssb wl 117
modprobe wl
did change nothing for me, but you can try /(as mentioned in the wiki ->https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Broadcom_wireless)
You might have to restart Network Manager: systemctl restart NetworkManager.service
What might have helped was installing linux headers: sudo pacman -S linux-headers
I don't know for sure what changed it to working, I guess it was the kernel update.
I have Broadcom BCM43142 chip and I can verify that the above approach works. @T.m Chronos, many thanks!
– freerunner
Mar 29 at 21:09
add a comment |
I finally got it working.
My working environment: 4.16.5-1-ARCH [rname -r]
My Desktop: GNOME
My Network-Env.: network-manager-applet 1.8.11dev+12+ga37483c1-1
My Wlan-Card: Broadcom Limited BCM4360 802.11ac Wireless Network Adapter [14e4:43a0] [lspci -vnn -d 14e4:]
What I did:
I looked at https://wireless.wiki.kernel.org/en/users/Drivers/b43#Supported_devices[/url:2j8cyqph] to find compatible drivers, which in my case turned out to be none but the wl package (install with pacman -S broadcom-wl). Make sure everything is up-to-date with sudo pacman -Sy, after that make sure your filesystem is all good with sudo pacman filesystem linux (which it wasn't in my case ;)). Check if your systems version uname -r && pacman -Q linux. Reboot. This already solved it, as the new kernel update brought some changes to
b43-firmware broadcom-wl nvidia
rmmod b43 b43legacy bcm43xx bcma brcm80211 brcmfmac brcmsmac ssb wl 117
modprobe wl
did change nothing for me, but you can try /(as mentioned in the wiki ->https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Broadcom_wireless)
You might have to restart Network Manager: systemctl restart NetworkManager.service
What might have helped was installing linux headers: sudo pacman -S linux-headers
I don't know for sure what changed it to working, I guess it was the kernel update.
I finally got it working.
My working environment: 4.16.5-1-ARCH [rname -r]
My Desktop: GNOME
My Network-Env.: network-manager-applet 1.8.11dev+12+ga37483c1-1
My Wlan-Card: Broadcom Limited BCM4360 802.11ac Wireless Network Adapter [14e4:43a0] [lspci -vnn -d 14e4:]
What I did:
I looked at https://wireless.wiki.kernel.org/en/users/Drivers/b43#Supported_devices[/url:2j8cyqph] to find compatible drivers, which in my case turned out to be none but the wl package (install with pacman -S broadcom-wl). Make sure everything is up-to-date with sudo pacman -Sy, after that make sure your filesystem is all good with sudo pacman filesystem linux (which it wasn't in my case ;)). Check if your systems version uname -r && pacman -Q linux. Reboot. This already solved it, as the new kernel update brought some changes to
b43-firmware broadcom-wl nvidia
rmmod b43 b43legacy bcm43xx bcma brcm80211 brcmfmac brcmsmac ssb wl 117
modprobe wl
did change nothing for me, but you can try /(as mentioned in the wiki ->https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Broadcom_wireless)
You might have to restart Network Manager: systemctl restart NetworkManager.service
What might have helped was installing linux headers: sudo pacman -S linux-headers
I don't know for sure what changed it to working, I guess it was the kernel update.
edited Apr 6 at 0:21
Rui F Ribeiro
43k1588147
43k1588147
answered May 2 '18 at 8:55
T.m ChronosT.m Chronos
467
467
I have Broadcom BCM43142 chip and I can verify that the above approach works. @T.m Chronos, many thanks!
– freerunner
Mar 29 at 21:09
add a comment |
I have Broadcom BCM43142 chip and I can verify that the above approach works. @T.m Chronos, many thanks!
– freerunner
Mar 29 at 21:09
I have Broadcom BCM43142 chip and I can verify that the above approach works. @T.m Chronos, many thanks!
– freerunner
Mar 29 at 21:09
I have Broadcom BCM43142 chip and I can verify that the above approach works. @T.m Chronos, many thanks!
– freerunner
Mar 29 at 21:09
add a comment |
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