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Wireless issues in Fedora 25


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I am having difficulty with my Fedora 25 installation. I have been using the default gnome for a while, but wanted to try a different desktop environment. I installed Enlightenment using dnf install enlightenment connman. This worked, and enlightenment worked but the networking didn't. I wasn't as enamored with enlightenment as I thought I would be so I booted back into gnome and deleted enlightenment but I also had networking issues in gnome. The little wifi icon now had a question mark. It says it's connected to my network when click on it, and I can also connect to 192.168.1.1 but I can't actually get to the Internet. The NetworkManager service is enabled and running rfkill shows nothing is blocked and nmcli shows me connected to my home network. But every time I open a browser i can't get to any websites and I can't ping any websites either. I have no idea why I can't get to the network even though it was working right before i installed Enlightenment. I have found almost no information on the Internet and have no idea what the actual problem is, since as far as all of the networking information shows I am connected to the my home network. I have tried rebooting, logging out and back in, powering down completely, etc. If I can't resolve this I think I'm just going to switch to the KDE variant of Fedora, although I would really rather not since I have a ton of config files and such installed and configured just the way I like.










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    I am having difficulty with my Fedora 25 installation. I have been using the default gnome for a while, but wanted to try a different desktop environment. I installed Enlightenment using dnf install enlightenment connman. This worked, and enlightenment worked but the networking didn't. I wasn't as enamored with enlightenment as I thought I would be so I booted back into gnome and deleted enlightenment but I also had networking issues in gnome. The little wifi icon now had a question mark. It says it's connected to my network when click on it, and I can also connect to 192.168.1.1 but I can't actually get to the Internet. The NetworkManager service is enabled and running rfkill shows nothing is blocked and nmcli shows me connected to my home network. But every time I open a browser i can't get to any websites and I can't ping any websites either. I have no idea why I can't get to the network even though it was working right before i installed Enlightenment. I have found almost no information on the Internet and have no idea what the actual problem is, since as far as all of the networking information shows I am connected to the my home network. I have tried rebooting, logging out and back in, powering down completely, etc. If I can't resolve this I think I'm just going to switch to the KDE variant of Fedora, although I would really rather not since I have a ton of config files and such installed and configured just the way I like.










    share|improve this question





























      0












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      0








      I am having difficulty with my Fedora 25 installation. I have been using the default gnome for a while, but wanted to try a different desktop environment. I installed Enlightenment using dnf install enlightenment connman. This worked, and enlightenment worked but the networking didn't. I wasn't as enamored with enlightenment as I thought I would be so I booted back into gnome and deleted enlightenment but I also had networking issues in gnome. The little wifi icon now had a question mark. It says it's connected to my network when click on it, and I can also connect to 192.168.1.1 but I can't actually get to the Internet. The NetworkManager service is enabled and running rfkill shows nothing is blocked and nmcli shows me connected to my home network. But every time I open a browser i can't get to any websites and I can't ping any websites either. I have no idea why I can't get to the network even though it was working right before i installed Enlightenment. I have found almost no information on the Internet and have no idea what the actual problem is, since as far as all of the networking information shows I am connected to the my home network. I have tried rebooting, logging out and back in, powering down completely, etc. If I can't resolve this I think I'm just going to switch to the KDE variant of Fedora, although I would really rather not since I have a ton of config files and such installed and configured just the way I like.










      share|improve this question
















      I am having difficulty with my Fedora 25 installation. I have been using the default gnome for a while, but wanted to try a different desktop environment. I installed Enlightenment using dnf install enlightenment connman. This worked, and enlightenment worked but the networking didn't. I wasn't as enamored with enlightenment as I thought I would be so I booted back into gnome and deleted enlightenment but I also had networking issues in gnome. The little wifi icon now had a question mark. It says it's connected to my network when click on it, and I can also connect to 192.168.1.1 but I can't actually get to the Internet. The NetworkManager service is enabled and running rfkill shows nothing is blocked and nmcli shows me connected to my home network. But every time I open a browser i can't get to any websites and I can't ping any websites either. I have no idea why I can't get to the network even though it was working right before i installed Enlightenment. I have found almost no information on the Internet and have no idea what the actual problem is, since as far as all of the networking information shows I am connected to the my home network. I have tried rebooting, logging out and back in, powering down completely, etc. If I can't resolve this I think I'm just going to switch to the KDE variant of Fedora, although I would really rather not since I have a ton of config files and such installed and configured just the way I like.







      networking fedora wifi gnome






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      edited Mar 1 '17 at 17:31









      Jeff Schaller

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      48.4k11 gold badges72 silver badges162 bronze badges










      asked Feb 1 '17 at 3:31









      briguyjmbriguyjm

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          2 Answers
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          1














          I had a similar problem, and with further investigation found that I could ping to IP addresses (ping XXX.XXX.XXX.XXX) both on my local LAN and on the internet (ping 8.8.8.8). Pinging to web addresses did not work, such as ping mail.yahoo.com, indicating a problem with domain name resolution. When the uninstall of connman takes place it leaves behind symbolic links for the /etc/resolv.conf file to /var/run/connman/resolv.conf. This link needs to be replaced with the link back to the NetworkManager config files, which are in /var/run/NetworkManager/resolv.conf. The command is;



          ln -sf /var/run/NetworkManager/resolv.conf /etc/resolv.conf



          Once the link back to the NetworkManager file is established connections using domain names can again be established.






          share|improve this answer

































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            Worked for me, thx !
            Worked for me, thx !
            Worked for me, thx !
            Worked for me, thx !





            share








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              1














              I had a similar problem, and with further investigation found that I could ping to IP addresses (ping XXX.XXX.XXX.XXX) both on my local LAN and on the internet (ping 8.8.8.8). Pinging to web addresses did not work, such as ping mail.yahoo.com, indicating a problem with domain name resolution. When the uninstall of connman takes place it leaves behind symbolic links for the /etc/resolv.conf file to /var/run/connman/resolv.conf. This link needs to be replaced with the link back to the NetworkManager config files, which are in /var/run/NetworkManager/resolv.conf. The command is;



              ln -sf /var/run/NetworkManager/resolv.conf /etc/resolv.conf



              Once the link back to the NetworkManager file is established connections using domain names can again be established.






              share|improve this answer






























                1














                I had a similar problem, and with further investigation found that I could ping to IP addresses (ping XXX.XXX.XXX.XXX) both on my local LAN and on the internet (ping 8.8.8.8). Pinging to web addresses did not work, such as ping mail.yahoo.com, indicating a problem with domain name resolution. When the uninstall of connman takes place it leaves behind symbolic links for the /etc/resolv.conf file to /var/run/connman/resolv.conf. This link needs to be replaced with the link back to the NetworkManager config files, which are in /var/run/NetworkManager/resolv.conf. The command is;



                ln -sf /var/run/NetworkManager/resolv.conf /etc/resolv.conf



                Once the link back to the NetworkManager file is established connections using domain names can again be established.






                share|improve this answer




























                  1












                  1








                  1







                  I had a similar problem, and with further investigation found that I could ping to IP addresses (ping XXX.XXX.XXX.XXX) both on my local LAN and on the internet (ping 8.8.8.8). Pinging to web addresses did not work, such as ping mail.yahoo.com, indicating a problem with domain name resolution. When the uninstall of connman takes place it leaves behind symbolic links for the /etc/resolv.conf file to /var/run/connman/resolv.conf. This link needs to be replaced with the link back to the NetworkManager config files, which are in /var/run/NetworkManager/resolv.conf. The command is;



                  ln -sf /var/run/NetworkManager/resolv.conf /etc/resolv.conf



                  Once the link back to the NetworkManager file is established connections using domain names can again be established.






                  share|improve this answer













                  I had a similar problem, and with further investigation found that I could ping to IP addresses (ping XXX.XXX.XXX.XXX) both on my local LAN and on the internet (ping 8.8.8.8). Pinging to web addresses did not work, such as ping mail.yahoo.com, indicating a problem with domain name resolution. When the uninstall of connman takes place it leaves behind symbolic links for the /etc/resolv.conf file to /var/run/connman/resolv.conf. This link needs to be replaced with the link back to the NetworkManager config files, which are in /var/run/NetworkManager/resolv.conf. The command is;



                  ln -sf /var/run/NetworkManager/resolv.conf /etc/resolv.conf



                  Once the link back to the NetworkManager file is established connections using domain names can again be established.







                  share|improve this answer












                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer










                  answered May 24 '17 at 18:52









                  EdandKathyEdandKathy

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                      Worked for me, thx !
                      Worked for me, thx !





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                        Worked for me, thx !
                        Worked for me, thx !
                        Worked for me, thx !
                        Worked for me, thx !





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                          Worked for me, thx !
                          Worked for me, thx !
                          Worked for me, thx !
                          Worked for me, thx !





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                          Worked for me, thx !
                          Worked for me, thx !
                          Worked for me, thx !
                          Worked for me, thx !






                          share








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                          answered 6 mins ago









                          ManuelManuel

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