Salve a tutti, sono nuovo di Endeavour e ho installato il S.O. da una settimana attratto dalla possibilità di imparare a usare una distro basata su Arch. Purtroppo ho riscontrato diversi problemi, alcuni dei quali sono riuscito a risolvere da solo con le mie conoscenze del mondo linux.
Ma questa della connessione internet non sono riuscito. In pratica la connessione è instabile, funziona bene in alcuni momenti ma in altri si pianta completamente. Ho già visto che non è un problema dei driver. Da una ricerca su google, avevo visto questo:
/etc/NetworkManager/conf.d/20-connectivity.conf
INSERENDO LE SEGUENTI RIGHE:
[connectivity]
.set.enabled=false
Ho eseguito tale modifica ma il problema persiste. Qualcuno piò aiutarmi? altrimenti sarò costretto a disinstallare Endeavour perchè davvero non si può lavorare in queste condizioni.
Grazie.
Ciao ddnn, grazie mille per la risposta.
Ho eseguito il downgrade di idw e ell, idw alla versione 1.0-3 e ell alla versione 0.66-1. Ora sto testando la connessione, sembra vada meglio ma ho bisogno di un po’ di tempo per capire se il problema sia stato risolto o meno. Ti terro’ aggiornato.
Ok, ho effettuato il downgrade dei pacchetti iwd e ell ma niente da fare: il problema persiste. Ho provato anche ad eliminare questi pacchetti che sono dipendenze facoltative ma niente da fare.
Allego la mia configurazione:
03:00.0 Network controller: Realtek Semiconductor Co., Ltd. RTL8852BE PCIe 802.11ax Wireless Network Controller
Subsystem: Realtek Semiconductor Co., Ltd. Device b886
Flags: bus master, fast devsel, latency 0, IRQ 96, IOMMU group 12
I/O ports at 2000 [size=256]
Memory at c0700000 (64-bit, non-prefetchable) [size=1M]
Capabilities:
Kernel driver in use: rtw89_8852be
Kernel modules: rtw89_8852be
NetworkManager.service - Network Manager
Loaded: loaded (/usr/lib/systemd/system/NetworkManager.service; enabled; preset: disa>
Active: active (running) since Sat 2024-09-07 11:29:11 CEST; 4min 21s ago
Invocation: 217a04718cbf402ca128de3feb2f2e0c
Docs: man:NetworkManager(8)
Main PID: 733 (NetworkManager)
Tasks: 4 (limit: 18374)
Memory: 15.9M (peak: 16.8M)
CPU: 1.048s
CGroup: /system.slice/NetworkManager.service
└─733 /usr/bin/NetworkManager --no-daemon
set 07 11:29:23 Endeavour NetworkManager[733]: [1725701363.3638] dhcp4 (wlp3s0): s>
set 07 11:29:23 Endeavour NetworkManager[733]: [1725701363.5102] dhcp4 (wlp3s0): s>
set 07 11:29:23 Endeavour NetworkManager[733]: [1725701363.5107] policy: set 'Mi 1>
set 07 11:29:23 Endeavour NetworkManager[733]: [1725701363.5140] device (wlp3s0): >
set 07 11:29:23 Endeavour NetworkManager[733]: [1725701363.5409] device (wlp3s0): >
set 07 11:29:23 Endeavour NetworkManager[733]: [1725701363.5411] device (wlp3s0): >
set 07 11:29:23 Endeavour NetworkManager[733]: [1725701363.5413] manager: NetworkM>
set 07 11:29:23 Endeavour NetworkManager[733]: [1725701363.5416] device (wlp3s0): >
set 07 11:29:23 Endeavour NetworkManager[733]: [1725701363.5419] manager: NetworkM>
set 07 11:29:23 Endeavour NetworkManager[733]: [1725701363.5421] manager: startup >
Ora proverò ad effettuare il downgrade di NetworkManager e delle sue dipendenze necessarie.
Grazie ma ho già controllato, non è un problema di configurazione driver. Il problema è che la connessione va a intermittenza e questo non posso permettermelo.
If it’s not a problem related to iwd, ell, or network manager, it’s likely kernel-related.
There is a recent issue with possibly all the newest kernels versions that affects some users. You may want to try downgrading that instead, specifically to the version you had before updating.
sudo downgrade linux linux-headers
OR
sudo downgrade linux-lts linux-lts-headers
Then select the version that corresponds with August 29.
Ok, done but nothing to do. The problem persists. Unfortunately I will have to close my experience with Endeavour OS here. Unfortunately, my experience was too bad, taking hours away from my work to try to solve a really stupid problem. Thank you for your help.
So, I want to clarify one thing: I’m a beginner in the use of Arch and its derivatives, such as Eos, but I’m not a beginner in the Linux world at all. I know Debiab and its derivatives and all the differences of the Arch world perfectly. That’s why I chose to install Eos on my machine, to learn new concepts and I can say that I learned a lot. I configured all aspects of EOS by myself, from Grub through Samba and for the management of software packages managed with pacman and yay. I can say that I now know enough about the Arch world and if I leave Eos it is certainly not my fault but of a serious bug that afflicts the distro and that not even you, despite having helped me, have not been able to solve. I won’t land on lmde (which I already know like the back of my hand) but I’ll try another distro based on Arch and I’ve already chosen it, it’s Garuda Linux. Good continuation.
Well, it’s good that you are trying new things. Garuda is usually better for gamers and those with newer devices, but if it works, it works. That’s all that actually matters.
PS: I actually had trouble with one particular app on EndeavourOS, and because I need it for my job (I work from home), I went with the Arch distro that works with that app out of the box. In this case, Archcraft.
I remained part of the community because it’s simply the best I’ve experienced.