My wireless connection has lost stability after I upgraded from Ubuntu 11.10 to Ubuntu 12.04. It used to remain connected for as long as there was signal, but now I get periodic disconnects which appear very random and without a defined cause.
I have attached an image (below) of a signal graph (graphed by iwScanner) which shows how signal is relatively stable but it is somehow lost momentarily and quickly regained.
You can see how there are short interruptions in the signal that cut the connection, which I assure you, are not caused by my router.
My network card is a Broadcom Corporation BCM4312 802.11b/g LP-PHY (rev 01)
, in case it is relevant.
ADDENDUM I
Test information
I had thought that the cause of this problem was either my network management application or the wireless card driver, so I decided to find out and tried the following configurations:
wicd
with my samewl
driver. This does not fix the problem, the behavior stays the same.wicd
with theb43
driver. With this configuration, I can't even connect to internet - wicd reads no networks in range.nm-applet
withb43
driver. This does not fix the problem either.
(My original configuration was nm-applet
with the wl
driver)
Also, I think the wl
driver is also called sta.
Because of the outcome of this tests, I would conclude that the problem is not in the network management application nor in the driver. Where else could it be?
Disable IPv6
Possible answer
By the question's author, credit for user Captine.
I noticed this question on the Related sidebar, and one of its answers seems to solve my problem: Disabling IPv6 connectivity.
I have set the Network Manager applet to ignore by all means IPv6, but perhaps what was causing the problem was that my connection was changed by the upgrade so that it required IPv6 addressing before it was considered completed.
Of course this does not seem like a perfect solution (or even permanent), now that even though in my country IPv6 is still not a standard, it will someday be and I would like to have a continuous connection by then. For those whose ISPs provide only IPv6 connectivity, this is not a solution.
I have had a continuous connection for a long time now:
If I have no interruptions for the whole day, I will make this an answer and consider this question closed. Of course, this question might be a duplicate of the one I linked - the opinion of a moderator is pending.
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