Is there a manual “scan for Wifi networks now” in Network-Manager?
up vote
3
down vote
favorite
Background
Most mobile OSes have a button to re-check for new Wifi networks. In Ubuntu I know I can
type
iwlist wlan0 scan
and see the results printeddisable and re-enable Wifi in the Network indicator
type
sudo service network-manager restart
and restart the whole thing.wait for it to automatically re-scan for new networks
Q: Is there a way to nudge Network-Manager to re-scan for networks, besides nuking it as above?
wireless network-manager
add a comment |
up vote
3
down vote
favorite
Background
Most mobile OSes have a button to re-check for new Wifi networks. In Ubuntu I know I can
type
iwlist wlan0 scan
and see the results printeddisable and re-enable Wifi in the Network indicator
type
sudo service network-manager restart
and restart the whole thing.wait for it to automatically re-scan for new networks
Q: Is there a way to nudge Network-Manager to re-scan for networks, besides nuking it as above?
wireless network-manager
add a comment |
up vote
3
down vote
favorite
up vote
3
down vote
favorite
Background
Most mobile OSes have a button to re-check for new Wifi networks. In Ubuntu I know I can
type
iwlist wlan0 scan
and see the results printeddisable and re-enable Wifi in the Network indicator
type
sudo service network-manager restart
and restart the whole thing.wait for it to automatically re-scan for new networks
Q: Is there a way to nudge Network-Manager to re-scan for networks, besides nuking it as above?
wireless network-manager
Background
Most mobile OSes have a button to re-check for new Wifi networks. In Ubuntu I know I can
type
iwlist wlan0 scan
and see the results printeddisable and re-enable Wifi in the Network indicator
type
sudo service network-manager restart
and restart the whole thing.wait for it to automatically re-scan for new networks
Q: Is there a way to nudge Network-Manager to re-scan for networks, besides nuking it as above?
wireless network-manager
wireless network-manager
edited Jan 29 '16 at 15:21
asked Jan 29 '16 at 13:53
philsf
638419
638419
add a comment |
add a comment |
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
up vote
3
down vote
Networks are re-checked automatically. You do not need to press anything. You can wait for some seconds to see a new network.
To re-check immidiately you do not need to restart Network Manager. You can click "Disable Wi-Fi" and "Enable Wi-Fi", if you are so impatient.
1
I know the checks are automatic. I'll edit the question to reflect this, thanks for the reminder.
– philsf
Jan 29 '16 at 15:19
1
"You can wait for some seconds to see a new network.". You mean wait for minutes (or at least, it feels like minutes). The wait is too long; that is the problem. What should be implemented in all Linux distribution is that when a user clicks on the Wi-Fi applet, automatically a new scan should be performed.
– Hans Deragon
Dec 29 '17 at 17:34
add a comment |
up vote
1
down vote
You can try out WiFi Radar if you are looking for a more windows like wifi manager that has a scan button. You can download it from the software center or click here
The version coming with Ubuntu 16.04.03 LTS Xenial Xerus, 2.0.s08+dfsg-1.1ubuntu1, does not have a scan button. Not sure if it continuously scans or not.
– Hans Deragon
Dec 29 '17 at 17:39
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
accepted
Ever since Ubuntu switched from Unity to GNOME, we can enhance the GUI shell with GNOME extensions.
Without the overhead of installing a new app and using only Network-Manager, the simplest solution is to install the Refresh Wifi Connections extension.
add a comment |
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
up vote
3
down vote
Networks are re-checked automatically. You do not need to press anything. You can wait for some seconds to see a new network.
To re-check immidiately you do not need to restart Network Manager. You can click "Disable Wi-Fi" and "Enable Wi-Fi", if you are so impatient.
1
I know the checks are automatic. I'll edit the question to reflect this, thanks for the reminder.
– philsf
Jan 29 '16 at 15:19
1
"You can wait for some seconds to see a new network.". You mean wait for minutes (or at least, it feels like minutes). The wait is too long; that is the problem. What should be implemented in all Linux distribution is that when a user clicks on the Wi-Fi applet, automatically a new scan should be performed.
– Hans Deragon
Dec 29 '17 at 17:34
add a comment |
up vote
3
down vote
Networks are re-checked automatically. You do not need to press anything. You can wait for some seconds to see a new network.
To re-check immidiately you do not need to restart Network Manager. You can click "Disable Wi-Fi" and "Enable Wi-Fi", if you are so impatient.
1
I know the checks are automatic. I'll edit the question to reflect this, thanks for the reminder.
– philsf
Jan 29 '16 at 15:19
1
"You can wait for some seconds to see a new network.". You mean wait for minutes (or at least, it feels like minutes). The wait is too long; that is the problem. What should be implemented in all Linux distribution is that when a user clicks on the Wi-Fi applet, automatically a new scan should be performed.
– Hans Deragon
Dec 29 '17 at 17:34
add a comment |
up vote
3
down vote
up vote
3
down vote
Networks are re-checked automatically. You do not need to press anything. You can wait for some seconds to see a new network.
To re-check immidiately you do not need to restart Network Manager. You can click "Disable Wi-Fi" and "Enable Wi-Fi", if you are so impatient.
Networks are re-checked automatically. You do not need to press anything. You can wait for some seconds to see a new network.
To re-check immidiately you do not need to restart Network Manager. You can click "Disable Wi-Fi" and "Enable Wi-Fi", if you are so impatient.
edited Jan 29 '16 at 14:46
answered Jan 29 '16 at 14:28
Pilot6
51.3k15107195
51.3k15107195
1
I know the checks are automatic. I'll edit the question to reflect this, thanks for the reminder.
– philsf
Jan 29 '16 at 15:19
1
"You can wait for some seconds to see a new network.". You mean wait for minutes (or at least, it feels like minutes). The wait is too long; that is the problem. What should be implemented in all Linux distribution is that when a user clicks on the Wi-Fi applet, automatically a new scan should be performed.
– Hans Deragon
Dec 29 '17 at 17:34
add a comment |
1
I know the checks are automatic. I'll edit the question to reflect this, thanks for the reminder.
– philsf
Jan 29 '16 at 15:19
1
"You can wait for some seconds to see a new network.". You mean wait for minutes (or at least, it feels like minutes). The wait is too long; that is the problem. What should be implemented in all Linux distribution is that when a user clicks on the Wi-Fi applet, automatically a new scan should be performed.
– Hans Deragon
Dec 29 '17 at 17:34
1
1
I know the checks are automatic. I'll edit the question to reflect this, thanks for the reminder.
– philsf
Jan 29 '16 at 15:19
I know the checks are automatic. I'll edit the question to reflect this, thanks for the reminder.
– philsf
Jan 29 '16 at 15:19
1
1
"You can wait for some seconds to see a new network.". You mean wait for minutes (or at least, it feels like minutes). The wait is too long; that is the problem. What should be implemented in all Linux distribution is that when a user clicks on the Wi-Fi applet, automatically a new scan should be performed.
– Hans Deragon
Dec 29 '17 at 17:34
"You can wait for some seconds to see a new network.". You mean wait for minutes (or at least, it feels like minutes). The wait is too long; that is the problem. What should be implemented in all Linux distribution is that when a user clicks on the Wi-Fi applet, automatically a new scan should be performed.
– Hans Deragon
Dec 29 '17 at 17:34
add a comment |
up vote
1
down vote
You can try out WiFi Radar if you are looking for a more windows like wifi manager that has a scan button. You can download it from the software center or click here
The version coming with Ubuntu 16.04.03 LTS Xenial Xerus, 2.0.s08+dfsg-1.1ubuntu1, does not have a scan button. Not sure if it continuously scans or not.
– Hans Deragon
Dec 29 '17 at 17:39
add a comment |
up vote
1
down vote
You can try out WiFi Radar if you are looking for a more windows like wifi manager that has a scan button. You can download it from the software center or click here
The version coming with Ubuntu 16.04.03 LTS Xenial Xerus, 2.0.s08+dfsg-1.1ubuntu1, does not have a scan button. Not sure if it continuously scans or not.
– Hans Deragon
Dec 29 '17 at 17:39
add a comment |
up vote
1
down vote
up vote
1
down vote
You can try out WiFi Radar if you are looking for a more windows like wifi manager that has a scan button. You can download it from the software center or click here
You can try out WiFi Radar if you are looking for a more windows like wifi manager that has a scan button. You can download it from the software center or click here
edited Jan 29 '16 at 14:46
answered Jan 29 '16 at 14:32
DnrDevil
1,3191917
1,3191917
The version coming with Ubuntu 16.04.03 LTS Xenial Xerus, 2.0.s08+dfsg-1.1ubuntu1, does not have a scan button. Not sure if it continuously scans or not.
– Hans Deragon
Dec 29 '17 at 17:39
add a comment |
The version coming with Ubuntu 16.04.03 LTS Xenial Xerus, 2.0.s08+dfsg-1.1ubuntu1, does not have a scan button. Not sure if it continuously scans or not.
– Hans Deragon
Dec 29 '17 at 17:39
The version coming with Ubuntu 16.04.03 LTS Xenial Xerus, 2.0.s08+dfsg-1.1ubuntu1, does not have a scan button. Not sure if it continuously scans or not.
– Hans Deragon
Dec 29 '17 at 17:39
The version coming with Ubuntu 16.04.03 LTS Xenial Xerus, 2.0.s08+dfsg-1.1ubuntu1, does not have a scan button. Not sure if it continuously scans or not.
– Hans Deragon
Dec 29 '17 at 17:39
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
accepted
Ever since Ubuntu switched from Unity to GNOME, we can enhance the GUI shell with GNOME extensions.
Without the overhead of installing a new app and using only Network-Manager, the simplest solution is to install the Refresh Wifi Connections extension.
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
accepted
Ever since Ubuntu switched from Unity to GNOME, we can enhance the GUI shell with GNOME extensions.
Without the overhead of installing a new app and using only Network-Manager, the simplest solution is to install the Refresh Wifi Connections extension.
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
accepted
up vote
0
down vote
accepted
Ever since Ubuntu switched from Unity to GNOME, we can enhance the GUI shell with GNOME extensions.
Without the overhead of installing a new app and using only Network-Manager, the simplest solution is to install the Refresh Wifi Connections extension.
Ever since Ubuntu switched from Unity to GNOME, we can enhance the GUI shell with GNOME extensions.
Without the overhead of installing a new app and using only Network-Manager, the simplest solution is to install the Refresh Wifi Connections extension.
answered Nov 28 at 23:28
philsf
638419
638419
add a comment |
add a comment |
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