My dmesg, some extra at the head and tail:
[ 146.345953] Bluetooth: L2CAP socket layer initialized
[ 146.352066] Bluetooth: SCO socket layer initialized
[ 146.373036] Bluetooth: BNEP (Ethernet Emulation) ver 1.3
[ 146.373042] Bluetooth: BNEP filters: protocol multicast
[ 148.066397] EXT4-fs (sda1): re-mounted. Opts: errors=remount-ro,commit=0
[ 148.319003] init: plymouth-stop pre-start process (1501) terminated with status 1
[ 226.325840] PPP BSD Compression module registered
[ 226.364372] PPP Deflate Compression module registered
[ 314.192053] usb 1-5: new high speed USB device number 4 using ehci_hcd
[ 319.517640] cfg80211: Calling CRDA to update world regulatory domain
[ 319.541413] cfg80211: World regulatory domain updated:
The lines starting with "PPP" means that my device E367 can connect to the operator's network via USB-2.0 in Thinkpad X60. The device get an ip, so after running ifconfig
we get:
ppp0 Link encap:Point-to-Point Protocol
inet addr:10.20.38.151 P-t-P:10.64.64.64 Mask:255.255.255.255
UP POINTOPOINT RUNNING NOARP MULTICAST MTU:1500 Metric:1
RX packets:11 errors:0 dropped:0 overruns:0 frame:0
TX packets:12 errors:0 dropped:0 overruns:0 carrier:0
collisions:0 txqueuelen:3
RX bytes:158 (158.0 B) TX bytes:269 (269.0 B)
The packet loss is however 100% when I try to ping, for instance ping google.com
.
I am not sure where the problem is. I know that the thing is
- NOT reboot problem, since I have rebooted my system now 18 times with different configs.
- should NOT be in the hardware, since I can replicate it with two Thinkpad Lenovo X60s with clean Ubuntu 11.10s; however worked for some reason in 11.10 beta.
- NOT a softblock or hardblock problem, since I can see it with
rfkill list
. - NOT a blacklist problem, since I have nothing in my personal blacklists and the default blacklists are not changed.
- My Dongle E367 works, since I verified it in the operator's shop with XP and Windows 7
Pieces of information about the connection that does not get internet although it should:
How can you use Huawei E367 with your Mobile Broadband Successfully?