Definition of Wireless Tools
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Wireless Tools
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NetworkManager
The main root daemon controls the network state and publishes that information over the system message bus, provided by dbus. With a list of current hardware, NetworkManager determines the "best" network device to use in response to network changes like insertion/removal of devices, new wireless networks, docking/undocking of a laptop, etc. NetworkManager also stores various properties on each network device, like link status, HAL UDI, IP address, and visible wireless networks which are available to user applications via dbus method calls.
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KWiFiManager
With the application KWiFiManager you can configure and monitor your wireless LAN PC-Cards under Linux/KDE. The application is designed for KDE version 3.x only.
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wpa_supplicant
wpa_supplicant is a WPA Supplicant for Linux, BSD and Windows with support for WPA and WPA2 (IEEE 802.11i / RSN). It is suitable for both desktop/laptop computers and embedded systems. Supplicant is the IEEE 802.1X/WPA component that is used in the client stations. It implements key negotiation with a WPA Authenticator and it controls the roaming and IEEE 802.11 authentication/association of the wlan driver. wpa_supplicant is designed to be a "daemon" program that runs in the background and acts as the backend component controlling the wireless connection. wpa_supplicant supports separate frontend programs and a text-based frontend (wpa_cli) and a GUI (wpa_gui) are included with wpa_supplicant.
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APRadar
AP Radar is a Linux/GTK+ based graphical netstumbler and wireless profile manager. This project makes use of the version 14 wireless extensions in linux 2.4.20 and 2.6 to provide access point scanning capabilities for most models of wireless cards. It is meant to replace the manual process of running iwconfig and dhclient. It makes reconfiguring for different APs quick and easy.
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