HELP! Can't log in to both machinesWIFI passwords!?
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@fusedeep said in HELP! Can't log in to both machinesWIFI passwords!?:
I have added;
M589 S"DuetSSID" P"password" I192.168.0.1
To my point 6 (with my password) and it won't accept the password.Please post the text files you moved to your Duets as "runonce.g"
fundamental password deep in duet
There is none.
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M552 S0 ; sets WiFi to idle
G4 S5 ; wait 5 seconds for WiFi to turn off
M589 S"DuetSSID" P"Point6" I192.168.0.1
G4 S5 ; wait again
M552 S2 ; enable access pointI dropped this into macros folder as a g file extension
It does not work.
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@fusedeep said in HELP! Can't log in to both machinesWIFI passwords!?:
I dropped this into macros folder as a g file extension
put it into your /sys/ folder and try again.
Edit: To verify that the macro "runounce.g" was executed, take a second look at the /sys/ directory: the file must have vanished.
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All fixed now! The WiFi passwords had been lost due to a laptop borking and being rebuilt, so the Duets needed resetting with M589 (there's no way to recover the WiFi password). However, one undocumented 'feature' - WiFi passwords need to be at least 8 characters long. So the runonce.g wasn't working. Once @FuseDeep connected via YAT (which wasn't working on the original laptop, had to use another laptop), he could see the error message, and set a correct SSID and password.
I'll update the M589 documentation to reflect this.
Ian
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Yes, exactly as Ian said.
Thank you so much everyone above for your constructive suggestions and comments.
I have now stopped sobbing into my keyboard!
And written the password clearly on each machine.
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PS.
In modern windows you have to enable view file extension in folder settings too!
In the old days you could simply edit, but they are trying to tidy up, apparently...
Really, that’s it. Microsoft may think it makes for less confusion, but the reverse is true.
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It’s pretty clear by now that Microsoft is unlikely to see the light and display file extensions by default in any version of Windows. That doesn’t matter because you can take charge of the situation yourself and turn extension display on:
Open any folder window.
Press Alt+T+O (that’s the letter O, not a zero) to open the Folder Options dialog box.
Click the View tab.
Remove the tick (checkmark) beside ‘Hide extensions for known file types’ and click OK.//
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Oh, and the first USB cable he used seemed not to carry data! I 'encouraged' him to try another cable, which fortunately worked.
Edit: If you are asked for a 'network security key', this is the password that protects your WiFi network. If you have a Wi-Fi router (or Duet in Access Point mode) in your home, you'll need a code to connect your device to it. That WiFi password is your network security key.
Ian
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@droftarts said in HELP! Can't log in to both machinesWIFI passwords!?:
If you are asked for a 'network security key', this is the password that protects your WiFi network. If you have a Wi-Fi router in your home, you'll need a code to connect your device to it. That WiFi password is your network security key.
That's what I thought. But I got the impression @FuseDeep has no router installed.
BTW: great job! There should be a way to vote tarts
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@infiniteloop In this case, the Duet is the 'router'. It's the message you get in Windows if the Access Point/Router rejects the password.
Ian
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