Your "company" like "a bunch of idiots I pay money so they can feed their children" or just your ISP?
In the former case, that's not a problem… obviously
In the latter case, yor router's IP is http://192.168.1.1 - consumer routers typically provide a web frontend and the default login data is printed on the bottom of the box or you got a booklet/card/whatever with it.
Okay, i was able to enter that web and change the lease, it was, like you said, 3600 seconds. I put it to do that after 24 hs, so let's hope that fixes it. I have no idea what's the lease thing, but i'll take your word for it. Thank you so much!
]]>In the former case, that's not a problem… obviously
In the latter case, yor router's IP is http://192.168.1.1 - consumer routers typically provide a web frontend and the default login data is printed on the bottom of the box or you got a booklet/card/whatever with it.
]]>The carrier unmotivatedly drops out after ~45 minutes each and you obtain 60 minute leases.
Do you control the router?
Can you give the client an unlimited (or much longer, eg. 24h) lease?
I'm not sure how to do that exactly, i have an internet modem that my company installed in my house and that's it. I never had to do configurations or something. I'm afraid i might have to call them to do something like that. Otherwise, i have no idea how to configure it on my own.
]]>Is that supposed to cover a connection loss?
You're getting and losing the carrier at 12:43:50 and re-gain it at 12:44:03 and successfully solicit a lease at 12:44:10 (but the log is only 2 minutes total)
Well, i did that after turning on the PC. I'll wait for a connection loss and do it again, sorry!
Edit: Okay, now i did it after a connection loss. http://ix.io/2Cjo
I can see that it says "carrier lost" and searches for a connection again.
Let's see what's actually going on and please post a complete system journal
sudo journalctl -b | curl -F 'f:1=<-' ix.io
Here it is. I don't understand any of it lol
]]>sudo journalctl -b | curl -F 'f:1=<-' ix.io
Thanks for the help!
You're welcome, but that's not what's going help you! Arch is a kinda self help program. You need to dive in full, not only get your feet wet. The point is we may pull any bit of info out of you and provide a working setup without you understanding wat the fuck it is you did to make it work. So go and grasp basic networking and if than after you did set it up something doesn't work you also know what info to provide us to understand what's going wrong. Hope it makes sense and you don't feel attacked cause I didn't mean to do that
]]>Well, then the problem may not be with your computer at all, it may also be a faulty cable or problem with the router/modem.
Are you sure anything else like DNS or hosts file etc. is setup the way it should? If you're not sure walk through all steps again. you may even disable both dhcpcd & NetworkManager and try systemd-networkd, but first go trough all settings needed to get a connection in the first place.
Honestly, i have no idea how to do all that
My internet generally works well, i was using Debian before and i had no problems, and now, i dual boot with windows, and i have no problems there either.
I'll try to check all that you said, although i'm afraid of losing my connection completely, i never touched any of those configs.
Thanks for the help!
You need to stop and disable only one of both services, if you did that it can't magically come to live again unless you enable it first..
Yeah i know. I tried doing that with both of them, enabling one and disabling the other. Then i tried the same, but biceversa. But my internet keeps dropping, even using only one of them.
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