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![]() | 1 | initial version | posted 2015-02-14 18:08:58 +0200 |
As of the answer in this question: link, it seems that the only way to display current IP, subnet mask, gateway and dns addresses is to enable the Developer Mode and run two commands in the Terminal. Imo, this is not very user-friendly and convenient.
I think that current WLAN addresses should be shown somewhere in the WLAN submenu (maybe accessible as a pulley menu item?). The "page" with these addresses could be divided into two sections: - Basic (IPv4, IPv6, subnet, gateway, primary dns, secondary dns) - Advanced (other addresses we can from the current wlan config, like DHCP address or WINS address (if set))
Having easy access to this information helps in debugging connection problems. For example, once I had a problem with accessing any webpage whilst being connected to a WLAN. It looked like a dns problem, but I couldn't find the configuration obtained from DHCP to verify this.
![]() | 2 | No.2 Revision |
As of the answer in this question: link, it seems that the only way to display current IP, subnet mask, gateway and dns addresses is to enable the Developer Mode and run two commands in the Terminal. Imo, this is not very user-friendly and convenient.
I think that current WLAN addresses should be shown somewhere in the WLAN submenu (maybe accessible as a pulley menu item?). The "page" with these addresses could be divided into two sections:
- sections:
Having easy access to this information helps in debugging connection problems. For example, once I had a problem with accessing any webpage whilst being connected to a WLAN. It looked like a dns problem, but I couldn't find the configuration obtained from DHCP to verify this.