Ubuntu 18.10 + Wireless router (TP-Link) instability issue












0















I have just installed Ubuntu 18.10. Great experience so far except for the following issue:



Whenever I try to access some websites like Netflix or Mathworks, the connection to the wireless router is lost and I have to reinitialize both for them to work. It seems that when the data-flow is high, the connection is lost, but I am not sure. The wireless router is a TP-Link model TL-WR841N(TPD) Ver: 10.0. I am using Ubuntu 18.10 on a Samsung laptop model NP910S3K. Both the laptop and the router are using the default configurations, I only changed the router passwords.



The same machine using Windows 10 and another machine (a macbook-pro late 2013) running MAC-OS High Sierra don't have this issue. They work well with the OS they came with. But I want to use linux, not windows or macOS.



I am not an expert user, I just like the idea of moving definitively to Linux. At the university, the machines work as a charm. I am having this problems just at home.



Kind regards,



Lucas



Edit:



lucas@lucas-pc:~$ lspci -nnk | grep 0280 -A3
01:00.0 Network controller [0280]: Qualcomm Atheros QCA6174 802.11ac
Wireless Network Adapter [168c:003e] (rev 20)
Subsystem: Samsung Electronics Co Ltd QCA6174 802.11ac Wireless Network Adapter [144d:4125]
Kernel driver in use: ath10k_pci
Kernel modules: ath10k_pci










share|improve this question




















  • 1





    Let's start by identifying the wireless device in the laptop. Please edit your question to add the result of the terminal command: lspci -nnk | grep 0280 -A3 Welcome to Ask Ubuntu.

    – chili555
    Dec 28 '18 at 22:59











  • chill55, thanks for the fast response. I included it in the description

    – Lucas Silveira
    Dec 29 '18 at 19:30













  • Please, someone help me. This problem is driving me crazy, having to reboot the router around 50 times a day is a deal-breaker.

    – Lucas Silveira
    Jan 1 at 20:06











  • If you're on firmware-6, using a kernel above 4.14 then perhaps some generic options like disabling power saving, disabling led flashing, disabling passive scans might help point the way?

    – pbhj
    Jan 6 at 22:17











  • @pbhj How do I make this modifications, could you pass me the terminal commands? I am not a linux expert, just a normal user trying to switch to it.

    – Lucas Silveira
    Jan 6 at 22:42
















0















I have just installed Ubuntu 18.10. Great experience so far except for the following issue:



Whenever I try to access some websites like Netflix or Mathworks, the connection to the wireless router is lost and I have to reinitialize both for them to work. It seems that when the data-flow is high, the connection is lost, but I am not sure. The wireless router is a TP-Link model TL-WR841N(TPD) Ver: 10.0. I am using Ubuntu 18.10 on a Samsung laptop model NP910S3K. Both the laptop and the router are using the default configurations, I only changed the router passwords.



The same machine using Windows 10 and another machine (a macbook-pro late 2013) running MAC-OS High Sierra don't have this issue. They work well with the OS they came with. But I want to use linux, not windows or macOS.



I am not an expert user, I just like the idea of moving definitively to Linux. At the university, the machines work as a charm. I am having this problems just at home.



Kind regards,



Lucas



Edit:



lucas@lucas-pc:~$ lspci -nnk | grep 0280 -A3
01:00.0 Network controller [0280]: Qualcomm Atheros QCA6174 802.11ac
Wireless Network Adapter [168c:003e] (rev 20)
Subsystem: Samsung Electronics Co Ltd QCA6174 802.11ac Wireless Network Adapter [144d:4125]
Kernel driver in use: ath10k_pci
Kernel modules: ath10k_pci










share|improve this question




















  • 1





    Let's start by identifying the wireless device in the laptop. Please edit your question to add the result of the terminal command: lspci -nnk | grep 0280 -A3 Welcome to Ask Ubuntu.

    – chili555
    Dec 28 '18 at 22:59











  • chill55, thanks for the fast response. I included it in the description

    – Lucas Silveira
    Dec 29 '18 at 19:30













  • Please, someone help me. This problem is driving me crazy, having to reboot the router around 50 times a day is a deal-breaker.

    – Lucas Silveira
    Jan 1 at 20:06











  • If you're on firmware-6, using a kernel above 4.14 then perhaps some generic options like disabling power saving, disabling led flashing, disabling passive scans might help point the way?

    – pbhj
    Jan 6 at 22:17











  • @pbhj How do I make this modifications, could you pass me the terminal commands? I am not a linux expert, just a normal user trying to switch to it.

    – Lucas Silveira
    Jan 6 at 22:42














0












0








0








I have just installed Ubuntu 18.10. Great experience so far except for the following issue:



Whenever I try to access some websites like Netflix or Mathworks, the connection to the wireless router is lost and I have to reinitialize both for them to work. It seems that when the data-flow is high, the connection is lost, but I am not sure. The wireless router is a TP-Link model TL-WR841N(TPD) Ver: 10.0. I am using Ubuntu 18.10 on a Samsung laptop model NP910S3K. Both the laptop and the router are using the default configurations, I only changed the router passwords.



The same machine using Windows 10 and another machine (a macbook-pro late 2013) running MAC-OS High Sierra don't have this issue. They work well with the OS they came with. But I want to use linux, not windows or macOS.



I am not an expert user, I just like the idea of moving definitively to Linux. At the university, the machines work as a charm. I am having this problems just at home.



Kind regards,



Lucas



Edit:



lucas@lucas-pc:~$ lspci -nnk | grep 0280 -A3
01:00.0 Network controller [0280]: Qualcomm Atheros QCA6174 802.11ac
Wireless Network Adapter [168c:003e] (rev 20)
Subsystem: Samsung Electronics Co Ltd QCA6174 802.11ac Wireless Network Adapter [144d:4125]
Kernel driver in use: ath10k_pci
Kernel modules: ath10k_pci










share|improve this question
















I have just installed Ubuntu 18.10. Great experience so far except for the following issue:



Whenever I try to access some websites like Netflix or Mathworks, the connection to the wireless router is lost and I have to reinitialize both for them to work. It seems that when the data-flow is high, the connection is lost, but I am not sure. The wireless router is a TP-Link model TL-WR841N(TPD) Ver: 10.0. I am using Ubuntu 18.10 on a Samsung laptop model NP910S3K. Both the laptop and the router are using the default configurations, I only changed the router passwords.



The same machine using Windows 10 and another machine (a macbook-pro late 2013) running MAC-OS High Sierra don't have this issue. They work well with the OS they came with. But I want to use linux, not windows or macOS.



I am not an expert user, I just like the idea of moving definitively to Linux. At the university, the machines work as a charm. I am having this problems just at home.



Kind regards,



Lucas



Edit:



lucas@lucas-pc:~$ lspci -nnk | grep 0280 -A3
01:00.0 Network controller [0280]: Qualcomm Atheros QCA6174 802.11ac
Wireless Network Adapter [168c:003e] (rev 20)
Subsystem: Samsung Electronics Co Ltd QCA6174 802.11ac Wireless Network Adapter [144d:4125]
Kernel driver in use: ath10k_pci
Kernel modules: ath10k_pci







networking wireless 18.10 tp-link






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Jan 6 at 22:38







Lucas Silveira

















asked Dec 28 '18 at 21:57









Lucas SilveiraLucas Silveira

13




13








  • 1





    Let's start by identifying the wireless device in the laptop. Please edit your question to add the result of the terminal command: lspci -nnk | grep 0280 -A3 Welcome to Ask Ubuntu.

    – chili555
    Dec 28 '18 at 22:59











  • chill55, thanks for the fast response. I included it in the description

    – Lucas Silveira
    Dec 29 '18 at 19:30













  • Please, someone help me. This problem is driving me crazy, having to reboot the router around 50 times a day is a deal-breaker.

    – Lucas Silveira
    Jan 1 at 20:06











  • If you're on firmware-6, using a kernel above 4.14 then perhaps some generic options like disabling power saving, disabling led flashing, disabling passive scans might help point the way?

    – pbhj
    Jan 6 at 22:17











  • @pbhj How do I make this modifications, could you pass me the terminal commands? I am not a linux expert, just a normal user trying to switch to it.

    – Lucas Silveira
    Jan 6 at 22:42














  • 1





    Let's start by identifying the wireless device in the laptop. Please edit your question to add the result of the terminal command: lspci -nnk | grep 0280 -A3 Welcome to Ask Ubuntu.

    – chili555
    Dec 28 '18 at 22:59











  • chill55, thanks for the fast response. I included it in the description

    – Lucas Silveira
    Dec 29 '18 at 19:30













  • Please, someone help me. This problem is driving me crazy, having to reboot the router around 50 times a day is a deal-breaker.

    – Lucas Silveira
    Jan 1 at 20:06











  • If you're on firmware-6, using a kernel above 4.14 then perhaps some generic options like disabling power saving, disabling led flashing, disabling passive scans might help point the way?

    – pbhj
    Jan 6 at 22:17











  • @pbhj How do I make this modifications, could you pass me the terminal commands? I am not a linux expert, just a normal user trying to switch to it.

    – Lucas Silveira
    Jan 6 at 22:42








1




1





Let's start by identifying the wireless device in the laptop. Please edit your question to add the result of the terminal command: lspci -nnk | grep 0280 -A3 Welcome to Ask Ubuntu.

– chili555
Dec 28 '18 at 22:59





Let's start by identifying the wireless device in the laptop. Please edit your question to add the result of the terminal command: lspci -nnk | grep 0280 -A3 Welcome to Ask Ubuntu.

– chili555
Dec 28 '18 at 22:59













chill55, thanks for the fast response. I included it in the description

– Lucas Silveira
Dec 29 '18 at 19:30







chill55, thanks for the fast response. I included it in the description

– Lucas Silveira
Dec 29 '18 at 19:30















Please, someone help me. This problem is driving me crazy, having to reboot the router around 50 times a day is a deal-breaker.

– Lucas Silveira
Jan 1 at 20:06





Please, someone help me. This problem is driving me crazy, having to reboot the router around 50 times a day is a deal-breaker.

– Lucas Silveira
Jan 1 at 20:06













If you're on firmware-6, using a kernel above 4.14 then perhaps some generic options like disabling power saving, disabling led flashing, disabling passive scans might help point the way?

– pbhj
Jan 6 at 22:17





If you're on firmware-6, using a kernel above 4.14 then perhaps some generic options like disabling power saving, disabling led flashing, disabling passive scans might help point the way?

– pbhj
Jan 6 at 22:17













@pbhj How do I make this modifications, could you pass me the terminal commands? I am not a linux expert, just a normal user trying to switch to it.

– Lucas Silveira
Jan 6 at 22:42





@pbhj How do I make this modifications, could you pass me the terminal commands? I am not a linux expert, just a normal user trying to switch to it.

– Lucas Silveira
Jan 6 at 22:42










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















1














I notice that you said:




Both the laptop and the router are using the default configurations




First, check the settings in the router. WPA2-AES is preferred; not any WPA and WPA2 mixed mode and certainly not TKIP. Second, if your router is capable of N speeds, you may have better connectivity with a channel width of 20 MHz in the 2.4 GHz band instead of automatic 20/40 MHz, although it is likely to affect N speeds. I also have better luck with a fixed channel, either 1, 6 or 11, rather than automatic channel selection. Also, be certain the router is not set to use N speeds only; auto B, G and N is preferred. After making these changes, reboot the router.



Next, I recommend that your regulatory domain be set explicitly. Check yours:



sudo iw reg get


If you get 00, that is a one-size-maybe-fits-all setting. Find yours here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISO_3166-1_alpha-2 Then set it temporarily:



sudo iw reg set IS


Of course, substitute your country code if not Iceland. Set it permanently:



sudo nano /etc/default/crda


Change the last line to read:



REGDOMAIN=IS


Proofread carefully, save and close the text editor.



After rebooting the computer, please give us your report.



EDIT: As you noted, there are many instances of 'ath10k_pci firmware crashed' in an internet search. Here is one that I suggest you try as the last post mentions a firmware change but no further complaints. https://github.com/manjaro/packages-core/issues/131



Let's try it. From the terminal, first, we back up the existing file:



cd /lib/firmware/ath10k/QCA6174/hw3.0
sudo mv firmware-6.bin firmware-6.bak


Now we get the new firmware file:



sudo wget https://github.com/kvalo/ath10k-firmware/blob/master/QCA6174/hw3.0/4.4.1.c1/firmware-6.bin_RM.4.4.1.c1-00042-QCARMSWP-1


Any we rename it:



sudo mv firmware-6.bin_RM.4.4.1.c1-00042-QCARMSWP-1 firmware-6.bin


Reboot and let us see:



dmesg | grep ath





share|improve this answer


























  • Thank you chili555. I have made the modifications you suggested. Unfortunately the instability persists the same.

    – Lucas Silveira
    Jan 1 at 21:41











  • I wonder if there are any clues in the log. Please edit your question to include the result of: dmesg | grep -e ath -e wlp

    – chili555
    Jan 1 at 21:52











  • The file is to long to include in the question. However I intentionally entered Netflix to cause the internet to go down, and there was no modification in the file before and after the internet crashed.

    – Lucas Silveira
    Jan 1 at 22:07













  • I'd still like to examine the log. Please post it here and give us the link: paste.ubuntu.com

    – chili555
    Jan 1 at 23:09






  • 1





    On the Samsung laptop, I have: lspci -nnk | grep 0280 -A3 01:00.0 Network controller [0280]: Qualcomm Atheros QCA6174 802.11ac. I've read on some forums a huge list of people with this controller and the same problem of mine, but not solution.

    – Lucas Silveira
    Jan 6 at 19:26













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1 Answer
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active

oldest

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1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









1














I notice that you said:




Both the laptop and the router are using the default configurations




First, check the settings in the router. WPA2-AES is preferred; not any WPA and WPA2 mixed mode and certainly not TKIP. Second, if your router is capable of N speeds, you may have better connectivity with a channel width of 20 MHz in the 2.4 GHz band instead of automatic 20/40 MHz, although it is likely to affect N speeds. I also have better luck with a fixed channel, either 1, 6 or 11, rather than automatic channel selection. Also, be certain the router is not set to use N speeds only; auto B, G and N is preferred. After making these changes, reboot the router.



Next, I recommend that your regulatory domain be set explicitly. Check yours:



sudo iw reg get


If you get 00, that is a one-size-maybe-fits-all setting. Find yours here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISO_3166-1_alpha-2 Then set it temporarily:



sudo iw reg set IS


Of course, substitute your country code if not Iceland. Set it permanently:



sudo nano /etc/default/crda


Change the last line to read:



REGDOMAIN=IS


Proofread carefully, save and close the text editor.



After rebooting the computer, please give us your report.



EDIT: As you noted, there are many instances of 'ath10k_pci firmware crashed' in an internet search. Here is one that I suggest you try as the last post mentions a firmware change but no further complaints. https://github.com/manjaro/packages-core/issues/131



Let's try it. From the terminal, first, we back up the existing file:



cd /lib/firmware/ath10k/QCA6174/hw3.0
sudo mv firmware-6.bin firmware-6.bak


Now we get the new firmware file:



sudo wget https://github.com/kvalo/ath10k-firmware/blob/master/QCA6174/hw3.0/4.4.1.c1/firmware-6.bin_RM.4.4.1.c1-00042-QCARMSWP-1


Any we rename it:



sudo mv firmware-6.bin_RM.4.4.1.c1-00042-QCARMSWP-1 firmware-6.bin


Reboot and let us see:



dmesg | grep ath





share|improve this answer


























  • Thank you chili555. I have made the modifications you suggested. Unfortunately the instability persists the same.

    – Lucas Silveira
    Jan 1 at 21:41











  • I wonder if there are any clues in the log. Please edit your question to include the result of: dmesg | grep -e ath -e wlp

    – chili555
    Jan 1 at 21:52











  • The file is to long to include in the question. However I intentionally entered Netflix to cause the internet to go down, and there was no modification in the file before and after the internet crashed.

    – Lucas Silveira
    Jan 1 at 22:07













  • I'd still like to examine the log. Please post it here and give us the link: paste.ubuntu.com

    – chili555
    Jan 1 at 23:09






  • 1





    On the Samsung laptop, I have: lspci -nnk | grep 0280 -A3 01:00.0 Network controller [0280]: Qualcomm Atheros QCA6174 802.11ac. I've read on some forums a huge list of people with this controller and the same problem of mine, but not solution.

    – Lucas Silveira
    Jan 6 at 19:26


















1














I notice that you said:




Both the laptop and the router are using the default configurations




First, check the settings in the router. WPA2-AES is preferred; not any WPA and WPA2 mixed mode and certainly not TKIP. Second, if your router is capable of N speeds, you may have better connectivity with a channel width of 20 MHz in the 2.4 GHz band instead of automatic 20/40 MHz, although it is likely to affect N speeds. I also have better luck with a fixed channel, either 1, 6 or 11, rather than automatic channel selection. Also, be certain the router is not set to use N speeds only; auto B, G and N is preferred. After making these changes, reboot the router.



Next, I recommend that your regulatory domain be set explicitly. Check yours:



sudo iw reg get


If you get 00, that is a one-size-maybe-fits-all setting. Find yours here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISO_3166-1_alpha-2 Then set it temporarily:



sudo iw reg set IS


Of course, substitute your country code if not Iceland. Set it permanently:



sudo nano /etc/default/crda


Change the last line to read:



REGDOMAIN=IS


Proofread carefully, save and close the text editor.



After rebooting the computer, please give us your report.



EDIT: As you noted, there are many instances of 'ath10k_pci firmware crashed' in an internet search. Here is one that I suggest you try as the last post mentions a firmware change but no further complaints. https://github.com/manjaro/packages-core/issues/131



Let's try it. From the terminal, first, we back up the existing file:



cd /lib/firmware/ath10k/QCA6174/hw3.0
sudo mv firmware-6.bin firmware-6.bak


Now we get the new firmware file:



sudo wget https://github.com/kvalo/ath10k-firmware/blob/master/QCA6174/hw3.0/4.4.1.c1/firmware-6.bin_RM.4.4.1.c1-00042-QCARMSWP-1


Any we rename it:



sudo mv firmware-6.bin_RM.4.4.1.c1-00042-QCARMSWP-1 firmware-6.bin


Reboot and let us see:



dmesg | grep ath





share|improve this answer


























  • Thank you chili555. I have made the modifications you suggested. Unfortunately the instability persists the same.

    – Lucas Silveira
    Jan 1 at 21:41











  • I wonder if there are any clues in the log. Please edit your question to include the result of: dmesg | grep -e ath -e wlp

    – chili555
    Jan 1 at 21:52











  • The file is to long to include in the question. However I intentionally entered Netflix to cause the internet to go down, and there was no modification in the file before and after the internet crashed.

    – Lucas Silveira
    Jan 1 at 22:07













  • I'd still like to examine the log. Please post it here and give us the link: paste.ubuntu.com

    – chili555
    Jan 1 at 23:09






  • 1





    On the Samsung laptop, I have: lspci -nnk | grep 0280 -A3 01:00.0 Network controller [0280]: Qualcomm Atheros QCA6174 802.11ac. I've read on some forums a huge list of people with this controller and the same problem of mine, but not solution.

    – Lucas Silveira
    Jan 6 at 19:26
















1












1








1







I notice that you said:




Both the laptop and the router are using the default configurations




First, check the settings in the router. WPA2-AES is preferred; not any WPA and WPA2 mixed mode and certainly not TKIP. Second, if your router is capable of N speeds, you may have better connectivity with a channel width of 20 MHz in the 2.4 GHz band instead of automatic 20/40 MHz, although it is likely to affect N speeds. I also have better luck with a fixed channel, either 1, 6 or 11, rather than automatic channel selection. Also, be certain the router is not set to use N speeds only; auto B, G and N is preferred. After making these changes, reboot the router.



Next, I recommend that your regulatory domain be set explicitly. Check yours:



sudo iw reg get


If you get 00, that is a one-size-maybe-fits-all setting. Find yours here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISO_3166-1_alpha-2 Then set it temporarily:



sudo iw reg set IS


Of course, substitute your country code if not Iceland. Set it permanently:



sudo nano /etc/default/crda


Change the last line to read:



REGDOMAIN=IS


Proofread carefully, save and close the text editor.



After rebooting the computer, please give us your report.



EDIT: As you noted, there are many instances of 'ath10k_pci firmware crashed' in an internet search. Here is one that I suggest you try as the last post mentions a firmware change but no further complaints. https://github.com/manjaro/packages-core/issues/131



Let's try it. From the terminal, first, we back up the existing file:



cd /lib/firmware/ath10k/QCA6174/hw3.0
sudo mv firmware-6.bin firmware-6.bak


Now we get the new firmware file:



sudo wget https://github.com/kvalo/ath10k-firmware/blob/master/QCA6174/hw3.0/4.4.1.c1/firmware-6.bin_RM.4.4.1.c1-00042-QCARMSWP-1


Any we rename it:



sudo mv firmware-6.bin_RM.4.4.1.c1-00042-QCARMSWP-1 firmware-6.bin


Reboot and let us see:



dmesg | grep ath





share|improve this answer















I notice that you said:




Both the laptop and the router are using the default configurations




First, check the settings in the router. WPA2-AES is preferred; not any WPA and WPA2 mixed mode and certainly not TKIP. Second, if your router is capable of N speeds, you may have better connectivity with a channel width of 20 MHz in the 2.4 GHz band instead of automatic 20/40 MHz, although it is likely to affect N speeds. I also have better luck with a fixed channel, either 1, 6 or 11, rather than automatic channel selection. Also, be certain the router is not set to use N speeds only; auto B, G and N is preferred. After making these changes, reboot the router.



Next, I recommend that your regulatory domain be set explicitly. Check yours:



sudo iw reg get


If you get 00, that is a one-size-maybe-fits-all setting. Find yours here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISO_3166-1_alpha-2 Then set it temporarily:



sudo iw reg set IS


Of course, substitute your country code if not Iceland. Set it permanently:



sudo nano /etc/default/crda


Change the last line to read:



REGDOMAIN=IS


Proofread carefully, save and close the text editor.



After rebooting the computer, please give us your report.



EDIT: As you noted, there are many instances of 'ath10k_pci firmware crashed' in an internet search. Here is one that I suggest you try as the last post mentions a firmware change but no further complaints. https://github.com/manjaro/packages-core/issues/131



Let's try it. From the terminal, first, we back up the existing file:



cd /lib/firmware/ath10k/QCA6174/hw3.0
sudo mv firmware-6.bin firmware-6.bak


Now we get the new firmware file:



sudo wget https://github.com/kvalo/ath10k-firmware/blob/master/QCA6174/hw3.0/4.4.1.c1/firmware-6.bin_RM.4.4.1.c1-00042-QCARMSWP-1


Any we rename it:



sudo mv firmware-6.bin_RM.4.4.1.c1-00042-QCARMSWP-1 firmware-6.bin


Reboot and let us see:



dmesg | grep ath






share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Jan 6 at 21:38

























answered Jan 1 at 20:45









chili555chili555

38.4k55177




38.4k55177













  • Thank you chili555. I have made the modifications you suggested. Unfortunately the instability persists the same.

    – Lucas Silveira
    Jan 1 at 21:41











  • I wonder if there are any clues in the log. Please edit your question to include the result of: dmesg | grep -e ath -e wlp

    – chili555
    Jan 1 at 21:52











  • The file is to long to include in the question. However I intentionally entered Netflix to cause the internet to go down, and there was no modification in the file before and after the internet crashed.

    – Lucas Silveira
    Jan 1 at 22:07













  • I'd still like to examine the log. Please post it here and give us the link: paste.ubuntu.com

    – chili555
    Jan 1 at 23:09






  • 1





    On the Samsung laptop, I have: lspci -nnk | grep 0280 -A3 01:00.0 Network controller [0280]: Qualcomm Atheros QCA6174 802.11ac. I've read on some forums a huge list of people with this controller and the same problem of mine, but not solution.

    – Lucas Silveira
    Jan 6 at 19:26





















  • Thank you chili555. I have made the modifications you suggested. Unfortunately the instability persists the same.

    – Lucas Silveira
    Jan 1 at 21:41











  • I wonder if there are any clues in the log. Please edit your question to include the result of: dmesg | grep -e ath -e wlp

    – chili555
    Jan 1 at 21:52











  • The file is to long to include in the question. However I intentionally entered Netflix to cause the internet to go down, and there was no modification in the file before and after the internet crashed.

    – Lucas Silveira
    Jan 1 at 22:07













  • I'd still like to examine the log. Please post it here and give us the link: paste.ubuntu.com

    – chili555
    Jan 1 at 23:09






  • 1





    On the Samsung laptop, I have: lspci -nnk | grep 0280 -A3 01:00.0 Network controller [0280]: Qualcomm Atheros QCA6174 802.11ac. I've read on some forums a huge list of people with this controller and the same problem of mine, but not solution.

    – Lucas Silveira
    Jan 6 at 19:26



















Thank you chili555. I have made the modifications you suggested. Unfortunately the instability persists the same.

– Lucas Silveira
Jan 1 at 21:41





Thank you chili555. I have made the modifications you suggested. Unfortunately the instability persists the same.

– Lucas Silveira
Jan 1 at 21:41













I wonder if there are any clues in the log. Please edit your question to include the result of: dmesg | grep -e ath -e wlp

– chili555
Jan 1 at 21:52





I wonder if there are any clues in the log. Please edit your question to include the result of: dmesg | grep -e ath -e wlp

– chili555
Jan 1 at 21:52













The file is to long to include in the question. However I intentionally entered Netflix to cause the internet to go down, and there was no modification in the file before and after the internet crashed.

– Lucas Silveira
Jan 1 at 22:07







The file is to long to include in the question. However I intentionally entered Netflix to cause the internet to go down, and there was no modification in the file before and after the internet crashed.

– Lucas Silveira
Jan 1 at 22:07















I'd still like to examine the log. Please post it here and give us the link: paste.ubuntu.com

– chili555
Jan 1 at 23:09





I'd still like to examine the log. Please post it here and give us the link: paste.ubuntu.com

– chili555
Jan 1 at 23:09




1




1





On the Samsung laptop, I have: lspci -nnk | grep 0280 -A3 01:00.0 Network controller [0280]: Qualcomm Atheros QCA6174 802.11ac. I've read on some forums a huge list of people with this controller and the same problem of mine, but not solution.

– Lucas Silveira
Jan 6 at 19:26







On the Samsung laptop, I have: lspci -nnk | grep 0280 -A3 01:00.0 Network controller [0280]: Qualcomm Atheros QCA6174 802.11ac. I've read on some forums a huge list of people with this controller and the same problem of mine, but not solution.

– Lucas Silveira
Jan 6 at 19:26




















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