Score:1

WiFi adapter not found ubuntu 21.10

cm flag

Since a while back, I've had issues with my wifi. It started a month ago when I was using ubuntu 20.04. I've updated to ubuntu 21.10 since but the issue remains. The problem is that the wifi abruptly turns off after a while (sometimes a few seconds after booting, sometimes a few hours) and that it disappears from the menu and display wifi adapter not found in the settings. I know this is a common issue but I haven't been able to solve it.

Wireless info when wifi adapter is found

Wireless info when wifi adapter is not found

Update:

I'm using an intel open-source driver that is supposed to work. I've tried disabling secure boot in the BIOS, updating the BIOS to the latest version. I've also tried disabling wifi power management. Nothing works. Although it feels as if the wifi-dissapears less frequently there are still issues.

Thank you in advance! :)

de flag
Disable Secure Boot in BIos. After that, try command: sudo ubuntu-drivers autoinstall. Reboot. Also check "Additional drivers" in Softare&Updates.
gertrud.leijonhufvud avatar
cm flag
Thank you, currently trying to disable the secure boot. It works thus far but that doesn't have to mean anything yet. The other stuff returned that all drivers are already installed and that no additional drivers are available (which is what it returned before as well).
ChanganAuto avatar
us flag
@Emvo `sudo ubuntu-drivers autoinstall` is for other proprietary drivers, namely Nvidia's. The suggestion about looking in additional drivers is fine but not applicable: If the WiFi needed something not previously installed it wouldn't work. And Intel network devices, ALL of them, work woth open-source drivers already installed and running.
ChanganAuto avatar
us flag
@gertrud.leijonhufvud You have "power management" enabled which the most probable culprit. Check the answers here https://askubuntu.com/questions/695867/disable-wifi-power-management
gertrud.leijonhufvud avatar
cm flag
@ChanganAuto Thank you! Once again I can't tell if it works immediately but it seems reasonable and I haven't tried it before. Should I enable secure boot again though? I'm guessing that the point of that is to get access to other drivers but the current driver is supposed to work.
ChanganAuto avatar
us flag
Secure Boot has nothing to do with this, it doesn't matter if enabled or disabled. It prevents loading proprietary drivers unless manually signed but, again, Intel's are open-source. If you've been using the computer with SB enabled without noticing some hardware not working or messages at the boot asking you to define a MOK password then, in your case, SB is irrelevant. You may want to disable it for convenience if, for example, you decide to use virtualization (Virtualbox, VMWare, etc.) because the software tends to install additional (virtual) drivers that will then be intercepted.
Score:0
jp flag

I ran into a similar issue years ago, and it turned out to be a bugged power saving mode.

In /etc/NetworkManager/conf.d/default-wifi-powersave-on.conf, change wifi.powersave = 3 to wifi.powersave = 2 to disable it and see if that fixes your problem.

gertrud.leijonhufvud avatar
cm flag
I've tried it and I'm still having issues (although it fells like they're not as common) :(
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