Score:0

Wifi not showing up on Ubuntu 21.04 Pi Zero 2

in flag

Basically, got myself new RPI zero 2. I already have ubuntu headless setup and working on RPI 4 - no wifi problems there.

I updated and upgraded ubuntu before putting sd card into RPI zero

And when it boots up there is no wifi showing up. 1.lo, docker, docker and some vethff970df1

Ive tried connecting the wifi dongle to RPI zero 2 but it didnt automatically connect or showed up on router's devices list

So not sure what to try next. I really want to avoid reflashing and resetting everything up

guiverc avatar
cn flag
Ubuntu 21? No such release; Ubuntu does have *year* releases; eg. Ubuntu Core 20, but they are different products to the far more widely used Ubuntu 20.04 LTS Server or Desktop for example. Please be precise with details; as *year* format products (eg. 20) are limited to *snap* packages only where 20.04 can use *snap*, *deb*, and more package types.
P.C. Blazkowicz avatar
in flag
Thanks for the feedback. It is Ubuntu 21.04 hirsute
Nmath avatar
ng flag
Ubuntu 21.04 is EOL. It is unsupported and off-topic here. You should install a supported release. https://wiki.ubuntu.com/Releases
guiverc avatar
cn flag
Ubuntu 21.04 (along with all flavors) is *End-of-Life* and thus unsupported on this site (https://askubuntu.com/help/on-topic), and many other Ubuntu sites, unless your question is specific to moving to a supported release of Ubuntu. https://fridge.ubuntu.com/2022/01/21/ubuntu-21-04-hirsute-hippo-end-of-life-reached-on-january-20-2022/ https://help.ubuntu.com/community/EOLUpgrades *Do note: you may not need to follow EOLUpgrades advice yet as noted in the EOL annoucement*
P.C. Blazkowicz avatar
in flag
Alright, didnt know that. Ive learned something today
guiverc avatar
cn flag
Ubuntu LTS releases are the first release of an even year (ie. 6.06, 8.04, 10.04, 12.04, 14.04... 20.04) with other releases in a *development* cycle that ends with the next LTS: ie. 20.10 + 21.04 + 21.10 are in the cycle which completes with 22.04 LTS release. The non-LTS releases have 9 months of support; so 21.04 being the 2021-April release (ie. *year.month* format) allows you to know it's support ends 2022-Jan (21,04=2021.April + 9 months = 2022.Jan) even if you ignore notices (ie. easy to plan *release-upgrade* times with Ubuntu due to *year.month* format for releases)
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