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-WiFi Radar is a Python utility for managing WiFi profiles. It enables
-you to scan for available networks and create profiles for your preferred
-networks. At boot time, running WiFi Radar will automatically scan for an
-available preferred network and connect to it. You can drag and drop your
-preferred networks to arrange the profile priority.
-
-This script installs a wifi-radar.sh script in /usr/bin that by default
-runs /usr/sbin/wifi-radar with sudo. You can change this to use ksudo
-instead by running the script thusly:
- ./wifi-radar.SlackBuild KSUDO=yes
-
-To use wifi-radar with a normal user (with sudo) add to your /etc/sudoers:
- %users ALL = NOPASSWD: /usr/sbin/wifi-radar
-
-Then launch wifi-radar.sh, which will handle setting up a proper environment
-and running /usr/sbin/wifi-radar.
-
-If you want to scan and connect to one of your preferred networks at
-boot, the recommended way is to add the following to /etc/rc.d/rc.local
-and make sure /etc/rc.d/rc.wifi-radar is executable.
- if [ -x /etc/rc.d/rc.wifi-radar ]; then
- /etc/rc.d/rc.wifi-radar start
- fi
-And of course, to rc.local_shutdown:
- if [ -x /etc/rc.d/rc.wifi-radar ]; then
- /etc/rc.d/rc.wifi-radar stop
- fi
-
-Please note that according to the manpage, wifi-radar is fairly power hungry
-due to its constant scan nature. You may not wish to have it running in the
-background all the time sucking battery juice.
-
-Make sure /etc/wifi-radar.conf is only readable by root (or perhaps the
-group that owns it in some cases). We install the file with mode 0600 by
-default, but this was not the case in some earlier revisions, so you should
-double-check it to be sure. As of version 1.9.9 the config file is now
-/etc/wifi-radar.conf, if you are upgrading you need to move you old config
-file to /etc. \ No newline at end of file