Lan 80211n Usb Nic Driver - Realtek 8188gu Wireless
# Remove any existing conflicting drivers sudo modprobe -r rtl8xxxu sudo modprobe -r rtl8188gu git clone https://github.com/kelebek333/rtl8188gu cd rtl8188gu make clean make sudo make install sudo modprobe -v 8188gu
sudo ./dkms-install.sh Add the maintainer’s PPA (for Ubuntu 20.04/22.04): realtek 8188gu wireless lan 80211n usb nic driver
Introduction In the world of wireless networking, few components are as ubiquitous yet as misunderstood as the USB Wi-Fi adapter. Among the most common chipsets powering these tiny dongles is the Realtek 8188GU Wireless LAN 802.11n USB NIC . This chipset has been shipped in millions of devices—from no-name adapters on Amazon to brand-name units from TP-Link, D-Link, and Edimax. However, its Achilles’ heel has always been driver support. # Remove any existing conflicting drivers sudo modprobe
sudo add-apt-repository ppa:kelebek333/kablosuz sudo apt update sudo apt install rtl8188gu-dkms | Problem | Fix | |---------|-----| | Adapter is detected but no scan results | Run sudo ip link set wlan0 up (replace wlan0 with your interface name) | | Authentication timeout | Disable 802.11n: sudo iwconfig wlan0 rate 54M | | Dropped connections under load | Blacklist mac80211_hwsim: echo "blacklist mac80211_hwsim" | sudo tee /etc/modprobe.d/mac80211_hwsim.conf | | Monitor mode needed (for pentesting) | The 8188GU does not support monitor mode or packet injection. Use an 8188EU or RTL8812AU for that. | Part 4: Realtek 8188GU Driver for macOS (Hackintosh Only) Official word: Realtek never released macOS drivers for the 8188GU . For genuine Macs, this chipset is not supported. However, Hackintosh users have had limited success using the open-source Wireless USB Adapter Clover-V9 project. However, its Achilles’ heel has always been driver support
If you used the DKMS method, run:
sudo dkms status sudo dkms autoinstall If that fails, recompile the driver:
We have covered every possible angle: from identifying your chipset, to step-by-step installation guides, to performance tuning, and finally to knowing when to retire the adapter. Bookmark this article before you start tinkering—you will likely return to it each time a Windows feature update or a Linux kernel upgrade re-breaks your driver.