Always call start_next_scan_request when a scan request has finished,
with a success or a failure, including a periodic scan attempt. Inside
that function check if there's any work to be done, either for one-off
scan requests or periodic scan, instead of having this check only inside
get_scan_done. Call start_next_scan_request in scan_periodic_start and
scan_periodic_timeout.
Also call the trigger callback with an error code when sending the
netlink command fails after the scan request has been queued because
another scan was in progress when the scan was requested.
Program received signal SIGSEGV, Segmentation fault.
0x0000000000419d38 in scan_done (msg=0x692580, userdata=0x688250)
at src/scan.c:250
250 sc->state = sr->passive ? SCAN_STATE_PASSIVE : SCAN_STATE_ACTIVE;
(gdb) bt
0 0x0000000000419d38 in scan_done (msg=0x692580, userdata=0x688250)
at src/scan.c:250
1 0x000000000043cac0 in process_unicast (genl=0x686d60, nlmsg=0x7fffffffc3b0)
at ell/genl.c:390
2 0x000000000043ceb0 in received_data (io=0x686e60, user_data=0x686d60)
at ell/genl.c:506
3 0x000000000043967d in io_callback (fd=6, events=1, user_data=0x686e60)
at ell/io.c:120
4 0x000000000043824d in l_main_run () at ell/main.c:381
5 0x000000000040303c in main (argc=1, argv=0x7fffffffe668) at src/main.c:259
The reasoning is that the logic inside scan_common is reversed. Instead
of freeing the scan request on error, we always do it. This causes the
trigger_scan callback to receive invalid userdata.
Save the ids of the netlink trigger scan commands that we send and
cancel them in scan_ifindex_remove to fix a race leading to a
segfault. The segfault would happen every time if scan_ifindex_remove
was called in the same main loop iteration in which we sent the
command, on shutdown:
^CTerminate
src/netdev.c:netdev_free() Freeing netdev wlan3[6]
src/device.c:device_disassociated() 6
src/device.c:device_enter_state() Old State: connected, new state:
disconnected
src/device.c:device_enter_state() Old State: disconnected, new state:
autoconnect
src/scan.c:scan_periodic_start() Starting periodic scan for ifindex: 6
src/device.c:device_free()
src/device.c:bss_free() Freeing BSS 02:00:00:00:00:00
src/device.c:bss_free() Freeing BSS 02:00:00:00:01:00
Removing scan context for ifindex: 6
src/scan.c:scan_context_free() sc: 0x5555557ca290
src/scan.c:scan_notify() Scan notification 33
src/netdev.c:netdev_operstate_down_cb() netdev: 6, success: 1
src/scan.c:scan_periodic_done()
src/scan.c:scan_periodic_done() Periodic scan triggered for ifindex:
1434209520
Program received signal SIGSEGV, Segmentation fault.
0x0000000000000064 in ?? ()
(gdb) bt
#0 0x0000000000000064 in ?? ()
#1 0x0000555555583560 in process_unicast (nlmsg=0x7fffffffc1a0,
genl=0x5555557c1d60) at ell/genl.c:390
#2 received_data (io=<optimized out>, user_data=0x5555557c1d60)
at ell/genl.c:506
#3 0x0000555555580d45 in io_callback (fd=<optimized out>,
events=1, user_data=0x5555557c1e60) at ell/io.c:120
#4 0x000055555558005f in l_main_run () at ell/main.c:381
#5 0x00005555555599c1 in main (argc=<optimized out>, argv=<optimized out>)
at src/main.c:259
Parse the contents of the GTK and IGTK subelements in an FT IE instead
of working with buffers containing the whole subelement. Some more
validation of the subelement contents. Drop support for GTK / IGTK when
building the FTE (unused).
Don't start the handshake timeout in eapol_start if either
handshake->ptk_complete is set (handshake already done) or
handshake->have_snonce is set (steps 1&2 done). This accounts for
eapol_start being called after a Fast Transition when a 4-Way handshake
is not expected.
Add a flush flag to scan_parameters to tell the kernel to flush the
cache of scan results before the new scan. Use this flag in the
active scan during roaming.
Split the igtk parameter to handshake_state_install_igtk into one
parameter for the actual IGTK buffer and one for the IPN buffer instead
of requiring the caller to have them both in one continuous buffer.
With FT protocol, one is received encrypted and the other in plain text.
Make sure that the Neighbor Report timeout is cancelled when connection
breaks or device is being destroyed, and call the callback. Add an
errno parameter to the callback to indicate the cause.
With this patch an actual fast transition should happen when the signal
strength goes low but there are still various details to be fixed before
this becomes useful:
* the kernel tends to return cached scan results and won't update the
rssi values,
* there's no timer to prevent too frequent transition attempts or to
retry after some time if the signal is still low,
* no candidate other than the top ranked BSS is tried. With FT it
may be impossible to try another BSS anyway although there isn't
anything in the spec to imply this. It would require keeping the
handshake_state around after netdev gives up on the transition
attempt.
Trigger a scan of the selected channels or all channels if no useful
neighbor list was obtained, then process the scan results to select the
final target BSS.
The actual transition to the new BSS is not included in this patch for
readability.
Trigger a roam attempt when the RSSI level has been low for at least 5
seconds using the netdev RSSI LOW/HIGH events. See if neighbor reports
are supported and if so, request and process the neighbor reports list
to restrict the number of channels to be scanned. The scanning part is
not included in this patch for readability.
Validate the fourth message of the fast transition sequence and save the
new keys and state as current values in the netdev object. The
FT-specific IE validation that was already present in the initial MD
is moved to a new function.
Build and send the FT Authentication Request frame, the initial Fast
Transition message.
In this version the assumption is that once we start a transition attempt
there's no going back so the old handshake_state, scan_bss, etc. can be
replaced by the new objects immediately and there's no point at which both
the old and the new connection states are needed. Also the disconnect
event for the old connection is implicit. At netdev level the state
during a transition is almost the same with a new connection setup.
The first disconnect event on the netlink socket after the FT Authenticate
is assumed to be the one generated by the kernel for the old connection.
The disconnect event doesn't contain the AP bssid (unlike the
deauthenticate event preceding it), otherwise we could check to see if
the bssid is the one we are interested in or could check connect_cmd_id
assuming a disconnect doesn't happen before the connect command finishes.
This adds support for iwd.conf 'ManagementFrameProtection' setting.
This setting has the following semantics, with '1' being the default:
0 - MFP off, even if hardware is capable
1 - Use MFP if available
2 - MFP required. If the hardware is not capable, no connections will
be possible. Use at your own risk.
Despite RFC3748 mandating MSKs to be at least 256 bits some EAP methods
return shorter MSKs. Since we call handshake_failed when the MSK is too
short, EAP methods have to be careful with their calls to set_key_material
because it may result in a call to the method's .remove method.
EAP-TLS and EAP-TTLS can't handle that currently and would be difficult to
adapt because of the TLS internals but they always set msk_len to 64 so
handshake_failed will not be called.
Make sure that eap_set_key_material can free the whole EAP method and
EAP state machine before returning, by calling that function last. This
relies on eap_mschapv2_handle_success being the last call in about 5
stack frames above it too.
Action Frames are sent by nl80211 as unicast data. We're not receiving
any other unicast packets in iwd at this time so let netdev directly
handle all unicast data on the genl socket.
Add a version of scan_active that accepts a struct with the scan
parameters so we can more easily add new parameters. Since the genl
message is now built within scan_active_start the extra_ie memory
can be freed by the caller at any time.
clang complains about enum as var_arg type
because of the argument standard conversion.
In a small test I did neither clang nor gcc can
properly warn about out of range values, so it's
purely for documentation either way.
There are situations when a CMD_DISCONNECT or deauthenticate will be
issued locally because of an error detected locally where netdev would
not be able to emit a event to the device object. The CMD_DISCONNECT
handler can only send an event if the disconnect is triggered by the AP
because we don't have an enum value defined for other diconnects. We
have these values defined for the connect callback but those errors may
happen when the connect callback is already NULL because a connection
has been estabilshed. So add an event type for local errors.
These situations may occur in a transition negotiation or in an eapol
handshake failure during rekeying resulting in a call to
netdev_handshake_failed.
The kernel parses NL80211_ATTR_USE_MFP to mean an enumeration
nl80211_mfp. So instead of using a boolean, we should be using the
value NL80211_MFP_REQUIRED.
Make the use of EAPOL-Start the default and send it when configured for
8021x and either we receive no EAPOL-EAP from from the AP before
timeout, or if the AP tries to start a 4-Way Handshake.
On certain routers, the 4-Way handshake message 3 of 4 contains a key iv
field which is not zero as it is supposed to. This causes us to fail
the handshake.
Since the iv field is not utilized in this particular case, it is safe
to simply warn rather than fail the handshake outright.
Use the NLMSG_ALIGN macro on the family header size (struct ifinfomsg in
this case). The ascii graphics in include/net/netlink.h show that both
the netlink header and the family header should be padded. The netlink
header (nlmsghdr) is already padded in ell. To "document" this
requirementin ell what we could do is take two buffers, one for the
family header and one for the attributes.
This doesn't change anything for most people because ifinfomsg is
already 16-byte long on the usual architectures.
Remove the keys and other data from struct eapol_sm, update device.c,
netdev.c and wsc.c to use the handshake_state object instead of
eapol_sm. This also gets rid of eapol_cancel and the ifindex parameter
in some of the eapol functions where sm->handshake->ifindex can be
used instead.
struct handshake_state is an object that stores all the key data and other
authentication state and does the low level operations on the keys. Together
with the next patch this mostly just splits eapol.c into two layers
so that the key operations can also be used in Fast Transitions which don't
use eapol.
If device_select_akm_suite selects Fast Transition association then pass
the MD IE and other bits needed for eapol and netdev to do an FT
association and 4-Way Handshake.
If an MD IE is supplied to netdev_connect, pass that MD IE in the
associate request, then validate and handle the MD IE and FT IE in the
associate response from AP.
Add space in the eapol_sm struct for the pieces of information required
for the FT 4-Way Handshake and add setters for device.c and netdev.c to
be able to provide the data.
Don't decide on the AKM suite to use when the bss entries are received
and processed, instead select the suite when the connection is triggered
using a new function device_select_akm_suite, similar to
wiphy_select_cipher(). Describing the AKM suite through flags will be
more difficult when more than 2 suites per security type are supported.
Also handle the wiphy_select_cipher 0 return value when no cipher can be
selected.
The len parameter was only used so it could be validated against ie[1],
but since it was not checked to be > 2, it must have been validated
already, the check was redundant. In any case all users directly
passed ie[1] as len anyway. This makes it consistent with the ie
parsers and builders which didn't require a length.
In many cases the pairwise and group cipher information is not the only
information needed from the BSS RSN/WPA elements in order to make a
decision. For example, th MFPC/MFPR bits might be needed, or
pre-authentication capability bits, group management ciphers, etc.
This patch refactors bss_get_supported_ciphers into the more general
scan_bss_get_rsn_info function
Split eapol_start into two calls, one to register the state machine so
that the PAE read handler knows not to discard frames for that ifindex,
and eapol_start to actually start processing the frames. This is needed
because, as per the comment in netdev.c, due to scheduling the PAE
socket read handler may trigger before the CMD_CONNECT event handler,
which needs to parse the FTE from the Associate Response frame and
supply it to the eapol SM before it can do anything with the message 1
of 4 of the FT handshake.
Another issue is that depending on the driver or timing, the underlying
link might not be marked as 'ready' by the kernel. In this case, our
response to Message 1 of the 4-way Handshake is written and accepted by
the kernel, but gets dropped on the floor internally. Which leads to
timeouts if the AP doesn't retransmit.
This function takes an Operating Channel and a Country String to convert
it into a band. Using scan_oper_class_to_band and scan_channel_to_freq,
an Operating Channel, a Country String and a Channel Number together can
be converted into an actual frequency. EU and US country codes based on
wpa_supplicant's tables.
It doesn't matter for crypto_derive_pairwise_ptk in non-SHA256 mode
but in the FT PTK derivation function, as well as in SHA256 mode all
bytes of the output do actually change with the PTK size.
Fix autoconnect trying to connect to networks never used before as found
by Tim Kourt. Update the comments to be consistent with the use of the
is_known field and the docs, in that a Known Network is any network that
has a config file in the iwd storage, and an autoconnect candidate is a
network that has been connected to before.
If the handshake fails, we trigger a deauthentication prior to reporting
NETDEV_RESULT_HANDSHAKE_FAILED. If a netdev_disconnect is invoked in
the meantime, then the caller will receive -ENOTCONN. This is
incorrect, since we are in fact logically connected until the connect_cb
is notified.
Tweak the behavior to keep the connected variable as true, but check
whether disconnect_cmd_id has been issued in the netdev_disconnect_event
callback.
If the device is currently connected, we will initiate a disconnection
(or wait for the disconnection to complete) prior to starting the
WSC-EAP association.
Use the org.freedesktop.DBus.Properties interfaces on objects with
properties and drop the old style GetProperty/SetProperty methods on
individual interfaces. Agent and KnownNetworks have no properties at
this time so don't add org.freedesktop.DBus.Properties interfaces.
We send the scan results where we obtained a PushButton target over to
device object. If EAP-WSC transaction is successful, then the scan
results are searched to find a network/bss combination found in the
credentials obtained. If found, the network is connected to
automatically.
This also fixes a potential buffer overflow since the ssid was cast to a
string inside network_create. However, ssid is a buffer of 32 bytes,
and would not be null-terminated in the case of a 32-byte SSID.
==5362== Conditional jump or move depends on uninitialised value(s)
==5362== at 0x419B62: wsc_wfa_ext_iter_next (wscutil.c:52)
==5362== by 0x41B869: wsc_parse_probe_response (wscutil.c:1016)
==5362== by 0x41FD77: scan_results (wsc.c:218)
==5362== by 0x415669: get_scan_done (scan.c:892)
==5362== by 0x432932: destroy_request (genl.c:134)
==5362== by 0x433245: process_unicast (genl.c:394)
==5362== by 0x43361A: received_data (genl.c:506)
==5362== by 0x42FDC2: io_callback (io.c:120)
==5362== by 0x42EABE: l_main_run (main.c:381)
==5362== by 0x402F90: main (main.c:234)
This is used to get arbitrary information out of the EAP method. Needed
for EAP-WSC to signal credential information obtained from the peer.
Other uses include signaling why EAP-WSC failed (e.g. invalid PIN, etc)
and processing of M2D discovery messages. The information in M2Ds might
be useful to external clients.
We used to open a socket for each wireless interface. This patch uses a
single socket with an attached BPF to handle all EAPoL traffic via a
single file descriptor.
When parsing the EAPoL-Key key data field we don't strip the 0xdd /
0x00 padding from the decrypted data so there may be trailing padding
after the IE sequence and valgrind will report an invalid read of the
length byte. Same thing may happen if we're sent garbage.
When we send M5 & M7, we need to generate a random IV. For testing
purposes, the IV can be provided in settings, otherwise it will be
generated randomly.
We need quite a bit of attributes of M2 for the duration of the WSC
handshake. Most importantly, we need to use the peer's public key when
processing M4 and M6. RegistrarNonce is also needed for generating any
ACK/NACK messages as needed.
Also, peer's device attributes such as Model, Manufacturer, etc might be
useful to report upon successful handshake.
AuthKey is already uploaded into auth_key_hmac. KeyWrapKey is now
uploaded into the AES-CBC(128) cipher. We currently have no use for
EMSK.
So we no longer need to keep the wsc_session_key structure around.
Encrypted Settings TLVs are structured similarly to the various WSC
messages. However, they lack a version2 extension field and use a Key
Wrap Authenticator element instead of Authenticator.
DevicePassword is the PIN, either static, dynamically generated or
entered by the user. For PushButton mode, DevicePassword is set to
'00000000'. It can also be provided via external means, such as NFC.
This patch allows DevicePassword to be externally configured into the
EAP-WSC layer. Optionally, the secret nonce values can also be
provided for testing purposes. If omitted, they will be generated using
l_getrandom.
We use the load_settings method to bootstrap the internal state of the
EAP WSC state machine. We require certain information to be provided by
the higher layers, namely:
Global Device parameters
- Manufacturer
- Model Name
- Model Number
- Serial Number
- Device Name
- Primary Device Type
- OS Version
Session specific parameters
- MAC Address
- Configuration Methods
- RF Bands
The following parameters are auto-generated for each new session, but
can be over-ridden if desired
- Private Key
- Enrollee Nonce
Expanded EAP methods should get their packets for handling starting at
the op-code field. They're not really interested in
type/vendor-id/vendor-type fields.
Instead of one global protocol_version, we now store it inside eapol_sm.
This allows us to use the same protocol version for our response as the
request from the authenticator.
For unit tests where we had protocol version mismatches, a new method is
introduced to explicitly set the protocol version to use.
CMD_DISCONNECT fails on some occasions when CMD_CONNECT is still
running. When this happens the DBus disconnect command receives an
error reply but iwd's device state is left as disconnected even though
there's a connection at the kernel level which times out a few seconds
later. If the CMD_CONNECT is cancelled I couldn't reproduce this so far.
src/network.c:network_connect()
src/network.c:network_connect_psk()
src/network.c:network_connect_psk() psk:
69ae3f8b2f84a438cf6a44275913182dd2714510ccb8cbdf8da9dc8b61718560
src/network.c:network_connect_psk() len: 32
src/network.c:network_connect_psk() ask_psk: false
src/device.c:device_enter_state() Old State: disconnected, new state:
connecting
src/scan.c:scan_notify() Scan notification 33
src/device.c:device_netdev_event() Associating
src/netdev.c:netdev_mlme_notify() MLME notification 60
MLME notification is missing ifindex attribute
src/device.c:device_dbus_disconnect()
src/device.c:device_connect_cb() 6, result: 5
src/device.c:device_enter_state() Old State: connecting, new state:
disconnecting
src/device.c:device_disconnect_cb() 6, success: 0
src/device.c:device_enter_state() Old State: disconnecting, new state:
disconnected
src/scan.c:scan_notify() Scan notification 34
src/netdev.c:netdev_mlme_notify() MLME notification 19
src/netdev.c:netdev_mlme_notify() MLME notification 60
MLME notification is missing ifindex attribute
src/netdev.c:netdev_mlme_notify() MLME notification 37
src/netdev.c:netdev_authenticate_event()
src/scan.c:get_scan_callback() get_scan_callback
src/scan.c:get_scan_done() get_scan_done
src/netdev.c:netdev_mlme_notify() MLME notification 60
MLME notification is missing ifindex attribute
src/netdev.c:netdev_mlme_notify() MLME notification 19
MLME notification is missing ifindex attribute
src/netdev.c:netdev_mlme_notify() MLME notification 38
src/netdev.c:netdev_associate_event()
src/netdev.c:netdev_mlme_notify() MLME notification 46
src/netdev.c:netdev_connect_event()
<delay>
src/netdev.c:netdev_mlme_notify() MLME notification 60
MLME notification is missing ifindex attribute
src/netdev.c:netdev_mlme_notify() MLME notification 20
MLME notification is missing ifindex attribute
src/netdev.c:netdev_mlme_notify() MLME notification 20
src/netdev.c:netdev_mlme_notify() MLME notification 39
src/netdev.c:netdev_deauthenticate_event()
This is to make sure device_remove and netdev_connect_free are called
early so we don't continue setting up a connection and don't let DBus
clients power device back up after we've called netdev_set_powered.
Calling device_disassociated inside disconnect_cb was mostly pointless.
Most attributes were already cleared by device_disconnect() when
initiating the disconnection procedure.
This patch also modifies the logic for triggering the autoconnect. If
the user initiated the disconnect call, then autoconnect should not be
triggered. If the disconnect was triggered by other means, then iwd
will still enter autoconnect mode.
All of the abortion logic is invoked when device_disconnect is called.
So there's no point calling device_disassociated in this case. This
also prevents us from entering into autoconnect mode too early.
Prevents situations like this:
src/device.c:device_enter_state() Old State: connecting, new state:
connected
src/scan.c:scan_periodic_stop() Stopping periodic scan for ifindex: 3
src/device.c:device_dbus_disconnect()
src/device.c:device_connect_cb() 3
src/device.c:device_disassociated() 3
src/device.c:device_enter_state() Old State: connected, new state:
autoconnect
Also, remove the check for device->state == DEVICE_STATE_CONNECTING.
device_connect_cb should always called when the state is CONNECTING.
If this is not so, it indicates a bug inside the netdev layer.
This was introduced by commit f468fceb02.
However, after commit 2d78f51fac66b9beff03a56f12e5fb8456625f07, the
connect_cb is called from inside netdev_disconnect. This in turn causes
the dbus-reply to be sent out if needed. So by the time we get to the
code in question, connect_pending is always NULL.
Try to make the connect and disconnect operations look more like a
transaction where the callback is always called eventually, also with a
clear indication if the operation is in profress. The connected state
lasts from the start of the connection attempt until the disconnect.
1. Non-null netdev->connected or disconnect_cb indicate that the operation
is active.
2. Every entry-point in netdev.c checks if connected is still set
before executing the next step of the connection setup. CMD_CONNECT and
the subsequent commands may succeed even if CMD_DISCONNECT is called
in the middle so they can't only rely on the error value for that.
3. netdev->connect_cb and other elements of the connection state are
reset by netdev_connect_free which groups the clean-up operations to
make sure we don't miss anything. Since the callback pointers are
reset device.c doesn't need to check that it receives a spurious
event in those callbacks for example after calling netdev_disconnect.
If initial bring up returns ERFKILL proceed and the inteface can be
explicitly brought up by the client once rfkill is disabled.
Also fix the error number returned to netdev_set_powered callback to be
negative as expected by netdev_initial_up_cb.
map_wiphy made the assumption that phy names follow the "phyN" pattern
but phys created or renamed by the "iw" command can have arbitrary
names. It seems that /sys/class/rfkill/rfkill%u/name is not updated on
a phy rename, so we can't use it to subsequently read
/sys/class/ieee80211/<name>/index but both
/sys/class/rfkill/rfkill%u/../index and
/sys/class/rfkill/rfkill%u/device/index point to that file.
==3059== 7 bytes in 1 blocks are still reachable in loss record 1 of 2
==3059== at 0x4C2C970: malloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:296)
==3059== by 0x50BB319: strndup (in /lib64/libc-2.22.so)
==3059== by 0x417B4D: l_strndup (util.c:180)
==3059== by 0x417E1B: l_strsplit (util.c:311)
==3059== by 0x4057FC: netdev_init (netdev.c:1658)
==3059== by 0x402E26: nl80211_appeared (main.c:112)
==3059== by 0x41F577: get_family_callback (genl.c:1038)
==3059== by 0x41EE3F: process_unicast (genl.c:390)
==3059== by 0x41EE3F: received_data (genl.c:506)
==3059== by 0x41C6F4: io_callback (io.c:120)
==3059== by 0x41BAA9: l_main_run (main.c:381)
==3059== by 0x402B9C: main (main.c:234)
Previously device.c would remove the whole object at the path of the
Device and the WSC interfaces but now the watches are called without the
whole object appearing and disappearing.
Change the path for net.connman.iwd.Device objects to /phyX/Y and
register net.connman.iwd.Adapter at /phyX grouping devices of the same
wiphy.
Turns out no changes to the test/* scripts are needed.
The boolean property indicates if a scan is ongoing. Only the scans
triggered by device.c are reflected (not the ones from WSC) because only
those scans affect the list of networks seen by Dbus.
Add rfkill.c/rfkill.h to be used for watching per-wiphy RFkill state.
It uses both /dev/rfkill and /sys because /dev/rfkill is the recommended
way of interfacing with rfkill but at the same time it doesn't provide
the information on mapping to wiphy IDs.
Note that the autoconnect_list may still contain the network. Currently
only the top entry from the list is ever used and only on
new_scan_results(), i.e. at the same time the list is being created.
If at some point it becomes part of actual device state it needs to also
be reset when a network is being forgotten.
If Disconnect is called during an ongoing connection attempt send a
CMD_DEAUTHENTICATE command same as when we're already connected, and
send a reply to potential dbus Connect call.
When a new wiphy is added, the kernel usually adds a default STA
interface as well. This interface is currently not signaled over
nl80211 in any way.
This implements a selective dump of the wiphy interfaces in order to
obtain the newly added netdev. Selective dump is currently not
supported by the kernel, so all netdevs will be returned. A patch on
linux-wireless is pending that implements the selective dump
functionality.
==24934== 16 bytes in 1 blocks are definitely lost in loss record 1 of 1
==24934== at 0x4C2C970: malloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:296)
==24934== by 0x41675D: l_malloc (util.c:62)
==24934== by 0x4033B3: netdev_set_linkmode_and_operstate
(netdev.c:149)
==24934== by 0x4042B9: netdev_free (netdev.c:221)
==24934== by 0x41735D: l_queue_clear (queue.c:107)
==24934== by 0x4173A8: l_queue_destroy (queue.c:82)
==24934== by 0x40543D: netdev_exit (netdev.c:1459)
==24934== by 0x402D6F: nl80211_vanished (main.c:126)
==24934== by 0x41E607: l_genl_family_unref (genl.c:1057)
==24934== by 0x402B50: main (main.c:237)
Instead of calling the device added or removed callback when the
interface is detected, call it when interface goes up or down. This
only affects the addition and removal of the WSC interface now.
During the network_info refactoring the adding of the connected BSS to
device->bss_list in case it is not in the scan results has moved to
after the l_hashmap_foreach_remove call meaning that the network could
be removed even though it is still pointed at by
device->connected networks. Reverse the order to what it was before.
Alternatively network_process network could take not of the fact the
network is connected and not call network_remove on it leaving it with
an empty bss_list.
It is probably rare that a disconnect should fail but if it happens the
device->state is not returned to CONNECTED and I'm not sure if it should
be, so the ConnectedNetwork property and other bits should probably be
reset at the start of the disconnection instead of at the end.
Also check if state is CONNECTED before calling network_disconnected
because network_connected may have not been called yet.
--interfaces (-i) tells iwd which interfaces to manage. If the option
is ommitted, all interfaces will be managed.
--nointerfaces (-I) tells iwd which interfaces to blacklist. If the
option is ommitted, no interfaces will be blacklisted.
When setting operstate to dormant or down, give it a callback for debug
purposes. It looks like that operstate down message does not have a
chance to go out currently.
knownnetworks.c/.h implements the KnownNetworks interface and loads the
known networks from storage on startup. The list of all the networks
including information on whether a network is known is managed in
network.c to avoid having two separate lists of network_info structures
and keeping them in sync. That turns out to be difficult because the
network.c list is sorted by connected_time and connected_time changes
can be triggered in both network.c or knownnetworks.c. Both can also
trigger a network_info to be removed completely.
network_info gets a is_known flag that is used for the
GetOrderedNetworks tracking and to implement the KnownNetworks
interface - loading of the list of known networks on startup and
forgetting networks.
For simplicity and future use (possibly performance), every struct network
gets a pointer to a network_info structure, there's one network_info for
every network being by any interface, not only known networks. The SSID
and security type information is removed from struct network because the
network_info holds that information.
network_info also gets a seen_count field to count how many references
from network.info fields it has, so as to fix the removal of
network_info structures. Previously, once they were added to the
networks list, they'd stay there forever possibly skewing the network
ranking results.
This also fixed the network ranking used by GetOrderedNetwork which
wasn't working due to a missing assignment of *index in
network_find_info also triggering valgrind alerts.
The eapol state machine parameters are now built inside device.c when
the network connection is attempted. The reason is that the device
object knows about network settings, wiphy constraints and should
contain the main 'management' logic.
netdev now manages the actual low-level process of building association
messages, detecting authentication events, etc.
Keep an updated sorted list of networks in addition to the "networks"
hashmap. The list can be queried through the GetOrderedNetworks dbus
method.
We also take advantage of that list to get rid of a single
l_hashmap_foreach in new_scan_results.
A function that calculates a new rank type to order all networks
currently seen by a netdev. The order is designed for displaying the
list to user so that the networks most likely to be wanted by the user
are first on the list.
Since the rankmod value only makes sense for autoconnectable networks,
change network_rankmod to return an indication of whether the rankmod is
valid as a boolean instead of as a double, as discussed before.
Do nothing in device_disassociated if device->connected_network
indicates we are not associated. This may happen if the device was
connected since before iwd was started, this should possibly be fixed
separately by querying device state when device is detected.
Make sure networks of all 4 security types have a settings file created
or updated with a new modification time on a successful connect so that
autoconnect and network sorting works for networks other than PSK too.
By doing this on storage_network_touch failure we make sure we don't
overwrite anything dropped into the settings directory while we were
connecting.
for network_seen and network_connected
Only accept a struct network pointer instead of separately the ssid and
security type. This is needed so we can do some more simplification in
the next patch by having access to the network struct.
It looks like with multiple netdev seeing the same networks we'd create
multiple network_info structures for each network. Since the
"networks" list (of network_info structs) is global that's probbaly not
the intention here.
Turn netdev watches into device watches. The intent is to refactor out
netdev specific details into its own class and move device specific
logic into device.c away from wiphy.c
Sometimes the periodic scan is started and stopped before the timeout
was created. If periodic_scan_stop was called before, the timeout
object was not reset to NULL, which can lead to a crash.
The lost beacon event can be received when iwd thinks netdev is
diconnected if it was connected before iwd started, and then
netdev_disassociated will segfault.
It seems until now dbus.c would always connect to dbus-1 (unless
DBUS_SESSION_BUS_ADDRESS pointed at kdbus) and passing -K only made
iwd create a kdbus bus and not use it. Now use ell to actually use
kdbus instead of dbus-1 with -K. Don't use the src/kdbus.c functions
that duplicate ell functionality. As a side effect the connection
description and the bloom sizes are now the ell defaults.
Instead of passing the user_data parameter in every __eapol_rx_packet
call to be used by EAPOL in all tx_packet calls, add
eapol_sm_set_tx_user_data function that sets the value of user_data for
all subsequent tx_packet calls. This way tx_packet can be called from
places that are not necessarily inside an __eapol_rx_packet call.
Only EAP as the inner authentication option is supported. According to
wikipedia this is the most popular EAP-TTLS use case, with MD5 as the
inner EAP's method.
Add the EAP-TLS authentication method. Currently, all the credentials
data is read from the provisioning file even though things like the
private key passphrase should possibly be obtained from the dbus agent.
Probe Response messages can contain additional attributes tucked away
into the WFA-Vendor specific attribute. Parse these attributes while
making sure the order is as expected.
==2469== 24 bytes in 1 blocks are still reachable in loss record 1 of 1
==2469== at 0x4C2B970: malloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:296)
==2469== by 0x40E6DD: l_malloc (util.c:62)
==2469== by 0x40F1CD: l_queue_new (queue.c:63)
==2469== by 0x40D534: scan_init (scan.c:796)
==2469== by 0x403AC3: nl80211_appeared (wiphy.c:2121)
==2469== by 0x415FF3: get_family_callback (genl.c:987)
==2469== by 0x415A4F: process_request (genl.c:381)
==2469== by 0x415A4F: received_data (genl.c:492)
==2469== by 0x413184: io_callback (io.c:120)
==2469== by 0x4127C2: l_main_run (main.c:346)
==2469== by 0x40253E: main (main.c:171)
Refactoring the entire scan code, and this part seems to not be
supported by the target kernels. Revisit / redo this functionality once
things become a bit clearer.
In the D-bus .Connect call return an error immediately if we
find that there's no common cipher supported between iwd, the
network adapter and the AP. This is to avoid asking the agent
for the passkey if we know the connection will fail.
An alternative would be to only show networks that we can connect
to in the scan results on D-bus but I suspect that would cause
more pain to users debugging their wifi setups on average.
For now, if a passphrase is needed we check once before querying
for passphrase and recheck afterwards when we're about to
associate.
Instead of passing in the RSN/WPA elements, simply pass in the
configured cipher. This will make the implementation of the install_gtk
callback much simpler.
Step 4 is always sent without encrypted Key Data according to Section
11.6.6.5. In the case of WPA, Encrypted Key Data field is reserved, and
should always be 0. Thus it is safe to drop the !is_wpa condition.
When handling repeated 4-Way Handshakes from the AP there will be no
.Connect() call pending so we need to check that netdev->connect_pending
is non-NULL. It may be a good idea to check this even during initial
handshake.
When disconnect is triggered locally, we do not clean up properly.
==4336== at 0x4C2B970: malloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:296)
==4336== by 0x40CEED: l_malloc (util.c:62)
==4336== by 0x40F46A: l_settings_new (settings.c:82)
==4336== by 0x40CE2E: storage_network_open (storage.c:180)
==4336== by 0x40498E: network_connect_psk (wiphy.c:307)
==4336== by 0x40498E: network_connect (wiphy.c:359)
==4336== by 0x41D7EE: _dbus_object_tree_dispatch (dbus-service.c:845)
==4336== by 0x416A16: message_read_handler (dbus.c:297)
==4336== by 0x411984: io_callback (io.c:120)
==4336== by 0x410FC2: l_main_run (main.c:346)
==4336== by 0x40253E: main (main.c:171)
This happens when connecting / disconnecting successfully multiple
times.
==4336== 64 bytes in 2 blocks are definitely lost in loss record 9 of 11
==4336== at 0x4C2B970: malloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:296)
==4336== by 0x40CEED: l_malloc (util.c:62)
==4336== by 0x40D6D9: l_util_from_hexstring (util.c:493)
==4336== by 0x4049C6: network_connect_psk (wiphy.c:315)
==4336== by 0x4049C6: network_connect (wiphy.c:359)
==4336== by 0x41D7EE: _dbus_object_tree_dispatch (dbus-service.c:845)
==4336== by 0x416A16: message_read_handler (dbus.c:297)
==4336== by 0x411984: io_callback (io.c:120)
==4336== by 0x410FC2: l_main_run (main.c:346)
==4336== by 0x40253E: main (main.c:171)
Instead of storing the network pointer for each BSS, store it on the
netdev object. This saves space inside struct bss and makes longer term
refactoring simpler.
==4249== 231 (32 direct, 199 indirect) bytes in 1 blocks are definitely
lost in loss record 10 of 10
==4249== at 0x4C2B970: malloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:296)
==4249== by 0x40CF5D: l_malloc (util.c:62)
==4249== by 0x40F4DA: l_settings_new (settings.c:82)
==4249== by 0x40CE9E: storage_network_open (storage.c:180)
==4249== by 0x40499E: network_connect_psk (wiphy.c:307)
==4249== by 0x40499E: network_connect (wiphy.c:359)
==4249== by 0x41D85E: _dbus_object_tree_dispatch (dbus-service.c:845)
==4249== by 0x416A86: message_read_handler (dbus.c:297)
==4249== by 0x4119F4: io_callback (io.c:120)
==4249== by 0x411032: l_main_run (main.c:346)
==4249== by 0x40253E: main (main.c:171)
This patch saves off the PSK generated based on the passphrase provided
by the agent/user. The PSK is saved only if the connection is
successful.
Subsequent connection attempts to the known AP use the PSK saved on the
filesystem (default /var/lib/iwd/<ssid>.psk). If the connection fails,
the agent will again be asked for the passphrase on the next attempt.
CMD_DEAUTHENTICATE seems to carry only the management frame pdu
information. CMD_DISCONNECT is carrying the information that is
actually needed by us:
> Event: Disconnect (0x30) len 28 1140.118545
Wiphy: 0 (0x00000000)
Interface Index: 3 (0x00000003)
Reason Code: 2 (0x0002)
Disconnect by AP: true
We will ignore non-UTF8 based SSIDs. Support for non-UTF8 SSIDs seems
to be of dubious value in the real world as the vast majority of
consumer devices would not even allow such SSIDs to be configured or
used.
There also seems to be no compelling argument to support such SSIDs, so
until that argument arrives, non-UTF8 SSIDs will be filtered out. This
makes the D-Bus API and implementation much easier.
We start a timer. This handles the case that the Authenticator does
not send us the first message of the 4-way handshake, or disappears
before sending us the 3rd message.
We need to set the linkmode and operstate after successful
authentication.
Initial value for linkmode is 1 (user space controlled) and
IF_OPER_DORMANT for opermode. After successful authentication,
the operstate is set to IF_OPER_UP.
More specific details can be seen in kernel sources at
https://www.kernel.org/doc/Documentation/networking/operstates.txt
CC src/wiphy.o
src/wiphy.c: In function ‘eapol_read’:
src/wiphy.c:172:24: error: argument to ‘sizeof’ in ‘memset’ call is the same expression as the destination; did you mean to remove the addressof? [-Werror=sizeof-pointer-memaccess]
memset(&sll, 0, sizeof(&sll));
^
We can give reply to connect DBus call in associating event only
when we are connecting to Open network. For PSK AP, the reply can
only be sent after we have finished 4-way handshaking.
Currently it supports Microsoft vendor specific information element
with version and type value 1 only. Typically it contains WPA security
related information.
The success or not of a scan command is found from the message directly.
There's no need to look for any attribute from the scan netlink answer.
The message is an error message or not, and that tells if the scan has
been started or not.
Modifying a bit how networks are stored inside the hashtable:
1 - instead of the network id, the network's object path is used
2 - network holds the pointer of the object path
3 - the hashtable does not free the key (network_free() will)
This permits to optimize on:
1 - one memory allocation used for 2 distinct things
2 - remove the need to re-compute the object path (and the id) when it's
needed, it can use dircetly the one stored in the network structure.
Request a passphrase via Agent if none is set at the time network is
being connected. When freeing a network, cancel any outstanding Agent
requests and free allocated memory.
l_genl_family_send only returns request id. If request
failed at low level, current implementation does not handle that.
In case of request failure clear pending dbus messages.
Open networks do not contain a RSN element, so storing a 256 byte buffer
was too expensive.
This patch also has the side-effect of fixing detection of Open
Networks. Prior to this, if the scan results did not contain an RSN IE,
the 'rsne' variable would be set to all zeros. scan_get_ssid_security
would then be called, but instead of a NULL struct ie_rsn_info, a
non-null, but zerod out ie_rsn_info would be passed in. This caused the
code to work, but for the wrong reasons.