A prior commit refactored the AKM selection in wiphy.c. This
ended up breaking FILS tests due to the hard coding of a
false fils_hint in wiphy_select_akm. Since our FILS tests
only advertise FILS AKMs wiphy_can_connect would return false
for these networks.
Similar to wiphy_select_akm, add a fils hint parameter to
wiphy_can_connect and pass that down directly to wiphy_select_akm.
If PreSharedKey is set, the current logic does not validate the
Passphrase beyond its existence. This can lead to strange situations
where an invalid WPA3-PSK passphrase might get used. This can of course
only happen if the user (as root) or NetworkManager-iwd-backend writes
such a file incorrectly.
Move the WSC Primary Device Type parsing from p2p.c and eap-wsc.c to a
common function in wscutil.c supporting both formats so that it can be
used in ap.c too.
Logically this frame watch belongs in station. It was kept in device.c
for the purported reason that the station object was removed with
ifdown/ifup changes and hence the frame watch might need to be removed
and re-added unnecessarily. Since the kernel does not actually allow to
unregister a frame watch (only when the netdev is removed or its iftype
changes), re-adding a frame watch might trigger a -EALREADY or similar
error.
Avoid this by registering the frame watch when a new netdev is detected
in STATION mode, or when the interface type changes to STATION.
If a netdev iftype is changed, all frame registrations are removed.
Make sure to re-register for the appropriate frame notifications in case
our iftype is switched back to 'station'. In any other iftype, no frame
watches are registered and rrm_state object is effectively dormant.
Right now, RRM is created when a new netdev is detected and its iftype
is of type station. That means that any devices that start their life
as any other iftype cannot be changed to a station and have RRM function
properly. Fix that by always creating the RRM state regardless of the
initial iftype.
In the case that a netdev is powered down, or an interface type change
occurs, the station object will be removed and any watches will be
freed.
Since rrm is created when the netdev is created and persists across
iftype and power up/down changes, it should provide a destroy callback
to station_add_state_watch so that it can be notified when the watch is
removed.
If the iftype changes, kernel silently wipes out any frame registrations
we may have registered. Right now, frame registrations are only done when
the interface is created. This can result in frame watches not being
added if the interface type is changed between station mode to ap mode
and then back to station mode, e.g.:
device wlan0 set-property Mode ap
device wlan0 set-property Mode station
Make sure to re-add frame registrations according to the mode if the
interface type is changed.
Since netdev now keeps track of iftype changes, let it call
frame_watch_wdev_remove on netdevs that it manages to clear frame
registrations that should be cleared due to an iftype change.
Note that P2P_DEVICE wdevs are not managed by any netdev object, but
since their iftype cannot be changed, they should not be affected
by this change.
And set the interface type based on the event rather than the command
callback. This allows us to track interface type changes even if they
come from outside iwd (which shouldn't happen.)
The prepare_ft patch was an intermediate to a full patch
set and was not fully tested stand alone. Its placement
actually broke FT due to handshake->aa getting overwritten
prior to netdev->prev_bssid being copied out. This caused
FT to fail with "transport endpoint not connected (-107)"
The AuthCenter was still not being fully cleaned up in these
tests. It was being stopped but there was still a reference being
held which prevented __del__ from being called.
There was a bug with process output where the last bit of data would
never make it into stdout or log files. This was due to the IO watch
being cleaned up when the process was killed and never allowing it
to finish writing any pending data.
Now the IO watch implementation has been moved out into its own
function (io_process) which is now used to write the final bits of
data out on process exit.
The processes in the list ultimately get removed for each
kill() call. This causes strange behavior since the list is
being iterated and each iteration is removing items. Instead
iterate over a new temporary list so the actual process list
can be cleaned up.
- Make sure to print the cookie information
- Don't print messages for frames we're not interested in. This is
particularly helpful when running auto-tests since frame acks from
hostapd pollute the iwd log.
This file was not included when testNetconfig was introduced
and is required. My system was working fine as it was in my
local tree but has been missing and not passing for others.
IWD_GENL_DEBUG is not generally useful anymore as it just prints a
hexdump of the raw data on the socket. The messages are quite verbose
and spam test-runner logs for little utility.
Fix a regression where connection to an open network results in an
NotSupported error being returned.
Fixes: d79e883e93 ("netdev: Introduce connection types")
This makes conversions simpler. Also fixes a bug where P2P devices were
printed with an incorrect Mode value since dbus_iftype_to_string was
assuming that an iftype as defined in nl80211.h was being passed in,
while netdev was returning an enum value defined in netdev.h.
It was seen that some full mac cards/drivers do not include any
rate information with the NEW_STATION event. This was causing
the NEW_STATION event to be ignored, preventing AP mode from
working on these cards.
Since the full mac path does not even require sta->rates the
parsing can be removed completely.
It was found that if the user cancels/disconnects the agent prior to
entering credentials, IWD would get stuck and could no longer accept
any connect calls with the error "Operation already in progress".
For example exiting iwctl in the Password prompt would cause this:
iwctl
$ station wlan0 connect myssid
$ Password: <Ctrl-C>
This was due to the agent never calling the network callback in the
case of an agent disconnect. Network would wait indefinitely for the
credentials, and disallow any future connect attempts.
To fix this agent_finalize_pending can be called in agent_disconnect
with a NULL reply which behaves the same as if there was an
internal timeout and ultimately allows network to fail the connection
The 8021x offloading procedure still does EAP in userspace which
negotiates the PMK. The kernel then expects to obtain this PMK
from userspace by calling SET_PMK. This then allows the firmware
to begin the 4-way handshake.
Using __eapol_install_set_pmk_func to install netdev_set_pmk,
netdev now gets called into once EAP finishes and can begin
the final userspace actions prior to the firmware starting
the 4-way handshake:
- SET_PMK using PMK negotiated with EAP
- Emit SETTING_KEYS event
- netdev_connect_ok
One thing to note is that the kernel provides no way of knowing if
the 4-way handshake completed. Assuming SET_PMK/SET_STATION come
back with no errors, IWD assumes the PMK was valid. If not, or
due to some other issue in the 4-way, the kernel will send a
disconnect.
This adds a new type for 8021x offload as well as support in
building CMD_CONNECT.
As described in the comment, 8021x offloading is not particularly
similar to PSK as far as the code flow in IWD is concerned. There
still needs to be an eapol_sm due to EAP being done in userspace.
This throws somewhat of a wrench into our 'is_offload' cases. And
as such this connection type is handled specially.
802.1x offloading needs a way to call SET_PMK after EAP finishes.
In the same manner as set_tk/gtk/igtk a new 'install_pmk' function
was added which eapol can call into after EAP completes.
The timeout functionality was removed from the core SAE
implementation as it causes issues with kernel behavior.
Because of this the timeout tests are no longer valid,
nor is a few asserts in the end-to-end test.
The chances were extremely low, but using l_idle_oneshot
could end up causing a invalid memory access if the netdev
went down while waiting for the disconnect idle callback.
Instead netdev can keep track of the idle with l_idle_create
and remove it if the netdev goes down prior to the idle callback.
This fixes an infinite loop issue when authenticate frames time
out. If the AP is not responding IWD ends up retrying indefinitely
due to how SAE was handling this timeout. Inside sae_auth_timeout
it was actually sending another authenticate frame to reject
the SAE handshake. This, again, resulted in a timeout which called
the SAE timeout handler and repeated indefinitely.
The kernel resend behavior was not taken into account when writing
the SAE timeout behavior and in practice there is actually no need
for SAE to do much of anything in response to a timeout. The
kernel automatically resends Authenticate frames 3 times which mirrors
IWDs SAE behavior anyways. Because of this the authenticate timeout
handler can be completely removed, which will cause the connection
to fail in the case of an autentication timeout.
This crash was caused from the disconnect_cb being called
immediately in cases where send_disconnect was false. The
previous patch actually addressed this separately as this
flag was being set improperly which will, indirectly, fix
one of the two code paths that could cause this crash.
Still, there is a situation where send_disconnect could
be false and in this case IWD would still crash. If IWD
is waiting to queue the connect item and netdev_disconnect
is called it would result in the callback being called
immediately. Instead we can add an l_idle as to allow the
callback to happen out of scope, which is what station
expects.
Prior to this patch, the crashing behavior can be tested using
the following script (or some variant of it, your system timing
may not be the same as mine).
iwctl station wlan0 disconnect
iwctl station wlan0 connect <network1> &
sleep 0.02
iwctl station wlan0 connect <network2>
++++++++ backtrace ++++++++
0 0x7f4e1504e530 in /lib64/libc.so.6
1 0x432b54 in network_get_security() at src/network.c:253
2 0x416e92 in station_handshake_setup() at src/station.c:937
3 0x41a505 in __station_connect_network() at src/station.c:2551
4 0x41a683 in station_disconnect_onconnect_cb() at src/station.c:2581
5 0x40b4ae in netdev_disconnect() at src/netdev.c:3142
6 0x41a719 in station_disconnect_onconnect() at src/station.c:2603
7 0x41a89d in station_connect_network() at src/station.c:2652
8 0x433f1d in network_connect_psk() at src/network.c:886
9 0x43483a in network_connect() at src/network.c:1183
10 0x4add11 in _dbus_object_tree_dispatch() at ell/dbus-service.c:1802
11 0x49ff54 in message_read_handler() at ell/dbus.c:285
12 0x496d2f in io_callback() at ell/io.c:120
13 0x495894 in l_main_iterate() at ell/main.c:478
14 0x49599b in l_main_run() at ell/main.c:521
15 0x495cb3 in l_main_run_with_signal() at ell/main.c:647
16 0x404add in main() at src/main.c:490
17 0x7f4e15038b25 in /lib64/libc.so.6
The send_disconnect flag was being improperly set based only
on connect_cmd_id being zero. This does not take into account
the case of CMD_CONNECT having finished but not EAPoL. In this
case we do need to send a disconnect.