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 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.
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.
Instead of mallocing the ssid buffer, use a static array. This removes an
extra couple of malloc/free operations and should result in less memory
utilization on average.
Authenticate event on wiphy mlme notification does not provide
enough information on which network/bss authentication command
was sent. BSS and network information is required to send associate
command to AP. So cache bss pointer in netdev struct and retrieve
on wiphy mlme notifications.
Instead of storing multiple copies of the same BSS (one hanging off the
netdev object and one hanging off the network object), we instead store
the BSS list only on the netdev object.
The network object gets a pointer to the BSS structure on the netdev
list. As a side effect, the BSS list is always sorted properly.