Periodic scans were handled specially where they were only
started if no other requests were pending in the scan queue.
This is fine, and what we want, but this can actually be
handled automatically by nature of the wiphy work queue rather
than needing to check the request queue explicitly.
Instead we can insert periodic scans at a lower priority than
other scans. This puts them at the end of the work queue, as
well as allows future requests to jump ahead if a periodic scan
has not yet started.
Eventually, once all pending scans are done, the peridoic scan
may begin. This is no different than the preivous behavior and
avoids the need for any special checks once scan requests
complete.
One check was added to address the problem of the periodic scan
timer firing before the scan could even start. Currently this
happened to be handled fine in scan_periodic_queue, as it checks
the queue length. Since this check was removed we must see check
for this condition inside scan_periodic_timeout.
This adds a priority argument to scan_common rather than hard
coding it when inserting the work item and uses the newly
defined wiphy priority for scanning.
Work priority was never explicitly defined anywhere, and a module
using wiphy_radio_work APIs needed to ensure it was not inserting
at a priority that would interfere with other work.
Now all the types of work have been defined with their own priority
and future priorities can easily be added before, after, or in
between existing priorities.
- Mostly problems with whitespace:
- Use of spaces instead of tabs
- Stray spaces before closing ')
- Missing spaces
- Missing 'void' from function declarations & definitions that
take no arguments.
- Wrong indentation level
When this attribute is included, the initiator is requesting all
future frames be sent on this channel. There is no reason for a
configurator to act on this attribute (at least for now) so the
request frame will be dropped in this case. Enrollees will act
on it by switching to the new channel and sending the authentication
response.
While connected the driver ends up choosing quite small ROC
durations leading to excessive calls to ROC. This also will
negatively effect any wireless performance for the current
network and possibly lead to missed DPP frames.
Currently the enrollee relied on autoconnect to handle connecting
to the newly configured network. This usually resulted in poor
performance since periodic scans are done at large intervals apart.
Instead first check if the newly configured network is already
in IWD's network queue. If so it can be connected to immediately.
If not, a full scan must be done and results given to station.
With better JSON support the configuration request object
can now be fully parsed. As stated in the previous comment
there really isn't much use from the configurator side apart
from verifying mandatory values are included.
This patch also modifies the configuration result to handle
sending non 'OK' status codes in case of JSON parsing errors.
json_iter_parse is only meant to work on objects while
json_iter_next is only meant to work on arrays.
This adds checks in both APIs to ensure they aren't being
used incorrectly.
Arrays can now be parsed using the JSON_ARRAY type (stored in
a struct json_iter) then iterated using json_iter_next. When
iterating the type can be checked with json_iter_get_type. For
each iteration the value can be obtained using any of the type
getters (int/uint/boolean/null).
This adds support for boolean, (unsigned) integers, and
null types. JSON_PRIMITIVE should be used as the type when
parsing and the value should be struct json_iter.
Once parsed the actual value can be obtained using one of
the primitive getters. If the type does not match they will
return false.
If using JSON_OPTIONAL with JSON_PRIMITIVE the resulting
iterator can be checked with json_iter_is_valid. If false
the key/value was not found or the type was not matching.
First, this was renamed to 'count_tokens_in_container' to be
more general purpose (i.e. include future array counting).
The way the tokens are counted also changed to be more intuitive.
While the previous way was correct, it was somewhat convoluted in
how it worked (finding the next parent of the objects parent).
Instead we can use the container token itself as the parent and
begin counting tokens. When we find a token with a parent index
less than the target we have reached the end of this container.
This also works for nested containers, including arrays since we
no longer rely on a key (which an array element would not have).
For example::
{
"first":{"foo":"bar"},
"second":{"foo2":"bar2"}
}
index 0 <overall object>
index 1 "first" with parent 0
index 2 {"foo":"bar"} with parent 1
Counting tokens inside "first"'s object we have:
index 3 "foo" with parent 2
index 4 "bar" with parent 3
If we continue counting we reach:
index 5 "second" with parent 0
This terminates the counting loop since the parent index is
less than '2' (the index of {"foo":"bar"} object).
In file included from ./ell/ell.h:15,
from ../../src/dpp.c:29:
../../src/dpp.c: In function ‘authenticate_request’:
../../ell/log.h:79:22: warning: format ‘%lu’ expects argument of type ‘long unsigned int’, but argument 8 has type ‘size_t’ {aka ‘unsigned int’} [-Wformat=]
79 | l_log(L_LOG_DEBUG, "%s:%s() " format, __FILE__, \
| ^~~~~~~~~~
../../ell/log.h:54:16: note: in definition of macro ‘l_log’
54 | __func__, format "\n", ##__VA_ARGS__)
| ^~~~~~
../../ell/log.h:103:31: note: in expansion of macro ‘L_DEBUG_SYMBOL’
103 | #define l_debug(format, ...) L_DEBUG_SYMBOL(__debug_desc, format, ##__VA_ARGS__)
| ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~
../../src/dpp.c:1235:3: note: in expansion of macro ‘l_debug’
1235 | l_debug("I-Nonce has unexpected length %lu", i_nonce_len);
| ^~~~~~~
Direct leak of 64 byte(s) in 1 object(s) allocated from:
#0 0x7fa226fbf0f8 in __interceptor_malloc (/usr/lib/gcc/x86_64-pc-linux-gnu/9.4.0/libasan.so.5+0x10c0f8)
#1 0x688c98 in l_malloc ell/util.c:62
#2 0x6c2b19 in msg_alloc ell/genl.c:740
#3 0x6cb32c in l_genl_msg_new_sized ell/genl.c:1567
#4 0x424f57 in netdev_build_cmd_authenticate src/netdev.c:3285
#5 0x425b50 in netdev_sae_tx_authenticate src/netdev.c:3385
Direct leak of 7 byte(s) in 1 object(s) allocated from:
#0 0x7fd748ad00f8 in __interceptor_malloc (/usr/lib/gcc/x86_64-pc-linux-gnu/9.4.0/libasan.so.5+0x10c0f8)
#1 0x688c21 in l_malloc ell/util.c:62
#2 0x4beec7 in handshake_state_set_vendor_ies src/handshake.c:324
#3 0x464e4e in station_handshake_setup src/station.c:1203
#4 0x472a2f in __station_connect_network src/station.c:2975
#5 0x473a30 in station_connect_network src/station.c:3078
#6 0x4ed728 in network_connect_8021x src/network.c:1497
Fixes: f24cfa481b ("handshake: Add setter for vendor IEs")
This implements a configurator in the responder role. Currently
configuring an enrollee is limited to only the connected network.
This is to avoid the need to go offchannel for any reason. But
because of this a roam, channel switch, or disconnect will cause
the configuration to fail as none of the frames are being sent
offchannel.
Added both enrollee and configurator roles, as well as the needed
logic inside the authentication protocol to verify role compatibility.
The dpp_sm's role will now be used when setting capability bits making
the auth protocol agnostic to enrollees or configurators.
This also allows the card to re-issue ROC if it ends in the middle of
authenticating or configuring as well as add a maximum timeout for
auth/config protocols.
IO errors were also handled as these sometimes can happen with
certain drivers but are not fatal.
Allows creating a new configuration object based on settings, ssid,
and akm suite (for configurator role) as well as converting a
configuration object to JSON.
Rather than hard coding ad0, use the actual frame data. There really
isn't a reason this would differ (only status attribute) but just
in case its better to use the frame data directly.
This is a minimal implementation only supporting legacy network
configuration, i.e. only SSID and PSK/passphrase are supported.
Missing features include:
- Fragmentation/comeback delay support
- DPP AKM support
- 8021x/PKEX support
This implements the DPP protocol used to authenticate to a
DPP configurator.
Note this is not a full implementation of the protocol and
there are a few missing features which will be added as
needed:
- Mutual authentication (needed for BLE bootstrapping)
- Configurator support
- Initiator role
The presence procedure implemented is a far cry from what the spec
actually wants. There are two reason for this: a) the kernels offchannel
support is not at a level where it will work without rather annoying
work arounds, and b) doing the procedure outlined in the spec will
result in terrible discovery performance.
Because of this a simpler single channel announcement is done by default
and the full presence procedure is left out until/if it is needed.
This is a minimal wrapper around jsmn.h to make things a bit easier
for iterating through a JSON object.
To use, first parse the JSON and create a contents object using
json_contents_new(). This object can then be used to initialize a
json_iter object using json_iter_init().
The json_iter object can then be parsed with json_iter_parse by
passing in JSON_MANDATORY/JSON_OPTIONAL arguments. Currently only
JSON_STRING and JSON_OBJECT types are supported. Any JSON_MANDATORY
values that are not found will result in an error.
If a JSON_OPTIONAL string is not found, the pointer will be NULL.
If a JSON_OPTIONAL object is not found, this iterator will be
initialized but 'start' will be -1. This can be checked with a
convenience macro json_object_not_found();
Static analysis was not happy since this return can be negative and
it was being fed into an unsigned argument. In reality this cannot
happen since the key buffer is always set to the maximum size supported
by any curves.
This module provides a convenient wrapper around both
CMD_[CANCEL_]_REMAIN_ON_CHANNEL APIs.
Certain protocols require going offchannel to send frames, and/or
wait for a response. The frame-xchg module somewhat does this but
has some limitations. For example you cannot just go offchannel;
an initial frame must be sent out to start the procedure. In addition
frame-xchg does not work for broadcasts since it expects an ACK.
This module is much simpler and only handles going offchannel for
a duration. During this time frames may be sent or received. After
the duration the caller will get a callback and any included error
if there was one. Any offchannel request can be cancelled prior to
the duration expriring if the offchannel work has finished early.
The disconnect event handler was mistakenly bailing out if FT or
reassociation was going on. This was done because a disconnect
event is sent by the kernel when CMD_AUTH/CMD_ASSOC is used.
The problem is an AP could also disconnect IWD which should never
be ignored.
To fix this always parse the disconnect event and, if issued by
the AP, always notify watchers of the disconnect.
LLD 13 and GNU ld 2.37 support -z start-stop-gc which allows garbage
collection of C identifier name sections despite the __start_/__stop_
references. GNU ld before 2015-10 had the behavior as well. Simply set
the retain attribute so that GCC 11 (if configure-time binutils is 2.36
or newer)/Clang 13 will set the SHF_GNU_RETAIN section attribute to
prevent garbage collection.
Without the patch, there are linker errors with -z start-stop-gc
(LLD default) when -Wl,--gc-sections is used:
```
ld.lld: error: undefined symbol: __start___eap
>>> referenced by eap.c
>>> src/eap.o:(eap_init)
```
The remain attribute will not be needed if the metadata sections are
referenced by code directly.
ap.c has been mostly careful to call the event handler at the end of any
externally called function to allow methods like ap_free() to be called
within the handler, but that isn't enough. For example in
ap_del_station we may end up emitting two events: STATION_REMOVED and
DHCP_LEASE_EXPIRED. Use a slightly more complicated mechanism to
explicitly guard ap_free calls inside the event handler.
To make it easier, simplify cleanup in ap_assoc_reassoc with the use of
_auto_.
In ap_del_station reorder the actions to send the STATION_REMOVED event
first as the DHCP_LEASE_EXPIRED is a consequence of the former and it
makes sense for the handler to react to it first.
src/eap.c: In function 'eap_rx_packet':
src/eap.c:419:50: error: 'vendor_type' may be used uninitialized in this function [-Werror=maybe-uninitialized]
419 | (type == EAP_TYPE_EXPANDED && vendor_id == (id) && vendor_type == (t))
| ^~
src/eap.c:430:11: note: 'vendor_type' was declared here
430 | uint32_t vendor_type;
It isn't clear why GCC complains about vendor_type, but not vendor_id.
But in all cases if type == EAP_TYPE_EXPANDED, then vendor_type and
vendor_id are set. Silence this spurious warning.
There is an unchecked NULL pointer access in network_has_open_pair.
open_info can be NULL, when out of multiple APs in range that advertise
the same SSID some advertise OWE transition elments and some don't.
The Hotspot 2.0 spec has some requirements that IWD was missing depending
on a few bits in extended capabilities and the HS2.0 indication element.
These requirements correspond to a few sysfs options that can be set in
the kernel which are now set on CONNECTED and unset on DISCONNECTED.
Netconfig was the only user of sysfs but now other modules will
also need it.
Adding existing API for IPv6 settings, a IPv4 and IPv6 'supports'
checker, and a setter for IPv4 settings.
The way a SA Query was done following a channel switch was slightly
incorrect. One because it is only needed when OCVC is set, and two
because IWD was not waiting a random delay between 0 and 5000us as
lined out by the spec. This patch fixes both these issues.
Cache the latest v4 and v6 domain string lists in struct netconfig state
to be able to more easily detect changes in those values in future
commits. For that split netconfig_set_domains's code into this function,
which now only commits the values in netconfig->v{4,6}_domain{,s} to the
resolver, and netconfig_domains_update() which figures out the active
domains string list and saves it into netconfig->v{4,6}_domain{,s}. This
probably saves some cycles as the callers can now decide to only
recalculate the domains list which may have changed.
While there simplify netconfig_set_domains return type to void as the
result was always 0 anyway and was never checked by callers.
Cache the latest v4 and v6 DNS IP string lists in struct netconfig state
to be able to more easily detect changes in those values in future
commits. For that split netconfig_set_dns's code into this function,
which now only commit the values in netconfig->dns{4,6}_list to the
resolver, and netconfig_dns_list_update() which figures out the active
DNS IP address list and saves it in netconfig->dns{4,6} list. This
probably saves some cycles as the callers can now decide to only
recalculate the dns_list which may have changed.
While there simplify netconfig_set_dns return type to void as the result
was always 0 anyway and was never checked by callers.
Cache the latest v4 and v6 gateway IP string in struct netconfig state
to be able to more easily detect changes in those values in future
commits and perhaps to simplify the ..._routes_install functions.
netconfig_ipv4_get_gateway's out_mac parameter can now be NULL. While
editing that function fix a small formatting annoyance.
Use a separate fils variable to make the code a bit prettier.
Also make sure that the out_mac parameter is not NULL prior to storing
the gateway_mac in it.
Add netconfig_enabled() and use that in all places that want to know
whether network configuration is enabled. Drop the enable_network_config
deprecated setting, which was only being handled in one of these 5 or so
places.
This code path was never tested and used to ensure a OWE transition
candidate gets selected over an open one (e.g. if all the BSS's are
blacklisted). But this logic was incorrect and the path was being
taken for BSS's that did not contain the owe_trans element, basically
all BSS's. For RSN's this was somewhat fine since the final check
would set a candidate, but for open BSS's the loop would start over
and potentially complete the loop without ever returning a candidate.
If fallback was false, NULL would be returned.
To fix this only take the OWE transition path if its an OWE transition
BSS, i.e. inverse the logic.
Normally Beacon Reporting subelements are present only if repeated
measurements are requested. However, an all-zero Beacon Reporting
subelement is included by some implementations. Handle this case
similarly to the absent case.
Since Reporting Detail subelement is listed as 'extensible', make sure
that the length check is not overly restrictive. We only interpret the
first field.
It was seen during testing that several offload-capable cards
were not including the OCI in the 4-way handshake. This made
any OCV capable AP unconnectable.
To be safe disable OCV on any cards that support offloading.
802.11 requires an STA initiate the SA Query procedure on channel
switch events. This patch refactors sending the SA Query into its
own routine and starts the procedure when the channel switch event
comes in.
In addition the OCI needs to be verified, so the channel info is
parsed and set into the handshakes chandef.
There are several events for channel switching, and nl80211cmd was
naming two of them "Channel Switch Notify". Change
CH_SWITCH_STARTED_NOTIFY to "Channel Switch Started Notify" to
distinguish the two events.
SA query is the final protocol that requires OCI inclusion and
verification. The OCI element is now included and verified in
both request and response frames as required by 802.11.
strcmp behavior is undefined if one of the parameters is NULL.
Server-id is a mandatory value and cannot be NULL. Gateway can be NULL
in DHCP, so check that explicitly.
Reported-by: Andrew Zaborowski <andrew.zaborowski@intel.com>
In certain situations, it is possible for us to know the MAC of the
default gateway when DHCP finishes. This is quite typical on many home
network and small network setups. It is thus possible to pre-populate
the ARP cache with the gateway MAC address to save an extra round trip
at connection time.
Another advantage is during roaming. After version 4.20, linux kernel
flushes ARP caches by default whenever netdev encounters a no carrier
condition (as is the case during roaming). This can prevent packets
from going out after a roam for a significant amount of time due to
lost/delayed ARP responses.
This implements the new handshake callback for setting a TK with
an extended key ID. The procedure is different from legacy zero
index TKs.
First the new TK is set as RX only. Then message 4 should be sent
out (so it uses the existing TK). This poses a slight issue with
PAE sockets since message order is not guaranteed. In this case
the 4th message is stored and sent after the new TK is installed.
Then the new TK is modified using SET_KEY to both send and
receive.
In the case of control port over NL80211 the above can be avoided
and we can simply install the new key, send message 4, and modify
the TK as TX + RX all in sequence, without waiting for any callbacks.
When UseDefaultInterface is set, iwd doesn't attempt to destroy and
recreate any default interfaces it detects. However, only a single
default interface was ever remembered & initialized. This is fine for
most cases since the kernel would typically only create a single netdev
by default.
However, some drivers can create multiple netdevs by default, if
configured to do so. Other usecases, such as tethering, can also
benefit if iwd initialized & managed all default netdevs that were
detected at iwd start time or device hotplug.
oci variable is always set during handshake_util_find_kde. Do not
initialize it unnecessarily to help the compiler / static analysis find
potential issues.
If OCI is not used, then the oci array is never initialized. Do not try
to include it in our GTK 2_of_2 message.
Fixes: ad4d639854 ("eapol: include OCI in GTK 2/2")
802.11 added Extended Key IDs which aim to solve the issue of PTK
key replacement during rekeys. Since swapping out the existing PTK
may result in data loss because there may be in flight packets still
using the old PTK.
Extended Key IDs use two key IDs for the PTK, which toggle between
0 and 1. During a rekey a new PTK is derived which uses the key ID
not already taken by the existing PTK. This new PTK is added as RX
only, then message 4/4 is sent. This ensure message 4 is encrypted
using the previous PTK. Once sent, the new PTK can be modified to
both RX and TX and the rekey is complete.
To handle this in eapol the extended key ID KDE is parsed which
gives us the new PTK key index. Using the new handshake callback
(handshake_state_set_ext_tk) the new TK is installed. The 4th
message is also included as an argument which is taken care of by
netdev (in case waiting for NEW_KEY is required due to PAE socekts).
This may not be required but setting the group key mode explicitly
to multicast makes things consistent, even if only for the benefit
of reading iwmon logs easier.
The procedure for setting extended key IDs is different from the
single PTK key. The key ID is toggled between 0 and 1 and the new
key is set as RX only, then set to RX/TX after message 4/4 goes
out.
Since netdev needs to set this new key before sending message 4,
eapol can include a built message which netdev will store if
required (i.e. using PAE).
ext_key_id_capable indicates the handshake has set the capability bit
in the RSN info. This will only be set if the AP also has the capability
set.
active_tk_index is the key index the AP chose in message 3. This is
now used for both legacy (always zero) and extended key IDs.
Move the reading of ControlPortOverNL80211 into wiphy itself and
renamed wiphy_control_port_capable to wiphy_control_port_enabled.
This makes things easier for any modules interested in control
port support since they will only have to check this one API rather
than read the settings and check capability.
Expose the Device Address property for each peer. The spec doesn't say
much about how permanent the address or the name are, although the
device address by definition lives longer than the interface addresses.
However the device address is defined to be unique and the name is not
so the address can be used to differentiate devices with identical name.
Being unique also may imply that it's assigned globally and thus
permanent.
Network Manager uses the P2P device address when saving connection
profiles (and will need it from the backend) and in this case it seems
better justified than using the name.
The address is already in the object path but the object path also
includes the local phy index which may change for no reason even when
the peer's address hasn't changed so the path is not useful for
remembering which device we've connected to before. Looking at only
parts of the path is considered wrong.
Some drivers might not actually support control port properly even if
advertised by mac80211. Introduce a new method to wiphy that will take
care of looking up any driver quirks that override the presence of
NL80211_EXT_FEATURE_CONTROL_PORT_OVER_NL80211
Make consecutive calls to netconfig_load_settings() memory-leak safe by
introducing a netconfig_free_settings convenience method. This method
will free any settings that are allocated as a result of
netconfig_load_settings() and will be called from netconfig_free() to
ensure that any settings are freed as a result of netconfig_destroy().
For symmetry with IPv4, save the command id for this netlink command so
we can later add logic to the callback as well as be able to cancel the
command. No functional change in this commit alone.
FT/FILS handle their own PMK derivation but rekeys still require
using the 4-way handshake. There is some ambiguity in the spec whether
or not the PMKID needs to be included in message 1/4 and it appears
that when rekeying after FT/FILS hostapd does not include a PMKID.
The handshake contains the current BSS's RSNE/WPA which may differ
from the FT-over-DS target. When verifying the target BSS's RSNE/WPA
IE needs to be checked, not the current BSS.
If the deauth path was triggered IWD would deauth but end up
calling the connect callback with whatever result netdev had
set, e.g. 'NETDEV_RESULT_OK'. This, of course, caused station
some confusion.
FT-over-DS cannot use OCV due to how the kernel works. This means
we could connect initially with OCVC set, but a FT-over-DS attempt
needs to unset OCVC. Set OCVC false when rebuilding the RSNE for
reassociation.
The FT-over-DS action stage builds an FT-Request which contains an
RSNE. Since FT-over-DS will not support OCV add a boolean to
ft_build_authenticate_ies so the OCVC bit can be disabled rather
than relying on the handshake setting.
This modifies the FT logic to fist call get_oci() before
reassociation. This allows the OCI to be included in reassociation
and in the 4-way handshake later on.
The code path for getting the OCI had to be slightly changed to
handle an OCI that is already set. First the handshake chandef is
NULL'ed out for any new connection. This prevents a stale OCI from
being used. Then some checks were added for this case in
netdev_connect_event and if chandef is already set, start the 4-way
handshake.
netconfig_load_settings is called when establishing a new initial
association to a network. This function tries to update dhcp/dhcpv6
clients with the MAC address of the netdev being used. However, it is
too early to update the MAC here since netdev might need to powercycle
the underlying network device in order to update the MAC (i.e. when
AddressRandomization="network" is used).
If the MAC is set incorrectly, DHCP clients are unable to obtain the
lease properly and station is stuck in "connecting" mode indefinitely.
Fix this by delaying MAC address update until netconfig_configure() is
invoked.
Fixes: ad228461ab ("netconfig: Move loading settings to new method, refactor")
If the AP advertises FT-over-DS support it likely wants us to use
it. Additionally signal_low is probably going to be true since IWD
has started a roam attempt.
When netdev goes down so does station, but prior to netdev calling
the neighbor report callback. The way the logic was written station
is dereferenced prior to checking for any errors, causing a use
after free.
Since -ENODEV is used in this case check for that early before
accessing station.
This adds a utility to convert a chandef obtained from the kernel into a
3 byte OCI element format containing the operating class, primary
channel and secondary channel center frequency index.
This changes scan_bss from using separate members for each
OWE transition element data type (ssid, ssid_len, and bssid)
to a structure that holds them all.
This is being done because OWE transition has option operating
class and channel bytes which will soon be parsed. This would
end up needing 5 separate members in scan_bss which is a bit
much for a single IE that needs to be parsed.
This makes checking the presense of the IE more convenient
as well since it can be done with a simple NULL pointer check
rather than having to l_memeqzero the BSSID.
These members are currently stored in scan_bss but with the
addition of operating class/band info this will become 5
separate members. This is a bit excessive to store in scan_bss
separately so instead this structure can hold everything related
to the OWE transition IE.
Add a utility for setting the OCI obtained from the hardware (prior to
handshake starting) as well as a utility to validate the OCI obtained
from the peer.
This adds a utility that can convert an operating class + channel
combination to a frequency. Operating class is assumed to be a global
operating class from 802.11 Appendix E4.
This information can be found in Operating Channel Information (OCI) IEs,
as well as OWE Transition Mode IEs.
Calling handshake_state_setup_own_ciphers from within
handshate_state_set_authenticator_ie was misleading. In all cases the
supplicant chooses the AKM. This worked since our AP code only ever
advertises a single AKM, but would not work in the general case.
Similarly, the supplicant would choose which authentication type to use
by either sending the WPA1 or WPA2 IE (or OSEN). Thus the setting of
the related variables in handshake_state_set_authenticator_ie was also
incorrect. In iwd, the supplicant_ie would be set after the
authenticator_ie, so these settings would be overwritten in most cases.
Refactor these two setters so that the supplicant's chosen rsn_info
would be used to drive the handshake.
reallocarray has been added to glibc relatively recently (version 2.26,
from 2017) and apparently not all users run new enough glibc. Moreover,
reallocarray is not available with uclibc-ng. So use realloc if
reallocarray is not available to avoid the following build failure
raised since commit 891b78e9e8:
/home/giuliobenetti/autobuild/run/instance-3/output-1/host/lib/gcc/xtensa-buildroot-linux-uclibc/10.3.0/../../../../xtensa-buildroot-linux-uclibc/bin/ld: src/sae.o: in function `sae_rx_authenticate':
sae.c:(.text+0xd74): undefined reference to `reallocarray'
Fixes:
- http://autobuild.buildroot.org/results/c6d3f86282c44645b4f1c61882dc63ccfc8eb35a
There isn't much control station has with how BSS's are inserted to
a network object. The rank algorithm makes that decision. Because of
this we could end up in a situation where the Open BSS is preferred
over the OWE transition BSS.
In attempt to better handle this any Open BSS in this type of network
will not be chosen unless its the only candidate (e.g. no other BSSs,
inability to connect with OWE, or an improperly configured network).
OWE Transition is described in the WiFi Alliance OWE Specification
version 1.1. The idea behind it is to support both legacy devices
without any concept of OWE as well as modern ones which support the
OWE protocol.
OWE is a somewhat special type of network. Where it advertises an
RSN element but is still "open". This apparently confuses older
devices so the OWE transition procedure was created.
The idea is simple: have two BSS's, one open, and one as a hidden
OWE network. Each network advertises a vendor IE which points to the
other. A device sees the open network and can connect (legacy) or
parse the IE, scan for the hidden OWE network, and connect to that
instead.
Care was taken to handle connections to hidden networks directly.
The policy is being set that any hidden network with the WFA OWE IE
is not connectable via ConnectHiddenNetwork(). These networks are
special, and can only be connected to via the network object for
the paired open network.
When scan results come in from any source (DBus, quick, autoconnect)
each BSS is checked for the OWE Transition IE. A few paths can be
taken here when the IE is found:
1. The BSS is open. The BSSID in the IE is checked against the
current scan results (excluding hidden networks). If a match is
found we should already have the hidden OWE BSS and nothing
else needs to be done (3).
2. The BSS is open. The BSSID in the IE is not found in the
current scan results, and the open network also has no OWE BSS
in it. This will be processed after scan results.
3. The BSS is not open and contains the OWE IE. This BSS will
automatically get added to the network object and nothing else
needs to be done.
After the scan results each network is checked for any non-paired
open BSS's. If found a scan is started for these BSS's per-network.
Once these scan results come in the network is notified.
From here network.c can detect that this is an OWE transition
network and connect to the OWE BSS rather than the open one.
Specifically OWE networks with multiple open/hidden BSS's are troublesome
to scan for with the current APIs. The scan parameters are limited to a
single SSID and even if that was changed we have the potential of hitting
the max SSID's per scan limit. In all, it puts the burden onto the caller
to sort out the SSIDs/frequencies to scan for.
Rather than requiring station to handle this a new scan API was added,
scan_owe_hidden() which takes a list of open BSS's and will automatically
scan for the SSIDs in the OWE transition IE for each.
It is slightly optimized to first check if all the hidden SSID's are the
same. This is the most likely case (e.g. single pair or single network)
and a single scan command can be used. Otherwise individual scan commands
are queued for each SSID/frequency combo.
handshake_util_ap_ie_matches() is used to make sure that the RSN element
received from the Authenticator during handshake / association response
is the same as the one advertised in Beacon/Probe Response frames. This
utility tries to bitwise compare the element first, and only if that
fails, compares RSN members individually.
For FT, bitwise comparison will always fail since the PMKID has to be
included by the Authenticator in any RSN IEs included in Authenticate
& Association Response frames.
Perform the bitwise comparison as an optimization only during processing
of eapol message 3/4. Also keep the parsed rsn information for future
use and to possibly avoid re-parsing it during later checks.
DBus scan is performed in several subsets. In certain corner-case
circumstances it would be possible for autoconnect to run after each
subset scan. Instead, trigger autoconnect only after the dbus scan
completes.
This also works around a condition where ANQP results could trigger
autoconnect too early.
Several invocations of station_set_scan_results() base the
'add_to_autoconnect' parameter on station_is_autoconnecting(). Simplify
the code by having station_set_scan_results() invoke that itself.
'add_to_autoconnect' now becomes an 'intent' parameter, specifying
whether autoconnect path should be invoked as a result of these scan
results or not when station is in an appropriate state. Rename
'add_to_autoconnect' parameter to make this clearer.
If the frequency of the bss is not in the list of frequencies for the
current scan, then this is a cached bss. It was likely already
processed for ANQP before, so skip it.
IWD has restricted SSIDs to only utf8 so they can be displayed but
with the addition of OWE transition networks this is an unneeded
restriction (for these networks). The SSID of an OWE transition
network is never displayed to the user so limiting to utf8 isn't
required.
Allow non-utf8 SSIDs to be scanned for by including the length in
the scan parameters and not relying on strlen().
This is a parser for the WFA OWE Transition element. For now the
optional band/channel bytes will not be parsed as hostapd does not
yet support these and would also require the 802.11 appendix E-1
to be added to IWD. Because of this OWE Transition networks are
assumed to be on the same channel as their open counterpart.
in6_addr.__in6_u.__u6_addr8 is glibc-specific and named differently in
the headers shipped with musl libc for example. The POSIX compliant and
universal way of accessing it is in6_addr.s6_addr.
This was actually broken if triggered because __network_connect
checks if network->connect_after_owe_hidden is set and returns
already in progress. We want to keep this behavior though for
obvious reasons.
To fix this station_connect_network can be called directly which
bypasses the check. This is essentially how ANQP avoids this
problem as well.
Similar to ANQP a connect call could come in while station is
scanning for OWE hidden networks. This is supported in the same
manor by saving away the dbus message and resuming the connection
after the hidden OWE scan.
With the addition of OWE transition network needs to be notified
of the hidden OWE scan which is quite similar to how it is notified
of ANQP. The ANQP event watch can be made generic and reused to
allow other events besides ANQP.
This is being added to support OWE transition mode. For these
type of networks the OWE BSS may contain a different SSID than
that of the network, but the WFA spec requires this be hidden
from the user. This means we need to set the handshake SSID based
on the BSS rather than the network object.
Refactor netconfig_set_dns to be a bit easier to follow and remove use
of macros. Also bail out early if no DNS addresses are provided instead
of building an empty DNS list since resolve_set_dns() simply returns if
a NULL or empty DNS list is provided.
Kernel keeps transmitting authentication frames until told to stop or an
authentication frame the kernel considers 'final' is received. Detect
cases where the kernel would keep retransmitting, and if auth_proto
encounters a fatal protocol error, prevent these retransmissions from
occuring by sending a Deauthenticate command to the kernel.
Additionally, treat -EBADMSG/-ENOMSG return from auth_proto specially.
These error codes are meant to convey that a frame should be silently
dropped and retransmissions should continue.
This works around a hostapd bug (described more in the TODO comment)
which is exposed because of the kernels overly agressive re-transmit
behavior on missed ACKs. Combined this results in a death if the
initial commit is not acked. This behavior has been identified in
consumer access points and likely won't ever be patched for older
devices. Because of this IWD must work around the problem which can
be eliminated by not sending out this commit message.
This bug was reported to the hostapd ML:
https://lists.infradead.org/pipermail/hostap/2021-September/039842.html
This change should not cause any compatibility problems to non-hostapd
access points and is identical to how wpa_supplicant treats this
scenario.
If a commit is received while in an accepted state the spec states
the scalar should be checked against the previous commit and if
equal the message should be silently dropped.
In netconfig_load_settings apply the DNS overrides strings we've loaded
instead of leaking them.
Fixes: ad228461ab ("netconfig: Move loading settings to new method, refactor")
netdev now assumes the SSID was set in the handshake (normally via
network_handshake_setup) but WSC calls netdev_connect directly so
it also should set the SSID.
In order to support OWE in the CMD_CONNECT path the scan_bss parameter
needs to be removed since this is lost after netdev_connect returns.
Nearly everything needed is also stored in the handshake except the
privacy capability which is now being mirrored in the netdev object
itself.
Use the MAC addresses for the gateways and DNS servers received in the
FILS IP Assigment IE together with the gateway IP and DNS server IP.
Commit the IP to MAC mappings directly to the ARP/NDP tables so that the
network stack can skip sending the corresponding queries over the air.
Send and receive the FILS IP Address Assignment IEs during association.
As implemented this would work independently of FILS although the only
AP software handling this mechanism without FILS is likely IWD itself.
No support is added for handling the IP assignment information sent from
the server after the initial Association Request/Response frames, i.e.
the information is only used if it is received directly in the
Association Response without the "response pending" bit, otherwise the
DHCP client will be started.
Add two methods that will allow station to implement FILS IP Address
Assigment, one method to decide whether to send the request during
association, and fill in the values to be used in the request IE, and
another to handle the response IE values received from the server and
apply them. The netconfig->rtm_protocol value used when the address is
assigned this way remains RTPROT_DHCP because from the user's point of
view this is automatic IP assigment by the server, a replacement for
DHCP.
Split loading settings out of network_configure into a new method,
network_load_settings. Make sure both consistently handle errors by
printing messages and informing the caller.
Setter which forces the use of group 19 rather than the group order
that ELL provides. Certain APs have been found to have buggy group
negotiation and only work if group 19 is tried first, and only. When
an AP like this this is found (based on vendor OUI match) SAE will
use group 19 unconditionally, and fail if group 19 does not work.
Other groups could be tried upon failure but per the spec group 19
must be supported so there isn't much use in trying other, optional
groups.
Handle the 802.11ai FILS IP Address Assignment IEs in Association
Request frames when netconfig is enabled. Only IPv4 is supported.
Like the P2P IP Allocation mechanism, since the payload format and logic
is independent from the rest of the FILS standard this is enabled
unconditionally for clients who want to use it even though we don't
actually do FILS in AP mode.
If netconfig is enabled tell the DHCP server to expire any leases owned
by the client that is disconnecting by using l_dhcp_server_expire_by_mac
to return the IPs to the IP pool. They're added to the expired list
so they'd only be used if there are no other addresses left in the pool
and can be reactivated if the client comes back before the address is
used by somebody else.
This should ensure that we're always able to offer an address to a new
client as long as there are fewer concurrent clients than addresses in
the configured subnet or IP range.
Use the struct handshake_state::support_ip_allocation field already
supported in eapol.c authenticator side to enable the P2P IP Allocation
mechanism in ap.c. Add the P2P_GROUP_CAP_IP_ALLOCATION bit in P2P group
capabilities to signal the feature is now supported.
There's no harm in enabling this feature in every AP (not just P2P Group
Owner) but the clients won't know whether we support it other than
through that P2P-specific group capability bit.
Add a handshake event for use by the AP side for mechanisms that
allocate client IPs during the handshake: P2P address allocation and
FILS address assignment. This is emitted only when EAPOL or the
auth_proto is actually about to send the network configuration data to
the client so that ap.c can skip allocating a DHCP leases altogether if
the client doesn't send the required KDE or IE.
Some drivers ignore the initial IF_OPER_UP setting that was sent during
netdev_connect_ok(). Attempt to work around this by parsing New Link
events. If OperState setting is still not correct in a subsequent event,
retry setting OperState to IF_OPER_UP.
The hotspot case can actually result in network being NULL which
ends up crashing when accessing "->secrets". In addition any
secrets on this network were never removed for hotspot networks
since everything happened in network_unset_hotspot.
This is meant to be used as a generic notification to autotests. For
now 'no-roam-candidates' is the only event being sent. The idea
is to extend these events to signal conditions that are otherwise
undiscoverable in autotesting.
Replace instances of the ap_del_station() +
ap_sta_free()/ap_remove_sta() with calls to ap_station_disconnect to
make sure we consistently remove the station from the ap->sta_states
queue before using ap_del_station(). ap_del_station() may generate an
event to the ap.h API user (e.g. P2P) and this may end up tearing down
the AP completely.
For that scenario we also don't want ap_sta_free() to access sta->ap so
we make sure ap_del_station() performs these cleanup steps so that
ap_sta_free() has nothing to do that accesses sta->ap.
client_frame is not valid for a beacon frame as beacons are not sent in
response to another frame. Move the access to client_frame->address_2
to the conditional blocks for Probe Response and Association Response
frames.
This is to support the autotesting framework by allowing a smaller
scan subset. This will cut down on the amount of time spent scanning
via normal DBus scans (where the entire spectrum is scanned).
Most autotests do not want autoconnect behavior so it is being
turned off by default. There are a few tests where it is needed
and in these few cases the test can enable autoconnect through
the new station debug property.
This adds the property "AutoConnect" to the station debug interface
which can be read/written to disable or enable autoconnect globally.
As one would expect this property is only going to be used for testing
hence why it was put on the debug interface. Mosts tests disable
autoconnect (or they should) because it leads to unexpected connections.
This method will initiate a connection to a specific BSS rather
than relying on a network based connection (which the user has
no control over which specific BSS is selected).
The only point of failure in netdev_connect_common was setting
up the handshake type. Moving this outside of netdev_connect_common
makes the code flow much better in netdev_{connect,reassociate} as
nothing needs to be reset upon failure.
Utilize 'storage_is_file' when readdir returns DT_UNKNOWN to ensure
features like autoconnect work on filesystems that don't return a d_type
(eg. XFS).
Utilize 'storage_is_file' when readdir returns DT_UNKNOWN to ensure
features like autoconnect work on filesystems that don't return a d_type
(eg. XFS).
Add a function 'storage_is_file' which will use stat to verify a
file's existence given a path relative to the storage directory.
Not all filesystems provide a file type via readdir's d_type.
XFS is a notable system with optional d_type support.
When d_type is not supported stat must be used as a fallback.
If a stat fallback is not provided iwd will fail to load state files.
The preparing_roam flag is expected to be set by a few roam
routines and normally this is done prior to the roam scan.
The Roam() developer option was not doing this and would
cause failed roams in some cases.
This adds support in netdev_reassociate for all the auth
protocols (SAE/FILS/OWE) by moving the bulk of netdev_connect
into netdev_connect_common. In addition PREV_BSSID is set
in the associate message if 'in_reassoc' is true.
Some connections, like Hotspot require additional IEs to be used during
the Association. These are now passed as 'extra_ies' when invoking
netdev_connect, however they are also needed during ReAssociation and FT
to such APs.
Additionally, it may be that Hotspot-enabled APs will start utilizing
FILS or SAE. In these cases the extra_ies need to be accounted for
somehow, either by making a copy in handshake_state, netdev, or the
auth_proto itself. Similarly, P2P which heavily uses vendor IEs can be
used over SAE in the future.
Since a copy of these IEs is needed, might as well store them in
handshake_state itself for easy book-keeping by network/station.
RM Enabled Capabilities and Extended Capabilities IEs were correctly
being sent when using CMD_CONNECT for initial connections and
re-associations. However, for SoftMac SAE, FT, FILS and OWE connections,
these additional IEs were not added properly during the Associate step.
If the driver supports RRM, then we might as well always send the RM
Enabled Capabilities IE (and use the USE_RRM flag). 802.11-2020
suggests that this IE can be sent whenever
dot11RadioMeasurementActivated is true, and this setting is independent
of whether the peer supports RRM. There's nothing to indicate that an
STA should not send these IEs if the AP is not RRM enabled.
While we correctly emit a NETDEV_EVENT_CHANNEL_SWITCHED event from
netdev for other modules to respond to, we fail to actually update the
frequency of the netdev object in question. Since the netdev frequency
is used elsewhere (e.g. to send action frames), it needs updating too.
Fixes: 5eb0b7ca8e ("netdev: add a channel switch event")
This variable ended up being used only on the fast-transition path. On
the re-associate path it was never used, but memcpy-ied nevertheless.
Since its only use is by auth_proto based protocols, move it to the
auth_proto object directly.
Due to how prepare_ft works (we need prev_bssid from the handshake, but
the handshake is reset), have netdev_ft_* methods take an 'orig_bss'
parameter, similar to netdev_reassociate.
IE elements in various management frames are ordered. This ordering is
outlined in 802.11, Section 9.3.3. The ordering is actually different
depending on the frame type. Instead of trying to implement the order
manually, add a utility function that will sort the IEs in the order
expected by the particular management frame type.
Since we already have IE ordering look up tables in the various
management frame type validation functions, move them to global level
and re-use these lookup tables for the sorting utility.
This refactors some code to eliminate getting the ERP entry twice
by simply returning it from network_has_erp_identity (now renamed
to network_get_erp_cache). In addition this code was moved into
station_build_handshake_rsn and properly cleaned up in case there
was an error or if a FILS AKM was not chosen.
The authorized macs pointer was being set to either the wsc_beacon
or wsc_probe_response structures, which were initialized out of
scope to where 'amacs' was being used. This resulted in an out of
scope read, caught by address sanitizers.
One of these message buffers was overflowing due to padding not
being taken into account (caught by sanitizers). Wrapped the length
of all message buffers with EAP_SIM_ROUND as to account for any
padding that attributes may add.
The network_config was not being copied to network_info when
updated. This caused any new settings to be lost if the network
configuration file was updated during runtime.
The RoamThreshold5G was never honored because it was being
set prior to any connections. This caused the logic inside
netdev_cqm_rssi_update to always choose the 2GHz threshold
(RoamThreshold) due to netdev->frequency being zero at this time.
Instead call netdev_cqm_rssi_update in all connect/transition
calls after netdev->frequency is updated. This will allow both
the 2G and 5G thresholds to be used depending on what frequency
the new BSS is.
The call to netdev_cqm_rssi_update in netdev_setup_interface
was also removed since it serves no purpose, at least now
that there are two thresholds to consider.
Under certain conditions, access points with very low signal could be
detected. This signal is too low to estimate a data rate and causes
this L_WARN to fire. Fix this by returning a -ENETUNREACH error code in
case the signal is too low for any of the supported rates.
Transition Disable indications and information stored in the network
profile needs to be enforced. Since Transition Disable information is
now stored inside the network object, add a new method
'network_can_connect_bss' that will take this information into account.
wiphy_can_connect method is thus deprecated and removed.
Transition Disable can also result in certain AKMs and pairwise ciphers
being disabled, so wiphy_select_akm method's signature is changed and
takes the (possibly overriden) ie_rsn_info as input.
This indication can come in via EAPoL message 3 or during
FILS Association. It carries information as to whether certain
transition mode options should be disabled. See WPA3 Specification,
version 3 for more details.
Some network settings keys are set / parsed in multiple files. Add a
utility to parse all common network configuration settings in one place.
Also add some defines to make sure settings are always saved in the
expected group/key.
This returns the length of the actual contents, making the code a bit
easier to read and avoid the need to mask the KDE value which isn't
self-explanatory.
Instead of requiring each auth_proto to perform validation of the frames
received via rx_authenticate & rx_associate, have netdev itself perform
the mpdu validation. This is unlikely to happen anyway since the kernel
performs its own frame validation. Print a warning in case the
validation fails.
There's no reason why a change in groups would result in the
anti-clogging token becoming invalid. This might result in us needing
an extra round-trip if the peer is using countermeasures and our
requested group was deemed unsuitable.
We may receive multiple anti-clogging request messages. We memdup the
token every time, without checking whether memory for one has already
been allocated. Free the old token prior to allocating a new one.
The group was not checked at all. The specification doesn't
mention doing so specifically, but we are only likely to receive an Anti
Clogging Token Request message once we have sent our initial Commit. So
the group should be something we could have sent or might potentially be
able to use.
In case an exceptional condition occurs, handle this more consistently
by returning the following errors:
-ENOMSG -- If a message results in the retransmission timer t0 being
restarted without actually sending anything.
-EBADMSG -- If a received message is to be silently discarded without
affecting the t0 timer.
-ETIMEDOUT -- If SYNC_MAX has been exceeded
-EPROTO -- If a fatal protocol error occurred
Now that sae_verify_* methods no longer allow dropped frames though,
there's no reason to keep these checks. sae_process_commit and
sae_process_confirm will now always receive messages in their respective
state.
sae_verify_* functions were correctly marking frames to be dropped, but
were returning 0, which caused the to-be-dropped frames to be further
processed inside sae_rx_authenticate. Fix that by returning a proper
error.
Make sure to return -EAGAIN whenever a received frame from the peer
results in a retransmission. This also prevents the frame from being
mistakenly processed further in sae_rx_authenticate.
Do not try to transition to a new state from sae_send_commit /
sae_send_confirm since these methods can be called due to
retransmissions or other unexpected messages. Instead, transition to
the new state explicitly from sae_process_commit / sae_process_confirm.
SAE protocol is meant to authenticate peers simultaneously. Hence it
includes a tie-breaker provision in case both peers enter into the
Committed state and the Commit messages arrive at the respective peers
near simultaneously.
However, in the case of STA or Infrastructure mode, only one peer (STA)
would normally enter the Committed state (via Init) and the tie-breaker
provision is not needed. If this condition is detected, abort the
connection.
Also remove the uneeded group change check in process_commit.
sae_compute_pwe doesn't really depend on the state of sae_sm. Only the
curve to be used for the PWE calculation is needed. Rework the function
signature to reflect that and remove unneeded member of struct sae_sm.
ie_tlv_builder_init takes a size_t as input, yet for some reason
ie_tlv_builder_finalize takes an unsigned int argument as output. Fix
the latter to use size_t as well.
During processing of Connect events by netdev, some of these elements
might be updated even when already set. Instead of issuing
l_free/l_memdup each time, check and see whether the elements are
bitwise identical first.
Returns a template RSNX element that can be further modified by callers
to set any additional capabilities if required. wiphy will fill in
those capabilities that are driver / firmware dependent.
Most parameters set into the handshake object are actually known by the
network object itself and not station. This includes address
randomization settings, EAPoL settings, passphrase/psk/8021x settings,
etc. Since the number of these settings will only keep growing, move
the handshake setup into network itself. This also helps keep network
internals better encapsulated.
Refactor network_sync_psk to not require setting attributes into
multiple settings objects. This is in fact unnecessary as the parsed
security parameters are used everywhere else instead. Also make sure to
wipe the [Security] group first, in case any settings were invalid
during loading or otherwise invalidated.
Credentials obtained can now be either in passphrase or PSK form. Prior
to commit 7a9891dbef, passphrase credentials were always converted to
PSK form by invoking crypto_psk_from_passphrase. This was changed in
order to support WPA3 networks. Unfortunately the provisioning logic
was never properly updated. Fix that, and also try to not overwrite any
existing settings in case WSC is providing credentials for networks that
are already known.
Fixes: 7a9891dbef ("wsc: store plain text passphrase if available")
There will be additional security-related settings that will be
introduced for settings files. In particular, Hash-to-Curve PT
elements, Transition Disable settings and potentially others in the
future. Since PSK is now not the only element that would require
update, rename this function to better reflect this.
PRF+ from RFC 5295 is the more generic function using which HKDF_Expand
is defined. Allow this function to take a vararg list of arguments to
be hashed (these are referred to as 'S' in the RFCs).
Implement hkdf_expand in terms of prf_plus and update all uses to the
new syntax.
This fixes an issue where the udp port was not being opened due to a
permission denied error. The result of this was the dhcp client would
fail to send the renewal request and so the dhcp lease would expire.
The addition of the CAP_NET_BIND_SERVICE capability allows the service
to open sockets in the restricted port range (<1024) which is required
for dhcp.
This is based on a previous patch by Roberto Santalla Fernández.
A new config is introduced into the network config file under IPv4
called SendHostname. If this is set to true then we add the hostname
into all DHCP requests. The default is false.
If the idea is that the interface should only be present when connected
then don't do this in the DISCONNECTING state as there are various
possible transitions from CONNECTED or ROAMING directly to DISCONNECTED.
Don't require a gateway address from the settings file or from the DHCP
server when doing netconfig. Failing when the gateway address was
missing was breaking P2P but also small local networks.
Be paranoid and check that the prefix length in addresses from
used_addr4_list are not zero (they shouldn't be) and that address family
is AF_INET (it should be), mainly to quiet coverity warnings:
While there also fix one line's indentation.
At the end of ip_pool_select_addr4() we'd check if the selected address
is equal to the subnet address and increment it by 1 to produce a valid
host address for the AP. That check was always correct only with 24-bit
prefix, extend it to actually use the prefix-dependent mask instead of
0xff. Fixes a testAP failure triggered 50% of the times because the
netmask is 28 bit long there.
Don't signal the connected state until the client has obtained a DHCP
lease and we can set the ConnectedIP property. From now on that
property is always set when there's a connection.
p2p_parse_association_req() already extracts the P2P IE payload from the
IE sequence, there's no need to call ie_tlv_extract_p2p_payload before
it. Pass the IE sequence directly to p2p_parse_association_req().
Similarly to commit
27d302a0 ("band: Add a utility to estimate VHT rx data rate"), this
commit adds an RX data rate estimation utility for HT connections.
This function is meant to supercede a similar function in ie.c. The
current approach results in very optimistic data rate estimates since it
only takes into account the VHT/HT Capabilities IEs. It does not take
into account any local hardware limitations (such as no VHT/HT support),
limited RX MCS sets & number of spatial streams. It also does not take
into account that the AP might not be actually operating on higher
bandwidth channels.
This function is meant to address that by matching peer TX MCS sets with
the local hardware RX MCS set capability. It also takes into account
channel bandwidth capabilities of the local hardware, as well as whether
the AP is actually operating on a wider channel.
Move the band definition out of wiphy.c and into band.[ch]. This is
done to make certain utilities that depend on band information capable
of being tested from unit tests.
The band concept will most likely grow over time. For now, the only
user will be wiphy.c and unit tests, so the structures are kept public.
It is possible that the address set command succeeds just after a
netconfig object has been destroyed.
==6485== Invalid read of size 8
==6485== at 0x458A6D: netconfig_ipv4_routes_install (netconfig.c:629)
==6485== by 0x458D1C: netconfig_ipv4_ifaddr_add_cmd_cb (netconfig.c:689)
==6485== by 0x4A5E7B: process_message (netlink.c:181)
==6485== by 0x4A626A: can_read_data (netlink.c:289)
==6485== by 0x4A3E19: io_callback (io.c:120)
==6485== by 0x4A27B5: l_main_iterate (main.c:478)
==6485== by 0x4A28F6: l_main_run (main.c:525)
==6485== by 0x4A2C0E: l_main_run_with_signal (main.c:647)
==6485== by 0x404D27: main (main.c:542)
==6485== Address 0x4a47290 is 32 bytes inside a block of size 104 free'd
==6485== at 0x48399CB: free (vg_replace_malloc.c:538)
==6485== by 0x49998B: l_free (util.c:136)
==6485== by 0x457699: netconfig_free (netconfig.c:130)
==6485== by 0x45A038: netconfig_destroy (netconfig.c:1163)
==6485== by 0x41FD16: station_free (station.c:3613)
==6485== by 0x42020E: station_destroy_interface (station.c:3710)
==6485== by 0x4B990E: interface_instance_free (dbus-service.c:510)
==6485== by 0x4BC193: _dbus_object_tree_remove_interface (dbus-service.c:1694)
==6485== by 0x4BA22A: _dbus_object_tree_object_destroy (dbus-service.c:795)
==6485== by 0x4B078D: l_dbus_unregister_object (dbus.c:1537)
==6485== by 0x417ACB: device_netdev_notify (device.c:361)
==6485== by 0x4062B6: netdev_free (netdev.c:808)
==6485== Block was alloc'd at
==6485== at 0x483879F: malloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:307)
==6485== by 0x499857: l_malloc (util.c:62)
==6485== by 0x459DC0: netconfig_new (netconfig.c:1115)
==6485== by 0x41FC29: station_create (station.c:3592)
==6485== by 0x4207B3: station_netdev_watch (station.c:3864)
==6485== by 0x411A17: netdev_initial_up_cb (netdev.c:5588)
==6485== by 0x4A5E7B: process_message (netlink.c:181)
==6485== by 0x4A626A: can_read_data (netlink.c:289)
==6485== by 0x4A3E19: io_callback (io.c:120)
==6485== by 0x4A27B5: l_main_iterate (main.c:478)
==6485== by 0x4A28F6: l_main_run (main.c:525)
==6485== by 0x4A2C0E: l_main_run_with_signal (main.c:647)
==6485==
netdev_free relies on netdev->connected being set to detect whether a
connection is in progress. This variable is only set once the driver
has been connected however, so for situations where a CMD_CONNECT is
still 'in flight' or if the wiphy work is still pending, the ongoing
connection will not be canceled. Fix that by being more thorough when
trying to detect that a connection is in progress.
src/wiphy.c:wiphy_radio_work_next() Starting work item 2
Terminate
src/netdev.c:netdev_free() Freeing netdev wlan0[9]
src/device.c:device_free()
src/station.c:station_free()
src/netconfig.c:netconfig_destroy()
Removing scan context for wdev c
src/scan.c:scan_context_free() sc: 0x4a44c80
src/netdev.c:netdev_mlme_notify() MLME notification New Station(19)
src/netdev.c:netdev_link_notify() event 16 on ifindex 9
==6356== Invalid write of size 4
==6356== at 0x40A253: netdev_cmd_connect_cb (netdev.c:2522)
==6356== by 0x4A8886: process_unicast (genl.c:986)
==6356== by 0x4A8C48: received_data (genl.c:1098)
==6356== by 0x4A3DFD: io_callback (io.c:120)
==6356== by 0x4A2799: l_main_iterate (main.c:478)
==6356== by 0x4A28DA: l_main_run (main.c:525)
==6356== by 0x4A2BF2: l_main_run_with_signal (main.c:647)
==6356== by 0x404D27: main (main.c:542)
==6356== Address 0x4a3e418 is 152 bytes inside a block of size 472 free'd
==6356== at 0x48399CB: free (vg_replace_malloc.c:538)
==6356== by 0x49996F: l_free (util.c:136)
==6356== by 0x406662: netdev_free (netdev.c:886)
==6356== by 0x4129C2: netdev_shutdown (netdev.c:5980)
==6356== by 0x403A14: iwd_shutdown (main.c:79)
==6356== by 0x403A7D: signal_handler (main.c:90)
==6356== by 0x4A2AFB: sigint_handler (main.c:612)
==6356== by 0x4A2F3B: handle_callback (signal.c:78)
==6356== by 0x4A3030: signalfd_read_cb (signal.c:104)
==6356== by 0x4A3DFD: io_callback (io.c:120)
==6356== by 0x4A2799: l_main_iterate (main.c:478)
==6356== by 0x4A28DA: l_main_run (main.c:525)
==6356== Block was alloc'd at
==6356== at 0x483879F: malloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:307)
==6356== by 0x49983B: l_malloc (util.c:62)
==6356== by 0x4121BD: netdev_create_from_genl (netdev.c:5776)
==6356== by 0x451F6F: manager_new_station_interface_cb (manager.c:173)
==6356== by 0x4A8886: process_unicast (genl.c:986)
==6356== by 0x4A8C48: received_data (genl.c:1098)
==6356== by 0x4A3DFD: io_callback (io.c:120)
==6356== by 0x4A2799: l_main_iterate (main.c:478)
==6356== by 0x4A28DA: l_main_run (main.c:525)
==6356== by 0x4A2BF2: l_main_run_with_signal (main.c:647)
==6356== by 0x404D27: main (main.c:542)
If the daemon is started and killed rapidly on startup, it is possible
for netdev_shutdown to be called prior to manager processing messages
that actually create the netdev itself. Since the netdev_list has
already been freed, the storage is lost. Fix that by destroying
netdev_list only when the module is unloaded.
If we're going down, make sure to notify any watches about EVENT_DEL
earlier. Not doing so might result in us not cleaning up requests that
might have been started as the result of this event.
station_free() is invoked when one of two possibilities happen:
- Device has been powered down, and EVENT_DOWN has been emitted
- Device has been removed, and EVENT_DEL has been emitted
In both cases there is not much point for netdev_disconnect to be
invoked as that tries to cleanly shut down an existing connection. The
only thing the ABORTED error accomplishes in this case is to send a
dbus_aborted_error for the pending_connect message, if it exists.
There's already code for doing this in station_free().
src/station.c:station_enter_state() Old State: autoconnect_quick, new state: connecting (auto)
src/scan.c:scan_cancel() Trying to cancel scan id 1 for wdev 7
src/wiphy.c:wiphy_radio_work_done() Work item 1 done
src/wiphy.c:wiphy_radio_work_next() Starting work item 2
Terminate
src/netdev.c:netdev_free() Freeing netdev wlan0[9]
src/device.c:device_free()
src/station.c:station_free()
src/wiphy.c:wiphy_radio_work_done() Work item 2 done
src/station.c:station_connect_cb() 9, result: 5
src/netconfig.c:netconfig_destroy()
Removing scan context for wdev 7
src/scan.c:scan_context_free() sc: 0x4a39490
src/netdev.c:netdev_mlme_notify() MLME notification New Station(19)
src/netdev.c:netdev_link_notify() event 16 on ifindex 9
src/netdev.c:netdev_link_notify() event 16 on ifindex 9
src/netdev.c:netdev_mlme_notify() MLME notification Authenticate(37)
src/netdev.c:netdev_link_notify() event 16 on ifindex 9
src/netdev.c:netdev_mlme_notify() MLME notification Associate(38)
src/netdev.c:netdev_link_notify() event 16 on ifindex 9
src/netdev.c:netdev_mlme_notify() MLME notification Connect(46)
src/netdev.c:netdev_link_notify() event 16 on ifindex 9
src/wiphy.c:wiphy_reg_notify() Notification of command Reg Change(36)
src/wiphy.c:wiphy_update_reg_domain() New reg domain country code for (global) is US
src/netdev.c:netdev_link_notify() event 16 on ifindex 9
src/netdev.c:netdev_unicast_notify() Unicast notification 129
src/netdev.c:netdev_mlme_notify() MLME notification Del Station(20)
src/netdev.c:netdev_mlme_notify() MLME notification Deauthenticate(39)
src/netdev.c:netdev_mlme_notify() MLME notification Disconnect(48)
src/wiphy.c:wiphy_reg_notify() Notification of command Reg Change(36)
src/wiphy.c:wiphy_update_reg_domain() New reg domain country code for (global) is XX
==20311== Invalid write of size 4
==20311== at 0x406E74: netdev_cmd_disconnect_cb (netdev.c:1130)
==20311== by 0x4A78A8: process_unicast (genl.c:986)
==20311== by 0x4A7C6A: received_data (genl.c:1098)
==20311== by 0x4A2E1F: io_callback (io.c:120)
==20311== by 0x4A17BB: l_main_iterate (main.c:478)
==20311== by 0x4A18FC: l_main_run (main.c:525)
==20311== by 0x4A1C14: l_main_run_with_signal (main.c:647)
==20311== by 0x404D27: main (main.c:542)
==20311== Address 0x4a37a0c is 156 bytes inside a block of size 472 free'd
==20311== at 0x48399CB: free (vg_replace_malloc.c:538)
==20311== by 0x498991: l_free (util.c:136)
==20311== by 0x406651: netdev_free (netdev.c:883)
==20311== by 0x412976: netdev_shutdown (netdev.c:5970)
==20311== by 0x403A14: iwd_shutdown (main.c:79)
==20311== by 0x403A7D: signal_handler (main.c:90)
==20311== by 0x4A1B1D: sigint_handler (main.c:612)
==20311== by 0x4A1F5D: handle_callback (signal.c:78)
==20311== by 0x4A2052: signalfd_read_cb (signal.c:104)
==20311== by 0x4A2E1F: io_callback (io.c:120)
==20311== by 0x4A17BB: l_main_iterate (main.c:478)
==20311== by 0x4A18FC: l_main_run (main.c:525)
The data rate estimation belongs in wiphy since it should take hardware
capabilities into account. Right now the data rate calculation simply
assumes the hardware is as capable as the AP. scan.c will be ported to
use this utility and the data rate estimation will be expanded to take
wiphy capabilities into account.
scan_parse_result used to parse the wdev and return this to the caller
where it was compared against the expected wdev. Simplify this by
extract the wdev first, and proceeding with the bss parsing afterwards.
Right now a very limited set of band parameters are parsed into wiphy.
This includes the supported rates and the supported frequencies.
However, there is much more information that is given for each band.
Introduce a new band object that will store this information and can be
extended for future use.
Change the char *addr_str and uint8_t prefix_len pair to an
l_rtnl_address object and use ell/rtnl.h utilities that use that
directly. Extend broadcast_from_ip to handle prefix_len.
We generate the DBus error reply type from the errno only when
ap_start() was failing synchronously, now also send the errno through
the callbacks so that we can also return a specific DBus reply when
failing asynchronously. Thea AP autotest relies on receiving the
AlreadyExists DBus error.
Deprecate the global [General].APRanges setting in favour of
[IPv4].APAddressPool with an extended (but backwards-compatible) syntax.
Drop the existing address pool creation code.
The new APAddressPool setting has the same syntax as the profile-local
[IPv4].Address setting and the subnet selection code will fall back
to the global setting if it's missing, this way we use common code to
handle both settings.
Extend the [IPv4].Address setting's syntax to allow a new format: a list
of <IP>/<prefix_len> -form strings that define the address space from
which a subnet is selected. Rewrite the DHCP settings loading with
other notable changes:
* validate some of the settings more thoroughly,
* name all netconfig-related ap_state members with the netconfig_
prefix,
* make sure we always call l_dhcp_server_set_netmask(),
* allow netmasks other than 24-bit and change the default to 28 bits,
* as requested avoid using the l_net_ ioctl-based functions although
l_dhcp still uses them internally,
* as requested avoid touching the ap_state members until the end of
some functions so that on error they're basically a no-op (for
readability).
Add the ip_pool_select_addr4 function to select a random subnet of requested
size from an address space defined by a string list (for use with the
AP profile [IPv4].Address and the global [IPv4].APAddressPool settings),
avoiding those subnets that conflict with subnets in use. We take care
to give a similar weight to all subnets contained in the specified
ranges regardless of how many ranges contain each, basically so that
overlapping ranges don't affect the probabilities (debatable.)
Add the ip-pool submodule that tracks IPv4 addresses in use on the
system for use when selecting the address for a new AP. l_rtnl_address
is used internally because if we're going to return l_rtnl_address
objects it would be misleading if we didn't fill in all of their
properties like flags etc.
If the connected BSS changes channel, netdev will emit an event with the
new channel's frequency. In response, have station change the frequency
of the connected scan_bss struct and inform network about the update.
If the connected BSS announces that it is switching operating channel,
the kernel may emit the NL80211_CMD_CH_SWTICH_NOTIFY event when the
switch is complete. Add a new netdev event NETDEV_EVENT_CHANNEL_SWITCHED
to signal to interested modules that the connected BSS has changed
channel. The event carries a pointer to the new channel's frequency.
NL80211_BSS_LAST_SEEN_BOOTTIME is expressed in nanoseconds, while BSS
timestamps are expressed in microseconds internally. Convert the
attribute to microseconds when using it to timestamp a BSS. This makes
iwd expire absent BSSes within 30 seconds as intended.
Fixes: 454cee12d4 ("scan: Use kernel-reported time-stamp if provided")
Right now, if a connection to a network selected by auto-connect fails,
the entire autoconnect process is restarted. This means that scans are
kicked off again, auto-connect list is rebuilt, etc. This was due to
auto-connect reusing the same failure path as connections triggered via
D-Bus.
The above behavior can lead to weird situations in certain corner cases.
For example, a highly preferred network configured with the wrong
password would result in auto-connect entering an infinite loop.
Fix this by making sure that all auto-connect entries are tried and
exhausted prior to re-scanning again.
The temporary ban list is cleared when a network is connected to
successfully, and also in network_connect_failed. Unfortunately,
network_connect_failed is not called in all paths (i.e. during
autoconnect) since it messes with the state of secrets and passphrases.
Clear the list in network_disconnected() instead, since it is guaranteed
to be called in every circumstance.
This will be effectively the same as the CONNECTING state, but can be
used to enable differing behavior, depending on whether connection was
triggered by autoconnect or via D-Bus.
Code that walked the VHT TX/RX MCS maps seemed to assume that bit_field
operated on bits that start at '1'. But this utility actually operates
on bits that start at '0'. I.e. the least significant bit is at
position 0.
While we're at it, rename the mcs variable into bitoffset to make it
clearer how the maps are being iterated over. Supported MCS is actually
the value found in the map.
This option has not been used in a very long time, and is of limited
utility since the only thing D-Bus debugging does is hexdumps the
content of D-Bus messages to the terminal.
The current calculation was giving erroneous results when it came to VHT
MCS index 4 and VHT MCS index 8 & 9.
Switch to a precomputed look up table and add a multiplication factor
for short GI.
ap_reset() seems to be called whenever the AP is stopped or removed due
to interface shutdown. For some reason ap_reset did not remove the DHCP
server object, resulting in leaks:
==211== at 0x483879F: malloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:307)
==211== by 0x46B5AD: l_malloc (util.c:62)
==211== by 0x49B0E2: l_dhcp_server_new (dhcp-server.c:715)
==211== by 0x433AA3: ap_setup_dhcp (ap.c:2615)
==211== by 0x433AA3: ap_load_dhcp (ap.c:2645)
==211== by 0x433AA3: ap_load_config (ap.c:2753)
==211== by 0x433AA3: ap_start (ap.c:2885)
==211== by 0x434A96: ap_dbus_start_profile (ap.c:3329)
==211== by 0x482DA9: _dbus_object_tree_dispatch (dbus-service.c:1815)
==211== by 0x47A4D9: message_read_handler (dbus.c:285)
==211== by 0x4720EB: io_callback (io.c:120)
==211== by 0x47130C: l_main_iterate (main.c:478)
==211== by 0x4713DB: l_main_run (main.c:525)
==211== by 0x4713DB: l_main_run (main.c:507)
==211== by 0x4715EB: l_main_run_with_signal (main.c:647)
==211== by 0x403EE1: main (main.c:550)
==209== by 0x43E48A: netconfig_ipv4_select_and_install (netconfig.c:887)
==209== by 0x43E48A: netconfig_configure (netconfig.c:1025)
==209== by 0x41743C: station_connect_cb (station.c:2556)
==209== by 0x408E0D: netdev_connect_ok (netdev.c:1311)
==209== by 0x47549E: process_unicast (genl.c:994)
==209== by 0x47549E: received_data (genl.c:1102)
==209== by 0x4720EB: io_callback (io.c:120)
==209== by 0x47130C: l_main_iterate (main.c:478)
==209== by 0x4713DB: l_main_run (main.c:525)
==209== by 0x4713DB: l_main_run (main.c:507)
==209== by 0x4715EB: l_main_run_with_signal (main.c:647)
==209== by 0x403EE1: main (main.c:550)
Prior to the BSS blacklist a BSS based autoconnect list made
the most sense, but now station actually retries all BSS's upon
failure. This means that for each BSS in the autoconnect list
every other BSS under that SSID will be attempted to connect to
if there is a failure. Essentially this is a network based
autoconnect list, just an indirect way of doing it.
Intead the autoconnect list can be purely network based, using
the network rank for sorting. This avoids the need for a special
autoconnect_entry struct as well as ensures the last connected
network is chosen first (simply based on existing network ranking
logic).
It was observed that IWD's ranking for BSS's did not always
end up with the fastest being chosen. This was due to IWD's
heavy weight on signal strength. This is a decent way of ranking
but even better is calculating a theoretical data rate which
was also done and factored in. The problem is the data rate
factor was always outdone by the signal strength.
Intead remove signal strength entirely as this is already taken
into account with the data rate calculation. This also removes
the check for rate IEs. If no IEs are found the parser will
base the data rate soley on RSSI.
There were a few other factors removed which will be added back
when ranking *networks* rather than BSS's. WPA version (or open)
was removed as well as the privacy capability. These values really
should not differ between BSS's in the same SSID and as such
should be used for network ranking instead.
Both ext/supported rates IEs are obtained from scan results. These
IEs are passed to ie_tlv_init/ie_tlv_next, as well as direct length
checks (for supported rates at least, extended supported rates can
be as long as a single byte integer can hold, 1 - 255) which verifies
that the length in the IE matches the overall IE length that is
stored in scan_bss. Because of this, ie_parse_supported_rates_from_data
was doing double duty re-initializing a TLV iterator.
Intead, since we know the IE length is within bounds, the length/data
can simply be directly accessed out of the buffer. This avoids the need
for a wrapper function entirely.
The length parameters were also removed, since this is now obtained
directly from the IE.
Since netdev maintains the list of FT over DS info structs there is not
any need for station to get callbacks when the initial action frame
is received, or not. This removes the need for the callback handler,
user data, and response timeout.
Roam times can be slightly improved by sending out the FT-over-DS
action frames to any BSS in the mobility domain immediately after
connecting. This preauthenticates IWD to each AP which means
Reassociation can happen right away when a roam is needed.
When a roam is needed station_transition_start will first try
FT-over-DS (if supported) via netdev_fast_transtion_over_ds. The
return is checked and if netdev has no cached entries FT-over-Air
will be used instead.
The beauty of FT-over-DS is that a station can send and receive
action frames to many APs to prepare for a future roam. Each
AP authenticates the station and when a roam happens the station
can immediately move to reassociation.
To handle this a queue of netdev_ft_over_ds_info structs is used
instead of a single entry. Using the new ft.c parser APIs these
info structs can be looked up when responses come in. For now
the timeouts/callbacks are kept but these will be removed as it
really does not matter if the AP sends a response (keeps station
happy until the next patch).
This is to prepare for multiple concurrent FT-over-DS action frames.
A list will be kept in netdev and for lookup reasons it needs to
parse the start of the frame to grab the aa/spa addresses. In this
call the IEs are also returned and passed to the new
ft_over_ds_parse_action_response.
For now the address checks have been moved into netdev, but this will
eventually turn into a queue lookup.
This value sets the roaming threshold on 5GHz networks. The
threshold has been separated from 2.4GHz because in many cases
5GHz can perform much better at low RSSI than 2.4GHz.
In addition the BSS ranking logic was re-worked and now 5GHz is
much more preferred, even at low RSSI. This means we need a
lower floor for RSSI before roaming, otherwise IWD would end
up roaming immediately after connecting due to low RSSI CQM
events.