This gives the tests a lot more fine-tune control to wait for
specific state transitions rather than only what is exposed over
DBus.
The additional events for "ft-roam" and "reassoc-roam" were removed
since these are now covered by the more generic state change events
("ft-roaming" and "roaming" respectively).
To support multiple nlmon sources, move the logic that reads from iwmon
device into main.c instead of nlmon. nlmon.c now becomes agnostic of
how the packets are actually obtained. Packets are fed in via
high-level APIs such as nlmon_print_rtnl, nlmon_print_genl,
nlmon_print_pae.
The current implementation inside nlmon_receive is asymmetrical. RTNL
packets are printed using nlmon_print_rtnl while GENL packets are
printed using nlmon_message.
nlmon_print_genl and nlmon_print_rtnl already handle iterating over data
containing multiple messages, and are used by nlmon started in reader
mode. Use these for better symmetry inside nlmon_receive.
While here, move store_netlink() call into nlmon_print_rtnl. This makes
handling of PCAP output symmetrical for both RTNL and GENL packets.
This also fixes a possibility where only the first message of a
multi-RTNL packet would be stored.
nlmon_print_genl invokes genl_ctrl when a generic netlink control
message is encountered. genl_ctrl() tries to filter nl80211 family
appearance messages and setup nlmon->id with the extracted family id.
However, the id is already provided inside main.c by using nlmon_open,
and no control messages are processed by nlmon in 'capture' mode (-r
command line argument not passed) since all genl messages go through
nlmon_message() path instead.
configure scripts need to be runnable with a POSIX-compliant /bin/sh.
On many (but not all!) systems, /bin/sh is provided by Bash, so errors
like this aren't spotted. Notably Debian defaults to /bin/sh provided
by dash which doesn't tolerate such bashisms as '+='.
This retains compatibility with bash. Just copy the expanded append like
we do on the line above.
Fixes warnings like:
```
./configure: 13352: CFLAGS+= -U_FORTIFY_SOURCE -D_FORTIFY_SOURCE=2: not found
```
In order to test that extra settings are applied prior to connecting
two tests were added for hidden networks as well as one testing if
there is already an existing profile after DPP.
The reason hidden networks were used was due to the requirement of
the "Hidden" settings in the profile. If this setting doesn't get
sync'ed to disk the connection will fail.
Before this change DPP was writing the credentials both to disk
and into the network object directly. This allowed the connection
to work fine but additional settings were not picked up due to
network_set_passphrase/psk loading the settings before they were
written.
Instead DPP can avoid setting the credentials to the network
object entirely and just write them to disk. Then, wait for
known networks to notify that the profile was either created
or updated then DPP can proceed to connecting. network_autoconnect()
will take care of loading the profile that DPP wrote and remove the
need for DPP to touch the network object at all.
One thing to note is that an idle callback is still needed from
within the known networks callback. This is because a new profile
requires network.c to set the network_info which is done in the
known networks callback. Rather than assume that network.c will be
called into before dpp.c an l_idle was added.
If a known network is modified on disk known networks does not have
any way of notifying other modules. This will be needed to support a
corner case in DPP if a profile exists but is overwritten after DPP
configuration. Add this event to known networks and handle it in
network.c (though nothing needs to be done in that case).
Without the change test-dpp fails on aarch64-linux as:
$ unit/test-dpp
TEST: DPP test responder-only key derivation
TEST: DPP test mutual key derivation
TEST: DPP test PKEX key derivation
test-dpp: unit/test-dpp.c:514: test_pkex_key_derivation: Assertion `!memcmp(tmp, __tmp, 32)' failed.
This happens due to int/size_t type mismatch passed to vararg
parameters to prf_plus():
bool prf_plus(enum l_checksum_type type, const void *key, size_t key_len,
void *out, size_t out_len,
size_t n_extra, ...)
{
// ...
va_start(va, n_extra);
for (i = 0; i < n_extra; i++) {
iov[i + 1].iov_base = va_arg(va, void *);
iov[i + 1].iov_len = va_arg(va, size_t);
// ...
Note that varargs here could only be a sequence of `void *` / `size_t`
values.
But in src/dpp-util.c `iwd` attempted to pass `int` there:
prf_plus(sha, prk, bytes, z_out, bytes, 5,
mac_i, 6, // <- here
mac_r, 6, // <- and here
m_x, bytes,
n_x, bytes,
key, strlen(key));
aarch64 stores only 32-bit value part of the register:
mov w7, #0x6
str w7, [sp, #...]
and loads full 64-bit form of the register:
ldr x3, [x3]
As a result higher bits of `iov[].iov_len` contain unexpected values and
sendmsg sends a lot more data than expected to the kernel.
The change fixes test-dpp test for me.
While at it fixed obvious `int` / `size_t` mismatch in src/erp.c.
Fixes: 6320d6db0f ("crypto: remove label from prf_plus, instead use va_args")
The path argument was used purely for debugging. It can be just as
informational printing just the SSID of the profile that failed to
parse the setting without requiring callers allocate a string to
call the function.
Certain tests may require external processes to work
(e.g. testNetconfig) and if missing the test will just hang until
the maximum test timeout. Check in start_process if the exe
actually exists and if not throw an exception.
In order to support identifiers the test profiles needed to be
reworked due to hostapd allowing multiple password entires. You
cannot just call set_value() with a new entry as the old ones
still exist. Instead use a unique password for the identifier and
non-identifier use cases.
After adding this test the failure_test started failing due to
hostapd not starting up. This was due to the group being unsupported
but oddly only when hostapd was reloaded (running the test
individually worked). To fix this the group number was changed to 21
which hostapd does support but IWD does not.
Adds a new network profile setting [Security].PasswordIdentifier.
When set (and the BSS enables SAE password identifiers) the network
and handshake object will read this and use it for the SAE
exchange.
Building the handshake will fail if:
- there is no password identifier set and the BSS sets the
"exclusive" bit.
- there is a password identifier set and the BSS does not set
the "in-use" bit.
Using this will provide netdev with a connect callback and unify the
roaming result notification between FT and reassociation. Both paths
will now end up in station_reassociate_cb.
This also adds another return case for ft_handshake_setup which was
previously ignored by ft_associate. Its likely impossible to actually
happen but should be handled nevertheless.
Fixes: 30c6a10f28 ("netdev: Separate connect_failed and disconnected paths")
Essentially exposes (and renames) netdev_ft_tx_associate in order to
be called similarly to netdev_reassociate/netdev_connect where a
connect callback can be provided. This will fix the current bug where
if association times out during FT IWD will hang and never transition
to disconnected.
This also removes the calling of the FT_ROAMED event and instead just
calls the connect callback (since its now set). This unifies the
callback path for reassociation and FT roaming.
This will be called from station after FT-authentication has
finished. It sets up the handshake object to perform reassociation.
This is essentially a copy-paste of ft_associate without sending
the actual frame.
In general only the authenticator FTE is used/validated but with
some FT refactoring coming there needs to be a way to build the
supplicants FTE into the handshake object. Because of this there
needs to be separate FTE buffers for both the authenticator and
supplicant.
The default() method was added for convenience but was extending the
test times significantly when the hostapd config was lengthy. This
was because it called set_value for every value regardless if it
had changed. Instead store the current configuration and in default()
only reset values that differ.
This tests ensures IWD disconnects after receiving an association
timeout event. This exposes a current bug where IWD does not
transition to disconnected after an association timeout when
FT-roaming.
If tests end in an unknown state it is sometimes required that IWD
be stopped manually in order for future tests to run. Add a stop()
method so test tearDown() methods can explicitly stop IWD.
The path for IWD to call this doesn't ever happen in autotests
but during debugging of the DPP agent it was noticed that the
DBus signature was incorrect and would always result in an error
when calling from IWD.
For adding SAE password identifiers the capability bits need to be
verified when loading the identifier from the profile. Pass the
BSS object in to network_load_psk rather than the 'need_passphrase'
boolean.
iov_ie_append assumed that a single IE was being added and thus the
length of the IE could be extracted directly from the element. However,
iov_ie_append was used on buffers which could contain multiple IEs
concatenated together, for example in handshake_state::vendor_ies. Most
of the time this was safe since vendor_ies was NULL or contained a
single element, but would result in incorrect behavior in the general
case. Fix that by changing iov_ie_append signature to take an explicit
length argument and have the caller specify whether the element is a
single IE or multiple.
Fixes: 7e9971661b ("netdev: Append any vendor IEs from the handshake")
Use an _auto_ variable to cleanup IEs allocated by
p2p_build_association_req(). While here, take out unneeded L_WARN_ON
since p2p_build_association_req cannot fail.