Similar to 06aa84cca set the operstate when AdHoc is started and
stopped as it is no longer always set by netdev (only for station/p2p
interface types)
The Started property was being set in the Join IBSS callback which
isn't really when the IBSS has been started. The kernel automatically
scans for IBSS networks which takes some time. Its better to wait
on setting Started until we get the Join IBSS event.
Commit 1f910f84b4 ("eapol: Use eapol_start in authenticator mode too")
introduced the requirement that authentication eapol_sm objects also had
to be started via eapol_start. Adhoc was never updated to do that.
For PSK networks we have netdev.c taking care of setting the linkmode &
operstate. For open adhoc networks, netdev.c was never involved which
resulted in linkmode & operstate never being set. Fix this by invoking
the necessary magic when a connection is established.
adhoc_reset() destroys ssid and sta_states but leaves the pointers
around, athough the adhoc_state structure is not always freed.
This causes a segfault when exiting iwd after a client has done
adhoc start and adhoc stop on a device since adhoc_reset() is called
from adhoc_sta_free although it was previously called from
adhoc_leave_cb().
The netdev_leave_adhoc() returns a negative errno on errors and zero
on success, but adhoc_dbus_stop() assumed the inverse when checking for
an error.
Also, the DBus message was not being referenced in adhoc->pending and
then adhoc_leave_cb() segfaulted attempting to dereference it.
Convert the handshake event callback type to use variable argument
list to allow for more flexibility in event-specific arguments
passed to the callbacks.
Note the uint16_t reason code is promoted to an int when using variable
arguments so va_arg(args, int) has to be used.
The handshake object had 4 setters for authenticator/supplicant IE.
Since the IE ultimately gets put into the same buffer, there really
only needs to be a single setter for authenticator/supplicant. The
handshake object can deal with parsing to decide what kind of IE it
is (WPA or RSN).
Adhoc was not waiting for BOTH handshakes to complete before adding the
new peer to the ConnectedPeers property. Actually waiting for the gtk/igtk
(in a previous commit) helps with this, but adhoc also needed to keep track
of which handshakes had completed, and only add the peer once BOTH were done.
This required a small change in netdev, where we memcmp the addresses from
both handshakes and only set the PTK on one.
Adhoc requires 2 GTK's to be set, a single TX GTK and a per-mac RX GTK.
The per-mac RX GTK already gets set via netdev_set_gtk. The single TX GTK
is created the same as AP, where, upon the first station connecting a GTK
is generated and set in the kernel. Then any subsequent stations use
GET_KEY to retrieve the GTK and set it in the handshake.
As a consequence of the previous commit, netdev watches are always
called when the device object is valid. As a result, we can drop the
netdev_get_device calls and checks from individual AP/AdHoc/Station/WSC
netdev watches
Since the interfaces are not supposed to exist when the device is DOWN
(we destroy the interfaces on NETDEV_WATCH_EVENT_DOWN too), don't
create the interfaces if the device hasn't been brought up yet.
To avoid confusion in case of an authenticator side handshake_state
structure and eapol_sm structure, rename own_ie to supplicant_ie and
ap_ie to authenticator_ie. Also rename
handshake_state_set_{own,ap}_{rsn,wpa} and fix when we call
handshake_state_setup_own_ciphers. As a result
handshake_state_set_authenticator, if needed, should be called before
handshake_state_set_{own,ap}_{rsn,wpa}.
There was somewhat overlapping functionality in the device_watch
infrastructure as well as the netdev_event_watch. This commit combines
the two into a single watch based on the netdev object and cleans up the
various interface additions / removals.
With this commit the interfaces are created when the netdev/device is
switched to Powered=True state AND when the netdev iftype is also in the
correct state for that interface. If the device is brought down, then
all interfaces except the .Device interface are removed.
This will make it easy to implement Device.Mode property properly since
most nl80211 devices need to be brought into Powered=False state prior
to switching the iftype.
This removes the authenticator bit in eapol_sm as well as unifies
eapol_register_authenticator and eapol_register. Taking advantage
of the handshake state authenticator bit we no longer have a need
for 2 separate register functions.
ap, and adhoc were also updated to set the authenticator bit in
the handshake and only use eapol_register to register their sm's.
netdev was updated to use the authenticator bit when choosing the
correct key address for adhoc.
If the sm object (or the handshake object) is NULL, don't call the
corresponding function.
0 0x7fb6cd37da80 in /lib64/libc.so.6
1 0x414764 in eapol_sm_destroy() at eapol.c:673
2 0x42e402 in ap_sta_free() at ap.c:97
3 0x439dbe in l_queue_clear() at /home/parallels/wrk/iwd/ell/queue.c:109
4 0x439e09 in l_queue_destroy() at /home/parallels/wrk/iwd/ell/queue.c:83
5 0x42e4bf in ap_reset() at ap.c:132
6 0x42e519 in ap_free() at ap.c:147
7 0x447456 in interface_instance_free() at /home/parallels/wrk/iwd/ell/dbus-service.c:513
8 0x449be0 in _dbus_object_tree_remove_interface() at /home/parallels/wrk/iwd/ell/dbus-service.c:1595
9 0x449ced in _dbus_object_tree_object_destroy() at /home/parallels/wrk/iwd/ell/dbus-service.c:787
10 0x40fb8c in device_free() at device.c:2717
11 0x405cdb in netdev_free() at netdev.c:605
12 0x439dbe in l_queue_clear() at /home/parallels/wrk/iwd/ell/queue.c:109
13 0x439e09 in l_queue_destroy() at /home/parallels/wrk/iwd/ell/queue.c:83
14 0x40aac2 in netdev_shutdown() at netdev.c:4483
15 0x403b75 in iwd_shutdown() at main.c:80
16 0x43d9f3 in signal_callback() at /home/parallels/wrk/iwd/ell/signal.c:83
17 0x43d4ee in l_main_iterate() at /home/parallels/wrk/iwd/ell/main.c:376
18 0x43d5ac in l_main_run() at /home/parallels/wrk/iwd/ell/main.c:419
19 0x40379b in main() at main.c:454
20 0x7fb6cd36788a in /lib64/libc.so.6
Rather than have device.c manage the creation/removal of
AP/AdHoc interfaces this new event was introduced. Now
anyone can listen for device events and if the mode changes
handle accordingly. This fixes potential memory leaks
in WSC when switching modes as well.