If a beacon is lost testAP will fail since it did not utilize any
rescanning logic. Now it can use this feature by passing full_scan.
This is required since IWD APs are not known to test-runner like
hostapd APs are.
Certain scenarios coupled with lost beacons could result in OrderedNetwork
being initialized many times until the dbus library reached its maximum
signal registrations. This could happen where there are two networks,
IWD finds one in a scan but continues to scan for the other and the beacons
are lost. The way get_ordered_networks was written it returns early if any
networks are found. Since get_ordered_network (not plural) uses
get_ordered_networks() in a loop this caused OrderedNetwork's to be created
rapidly until python raises an exception.
To fix this, pass an optional list of networks being looked for to
get_ordered_networks. Only if all the networks in the list are found will
it return early, otherwise it will continue to scan.
There was no open ssid provisioning file, which was fine as the
first test should have created one. But to be safe, include one
explicitly and use the proper setUp/tearDown functions.
By sleeping for 4 seconds IWD had plenty of time to fully disconnect
and reconnect in time to pass the final "connected" check. Instead
use wait_for_object_condition to wait for disconnected and expect
this to fail. This will let the test fail if IWD disconnects.
REKEY_GTK kicks off the GTK only handshake where REKEY_PTK does
both (via the 4-way). The way this utility was written was causing
hostapd some major issues since both REKEY_GTK and REKEY_PTK was
used.
Instead if address is set only do REKEY_PTK. This will also rekey
the GTK via the 4-way handshake.
If no address is set do REKEY_GTK which will only rekey the GTK.
The FT-over-DS test was allowed to fail as it stood. If FT-over-DS
failed it would just do a normal over-Air transition which satisfied
all the checks. To prevent this Authenticate frames are blocked after
the initial connection so if FT-over-DS fails there is no other way
to roam.
This adds several tests for OWE transition networks. Hostapd
does have special options for these networks but currently their
implementation is incorrect as the IE is not ever added to the
OWE BSS. Besides that using vendor_elements provides a much easier
way to create invalid IEs to test.
Since IWD tries group 20 first all other OWE tests are actually
triggering group negotiation where this test is not. Since this
code is exercised this test can be removed completely, as well
as the additional radio/network.
This test simulates the scenario where IWDs commit is not acked which
exposes a hostapd bug that ultimately fails the connection. This behavior
can be seen by reverting the commit which works around this issue:
"sae: don't send commit in confirmed state"
With the above patch applied this test should pass.
Note: The existing timeout test was reused as it was not of much use
anyways. All it did was block auth/assoc frames and expect a failure
which didn't exercise any SAE logic anyways.
This was a placeholder at one point but modules grew to depend on it
being a string. Fix these dependencies and set the root namespace
name to None so there is no more special case needed to handle both
a named namespace and the original 'root' namespace.
With various versions of wpa_supplicant tested, after an IWD GO tears
the group down, the wpa_supplicant P2P client will not immediately
signal that the group has disappeared but will at least wait for the
lost beacon signal, wait some more and try reconnecting and all that
takes it 10s or a little longer. Possibly sending Deauthenticate frames
to clients first would improve this.
mac80211_hwsim has a funny quirk with multiple addresses in
radios. Some operations require address index zero, some index
one. And these addresses (possibly a result of how test-runner
initializes radios) sometimes get mixed up. For example scan
results may show a BSS address as 02:00:00:00:00:00, while the
next test run shows 42:00:00:00:00:00.
Ultimately, sending out frames requires the first nibble of the
address to be 0x4 so to handle both variants of addresses described
above hwsim.py was updated to always bitwise OR the first byte
with 0x40.
The idea of this test is valid but it is extremely timing dependent
which simply isn't testable on all machines. Removing this test
at least until this can be tested reliably.
testHotspot suffered from improper cleanup and if a single test failed
all subsequent tests would fail due to IWD still running since IWD()
was never cleaned up.
In addition the PSK agent and hwsim rules are now set onto the cls
object and removed in tearDownClass()
There are really no cases where a test wants to remove a single
rule. Most loop through and remove rules individually so this
is being added as a convenience.
Certain autotests coupled with slower test machines can result in lost
beacons and "Network not found" errors. In attempt to help with this
the test can just rescan (30 seconds max) until the network is found.
Remove EAP-SIM from the generic PEAP test case since skipping
(if ofono is not on system) would skip the entire test rather
than just the EAP-SIM portion.
This tests all EAP methods in their standard configuration. Any
corner cases requiring changes to main.conf or other hostapd
options are not included and will be left as stand alone tests.
This was done because nearly all EAP tests are identical except
the IWD provisioning file and hostapd EAP users fine. The IWD
provisioning file can be swapped out as needed for each individual
test without actually restarting IWD. And the EAP users file can
simply be written to include every possible EAP method that
is supported.
The destructor was trying to do more than the scope of a destructor
by trying to handle this single case of hostapd being restarted.
Instead we can simply pass a keyword argument 'reinit' to the
constructor to tell it to reinitialize everything. And as for killing
hostapd this can be done in ungraceful_restart itself rather than
trying to handle it in the destructor.
This (hopefully) will make this test pass better on slower machines.
In addition the mechanism of copying over separate main.conf files
was changed (rather than echo'ing the option into /tmp/main.conf)
This addresses the TODO where HostapdCLI was creating separate
objects each time HostapdCLI was called. This was worked around
by manually setting the important members but instead the class
can be re-worked to act as somewhat of a singleton, per-config
at least.
If there is no HostapdCLI instance for a given config one is
created and initialized. Subsequent HostapdCLI calls (for the
same config) will be returned the same object rather than a
new one.
The hotspot ANQP delay test was setting a global delay on all
packets which had some unintended consequences. At the time this
was the only way of simulating the test scenario but now hwsim
supports prefix matching so only the ANQP request/response will
be delayed.
This test was accessing the subprocess object and calling terminate
which ends up causing issues with test-runners own process cleanup.
Instead kill() should be used.
Hostapd sometimes has trouble with specifying additional BSSs in
a single config file, at least in the test-runner environment.
Since all the BSS's specified were identical instead the test was
reworked to only have a single BSS and each subtest can connect
in its own unique way.
This test took quite a while to execute (~2 minutes on my machine)
because there was simply no other way to test this scenario but
waiting. Now the no-roam-candidates condition can be waited for
rather than just sleeping for 20 seconds. Additionally the default
RoamRetryInterval was being used which is 60 seconds. Instead
main.conf can set this to 5 seconds and really cut down on the time
to wait.
Part of a comment was also removed due to being incorrect. Even
with neighbor reports IWD still must scan, its just that the
scan is more limited and, in theory, faster.
get_ordered_network() now scans automatically and has been updated
to use the StationDebug.Scan() API rather than doing a full
dbus scan (unless full_scan = True). The frequencies to be scanned
are picked automatically based on the current hostapd status
(hidden behind ctx.hostapd.get_frequency()).
This changes all tests to use the default get_ordered_network behavior
rather than some custom or incorrect logic. Any use of
scan_if_needed=True has been removed since this is now the default.
Also any explicit scanning has been removed for tests which do not
require it (where the default behavior is good enough).
With the addition of connect_bssid/roam very few tests actually
require hwsim. Since hwsim can lead to problems with scan results
its best to have it off by default and have each test that needs
it explicitly turn it on.
Tests which previously turned it off have had that option removed.
Tests that do require hwsim still are vulnerable to scan result
problems, so for these tests beacon_int was added to the hostapd
config which seems to help with reliability somewhat.
There is a common block of code in nearly every test which is incorrect,
most likely a copy-paste from long ago. It goes something like:
wd.wait_for_object_condition(device, 'not obj.scanning')
device.scan()
wd.wait_for_object_condition(device, 'not obj.scanning')
network = device.get_ordered_network("ssid")
The problem here is that sometimes the scanning property does not get
updated fast enough before device.scan() returns, meaning get_ordered_network
comes up with nothing. Some tests pass scan_if_needed=True which 'fixes'
this but ends up re-scanning after the original scan finishes.
To put this to rest scan_if_needed is now defaulted to True, and no
explicit scan should be needed.
In addition the send_bss_transition call was updated to only send a
single BSS. By sending two BSS's IWD is left to pick whichever one
it wants which makes the test behavior undefined.
This will use the Roam() developer method to force a roam to
a certain BSS. This is particularly useful for any test requiring
roams that are not testing IWD's BSS selection logic. Rather than
creating hwsim rules, setting low RSSI values, and waiting for the
roam logic/scan to happen Roam() can be used to force the roam
logic immediately.
Several tests tests for connectivity with the expectation that it
will fail. This ends up taking 30+ seconds because testutil retries
3 times, each with a 10 second timeout. By passing expect_fail=True
this lowers the timeout to zero, and skips any retries.