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.
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.
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.
After namespaces were added, the dbus address was customized to
be /tmp/dbus{0..N}. This prevented any dbus applications started
in the shell from working properly.
Set DBUS_SYSTEM_BUS_ADDRESS to the environment prior to entering
the shell.