If a frequency is disabled IWD should keep track and disallow any
operations on that channel such as scanning. A new list has been added
which contains only disabled frequencies.
The scan_passive API wasn't using a const struct scan_freq_set as it
should be since it's not modifying the contents. Changing this to
const did require some additional changes like making the scan_parameters
'freqs' member const as well.
After changing scan_parameters, p2p needed updating since it was using
scan_parameters.freqs directly. This was changed to using a separate
scan_freq_set pointer, then setting to scan_parameters.freqs when needed.
Similar to the HT/VHT APIs, this estimates the data rate based on the
HE Capabilities element, in addition to our own capabilities. The
logic is much the same as HT/VHT. The major difference being that HE
uses several MCS tables depending on the channel width. Each width
MCS set is checked (if supported) and the highest estimated rate out
of all the MCS sets is used.
There appears to be a compiler bug with gcc 11.2 which thinks the vht_mcs_set
is a zero length array, and the memset of size 8 is out of bounds. This is only
seen once an element is added to 'struct band'.
In file included from /usr/include/string.h:519,
from src/wiphy.c:34:
In function ‘memset’,
inlined from ‘band_new_from_message’ at src/wiphy.c:1300:2,
inlined from ‘parse_supported_bands’ at src/wiphy.c:1423:11,
inlined from ‘wiphy_parse_attributes’ at src/wiphy.c:1596:5,
inlined from ‘wiphy_update_from_genl’ at src/wiphy.c:1773:2:
/usr/include/bits/string_fortified.h:59:10: error: ‘__builtin_memset’ offset [0, 7] is out of the bounds [0, 0] [-Werror=array-bounds]
59 | return __builtin___memset_chk (__dest, __ch, __len,
| ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
60 | __glibc_objsize0 (__dest));
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
In test-band the band object was allocated using l_malloc, but not
memset to zero. This will cause problems if allocated pointers are
included in struct band once band is freed.
This increases the maximum data rate which now is possible with HE.
A few comments were also updated, one to include 6G when adjusting
the rank for >4000mhz, and the other fixing a typo.
This is a general way of finding the best MCS/NSS values which will work
for HT, VHT, and HE by passing in the max MCS values for each value which
the MCS map could contain (0, 1, or 2).
The HE capabilities information is contained in
NL80211_BAND_ATTR_IFTYPE_DATA where each entry is a set of attributes
which define the rules for one or more interface types. This patch
specifically parses the HE PHY and HE MCS data which will be used for
data rate estimation.
Since the set of info is per-iftype(s) the data is stored in a queue
where each entry contains the PHY/MCS info, and a uint32 bit mask where
each bit index signifies an interface type.
With the addition of HE, the print function for MCS sets needs to change
slightly. The maps themselves are the same format, but the values indicate
different MCS ranges. Now the three MCS max values are passed in.
This queue will hold iftype(s) specific data for HE capabilities. Since
the capabilities may differ per-iftype the data is stored as such. Iftypes
may share a configuration so the band_he_capabilities structure has a
mask for each iftype using that configuration.
When PCI adapters are properly configured they should exist in the
vfio-pci system tree. It is assumed any devices configured as such
are used for test-runner.
This removes the need for a hw.conf file to be supplied, but still
is required for USB adapters. Because of this the --hw option was
updated to allow no value, or a file path.
subprocess.Popen's wait() method was overwritten to be non-blocking but
in certain circumstances you do want to wait forever. Fix this to allow
timeout=None, which calls the parent wait() method directly.
Certain module dependencies were missing, which could cause a crash on
exit under (very unlikely) circumstances.
#0 l_queue_peek_head (queue=<optimized out>) at ../iwd-1.28/ell/queue.c:241
#1 0x0000aaaab752f2a0 in wiphy_radio_work_done (wiphy=0xaaaac3a129a0, id=6)
at ../iwd-1.28/src/wiphy.c:2013
#2 0x0000aaaab7523f50 in netdev_connect_free (netdev=netdev@entry=0xaaaac3a13db0)
at ../iwd-1.28/src/netdev.c:765
#3 0x0000aaaab7526208 in netdev_free (data=0xaaaac3a13db0) at ../iwd-1.28/src/netdev.c:909
#4 0x0000aaaab75a3924 in l_queue_clear (queue=queue@entry=0xaaaac3a0c800,
destroy=destroy@entry=0xaaaab7526190 <netdev_free>) at ../iwd-1.28/ell/queue.c:107
#5 0x0000aaaab75a3974 in l_queue_destroy (queue=0xaaaac3a0c800,
destroy=destroy@entry=0xaaaab7526190 <netdev_free>) at ../iwd-1.28/ell/queue.c:82
#6 0x0000aaaab7522050 in netdev_exit () at ../iwd-1.28/src/netdev.c:6653
#7 0x0000aaaab7579bb0 in iwd_modules_exit () at ../iwd-1.28/src/module.c:181
In this particular case, wiphy module was de-initialized prior to the
netdev module:
Jul 14 18:14:39 localhost iwd[2867]: ../iwd-1.28/src/wiphy.c:wiphy_free() Freeing wiphy phy0[0]
Jul 14 18:14:39 localhost iwd[2867]: ../iwd-1.28/src/netdev.c:netdev_free() Freeing netdev wlan0[45]
Since we use git ls-files to produce the list of all tests for -A, if
the source directory is owned by somebody other than root one might
get:
fatal: unsafe repository ('/home/balrog/repos/iwd' is owned by someone else)
To add an exception for this directory, call:
git config --global --add safe.directory /home/balrog/repos/iwd
Starting
/home/balrog/repos/iwd/tools/..//autotests/ threw an uncaught exception
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "/home/balrog/repos/iwd/tools/run-tests", line 966, in run_auto_tests
subtests = pre_test(ctx, test, copied)
File "/home/balrog/repos/iwd/tools/run-tests", line 814, in pre_test
raise Exception("No hw.conf found for %s" % test)
Exception: No hw.conf found for /home/balrog/repos/iwd/tools/..//autotests/
Mark args.testhome as a safe directory on every run.
Test that the DHCPv4 lease got renewed after the T1 timer runs out.
Then also simulate the DHCPREQUEST during renew being lost and
retransmitted and the lease eventually getting renewed T1 + 60s later.
The main downside is that this test will inevitably take a while if
running in Qemu without the time travel ability.
Update the test and some utility code to run hostapd in an isolated net
namespace for connection_test.py. We now need a second hostapd
instance though because in static_test.py we test ACD and we need to
produce an IP conflict. Moving the hostapd instance unexpectedly fixes
dhcpd's internal mechanism to avoid IP conflicts and it would no longer
assign 192.168.1.10 to the second client, it'd notice that address was
already in use and assign the next free address, or fail if there was
none. So add a second hostapd instance that runs in the main namespace
together with the statically-configured client, it turns out the test
relies on the kernel being unable to deliver IP traffic to interfaces on
the same system.
The kernel will not let us test some scenarios of communication between
two hwsim radios (e.g. STA and AP) if they're in the same net namespace.
For example, when connected, you can't add normal IPv4 subnet routes for
the same subnet on two different interfaces in one namespace (you'd
either get an EEXIST or you'd replace the other route), you can set
different metrics on the routes but that won't fix IP routing. For
testNetconfig the result is that communication works for DHCP before we
get the inital lease but renewals won't work because they're unicast.
Allow hostapd to run on a radio that has been moved to a different
namespace in hw.conf so we don't have to work around these issues.
The --start option was directly passed to the kernel init parameter,
preventing any environment setup from happening.
Intead always use 'run-tests' as the init process but detect --start
and execute that binary/script once inside the environment.
The table header needs to be adjusted to include spaces between
columns.
The 'adapter list' command was also updated to shorted a few
columns which were quite long for the data that is actually displayed.
The existing color code escape sequences required the user to set the
color, write the string, then unset with COLOR_OFF. Instead the macros
can be made to take the string itself and automatically terminate the
color with COLOR_OFF. This makes for much more concise strings.