Currently the enrollee relied on autoconnect to handle connecting
to the newly configured network. This usually resulted in poor
performance since periodic scans are done at large intervals apart.
Instead first check if the newly configured network is already
in IWD's network queue. If so it can be connected to immediately.
If not, a full scan must be done and results given to station.
With better JSON support the configuration request object
can now be fully parsed. As stated in the previous comment
there really isn't much use from the configurator side apart
from verifying mandatory values are included.
This patch also modifies the configuration result to handle
sending non 'OK' status codes in case of JSON parsing errors.
json_iter_parse is only meant to work on objects while
json_iter_next is only meant to work on arrays.
This adds checks in both APIs to ensure they aren't being
used incorrectly.
Arrays can now be parsed using the JSON_ARRAY type (stored in
a struct json_iter) then iterated using json_iter_next. When
iterating the type can be checked with json_iter_get_type. For
each iteration the value can be obtained using any of the type
getters (int/uint/boolean/null).
This adds support for boolean, (unsigned) integers, and
null types. JSON_PRIMITIVE should be used as the type when
parsing and the value should be struct json_iter.
Once parsed the actual value can be obtained using one of
the primitive getters. If the type does not match they will
return false.
If using JSON_OPTIONAL with JSON_PRIMITIVE the resulting
iterator can be checked with json_iter_is_valid. If false
the key/value was not found or the type was not matching.
First, this was renamed to 'count_tokens_in_container' to be
more general purpose (i.e. include future array counting).
The way the tokens are counted also changed to be more intuitive.
While the previous way was correct, it was somewhat convoluted in
how it worked (finding the next parent of the objects parent).
Instead we can use the container token itself as the parent and
begin counting tokens. When we find a token with a parent index
less than the target we have reached the end of this container.
This also works for nested containers, including arrays since we
no longer rely on a key (which an array element would not have).
For example::
{
"first":{"foo":"bar"},
"second":{"foo2":"bar2"}
}
index 0 <overall object>
index 1 "first" with parent 0
index 2 {"foo":"bar"} with parent 1
Counting tokens inside "first"'s object we have:
index 3 "foo" with parent 2
index 4 "bar" with parent 3
If we continue counting we reach:
index 5 "second" with parent 0
This terminates the counting loop since the parent index is
less than '2' (the index of {"foo":"bar"} object).
In file included from ./ell/ell.h:15,
from ../../src/dpp.c:29:
../../src/dpp.c: In function ‘authenticate_request’:
../../ell/log.h:79:22: warning: format ‘%lu’ expects argument of type ‘long unsigned int’, but argument 8 has type ‘size_t’ {aka ‘unsigned int’} [-Wformat=]
79 | l_log(L_LOG_DEBUG, "%s:%s() " format, __FILE__, \
| ^~~~~~~~~~
../../ell/log.h:54:16: note: in definition of macro ‘l_log’
54 | __func__, format "\n", ##__VA_ARGS__)
| ^~~~~~
../../ell/log.h:103:31: note: in expansion of macro ‘L_DEBUG_SYMBOL’
103 | #define l_debug(format, ...) L_DEBUG_SYMBOL(__debug_desc, format, ##__VA_ARGS__)
| ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~
../../src/dpp.c:1235:3: note: in expansion of macro ‘l_debug’
1235 | l_debug("I-Nonce has unexpected length %lu", i_nonce_len);
| ^~~~~~~
Some wpa_cli utilities return some result which isn't possible to
get with wait_for_event unless you know what the result will be.
This adds wait_for_result which just returns the first event that
comes in.
wait_for_event was checking the event string presence in the rx_data
array which meant the event string had to match perfectly to any
received events. This poses problems with events that include additional
information which the caller may not be able to know or does not care
about. For example:
DPP-RX src=02:00:00:00:02:00 freq=2437 type=11
Waiting for this event previously would require the caller know src, freq,
and type. If the caller only wants to wait for DPP-RX, it can now do that.
This is created by the python interpreter for speed optimization
but poses problems if copied to /tmp since previous tests may
have already copied it leading to an exception.
Since a Device class can represent multiple modes (AP, AdHoc, station)
move StationDebug out of the init and only create this class when it
is used (presumably only when the device is in station mode).
The StationDebug class is now created in a property method consistent
with 'station_if'. If Device is not in station mode it is automatically
switched if the test tries any StationDebug methods.
If the Device mode is changed from 'station' the StationDebug class
instance is destroyed.
This file is meant as a sample and contains only the most typically
changed settings. For other settings users should refer to the
iwd.config manual page.
Right now hwsim blindly tries to forward broadcast/multicast frames to
all interfaces it knows about and relies on the kernel to reject the
forwarding attempt if the frequency does not match. This results in
multiple copies of the same message being added to the genl transmit
queue.
On slower systems this can cause a run-away memory consumption effect
where the queued messages are not processed in time prior to a new
message being received for forwarding. The likelyhood of this effect
manifesting itself is directly related to the number of hostapd
instances that are created and are beaconing simultaneously.
Try to optimize frame forwarding by not sending beacon frames
to those interfaces that are in AP mode (i.e. pure hostapd instances)
since such interfaces are going to be operating on a different frequency
and would not be interested in processing beacon frames anyway.
This optimization cuts down peak memory use during certain tests by 30x
or more (~33mb to ~1mb) when profiled with 'valgrind --tool=massif'
Direct leak of 64 byte(s) in 1 object(s) allocated from:
#0 0x7fa226fbf0f8 in __interceptor_malloc (/usr/lib/gcc/x86_64-pc-linux-gnu/9.4.0/libasan.so.5+0x10c0f8)
#1 0x688c98 in l_malloc ell/util.c:62
#2 0x6c2b19 in msg_alloc ell/genl.c:740
#3 0x6cb32c in l_genl_msg_new_sized ell/genl.c:1567
#4 0x424f57 in netdev_build_cmd_authenticate src/netdev.c:3285
#5 0x425b50 in netdev_sae_tx_authenticate src/netdev.c:3385
Direct leak of 7 byte(s) in 1 object(s) allocated from:
#0 0x7fd748ad00f8 in __interceptor_malloc (/usr/lib/gcc/x86_64-pc-linux-gnu/9.4.0/libasan.so.5+0x10c0f8)
#1 0x688c21 in l_malloc ell/util.c:62
#2 0x4beec7 in handshake_state_set_vendor_ies src/handshake.c:324
#3 0x464e4e in station_handshake_setup src/station.c:1203
#4 0x472a2f in __station_connect_network src/station.c:2975
#5 0x473a30 in station_connect_network src/station.c:3078
#6 0x4ed728 in network_connect_8021x src/network.c:1497
Fixes: f24cfa481b ("handshake: Add setter for vendor IEs")
Passing the full argument list to StationDebug was removed
because any existing properties (for Device) were being
included and causing incorrect behavior.
This neglected to handle namespaces which should also be
passed to StationDebug. Unfortunately the arguments are not
named when Device() is initialized so they cannot easily be
sorted. Instead just define Device() arguments to match the
DBus abstraction and pass only the path and namespace to
StationDebug
Two commands were added:
dpp <iface> start-enrollee
dpp <iface> start-configurator
dpp <iface> stop
In addition there is support for using the qrencode utility for displaying
the QR code after DPP is started (enrollee or configurator. If qrencode is
found on the system the QR code will be displayed. Otherwise only the URI
will be printed to the console.
This implements a configurator in the responder role. Currently
configuring an enrollee is limited to only the connected network.
This is to avoid the need to go offchannel for any reason. But
because of this a roam, channel switch, or disconnect will cause
the configuration to fail as none of the frames are being sent
offchannel.