If the frequency of the bss is not in the list of frequencies for the
current scan, then this is a cached bss. It was likely already
processed for ANQP before, so skip it.
IWD has restricted SSIDs to only utf8 so they can be displayed but
with the addition of OWE transition networks this is an unneeded
restriction (for these networks). The SSID of an OWE transition
network is never displayed to the user so limiting to utf8 isn't
required.
Allow non-utf8 SSIDs to be scanned for by including the length in
the scan parameters and not relying on strlen().
This is a parser for the WFA OWE Transition element. For now the
optional band/channel bytes will not be parsed as hostapd does not
yet support these and would also require the 802.11 appendix E-1
to be added to IWD. Because of this OWE Transition networks are
assumed to be on the same channel as their open counterpart.
in6_addr.__in6_u.__u6_addr8 is glibc-specific and named differently in
the headers shipped with musl libc for example. The POSIX compliant and
universal way of accessing it is in6_addr.s6_addr.
This was actually broken if triggered because __network_connect
checks if network->connect_after_owe_hidden is set and returns
already in progress. We want to keep this behavior though for
obvious reasons.
To fix this station_connect_network can be called directly which
bypasses the check. This is essentially how ANQP avoids this
problem as well.
Similar to ANQP a connect call could come in while station is
scanning for OWE hidden networks. This is supported in the same
manor by saving away the dbus message and resuming the connection
after the hidden OWE scan.
With the addition of OWE transition network needs to be notified
of the hidden OWE scan which is quite similar to how it is notified
of ANQP. The ANQP event watch can be made generic and reused to
allow other events besides ANQP.
This is being added to support OWE transition mode. For these
type of networks the OWE BSS may contain a different SSID than
that of the network, but the WFA spec requires this be hidden
from the user. This means we need to set the handshake SSID based
on the BSS rather than the network object.
Refactor netconfig_set_dns to be a bit easier to follow and remove use
of macros. Also bail out early if no DNS addresses are provided instead
of building an empty DNS list since resolve_set_dns() simply returns if
a NULL or empty DNS list is provided.
If set, a rule will start matching 'MatchBytes' some number of bytes
into the frame (MatchBytesOffset). This is useful since header
information, addresses, and sequence numbers may be unpredictable
between test runs.
To avoid unintended matches the Prefix property is left unchanged
and will match starting at the beginning of the frame.
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.
Kernel keeps transmitting authentication frames until told to stop or an
authentication frame the kernel considers 'final' is received. Detect
cases where the kernel would keep retransmitting, and if auth_proto
encounters a fatal protocol error, prevent these retransmissions from
occuring by sending a Deauthenticate command to the kernel.
Additionally, treat -EBADMSG/-ENOMSG return from auth_proto specially.
These error codes are meant to convey that a frame should be silently
dropped and retransmissions should continue.
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 works around a hostapd bug (described more in the TODO comment)
which is exposed because of the kernels overly agressive re-transmit
behavior on missed ACKs. Combined this results in a death if the
initial commit is not acked. This behavior has been identified in
consumer access points and likely won't ever be patched for older
devices. Because of this IWD must work around the problem which can
be eliminated by not sending out this commit message.
This bug was reported to the hostapd ML:
https://lists.infradead.org/pipermail/hostap/2021-September/039842.html
This change should not cause any compatibility problems to non-hostapd
access points and is identical to how wpa_supplicant treats this
scenario.
If a commit is received while in an accepted state the spec states
the scalar should be checked against the previous commit and if
equal the message should be silently dropped.
The hwsim rules did not treat frames and ACKs any differently which
can mislead the developer especially when setting a rule prefix.
If a prefix was used the frame ACK was actually being matched against
the original frame payload which seems wrong because the ACK is not
the original frame.
Though strange, matching the frame prefix on an ACK has its place if
the developer wants to block just the ACK rather than the frame so
to make this case more clear 'DropAck' was added as a rule property.
And only if this is true will an ACK be checked and potentially
dropped.
To maintain the current hwsim behavior DropAck will default to true.
This integer property can be set to only match a rule a number of
times rather than all packets. This is useful for testing behavior
of a single dropped frame or ack. Once the rule has been matched
'MatchTimes' the rules will no longer be applied (unless set again
to some integer greater than zero).
Since Process.processes is a weak reference dictionary any process
put in this dict will disappear if all references are lost. This
is much better than keeping a list in the Namespace which will hold
the references forever until test-runner manually kills them all at
the end of the test. This does still need to be done for daemon
processes but everything else can just go away when it is no longer
needed.
The test-runner logging is very basic and just dumps everything into files
per-test. This means any subtests are just appended to existing log files
which can be difficult to parse after the fact. This is especially hard
when IWD/Hostapd runs once for the entirety of the test (as opposed to
killing between tests).
This patch writes out a separator between each subtests in the form:
===== <file>:<function> =====
To do this all processes are now kept as weak references inside the
Process class itself. Process.write_separators() can be called which
will iterate through all running processes and write the provided
separator.
This also paves the way to remove the ctx.processes array which is more
trouble than its worth due to reference issues.
Note: For tests which start IWD this will have no effect as the separator
is written prior to the test running. For these tests though, it is
much easier to read the log files because you can clearly see when
IWD starts and exits.
Processes which were not explicitly killed ended up staying around
forever because they internally held references to other objects
such as GLib IO watches or write FDs.
This shuffles some code so these objects get cleaned up both when
explititly killed and after being waited for.
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.
In netconfig_load_settings apply the DNS overrides strings we've loaded
instead of leaking them.
Fixes: ad228461ab ("netconfig: Move loading settings to new method, refactor")