==5279== 104 bytes in 2 blocks are definitely lost in loss record 1 of 1
==5279== at 0x4C2F0CF: malloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:299)
==5279== by 0x4655CD: l_malloc (util.c:61)
==5279== by 0x47116B: l_rtnl_address_new (rtnl.c:136)
==5279== by 0x438F4B: netconfig_get_dhcp4_address (netconfig.c:429)
==5279== by 0x438F4B: netconfig_ipv4_dhcp_event_handler
(netconfig.c:735)
==5279== by 0x491C77: dhcp_client_event_notify (dhcp.c:332)
==5279== by 0x491C77: dhcp_client_rx_message (dhcp.c:810)
==5279== by 0x492A88: _dhcp_default_transport_read_handler
(dhcp-transport.c:151)
==5279== by 0x46BECB: io_callback (io.c:118)
==5279== by 0x46B10C: l_main_iterate (main.c:477)
==5279== by 0x46B1DB: l_main_run (main.c:524)
==5279== by 0x46B3EA: l_main_run_with_signal (main.c:646)
==5279== by 0x403ECE: main (main.c:490)
Fix the AlwaysRandomizeAddress setting name.
Add the stricter specification of the extension syntax.
Clarify that GTC and MD5 can't be used as outer EAP methods with wifi.
Tracking of addresses that weren't set by us seemed a bit questionable.
Take this out for now. If this is ever needed, then a queue with
l_rtnl_address objects should be used.
Introduce a new v4_address member which will hold the currently
configured IPV4 address (static or obtained via DHCP). Use the new
l_rtnl_address class for this.
As a side-effect, lease expiration will now properly remove the
configured address.
This patch converts the code to use the new l_rtnl_address class. The
settings parsing code will now return an l_rtnl_address object which
can be installed directly.
Also, address removal path for static addresses has been removed, since
netconfig_reset() sets disable_ipv6 setting to '1', which will remove
all IPV6 addresses for the interface.
This patch converts the code to use the new l_rtnl_route class instead
of using l_rtnl_route6* utilities. The settings parsing code will now
return an l_rtnl_route object which can be installed directly.
Also, the route removal path has been removed since netconfig_reset()
sets disable_ipv6 setting to '1' which will remove all IPV6 routes and
addresses for the interface.
This also changes the resolve API a little bit to act as a 'set' API
instead of an incremental 'add' API. This is actually easier to manage
in the resolve module since both systemd and resolvconf want changes
wholesale and not incrementally.
Waiting to request neighbor reports until we are in need of a roam
delays the roam time, and probably isn't as reliable since we are
most likely in a low RSSI state. Instead the neighbor report can
be requested immediately after connecting, saved, and used if/when
a roam is needed. The existing behavior is maintained if the early
neighbor report fails where a neighbor report is requested at the
time of the roam.
The code which parses the reports was factored out and shared
between the existing (late) neighbor report callback and the early
neighbor report callback.
handshake_state_set_authenticator_ie must be called to set group_cipher
in struct handshake_shake before handshake_set_gtk_state, otherwise
handshake_set_gtk_state is unable to determine the key length to set
handshake state gtk.
Fixes: 4bc20a0979 ("ap: Start EAP-WSC authentication with WSC enrollees")
For now the RA client is ran automatically when DHCPv6 client starts.
RA takes care of installing / deleting prefix routes and installing the
default gateway. If Router Advertisements indicate support DHCPv6, then
DHCPv6 transactions are kicked off and the address is set / removed
automatically.
Stateless configuration is not yet supported.
Modern kernels ~5.4+ have changed the way lost beacons are
reported and effectively make the lost beacon event useless
because it is immediately followed by a disconnect event. This
does not allow IWD enough time to do much of anything before
the disconnect comes in and we are forced to fully re-connect
to a different AP.
If EnableNetworkConfiguration was enabled ap.c required that
APRanges also be set. This prevents IWD from starting which
effects a perfectly valid station configuration. Instead if
APRanges is not provided IWD still allows ap_init to pass but
DHCP just will not be enabled.
Users can now supply an AP provisioning file containing an [IPv4]
section and define various DHCP settings:
[IPv4]
Address=<address>
Netmask=<netmask>
Gateway=<gateway>
IPRange=<start_address>,<end_address>
DNSList=<dns1>,<dns2>,...<dnsN>
LeaseTime=<lease_time>
There are a few notes/requirements to keep in mind when using a
provisioning file:
- All settings are optional but [IPv4].Address is required if the
interface does not already have an address set.
- If no [IPv4].Address is defined in the provisioning file and the AP
interface does not already have an address set, StartWithConfig()
will fail with -EINVAL.
- If a provisioning file is provided it will take precedence, and the
AP will not pull from the IP pool.
- A provisioning file containing an IPv4 section assumes DHCP is being
enabled and will override [General].EnableNetworkConfiguration.
- Any address that AP sets on the interface will be deleted when the AP
is stopped.
Users can now start an AP from settings based on a profile
on disk. The only argument is the SSID which will be used to
lookup the profile. If no profile is found a NotFound error
will be returned. Any invalid profiles will result in an
Invalid return.
This seems to happen occationally with testAP (potentially others).
The invalid read appears to happen when the frame_xchg_tx_cb detects
an early status and no ACK. In this particular case there is no
retry interval so we reach the retry limit and 'done' the frame.
This frees the 'fx' data all before the destroy callback can get
called. Once we finally return and the destroy callback is called
'fx' is freed and we see the invalid write.
==206== Memcheck, a memory error detector
==206== Copyright (C) 2002-2017, and GNU GPL'd, by Julian Seward et al.
==206== Using Valgrind-3.16.1 and LibVEX; rerun with -h for copyright info
==206== Command: iwd -p rad1,rad2,rad3,rad4 -d
==206== Parent PID: 140
==206==
==206== Invalid write of size 4
==206== at 0x4493A0: frame_xchg_tx_destroy (frame-xchg.c:941)
==206== by 0x46DAF6: destroy_request (genl.c:673)
==206== by 0x46DAF6: process_unicast (genl.c:1002)
==206== by 0x46DAF6: received_data (genl.c:1101)
==206== by 0x46AA4B: io_callback (io.c:118)
==206== by 0x469D6C: l_main_iterate (main.c:477)
==206== by 0x469E1B: l_main_run (main.c:524)
==206== by 0x469E1B: l_main_run (main.c:506)
==206== by 0x46A02B: l_main_run_with_signal (main.c:646)
==206== by 0x403E78: main (main.c:490)
==206== Address 0x4c59c6c is 172 bytes inside a block of size 176 free'd
==206== at 0x483B9F5: free (vg_replace_malloc.c:538)
==206== by 0x40F14C: destroy_work (wiphy.c:248)
==206== by 0x40F14C: wiphy_radio_work_done (wiphy.c:1578)
==206== by 0x44A916: frame_xchg_tx_cb (frame-xchg.c:930)
==206== by 0x46DAD9: process_unicast (genl.c:993)
==206== by 0x46DAD9: received_data (genl.c:1101)
==206== by 0x46AA4B: io_callback (io.c:118)
==206== by 0x469D6C: l_main_iterate (main.c:477)
==206== by 0x469E1B: l_main_run (main.c:524)
==206== by 0x469E1B: l_main_run (main.c:506)
==206== by 0x46A02B: l_main_run_with_signal (main.c:646)
==206== by 0x403E78: main (main.c:490)
==206== Block was alloc'd at
==206== at 0x483A809: malloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:307)
==206== by 0x4643CD: l_malloc (util.c:61)
==206== by 0x44AF8C: frame_xchg_startv (frame-xchg.c:1155)
==206== by 0x44B2A4: frame_xchg_start (frame-xchg.c:1108)
==206== by 0x42BC55: ap_send_mgmt_frame (ap.c:709)
==206== by 0x42F513: ap_probe_req_cb (ap.c:1869)
==206== by 0x449752: frame_watch_unicast_notify (frame-xchg.c:233)
==206== by 0x46DA2F: dispatch_unicast_watches (genl.c:961)
==206== by 0x46DA2F: process_unicast (genl.c:980)
==206== by 0x46DA2F: received_data (genl.c:1101)
==206== by 0x46AA4B: io_callback (io.c:118)
==206== by 0x469D6C: l_main_iterate (main.c:477)
==206== by 0x469E1B: l_main_run (main.c:524)
==206== by 0x469E1B: l_main_run (main.c:506)
==206== by 0x46A02B: l_main_run_with_signal (main.c:646)
==206==
The DHCP server can be enabled by enabling network configuration
with [General].EnableNetworkConfiguration. If an IP is not set
on the interface before the AP is started a valid IP range must
also be provided under [General].APRanges in IP prefix format e.g.
[General]
EnableNetworkConfiguration=true
APRanges=192.168.1.1/24
Each AP started will get assigned a new subnet within the range
specified by APRanges as to not conflict with other AP interfaces.
If there are no subnets left in the pool when an AP is started
it will fail with -EEXIST. Any AP's that are stopped will release
their subnet back into the pool to be used with other APs.
The DHCP IP pool will be automatically chosen by the ELL DHCP
implementation (+1 the AP's IP to *.254). The remaining DHCP
settings will be defaults chosen by ELL (DNS, lease time, etc).
periodic_scan_stop is called whenever we exit the autoscan state but a
periodic scan may not be running at the time. If we have a
user-triggered scan running, or the autoconnect_quick scan, and we reset
Scanning to false before that scan finished, a client could en up
calling GetOrderedNetwork too early and not receiving the scan results.
ConnectHiddenNetwork can be seen a triggering this sequence:
1. the active scan,
2. the optional agent request,
3. the Authentication/Association/4-Way Handshake/netconfig,
4. connected state
Currently Disconnect() interrupts 3 and 4, allow it to also interrupt
state 1. It's difficult to tell whether we're in state 2 from within
station.c.
Since our DBus API and our use cases only support initiating connections
and not accepting incoming connections we don't really need to reply to
Probe Requests on the P2P-Device interface. Start doing it firstly so
that we can test the scenario where we get discovered and pre-authorized
to connect in an autotest (wpa_supplicant doesn't seem to have a way to
authorize everyone, which is probably why most Wi-Fi Display dongles
don't do it and instead reply with "Fail: Information not available" and
then restart connection from their side) and secondly because the spec
wants us to do it.
Make sure dev->peer_list is non-NULL before using l_queue_push_tail()
same as we do when the peer info comes from a Probe Response (active
scan in Find Phase). Otherwise peers discovered through Probe Requests
before any Probe Responses are received will be lost.
The device type category array is indexed by the category ID so if we're
skipping i == 0 in the iteration, we should also skip the 0'th element
in device_type_categories.
The callback for the FRAME command was causing a crash in
wiphy_radio_work_done when not cancelled when the wiphy was being
removed from the system. This was likely to happen if this radio work
item was waiting for another item to finish. When the first one was
being cancelled due to the wiphy being removed, this one would be
started and immediately stopped by the radio work queue.
Now this crash could be fixed by dropping all frame exchange instances
on an interface that is being removed which is easy to do, but properly
cancelling the commands saves us the headache of analysing whether
there's a race condition in other situations where a frame exchange is
being aborted.
We want to use this flag only on the interfaces with one of the three
P2P iftypes so set the flag automatically depending on the iftype from
the last 'config' notification.
Convert ap_send_mgmt_frame() to use frame_xchg_start for sending frames,
this fixes among other things the ACK-received checks.
One side effect is that we're no longer sending Probe Responses with the
don't-wait-for-ack flag because frame-xchg doesn't support it, but other
AP implementations don't use that flag either.
Another side-effect is that we do use the no-cck-rate flag
unconditionally, something we may want to fix but would need to add
another parameter to frame-xchg.
Add a "psk" setting to allow the user to pass the binary PSK directly
instead of generating it from the passphrase and the SSID. In that case
we'll only send the PSK to WSC enrollees.