freebsd-src/sys/net80211/ieee80211_hostap.c

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/*-
* SPDX-License-Identifier: BSD-2-Clause
*
* Copyright (c) 2007-2008 Sam Leffler, Errno Consulting
* All rights reserved.
*
* Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
* modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
* are met:
* 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
* notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
* 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
* notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
* documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
*
* THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE AUTHOR ``AS IS'' AND ANY EXPRESS OR
* IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES
* OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED.
* IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT,
* INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT
* NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE,
* DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY
* THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT
* (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF
* THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
*/
/*
* IEEE 802.11 HOSTAP mode support.
*/
#include "opt_inet.h"
#include "opt_wlan.h"
#include <sys/param.h>
#include <sys/systm.h>
#include <sys/mbuf.h>
#include <sys/malloc.h>
#include <sys/kernel.h>
#include <sys/socket.h>
#include <sys/sockio.h>
#include <sys/endian.h>
#include <sys/errno.h>
#include <sys/proc.h>
#include <sys/sysctl.h>
#include <net/if.h>
#include <net/if_var.h>
#include <net/if_media.h>
#include <net/if_llc.h>
#include <net/if_private.h>
#include <net/ethernet.h>
#include <net/bpf.h>
#include <net80211/ieee80211_var.h>
#include <net80211/ieee80211_hostap.h>
#include <net80211/ieee80211_input.h>
#ifdef IEEE80211_SUPPORT_SUPERG
#include <net80211/ieee80211_superg.h>
#endif
#include <net80211/ieee80211_wds.h>
#include <net80211/ieee80211_vht.h>
#include <net80211/ieee80211_sta.h> /* for parse_wmeie */
#define IEEE80211_RATE2MBS(r) (((r) & IEEE80211_RATE_VAL) / 2)
static void hostap_vattach(struct ieee80211vap *);
static int hostap_newstate(struct ieee80211vap *, enum ieee80211_state, int);
static int hostap_input(struct ieee80211_node *ni, struct mbuf *m,
Begin plumbing ieee80211_rx_stats through the receive path. Smart NICs with firmware (eg wpi, iwn, the new atheros parts, the intel 7260 series, etc) support doing a lot of things in firmware. This includes but isn't limited to things like scanning, sending probe requests and receiving probe responses. However, net80211 doesn't know about any of this - it still drives the whole scan/probe infrastructure itself. In order to move towards suppoting smart NICs, the receive path needs to know about the channel/details for each received packet. In at least the iwn and 7260 firmware (and I believe wpi, but I haven't tried it yet) it will do the scanning, power-save and off-channel buffering for you - all you need to do is handle receiving beacons and probe responses on channels that aren't what you're currently on. However the whole receive path is peppered with ic->ic_curchan and manual scan/powersave handling. The beacon parsing code also checks ic->ic_curchan to determine if the received beacon is on the correct channel or not.[1] So: * add freq/ieee values to ieee80211_rx_stats; * change ieee80211_parse_beacon() to accept the 'current' channel as an argument; * modify the iv_input() and iv_recv_mgmt() methods to include the rx_stats; * add a new method - ieee80211_lookup_channel_rxstats() - that looks up a channel based on the contents of ieee80211_rx_stats; * if it exists, use it in the mgmt path to switch the current channel (which still defaults to ic->ic_curchan) over to something determined by rx_stats. This is enough to kick-start scan offload support in the Intel 7260 driver that Rui/I are working on. It also is a good start for scan offload support for a handful of existing NICs (wpi, iwn, some USB parts) and it'll very likely dramatically improve stability/performance there. It's not the whole thing - notably, we don't need to do powersave, we should not scan all channels, and we should leave probe request sending to the firmware and not do it ourselves. But, this allows for continued development on the above features whilst actually having a somewhat working NIC. TODO: * Finish tidying up how the net80211 input path works. Right now ieee80211_input / ieee80211_input_all act as the top-level that everything feeds into; it should change so the MIMO input routines are those and the legacy routines are phased out. * The band selection should be done by the driver, not by the net80211 layer. * ieee80211_lookup_channel_rxstats() only determines 11b or 11g channels for now - this is enough for scanning, but not 100% true in all cases. If we ever need to handle off-channel scan support for things like static-40MHz or static-80MHz, or turbo-G, or half/quarter rates, then we should extend this. [1] This is a side effect of frequency-hopping and CCK modes - you can receive beacons when you think you're on a different channel. In particular, CCK (which is used by the low 11b rates, eg beacons!) is decodable from adjacent channels - just at a low SNR. FH is a side effect of having the hardware/firmware do the frequency hopping - it may pick up beacons transmitted from other FH networks that are in a different phase of hopping frequencies.
2015-05-25 16:37:41 +00:00
const struct ieee80211_rx_stats *,
int rssi, int nf);
static void hostap_deliver_data(struct ieee80211vap *,
struct ieee80211_node *, struct mbuf *);
static void hostap_recv_mgmt(struct ieee80211_node *, struct mbuf *,
Begin plumbing ieee80211_rx_stats through the receive path. Smart NICs with firmware (eg wpi, iwn, the new atheros parts, the intel 7260 series, etc) support doing a lot of things in firmware. This includes but isn't limited to things like scanning, sending probe requests and receiving probe responses. However, net80211 doesn't know about any of this - it still drives the whole scan/probe infrastructure itself. In order to move towards suppoting smart NICs, the receive path needs to know about the channel/details for each received packet. In at least the iwn and 7260 firmware (and I believe wpi, but I haven't tried it yet) it will do the scanning, power-save and off-channel buffering for you - all you need to do is handle receiving beacons and probe responses on channels that aren't what you're currently on. However the whole receive path is peppered with ic->ic_curchan and manual scan/powersave handling. The beacon parsing code also checks ic->ic_curchan to determine if the received beacon is on the correct channel or not.[1] So: * add freq/ieee values to ieee80211_rx_stats; * change ieee80211_parse_beacon() to accept the 'current' channel as an argument; * modify the iv_input() and iv_recv_mgmt() methods to include the rx_stats; * add a new method - ieee80211_lookup_channel_rxstats() - that looks up a channel based on the contents of ieee80211_rx_stats; * if it exists, use it in the mgmt path to switch the current channel (which still defaults to ic->ic_curchan) over to something determined by rx_stats. This is enough to kick-start scan offload support in the Intel 7260 driver that Rui/I are working on. It also is a good start for scan offload support for a handful of existing NICs (wpi, iwn, some USB parts) and it'll very likely dramatically improve stability/performance there. It's not the whole thing - notably, we don't need to do powersave, we should not scan all channels, and we should leave probe request sending to the firmware and not do it ourselves. But, this allows for continued development on the above features whilst actually having a somewhat working NIC. TODO: * Finish tidying up how the net80211 input path works. Right now ieee80211_input / ieee80211_input_all act as the top-level that everything feeds into; it should change so the MIMO input routines are those and the legacy routines are phased out. * The band selection should be done by the driver, not by the net80211 layer. * ieee80211_lookup_channel_rxstats() only determines 11b or 11g channels for now - this is enough for scanning, but not 100% true in all cases. If we ever need to handle off-channel scan support for things like static-40MHz or static-80MHz, or turbo-G, or half/quarter rates, then we should extend this. [1] This is a side effect of frequency-hopping and CCK modes - you can receive beacons when you think you're on a different channel. In particular, CCK (which is used by the low 11b rates, eg beacons!) is decodable from adjacent channels - just at a low SNR. FH is a side effect of having the hardware/firmware do the frequency hopping - it may pick up beacons transmitted from other FH networks that are in a different phase of hopping frequencies.
2015-05-25 16:37:41 +00:00
int subtype, const struct ieee80211_rx_stats *rxs, int rssi, int nf);
static void hostap_recv_ctl(struct ieee80211_node *, struct mbuf *, int);
void
ieee80211_hostap_attach(struct ieee80211com *ic)
{
ic->ic_vattach[IEEE80211_M_HOSTAP] = hostap_vattach;
}
void
ieee80211_hostap_detach(struct ieee80211com *ic)
{
}
static void
hostap_vdetach(struct ieee80211vap *vap)
{
}
static void
hostap_vattach(struct ieee80211vap *vap)
{
vap->iv_newstate = hostap_newstate;
vap->iv_input = hostap_input;
vap->iv_recv_mgmt = hostap_recv_mgmt;
vap->iv_recv_ctl = hostap_recv_ctl;
vap->iv_opdetach = hostap_vdetach;
vap->iv_deliver_data = hostap_deliver_data;
vap->iv_recv_pspoll = ieee80211_recv_pspoll;
}
static void
sta_disassoc(void *arg, struct ieee80211_node *ni)
{
if (ni->ni_associd != 0) {
IEEE80211_SEND_MGMT(ni, IEEE80211_FC0_SUBTYPE_DISASSOC,
IEEE80211_REASON_ASSOC_LEAVE);
ieee80211_node_leave(ni);
}
}
static void
sta_csa(void *arg, struct ieee80211_node *ni)
{
struct ieee80211vap *vap = ni->ni_vap;
if (ni->ni_associd != 0)
if (ni->ni_inact > vap->iv_inact_init) {
ni->ni_inact = vap->iv_inact_init;
IEEE80211_NOTE(vap, IEEE80211_MSG_INACT, ni,
"%s: inact %u", __func__, ni->ni_inact);
}
}
static void
sta_drop(void *arg, struct ieee80211_node *ni)
{
if (ni->ni_associd != 0)
ieee80211_node_leave(ni);
}
/*
* Does a channel change require associated stations to re-associate
* so protocol state is correct. This is used when doing CSA across
* bands or similar (e.g. HT -> legacy).
*/
static int
isbandchange(struct ieee80211com *ic)
{
return ((ic->ic_bsschan->ic_flags ^ ic->ic_csa_newchan->ic_flags) &
(IEEE80211_CHAN_2GHZ | IEEE80211_CHAN_5GHZ | IEEE80211_CHAN_HALF |
IEEE80211_CHAN_QUARTER | IEEE80211_CHAN_HT)) != 0;
}
/*
* IEEE80211_M_HOSTAP vap state machine handler.
*/
static int
hostap_newstate(struct ieee80211vap *vap, enum ieee80211_state nstate, int arg)
{
struct ieee80211com *ic = vap->iv_ic;
enum ieee80211_state ostate;
IEEE80211_LOCK_ASSERT(ic);
ostate = vap->iv_state;
IEEE80211_DPRINTF(vap, IEEE80211_MSG_STATE, "%s: %s -> %s (%d)\n",
__func__, ieee80211_state_name[ostate],
ieee80211_state_name[nstate], arg);
vap->iv_state = nstate; /* state transition */
if (ostate != IEEE80211_S_SCAN)
ieee80211_cancel_scan(vap); /* background scan */
switch (nstate) {
case IEEE80211_S_INIT:
switch (ostate) {
case IEEE80211_S_SCAN:
ieee80211_cancel_scan(vap);
break;
case IEEE80211_S_CAC:
ieee80211_dfs_cac_stop(vap);
break;
case IEEE80211_S_RUN:
ieee80211_iterate_nodes_vap(&ic->ic_sta, vap,
sta_disassoc, NULL);
break;
default:
break;
}
if (ostate != IEEE80211_S_INIT) {
/* NB: optimize INIT -> INIT case */
ieee80211_reset_bss(vap);
}
if (vap->iv_auth->ia_detach != NULL)
vap->iv_auth->ia_detach(vap);
break;
case IEEE80211_S_SCAN:
switch (ostate) {
case IEEE80211_S_CSA:
case IEEE80211_S_RUN:
ieee80211_iterate_nodes_vap(&ic->ic_sta, vap,
sta_disassoc, NULL);
/*
* Clear overlapping BSS state; the beacon frame
* will be reconstructed on transition to the RUN
* state and the timeout routines check if the flag
* is set before doing anything so this is sufficient.
*/
[net80211] Migrate HT/legacy protection mode and preamble calculation to per-VAP flags The later firmware devices (including iwn!) support multiple configuration contexts for a lot of things, leaving it up to the firmware to decide which channel and vap is active. This allows for things like off-channel p2p sta/ap operation and other weird things. However, net80211 is still focused on a "net80211 drives all" when it comes to driving the NIC, and as part of this history a lot of these options are global and not per-VAP. This is fine when net80211 drives things and all VAPs share a single channel - these parameters importantly really reflect the state of the channel! - but it will increasingly be not fine when we start supporting more weird configurations and more recent NICs. Yeah, recent like iwn/iwm. Anyway - so, migrate all of the HT protection, legacy protection and preamble stuff to be per-VAP. The global flags are still there; they're now calculated in a deferred taskqueue that mirrors the old behaviour. Firmware based drivers which have per-VAP configuration of these parameters can now just listen to the per-VAP options. What do I mean by per-channel? Well, the above configuration parameters really are about interoperation with other devices on the same channel. Eg, HT protection mode will flip to legacy/mixed if it hears ANY BSS that supports non-HT stations or indicates it has non-HT stations associated. So, these flags really should be per-channel rather than per-VAP, and then for things like "do i need short preamble or long preamble?" turn into a "do I need it for this current operating channel". Then any VAP using it can query the channel that it's on, reflecting the real required state. This patch does none of the above paragraph just yet. I'm also cheating a bit - I'm currently not using separate taskqueues for the beacon updates and the per-VAP configuration updates. I can always further split it later if I need to but I didn't think it was SUPER important here. So: * Create vap taskqueue entries for ERP/protection, HT protection and short/long preamble; * Migrate the HT station count, short/long slot station count, etc - into per-VAP variables rather than global; * Fix a bug with my WME work from a while ago which made it per-VAP - do the WME beacon update /after/ the WME update taskqueue runs, not before; * Any time the HT protmode configuration changes or the ERP protection mode config changes - schedule the task, which will call the driver without the net80211 lock held and all correctly serialised; * Use the global flags for beacon IEs and VAP flags for probe responses and other IE situations. The primary consumer of this is ath10k. iwn could use it when sending RXON, but we don't support IBSS or AP modes on it yet, and I'm not yet sure whether it's required in STA mode (ie whether the firmware parses beacons to change protection mode or whether we need to.) Tested: * AR9280, STA/AP * AR9380, DWDS STA+STA/AP * ath10k work, STA/AP * Intel 6235, STA * Various rtwn / run NICs, DWDS STA and STA configurations
2020-07-01 00:23:49 +00:00
vap->iv_flags_ext &= ~IEEE80211_FEXT_NONERP_PR;
vap->iv_flags_ht &= ~IEEE80211_FHT_NONHT_PR;
/* XXX TODO: schedule deferred update? */
/* fall thru... */
case IEEE80211_S_CAC:
/*
* NB: We may get here because of a manual channel
* change in which case we need to stop CAC
* XXX no need to stop if ostate RUN but it's ok
*/
ieee80211_dfs_cac_stop(vap);
/* fall thru... */
case IEEE80211_S_INIT:
if (vap->iv_des_chan != IEEE80211_CHAN_ANYC &&
!IEEE80211_IS_CHAN_RADAR(vap->iv_des_chan)) {
/*
* Already have a channel; bypass the
* scan and startup immediately.
* ieee80211_create_ibss will call back to
* move us to RUN state.
*/
ieee80211_create_ibss(vap, vap->iv_des_chan);
break;
}
/*
* Initiate a scan. We can come here as a result
* of an IEEE80211_IOC_SCAN_REQ too in which case
* the vap will be marked with IEEE80211_FEXT_SCANREQ
* and the scan request parameters will be present
* in iv_scanreq. Otherwise we do the default.
*/
if (vap->iv_flags_ext & IEEE80211_FEXT_SCANREQ) {
ieee80211_check_scan(vap,
vap->iv_scanreq_flags,
vap->iv_scanreq_duration,
vap->iv_scanreq_mindwell,
vap->iv_scanreq_maxdwell,
vap->iv_scanreq_nssid, vap->iv_scanreq_ssid);
vap->iv_flags_ext &= ~IEEE80211_FEXT_SCANREQ;
} else
ieee80211_check_scan_current(vap);
break;
case IEEE80211_S_SCAN:
/*
* A state change requires a reset; scan.
*/
ieee80211_check_scan_current(vap);
break;
default:
break;
}
break;
case IEEE80211_S_CAC:
/*
* Start CAC on a DFS channel. We come here when starting
* a bss on a DFS channel (see ieee80211_create_ibss).
*/
ieee80211_dfs_cac_start(vap);
break;
case IEEE80211_S_RUN:
if (vap->iv_flags & IEEE80211_F_WPA) {
/* XXX validate prerequisites */
}
switch (ostate) {
case IEEE80211_S_INIT:
/*
* Already have a channel; bypass the
* scan and startup immediately.
* Note that ieee80211_create_ibss will call
* back to do a RUN->RUN state change.
*/
ieee80211_create_ibss(vap,
ieee80211_ht_adjust_channel(ic,
ic->ic_curchan, vap->iv_flags_ht));
/* NB: iv_bss is changed on return */
break;
case IEEE80211_S_CAC:
/*
* NB: This is the normal state change when CAC
* expires and no radar was detected; no need to
* clear the CAC timer as it's already expired.
*/
/* fall thru... */
case IEEE80211_S_CSA:
/*
* Shorten inactivity timer of associated stations
* to weed out sta's that don't follow a CSA.
*/
ieee80211_iterate_nodes_vap(&ic->ic_sta, vap,
sta_csa, NULL);
/*
* Update bss node channel to reflect where
* we landed after CSA.
*/
ieee80211_node_set_chan(vap->iv_bss,
ieee80211_ht_adjust_channel(ic, ic->ic_curchan,
ieee80211_htchanflags(vap->iv_bss->ni_chan)));
/* XXX bypass debug msgs */
break;
case IEEE80211_S_SCAN:
case IEEE80211_S_RUN:
#ifdef IEEE80211_DEBUG
if (ieee80211_msg_debug(vap)) {
struct ieee80211_node *ni = vap->iv_bss;
ieee80211_note(vap,
"synchronized with %s ssid ",
ether_sprintf(ni->ni_bssid));
ieee80211_print_essid(ni->ni_essid,
ni->ni_esslen);
/* XXX MCS/HT */
printf(" channel %d start %uMb\n",
ieee80211_chan2ieee(ic, ic->ic_curchan),
IEEE80211_RATE2MBS(ni->ni_txrate));
}
#endif
break;
default:
break;
}
/*
* Start/stop the authenticator. We delay until here
* to allow configuration to happen out of order.
*/
if (vap->iv_auth->ia_attach != NULL) {
/* XXX check failure */
vap->iv_auth->ia_attach(vap);
} else if (vap->iv_auth->ia_detach != NULL) {
vap->iv_auth->ia_detach(vap);
}
ieee80211_node_authorize(vap->iv_bss);
break;
case IEEE80211_S_CSA:
if (ostate == IEEE80211_S_RUN && isbandchange(ic)) {
/*
* On a ``band change'' silently drop associated
* stations as they must re-associate before they
* can pass traffic (as otherwise protocol state
* such as capabilities and the negotiated rate
* set may/will be wrong).
*/
ieee80211_iterate_nodes_vap(&ic->ic_sta, vap,
sta_drop, NULL);
}
break;
default:
break;
}
return 0;
}
static void
hostap_deliver_data(struct ieee80211vap *vap,
struct ieee80211_node *ni, struct mbuf *m)
{
struct ether_header *eh = mtod(m, struct ether_header *);
struct ifnet *ifp = vap->iv_ifp;
/* clear driver/net80211 flags before passing up */
m->m_flags &= ~(M_MCAST | M_BCAST);
m_clrprotoflags(m);
KASSERT(vap->iv_opmode == IEEE80211_M_HOSTAP,
("gack, opmode %d", vap->iv_opmode));
/*
* Do accounting.
*/
if_inc_counter(ifp, IFCOUNTER_IPACKETS, 1);
IEEE80211_NODE_STAT(ni, rx_data);
IEEE80211_NODE_STAT_ADD(ni, rx_bytes, m->m_pkthdr.len);
if (ETHER_IS_MULTICAST(eh->ether_dhost)) {
m->m_flags |= M_MCAST; /* XXX M_BCAST? */
IEEE80211_NODE_STAT(ni, rx_mcast);
} else
IEEE80211_NODE_STAT(ni, rx_ucast);
/* perform as a bridge within the AP */
if ((vap->iv_flags & IEEE80211_F_NOBRIDGE) == 0) {
struct mbuf *mcopy = NULL;
if (m->m_flags & M_MCAST) {
mcopy = m_dup(m, IEEE80211_M_NOWAIT);
if (mcopy == NULL)
if_inc_counter(ifp, IFCOUNTER_OERRORS, 1);
else
mcopy->m_flags |= M_MCAST;
} else {
/*
* Check if the destination is associated with the
* same vap and authorized to receive traffic.
* Beware of traffic destined for the vap itself;
* sending it will not work; just let it be delivered
* normally.
*/
struct ieee80211_node *sta = ieee80211_find_vap_node(
&vap->iv_ic->ic_sta, vap, eh->ether_dhost);
if (sta != NULL) {
if (ieee80211_node_is_authorized(sta)) {
/*
* Beware of sending to ourself; this
* needs to happen via the normal
* input path.
*/
if (sta != vap->iv_bss) {
mcopy = m;
m = NULL;
}
} else {
vap->iv_stats.is_rx_unauth++;
IEEE80211_NODE_STAT(sta, rx_unauth);
}
ieee80211_free_node(sta);
}
}
if (mcopy != NULL)
(void) ieee80211_vap_xmitpkt(vap, mcopy);
}
if (m != NULL) {
struct epoch_tracker et;
/*
* Mark frame as coming from vap's interface.
*/
m->m_pkthdr.rcvif = ifp;
if (m->m_flags & M_MCAST) {
/*
* Spam DWDS vap's w/ multicast traffic.
*/
/* XXX only if dwds in use? */
ieee80211_dwds_mcast(vap, m);
}
if (ni->ni_vlan != 0) {
/* attach vlan tag */
m->m_pkthdr.ether_vtag = ni->ni_vlan;
m->m_flags |= M_VLANTAG;
}
NET_EPOCH_ENTER(et);
ifp->if_input(ifp, m);
NET_EPOCH_EXIT(et);
}
}
/*
* Decide if a received management frame should be
* printed when debugging is enabled. This filters some
* of the less interesting frames that come frequently
* (e.g. beacons).
*/
static __inline int
doprint(struct ieee80211vap *vap, int subtype)
{
switch (subtype) {
case IEEE80211_FC0_SUBTYPE_BEACON:
return (vap->iv_ic->ic_flags & IEEE80211_F_SCAN);
case IEEE80211_FC0_SUBTYPE_PROBE_REQ:
return 0;
}
return 1;
}
/*
* Process a received frame. The node associated with the sender
* should be supplied. If nothing was found in the node table then
* the caller is assumed to supply a reference to iv_bss instead.
* The RSSI and a timestamp are also supplied. The RSSI data is used
* during AP scanning to select a AP to associate with; it can have
* any units so long as values have consistent units and higher values
* mean ``better signal''. The receive timestamp is currently not used
* by the 802.11 layer.
*/
static int
Begin plumbing ieee80211_rx_stats through the receive path. Smart NICs with firmware (eg wpi, iwn, the new atheros parts, the intel 7260 series, etc) support doing a lot of things in firmware. This includes but isn't limited to things like scanning, sending probe requests and receiving probe responses. However, net80211 doesn't know about any of this - it still drives the whole scan/probe infrastructure itself. In order to move towards suppoting smart NICs, the receive path needs to know about the channel/details for each received packet. In at least the iwn and 7260 firmware (and I believe wpi, but I haven't tried it yet) it will do the scanning, power-save and off-channel buffering for you - all you need to do is handle receiving beacons and probe responses on channels that aren't what you're currently on. However the whole receive path is peppered with ic->ic_curchan and manual scan/powersave handling. The beacon parsing code also checks ic->ic_curchan to determine if the received beacon is on the correct channel or not.[1] So: * add freq/ieee values to ieee80211_rx_stats; * change ieee80211_parse_beacon() to accept the 'current' channel as an argument; * modify the iv_input() and iv_recv_mgmt() methods to include the rx_stats; * add a new method - ieee80211_lookup_channel_rxstats() - that looks up a channel based on the contents of ieee80211_rx_stats; * if it exists, use it in the mgmt path to switch the current channel (which still defaults to ic->ic_curchan) over to something determined by rx_stats. This is enough to kick-start scan offload support in the Intel 7260 driver that Rui/I are working on. It also is a good start for scan offload support for a handful of existing NICs (wpi, iwn, some USB parts) and it'll very likely dramatically improve stability/performance there. It's not the whole thing - notably, we don't need to do powersave, we should not scan all channels, and we should leave probe request sending to the firmware and not do it ourselves. But, this allows for continued development on the above features whilst actually having a somewhat working NIC. TODO: * Finish tidying up how the net80211 input path works. Right now ieee80211_input / ieee80211_input_all act as the top-level that everything feeds into; it should change so the MIMO input routines are those and the legacy routines are phased out. * The band selection should be done by the driver, not by the net80211 layer. * ieee80211_lookup_channel_rxstats() only determines 11b or 11g channels for now - this is enough for scanning, but not 100% true in all cases. If we ever need to handle off-channel scan support for things like static-40MHz or static-80MHz, or turbo-G, or half/quarter rates, then we should extend this. [1] This is a side effect of frequency-hopping and CCK modes - you can receive beacons when you think you're on a different channel. In particular, CCK (which is used by the low 11b rates, eg beacons!) is decodable from adjacent channels - just at a low SNR. FH is a side effect of having the hardware/firmware do the frequency hopping - it may pick up beacons transmitted from other FH networks that are in a different phase of hopping frequencies.
2015-05-25 16:37:41 +00:00
hostap_input(struct ieee80211_node *ni, struct mbuf *m,
const struct ieee80211_rx_stats *rxs, int rssi, int nf)
{
struct ieee80211vap *vap = ni->ni_vap;
struct ieee80211com *ic = ni->ni_ic;
struct ifnet *ifp = vap->iv_ifp;
struct ieee80211_frame *wh;
struct ieee80211_key *key;
struct ether_header *eh;
int hdrspace, need_tap = 1; /* mbuf need to be tapped. */
uint8_t dir, type, subtype, qos;
uint8_t *bssid;
int is_hw_decrypted = 0;
int has_decrypted = 0;
/*
* Some devices do hardware decryption all the way through
* to pretending the frame wasn't encrypted in the first place.
* So, tag it appropriately so it isn't discarded inappropriately.
*/
if ((rxs != NULL) && (rxs->c_pktflags & IEEE80211_RX_F_DECRYPTED))
is_hw_decrypted = 1;
if (m->m_flags & M_AMPDU_MPDU) {
/*
* Fastpath for A-MPDU reorder q resubmission. Frames
* w/ M_AMPDU_MPDU marked have already passed through
* here but were received out of order and been held on
* the reorder queue. When resubmitted they are marked
* with the M_AMPDU_MPDU flag and we can bypass most of
* the normal processing.
*/
wh = mtod(m, struct ieee80211_frame *);
type = IEEE80211_FC0_TYPE_DATA;
dir = wh->i_fc[1] & IEEE80211_FC1_DIR_MASK;
subtype = IEEE80211_FC0_SUBTYPE_QOS_DATA;
hdrspace = ieee80211_hdrspace(ic, wh); /* XXX optimize? */
goto resubmit_ampdu;
}
KASSERT(ni != NULL, ("null node"));
ni->ni_inact = ni->ni_inact_reload;
type = -1; /* undefined */
if (m->m_pkthdr.len < sizeof(struct ieee80211_frame_min)) {
IEEE80211_DISCARD_MAC(vap, IEEE80211_MSG_ANY,
ni->ni_macaddr, NULL,
"too short (1): len %u", m->m_pkthdr.len);
vap->iv_stats.is_rx_tooshort++;
goto out;
}
/*
* Bit of a cheat here, we use a pointer for a 3-address
* frame format but don't reference fields past outside
* ieee80211_frame_min w/o first validating the data is
* present.
*/
wh = mtod(m, struct ieee80211_frame *);
if ((wh->i_fc[0] & IEEE80211_FC0_VERSION_MASK) !=
IEEE80211_FC0_VERSION_0) {
IEEE80211_DISCARD_MAC(vap, IEEE80211_MSG_ANY,
ni->ni_macaddr, NULL, "wrong version, fc %02x:%02x",
wh->i_fc[0], wh->i_fc[1]);
vap->iv_stats.is_rx_badversion++;
goto err;
}
dir = wh->i_fc[1] & IEEE80211_FC1_DIR_MASK;
type = wh->i_fc[0] & IEEE80211_FC0_TYPE_MASK;
subtype = wh->i_fc[0] & IEEE80211_FC0_SUBTYPE_MASK;
if ((ic->ic_flags & IEEE80211_F_SCAN) == 0) {
if (dir != IEEE80211_FC1_DIR_NODS)
bssid = wh->i_addr1;
else if (type == IEEE80211_FC0_TYPE_CTL)
bssid = wh->i_addr1;
else {
if (m->m_pkthdr.len < sizeof(struct ieee80211_frame)) {
IEEE80211_DISCARD_MAC(vap,
IEEE80211_MSG_ANY, ni->ni_macaddr,
NULL, "too short (2): len %u",
m->m_pkthdr.len);
vap->iv_stats.is_rx_tooshort++;
goto out;
}
bssid = wh->i_addr3;
}
/*
* Validate the bssid.
*/
if (!(type == IEEE80211_FC0_TYPE_MGT &&
subtype == IEEE80211_FC0_SUBTYPE_BEACON) &&
!IEEE80211_ADDR_EQ(bssid, vap->iv_bss->ni_bssid) &&
!IEEE80211_ADDR_EQ(bssid, ifp->if_broadcastaddr)) {
/* not interested in */
IEEE80211_DISCARD_MAC(vap, IEEE80211_MSG_INPUT,
bssid, NULL, "%s", "not to bss");
vap->iv_stats.is_rx_wrongbss++;
goto out;
}
IEEE80211_RSSI_LPF(ni->ni_avgrssi, rssi);
ni->ni_noise = nf;
if (IEEE80211_HAS_SEQ(type, subtype)) {
uint8_t tid = ieee80211_gettid(wh);
if (IEEE80211_QOS_HAS_SEQ(wh) &&
TID_TO_WME_AC(tid) >= WME_AC_VI)
ic->ic_wme.wme_hipri_traffic++;
if (! ieee80211_check_rxseq(ni, wh, bssid, rxs))
goto out;
}
}
switch (type) {
case IEEE80211_FC0_TYPE_DATA:
hdrspace = ieee80211_hdrspace(ic, wh);
if (m->m_len < hdrspace &&
(m = m_pullup(m, hdrspace)) == NULL) {
IEEE80211_DISCARD_MAC(vap, IEEE80211_MSG_ANY,
ni->ni_macaddr, NULL,
"data too short: expecting %u", hdrspace);
vap->iv_stats.is_rx_tooshort++;
goto out; /* XXX */
}
if (!(dir == IEEE80211_FC1_DIR_TODS ||
(dir == IEEE80211_FC1_DIR_DSTODS &&
(vap->iv_flags & IEEE80211_F_DWDS)))) {
if (dir != IEEE80211_FC1_DIR_DSTODS) {
IEEE80211_DISCARD(vap,
IEEE80211_MSG_INPUT, wh, "data",
"incorrect dir 0x%x", dir);
} else {
IEEE80211_DISCARD(vap,
IEEE80211_MSG_INPUT |
IEEE80211_MSG_WDS, wh,
"4-address data",
"%s", "DWDS not enabled");
}
vap->iv_stats.is_rx_wrongdir++;
goto out;
}
/* check if source STA is associated */
if (ni == vap->iv_bss) {
IEEE80211_DISCARD(vap, IEEE80211_MSG_INPUT,
wh, "data", "%s", "unknown src");
ieee80211_send_error(ni, wh->i_addr2,
IEEE80211_FC0_SUBTYPE_DEAUTH,
IEEE80211_REASON_NOT_AUTHED);
vap->iv_stats.is_rx_notassoc++;
goto err;
}
if (ni->ni_associd == 0) {
IEEE80211_DISCARD(vap, IEEE80211_MSG_INPUT,
wh, "data", "%s", "unassoc src");
IEEE80211_SEND_MGMT(ni,
IEEE80211_FC0_SUBTYPE_DISASSOC,
IEEE80211_REASON_NOT_ASSOCED);
vap->iv_stats.is_rx_notassoc++;
goto err;
}
/*
* Check for power save state change.
* XXX out-of-order A-MPDU frames?
*/
if (((wh->i_fc[1] & IEEE80211_FC1_PWR_MGT) ^
(ni->ni_flags & IEEE80211_NODE_PWR_MGT)))
vap->iv_node_ps(ni,
wh->i_fc[1] & IEEE80211_FC1_PWR_MGT);
/*
* For 4-address packets handle WDS discovery
* notifications. Once a WDS link is setup frames
* are just delivered to the WDS vap (see below).
*/
if (dir == IEEE80211_FC1_DIR_DSTODS && ni->ni_wdsvap == NULL) {
if (!ieee80211_node_is_authorized(ni)) {
IEEE80211_DISCARD(vap,
IEEE80211_MSG_INPUT |
IEEE80211_MSG_WDS, wh,
"4-address data",
"%s", "unauthorized port");
vap->iv_stats.is_rx_unauth++;
IEEE80211_NODE_STAT(ni, rx_unauth);
goto err;
}
ieee80211_dwds_discover(ni, m);
return type;
}
/*
* Handle A-MPDU re-ordering. If the frame is to be
* processed directly then ieee80211_ampdu_reorder
* will return 0; otherwise it has consumed the mbuf
* and we should do nothing more with it.
*/
if ((m->m_flags & M_AMPDU) &&
ieee80211_ampdu_reorder(ni, m, rxs) != 0) {
m = NULL;
goto out;
}
resubmit_ampdu:
/*
* Handle privacy requirements. Note that we
* must not be preempted from here until after
* we (potentially) call ieee80211_crypto_demic;
* otherwise we may violate assumptions in the
* crypto cipher modules used to do delayed update
* of replay sequence numbers.
*/
if (is_hw_decrypted || IEEE80211_IS_PROTECTED(wh)) {
if ((vap->iv_flags & IEEE80211_F_PRIVACY) == 0) {
/*
* Discard encrypted frames when privacy is off.
*/
IEEE80211_DISCARD(vap, IEEE80211_MSG_INPUT,
wh, "WEP", "%s", "PRIVACY off");
vap->iv_stats.is_rx_noprivacy++;
IEEE80211_NODE_STAT(ni, rx_noprivacy);
goto out;
}
if (ieee80211_crypto_decap(ni, m, hdrspace, &key) == 0) {
/* NB: stats+msgs handled in crypto_decap */
IEEE80211_NODE_STAT(ni, rx_wepfail);
goto out;
}
wh = mtod(m, struct ieee80211_frame *);
wh->i_fc[1] &= ~IEEE80211_FC1_PROTECTED;
has_decrypted = 1;
} else {
/* XXX M_WEP and IEEE80211_F_PRIVACY */
key = NULL;
}
/*
* Save QoS bits for use below--before we strip the header.
*/
if (subtype == IEEE80211_FC0_SUBTYPE_QOS_DATA)
qos = ieee80211_getqos(wh)[0];
else
qos = 0;
/*
* Next up, any fragmentation.
*/
if (!IEEE80211_IS_MULTICAST(wh->i_addr1)) {
m = ieee80211_defrag(ni, m, hdrspace, has_decrypted);
if (m == NULL) {
/* Fragment dropped or frame not complete yet */
goto out;
}
}
wh = NULL; /* no longer valid, catch any uses */
/*
* Next strip any MSDU crypto bits.
*/
if (key != NULL && !ieee80211_crypto_demic(vap, key, m, 0)) {
IEEE80211_DISCARD_MAC(vap, IEEE80211_MSG_INPUT,
ni->ni_macaddr, "data", "%s", "demic error");
vap->iv_stats.is_rx_demicfail++;
IEEE80211_NODE_STAT(ni, rx_demicfail);
goto out;
}
/* copy to listener after decrypt */
if (ieee80211_radiotap_active_vap(vap))
ieee80211_radiotap_rx(vap, m);
need_tap = 0;
/*
* Finally, strip the 802.11 header.
*/
m = ieee80211_decap(vap, m, hdrspace, qos);
if (m == NULL) {
/* XXX mask bit to check for both */
/* don't count Null data frames as errors */
if (subtype == IEEE80211_FC0_SUBTYPE_NODATA ||
subtype == IEEE80211_FC0_SUBTYPE_QOS_NULL)
goto out;
IEEE80211_DISCARD_MAC(vap, IEEE80211_MSG_INPUT,
ni->ni_macaddr, "data", "%s", "decap error");
vap->iv_stats.is_rx_decap++;
IEEE80211_NODE_STAT(ni, rx_decap);
goto err;
}
if (!(qos & IEEE80211_QOS_AMSDU))
eh = mtod(m, struct ether_header *);
else
eh = NULL;
if (!ieee80211_node_is_authorized(ni)) {
/*
* Deny any non-PAE frames received prior to
* authorization. For open/shared-key
* authentication the port is mark authorized
* after authentication completes. For 802.1x
* the port is not marked authorized by the
* authenticator until the handshake has completed.
*/
if (eh == NULL ||
eh->ether_type != htons(ETHERTYPE_PAE)) {
IEEE80211_DISCARD_MAC(vap, IEEE80211_MSG_INPUT,
ni->ni_macaddr, "data", "unauthorized or "
"unknown port: ether type 0x%x len %u",
eh == NULL ? -1 : eh->ether_type,
m->m_pkthdr.len);
vap->iv_stats.is_rx_unauth++;
IEEE80211_NODE_STAT(ni, rx_unauth);
goto err;
}
} else {
/*
* When denying unencrypted frames, discard
* any non-PAE frames received without encryption.
*/
if ((vap->iv_flags & IEEE80211_F_DROPUNENC) &&
((has_decrypted == 0) && (m->m_flags & M_WEP) == 0) &&
(is_hw_decrypted == 0) &&
(eh == NULL ||
eh->ether_type != htons(ETHERTYPE_PAE))) {
/*
* Drop unencrypted frames.
*/
vap->iv_stats.is_rx_unencrypted++;
IEEE80211_NODE_STAT(ni, rx_unencrypted);
goto out;
}
}
/* XXX require HT? */
if (qos & IEEE80211_QOS_AMSDU) {
m = ieee80211_decap_amsdu(ni, m);
if (m == NULL)
return IEEE80211_FC0_TYPE_DATA;
} else {
#ifdef IEEE80211_SUPPORT_SUPERG
m = ieee80211_decap_fastframe(vap, ni, m);
if (m == NULL)
return IEEE80211_FC0_TYPE_DATA;
#endif
}
if (dir == IEEE80211_FC1_DIR_DSTODS && ni->ni_wdsvap != NULL)
ieee80211_deliver_data(ni->ni_wdsvap, ni, m);
else
hostap_deliver_data(vap, ni, m);
return IEEE80211_FC0_TYPE_DATA;
case IEEE80211_FC0_TYPE_MGT:
vap->iv_stats.is_rx_mgmt++;
IEEE80211_NODE_STAT(ni, rx_mgmt);
if (dir != IEEE80211_FC1_DIR_NODS) {
IEEE80211_DISCARD(vap, IEEE80211_MSG_INPUT,
wh, "mgt", "incorrect dir 0x%x", dir);
vap->iv_stats.is_rx_wrongdir++;
goto err;
}
if (m->m_pkthdr.len < sizeof(struct ieee80211_frame)) {
IEEE80211_DISCARD_MAC(vap, IEEE80211_MSG_ANY,
ni->ni_macaddr, "mgt", "too short: len %u",
m->m_pkthdr.len);
vap->iv_stats.is_rx_tooshort++;
goto out;
}
if (IEEE80211_IS_MULTICAST(wh->i_addr2)) {
/* ensure return frames are unicast */
IEEE80211_DISCARD(vap, IEEE80211_MSG_ANY,
wh, NULL, "source is multicast: %s",
ether_sprintf(wh->i_addr2));
vap->iv_stats.is_rx_mgtdiscard++; /* XXX stat */
goto out;
}
#ifdef IEEE80211_DEBUG
if ((ieee80211_msg_debug(vap) && doprint(vap, subtype)) ||
ieee80211_msg_dumppkts(vap)) {
if_printf(ifp, "received %s from %s rssi %d\n",
ieee80211_mgt_subtype_name(subtype),
ether_sprintf(wh->i_addr2), rssi);
}
#endif
if (IEEE80211_IS_PROTECTED(wh)) {
if (subtype != IEEE80211_FC0_SUBTYPE_AUTH) {
/*
* Only shared key auth frames with a challenge
* should be encrypted, discard all others.
*/
IEEE80211_DISCARD(vap, IEEE80211_MSG_INPUT,
wh, NULL,
"%s", "WEP set but not permitted");
vap->iv_stats.is_rx_mgtdiscard++; /* XXX */
goto out;
}
if ((vap->iv_flags & IEEE80211_F_PRIVACY) == 0) {
/*
* Discard encrypted frames when privacy is off.
*/
IEEE80211_DISCARD(vap, IEEE80211_MSG_INPUT,
wh, NULL, "%s", "WEP set but PRIVACY off");
vap->iv_stats.is_rx_noprivacy++;
goto out;
}
hdrspace = ieee80211_hdrspace(ic, wh);
if (ieee80211_crypto_decap(ni, m, hdrspace, &key) == 0) {
/* NB: stats+msgs handled in crypto_decap */
goto out;
}
wh = mtod(m, struct ieee80211_frame *);
wh->i_fc[1] &= ~IEEE80211_FC1_PROTECTED;
has_decrypted = 1;
}
/*
* Pass the packet to radiotap before calling iv_recv_mgmt().
* Otherwise iv_recv_mgmt() might pass another packet to
* radiotap, resulting in out of order packet captures.
*/
if (ieee80211_radiotap_active_vap(vap))
ieee80211_radiotap_rx(vap, m);
need_tap = 0;
Begin plumbing ieee80211_rx_stats through the receive path. Smart NICs with firmware (eg wpi, iwn, the new atheros parts, the intel 7260 series, etc) support doing a lot of things in firmware. This includes but isn't limited to things like scanning, sending probe requests and receiving probe responses. However, net80211 doesn't know about any of this - it still drives the whole scan/probe infrastructure itself. In order to move towards suppoting smart NICs, the receive path needs to know about the channel/details for each received packet. In at least the iwn and 7260 firmware (and I believe wpi, but I haven't tried it yet) it will do the scanning, power-save and off-channel buffering for you - all you need to do is handle receiving beacons and probe responses on channels that aren't what you're currently on. However the whole receive path is peppered with ic->ic_curchan and manual scan/powersave handling. The beacon parsing code also checks ic->ic_curchan to determine if the received beacon is on the correct channel or not.[1] So: * add freq/ieee values to ieee80211_rx_stats; * change ieee80211_parse_beacon() to accept the 'current' channel as an argument; * modify the iv_input() and iv_recv_mgmt() methods to include the rx_stats; * add a new method - ieee80211_lookup_channel_rxstats() - that looks up a channel based on the contents of ieee80211_rx_stats; * if it exists, use it in the mgmt path to switch the current channel (which still defaults to ic->ic_curchan) over to something determined by rx_stats. This is enough to kick-start scan offload support in the Intel 7260 driver that Rui/I are working on. It also is a good start for scan offload support for a handful of existing NICs (wpi, iwn, some USB parts) and it'll very likely dramatically improve stability/performance there. It's not the whole thing - notably, we don't need to do powersave, we should not scan all channels, and we should leave probe request sending to the firmware and not do it ourselves. But, this allows for continued development on the above features whilst actually having a somewhat working NIC. TODO: * Finish tidying up how the net80211 input path works. Right now ieee80211_input / ieee80211_input_all act as the top-level that everything feeds into; it should change so the MIMO input routines are those and the legacy routines are phased out. * The band selection should be done by the driver, not by the net80211 layer. * ieee80211_lookup_channel_rxstats() only determines 11b or 11g channels for now - this is enough for scanning, but not 100% true in all cases. If we ever need to handle off-channel scan support for things like static-40MHz or static-80MHz, or turbo-G, or half/quarter rates, then we should extend this. [1] This is a side effect of frequency-hopping and CCK modes - you can receive beacons when you think you're on a different channel. In particular, CCK (which is used by the low 11b rates, eg beacons!) is decodable from adjacent channels - just at a low SNR. FH is a side effect of having the hardware/firmware do the frequency hopping - it may pick up beacons transmitted from other FH networks that are in a different phase of hopping frequencies.
2015-05-25 16:37:41 +00:00
vap->iv_recv_mgmt(ni, m, subtype, rxs, rssi, nf);
goto out;
case IEEE80211_FC0_TYPE_CTL:
vap->iv_stats.is_rx_ctl++;
IEEE80211_NODE_STAT(ni, rx_ctrl);
vap->iv_recv_ctl(ni, m, subtype);
goto out;
default:
IEEE80211_DISCARD(vap, IEEE80211_MSG_ANY,
wh, "bad", "frame type 0x%x", type);
/* should not come here */
break;
}
err:
if_inc_counter(ifp, IFCOUNTER_IERRORS, 1);
out:
if (m != NULL) {
if (need_tap && ieee80211_radiotap_active_vap(vap))
ieee80211_radiotap_rx(vap, m);
m_freem(m);
}
return type;
}
static void
hostap_auth_open(struct ieee80211_node *ni, struct ieee80211_frame *wh,
int rssi, int nf, uint16_t seq, uint16_t status)
{
struct ieee80211vap *vap = ni->ni_vap;
KASSERT(vap->iv_state == IEEE80211_S_RUN, ("state %d", vap->iv_state));
if (ni->ni_authmode == IEEE80211_AUTH_SHARED) {
IEEE80211_DISCARD_MAC(vap, IEEE80211_MSG_AUTH,
ni->ni_macaddr, "open auth",
"bad sta auth mode %u", ni->ni_authmode);
vap->iv_stats.is_rx_bad_auth++; /* XXX */
/*
* Clear any challenge text that may be there if
* a previous shared key auth failed and then an
* open auth is attempted.
*/
if (ni->ni_challenge != NULL) {
IEEE80211_FREE(ni->ni_challenge, M_80211_NODE);
ni->ni_challenge = NULL;
}
/* XXX hack to workaround calling convention */
ieee80211_send_error(ni, wh->i_addr2,
IEEE80211_FC0_SUBTYPE_AUTH,
(seq + 1) | (IEEE80211_STATUS_ALG<<16));
return;
}
if (seq != IEEE80211_AUTH_OPEN_REQUEST) {
vap->iv_stats.is_rx_bad_auth++;
return;
}
/* always accept open authentication requests */
if (ni == vap->iv_bss) {
ni = ieee80211_dup_bss(vap, wh->i_addr2);
if (ni == NULL)
return;
} else if ((ni->ni_flags & IEEE80211_NODE_AREF) == 0)
(void) ieee80211_ref_node(ni);
/*
* Mark the node as referenced to reflect that it's
* reference count has been bumped to insure it remains
* after the transaction completes.
*/
ni->ni_flags |= IEEE80211_NODE_AREF;
/*
2008-12-16 01:17:36 +00:00
* Mark the node as requiring a valid association id
* before outbound traffic is permitted.
*/
ni->ni_flags |= IEEE80211_NODE_ASSOCID;
if (vap->iv_acl != NULL &&
vap->iv_acl->iac_getpolicy(vap) == IEEE80211_MACCMD_POLICY_RADIUS) {
/*
* When the ACL policy is set to RADIUS we defer the
* authorization to a user agent. Dispatch an event,
* a subsequent MLME call will decide the fate of the
* station. If the user agent is not present then the
* node will be reclaimed due to inactivity.
*/
IEEE80211_NOTE_MAC(vap,
IEEE80211_MSG_AUTH | IEEE80211_MSG_ACL, ni->ni_macaddr,
"%s", "station authentication deferred (radius acl)");
ieee80211_notify_node_auth(ni);
} else {
IEEE80211_SEND_MGMT(ni, IEEE80211_FC0_SUBTYPE_AUTH, seq + 1);
IEEE80211_NOTE_MAC(vap,
IEEE80211_MSG_DEBUG | IEEE80211_MSG_AUTH, ni->ni_macaddr,
"%s", "station authenticated (open)");
/*
* When 802.1x is not in use mark the port
* authorized at this point so traffic can flow.
*/
if (ni->ni_authmode != IEEE80211_AUTH_8021X)
ieee80211_node_authorize(ni);
}
}
static void
hostap_auth_shared(struct ieee80211_node *ni, struct ieee80211_frame *wh,
uint8_t *frm, uint8_t *efrm, int rssi, int nf,
uint16_t seq, uint16_t status)
{
struct ieee80211vap *vap = ni->ni_vap;
uint8_t *challenge;
int estatus;
KASSERT(vap->iv_state == IEEE80211_S_RUN, ("state %d", vap->iv_state));
/*
* NB: this can happen as we allow pre-shared key
* authentication to be enabled w/o wep being turned
* on so that configuration of these can be done
* in any order. It may be better to enforce the
* ordering in which case this check would just be
* for sanity/consistency.
*/
if ((vap->iv_flags & IEEE80211_F_PRIVACY) == 0) {
IEEE80211_DISCARD_MAC(vap, IEEE80211_MSG_AUTH,
ni->ni_macaddr, "shared key auth",
"%s", " PRIVACY is disabled");
estatus = IEEE80211_STATUS_ALG;
goto bad;
}
/*
* Pre-shared key authentication is evil; accept
* it only if explicitly configured (it is supported
* mainly for compatibility with clients like Mac OS X).
*/
if (ni->ni_authmode != IEEE80211_AUTH_AUTO &&
ni->ni_authmode != IEEE80211_AUTH_SHARED) {
IEEE80211_DISCARD_MAC(vap, IEEE80211_MSG_AUTH,
ni->ni_macaddr, "shared key auth",
"bad sta auth mode %u", ni->ni_authmode);
vap->iv_stats.is_rx_bad_auth++; /* XXX maybe a unique error? */
estatus = IEEE80211_STATUS_ALG;
goto bad;
}
challenge = NULL;
if (frm + 1 < efrm) {
if ((frm[1] + 2) > (efrm - frm)) {
IEEE80211_DISCARD_MAC(vap, IEEE80211_MSG_AUTH,
ni->ni_macaddr, "shared key auth",
"ie %d/%d too long",
frm[0], (frm[1] + 2) - (efrm - frm));
vap->iv_stats.is_rx_bad_auth++;
estatus = IEEE80211_STATUS_CHALLENGE;
goto bad;
}
if (*frm == IEEE80211_ELEMID_CHALLENGE)
challenge = frm;
frm += frm[1] + 2;
}
switch (seq) {
case IEEE80211_AUTH_SHARED_CHALLENGE:
case IEEE80211_AUTH_SHARED_RESPONSE:
if (challenge == NULL) {
IEEE80211_DISCARD_MAC(vap, IEEE80211_MSG_AUTH,
ni->ni_macaddr, "shared key auth",
"%s", "no challenge");
vap->iv_stats.is_rx_bad_auth++;
estatus = IEEE80211_STATUS_CHALLENGE;
goto bad;
}
if (challenge[1] != IEEE80211_CHALLENGE_LEN) {
IEEE80211_DISCARD_MAC(vap, IEEE80211_MSG_AUTH,
ni->ni_macaddr, "shared key auth",
"bad challenge len %d", challenge[1]);
vap->iv_stats.is_rx_bad_auth++;
estatus = IEEE80211_STATUS_CHALLENGE;
goto bad;
}
default:
break;
}
switch (seq) {
case IEEE80211_AUTH_SHARED_REQUEST:
{
#ifdef IEEE80211_DEBUG
bool allocbs;
#endif
if (ni == vap->iv_bss) {
ni = ieee80211_dup_bss(vap, wh->i_addr2);
if (ni == NULL) {
/* NB: no way to return an error */
return;
}
#ifdef IEEE80211_DEBUG
allocbs = 1;
#endif
} else {
if ((ni->ni_flags & IEEE80211_NODE_AREF) == 0)
(void) ieee80211_ref_node(ni);
#ifdef IEEE80211_DEBUG
allocbs = 0;
#endif
}
/*
* Mark the node as referenced to reflect that it's
* reference count has been bumped to insure it remains
* after the transaction completes.
*/
ni->ni_flags |= IEEE80211_NODE_AREF;
/*
* Mark the node as requiring a valid association id
* before outbound traffic is permitted.
*/
ni->ni_flags |= IEEE80211_NODE_ASSOCID;
IEEE80211_RSSI_LPF(ni->ni_avgrssi, rssi);
ni->ni_noise = nf;
if (!ieee80211_alloc_challenge(ni)) {
/* NB: don't return error so they rexmit */
return;
}
net80211_get_random_bytes(ni->ni_challenge,
IEEE80211_CHALLENGE_LEN);
IEEE80211_NOTE(vap, IEEE80211_MSG_DEBUG | IEEE80211_MSG_AUTH,
ni, "shared key %sauth request", allocbs ? "" : "re");
/*
* When the ACL policy is set to RADIUS we defer the
* authorization to a user agent. Dispatch an event,
* a subsequent MLME call will decide the fate of the
* station. If the user agent is not present then the
* node will be reclaimed due to inactivity.
*/
if (vap->iv_acl != NULL &&
vap->iv_acl->iac_getpolicy(vap) == IEEE80211_MACCMD_POLICY_RADIUS) {
IEEE80211_NOTE_MAC(vap,
IEEE80211_MSG_AUTH | IEEE80211_MSG_ACL,
ni->ni_macaddr,
"%s", "station authentication deferred (radius acl)");
ieee80211_notify_node_auth(ni);
return;
}
break;
}
case IEEE80211_AUTH_SHARED_RESPONSE:
if (ni == vap->iv_bss) {
IEEE80211_DISCARD_MAC(vap, IEEE80211_MSG_AUTH,
ni->ni_macaddr, "shared key response",
"%s", "unknown station");
/* NB: don't send a response */
return;
}
if (ni->ni_challenge == NULL) {
IEEE80211_DISCARD_MAC(vap, IEEE80211_MSG_AUTH,
ni->ni_macaddr, "shared key response",
"%s", "no challenge recorded");
vap->iv_stats.is_rx_bad_auth++;
estatus = IEEE80211_STATUS_CHALLENGE;
goto bad;
}
if (memcmp(ni->ni_challenge, &challenge[2],
challenge[1]) != 0) {
IEEE80211_DISCARD_MAC(vap, IEEE80211_MSG_AUTH,
ni->ni_macaddr, "shared key response",
"%s", "challenge mismatch");
vap->iv_stats.is_rx_auth_fail++;
estatus = IEEE80211_STATUS_CHALLENGE;
goto bad;
}
IEEE80211_NOTE(vap, IEEE80211_MSG_DEBUG | IEEE80211_MSG_AUTH,
ni, "%s", "station authenticated (shared key)");
ieee80211_node_authorize(ni);
break;
default:
IEEE80211_DISCARD_MAC(vap, IEEE80211_MSG_AUTH,
ni->ni_macaddr, "shared key auth",
"bad seq %d", seq);
vap->iv_stats.is_rx_bad_auth++;
estatus = IEEE80211_STATUS_SEQUENCE;
goto bad;
}
IEEE80211_SEND_MGMT(ni, IEEE80211_FC0_SUBTYPE_AUTH, seq + 1);
return;
bad:
/*
* Send an error response; but only when operating as an AP.
*/
/* XXX hack to workaround calling convention */
ieee80211_send_error(ni, wh->i_addr2,
IEEE80211_FC0_SUBTYPE_AUTH,
(seq + 1) | (estatus<<16));
}
/*
* Convert a WPA cipher selector OUI to an internal
* cipher algorithm. Where appropriate we also
* record any key length.
*/
static int
wpa_cipher(const uint8_t *sel, uint8_t *keylen, uint8_t *cipher)
{
#define WPA_SEL(x) (((x)<<24)|WPA_OUI)
uint32_t w = le32dec(sel);
switch (w) {
case WPA_SEL(WPA_CSE_NULL):
*cipher = IEEE80211_CIPHER_NONE;
break;
case WPA_SEL(WPA_CSE_WEP40):
if (keylen)
*keylen = 40 / NBBY;
*cipher = IEEE80211_CIPHER_WEP;
break;
case WPA_SEL(WPA_CSE_WEP104):
if (keylen)
*keylen = 104 / NBBY;
*cipher = IEEE80211_CIPHER_WEP;
break;
case WPA_SEL(WPA_CSE_TKIP):
*cipher = IEEE80211_CIPHER_TKIP;
break;
case WPA_SEL(WPA_CSE_CCMP):
*cipher = IEEE80211_CIPHER_AES_CCM;
break;
default:
return (EINVAL);
}
return (0);
#undef WPA_SEL
}
/*
* Convert a WPA key management/authentication algorithm
* to an internal code.
*/
static int
wpa_keymgmt(const uint8_t *sel)
{
#define WPA_SEL(x) (((x)<<24)|WPA_OUI)
uint32_t w = le32dec(sel);
switch (w) {
case WPA_SEL(WPA_ASE_8021X_UNSPEC):
return WPA_ASE_8021X_UNSPEC;
case WPA_SEL(WPA_ASE_8021X_PSK):
return WPA_ASE_8021X_PSK;
case WPA_SEL(WPA_ASE_NONE):
return WPA_ASE_NONE;
}
return 0; /* NB: so is discarded */
#undef WPA_SEL
}
/*
* Parse a WPA information element to collect parameters.
* Note that we do not validate security parameters; that
* is handled by the authenticator; the parsing done here
* is just for internal use in making operational decisions.
*/
static int
ieee80211_parse_wpa(struct ieee80211vap *vap, const uint8_t *frm,
struct ieee80211_rsnparms *rsn, const struct ieee80211_frame *wh)
{
uint8_t len = frm[1];
uint32_t w;
int error, n;
/*
* Check the length once for fixed parts: OUI, type,
* version, mcast cipher, and 2 selector counts.
* Other, variable-length data, must be checked separately.
*/
if ((vap->iv_flags & IEEE80211_F_WPA1) == 0) {
IEEE80211_DISCARD_IE(vap,
IEEE80211_MSG_ELEMID | IEEE80211_MSG_WPA,
wh, "WPA", "not WPA, flags 0x%x", vap->iv_flags);
return IEEE80211_REASON_IE_INVALID;
}
if (len < 14) {
IEEE80211_DISCARD_IE(vap,
IEEE80211_MSG_ELEMID | IEEE80211_MSG_WPA,
wh, "WPA", "too short, len %u", len);
return IEEE80211_REASON_IE_INVALID;
}
frm += 6, len -= 4; /* NB: len is payload only */
/* NB: iswpaoui already validated the OUI and type */
w = le16dec(frm);
if (w != WPA_VERSION) {
IEEE80211_DISCARD_IE(vap,
IEEE80211_MSG_ELEMID | IEEE80211_MSG_WPA,
wh, "WPA", "bad version %u", w);
return IEEE80211_REASON_IE_INVALID;
}
frm += 2, len -= 2;
memset(rsn, 0, sizeof(*rsn));
/* multicast/group cipher */
error = wpa_cipher(frm, &rsn->rsn_mcastkeylen, &rsn->rsn_mcastcipher);
if (error != 0) {
IEEE80211_DISCARD_IE(vap,
IEEE80211_MSG_ELEMID | IEEE80211_MSG_WPA,
wh, "WPA", "unknown mcast cipher suite %08X",
le32dec(frm));
return IEEE80211_REASON_GROUP_CIPHER_INVALID;
}
frm += 4, len -= 4;
/* unicast ciphers */
n = le16dec(frm);
frm += 2, len -= 2;
if (len < n*4+2) {
IEEE80211_DISCARD_IE(vap,
IEEE80211_MSG_ELEMID | IEEE80211_MSG_WPA,
wh, "WPA", "ucast cipher data too short; len %u, n %u",
len, n);
return IEEE80211_REASON_IE_INVALID;
}
w = 0;
for (; n > 0; n--) {
uint8_t cipher;
error = wpa_cipher(frm, &rsn->rsn_ucastkeylen, &cipher);
if (error == 0)
w |= 1 << cipher;
frm += 4, len -= 4;
}
if (w == 0) {
IEEE80211_DISCARD_IE(vap,
IEEE80211_MSG_ELEMID | IEEE80211_MSG_WPA,
wh, "WPA", "no usable pairwise cipher suite found (w=%d)",
w);
return IEEE80211_REASON_PAIRWISE_CIPHER_INVALID;
}
/* XXX other? */
if (w & (1 << IEEE80211_CIPHER_AES_CCM))
rsn->rsn_ucastcipher = IEEE80211_CIPHER_AES_CCM;
else
rsn->rsn_ucastcipher = IEEE80211_CIPHER_TKIP;
/* key management algorithms */
n = le16dec(frm);
frm += 2, len -= 2;
if (len < n*4) {
IEEE80211_DISCARD_IE(vap,
IEEE80211_MSG_ELEMID | IEEE80211_MSG_WPA,
wh, "WPA", "key mgmt alg data too short; len %u, n %u",
len, n);
return IEEE80211_REASON_IE_INVALID;
}
w = 0;
for (; n > 0; n--) {
w |= wpa_keymgmt(frm);
frm += 4, len -= 4;
}
if (w & WPA_ASE_8021X_UNSPEC)
rsn->rsn_keymgmt = WPA_ASE_8021X_UNSPEC;
else
rsn->rsn_keymgmt = WPA_ASE_8021X_PSK;
if (len > 2) /* optional capabilities */
rsn->rsn_caps = le16dec(frm);
return 0;
}
/*
* Convert an RSN cipher selector OUI to an internal
* cipher algorithm. Where appropriate we also
* record any key length.
*/
static int
rsn_cipher(const uint8_t *sel, uint8_t *keylen, uint8_t *cipher)
{
#define RSN_SEL(x) (((x)<<24)|RSN_OUI)
uint32_t w = le32dec(sel);
switch (w) {
case RSN_SEL(RSN_CSE_NULL):
*cipher = IEEE80211_CIPHER_NONE;
break;
case RSN_SEL(RSN_CSE_WEP40):
if (keylen)
*keylen = 40 / NBBY;
*cipher = IEEE80211_CIPHER_WEP;
break;
case RSN_SEL(RSN_CSE_WEP104):
if (keylen)
*keylen = 104 / NBBY;
*cipher = IEEE80211_CIPHER_WEP;
break;
case RSN_SEL(RSN_CSE_TKIP):
*cipher = IEEE80211_CIPHER_TKIP;
break;
case RSN_SEL(RSN_CSE_CCMP):
*cipher = IEEE80211_CIPHER_AES_CCM;
break;
case RSN_SEL(RSN_CSE_WRAP):
*cipher = IEEE80211_CIPHER_AES_OCB;
break;
default:
return (EINVAL);
}
return (0);
#undef WPA_SEL
}
/*
* Convert an RSN key management/authentication algorithm
* to an internal code.
*/
static int
rsn_keymgmt(const uint8_t *sel)
{
#define RSN_SEL(x) (((x)<<24)|RSN_OUI)
uint32_t w = le32dec(sel);
switch (w) {
case RSN_SEL(RSN_ASE_8021X_UNSPEC):
return RSN_ASE_8021X_UNSPEC;
case RSN_SEL(RSN_ASE_8021X_PSK):
return RSN_ASE_8021X_PSK;
case RSN_SEL(RSN_ASE_NONE):
return RSN_ASE_NONE;
}
return 0; /* NB: so is discarded */
#undef RSN_SEL
}
/*
* Parse a WPA/RSN information element to collect parameters
* and validate the parameters against what has been
* configured for the system.
*/
static int
ieee80211_parse_rsn(struct ieee80211vap *vap, const uint8_t *frm,
struct ieee80211_rsnparms *rsn, const struct ieee80211_frame *wh)
{
uint8_t len = frm[1];
uint32_t w;
int error, n;
/*
* Check the length once for fixed parts:
* version, mcast cipher, and 2 selector counts.
* Other, variable-length data, must be checked separately.
*/
if ((vap->iv_flags & IEEE80211_F_WPA2) == 0) {
IEEE80211_DISCARD_IE(vap,
IEEE80211_MSG_ELEMID | IEEE80211_MSG_WPA,
wh, "WPA", "not RSN, flags 0x%x", vap->iv_flags);
return IEEE80211_REASON_IE_INVALID;
}
/* XXX may be shorter */
if (len < 10) {
IEEE80211_DISCARD_IE(vap,
IEEE80211_MSG_ELEMID | IEEE80211_MSG_WPA,
wh, "RSN", "too short, len %u", len);
return IEEE80211_REASON_IE_INVALID;
}
frm += 2;
w = le16dec(frm);
if (w != RSN_VERSION) {
IEEE80211_DISCARD_IE(vap,
IEEE80211_MSG_ELEMID | IEEE80211_MSG_WPA,
wh, "RSN", "bad version %u", w);
return IEEE80211_REASON_UNSUPP_RSN_IE_VERSION;
}
frm += 2, len -= 2;
memset(rsn, 0, sizeof(*rsn));
/* multicast/group cipher */
error = rsn_cipher(frm, &rsn->rsn_mcastkeylen, &rsn->rsn_mcastcipher);
if (error != 0) {
IEEE80211_DISCARD_IE(vap,
IEEE80211_MSG_ELEMID | IEEE80211_MSG_WPA,
wh, "RSN", "unknown mcast cipher suite %08X",
le32dec(frm));
return IEEE80211_REASON_GROUP_CIPHER_INVALID;
}
if (rsn->rsn_mcastcipher == IEEE80211_CIPHER_NONE) {
IEEE80211_DISCARD_IE(vap,
IEEE80211_MSG_ELEMID | IEEE80211_MSG_WPA,
wh, "RSN", "invalid mcast cipher suite %d",
rsn->rsn_mcastcipher);
return IEEE80211_REASON_GROUP_CIPHER_INVALID;
}
frm += 4, len -= 4;
/* unicast ciphers */
n = le16dec(frm);
frm += 2, len -= 2;
if (len < n*4+2) {
IEEE80211_DISCARD_IE(vap,
IEEE80211_MSG_ELEMID | IEEE80211_MSG_WPA,
wh, "RSN", "ucast cipher data too short; len %u, n %u",
len, n);
return IEEE80211_REASON_IE_INVALID;
}
w = 0;
for (; n > 0; n--) {
uint8_t cipher;
error = rsn_cipher(frm, &rsn->rsn_ucastkeylen, &cipher);
if (error == 0)
w |= 1 << cipher;
frm += 4, len -= 4;
}
if (w & (1 << IEEE80211_CIPHER_AES_CCM))
rsn->rsn_ucastcipher = IEEE80211_CIPHER_AES_CCM;
else if (w & (1 << IEEE80211_CIPHER_AES_OCB))
rsn->rsn_ucastcipher = IEEE80211_CIPHER_AES_OCB;
else if (w & (1 << IEEE80211_CIPHER_TKIP))
rsn->rsn_ucastcipher = IEEE80211_CIPHER_TKIP;
else if ((w & (1 << IEEE80211_CIPHER_NONE)) &&
(rsn->rsn_mcastcipher == IEEE80211_CIPHER_WEP ||
rsn->rsn_mcastcipher == IEEE80211_CIPHER_TKIP))
rsn->rsn_ucastcipher = IEEE80211_CIPHER_NONE;
else {
IEEE80211_DISCARD_IE(vap,
IEEE80211_MSG_ELEMID | IEEE80211_MSG_WPA,
wh, "RSN", "no usable pairwise cipher suite found (w=%d)",
w);
return IEEE80211_REASON_PAIRWISE_CIPHER_INVALID;
}
/* key management algorithms */
n = le16dec(frm);
frm += 2, len -= 2;
if (len < n*4) {
IEEE80211_DISCARD_IE(vap,
IEEE80211_MSG_ELEMID | IEEE80211_MSG_WPA,
wh, "RSN", "key mgmt alg data too short; len %u, n %u",
len, n);
return IEEE80211_REASON_IE_INVALID;
}
w = 0;
for (; n > 0; n--) {
w |= rsn_keymgmt(frm);
frm += 4, len -= 4;
}
if (w & RSN_ASE_8021X_UNSPEC)
rsn->rsn_keymgmt = RSN_ASE_8021X_UNSPEC;
else
rsn->rsn_keymgmt = RSN_ASE_8021X_PSK;
/* optional RSN capabilities */
if (len > 2)
rsn->rsn_caps = le16dec(frm);
/* XXXPMKID */
return 0;
}
/*
* WPA/802.11i association request processing.
*/
static int
wpa_assocreq(struct ieee80211_node *ni, struct ieee80211_rsnparms *rsnparms,
const struct ieee80211_frame *wh, const uint8_t *wpa,
const uint8_t *rsn, uint16_t capinfo)
{
struct ieee80211vap *vap = ni->ni_vap;
uint8_t reason;
int badwparsn;
ni->ni_flags &= ~(IEEE80211_NODE_WPS|IEEE80211_NODE_TSN);
if (wpa == NULL && rsn == NULL) {
if (vap->iv_flags_ext & IEEE80211_FEXT_WPS) {
/*
* W-Fi Protected Setup (WPS) permits
* clients to associate and pass EAPOL frames
* to establish initial credentials.
*/
ni->ni_flags |= IEEE80211_NODE_WPS;
return 1;
}
if ((vap->iv_flags_ext & IEEE80211_FEXT_TSN) &&
(capinfo & IEEE80211_CAPINFO_PRIVACY)) {
/*
* Transitional Security Network. Permits clients
* to associate and use WEP while WPA is configured.
*/
ni->ni_flags |= IEEE80211_NODE_TSN;
return 1;
}
IEEE80211_DISCARD(vap, IEEE80211_MSG_ASSOC | IEEE80211_MSG_WPA,
wh, NULL, "%s", "no WPA/RSN IE in association request");
vap->iv_stats.is_rx_assoc_badwpaie++;
reason = IEEE80211_REASON_IE_INVALID;
goto bad;
}
/* assert right association security credentials */
badwparsn = 0; /* NB: to silence compiler */
switch (vap->iv_flags & IEEE80211_F_WPA) {
case IEEE80211_F_WPA1:
badwparsn = (wpa == NULL);
break;
case IEEE80211_F_WPA2:
badwparsn = (rsn == NULL);
break;
case IEEE80211_F_WPA1|IEEE80211_F_WPA2:
badwparsn = (wpa == NULL && rsn == NULL);
break;
}
if (badwparsn) {
IEEE80211_DISCARD(vap, IEEE80211_MSG_ASSOC | IEEE80211_MSG_WPA,
wh, NULL,
"%s", "missing WPA/RSN IE in association request");
vap->iv_stats.is_rx_assoc_badwpaie++;
reason = IEEE80211_REASON_IE_INVALID;
goto bad;
}
/*
* Parse WPA/RSN information element.
*/
if (wpa != NULL)
reason = ieee80211_parse_wpa(vap, wpa, rsnparms, wh);
else
reason = ieee80211_parse_rsn(vap, rsn, rsnparms, wh);
if (reason != 0) {
/* XXX wpa->rsn fallback? */
/* XXX distinguish WPA/RSN? */
vap->iv_stats.is_rx_assoc_badwpaie++;
goto bad;
}
IEEE80211_NOTE(vap, IEEE80211_MSG_ASSOC | IEEE80211_MSG_WPA, ni,
"%s ie: mc %u/%u uc %u/%u key %u caps 0x%x",
wpa != NULL ? "WPA" : "RSN",
rsnparms->rsn_mcastcipher, rsnparms->rsn_mcastkeylen,
rsnparms->rsn_ucastcipher, rsnparms->rsn_ucastkeylen,
rsnparms->rsn_keymgmt, rsnparms->rsn_caps);
return 1;
bad:
ieee80211_node_deauth(ni, reason);
return 0;
}
/* XXX find a better place for definition */
struct l2_update_frame {
struct ether_header eh;
uint8_t dsap;
uint8_t ssap;
uint8_t control;
uint8_t xid[3];
} __packed;
/*
* Deliver a TGf L2UF frame on behalf of a station.
* This primes any bridge when the station is roaming
* between ap's on the same wired network.
*/
static void
ieee80211_deliver_l2uf(struct ieee80211_node *ni)
{
struct ieee80211vap *vap = ni->ni_vap;
struct ifnet *ifp = vap->iv_ifp;
struct mbuf *m;
struct l2_update_frame *l2uf;
struct ether_header *eh;
m = m_gethdr(IEEE80211_M_NOWAIT, MT_DATA);
if (m == NULL) {
IEEE80211_NOTE(vap, IEEE80211_MSG_ASSOC, ni,
"%s", "no mbuf for l2uf frame");
vap->iv_stats.is_rx_nobuf++; /* XXX not right */
return;
}
l2uf = mtod(m, struct l2_update_frame *);
eh = &l2uf->eh;
/* dst: Broadcast address */
IEEE80211_ADDR_COPY(eh->ether_dhost, ifp->if_broadcastaddr);
/* src: associated STA */
IEEE80211_ADDR_COPY(eh->ether_shost, ni->ni_macaddr);
eh->ether_type = htons(sizeof(*l2uf) - sizeof(*eh));
l2uf->dsap = 0;
l2uf->ssap = 0;
l2uf->control = 0xf5;
l2uf->xid[0] = 0x81;
l2uf->xid[1] = 0x80;
l2uf->xid[2] = 0x00;
m->m_pkthdr.len = m->m_len = sizeof(*l2uf);
hostap_deliver_data(vap, ni, m);
}
static void
ratesetmismatch(struct ieee80211_node *ni, const struct ieee80211_frame *wh,
int reassoc, int resp, const char *tag, int rate)
{
IEEE80211_NOTE_MAC(ni->ni_vap, IEEE80211_MSG_ANY, wh->i_addr2,
"deny %s request, %s rate set mismatch, rate/MCS %d",
reassoc ? "reassoc" : "assoc", tag, rate & IEEE80211_RATE_VAL);
IEEE80211_SEND_MGMT(ni, resp, IEEE80211_STATUS_BASIC_RATE);
ieee80211_node_leave(ni);
}
static void
capinfomismatch(struct ieee80211_node *ni, const struct ieee80211_frame *wh,
int reassoc, int resp, const char *tag, int capinfo)
{
struct ieee80211vap *vap = ni->ni_vap;
IEEE80211_NOTE_MAC(vap, IEEE80211_MSG_ANY, wh->i_addr2,
"deny %s request, %s mismatch 0x%x",
reassoc ? "reassoc" : "assoc", tag, capinfo);
IEEE80211_SEND_MGMT(ni, resp, IEEE80211_STATUS_CAPINFO);
ieee80211_node_leave(ni);
vap->iv_stats.is_rx_assoc_capmismatch++;
}
static void
htcapmismatch(struct ieee80211_node *ni, const struct ieee80211_frame *wh,
int reassoc, int resp)
{
IEEE80211_NOTE_MAC(ni->ni_vap, IEEE80211_MSG_ANY, wh->i_addr2,
"deny %s request, %s missing HT ie", reassoc ? "reassoc" : "assoc");
/* XXX no better code */
IEEE80211_SEND_MGMT(ni, resp, IEEE80211_STATUS_MISSING_HT_CAPS);
ieee80211_node_leave(ni);
}
static void
authalgreject(struct ieee80211_node *ni, const struct ieee80211_frame *wh,
int algo, int seq, int status)
{
struct ieee80211vap *vap = ni->ni_vap;
IEEE80211_DISCARD(vap, IEEE80211_MSG_ANY,
wh, NULL, "unsupported alg %d", algo);
vap->iv_stats.is_rx_auth_unsupported++;
ieee80211_send_error(ni, wh->i_addr2, IEEE80211_FC0_SUBTYPE_AUTH,
seq | (status << 16));
}
static __inline int
ishtmixed(const uint8_t *ie)
{
const struct ieee80211_ie_htinfo *ht =
(const struct ieee80211_ie_htinfo *) ie;
return (ht->hi_byte2 & IEEE80211_HTINFO_OPMODE) ==
IEEE80211_HTINFO_OPMODE_MIXED;
}
static int
is11bclient(const uint8_t *rates, const uint8_t *xrates)
{
static const uint32_t brates = (1<<2*1)|(1<<2*2)|(1<<11)|(1<<2*11);
int i;
/* NB: the 11b clients we care about will not have xrates */
if (xrates != NULL || rates == NULL)
return 0;
for (i = 0; i < rates[1]; i++) {
int r = rates[2+i] & IEEE80211_RATE_VAL;
if (r > 2*11 || ((1<<r) & brates) == 0)
return 0;
}
return 1;
}
static void
hostap_recv_mgmt(struct ieee80211_node *ni, struct mbuf *m0,
Begin plumbing ieee80211_rx_stats through the receive path. Smart NICs with firmware (eg wpi, iwn, the new atheros parts, the intel 7260 series, etc) support doing a lot of things in firmware. This includes but isn't limited to things like scanning, sending probe requests and receiving probe responses. However, net80211 doesn't know about any of this - it still drives the whole scan/probe infrastructure itself. In order to move towards suppoting smart NICs, the receive path needs to know about the channel/details for each received packet. In at least the iwn and 7260 firmware (and I believe wpi, but I haven't tried it yet) it will do the scanning, power-save and off-channel buffering for you - all you need to do is handle receiving beacons and probe responses on channels that aren't what you're currently on. However the whole receive path is peppered with ic->ic_curchan and manual scan/powersave handling. The beacon parsing code also checks ic->ic_curchan to determine if the received beacon is on the correct channel or not.[1] So: * add freq/ieee values to ieee80211_rx_stats; * change ieee80211_parse_beacon() to accept the 'current' channel as an argument; * modify the iv_input() and iv_recv_mgmt() methods to include the rx_stats; * add a new method - ieee80211_lookup_channel_rxstats() - that looks up a channel based on the contents of ieee80211_rx_stats; * if it exists, use it in the mgmt path to switch the current channel (which still defaults to ic->ic_curchan) over to something determined by rx_stats. This is enough to kick-start scan offload support in the Intel 7260 driver that Rui/I are working on. It also is a good start for scan offload support for a handful of existing NICs (wpi, iwn, some USB parts) and it'll very likely dramatically improve stability/performance there. It's not the whole thing - notably, we don't need to do powersave, we should not scan all channels, and we should leave probe request sending to the firmware and not do it ourselves. But, this allows for continued development on the above features whilst actually having a somewhat working NIC. TODO: * Finish tidying up how the net80211 input path works. Right now ieee80211_input / ieee80211_input_all act as the top-level that everything feeds into; it should change so the MIMO input routines are those and the legacy routines are phased out. * The band selection should be done by the driver, not by the net80211 layer. * ieee80211_lookup_channel_rxstats() only determines 11b or 11g channels for now - this is enough for scanning, but not 100% true in all cases. If we ever need to handle off-channel scan support for things like static-40MHz or static-80MHz, or turbo-G, or half/quarter rates, then we should extend this. [1] This is a side effect of frequency-hopping and CCK modes - you can receive beacons when you think you're on a different channel. In particular, CCK (which is used by the low 11b rates, eg beacons!) is decodable from adjacent channels - just at a low SNR. FH is a side effect of having the hardware/firmware do the frequency hopping - it may pick up beacons transmitted from other FH networks that are in a different phase of hopping frequencies.
2015-05-25 16:37:41 +00:00
int subtype, const struct ieee80211_rx_stats *rxs, int rssi, int nf)
{
struct ieee80211vap *vap = ni->ni_vap;
struct ieee80211com *ic = ni->ni_ic;
struct ieee80211_frame *wh;
uint8_t *frm, *efrm, *sfrm;
uint8_t *ssid, *rates, *xrates, *wpa, *rsn, *wme, *ath, *htcap;
uint8_t *vhtcap, *vhtinfo;
int reassoc, resp;
uint8_t rate;
wh = mtod(m0, struct ieee80211_frame *);
frm = (uint8_t *)&wh[1];
efrm = mtod(m0, uint8_t *) + m0->m_len;
switch (subtype) {
case IEEE80211_FC0_SUBTYPE_PROBE_RESP:
/*
* We process beacon/probe response frames when scanning;
* otherwise we check beacon frames for overlapping non-ERP
* BSS in 11g and/or overlapping legacy BSS when in HT.
*/
if ((ic->ic_flags & IEEE80211_F_SCAN) == 0) {
vap->iv_stats.is_rx_mgtdiscard++;
return;
}
/* FALLTHROUGH */
case IEEE80211_FC0_SUBTYPE_BEACON: {
struct ieee80211_scanparams scan;
/* NB: accept off-channel frames */
Begin plumbing ieee80211_rx_stats through the receive path. Smart NICs with firmware (eg wpi, iwn, the new atheros parts, the intel 7260 series, etc) support doing a lot of things in firmware. This includes but isn't limited to things like scanning, sending probe requests and receiving probe responses. However, net80211 doesn't know about any of this - it still drives the whole scan/probe infrastructure itself. In order to move towards suppoting smart NICs, the receive path needs to know about the channel/details for each received packet. In at least the iwn and 7260 firmware (and I believe wpi, but I haven't tried it yet) it will do the scanning, power-save and off-channel buffering for you - all you need to do is handle receiving beacons and probe responses on channels that aren't what you're currently on. However the whole receive path is peppered with ic->ic_curchan and manual scan/powersave handling. The beacon parsing code also checks ic->ic_curchan to determine if the received beacon is on the correct channel or not.[1] So: * add freq/ieee values to ieee80211_rx_stats; * change ieee80211_parse_beacon() to accept the 'current' channel as an argument; * modify the iv_input() and iv_recv_mgmt() methods to include the rx_stats; * add a new method - ieee80211_lookup_channel_rxstats() - that looks up a channel based on the contents of ieee80211_rx_stats; * if it exists, use it in the mgmt path to switch the current channel (which still defaults to ic->ic_curchan) over to something determined by rx_stats. This is enough to kick-start scan offload support in the Intel 7260 driver that Rui/I are working on. It also is a good start for scan offload support for a handful of existing NICs (wpi, iwn, some USB parts) and it'll very likely dramatically improve stability/performance there. It's not the whole thing - notably, we don't need to do powersave, we should not scan all channels, and we should leave probe request sending to the firmware and not do it ourselves. But, this allows for continued development on the above features whilst actually having a somewhat working NIC. TODO: * Finish tidying up how the net80211 input path works. Right now ieee80211_input / ieee80211_input_all act as the top-level that everything feeds into; it should change so the MIMO input routines are those and the legacy routines are phased out. * The band selection should be done by the driver, not by the net80211 layer. * ieee80211_lookup_channel_rxstats() only determines 11b or 11g channels for now - this is enough for scanning, but not 100% true in all cases. If we ever need to handle off-channel scan support for things like static-40MHz or static-80MHz, or turbo-G, or half/quarter rates, then we should extend this. [1] This is a side effect of frequency-hopping and CCK modes - you can receive beacons when you think you're on a different channel. In particular, CCK (which is used by the low 11b rates, eg beacons!) is decodable from adjacent channels - just at a low SNR. FH is a side effect of having the hardware/firmware do the frequency hopping - it may pick up beacons transmitted from other FH networks that are in a different phase of hopping frequencies.
2015-05-25 16:37:41 +00:00
/* XXX TODO: use rxstatus to determine off-channel details */
if (ieee80211_parse_beacon(ni, m0, ic->ic_curchan, &scan) &~ IEEE80211_BPARSE_OFFCHAN)
return;
/*
* Count frame now that we know it's to be processed.
*/
if (subtype == IEEE80211_FC0_SUBTYPE_BEACON) {
vap->iv_stats.is_rx_beacon++; /* XXX remove */
IEEE80211_NODE_STAT(ni, rx_beacons);
} else
IEEE80211_NODE_STAT(ni, rx_proberesp);
/*
* If scanning, just pass information to the scan module.
*/
if (ic->ic_flags & IEEE80211_F_SCAN) {
if (scan.status == 0 && /* NB: on channel */
(ic->ic_flags_ext & IEEE80211_FEXT_PROBECHAN)) {
/*
* Actively scanning a channel marked passive;
* send a probe request now that we know there
* is 802.11 traffic present.
*
* XXX check if the beacon we recv'd gives
* us what we need and suppress the probe req
*/
ieee80211_probe_curchan(vap, 1);
ic->ic_flags_ext &= ~IEEE80211_FEXT_PROBECHAN;
}
Prepare for supporting driver-overridden curchan when submitting scan results. Right now the scan infrastructure assumes the channel is under net80211 control, and that when receiving beacon frames for scanning, the current channel is indeed what ic_curchan is set to. But firmware NICs with firmware scan support need more than this - they can do background scans whilst hiding the off-channel behaviour from net80211. Ie, net80211 still thinks everything is associated and on the main channel, but it's getting scan results from all the background traffic. However sta_add() pays attention to ic_curchan and discards scan results that aren't on the right channel. CCK beacon frames can be decoded from adjacent channels so the receive path and sta_add discard these as appropriate. This is fine for software scanning like for ath(4), but not for firmware NICs. So with those, the whole concept of background firmware scanning won't work without major hacks (eg, overriding ic_curchan before calling the beacon input / scan add.) As part of my scan overhaul, modify sta_add() and the scan_add() APIs to take an explicit current channel. The normal RX path will set it to ic_curchan so it's a no-op. However, drivers may decide to (eventually!) override the scan method to set the "right" current channel based on what the firmware reports the scan state is. So for example, iwn, rsu and other NICs will eventually do this: * driver issues scan start firmware command; * firmware sends a "scan start on channel X" notify; * firmware sends a bunch of beacon RX's as part of the scan results; * .. and the driver will replace scan_add() curchan with channel X, so scan results are correct. * firmware sends a "scan start on channel Y" notify; * firmware sends more beacons... * .. the driver replaces scan_add() curchan with channel Y. Note: * Eventually, net80211 should eventually grow the idea of a per-packet current channel. It's possible in various modes (eg WAVE, P2P, etc) that individual frames can come in from different channels and that is under firmware control rather than driver/net80211 control, so we should support that.
2015-05-10 22:07:53 +00:00
ieee80211_add_scan(vap, ic->ic_curchan, &scan, wh,
subtype, rssi, nf);
return;
}
/*
* Check beacon for overlapping bss w/ non ERP stations.
* If we detect one and protection is configured but not
* enabled, enable it and start a timer that'll bring us
* out if we stop seeing the bss.
*/
if (IEEE80211_IS_CHAN_ANYG(ic->ic_curchan) &&
scan.status == 0 && /* NB: on-channel */
((scan.erp & 0x100) == 0 || /* NB: no ERP, 11b sta*/
(scan.erp & IEEE80211_ERP_NON_ERP_PRESENT))) {
[net80211] Migrate HT/legacy protection mode and preamble calculation to per-VAP flags The later firmware devices (including iwn!) support multiple configuration contexts for a lot of things, leaving it up to the firmware to decide which channel and vap is active. This allows for things like off-channel p2p sta/ap operation and other weird things. However, net80211 is still focused on a "net80211 drives all" when it comes to driving the NIC, and as part of this history a lot of these options are global and not per-VAP. This is fine when net80211 drives things and all VAPs share a single channel - these parameters importantly really reflect the state of the channel! - but it will increasingly be not fine when we start supporting more weird configurations and more recent NICs. Yeah, recent like iwn/iwm. Anyway - so, migrate all of the HT protection, legacy protection and preamble stuff to be per-VAP. The global flags are still there; they're now calculated in a deferred taskqueue that mirrors the old behaviour. Firmware based drivers which have per-VAP configuration of these parameters can now just listen to the per-VAP options. What do I mean by per-channel? Well, the above configuration parameters really are about interoperation with other devices on the same channel. Eg, HT protection mode will flip to legacy/mixed if it hears ANY BSS that supports non-HT stations or indicates it has non-HT stations associated. So, these flags really should be per-channel rather than per-VAP, and then for things like "do i need short preamble or long preamble?" turn into a "do I need it for this current operating channel". Then any VAP using it can query the channel that it's on, reflecting the real required state. This patch does none of the above paragraph just yet. I'm also cheating a bit - I'm currently not using separate taskqueues for the beacon updates and the per-VAP configuration updates. I can always further split it later if I need to but I didn't think it was SUPER important here. So: * Create vap taskqueue entries for ERP/protection, HT protection and short/long preamble; * Migrate the HT station count, short/long slot station count, etc - into per-VAP variables rather than global; * Fix a bug with my WME work from a while ago which made it per-VAP - do the WME beacon update /after/ the WME update taskqueue runs, not before; * Any time the HT protmode configuration changes or the ERP protection mode config changes - schedule the task, which will call the driver without the net80211 lock held and all correctly serialised; * Use the global flags for beacon IEs and VAP flags for probe responses and other IE situations. The primary consumer of this is ath10k. iwn could use it when sending RXON, but we don't support IBSS or AP modes on it yet, and I'm not yet sure whether it's required in STA mode (ie whether the firmware parses beacons to change protection mode or whether we need to.) Tested: * AR9280, STA/AP * AR9380, DWDS STA+STA/AP * ath10k work, STA/AP * Intel 6235, STA * Various rtwn / run NICs, DWDS STA and STA configurations
2020-07-01 00:23:49 +00:00
vap->iv_lastnonerp = ticks;
vap->iv_flags_ext |= IEEE80211_FEXT_NONERP_PR;
/*
* XXX TODO: this may need to check all VAPs?
*/
if (vap->iv_protmode != IEEE80211_PROT_NONE &&
(vap->iv_flags & IEEE80211_F_USEPROT) == 0) {
IEEE80211_NOTE_FRAME(vap,
IEEE80211_MSG_ASSOC, wh,
"non-ERP present on channel %d "
"(saw erp 0x%x from channel %d), "
"enable use of protection",
ic->ic_curchan->ic_ieee,
scan.erp, scan.chan);
[net80211] Migrate HT/legacy protection mode and preamble calculation to per-VAP flags The later firmware devices (including iwn!) support multiple configuration contexts for a lot of things, leaving it up to the firmware to decide which channel and vap is active. This allows for things like off-channel p2p sta/ap operation and other weird things. However, net80211 is still focused on a "net80211 drives all" when it comes to driving the NIC, and as part of this history a lot of these options are global and not per-VAP. This is fine when net80211 drives things and all VAPs share a single channel - these parameters importantly really reflect the state of the channel! - but it will increasingly be not fine when we start supporting more weird configurations and more recent NICs. Yeah, recent like iwn/iwm. Anyway - so, migrate all of the HT protection, legacy protection and preamble stuff to be per-VAP. The global flags are still there; they're now calculated in a deferred taskqueue that mirrors the old behaviour. Firmware based drivers which have per-VAP configuration of these parameters can now just listen to the per-VAP options. What do I mean by per-channel? Well, the above configuration parameters really are about interoperation with other devices on the same channel. Eg, HT protection mode will flip to legacy/mixed if it hears ANY BSS that supports non-HT stations or indicates it has non-HT stations associated. So, these flags really should be per-channel rather than per-VAP, and then for things like "do i need short preamble or long preamble?" turn into a "do I need it for this current operating channel". Then any VAP using it can query the channel that it's on, reflecting the real required state. This patch does none of the above paragraph just yet. I'm also cheating a bit - I'm currently not using separate taskqueues for the beacon updates and the per-VAP configuration updates. I can always further split it later if I need to but I didn't think it was SUPER important here. So: * Create vap taskqueue entries for ERP/protection, HT protection and short/long preamble; * Migrate the HT station count, short/long slot station count, etc - into per-VAP variables rather than global; * Fix a bug with my WME work from a while ago which made it per-VAP - do the WME beacon update /after/ the WME update taskqueue runs, not before; * Any time the HT protmode configuration changes or the ERP protection mode config changes - schedule the task, which will call the driver without the net80211 lock held and all correctly serialised; * Use the global flags for beacon IEs and VAP flags for probe responses and other IE situations. The primary consumer of this is ath10k. iwn could use it when sending RXON, but we don't support IBSS or AP modes on it yet, and I'm not yet sure whether it's required in STA mode (ie whether the firmware parses beacons to change protection mode or whether we need to.) Tested: * AR9280, STA/AP * AR9380, DWDS STA+STA/AP * ath10k work, STA/AP * Intel 6235, STA * Various rtwn / run NICs, DWDS STA and STA configurations
2020-07-01 00:23:49 +00:00
vap->iv_flags |= IEEE80211_F_USEPROT;
ieee80211_vap_update_erp_protmode(vap);
}
}
/*
* Check beacon for non-HT station on HT channel
* and update HT BSS occupancy as appropriate.
*/
if (IEEE80211_IS_CHAN_HT(ic->ic_curchan)) {
if (scan.status & IEEE80211_BPARSE_OFFCHAN) {
/*
* Off control channel; only check frames
* that come in the extension channel when
* operating w/ HT40.
*/
if (!IEEE80211_IS_CHAN_HT40(ic->ic_curchan))
break;
if (scan.chan != ic->ic_curchan->ic_extieee)
break;
}
if (scan.htinfo == NULL) {
[net80211] Migrate HT/legacy protection mode and preamble calculation to per-VAP flags The later firmware devices (including iwn!) support multiple configuration contexts for a lot of things, leaving it up to the firmware to decide which channel and vap is active. This allows for things like off-channel p2p sta/ap operation and other weird things. However, net80211 is still focused on a "net80211 drives all" when it comes to driving the NIC, and as part of this history a lot of these options are global and not per-VAP. This is fine when net80211 drives things and all VAPs share a single channel - these parameters importantly really reflect the state of the channel! - but it will increasingly be not fine when we start supporting more weird configurations and more recent NICs. Yeah, recent like iwn/iwm. Anyway - so, migrate all of the HT protection, legacy protection and preamble stuff to be per-VAP. The global flags are still there; they're now calculated in a deferred taskqueue that mirrors the old behaviour. Firmware based drivers which have per-VAP configuration of these parameters can now just listen to the per-VAP options. What do I mean by per-channel? Well, the above configuration parameters really are about interoperation with other devices on the same channel. Eg, HT protection mode will flip to legacy/mixed if it hears ANY BSS that supports non-HT stations or indicates it has non-HT stations associated. So, these flags really should be per-channel rather than per-VAP, and then for things like "do i need short preamble or long preamble?" turn into a "do I need it for this current operating channel". Then any VAP using it can query the channel that it's on, reflecting the real required state. This patch does none of the above paragraph just yet. I'm also cheating a bit - I'm currently not using separate taskqueues for the beacon updates and the per-VAP configuration updates. I can always further split it later if I need to but I didn't think it was SUPER important here. So: * Create vap taskqueue entries for ERP/protection, HT protection and short/long preamble; * Migrate the HT station count, short/long slot station count, etc - into per-VAP variables rather than global; * Fix a bug with my WME work from a while ago which made it per-VAP - do the WME beacon update /after/ the WME update taskqueue runs, not before; * Any time the HT protmode configuration changes or the ERP protection mode config changes - schedule the task, which will call the driver without the net80211 lock held and all correctly serialised; * Use the global flags for beacon IEs and VAP flags for probe responses and other IE situations. The primary consumer of this is ath10k. iwn could use it when sending RXON, but we don't support IBSS or AP modes on it yet, and I'm not yet sure whether it's required in STA mode (ie whether the firmware parses beacons to change protection mode or whether we need to.) Tested: * AR9280, STA/AP * AR9380, DWDS STA+STA/AP * ath10k work, STA/AP * Intel 6235, STA * Various rtwn / run NICs, DWDS STA and STA configurations
2020-07-01 00:23:49 +00:00
ieee80211_htprot_update(vap,
IEEE80211_HTINFO_OPMODE_PROTOPT |
IEEE80211_HTINFO_NONHT_PRESENT);
} else if (ishtmixed(scan.htinfo)) {
/* XXX? take NONHT_PRESENT from beacon? */
[net80211] Migrate HT/legacy protection mode and preamble calculation to per-VAP flags The later firmware devices (including iwn!) support multiple configuration contexts for a lot of things, leaving it up to the firmware to decide which channel and vap is active. This allows for things like off-channel p2p sta/ap operation and other weird things. However, net80211 is still focused on a "net80211 drives all" when it comes to driving the NIC, and as part of this history a lot of these options are global and not per-VAP. This is fine when net80211 drives things and all VAPs share a single channel - these parameters importantly really reflect the state of the channel! - but it will increasingly be not fine when we start supporting more weird configurations and more recent NICs. Yeah, recent like iwn/iwm. Anyway - so, migrate all of the HT protection, legacy protection and preamble stuff to be per-VAP. The global flags are still there; they're now calculated in a deferred taskqueue that mirrors the old behaviour. Firmware based drivers which have per-VAP configuration of these parameters can now just listen to the per-VAP options. What do I mean by per-channel? Well, the above configuration parameters really are about interoperation with other devices on the same channel. Eg, HT protection mode will flip to legacy/mixed if it hears ANY BSS that supports non-HT stations or indicates it has non-HT stations associated. So, these flags really should be per-channel rather than per-VAP, and then for things like "do i need short preamble or long preamble?" turn into a "do I need it for this current operating channel". Then any VAP using it can query the channel that it's on, reflecting the real required state. This patch does none of the above paragraph just yet. I'm also cheating a bit - I'm currently not using separate taskqueues for the beacon updates and the per-VAP configuration updates. I can always further split it later if I need to but I didn't think it was SUPER important here. So: * Create vap taskqueue entries for ERP/protection, HT protection and short/long preamble; * Migrate the HT station count, short/long slot station count, etc - into per-VAP variables rather than global; * Fix a bug with my WME work from a while ago which made it per-VAP - do the WME beacon update /after/ the WME update taskqueue runs, not before; * Any time the HT protmode configuration changes or the ERP protection mode config changes - schedule the task, which will call the driver without the net80211 lock held and all correctly serialised; * Use the global flags for beacon IEs and VAP flags for probe responses and other IE situations. The primary consumer of this is ath10k. iwn could use it when sending RXON, but we don't support IBSS or AP modes on it yet, and I'm not yet sure whether it's required in STA mode (ie whether the firmware parses beacons to change protection mode or whether we need to.) Tested: * AR9280, STA/AP * AR9380, DWDS STA+STA/AP * ath10k work, STA/AP * Intel 6235, STA * Various rtwn / run NICs, DWDS STA and STA configurations
2020-07-01 00:23:49 +00:00
ieee80211_htprot_update(vap,
IEEE80211_HTINFO_OPMODE_MIXED |
IEEE80211_HTINFO_NONHT_PRESENT);
}
}
break;
}
case IEEE80211_FC0_SUBTYPE_PROBE_REQ:
if (vap->iv_state != IEEE80211_S_RUN) {
vap->iv_stats.is_rx_mgtdiscard++;
return;
}
/*
* Consult the ACL policy module if setup.
*/
if (vap->iv_acl != NULL && !vap->iv_acl->iac_check(vap, wh)) {
IEEE80211_DISCARD(vap, IEEE80211_MSG_ACL,
wh, NULL, "%s", "disallowed by ACL");
vap->iv_stats.is_rx_acl++;
return;
}
/*
* prreq frame format
* [tlv] ssid
* [tlv] supported rates
* [tlv] extended supported rates
*/
ssid = rates = xrates = NULL;
while (efrm - frm > 1) {
IEEE80211_VERIFY_LENGTH(efrm - frm, frm[1] + 2, return);
switch (*frm) {
case IEEE80211_ELEMID_SSID:
ssid = frm;
break;
case IEEE80211_ELEMID_RATES:
rates = frm;
break;
case IEEE80211_ELEMID_XRATES:
xrates = frm;
break;
}
frm += frm[1] + 2;
}
IEEE80211_VERIFY_ELEMENT(rates, IEEE80211_RATE_MAXSIZE, return);
if (xrates != NULL)
IEEE80211_VERIFY_ELEMENT(xrates,
IEEE80211_RATE_MAXSIZE - rates[1], return);
IEEE80211_VERIFY_ELEMENT(ssid, IEEE80211_NWID_LEN, return);
IEEE80211_VERIFY_SSID(vap->iv_bss, ssid, return);
if ((vap->iv_flags & IEEE80211_F_HIDESSID) && ssid[1] == 0) {
IEEE80211_DISCARD(vap, IEEE80211_MSG_INPUT,
wh, NULL,
"%s", "no ssid with ssid suppression enabled");
vap->iv_stats.is_rx_ssidmismatch++; /*XXX*/
return;
}
/* XXX find a better class or define it's own */
IEEE80211_NOTE_MAC(vap, IEEE80211_MSG_INPUT, wh->i_addr2,
"%s", "recv probe req");
/*
* Some legacy 11b clients cannot hack a complete
* probe response frame. When the request includes
* only a bare-bones rate set, communicate this to
* the transmit side.
*/
ieee80211_send_proberesp(vap, wh->i_addr2,
is11bclient(rates, xrates) ? IEEE80211_SEND_LEGACY_11B : 0);
break;
case IEEE80211_FC0_SUBTYPE_AUTH: {
uint16_t algo, seq, status;
if (vap->iv_state != IEEE80211_S_RUN) {
vap->iv_stats.is_rx_mgtdiscard++;
return;
}
if (!IEEE80211_ADDR_EQ(wh->i_addr3, vap->iv_bss->ni_bssid)) {
IEEE80211_DISCARD(vap, IEEE80211_MSG_ANY,
wh, NULL, "%s", "wrong bssid");
vap->iv_stats.is_rx_wrongbss++; /*XXX unique stat?*/
return;
}
/*
* auth frame format
* [2] algorithm
* [2] sequence
* [2] status
* [tlv*] challenge
*/
IEEE80211_VERIFY_LENGTH(efrm - frm, 6, return);
algo = le16toh(*(uint16_t *)frm);
seq = le16toh(*(uint16_t *)(frm + 2));
status = le16toh(*(uint16_t *)(frm + 4));
IEEE80211_NOTE_MAC(vap, IEEE80211_MSG_AUTH, wh->i_addr2,
"recv auth frame with algorithm %d seq %d", algo, seq);
/*
* Consult the ACL policy module if setup.
*/
if (vap->iv_acl != NULL && !vap->iv_acl->iac_check(vap, wh)) {
IEEE80211_DISCARD(vap, IEEE80211_MSG_ACL,
wh, NULL, "%s", "disallowed by ACL");
vap->iv_stats.is_rx_acl++;
ieee80211_send_error(ni, wh->i_addr2,
IEEE80211_FC0_SUBTYPE_AUTH,
(seq+1) | (IEEE80211_STATUS_UNSPECIFIED<<16));
return;
}
if (vap->iv_flags & IEEE80211_F_COUNTERM) {
IEEE80211_DISCARD(vap,
IEEE80211_MSG_AUTH | IEEE80211_MSG_CRYPTO,
wh, NULL, "%s", "TKIP countermeasures enabled");
vap->iv_stats.is_rx_auth_countermeasures++;
ieee80211_send_error(ni, wh->i_addr2,
IEEE80211_FC0_SUBTYPE_AUTH,
IEEE80211_REASON_MIC_FAILURE);
return;
}
if (algo == IEEE80211_AUTH_ALG_SHARED)
hostap_auth_shared(ni, wh, frm + 6, efrm, rssi, nf,
seq, status);
else if (algo == IEEE80211_AUTH_ALG_OPEN)
hostap_auth_open(ni, wh, rssi, nf, seq, status);
else if (algo == IEEE80211_AUTH_ALG_LEAP) {
authalgreject(ni, wh, algo,
seq+1, IEEE80211_STATUS_ALG);
return;
} else {
/*
* We assume that an unknown algorithm is the result
* of a decryption failure on a shared key auth frame;
* return a status code appropriate for that instead
* of IEEE80211_STATUS_ALG.
*
* NB: a seq# of 4 is intentional; the decrypted
* frame likely has a bogus seq value.
*/
authalgreject(ni, wh, algo,
4, IEEE80211_STATUS_CHALLENGE);
return;
}
break;
}
case IEEE80211_FC0_SUBTYPE_ASSOC_REQ:
case IEEE80211_FC0_SUBTYPE_REASSOC_REQ: {
uint16_t capinfo, lintval;
struct ieee80211_rsnparms rsnparms;
if (vap->iv_state != IEEE80211_S_RUN) {
vap->iv_stats.is_rx_mgtdiscard++;
return;
}
if (!IEEE80211_ADDR_EQ(wh->i_addr3, vap->iv_bss->ni_bssid)) {
IEEE80211_DISCARD(vap, IEEE80211_MSG_ANY,
wh, NULL, "%s", "wrong bssid");
vap->iv_stats.is_rx_assoc_bss++;
return;
}
if (subtype == IEEE80211_FC0_SUBTYPE_REASSOC_REQ) {
reassoc = 1;
resp = IEEE80211_FC0_SUBTYPE_REASSOC_RESP;
} else {
reassoc = 0;
resp = IEEE80211_FC0_SUBTYPE_ASSOC_RESP;
}
if (ni == vap->iv_bss) {
IEEE80211_NOTE_MAC(vap, IEEE80211_MSG_ANY, wh->i_addr2,
"deny %s request, sta not authenticated",
reassoc ? "reassoc" : "assoc");
ieee80211_send_error(ni, wh->i_addr2,
IEEE80211_FC0_SUBTYPE_DEAUTH,
IEEE80211_REASON_ASSOC_NOT_AUTHED);
vap->iv_stats.is_rx_assoc_notauth++;
return;
}
/*
* asreq frame format
* [2] capability information
* [2] listen interval
* [6*] current AP address (reassoc only)
* [tlv] ssid
* [tlv] supported rates
* [tlv] extended supported rates
* [tlv] WPA or RSN
* [tlv] HT capabilities
* [tlv] Atheros capabilities
*/
IEEE80211_VERIFY_LENGTH(efrm - frm, (reassoc ? 10 : 4), return);
capinfo = le16toh(*(uint16_t *)frm); frm += 2;
lintval = le16toh(*(uint16_t *)frm); frm += 2;
if (reassoc)
frm += 6; /* ignore current AP info */
ssid = rates = xrates = wpa = rsn = wme = ath = htcap = NULL;
vhtcap = vhtinfo = NULL;
sfrm = frm;
while (efrm - frm > 1) {
IEEE80211_VERIFY_LENGTH(efrm - frm, frm[1] + 2, return);
switch (*frm) {
case IEEE80211_ELEMID_SSID:
ssid = frm;
break;
case IEEE80211_ELEMID_RATES:
rates = frm;
break;
case IEEE80211_ELEMID_XRATES:
xrates = frm;
break;
case IEEE80211_ELEMID_RSN:
rsn = frm;
break;
case IEEE80211_ELEMID_HTCAP:
htcap = frm;
break;
case IEEE80211_ELEMID_VHT_CAP:
vhtcap = frm;
break;
case IEEE80211_ELEMID_VHT_OPMODE:
vhtinfo = frm;
break;
case IEEE80211_ELEMID_VENDOR:
if (iswpaoui(frm))
wpa = frm;
else if (iswmeinfo(frm))
wme = frm;
#ifdef IEEE80211_SUPPORT_SUPERG
else if (isatherosoui(frm))
ath = frm;
#endif
else if (vap->iv_flags_ht & IEEE80211_FHT_HTCOMPAT) {
if (ishtcapoui(frm) && htcap == NULL)
htcap = frm;
}
break;
}
frm += frm[1] + 2;
}
IEEE80211_VERIFY_ELEMENT(rates, IEEE80211_RATE_MAXSIZE, return);
if (xrates != NULL)
IEEE80211_VERIFY_ELEMENT(xrates,
IEEE80211_RATE_MAXSIZE - rates[1], return);
IEEE80211_VERIFY_ELEMENT(ssid, IEEE80211_NWID_LEN, return);
IEEE80211_VERIFY_SSID(vap->iv_bss, ssid, return);
if (htcap != NULL) {
IEEE80211_VERIFY_LENGTH(htcap[1],
htcap[0] == IEEE80211_ELEMID_VENDOR ?
4 + sizeof(struct ieee80211_ie_htcap)-2 :
sizeof(struct ieee80211_ie_htcap)-2,
return); /* XXX just NULL out? */
}
2017-02-20 04:04:59 +00:00
/* Validate VHT IEs */
if (vhtcap != NULL) {
IEEE80211_VERIFY_LENGTH(vhtcap[1],
sizeof(struct ieee80211_vht_cap),
2017-02-20 04:04:59 +00:00
return);
}
if (vhtinfo != NULL) {
IEEE80211_VERIFY_LENGTH(vhtinfo[1],
sizeof(struct ieee80211_vht_operation),
2017-02-20 04:04:59 +00:00
return);
}
if ((vap->iv_flags & IEEE80211_F_WPA) &&
!wpa_assocreq(ni, &rsnparms, wh, wpa, rsn, capinfo))
return;
/* discard challenge after association */
if (ni->ni_challenge != NULL) {
IEEE80211_FREE(ni->ni_challenge, M_80211_NODE);
ni->ni_challenge = NULL;
}
/* NB: 802.11 spec says to ignore station's privacy bit */
if ((capinfo & IEEE80211_CAPINFO_ESS) == 0) {
capinfomismatch(ni, wh, reassoc, resp,
"capability", capinfo);
return;
}
/*
* Disallow re-associate w/ invalid slot time setting.
*/
if (ni->ni_associd != 0 &&
IEEE80211_IS_CHAN_ANYG(ic->ic_bsschan) &&
((ni->ni_capinfo ^ capinfo) & IEEE80211_CAPINFO_SHORT_SLOTTIME)) {
capinfomismatch(ni, wh, reassoc, resp,
"slot time", capinfo);
return;
}
rate = ieee80211_setup_rates(ni, rates, xrates,
IEEE80211_F_DOSORT | IEEE80211_F_DOFRATE |
IEEE80211_F_DONEGO | IEEE80211_F_DODEL);
if (rate & IEEE80211_RATE_BASIC) {
ratesetmismatch(ni, wh, reassoc, resp, "legacy", rate);
vap->iv_stats.is_rx_assoc_norate++;
return;
}
/*
* If constrained to 11g-only stations reject an
* 11b-only station. We cheat a bit here by looking
* at the max negotiated xmit rate and assuming anyone
* with a best rate <24Mb/s is an 11b station.
*/
if ((vap->iv_flags & IEEE80211_F_PUREG) && rate < 48) {
ratesetmismatch(ni, wh, reassoc, resp, "11g", rate);
vap->iv_stats.is_rx_assoc_norate++;
return;
}
/*
* Do HT rate set handling and setup HT node state.
*/
ni->ni_chan = vap->iv_bss->ni_chan;
/* VHT */
if (IEEE80211_IS_CHAN_VHT(ni->ni_chan) &&
vhtcap != NULL &&
vhtinfo != NULL) {
/* XXX TODO; see below */
printf("%s: VHT TODO!\n", __func__);
ieee80211_vht_node_init(ni);
ieee80211_vht_update_cap(ni, vhtcap, vhtinfo);
} else if (ni->ni_flags & IEEE80211_NODE_VHT)
ieee80211_vht_node_cleanup(ni);
/* HT */
if (IEEE80211_IS_CHAN_HT(ni->ni_chan) && htcap != NULL) {
rate = ieee80211_setup_htrates(ni, htcap,
IEEE80211_F_DOFMCS | IEEE80211_F_DONEGO |
IEEE80211_F_DOBRS);
if (rate & IEEE80211_RATE_BASIC) {
ratesetmismatch(ni, wh, reassoc, resp,
"HT", rate);
vap->iv_stats.is_ht_assoc_norate++;
return;
}
ieee80211_ht_node_init(ni);
ieee80211_ht_updatehtcap(ni, htcap);
} else if (ni->ni_flags & IEEE80211_NODE_HT)
ieee80211_ht_node_cleanup(ni);
/* Finally - this will use HT/VHT info to change node channel */
if (IEEE80211_IS_CHAN_HT(ni->ni_chan) && htcap != NULL) {
ieee80211_ht_updatehtcap_final(ni);
}
#ifdef IEEE80211_SUPPORT_SUPERG
/* Always do ff node cleanup; for A-MSDU */
ieee80211_ff_node_cleanup(ni);
#endif
/*
* Allow AMPDU operation only with unencrypted traffic
* or AES-CCM; the 11n spec only specifies these ciphers
* so permitting any others is undefined and can lead
* to interoperability problems.
*/
if ((ni->ni_flags & IEEE80211_NODE_HT) &&
(((vap->iv_flags & IEEE80211_F_WPA) &&
rsnparms.rsn_ucastcipher != IEEE80211_CIPHER_AES_CCM) ||
(vap->iv_flags & (IEEE80211_F_WPA|IEEE80211_F_PRIVACY)) == IEEE80211_F_PRIVACY)) {
IEEE80211_NOTE(vap,
IEEE80211_MSG_ASSOC | IEEE80211_MSG_11N, ni,
"disallow HT use because WEP or TKIP requested, "
"capinfo 0x%x ucastcipher %d", capinfo,
rsnparms.rsn_ucastcipher);
ieee80211_ht_node_cleanup(ni);
#ifdef IEEE80211_SUPPORT_SUPERG
/* Always do ff node cleanup; for A-MSDU */
ieee80211_ff_node_cleanup(ni);
#endif
vap->iv_stats.is_ht_assoc_downgrade++;
}
/*
* If constrained to 11n-only stations reject legacy stations.
*/
if ((vap->iv_flags_ht & IEEE80211_FHT_PUREN) &&
(ni->ni_flags & IEEE80211_NODE_HT) == 0) {
htcapmismatch(ni, wh, reassoc, resp);
vap->iv_stats.is_ht_assoc_nohtcap++;
return;
}
IEEE80211_RSSI_LPF(ni->ni_avgrssi, rssi);
ni->ni_noise = nf;
ni->ni_intval = lintval;
ni->ni_capinfo = capinfo;
ni->ni_fhdwell = vap->iv_bss->ni_fhdwell;
ni->ni_fhindex = vap->iv_bss->ni_fhindex;
/*
* Store the IEs.
* XXX maybe better to just expand
*/
if (ieee80211_ies_init(&ni->ni_ies, sfrm, efrm - sfrm)) {
#define setie(_ie, _off) ieee80211_ies_setie(ni->ni_ies, _ie, _off)
if (wpa != NULL)
setie(wpa_ie, wpa - sfrm);
if (rsn != NULL)
setie(rsn_ie, rsn - sfrm);
if (htcap != NULL)
setie(htcap_ie, htcap - sfrm);
if (wme != NULL) {
setie(wme_ie, wme - sfrm);
/*
* Mark node as capable of QoS.
*/
ni->ni_flags |= IEEE80211_NODE_QOS;
if (ieee80211_parse_wmeie(wme, wh, ni) > 0) {
if (ni->ni_uapsd != 0)
ni->ni_flags |=
IEEE80211_NODE_UAPSD;
else
ni->ni_flags &=
~IEEE80211_NODE_UAPSD;
}
} else
ni->ni_flags &=
~(IEEE80211_NODE_QOS |
IEEE80211_NODE_UAPSD);
#ifdef IEEE80211_SUPPORT_SUPERG
if (ath != NULL) {
setie(ath_ie, ath - sfrm);
/*
* Parse ATH station parameters.
*/
ieee80211_parse_ath(ni, ni->ni_ies.ath_ie);
} else
#endif
ni->ni_ath_flags = 0;
#undef setie
} else {
ni->ni_flags &= ~IEEE80211_NODE_QOS;
ni->ni_flags &= ~IEEE80211_NODE_UAPSD;
ni->ni_ath_flags = 0;
}
ieee80211_node_join(ni, resp);
ieee80211_deliver_l2uf(ni);
break;
}
case IEEE80211_FC0_SUBTYPE_DEAUTH:
case IEEE80211_FC0_SUBTYPE_DISASSOC: {
#ifdef IEEE80211_DEBUG
uint16_t reason;
#endif
if (vap->iv_state != IEEE80211_S_RUN ||
/* NB: can happen when in promiscuous mode */
!IEEE80211_ADDR_EQ(wh->i_addr1, vap->iv_myaddr)) {
vap->iv_stats.is_rx_mgtdiscard++;
break;
}
/*
* deauth/disassoc frame format
* [2] reason
*/
IEEE80211_VERIFY_LENGTH(efrm - frm, 2, return);
#ifdef IEEE80211_DEBUG
reason = le16toh(*(uint16_t *)frm);
#endif
if (subtype == IEEE80211_FC0_SUBTYPE_DEAUTH) {
vap->iv_stats.is_rx_deauth++;
IEEE80211_NODE_STAT(ni, rx_deauth);
} else {
vap->iv_stats.is_rx_disassoc++;
IEEE80211_NODE_STAT(ni, rx_disassoc);
}
IEEE80211_NOTE(vap, IEEE80211_MSG_AUTH, ni,
"recv %s (reason: %d (%s))",
ieee80211_mgt_subtype_name(subtype),
reason, ieee80211_reason_to_string(reason));
if (ni != vap->iv_bss)
ieee80211_node_leave(ni);
break;
}
case IEEE80211_FC0_SUBTYPE_ACTION:
case IEEE80211_FC0_SUBTYPE_ACTION_NOACK:
if (ni == vap->iv_bss) {
IEEE80211_DISCARD(vap, IEEE80211_MSG_INPUT,
wh, NULL, "%s", "unknown node");
vap->iv_stats.is_rx_mgtdiscard++;
} else if (!IEEE80211_ADDR_EQ(vap->iv_myaddr, wh->i_addr1) &&
!IEEE80211_IS_MULTICAST(wh->i_addr1)) {
IEEE80211_DISCARD(vap, IEEE80211_MSG_INPUT,
wh, NULL, "%s", "not for us");
vap->iv_stats.is_rx_mgtdiscard++;
} else if (vap->iv_state != IEEE80211_S_RUN) {
IEEE80211_DISCARD(vap, IEEE80211_MSG_INPUT,
wh, NULL, "wrong state %s",
ieee80211_state_name[vap->iv_state]);
vap->iv_stats.is_rx_mgtdiscard++;
} else {
if (ieee80211_parse_action(ni, m0) == 0)
(void)ic->ic_recv_action(ni, wh, frm, efrm);
}
break;
case IEEE80211_FC0_SUBTYPE_ASSOC_RESP:
case IEEE80211_FC0_SUBTYPE_REASSOC_RESP:
case IEEE80211_FC0_SUBTYPE_TIMING_ADV:
case IEEE80211_FC0_SUBTYPE_ATIM:
IEEE80211_DISCARD(vap, IEEE80211_MSG_INPUT,
wh, NULL, "%s", "not handled");
vap->iv_stats.is_rx_mgtdiscard++;
break;
default:
IEEE80211_DISCARD(vap, IEEE80211_MSG_ANY,
wh, "mgt", "subtype 0x%x not handled", subtype);
vap->iv_stats.is_rx_badsubtype++;
break;
}
}
static void
hostap_recv_ctl(struct ieee80211_node *ni, struct mbuf *m, int subtype)
{
switch (subtype) {
case IEEE80211_FC0_SUBTYPE_PS_POLL:
ni->ni_vap->iv_recv_pspoll(ni, m);
break;
case IEEE80211_FC0_SUBTYPE_BAR:
ieee80211_recv_bar(ni, m);
break;
}
}
/*
* Process a received ps-poll frame.
*/
void
ieee80211_recv_pspoll(struct ieee80211_node *ni, struct mbuf *m0)
{
struct ieee80211vap *vap = ni->ni_vap;
Bring over my initial work from the net80211 TX locking branch. This patchset implements a new TX lock, covering both the per-VAP (and thus per-node) TX locking and the serialisation through to the underlying physical device. This implements the hard requirement that frames to the underlying physical device are scheduled to the underlying device in the same order that they are processed at the VAP layer. This includes adding extra encapsulation state (such as sequence numbers and CCMP IV numbers.) Any order mismatch here will result in dropped packets at the receiver. There are multiple transmit contexts from the upper protocol layers as well as the "raw" interface via the management and BPF transmit paths. All of these need to be correctly serialised or bad behaviour will result under load. The specifics: * add a new TX IC lock - it will eventually just be used for serialisation to the underlying physical device but for now it's used for both the VAP encapsulation/serialisation and the physical device dispatch. This lock is specifically non-recursive. * Methodize the parent transmit, vap transmit and ic_raw_xmit function pointers; use lock assertions in the parent/vap transmit routines. * Add a lock assertion in ieee80211_encap() - the TX lock must be held here to guarantee sensible behaviour. * Refactor out the packet sending code from ieee80211_start() - now ieee80211_start() is just a loop over the ifnet queue and it dispatches each VAP packet send through ieee80211_start_pkt(). Yes, I will likely rename ieee80211_start_pkt() to something that better reflects its status as a VAP packet transmit path. More on that later. * Add locking around the management and BAR TX sending - to ensure that encapsulation and TX are done hand-in-hand. * Add locking in the mesh code - again, to ensure that encapsulation and mesh transmit are done hand-in-hand. * Add locking around the power save queue and ageq handling, when dispatching to the parent interface. * Add locking around the WDS handoff. * Add a note in the mesh dispatch code that the TX path needs to be re-thought-out - right now it's doing a direct parent device transmit rather than going via the vap layer. It may "work", but it's likely incorrect (as it bypasses any possible per-node power save and aggregation handling.) Why not a per-VAP or per-node lock? Because in order to ensure per-VAP ordering, we'd have to hold the VAP lock across parent->if_transmit(). There are a few problems with this: * There's some state being setup during each driver transmit - specifically, the encryption encap / CCMP IV setup. That should eventually be dragged back into the encapsulation phase but for now it lives in the driver TX path. This should be locked. * Two drivers (ath, iwn) re-use the node->ni_txseqs array in order to allocate sequence numbers when doing transmit aggregation. This should also be locked. * Drivers may have multiple frames queued already - so when one calls if_transmit(), it may end up dispatching multiple frames for different VAPs/nodes, each needing a different lock when handling that particular end destination. So to be "correct" locking-wise, we'd end up needing to grab a VAP or node lock inside the driver TX path when setting up crypto / AMPDU sequence numbers, and we may already _have_ a TX lock held - mostly for the same destination vap/node, but sometimes it'll be for others. That could lead to LORs and thus deadlocks. So for now, I'm sticking with an IC TX lock. It has the advantage of papering over the above and it also has the added advantage that I can assert that it's being held when doing a parent device transmit. I'll look at splitting the locks out a bit more later on. General outstanding net80211 TX path issues / TODO: * Look into separating out the VAP serialisation and the IC handoff. It's going to be tricky as parent->if_transmit() doesn't give me the opportunity to split queuing from driver dispatch. See above. * Work with monthadar to fix up the mesh transmit path so it doesn't go via the parent interface when retransmitting frames. * Push the encryption handling back into the driver, if it's at all architectually sane to do so. I know it's possible - it's what mac80211 in Linux does. * Make ieee80211_raw_xmit() queue a frame into VAP or parent queue rather than doing a short-cut direct into the driver. There are QoS issues here - you do want your management frames to be encapsulated and pushed onto the stack sooner than the (large, bursty) amount of data frames that are queued. But there has to be a saner way to do this. * Fragments are still broken - drivers need to be upgraded to an if_transmit() implementation and then fragmentation handling needs to be properly fixed. Tested: * STA - AR5416, AR9280, Intel 5300 abgn wifi * Hostap - AR5416, AR9160, AR9280 * Mesh - some testing by monthadar@, more to come.
2013-03-08 20:23:55 +00:00
struct ieee80211com *ic = vap->iv_ic;
struct ieee80211_frame_min *wh;
struct mbuf *m;
uint16_t aid;
int qlen;
wh = mtod(m0, struct ieee80211_frame_min *);
if (ni->ni_associd == 0) {
IEEE80211_DISCARD(vap,
IEEE80211_MSG_POWER | IEEE80211_MSG_DEBUG,
(struct ieee80211_frame *) wh, NULL,
"%s", "unassociated station");
vap->iv_stats.is_ps_unassoc++;
IEEE80211_SEND_MGMT(ni, IEEE80211_FC0_SUBTYPE_DEAUTH,
IEEE80211_REASON_NOT_ASSOCED);
return;
}
aid = le16toh(*(uint16_t *)wh->i_dur);
if (aid != ni->ni_associd) {
IEEE80211_DISCARD(vap,
IEEE80211_MSG_POWER | IEEE80211_MSG_DEBUG,
(struct ieee80211_frame *) wh, NULL,
"aid mismatch: sta aid 0x%x poll aid 0x%x",
ni->ni_associd, aid);
vap->iv_stats.is_ps_badaid++;
/*
* NB: We used to deauth the station but it turns out
* the Blackberry Curve 8230 (and perhaps other devices)
* sometimes send the wrong AID when WME is negotiated.
* Being more lenient here seems ok as we already check
* the station is associated and we only return frames
* queued for the station (i.e. we don't use the AID).
*/
return;
}
/* Okay, take the first queued packet and put it out... */
m = ieee80211_node_psq_dequeue(ni, &qlen);
if (m == NULL) {
IEEE80211_NOTE_MAC(vap, IEEE80211_MSG_POWER, wh->i_addr2,
"%s", "recv ps-poll, but queue empty");
ieee80211_send_nulldata(ieee80211_ref_node(ni));
vap->iv_stats.is_ps_qempty++; /* XXX node stat */
if (vap->iv_set_tim != NULL)
vap->iv_set_tim(ni, 0); /* just in case */
return;
}
/*
* If there are more packets, set the more packets bit
* in the packet dispatched to the station; otherwise
* turn off the TIM bit.
*/
if (qlen != 0) {
IEEE80211_NOTE(vap, IEEE80211_MSG_POWER, ni,
"recv ps-poll, send packet, %u still queued", qlen);
m->m_flags |= M_MORE_DATA;
} else {
IEEE80211_NOTE(vap, IEEE80211_MSG_POWER, ni,
"%s", "recv ps-poll, send packet, queue empty");
if (vap->iv_set_tim != NULL)
vap->iv_set_tim(ni, 0);
}
m->m_flags |= M_PWR_SAV; /* bypass PS handling */
/*
Bring over my initial work from the net80211 TX locking branch. This patchset implements a new TX lock, covering both the per-VAP (and thus per-node) TX locking and the serialisation through to the underlying physical device. This implements the hard requirement that frames to the underlying physical device are scheduled to the underlying device in the same order that they are processed at the VAP layer. This includes adding extra encapsulation state (such as sequence numbers and CCMP IV numbers.) Any order mismatch here will result in dropped packets at the receiver. There are multiple transmit contexts from the upper protocol layers as well as the "raw" interface via the management and BPF transmit paths. All of these need to be correctly serialised or bad behaviour will result under load. The specifics: * add a new TX IC lock - it will eventually just be used for serialisation to the underlying physical device but for now it's used for both the VAP encapsulation/serialisation and the physical device dispatch. This lock is specifically non-recursive. * Methodize the parent transmit, vap transmit and ic_raw_xmit function pointers; use lock assertions in the parent/vap transmit routines. * Add a lock assertion in ieee80211_encap() - the TX lock must be held here to guarantee sensible behaviour. * Refactor out the packet sending code from ieee80211_start() - now ieee80211_start() is just a loop over the ifnet queue and it dispatches each VAP packet send through ieee80211_start_pkt(). Yes, I will likely rename ieee80211_start_pkt() to something that better reflects its status as a VAP packet transmit path. More on that later. * Add locking around the management and BAR TX sending - to ensure that encapsulation and TX are done hand-in-hand. * Add locking in the mesh code - again, to ensure that encapsulation and mesh transmit are done hand-in-hand. * Add locking around the power save queue and ageq handling, when dispatching to the parent interface. * Add locking around the WDS handoff. * Add a note in the mesh dispatch code that the TX path needs to be re-thought-out - right now it's doing a direct parent device transmit rather than going via the vap layer. It may "work", but it's likely incorrect (as it bypasses any possible per-node power save and aggregation handling.) Why not a per-VAP or per-node lock? Because in order to ensure per-VAP ordering, we'd have to hold the VAP lock across parent->if_transmit(). There are a few problems with this: * There's some state being setup during each driver transmit - specifically, the encryption encap / CCMP IV setup. That should eventually be dragged back into the encapsulation phase but for now it lives in the driver TX path. This should be locked. * Two drivers (ath, iwn) re-use the node->ni_txseqs array in order to allocate sequence numbers when doing transmit aggregation. This should also be locked. * Drivers may have multiple frames queued already - so when one calls if_transmit(), it may end up dispatching multiple frames for different VAPs/nodes, each needing a different lock when handling that particular end destination. So to be "correct" locking-wise, we'd end up needing to grab a VAP or node lock inside the driver TX path when setting up crypto / AMPDU sequence numbers, and we may already _have_ a TX lock held - mostly for the same destination vap/node, but sometimes it'll be for others. That could lead to LORs and thus deadlocks. So for now, I'm sticking with an IC TX lock. It has the advantage of papering over the above and it also has the added advantage that I can assert that it's being held when doing a parent device transmit. I'll look at splitting the locks out a bit more later on. General outstanding net80211 TX path issues / TODO: * Look into separating out the VAP serialisation and the IC handoff. It's going to be tricky as parent->if_transmit() doesn't give me the opportunity to split queuing from driver dispatch. See above. * Work with monthadar to fix up the mesh transmit path so it doesn't go via the parent interface when retransmitting frames. * Push the encryption handling back into the driver, if it's at all architectually sane to do so. I know it's possible - it's what mac80211 in Linux does. * Make ieee80211_raw_xmit() queue a frame into VAP or parent queue rather than doing a short-cut direct into the driver. There are QoS issues here - you do want your management frames to be encapsulated and pushed onto the stack sooner than the (large, bursty) amount of data frames that are queued. But there has to be a saner way to do this. * Fragments are still broken - drivers need to be upgraded to an if_transmit() implementation and then fragmentation handling needs to be properly fixed. Tested: * STA - AR5416, AR9280, Intel 5300 abgn wifi * Hostap - AR5416, AR9160, AR9280 * Mesh - some testing by monthadar@, more to come.
2013-03-08 20:23:55 +00:00
* Do the right thing; if it's an encap'ed frame then
* call ieee80211_parent_xmitpkt() else
* call ieee80211_vap_xmitpkt().
*/
Bring over my initial work from the net80211 TX locking branch. This patchset implements a new TX lock, covering both the per-VAP (and thus per-node) TX locking and the serialisation through to the underlying physical device. This implements the hard requirement that frames to the underlying physical device are scheduled to the underlying device in the same order that they are processed at the VAP layer. This includes adding extra encapsulation state (such as sequence numbers and CCMP IV numbers.) Any order mismatch here will result in dropped packets at the receiver. There are multiple transmit contexts from the upper protocol layers as well as the "raw" interface via the management and BPF transmit paths. All of these need to be correctly serialised or bad behaviour will result under load. The specifics: * add a new TX IC lock - it will eventually just be used for serialisation to the underlying physical device but for now it's used for both the VAP encapsulation/serialisation and the physical device dispatch. This lock is specifically non-recursive. * Methodize the parent transmit, vap transmit and ic_raw_xmit function pointers; use lock assertions in the parent/vap transmit routines. * Add a lock assertion in ieee80211_encap() - the TX lock must be held here to guarantee sensible behaviour. * Refactor out the packet sending code from ieee80211_start() - now ieee80211_start() is just a loop over the ifnet queue and it dispatches each VAP packet send through ieee80211_start_pkt(). Yes, I will likely rename ieee80211_start_pkt() to something that better reflects its status as a VAP packet transmit path. More on that later. * Add locking around the management and BAR TX sending - to ensure that encapsulation and TX are done hand-in-hand. * Add locking in the mesh code - again, to ensure that encapsulation and mesh transmit are done hand-in-hand. * Add locking around the power save queue and ageq handling, when dispatching to the parent interface. * Add locking around the WDS handoff. * Add a note in the mesh dispatch code that the TX path needs to be re-thought-out - right now it's doing a direct parent device transmit rather than going via the vap layer. It may "work", but it's likely incorrect (as it bypasses any possible per-node power save and aggregation handling.) Why not a per-VAP or per-node lock? Because in order to ensure per-VAP ordering, we'd have to hold the VAP lock across parent->if_transmit(). There are a few problems with this: * There's some state being setup during each driver transmit - specifically, the encryption encap / CCMP IV setup. That should eventually be dragged back into the encapsulation phase but for now it lives in the driver TX path. This should be locked. * Two drivers (ath, iwn) re-use the node->ni_txseqs array in order to allocate sequence numbers when doing transmit aggregation. This should also be locked. * Drivers may have multiple frames queued already - so when one calls if_transmit(), it may end up dispatching multiple frames for different VAPs/nodes, each needing a different lock when handling that particular end destination. So to be "correct" locking-wise, we'd end up needing to grab a VAP or node lock inside the driver TX path when setting up crypto / AMPDU sequence numbers, and we may already _have_ a TX lock held - mostly for the same destination vap/node, but sometimes it'll be for others. That could lead to LORs and thus deadlocks. So for now, I'm sticking with an IC TX lock. It has the advantage of papering over the above and it also has the added advantage that I can assert that it's being held when doing a parent device transmit. I'll look at splitting the locks out a bit more later on. General outstanding net80211 TX path issues / TODO: * Look into separating out the VAP serialisation and the IC handoff. It's going to be tricky as parent->if_transmit() doesn't give me the opportunity to split queuing from driver dispatch. See above. * Work with monthadar to fix up the mesh transmit path so it doesn't go via the parent interface when retransmitting frames. * Push the encryption handling back into the driver, if it's at all architectually sane to do so. I know it's possible - it's what mac80211 in Linux does. * Make ieee80211_raw_xmit() queue a frame into VAP or parent queue rather than doing a short-cut direct into the driver. There are QoS issues here - you do want your management frames to be encapsulated and pushed onto the stack sooner than the (large, bursty) amount of data frames that are queued. But there has to be a saner way to do this. * Fragments are still broken - drivers need to be upgraded to an if_transmit() implementation and then fragmentation handling needs to be properly fixed. Tested: * STA - AR5416, AR9280, Intel 5300 abgn wifi * Hostap - AR5416, AR9160, AR9280 * Mesh - some testing by monthadar@, more to come.
2013-03-08 20:23:55 +00:00
if (m->m_flags & M_ENCAP) {
(void) ieee80211_parent_xmitpkt(ic, m);
Bring over my initial work from the net80211 TX locking branch. This patchset implements a new TX lock, covering both the per-VAP (and thus per-node) TX locking and the serialisation through to the underlying physical device. This implements the hard requirement that frames to the underlying physical device are scheduled to the underlying device in the same order that they are processed at the VAP layer. This includes adding extra encapsulation state (such as sequence numbers and CCMP IV numbers.) Any order mismatch here will result in dropped packets at the receiver. There are multiple transmit contexts from the upper protocol layers as well as the "raw" interface via the management and BPF transmit paths. All of these need to be correctly serialised or bad behaviour will result under load. The specifics: * add a new TX IC lock - it will eventually just be used for serialisation to the underlying physical device but for now it's used for both the VAP encapsulation/serialisation and the physical device dispatch. This lock is specifically non-recursive. * Methodize the parent transmit, vap transmit and ic_raw_xmit function pointers; use lock assertions in the parent/vap transmit routines. * Add a lock assertion in ieee80211_encap() - the TX lock must be held here to guarantee sensible behaviour. * Refactor out the packet sending code from ieee80211_start() - now ieee80211_start() is just a loop over the ifnet queue and it dispatches each VAP packet send through ieee80211_start_pkt(). Yes, I will likely rename ieee80211_start_pkt() to something that better reflects its status as a VAP packet transmit path. More on that later. * Add locking around the management and BAR TX sending - to ensure that encapsulation and TX are done hand-in-hand. * Add locking in the mesh code - again, to ensure that encapsulation and mesh transmit are done hand-in-hand. * Add locking around the power save queue and ageq handling, when dispatching to the parent interface. * Add locking around the WDS handoff. * Add a note in the mesh dispatch code that the TX path needs to be re-thought-out - right now it's doing a direct parent device transmit rather than going via the vap layer. It may "work", but it's likely incorrect (as it bypasses any possible per-node power save and aggregation handling.) Why not a per-VAP or per-node lock? Because in order to ensure per-VAP ordering, we'd have to hold the VAP lock across parent->if_transmit(). There are a few problems with this: * There's some state being setup during each driver transmit - specifically, the encryption encap / CCMP IV setup. That should eventually be dragged back into the encapsulation phase but for now it lives in the driver TX path. This should be locked. * Two drivers (ath, iwn) re-use the node->ni_txseqs array in order to allocate sequence numbers when doing transmit aggregation. This should also be locked. * Drivers may have multiple frames queued already - so when one calls if_transmit(), it may end up dispatching multiple frames for different VAPs/nodes, each needing a different lock when handling that particular end destination. So to be "correct" locking-wise, we'd end up needing to grab a VAP or node lock inside the driver TX path when setting up crypto / AMPDU sequence numbers, and we may already _have_ a TX lock held - mostly for the same destination vap/node, but sometimes it'll be for others. That could lead to LORs and thus deadlocks. So for now, I'm sticking with an IC TX lock. It has the advantage of papering over the above and it also has the added advantage that I can assert that it's being held when doing a parent device transmit. I'll look at splitting the locks out a bit more later on. General outstanding net80211 TX path issues / TODO: * Look into separating out the VAP serialisation and the IC handoff. It's going to be tricky as parent->if_transmit() doesn't give me the opportunity to split queuing from driver dispatch. See above. * Work with monthadar to fix up the mesh transmit path so it doesn't go via the parent interface when retransmitting frames. * Push the encryption handling back into the driver, if it's at all architectually sane to do so. I know it's possible - it's what mac80211 in Linux does. * Make ieee80211_raw_xmit() queue a frame into VAP or parent queue rather than doing a short-cut direct into the driver. There are QoS issues here - you do want your management frames to be encapsulated and pushed onto the stack sooner than the (large, bursty) amount of data frames that are queued. But there has to be a saner way to do this. * Fragments are still broken - drivers need to be upgraded to an if_transmit() implementation and then fragmentation handling needs to be properly fixed. Tested: * STA - AR5416, AR9280, Intel 5300 abgn wifi * Hostap - AR5416, AR9160, AR9280 * Mesh - some testing by monthadar@, more to come.
2013-03-08 20:23:55 +00:00
} else {
(void) ieee80211_vap_xmitpkt(vap, m);
}
}