X-Git-Url: https://git.rohieb.name/openwrt.git/blobdiff_plain/d9219238b05cc37112dd11427581e1aa6b502b33..f181b502657a40a3cf0e262874b3b2f27dd5c0bd:/docs/wireless.tex diff --git a/docs/wireless.tex b/docs/wireless.tex index 94d74f4fa..d92fa76cd 100644 --- a/docs/wireless.tex +++ b/docs/wireless.tex @@ -1,6 +1,15 @@ The WiFi settings are configured in the file \texttt{/etc/config/wireless} -(currently supported on Broadcom only). When booting the router for the first time -it should detect your card and create a sample configuration that looks like this: +(currently supported on Broadcom, Atheros and mac80211). When booting the router for the first time +it should detect your card and create a sample configuration file. By default '\texttt{option network lan}' is +commented. This prevents unsecured sharing of the network over the wireless interface. + +Each wireless driver has its own configuration script in \texttt{/lib/wifi/driver\_name.sh} which handles +driver specific options and configurations. This script is also calling driver specific binaries like wlc for +Broadcom, or hostapd and wpa\_supplicant for atheros and mac80211. + +The reason for using such architecture, is that it abstracts the driver configuration. + +\paragraph{Generic Broadcom wireless config:} \begin{Verbatim} config wifi-device "wl0" @@ -9,36 +18,156 @@ config wifi-device "wl0" config wifi-iface option device "wl0" +# option network lan + option mode "ap" + option ssid "OpenWrt" + option hidden "0" + option encryption "none" +\end{Verbatim} + +\paragraph{Generic Atheros wireless config:} + +\begin{Verbatim} +config wifi-device "wifi0" + option type "atheros" + option channel "5" + option hwmode "11g" + +config wifi-iface + option device "wifi0" +# option network lan + option mode "ap" + option ssid "OpenWrt" + option hidden "0" + option encryption "none" +\end{Verbatim} + +\paragraph{Generic mac80211 wireless config:} + +\begin{Verbatim} +config wifi-device "wifi0" + option type "mac80211" + option channel "5" + +config wifi-iface + option device "wlan0" +# option network lan option mode "ap" option ssid "OpenWrt" option hidden "0" option encryption "none" \end{Verbatim} +\paragraph{Generic multi-radio Atheros wireless config:} + +\begin{Verbatim} +config wifi-device wifi0 + option type atheros + option channel 1 + +config wifi-iface + option device wifi0 +# option network lan + option mode ap + option ssid OpenWrt_private + option hidden 0 + option encryption none + +config wifi-device wifi1 + option type atheros + option channel 11 + +config wifi-iface + option device wifi1 +# option network lan + option mode ap + option ssid OpenWrt_public + option hidden 1 + option encryption none +\end{Verbatim} + There are two types of config sections in this file. The '\texttt{wifi-device}' refers to the physical wifi interface and '\texttt{wifi-iface}' configures a virtual interface on top of that (if supported by the driver). +A full outline of the wireless configuration file with description of each field: + +\begin{Verbatim} +config wifi-device wifi device name + option type broadcom, atheros, mac80211 + option country us, uk, fr, de, etc. + option channel 1-14 + option maxassoc 1-128 (broadcom only) + option distance 1-n (meters) + option hwmode 11b, 11g, 11a, 11bg (atheros, mac80211) + option rxantenna 0,1,2 (atheros, broadcom) + option txantenna 0,1,2 (atheros, broadcom) + option txpower transmission power in dBm + +config wifi-iface + option network the interface you want wifi to bridge with + option device wifi0, wifi1, wifi2, wifiN + option mode ap, sta, adhoc, monitor, mesh, or wds + option txpower (deprecated) transmission power in dBm + option ssid ssid name + option bssid bssid address + option encryption none, wep, psk, psk2, wpa, wpa2 + option key encryption key + option key1 key 1 + option key2 key 2 + option key3 key 3 + option key4 key 4 + option server ip address + option port port + option hidden 0,1 + option isolate 0,1 (broadcom) +\end{Verbatim} + \paragraph{Options for the \texttt{wifi-device}:} \begin{itemize} \item \texttt{type} \\ The driver to use for this interface. - + \item \texttt{country} \\ The country code used to determine the regulatory settings. \item \texttt{channel} \\ - The wifi channel (1-14, depending on your country setting). + The wifi channel (e.g. 1-14, depending on your country setting). \item \texttt{maxassoc} \\ - Maximum number of associated clients + Optional: Maximum number of associated clients. This feature is supported only on the Broadcom chipsets. + + \item \texttt{distance} \\ + Optional: Distance between the ap and the furthest client in meters. This feature is supported only on the Atheros chipsets. + + \item \texttt{mode} \\ + The frequency band (\texttt{b}, \texttt{g}, \texttt{bg}, \texttt{a}). This feature is only supported on the Atheros chipsets. + + \item \texttt{diversity} \\ + Optional: Enable diversity for the Wi-Fi device. This feature is supported only on the Atheros chipsets. + + \item \texttt{rxantenna} \\ + Optional: Antenna identifier (0, 1 or 2) for reception. This feature is supported by Atheros and some Broadcom chipsets. + + \item \texttt{txantenna} \\ + Optional: Antenna identifier (0, 1 or 2) for emission. This feature is supported by Atheros and some Broadcom chipsets. + + \item \texttt{txpower} + Set the transmission power to be used. The amount is specified in dBm. \end{itemize} \paragraph{Options for the \texttt{wifi-iface}:} \begin{itemize} + \item \texttt{network} \\ + Selects the interface section from \texttt{/etc/config/network} to be + used with this interface + + \item \texttt{device} \\ + Set the wifi device name. + \item \texttt{mode} \\ Operating mode: @@ -52,52 +181,294 @@ of that (if supported by the driver). \item \texttt{adhoc} \\ Ad-Hoc mode + \item \texttt{monitor} \\ + Monitor mode + + \item \texttt{mesh} \\ + Mesh Point mode (802.11s) + \item \texttt{wds} \\ WDS point-to-point link \end{itemize} - \item \texttt{network} \\ - Selects the interface section from \texttt{/etc/config/network} to be - used with this interface + + \item \texttt{ssid} + Set the SSID to be used on the wifi device. + + \item \texttt{bssid} + Set the BSSID address to be used for wds to set the mac address of the other wds unit. + + \item \texttt{txpower} + (Deprecated, set in wifi-device) Set the transmission power to be used. The amount is specified in dBm. \item \texttt{encryption} \\ Encryption setting. Accepts the following values: \begin{itemize} + \item \texttt{none} + \item \texttt{wep} \item \texttt{psk}, \texttt{psk2} \\ WPA(2) Pre-shared Key \item \texttt{wpa}, \texttt{wpa2} \\ WPA(2) RADIUS - \end{itemize} - \item \texttt{key} (wpa and psk) \\ - Either the WPA key (PSK mode) or the RADIUS shared secret (WPA RADIUS mode) + \item \texttt{key, key1, key2, key3, key4} (wep, wpa and psk) \\ + WEP key, WPA key (PSK mode) or the RADIUS shared secret (WPA RADIUS mode) \item \texttt{server} (wpa) \\ - The RADIUS server address + The RADIUS server ip address \item \texttt{port} (wpa) \\ - The RADIUS server port + The RADIUS server port (defaults to 1812) + + \item \texttt{hidden} \\ + 0 broadcasts the ssid; 1 disables broadcasting of the ssid + + \item \texttt{isolate} \\ + Optional: Isolation is a mode usually set on hotspots that limits the clients to communicate only with the AP and not with other wireless clients. + 0 disables ap isolation (default); 1 enables ap isolation. \end{itemize} +\paragraph{Mesh Point} + +Mesh Point (802.11s) is only supported by some mac80211 drivers. It requires the iw package +to be installed to setup mesh links. OpenWrt creates mshN mesh point interfaces. A sample +configuration looks like this: + +\begin{Verbatim} +config wifi-device "wlan0" + option type "mac80211" + option channel "5" + +config wifi-iface + option device "wlan0" + option network lan + option mode "mesh" + option mesh_id "OpenWrt" +\end{Verbatim} + +\paragraph{Wireless Distribution System} + +WDS is a non-standard mode which will be working between two Broadcom devices for instance +but not between a Broadcom and Atheros device. + +\subparagraph{Unencrypted WDS connections} + +This configuration example shows you how to setup unencrypted WDS connections. +We assume that the peer configured as below as the BSSID ca:fe:ba:be:00:01 +and the remote WDS endpoint ca:fe:ba:be:00:02 (option bssid field). + +\begin{Verbatim} +config wifi-device "wl0" + option type "broadcom" + option channel "5" + +config wifi-iface + option device "wl0" + option network lan + option mode "ap" + option ssid "OpenWrt" + option hidden "0" + option encryption "none" + +config wifi-iface + option device "wl0" + option network lan + option mode wds + option ssid "OpenWrt WDS" + option bssid "ca:fe:ba:be:00:02" +\end{Verbatim} + +\subparagraph{Encrypted WDS connections} + +It is also possible to encrypt WDS connections. \texttt{psk}, \texttt{psk2} and +\texttt{psk+psk2} modes are supported. Configuration below is an example +configuration using Pre-Shared-Keys with AES algorithm. + +\begin{Verbatim} +config wifi-device wl0 + option type broadcom + option channel 5 + +config wifi-iface + option device "wl0" + option network lan + option mode ap + option ssid "OpenWrt" + option encryption psk2 + option key "" + +config wifi-iface + option device "wl0" + option network lan + option mode wds + option bssid ca:fe:ba:be:00:02 + option ssid "OpenWrt WDS" + option encryption psk2 + option key "" +\end{Verbatim} + +\paragraph{802.1x configurations} + +OpenWrt supports both 802.1x client and Access Point +configurations. 802.1x client is only working with +drivers supported by wpa-supplicant. Configuration +only supports EAP types TLS, TTLS or PEAP. + +\subparagraph{EAP-TLS} + +\begin{Verbatim} +config wifi-iface + option device "ath0" + option network lan + option ssid OpenWrt + option eap_type tls + option ca_cert "/etc/config/certs/ca.crt" + option priv_key "/etc/config/certs/priv.crt" + option priv_key_pwd "PKCS#12 passphrase" +\end{Verbatim} + +\subparagraph{EAP-PEAP} + +\begin{Verbatim} +config wifi-iface + option device "ath0" + option network lan + option ssid OpenWrt + option eap_type peap + option ca_cert "/etc/config/certs/ca.crt" + option auth MSCHAPV2 + option identity username + option password password +\end{Verbatim} + \paragraph{Limitations:} +There are certain limitations when combining modes. +Only the following mode combinations are supported: + \begin{itemize} \item \textbf{Broadcom}: \\ - Only the following mode combinations are supported: - \begin{itemize} \item 1x \texttt{sta}, 0-3x \texttt{ap} \item 1-4x \texttt{ap} \item 1x \texttt{adhoc} + \item 1x \texttt{monitor} \end{itemize} - WDS links can only be used in pure AP mode and can't use WEP (except when sharing the + WDS links can only be used in pure AP mode and cannot use WEP (except when sharing the settings with the master interface, which is done automatically). + \item \textbf{Atheros}: \\ + \begin{itemize} + \item 1x \texttt{sta}, 0-Nx \texttt{ap} + \item 1-Nx \texttt{ap} + \item 1x \texttt{adhoc} + \end{itemize} + + N is the maximum number of VAPs that the module allows, it defaults to 4, but can be + changed by loading the module with the maxvaps=N parameter. +\end{itemize} + +\paragraph{Adding a new driver configuration} + +Since we currently only support thread different wireless drivers : Broadcom, Atheros and mac80211, +you might be interested in adding support for another driver like Ralink RT2x00, +Texas Instruments ACX100/111. + +The driver specific script should be placed in \texttt{/lib/wifi/.sh} and has to +include several functions providing : + +\begin{itemize} + \item detection of the driver presence + \item enabling/disabling the wifi interface(s) + \item configuration reading and setting + \item third-party programs calling (nas, supplicant) \end{itemize} +Each driver script should append the driver to a global DRIVERS variable : + +\begin{Verbatim} +append DRIVERS "driver name" +\end{Verbatim} + +\subparagraph{\texttt{scan\_}} + +This function will parse the \texttt{/etc/config/wireless} and make sure there +are no configuration incompatibilities, like enabling hidden SSIDS with ad-hoc mode +for instance. This can be more complex if your driver supports a lof of configuration +options. It does not change the state of the interface. + +Example: +\begin{Verbatim} +scan_dummy() { + local device="$1" + + config_get vifs "$device" vifs + for vif in $vifs; do + # check config consistency for wifi-iface sections + done + # check mode combination +} +\end{Verbatim} +\subparagraph{\texttt{enable\_}} + +This function will bring up the wifi device and optionally create application specific +configuration files, e.g. for the WPA authenticator or supplicant. + +Example: +\begin{Verbatim} +enable_dummy() { + local device="$1" + + config_get vifs "$device" vifs + for vif in $vifs; do + # bring up virtual interface belonging to + # the wifi-device "$device" + done +} +\end{Verbatim} + +\subparagraph{\texttt{disable\_}} + +This function will bring down the wifi device and all its virtual interfaces (if supported). + +Example: +\begin{Verbatim} +disable_dummy() { + local device="$1" + + # bring down virtual interfaces belonging to + # "$device" regardless of whether they are + # configured or not. Don't rely on the vifs + # variable at this point +} +\end{Verbatim} + +\subparagraph{\texttt{detect\_}} + +This function looks for interfaces that are usable with the driver. Template config sections +for new devices should be written to stdout. Must check for already existing config sections +belonging to the interfaces before creating new templates. + +Example: +\begin{Verbatim} +detect_dummy() { + [ wifi-device = "$(config_get dummydev type)" ] && return 0 + cat <