freebsd-nq/sys/net80211/ieee80211_freebsd.c

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/*-
* Copyright (c) 2003-2009 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.
*/
#include <sys/cdefs.h>
__FBSDID("$FreeBSD$");
/*
* IEEE 802.11 support (FreeBSD-specific code)
*/
#include "opt_wlan.h"
#include <sys/param.h>
#include <sys/kernel.h>
#include <sys/systm.h>
#include <sys/eventhandler.h>
#include <sys/linker.h>
#include <sys/mbuf.h>
#include <sys/module.h>
#include <sys/proc.h>
#include <sys/sysctl.h>
#include <sys/socket.h>
#include <net/bpf.h>
#include <net/if.h>
#include <net/if_var.h>
#include <net/if_dl.h>
#include <net/if_clone.h>
#include <net/if_media.h>
#include <net/if_types.h>
#include <net/ethernet.h>
#include <net/route.h>
#include <net/vnet.h>
#include <net80211/ieee80211_var.h>
#include <net80211/ieee80211_input.h>
SYSCTL_NODE(_net, OID_AUTO, wlan, CTLFLAG_RD, 0, "IEEE 80211 parameters");
#ifdef IEEE80211_DEBUG
int ieee80211_debug = 0;
SYSCTL_INT(_net_wlan, OID_AUTO, debug, CTLFLAG_RW, &ieee80211_debug,
0, "debugging printfs");
#endif
static MALLOC_DEFINE(M_80211_COM, "80211com", "802.11 com state");
static const char wlanname[] = "wlan";
static struct if_clone *wlan_cloner;
static int
wlan_clone_create(struct if_clone *ifc, int unit, caddr_t params)
{
struct ieee80211_clone_params cp;
struct ieee80211vap *vap;
struct ieee80211com *ic;
int error;
error = copyin(params, &cp, sizeof(cp));
if (error)
return error;
Replay r286410. Change KPI of how device drivers that provide wireless connectivity interact with the net80211 stack. Historical background: originally wireless devices created an interface, just like Ethernet devices do. Name of an interface matched the name of the driver that created. Later, wlan(4) layer was introduced, and the wlanX interfaces become the actual interface, leaving original ones as "a parent interface" of wlanX. Kernelwise, the KPI between net80211 layer and a driver became a mix of methods that pass a pointer to struct ifnet as identifier and methods that pass pointer to struct ieee80211com. From user point of view, the parent interface just hangs on in the ifconfig list, and user can't do anything useful with it. Now, the struct ifnet goes away. The struct ieee80211com is the only KPI between a device driver and net80211. Details: - The struct ieee80211com is embedded into drivers softc. - Packets are sent via new ic_transmit method, which is very much like the previous if_transmit. - Bringing parent up/down is done via new ic_parent method, which notifies driver about any changes: number of wlan(4) interfaces, number of them in promisc or allmulti state. - Device specific ioctls (if any) are received on new ic_ioctl method. - Packets/errors accounting are done by the stack. In certain cases, when driver experiences errors and can not attribute them to any specific interface, driver updates ic_oerrors or ic_ierrors counters. Details on interface configuration with new world order: - A sequence of commands needed to bring up wireless DOESN"T change. - /etc/rc.conf parameters DON'T change. - List of devices that can be used to create wlan(4) interfaces is now provided by net.wlan.devices sysctl. Most drivers in this change were converted by me, except of wpi(4), that was done by Andriy Voskoboinyk. Big thanks to Kevin Lo for testing changes to at least 8 drivers. Thanks to pluknet@, Oliver Hartmann, Olivier Cochard, gjb@, mmoll@, op@ and lev@, who also participated in testing. Reviewed by: adrian Sponsored by: Netflix Sponsored by: Nginx, Inc.
2015-08-27 08:56:39 +00:00
ic = ieee80211_find_com(cp.icp_parent);
if (ic == NULL)
return ENXIO;
if (cp.icp_opmode >= IEEE80211_OPMODE_MAX) {
Replay r286410. Change KPI of how device drivers that provide wireless connectivity interact with the net80211 stack. Historical background: originally wireless devices created an interface, just like Ethernet devices do. Name of an interface matched the name of the driver that created. Later, wlan(4) layer was introduced, and the wlanX interfaces become the actual interface, leaving original ones as "a parent interface" of wlanX. Kernelwise, the KPI between net80211 layer and a driver became a mix of methods that pass a pointer to struct ifnet as identifier and methods that pass pointer to struct ieee80211com. From user point of view, the parent interface just hangs on in the ifconfig list, and user can't do anything useful with it. Now, the struct ifnet goes away. The struct ieee80211com is the only KPI between a device driver and net80211. Details: - The struct ieee80211com is embedded into drivers softc. - Packets are sent via new ic_transmit method, which is very much like the previous if_transmit. - Bringing parent up/down is done via new ic_parent method, which notifies driver about any changes: number of wlan(4) interfaces, number of them in promisc or allmulti state. - Device specific ioctls (if any) are received on new ic_ioctl method. - Packets/errors accounting are done by the stack. In certain cases, when driver experiences errors and can not attribute them to any specific interface, driver updates ic_oerrors or ic_ierrors counters. Details on interface configuration with new world order: - A sequence of commands needed to bring up wireless DOESN"T change. - /etc/rc.conf parameters DON'T change. - List of devices that can be used to create wlan(4) interfaces is now provided by net.wlan.devices sysctl. Most drivers in this change were converted by me, except of wpi(4), that was done by Andriy Voskoboinyk. Big thanks to Kevin Lo for testing changes to at least 8 drivers. Thanks to pluknet@, Oliver Hartmann, Olivier Cochard, gjb@, mmoll@, op@ and lev@, who also participated in testing. Reviewed by: adrian Sponsored by: Netflix Sponsored by: Nginx, Inc.
2015-08-27 08:56:39 +00:00
ic_printf(ic, "%s: invalid opmode %d\n", __func__,
cp.icp_opmode);
return EINVAL;
}
if ((ic->ic_caps & ieee80211_opcap[cp.icp_opmode]) == 0) {
Replay r286410. Change KPI of how device drivers that provide wireless connectivity interact with the net80211 stack. Historical background: originally wireless devices created an interface, just like Ethernet devices do. Name of an interface matched the name of the driver that created. Later, wlan(4) layer was introduced, and the wlanX interfaces become the actual interface, leaving original ones as "a parent interface" of wlanX. Kernelwise, the KPI between net80211 layer and a driver became a mix of methods that pass a pointer to struct ifnet as identifier and methods that pass pointer to struct ieee80211com. From user point of view, the parent interface just hangs on in the ifconfig list, and user can't do anything useful with it. Now, the struct ifnet goes away. The struct ieee80211com is the only KPI between a device driver and net80211. Details: - The struct ieee80211com is embedded into drivers softc. - Packets are sent via new ic_transmit method, which is very much like the previous if_transmit. - Bringing parent up/down is done via new ic_parent method, which notifies driver about any changes: number of wlan(4) interfaces, number of them in promisc or allmulti state. - Device specific ioctls (if any) are received on new ic_ioctl method. - Packets/errors accounting are done by the stack. In certain cases, when driver experiences errors and can not attribute them to any specific interface, driver updates ic_oerrors or ic_ierrors counters. Details on interface configuration with new world order: - A sequence of commands needed to bring up wireless DOESN"T change. - /etc/rc.conf parameters DON'T change. - List of devices that can be used to create wlan(4) interfaces is now provided by net.wlan.devices sysctl. Most drivers in this change were converted by me, except of wpi(4), that was done by Andriy Voskoboinyk. Big thanks to Kevin Lo for testing changes to at least 8 drivers. Thanks to pluknet@, Oliver Hartmann, Olivier Cochard, gjb@, mmoll@, op@ and lev@, who also participated in testing. Reviewed by: adrian Sponsored by: Netflix Sponsored by: Nginx, Inc.
2015-08-27 08:56:39 +00:00
ic_printf(ic, "%s mode not supported\n",
ieee80211_opmode_name[cp.icp_opmode]);
return EOPNOTSUPP;
}
if ((cp.icp_flags & IEEE80211_CLONE_TDMA) &&
#ifdef IEEE80211_SUPPORT_TDMA
(ic->ic_caps & IEEE80211_C_TDMA) == 0
#else
(1)
#endif
) {
Replay r286410. Change KPI of how device drivers that provide wireless connectivity interact with the net80211 stack. Historical background: originally wireless devices created an interface, just like Ethernet devices do. Name of an interface matched the name of the driver that created. Later, wlan(4) layer was introduced, and the wlanX interfaces become the actual interface, leaving original ones as "a parent interface" of wlanX. Kernelwise, the KPI between net80211 layer and a driver became a mix of methods that pass a pointer to struct ifnet as identifier and methods that pass pointer to struct ieee80211com. From user point of view, the parent interface just hangs on in the ifconfig list, and user can't do anything useful with it. Now, the struct ifnet goes away. The struct ieee80211com is the only KPI between a device driver and net80211. Details: - The struct ieee80211com is embedded into drivers softc. - Packets are sent via new ic_transmit method, which is very much like the previous if_transmit. - Bringing parent up/down is done via new ic_parent method, which notifies driver about any changes: number of wlan(4) interfaces, number of them in promisc or allmulti state. - Device specific ioctls (if any) are received on new ic_ioctl method. - Packets/errors accounting are done by the stack. In certain cases, when driver experiences errors and can not attribute them to any specific interface, driver updates ic_oerrors or ic_ierrors counters. Details on interface configuration with new world order: - A sequence of commands needed to bring up wireless DOESN"T change. - /etc/rc.conf parameters DON'T change. - List of devices that can be used to create wlan(4) interfaces is now provided by net.wlan.devices sysctl. Most drivers in this change were converted by me, except of wpi(4), that was done by Andriy Voskoboinyk. Big thanks to Kevin Lo for testing changes to at least 8 drivers. Thanks to pluknet@, Oliver Hartmann, Olivier Cochard, gjb@, mmoll@, op@ and lev@, who also participated in testing. Reviewed by: adrian Sponsored by: Netflix Sponsored by: Nginx, Inc.
2015-08-27 08:56:39 +00:00
ic_printf(ic, "TDMA not supported\n");
return EOPNOTSUPP;
}
vap = ic->ic_vap_create(ic, wlanname, unit,
cp.icp_opmode, cp.icp_flags, cp.icp_bssid,
cp.icp_flags & IEEE80211_CLONE_MACADDR ?
Replay r286410. Change KPI of how device drivers that provide wireless connectivity interact with the net80211 stack. Historical background: originally wireless devices created an interface, just like Ethernet devices do. Name of an interface matched the name of the driver that created. Later, wlan(4) layer was introduced, and the wlanX interfaces become the actual interface, leaving original ones as "a parent interface" of wlanX. Kernelwise, the KPI between net80211 layer and a driver became a mix of methods that pass a pointer to struct ifnet as identifier and methods that pass pointer to struct ieee80211com. From user point of view, the parent interface just hangs on in the ifconfig list, and user can't do anything useful with it. Now, the struct ifnet goes away. The struct ieee80211com is the only KPI between a device driver and net80211. Details: - The struct ieee80211com is embedded into drivers softc. - Packets are sent via new ic_transmit method, which is very much like the previous if_transmit. - Bringing parent up/down is done via new ic_parent method, which notifies driver about any changes: number of wlan(4) interfaces, number of them in promisc or allmulti state. - Device specific ioctls (if any) are received on new ic_ioctl method. - Packets/errors accounting are done by the stack. In certain cases, when driver experiences errors and can not attribute them to any specific interface, driver updates ic_oerrors or ic_ierrors counters. Details on interface configuration with new world order: - A sequence of commands needed to bring up wireless DOESN"T change. - /etc/rc.conf parameters DON'T change. - List of devices that can be used to create wlan(4) interfaces is now provided by net.wlan.devices sysctl. Most drivers in this change were converted by me, except of wpi(4), that was done by Andriy Voskoboinyk. Big thanks to Kevin Lo for testing changes to at least 8 drivers. Thanks to pluknet@, Oliver Hartmann, Olivier Cochard, gjb@, mmoll@, op@ and lev@, who also participated in testing. Reviewed by: adrian Sponsored by: Netflix Sponsored by: Nginx, Inc.
2015-08-27 08:56:39 +00:00
cp.icp_macaddr : ic->ic_macaddr);
return (vap == NULL ? EIO : 0);
}
static void
wlan_clone_destroy(struct ifnet *ifp)
{
struct ieee80211vap *vap = ifp->if_softc;
struct ieee80211com *ic = vap->iv_ic;
ic->ic_vap_delete(vap);
}
void
ieee80211_vap_destroy(struct ieee80211vap *vap)
{
CURVNET_SET(vap->iv_ifp->if_vnet);
if_clone_destroyif(wlan_cloner, vap->iv_ifp);
CURVNET_RESTORE();
}
int
ieee80211_sysctl_msecs_ticks(SYSCTL_HANDLER_ARGS)
{
int msecs = ticks_to_msecs(*(int *)arg1);
int error, t;
error = sysctl_handle_int(oidp, &msecs, 0, req);
if (error || !req->newptr)
return error;
t = msecs_to_ticks(msecs);
*(int *)arg1 = (t < 1) ? 1 : t;
return 0;
}
static int
ieee80211_sysctl_inact(SYSCTL_HANDLER_ARGS)
{
int inact = (*(int *)arg1) * IEEE80211_INACT_WAIT;
int error;
error = sysctl_handle_int(oidp, &inact, 0, req);
if (error || !req->newptr)
return error;
*(int *)arg1 = inact / IEEE80211_INACT_WAIT;
return 0;
}
static int
ieee80211_sysctl_parent(SYSCTL_HANDLER_ARGS)
{
struct ieee80211com *ic = arg1;
return SYSCTL_OUT_STR(req, ic->ic_name);
}
static int
ieee80211_sysctl_radar(SYSCTL_HANDLER_ARGS)
{
struct ieee80211com *ic = arg1;
int t = 0, error;
error = sysctl_handle_int(oidp, &t, 0, req);
if (error || !req->newptr)
return error;
IEEE80211_LOCK(ic);
ieee80211_dfs_notify_radar(ic, ic->ic_curchan);
IEEE80211_UNLOCK(ic);
return 0;
}
void
ieee80211_sysctl_attach(struct ieee80211com *ic)
{
}
void
ieee80211_sysctl_detach(struct ieee80211com *ic)
{
}
void
ieee80211_sysctl_vattach(struct ieee80211vap *vap)
{
struct ifnet *ifp = vap->iv_ifp;
struct sysctl_ctx_list *ctx;
struct sysctl_oid *oid;
char num[14]; /* sufficient for 32 bits */
ctx = (struct sysctl_ctx_list *) IEEE80211_MALLOC(sizeof(struct sysctl_ctx_list),
M_DEVBUF, IEEE80211_M_NOWAIT | IEEE80211_M_ZERO);
if (ctx == NULL) {
if_printf(ifp, "%s: cannot allocate sysctl context!\n",
__func__);
return;
}
sysctl_ctx_init(ctx);
snprintf(num, sizeof(num), "%u", ifp->if_dunit);
oid = SYSCTL_ADD_NODE(ctx, &SYSCTL_NODE_CHILDREN(_net, wlan),
OID_AUTO, num, CTLFLAG_RD, NULL, "");
SYSCTL_ADD_PROC(ctx, SYSCTL_CHILDREN(oid), OID_AUTO,
"%parent", CTLTYPE_STRING | CTLFLAG_RD, vap->iv_ic, 0,
ieee80211_sysctl_parent, "A", "parent device");
SYSCTL_ADD_UINT(ctx, SYSCTL_CHILDREN(oid), OID_AUTO,
"driver_caps", CTLFLAG_RW, &vap->iv_caps, 0,
"driver capabilities");
#ifdef IEEE80211_DEBUG
vap->iv_debug = ieee80211_debug;
SYSCTL_ADD_UINT(ctx, SYSCTL_CHILDREN(oid), OID_AUTO,
"debug", CTLFLAG_RW, &vap->iv_debug, 0,
"control debugging printfs");
#endif
SYSCTL_ADD_INT(ctx, SYSCTL_CHILDREN(oid), OID_AUTO,
"bmiss_max", CTLFLAG_RW, &vap->iv_bmiss_max, 0,
"consecutive beacon misses before scanning");
/* XXX inherit from tunables */
SYSCTL_ADD_PROC(ctx, SYSCTL_CHILDREN(oid), OID_AUTO,
"inact_run", CTLTYPE_INT | CTLFLAG_RW, &vap->iv_inact_run, 0,
ieee80211_sysctl_inact, "I",
"station inactivity timeout (sec)");
SYSCTL_ADD_PROC(ctx, SYSCTL_CHILDREN(oid), OID_AUTO,
"inact_probe", CTLTYPE_INT | CTLFLAG_RW, &vap->iv_inact_probe, 0,
ieee80211_sysctl_inact, "I",
"station inactivity probe timeout (sec)");
SYSCTL_ADD_PROC(ctx, SYSCTL_CHILDREN(oid), OID_AUTO,
"inact_auth", CTLTYPE_INT | CTLFLAG_RW, &vap->iv_inact_auth, 0,
ieee80211_sysctl_inact, "I",
"station authentication timeout (sec)");
SYSCTL_ADD_PROC(ctx, SYSCTL_CHILDREN(oid), OID_AUTO,
"inact_init", CTLTYPE_INT | CTLFLAG_RW, &vap->iv_inact_init, 0,
ieee80211_sysctl_inact, "I",
"station initial state timeout (sec)");
if (vap->iv_htcaps & IEEE80211_HTC_HT) {
SYSCTL_ADD_UINT(ctx, SYSCTL_CHILDREN(oid), OID_AUTO,
"ampdu_mintraffic_bk", CTLFLAG_RW,
&vap->iv_ampdu_mintraffic[WME_AC_BK], 0,
"BK traffic tx aggr threshold (pps)");
SYSCTL_ADD_UINT(ctx, SYSCTL_CHILDREN(oid), OID_AUTO,
"ampdu_mintraffic_be", CTLFLAG_RW,
&vap->iv_ampdu_mintraffic[WME_AC_BE], 0,
"BE traffic tx aggr threshold (pps)");
SYSCTL_ADD_UINT(ctx, SYSCTL_CHILDREN(oid), OID_AUTO,
"ampdu_mintraffic_vo", CTLFLAG_RW,
&vap->iv_ampdu_mintraffic[WME_AC_VO], 0,
"VO traffic tx aggr threshold (pps)");
SYSCTL_ADD_UINT(ctx, SYSCTL_CHILDREN(oid), OID_AUTO,
"ampdu_mintraffic_vi", CTLFLAG_RW,
&vap->iv_ampdu_mintraffic[WME_AC_VI], 0,
"VI traffic tx aggr threshold (pps)");
}
if (vap->iv_caps & IEEE80211_C_DFS) {
SYSCTL_ADD_PROC(ctx, SYSCTL_CHILDREN(oid), OID_AUTO,
"radar", CTLTYPE_INT | CTLFLAG_RW, vap->iv_ic, 0,
ieee80211_sysctl_radar, "I", "simulate radar event");
}
vap->iv_sysctl = ctx;
vap->iv_oid = oid;
}
void
ieee80211_sysctl_vdetach(struct ieee80211vap *vap)
{
if (vap->iv_sysctl != NULL) {
sysctl_ctx_free(vap->iv_sysctl);
IEEE80211_FREE(vap->iv_sysctl, M_DEVBUF);
vap->iv_sysctl = NULL;
}
}
int
ieee80211_node_dectestref(struct ieee80211_node *ni)
{
/* XXX need equivalent of atomic_dec_and_test */
atomic_subtract_int(&ni->ni_refcnt, 1);
return atomic_cmpset_int(&ni->ni_refcnt, 0, 1);
}
void
ieee80211_drain_ifq(struct ifqueue *ifq)
{
struct ieee80211_node *ni;
struct mbuf *m;
for (;;) {
IF_DEQUEUE(ifq, m);
if (m == NULL)
break;
ni = (struct ieee80211_node *)m->m_pkthdr.rcvif;
KASSERT(ni != NULL, ("frame w/o node"));
ieee80211_free_node(ni);
m->m_pkthdr.rcvif = NULL;
m_freem(m);
}
}
void
ieee80211_flush_ifq(struct ifqueue *ifq, struct ieee80211vap *vap)
{
struct ieee80211_node *ni;
struct mbuf *m, **mprev;
IF_LOCK(ifq);
mprev = &ifq->ifq_head;
while ((m = *mprev) != NULL) {
ni = (struct ieee80211_node *)m->m_pkthdr.rcvif;
if (ni != NULL && ni->ni_vap == vap) {
*mprev = m->m_nextpkt; /* remove from list */
ifq->ifq_len--;
m_freem(m);
ieee80211_free_node(ni); /* reclaim ref */
} else
mprev = &m->m_nextpkt;
}
/* recalculate tail ptr */
m = ifq->ifq_head;
for (; m != NULL && m->m_nextpkt != NULL; m = m->m_nextpkt)
;
ifq->ifq_tail = m;
IF_UNLOCK(ifq);
}
Update 802.11 wireless support: o major overhaul of the way channels are handled: channels are now fully enumerated and uniquely identify the operating characteristics; these changes are visible to user applications which require changes o make scanning support independent of the state machine to enable background scanning and roaming o move scanning support into loadable modules based on the operating mode to enable different policies and reduce the memory footprint on systems w/ constrained resources o add background scanning in station mode (no support for adhoc/ibss mode yet) o significantly speedup sta mode scanning with a variety of techniques o add roaming support when background scanning is supported; for now we use a simple algorithm to trigger a roam: we threshold the rssi and tx rate, if either drops too low we try to roam to a new ap o add tx fragmentation support o add first cut at 802.11n support: this code works with forthcoming drivers but is incomplete; it's included now to establish a baseline for other drivers to be developed and for user applications o adjust max_linkhdr et. al. to reflect 802.11 requirements; this eliminates prepending mbufs for traffic generated locally o add support for Atheros protocol extensions; mainly the fast frames encapsulation (note this can be used with any card that can tx+rx large frames correctly) o add sta support for ap's that beacon both WPA1+2 support o change all data types from bsd-style to posix-style o propagate noise floor data from drivers to net80211 and on to user apps o correct various issues in the sta mode state machine related to handling authentication and association failures o enable the addition of sta mode power save support for drivers that need net80211 support (not in this commit) o remove old WI compatibility ioctls (wicontrol is officially dead) o change the data structures returned for get sta info and get scan results so future additions will not break user apps o fixed tx rate is now maintained internally as an ieee rate and not an index into the rate set; this needs to be extended to deal with multi-mode operation o add extended channel specifications to radiotap to enable 11n sniffing Drivers: o ath: add support for bg scanning, tx fragmentation, fast frames, dynamic turbo (lightly tested), 11n (sniffing only and needs new hal) o awi: compile tested only o ndis: lightly tested o ipw: lightly tested o iwi: add support for bg scanning (well tested but may have some rough edges) o ral, ural, rum: add suppoort for bg scanning, calibrate rssi data o wi: lightly tested This work is based on contributions by Atheros, kmacy, sephe, thompsa, mlaier, kevlo, and others. Much of the scanning work was supported by Atheros. The 11n work was supported by Marvell.
2007-06-11 03:36:55 +00:00
/*
* As above, for mbufs allocated with m_gethdr/MGETHDR
* or initialized by M_COPY_PKTHDR.
*/
#define MC_ALIGN(m, len) \
do { \
(m)->m_data += (MCLBYTES - (len)) &~ (sizeof(long) - 1); \
} while (/* CONSTCOND */ 0)
/*
* Allocate and setup a management frame of the specified
* size. We return the mbuf and a pointer to the start
* of the contiguous data area that's been reserved based
* on the packet length. The data area is forced to 32-bit
* alignment and the buffer length to a multiple of 4 bytes.
* This is done mainly so beacon frames (that require this)
* can use this interface too.
*/
struct mbuf *
Update 802.11 wireless support: o major overhaul of the way channels are handled: channels are now fully enumerated and uniquely identify the operating characteristics; these changes are visible to user applications which require changes o make scanning support independent of the state machine to enable background scanning and roaming o move scanning support into loadable modules based on the operating mode to enable different policies and reduce the memory footprint on systems w/ constrained resources o add background scanning in station mode (no support for adhoc/ibss mode yet) o significantly speedup sta mode scanning with a variety of techniques o add roaming support when background scanning is supported; for now we use a simple algorithm to trigger a roam: we threshold the rssi and tx rate, if either drops too low we try to roam to a new ap o add tx fragmentation support o add first cut at 802.11n support: this code works with forthcoming drivers but is incomplete; it's included now to establish a baseline for other drivers to be developed and for user applications o adjust max_linkhdr et. al. to reflect 802.11 requirements; this eliminates prepending mbufs for traffic generated locally o add support for Atheros protocol extensions; mainly the fast frames encapsulation (note this can be used with any card that can tx+rx large frames correctly) o add sta support for ap's that beacon both WPA1+2 support o change all data types from bsd-style to posix-style o propagate noise floor data from drivers to net80211 and on to user apps o correct various issues in the sta mode state machine related to handling authentication and association failures o enable the addition of sta mode power save support for drivers that need net80211 support (not in this commit) o remove old WI compatibility ioctls (wicontrol is officially dead) o change the data structures returned for get sta info and get scan results so future additions will not break user apps o fixed tx rate is now maintained internally as an ieee rate and not an index into the rate set; this needs to be extended to deal with multi-mode operation o add extended channel specifications to radiotap to enable 11n sniffing Drivers: o ath: add support for bg scanning, tx fragmentation, fast frames, dynamic turbo (lightly tested), 11n (sniffing only and needs new hal) o awi: compile tested only o ndis: lightly tested o ipw: lightly tested o iwi: add support for bg scanning (well tested but may have some rough edges) o ral, ural, rum: add suppoort for bg scanning, calibrate rssi data o wi: lightly tested This work is based on contributions by Atheros, kmacy, sephe, thompsa, mlaier, kevlo, and others. Much of the scanning work was supported by Atheros. The 11n work was supported by Marvell.
2007-06-11 03:36:55 +00:00
ieee80211_getmgtframe(uint8_t **frm, int headroom, int pktlen)
{
struct mbuf *m;
u_int len;
/*
* NB: we know the mbuf routines will align the data area
* so we don't need to do anything special.
*/
Update 802.11 wireless support: o major overhaul of the way channels are handled: channels are now fully enumerated and uniquely identify the operating characteristics; these changes are visible to user applications which require changes o make scanning support independent of the state machine to enable background scanning and roaming o move scanning support into loadable modules based on the operating mode to enable different policies and reduce the memory footprint on systems w/ constrained resources o add background scanning in station mode (no support for adhoc/ibss mode yet) o significantly speedup sta mode scanning with a variety of techniques o add roaming support when background scanning is supported; for now we use a simple algorithm to trigger a roam: we threshold the rssi and tx rate, if either drops too low we try to roam to a new ap o add tx fragmentation support o add first cut at 802.11n support: this code works with forthcoming drivers but is incomplete; it's included now to establish a baseline for other drivers to be developed and for user applications o adjust max_linkhdr et. al. to reflect 802.11 requirements; this eliminates prepending mbufs for traffic generated locally o add support for Atheros protocol extensions; mainly the fast frames encapsulation (note this can be used with any card that can tx+rx large frames correctly) o add sta support for ap's that beacon both WPA1+2 support o change all data types from bsd-style to posix-style o propagate noise floor data from drivers to net80211 and on to user apps o correct various issues in the sta mode state machine related to handling authentication and association failures o enable the addition of sta mode power save support for drivers that need net80211 support (not in this commit) o remove old WI compatibility ioctls (wicontrol is officially dead) o change the data structures returned for get sta info and get scan results so future additions will not break user apps o fixed tx rate is now maintained internally as an ieee rate and not an index into the rate set; this needs to be extended to deal with multi-mode operation o add extended channel specifications to radiotap to enable 11n sniffing Drivers: o ath: add support for bg scanning, tx fragmentation, fast frames, dynamic turbo (lightly tested), 11n (sniffing only and needs new hal) o awi: compile tested only o ndis: lightly tested o ipw: lightly tested o iwi: add support for bg scanning (well tested but may have some rough edges) o ral, ural, rum: add suppoort for bg scanning, calibrate rssi data o wi: lightly tested This work is based on contributions by Atheros, kmacy, sephe, thompsa, mlaier, kevlo, and others. Much of the scanning work was supported by Atheros. The 11n work was supported by Marvell.
2007-06-11 03:36:55 +00:00
len = roundup2(headroom + pktlen, 4);
KASSERT(len <= MCLBYTES, ("802.11 mgt frame too large: %u", len));
if (len < MINCLSIZE) {
m = m_gethdr(M_NOWAIT, MT_DATA);
/*
* Align the data in case additional headers are added.
* This should only happen when a WEP header is added
* which only happens for shared key authentication mgt
* frames which all fit in MHLEN.
*/
if (m != NULL)
M_ALIGN(m, len);
Update 802.11 wireless support: o major overhaul of the way channels are handled: channels are now fully enumerated and uniquely identify the operating characteristics; these changes are visible to user applications which require changes o make scanning support independent of the state machine to enable background scanning and roaming o move scanning support into loadable modules based on the operating mode to enable different policies and reduce the memory footprint on systems w/ constrained resources o add background scanning in station mode (no support for adhoc/ibss mode yet) o significantly speedup sta mode scanning with a variety of techniques o add roaming support when background scanning is supported; for now we use a simple algorithm to trigger a roam: we threshold the rssi and tx rate, if either drops too low we try to roam to a new ap o add tx fragmentation support o add first cut at 802.11n support: this code works with forthcoming drivers but is incomplete; it's included now to establish a baseline for other drivers to be developed and for user applications o adjust max_linkhdr et. al. to reflect 802.11 requirements; this eliminates prepending mbufs for traffic generated locally o add support for Atheros protocol extensions; mainly the fast frames encapsulation (note this can be used with any card that can tx+rx large frames correctly) o add sta support for ap's that beacon both WPA1+2 support o change all data types from bsd-style to posix-style o propagate noise floor data from drivers to net80211 and on to user apps o correct various issues in the sta mode state machine related to handling authentication and association failures o enable the addition of sta mode power save support for drivers that need net80211 support (not in this commit) o remove old WI compatibility ioctls (wicontrol is officially dead) o change the data structures returned for get sta info and get scan results so future additions will not break user apps o fixed tx rate is now maintained internally as an ieee rate and not an index into the rate set; this needs to be extended to deal with multi-mode operation o add extended channel specifications to radiotap to enable 11n sniffing Drivers: o ath: add support for bg scanning, tx fragmentation, fast frames, dynamic turbo (lightly tested), 11n (sniffing only and needs new hal) o awi: compile tested only o ndis: lightly tested o ipw: lightly tested o iwi: add support for bg scanning (well tested but may have some rough edges) o ral, ural, rum: add suppoort for bg scanning, calibrate rssi data o wi: lightly tested This work is based on contributions by Atheros, kmacy, sephe, thompsa, mlaier, kevlo, and others. Much of the scanning work was supported by Atheros. The 11n work was supported by Marvell.
2007-06-11 03:36:55 +00:00
} else {
m = m_getcl(M_NOWAIT, MT_DATA, M_PKTHDR);
Update 802.11 wireless support: o major overhaul of the way channels are handled: channels are now fully enumerated and uniquely identify the operating characteristics; these changes are visible to user applications which require changes o make scanning support independent of the state machine to enable background scanning and roaming o move scanning support into loadable modules based on the operating mode to enable different policies and reduce the memory footprint on systems w/ constrained resources o add background scanning in station mode (no support for adhoc/ibss mode yet) o significantly speedup sta mode scanning with a variety of techniques o add roaming support when background scanning is supported; for now we use a simple algorithm to trigger a roam: we threshold the rssi and tx rate, if either drops too low we try to roam to a new ap o add tx fragmentation support o add first cut at 802.11n support: this code works with forthcoming drivers but is incomplete; it's included now to establish a baseline for other drivers to be developed and for user applications o adjust max_linkhdr et. al. to reflect 802.11 requirements; this eliminates prepending mbufs for traffic generated locally o add support for Atheros protocol extensions; mainly the fast frames encapsulation (note this can be used with any card that can tx+rx large frames correctly) o add sta support for ap's that beacon both WPA1+2 support o change all data types from bsd-style to posix-style o propagate noise floor data from drivers to net80211 and on to user apps o correct various issues in the sta mode state machine related to handling authentication and association failures o enable the addition of sta mode power save support for drivers that need net80211 support (not in this commit) o remove old WI compatibility ioctls (wicontrol is officially dead) o change the data structures returned for get sta info and get scan results so future additions will not break user apps o fixed tx rate is now maintained internally as an ieee rate and not an index into the rate set; this needs to be extended to deal with multi-mode operation o add extended channel specifications to radiotap to enable 11n sniffing Drivers: o ath: add support for bg scanning, tx fragmentation, fast frames, dynamic turbo (lightly tested), 11n (sniffing only and needs new hal) o awi: compile tested only o ndis: lightly tested o ipw: lightly tested o iwi: add support for bg scanning (well tested but may have some rough edges) o ral, ural, rum: add suppoort for bg scanning, calibrate rssi data o wi: lightly tested This work is based on contributions by Atheros, kmacy, sephe, thompsa, mlaier, kevlo, and others. Much of the scanning work was supported by Atheros. The 11n work was supported by Marvell.
2007-06-11 03:36:55 +00:00
if (m != NULL)
MC_ALIGN(m, len);
}
if (m != NULL) {
m->m_data += headroom;
*frm = m->m_data;
}
return m;
}
#ifndef __NO_STRICT_ALIGNMENT
/*
* Re-align the payload in the mbuf. This is mainly used (right now)
* to handle IP header alignment requirements on certain architectures.
*/
struct mbuf *
ieee80211_realign(struct ieee80211vap *vap, struct mbuf *m, size_t align)
{
int pktlen, space;
struct mbuf *n;
pktlen = m->m_pkthdr.len;
space = pktlen + align;
if (space < MINCLSIZE)
n = m_gethdr(M_NOWAIT, MT_DATA);
else {
n = m_getjcl(M_NOWAIT, MT_DATA, M_PKTHDR,
space <= MCLBYTES ? MCLBYTES :
#if MJUMPAGESIZE != MCLBYTES
space <= MJUMPAGESIZE ? MJUMPAGESIZE :
#endif
space <= MJUM9BYTES ? MJUM9BYTES : MJUM16BYTES);
}
if (__predict_true(n != NULL)) {
m_move_pkthdr(n, m);
n->m_data = (caddr_t)(ALIGN(n->m_data + align) - align);
m_copydata(m, 0, pktlen, mtod(n, caddr_t));
n->m_len = pktlen;
} else {
IEEE80211_DISCARD(vap, IEEE80211_MSG_ANY,
mtod(m, const struct ieee80211_frame *), NULL,
"%s", "no mbuf to realign");
vap->iv_stats.is_rx_badalign++;
}
m_freem(m);
return n;
}
#endif /* !__NO_STRICT_ALIGNMENT */
Update 802.11 wireless support: o major overhaul of the way channels are handled: channels are now fully enumerated and uniquely identify the operating characteristics; these changes are visible to user applications which require changes o make scanning support independent of the state machine to enable background scanning and roaming o move scanning support into loadable modules based on the operating mode to enable different policies and reduce the memory footprint on systems w/ constrained resources o add background scanning in station mode (no support for adhoc/ibss mode yet) o significantly speedup sta mode scanning with a variety of techniques o add roaming support when background scanning is supported; for now we use a simple algorithm to trigger a roam: we threshold the rssi and tx rate, if either drops too low we try to roam to a new ap o add tx fragmentation support o add first cut at 802.11n support: this code works with forthcoming drivers but is incomplete; it's included now to establish a baseline for other drivers to be developed and for user applications o adjust max_linkhdr et. al. to reflect 802.11 requirements; this eliminates prepending mbufs for traffic generated locally o add support for Atheros protocol extensions; mainly the fast frames encapsulation (note this can be used with any card that can tx+rx large frames correctly) o add sta support for ap's that beacon both WPA1+2 support o change all data types from bsd-style to posix-style o propagate noise floor data from drivers to net80211 and on to user apps o correct various issues in the sta mode state machine related to handling authentication and association failures o enable the addition of sta mode power save support for drivers that need net80211 support (not in this commit) o remove old WI compatibility ioctls (wicontrol is officially dead) o change the data structures returned for get sta info and get scan results so future additions will not break user apps o fixed tx rate is now maintained internally as an ieee rate and not an index into the rate set; this needs to be extended to deal with multi-mode operation o add extended channel specifications to radiotap to enable 11n sniffing Drivers: o ath: add support for bg scanning, tx fragmentation, fast frames, dynamic turbo (lightly tested), 11n (sniffing only and needs new hal) o awi: compile tested only o ndis: lightly tested o ipw: lightly tested o iwi: add support for bg scanning (well tested but may have some rough edges) o ral, ural, rum: add suppoort for bg scanning, calibrate rssi data o wi: lightly tested This work is based on contributions by Atheros, kmacy, sephe, thompsa, mlaier, kevlo, and others. Much of the scanning work was supported by Atheros. The 11n work was supported by Marvell.
2007-06-11 03:36:55 +00:00
int
ieee80211_add_callback(struct mbuf *m,
void (*func)(struct ieee80211_node *, void *, int), void *arg)
{
struct m_tag *mtag;
struct ieee80211_cb *cb;
mtag = m_tag_alloc(MTAG_ABI_NET80211, NET80211_TAG_CALLBACK,
sizeof(struct ieee80211_cb), M_NOWAIT);
if (mtag == NULL)
return 0;
cb = (struct ieee80211_cb *)(mtag+1);
cb->func = func;
cb->arg = arg;
m_tag_prepend(m, mtag);
m->m_flags |= M_TXCB;
return 1;
}
First pass of adding transmit parameters as an option for outbound 802.11 mbufs. The raw transmit path currently doesn't make it easy to queue these frames: * there's no node reference stored in the mbuf, like for the normal path, and * the bpf supplied raw transmit parameters (rate, rts/cts, etc) are passed in as an argument, not as an mbuf tag. In order to support driver queuing of these frames, we need to be able to put the above into the mbuf before the driver gets it, so the driver /can/ put it into a queue if needed. Use an mbuf tag and for now just verbatim copy the bpf parameters into it. Later on it may grow to include more options but this will do for now. Why would you want to queue raw frames? Well, in the case of iwn(4), we can't send the firmware frames to transmit before we hear a beacon - the firmware will consider passive channels as unavailable until it hears a beacon. The firmware "passive" channel state is cleared upon each RXON command, which is sent to update association status. So, when we attempt association and authorisation, the RXON command causes the firmware to clear out what it's already seen, and so we have to wait for a beacon before we can transmit. Before people get overly excited - this alone doesn't "fix" 5GHz operation - it just makes it (more) possible. The aim here is to convert all the drivers over to use a raw_xmit() API that doesn't include the node and params - instead they'd get those from the mbuf. Then raw_xmit() becomes just a side-channel version of the normal transmit path for management traffic. MFC after: 2 weeks Sponsored by: Norse Corp, Inc.
2015-06-04 06:30:39 +00:00
int
ieee80211_add_xmit_params(struct mbuf *m,
const struct ieee80211_bpf_params *params)
{
struct m_tag *mtag;
struct ieee80211_tx_params *tx;
mtag = m_tag_alloc(MTAG_ABI_NET80211, NET80211_TAG_XMIT_PARAMS,
sizeof(struct ieee80211_tx_params), M_NOWAIT);
if (mtag == NULL)
return (0);
tx = (struct ieee80211_tx_params *)(mtag+1);
memcpy(&tx->params, params, sizeof(struct ieee80211_bpf_params));
m_tag_prepend(m, mtag);
return (1);
}
int
ieee80211_get_xmit_params(struct mbuf *m,
struct ieee80211_bpf_params *params)
{
struct m_tag *mtag;
struct ieee80211_tx_params *tx;
mtag = m_tag_locate(m, MTAG_ABI_NET80211, NET80211_TAG_XMIT_PARAMS,
NULL);
if (mtag == NULL)
return (-1);
tx = (struct ieee80211_tx_params *)(mtag + 1);
memcpy(params, &tx->params, sizeof(struct ieee80211_bpf_params));
return (0);
}
Update 802.11 wireless support: o major overhaul of the way channels are handled: channels are now fully enumerated and uniquely identify the operating characteristics; these changes are visible to user applications which require changes o make scanning support independent of the state machine to enable background scanning and roaming o move scanning support into loadable modules based on the operating mode to enable different policies and reduce the memory footprint on systems w/ constrained resources o add background scanning in station mode (no support for adhoc/ibss mode yet) o significantly speedup sta mode scanning with a variety of techniques o add roaming support when background scanning is supported; for now we use a simple algorithm to trigger a roam: we threshold the rssi and tx rate, if either drops too low we try to roam to a new ap o add tx fragmentation support o add first cut at 802.11n support: this code works with forthcoming drivers but is incomplete; it's included now to establish a baseline for other drivers to be developed and for user applications o adjust max_linkhdr et. al. to reflect 802.11 requirements; this eliminates prepending mbufs for traffic generated locally o add support for Atheros protocol extensions; mainly the fast frames encapsulation (note this can be used with any card that can tx+rx large frames correctly) o add sta support for ap's that beacon both WPA1+2 support o change all data types from bsd-style to posix-style o propagate noise floor data from drivers to net80211 and on to user apps o correct various issues in the sta mode state machine related to handling authentication and association failures o enable the addition of sta mode power save support for drivers that need net80211 support (not in this commit) o remove old WI compatibility ioctls (wicontrol is officially dead) o change the data structures returned for get sta info and get scan results so future additions will not break user apps o fixed tx rate is now maintained internally as an ieee rate and not an index into the rate set; this needs to be extended to deal with multi-mode operation o add extended channel specifications to radiotap to enable 11n sniffing Drivers: o ath: add support for bg scanning, tx fragmentation, fast frames, dynamic turbo (lightly tested), 11n (sniffing only and needs new hal) o awi: compile tested only o ndis: lightly tested o ipw: lightly tested o iwi: add support for bg scanning (well tested but may have some rough edges) o ral, ural, rum: add suppoort for bg scanning, calibrate rssi data o wi: lightly tested This work is based on contributions by Atheros, kmacy, sephe, thompsa, mlaier, kevlo, and others. Much of the scanning work was supported by Atheros. The 11n work was supported by Marvell.
2007-06-11 03:36:55 +00:00
void
ieee80211_process_callback(struct ieee80211_node *ni,
struct mbuf *m, int status)
{
struct m_tag *mtag;
mtag = m_tag_locate(m, MTAG_ABI_NET80211, NET80211_TAG_CALLBACK, NULL);
if (mtag != NULL) {
struct ieee80211_cb *cb = (struct ieee80211_cb *)(mtag+1);
cb->func(ni, cb->arg, status);
}
}
/*
* Add RX parameters to the given mbuf.
*
* Returns 1 if OK, 0 on error.
*/
int
ieee80211_add_rx_params(struct mbuf *m, const struct ieee80211_rx_stats *rxs)
{
struct m_tag *mtag;
struct ieee80211_rx_params *rx;
mtag = m_tag_alloc(MTAG_ABI_NET80211, NET80211_TAG_RECV_PARAMS,
sizeof(struct ieee80211_rx_stats), M_NOWAIT);
if (mtag == NULL)
return (0);
rx = (struct ieee80211_rx_params *)(mtag + 1);
memcpy(&rx->params, rxs, sizeof(*rxs));
m_tag_prepend(m, mtag);
return (1);
}
int
ieee80211_get_rx_params(struct mbuf *m, struct ieee80211_rx_stats *rxs)
{
struct m_tag *mtag;
struct ieee80211_rx_params *rx;
mtag = m_tag_locate(m, MTAG_ABI_NET80211, NET80211_TAG_RECV_PARAMS,
NULL);
if (mtag == NULL)
return (-1);
rx = (struct ieee80211_rx_params *)(mtag + 1);
memcpy(rxs, &rx->params, sizeof(*rxs));
return (0);
}
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
/*
* Transmit a frame to the parent interface.
*/
int
Replay r286410. Change KPI of how device drivers that provide wireless connectivity interact with the net80211 stack. Historical background: originally wireless devices created an interface, just like Ethernet devices do. Name of an interface matched the name of the driver that created. Later, wlan(4) layer was introduced, and the wlanX interfaces become the actual interface, leaving original ones as "a parent interface" of wlanX. Kernelwise, the KPI between net80211 layer and a driver became a mix of methods that pass a pointer to struct ifnet as identifier and methods that pass pointer to struct ieee80211com. From user point of view, the parent interface just hangs on in the ifconfig list, and user can't do anything useful with it. Now, the struct ifnet goes away. The struct ieee80211com is the only KPI between a device driver and net80211. Details: - The struct ieee80211com is embedded into drivers softc. - Packets are sent via new ic_transmit method, which is very much like the previous if_transmit. - Bringing parent up/down is done via new ic_parent method, which notifies driver about any changes: number of wlan(4) interfaces, number of them in promisc or allmulti state. - Device specific ioctls (if any) are received on new ic_ioctl method. - Packets/errors accounting are done by the stack. In certain cases, when driver experiences errors and can not attribute them to any specific interface, driver updates ic_oerrors or ic_ierrors counters. Details on interface configuration with new world order: - A sequence of commands needed to bring up wireless DOESN"T change. - /etc/rc.conf parameters DON'T change. - List of devices that can be used to create wlan(4) interfaces is now provided by net.wlan.devices sysctl. Most drivers in this change were converted by me, except of wpi(4), that was done by Andriy Voskoboinyk. Big thanks to Kevin Lo for testing changes to at least 8 drivers. Thanks to pluknet@, Oliver Hartmann, Olivier Cochard, gjb@, mmoll@, op@ and lev@, who also participated in testing. Reviewed by: adrian Sponsored by: Netflix Sponsored by: Nginx, Inc.
2015-08-27 08:56:39 +00:00
ieee80211_parent_xmitpkt(struct ieee80211com *ic, struct mbuf *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
{
Replay r286410. Change KPI of how device drivers that provide wireless connectivity interact with the net80211 stack. Historical background: originally wireless devices created an interface, just like Ethernet devices do. Name of an interface matched the name of the driver that created. Later, wlan(4) layer was introduced, and the wlanX interfaces become the actual interface, leaving original ones as "a parent interface" of wlanX. Kernelwise, the KPI between net80211 layer and a driver became a mix of methods that pass a pointer to struct ifnet as identifier and methods that pass pointer to struct ieee80211com. From user point of view, the parent interface just hangs on in the ifconfig list, and user can't do anything useful with it. Now, the struct ifnet goes away. The struct ieee80211com is the only KPI between a device driver and net80211. Details: - The struct ieee80211com is embedded into drivers softc. - Packets are sent via new ic_transmit method, which is very much like the previous if_transmit. - Bringing parent up/down is done via new ic_parent method, which notifies driver about any changes: number of wlan(4) interfaces, number of them in promisc or allmulti state. - Device specific ioctls (if any) are received on new ic_ioctl method. - Packets/errors accounting are done by the stack. In certain cases, when driver experiences errors and can not attribute them to any specific interface, driver updates ic_oerrors or ic_ierrors counters. Details on interface configuration with new world order: - A sequence of commands needed to bring up wireless DOESN"T change. - /etc/rc.conf parameters DON'T change. - List of devices that can be used to create wlan(4) interfaces is now provided by net.wlan.devices sysctl. Most drivers in this change were converted by me, except of wpi(4), that was done by Andriy Voskoboinyk. Big thanks to Kevin Lo for testing changes to at least 8 drivers. Thanks to pluknet@, Oliver Hartmann, Olivier Cochard, gjb@, mmoll@, op@ and lev@, who also participated in testing. Reviewed by: adrian Sponsored by: Netflix Sponsored by: Nginx, Inc.
2015-08-27 08:56:39 +00:00
int error;
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
/*
* Assert the IC TX lock is held - this enforces the
* processing -> queuing order is maintained
*/
IEEE80211_TX_LOCK_ASSERT(ic);
Replay r286410. Change KPI of how device drivers that provide wireless connectivity interact with the net80211 stack. Historical background: originally wireless devices created an interface, just like Ethernet devices do. Name of an interface matched the name of the driver that created. Later, wlan(4) layer was introduced, and the wlanX interfaces become the actual interface, leaving original ones as "a parent interface" of wlanX. Kernelwise, the KPI between net80211 layer and a driver became a mix of methods that pass a pointer to struct ifnet as identifier and methods that pass pointer to struct ieee80211com. From user point of view, the parent interface just hangs on in the ifconfig list, and user can't do anything useful with it. Now, the struct ifnet goes away. The struct ieee80211com is the only KPI between a device driver and net80211. Details: - The struct ieee80211com is embedded into drivers softc. - Packets are sent via new ic_transmit method, which is very much like the previous if_transmit. - Bringing parent up/down is done via new ic_parent method, which notifies driver about any changes: number of wlan(4) interfaces, number of them in promisc or allmulti state. - Device specific ioctls (if any) are received on new ic_ioctl method. - Packets/errors accounting are done by the stack. In certain cases, when driver experiences errors and can not attribute them to any specific interface, driver updates ic_oerrors or ic_ierrors counters. Details on interface configuration with new world order: - A sequence of commands needed to bring up wireless DOESN"T change. - /etc/rc.conf parameters DON'T change. - List of devices that can be used to create wlan(4) interfaces is now provided by net.wlan.devices sysctl. Most drivers in this change were converted by me, except of wpi(4), that was done by Andriy Voskoboinyk. Big thanks to Kevin Lo for testing changes to at least 8 drivers. Thanks to pluknet@, Oliver Hartmann, Olivier Cochard, gjb@, mmoll@, op@ and lev@, who also participated in testing. Reviewed by: adrian Sponsored by: Netflix Sponsored by: Nginx, Inc.
2015-08-27 08:56:39 +00:00
error = ic->ic_transmit(ic, m);
if (error) {
struct ieee80211_node *ni;
ni = (struct ieee80211_node *)m->m_pkthdr.rcvif;
/* XXX number of fragments */
if_inc_counter(ni->ni_vap->iv_ifp, IFCOUNTER_OERRORS, 1);
ieee80211_free_node(ni);
ieee80211_free_mbuf(m);
}
Replay r286410. Change KPI of how device drivers that provide wireless connectivity interact with the net80211 stack. Historical background: originally wireless devices created an interface, just like Ethernet devices do. Name of an interface matched the name of the driver that created. Later, wlan(4) layer was introduced, and the wlanX interfaces become the actual interface, leaving original ones as "a parent interface" of wlanX. Kernelwise, the KPI between net80211 layer and a driver became a mix of methods that pass a pointer to struct ifnet as identifier and methods that pass pointer to struct ieee80211com. From user point of view, the parent interface just hangs on in the ifconfig list, and user can't do anything useful with it. Now, the struct ifnet goes away. The struct ieee80211com is the only KPI between a device driver and net80211. Details: - The struct ieee80211com is embedded into drivers softc. - Packets are sent via new ic_transmit method, which is very much like the previous if_transmit. - Bringing parent up/down is done via new ic_parent method, which notifies driver about any changes: number of wlan(4) interfaces, number of them in promisc or allmulti state. - Device specific ioctls (if any) are received on new ic_ioctl method. - Packets/errors accounting are done by the stack. In certain cases, when driver experiences errors and can not attribute them to any specific interface, driver updates ic_oerrors or ic_ierrors counters. Details on interface configuration with new world order: - A sequence of commands needed to bring up wireless DOESN"T change. - /etc/rc.conf parameters DON'T change. - List of devices that can be used to create wlan(4) interfaces is now provided by net.wlan.devices sysctl. Most drivers in this change were converted by me, except of wpi(4), that was done by Andriy Voskoboinyk. Big thanks to Kevin Lo for testing changes to at least 8 drivers. Thanks to pluknet@, Oliver Hartmann, Olivier Cochard, gjb@, mmoll@, op@ and lev@, who also participated in testing. Reviewed by: adrian Sponsored by: Netflix Sponsored by: Nginx, Inc.
2015-08-27 08:56:39 +00:00
return (error);
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
}
/*
* Transmit a frame to the VAP interface.
*/
int
ieee80211_vap_xmitpkt(struct ieee80211vap *vap, struct mbuf *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
{
struct ifnet *ifp = vap->iv_ifp;
/*
* When transmitting via the VAP, we shouldn't hold
* any IC TX lock as the VAP TX path will acquire it.
*/
IEEE80211_TX_UNLOCK_ASSERT(vap->iv_ic);
return (ifp->if_transmit(ifp, m));
}
#include <sys/libkern.h>
void
get_random_bytes(void *p, size_t n)
{
Update 802.11 wireless support: o major overhaul of the way channels are handled: channels are now fully enumerated and uniquely identify the operating characteristics; these changes are visible to user applications which require changes o make scanning support independent of the state machine to enable background scanning and roaming o move scanning support into loadable modules based on the operating mode to enable different policies and reduce the memory footprint on systems w/ constrained resources o add background scanning in station mode (no support for adhoc/ibss mode yet) o significantly speedup sta mode scanning with a variety of techniques o add roaming support when background scanning is supported; for now we use a simple algorithm to trigger a roam: we threshold the rssi and tx rate, if either drops too low we try to roam to a new ap o add tx fragmentation support o add first cut at 802.11n support: this code works with forthcoming drivers but is incomplete; it's included now to establish a baseline for other drivers to be developed and for user applications o adjust max_linkhdr et. al. to reflect 802.11 requirements; this eliminates prepending mbufs for traffic generated locally o add support for Atheros protocol extensions; mainly the fast frames encapsulation (note this can be used with any card that can tx+rx large frames correctly) o add sta support for ap's that beacon both WPA1+2 support o change all data types from bsd-style to posix-style o propagate noise floor data from drivers to net80211 and on to user apps o correct various issues in the sta mode state machine related to handling authentication and association failures o enable the addition of sta mode power save support for drivers that need net80211 support (not in this commit) o remove old WI compatibility ioctls (wicontrol is officially dead) o change the data structures returned for get sta info and get scan results so future additions will not break user apps o fixed tx rate is now maintained internally as an ieee rate and not an index into the rate set; this needs to be extended to deal with multi-mode operation o add extended channel specifications to radiotap to enable 11n sniffing Drivers: o ath: add support for bg scanning, tx fragmentation, fast frames, dynamic turbo (lightly tested), 11n (sniffing only and needs new hal) o awi: compile tested only o ndis: lightly tested o ipw: lightly tested o iwi: add support for bg scanning (well tested but may have some rough edges) o ral, ural, rum: add suppoort for bg scanning, calibrate rssi data o wi: lightly tested This work is based on contributions by Atheros, kmacy, sephe, thompsa, mlaier, kevlo, and others. Much of the scanning work was supported by Atheros. The 11n work was supported by Marvell.
2007-06-11 03:36:55 +00:00
uint8_t *dp = p;
while (n > 0) {
Update 802.11 wireless support: o major overhaul of the way channels are handled: channels are now fully enumerated and uniquely identify the operating characteristics; these changes are visible to user applications which require changes o make scanning support independent of the state machine to enable background scanning and roaming o move scanning support into loadable modules based on the operating mode to enable different policies and reduce the memory footprint on systems w/ constrained resources o add background scanning in station mode (no support for adhoc/ibss mode yet) o significantly speedup sta mode scanning with a variety of techniques o add roaming support when background scanning is supported; for now we use a simple algorithm to trigger a roam: we threshold the rssi and tx rate, if either drops too low we try to roam to a new ap o add tx fragmentation support o add first cut at 802.11n support: this code works with forthcoming drivers but is incomplete; it's included now to establish a baseline for other drivers to be developed and for user applications o adjust max_linkhdr et. al. to reflect 802.11 requirements; this eliminates prepending mbufs for traffic generated locally o add support for Atheros protocol extensions; mainly the fast frames encapsulation (note this can be used with any card that can tx+rx large frames correctly) o add sta support for ap's that beacon both WPA1+2 support o change all data types from bsd-style to posix-style o propagate noise floor data from drivers to net80211 and on to user apps o correct various issues in the sta mode state machine related to handling authentication and association failures o enable the addition of sta mode power save support for drivers that need net80211 support (not in this commit) o remove old WI compatibility ioctls (wicontrol is officially dead) o change the data structures returned for get sta info and get scan results so future additions will not break user apps o fixed tx rate is now maintained internally as an ieee rate and not an index into the rate set; this needs to be extended to deal with multi-mode operation o add extended channel specifications to radiotap to enable 11n sniffing Drivers: o ath: add support for bg scanning, tx fragmentation, fast frames, dynamic turbo (lightly tested), 11n (sniffing only and needs new hal) o awi: compile tested only o ndis: lightly tested o ipw: lightly tested o iwi: add support for bg scanning (well tested but may have some rough edges) o ral, ural, rum: add suppoort for bg scanning, calibrate rssi data o wi: lightly tested This work is based on contributions by Atheros, kmacy, sephe, thompsa, mlaier, kevlo, and others. Much of the scanning work was supported by Atheros. The 11n work was supported by Marvell.
2007-06-11 03:36:55 +00:00
uint32_t v = arc4random();
size_t nb = n > sizeof(uint32_t) ? sizeof(uint32_t) : n;
bcopy(&v, dp, n > sizeof(uint32_t) ? sizeof(uint32_t) : n);
dp += sizeof(uint32_t), n -= nb;
}
}
/*
* Helper function for events that pass just a single mac address.
*/
static void
notify_macaddr(struct ifnet *ifp, int op, const uint8_t mac[IEEE80211_ADDR_LEN])
{
struct ieee80211_join_event iev;
Change the curvnet variable from a global const struct vnet *, previously always pointing to the default vnet context, to a dynamically changing thread-local one. The currvnet context should be set on entry to networking code via CURVNET_SET() macros, and reverted to previous state via CURVNET_RESTORE(). Recursions on curvnet are permitted, though strongly discuouraged. This change should have no functional impact on nooptions VIMAGE kernel builds, where CURVNET_* macros expand to whitespace. The curthread->td_vnet (aka curvnet) variable's purpose is to be an indicator of the vnet context in which the current network-related operation takes place, in case we cannot deduce the current vnet context from any other source, such as by looking at mbuf's m->m_pkthdr.rcvif->if_vnet, sockets's so->so_vnet etc. Moreover, so far curvnet has turned out to be an invaluable consistency checking aid: it helps to catch cases when sockets, ifnets or any other vnet-aware structures may have leaked from one vnet to another. The exact placement of the CURVNET_SET() / CURVNET_RESTORE() macros was a result of an empirical iterative process, whith an aim to reduce recursions on CURVNET_SET() to a minimum, while still reducing the scope of CURVNET_SET() to networking only operations - the alternative would be calling CURVNET_SET() on each system call entry. In general, curvnet has to be set in three typicall cases: when processing socket-related requests from userspace or from within the kernel; when processing inbound traffic flowing from device drivers to upper layers of the networking stack, and when executing timer-driven networking functions. This change also introduces a DDB subcommand to show the list of all vnet instances. Approved by: julian (mentor)
2009-05-05 10:56:12 +00:00
CURVNET_SET(ifp->if_vnet);
memset(&iev, 0, sizeof(iev));
IEEE80211_ADDR_COPY(iev.iev_addr, mac);
rt_ieee80211msg(ifp, op, &iev, sizeof(iev));
Change the curvnet variable from a global const struct vnet *, previously always pointing to the default vnet context, to a dynamically changing thread-local one. The currvnet context should be set on entry to networking code via CURVNET_SET() macros, and reverted to previous state via CURVNET_RESTORE(). Recursions on curvnet are permitted, though strongly discuouraged. This change should have no functional impact on nooptions VIMAGE kernel builds, where CURVNET_* macros expand to whitespace. The curthread->td_vnet (aka curvnet) variable's purpose is to be an indicator of the vnet context in which the current network-related operation takes place, in case we cannot deduce the current vnet context from any other source, such as by looking at mbuf's m->m_pkthdr.rcvif->if_vnet, sockets's so->so_vnet etc. Moreover, so far curvnet has turned out to be an invaluable consistency checking aid: it helps to catch cases when sockets, ifnets or any other vnet-aware structures may have leaked from one vnet to another. The exact placement of the CURVNET_SET() / CURVNET_RESTORE() macros was a result of an empirical iterative process, whith an aim to reduce recursions on CURVNET_SET() to a minimum, while still reducing the scope of CURVNET_SET() to networking only operations - the alternative would be calling CURVNET_SET() on each system call entry. In general, curvnet has to be set in three typicall cases: when processing socket-related requests from userspace or from within the kernel; when processing inbound traffic flowing from device drivers to upper layers of the networking stack, and when executing timer-driven networking functions. This change also introduces a DDB subcommand to show the list of all vnet instances. Approved by: julian (mentor)
2009-05-05 10:56:12 +00:00
CURVNET_RESTORE();
}
void
ieee80211_notify_node_join(struct ieee80211_node *ni, int newassoc)
{
struct ieee80211vap *vap = ni->ni_vap;
struct ifnet *ifp = vap->iv_ifp;
Change the curvnet variable from a global const struct vnet *, previously always pointing to the default vnet context, to a dynamically changing thread-local one. The currvnet context should be set on entry to networking code via CURVNET_SET() macros, and reverted to previous state via CURVNET_RESTORE(). Recursions on curvnet are permitted, though strongly discuouraged. This change should have no functional impact on nooptions VIMAGE kernel builds, where CURVNET_* macros expand to whitespace. The curthread->td_vnet (aka curvnet) variable's purpose is to be an indicator of the vnet context in which the current network-related operation takes place, in case we cannot deduce the current vnet context from any other source, such as by looking at mbuf's m->m_pkthdr.rcvif->if_vnet, sockets's so->so_vnet etc. Moreover, so far curvnet has turned out to be an invaluable consistency checking aid: it helps to catch cases when sockets, ifnets or any other vnet-aware structures may have leaked from one vnet to another. The exact placement of the CURVNET_SET() / CURVNET_RESTORE() macros was a result of an empirical iterative process, whith an aim to reduce recursions on CURVNET_SET() to a minimum, while still reducing the scope of CURVNET_SET() to networking only operations - the alternative would be calling CURVNET_SET() on each system call entry. In general, curvnet has to be set in three typicall cases: when processing socket-related requests from userspace or from within the kernel; when processing inbound traffic flowing from device drivers to upper layers of the networking stack, and when executing timer-driven networking functions. This change also introduces a DDB subcommand to show the list of all vnet instances. Approved by: julian (mentor)
2009-05-05 10:56:12 +00:00
CURVNET_SET_QUIET(ifp->if_vnet);
IEEE80211_NOTE(vap, IEEE80211_MSG_NODE, ni, "%snode join",
(ni == vap->iv_bss) ? "bss " : "");
if (ni == vap->iv_bss) {
notify_macaddr(ifp, newassoc ?
RTM_IEEE80211_ASSOC : RTM_IEEE80211_REASSOC, ni->ni_bssid);
if_link_state_change(ifp, LINK_STATE_UP);
} else {
notify_macaddr(ifp, newassoc ?
RTM_IEEE80211_JOIN : RTM_IEEE80211_REJOIN, ni->ni_macaddr);
}
Change the curvnet variable from a global const struct vnet *, previously always pointing to the default vnet context, to a dynamically changing thread-local one. The currvnet context should be set on entry to networking code via CURVNET_SET() macros, and reverted to previous state via CURVNET_RESTORE(). Recursions on curvnet are permitted, though strongly discuouraged. This change should have no functional impact on nooptions VIMAGE kernel builds, where CURVNET_* macros expand to whitespace. The curthread->td_vnet (aka curvnet) variable's purpose is to be an indicator of the vnet context in which the current network-related operation takes place, in case we cannot deduce the current vnet context from any other source, such as by looking at mbuf's m->m_pkthdr.rcvif->if_vnet, sockets's so->so_vnet etc. Moreover, so far curvnet has turned out to be an invaluable consistency checking aid: it helps to catch cases when sockets, ifnets or any other vnet-aware structures may have leaked from one vnet to another. The exact placement of the CURVNET_SET() / CURVNET_RESTORE() macros was a result of an empirical iterative process, whith an aim to reduce recursions on CURVNET_SET() to a minimum, while still reducing the scope of CURVNET_SET() to networking only operations - the alternative would be calling CURVNET_SET() on each system call entry. In general, curvnet has to be set in three typicall cases: when processing socket-related requests from userspace or from within the kernel; when processing inbound traffic flowing from device drivers to upper layers of the networking stack, and when executing timer-driven networking functions. This change also introduces a DDB subcommand to show the list of all vnet instances. Approved by: julian (mentor)
2009-05-05 10:56:12 +00:00
CURVNET_RESTORE();
}
void
ieee80211_notify_node_leave(struct ieee80211_node *ni)
{
struct ieee80211vap *vap = ni->ni_vap;
struct ifnet *ifp = vap->iv_ifp;
Change the curvnet variable from a global const struct vnet *, previously always pointing to the default vnet context, to a dynamically changing thread-local one. The currvnet context should be set on entry to networking code via CURVNET_SET() macros, and reverted to previous state via CURVNET_RESTORE(). Recursions on curvnet are permitted, though strongly discuouraged. This change should have no functional impact on nooptions VIMAGE kernel builds, where CURVNET_* macros expand to whitespace. The curthread->td_vnet (aka curvnet) variable's purpose is to be an indicator of the vnet context in which the current network-related operation takes place, in case we cannot deduce the current vnet context from any other source, such as by looking at mbuf's m->m_pkthdr.rcvif->if_vnet, sockets's so->so_vnet etc. Moreover, so far curvnet has turned out to be an invaluable consistency checking aid: it helps to catch cases when sockets, ifnets or any other vnet-aware structures may have leaked from one vnet to another. The exact placement of the CURVNET_SET() / CURVNET_RESTORE() macros was a result of an empirical iterative process, whith an aim to reduce recursions on CURVNET_SET() to a minimum, while still reducing the scope of CURVNET_SET() to networking only operations - the alternative would be calling CURVNET_SET() on each system call entry. In general, curvnet has to be set in three typicall cases: when processing socket-related requests from userspace or from within the kernel; when processing inbound traffic flowing from device drivers to upper layers of the networking stack, and when executing timer-driven networking functions. This change also introduces a DDB subcommand to show the list of all vnet instances. Approved by: julian (mentor)
2009-05-05 10:56:12 +00:00
CURVNET_SET_QUIET(ifp->if_vnet);
IEEE80211_NOTE(vap, IEEE80211_MSG_NODE, ni, "%snode leave",
(ni == vap->iv_bss) ? "bss " : "");
if (ni == vap->iv_bss) {
rt_ieee80211msg(ifp, RTM_IEEE80211_DISASSOC, NULL, 0);
if_link_state_change(ifp, LINK_STATE_DOWN);
} else {
/* fire off wireless event station leaving */
notify_macaddr(ifp, RTM_IEEE80211_LEAVE, ni->ni_macaddr);
}
Change the curvnet variable from a global const struct vnet *, previously always pointing to the default vnet context, to a dynamically changing thread-local one. The currvnet context should be set on entry to networking code via CURVNET_SET() macros, and reverted to previous state via CURVNET_RESTORE(). Recursions on curvnet are permitted, though strongly discuouraged. This change should have no functional impact on nooptions VIMAGE kernel builds, where CURVNET_* macros expand to whitespace. The curthread->td_vnet (aka curvnet) variable's purpose is to be an indicator of the vnet context in which the current network-related operation takes place, in case we cannot deduce the current vnet context from any other source, such as by looking at mbuf's m->m_pkthdr.rcvif->if_vnet, sockets's so->so_vnet etc. Moreover, so far curvnet has turned out to be an invaluable consistency checking aid: it helps to catch cases when sockets, ifnets or any other vnet-aware structures may have leaked from one vnet to another. The exact placement of the CURVNET_SET() / CURVNET_RESTORE() macros was a result of an empirical iterative process, whith an aim to reduce recursions on CURVNET_SET() to a minimum, while still reducing the scope of CURVNET_SET() to networking only operations - the alternative would be calling CURVNET_SET() on each system call entry. In general, curvnet has to be set in three typicall cases: when processing socket-related requests from userspace or from within the kernel; when processing inbound traffic flowing from device drivers to upper layers of the networking stack, and when executing timer-driven networking functions. This change also introduces a DDB subcommand to show the list of all vnet instances. Approved by: julian (mentor)
2009-05-05 10:56:12 +00:00
CURVNET_RESTORE();
}
void
ieee80211_notify_scan_done(struct ieee80211vap *vap)
{
struct ifnet *ifp = vap->iv_ifp;
IEEE80211_DPRINTF(vap, IEEE80211_MSG_SCAN, "%s\n", "notify scan done");
/* dispatch wireless event indicating scan completed */
Change the curvnet variable from a global const struct vnet *, previously always pointing to the default vnet context, to a dynamically changing thread-local one. The currvnet context should be set on entry to networking code via CURVNET_SET() macros, and reverted to previous state via CURVNET_RESTORE(). Recursions on curvnet are permitted, though strongly discuouraged. This change should have no functional impact on nooptions VIMAGE kernel builds, where CURVNET_* macros expand to whitespace. The curthread->td_vnet (aka curvnet) variable's purpose is to be an indicator of the vnet context in which the current network-related operation takes place, in case we cannot deduce the current vnet context from any other source, such as by looking at mbuf's m->m_pkthdr.rcvif->if_vnet, sockets's so->so_vnet etc. Moreover, so far curvnet has turned out to be an invaluable consistency checking aid: it helps to catch cases when sockets, ifnets or any other vnet-aware structures may have leaked from one vnet to another. The exact placement of the CURVNET_SET() / CURVNET_RESTORE() macros was a result of an empirical iterative process, whith an aim to reduce recursions on CURVNET_SET() to a minimum, while still reducing the scope of CURVNET_SET() to networking only operations - the alternative would be calling CURVNET_SET() on each system call entry. In general, curvnet has to be set in three typicall cases: when processing socket-related requests from userspace or from within the kernel; when processing inbound traffic flowing from device drivers to upper layers of the networking stack, and when executing timer-driven networking functions. This change also introduces a DDB subcommand to show the list of all vnet instances. Approved by: julian (mentor)
2009-05-05 10:56:12 +00:00
CURVNET_SET(ifp->if_vnet);
rt_ieee80211msg(ifp, RTM_IEEE80211_SCAN, NULL, 0);
Change the curvnet variable from a global const struct vnet *, previously always pointing to the default vnet context, to a dynamically changing thread-local one. The currvnet context should be set on entry to networking code via CURVNET_SET() macros, and reverted to previous state via CURVNET_RESTORE(). Recursions on curvnet are permitted, though strongly discuouraged. This change should have no functional impact on nooptions VIMAGE kernel builds, where CURVNET_* macros expand to whitespace. The curthread->td_vnet (aka curvnet) variable's purpose is to be an indicator of the vnet context in which the current network-related operation takes place, in case we cannot deduce the current vnet context from any other source, such as by looking at mbuf's m->m_pkthdr.rcvif->if_vnet, sockets's so->so_vnet etc. Moreover, so far curvnet has turned out to be an invaluable consistency checking aid: it helps to catch cases when sockets, ifnets or any other vnet-aware structures may have leaked from one vnet to another. The exact placement of the CURVNET_SET() / CURVNET_RESTORE() macros was a result of an empirical iterative process, whith an aim to reduce recursions on CURVNET_SET() to a minimum, while still reducing the scope of CURVNET_SET() to networking only operations - the alternative would be calling CURVNET_SET() on each system call entry. In general, curvnet has to be set in three typicall cases: when processing socket-related requests from userspace or from within the kernel; when processing inbound traffic flowing from device drivers to upper layers of the networking stack, and when executing timer-driven networking functions. This change also introduces a DDB subcommand to show the list of all vnet instances. Approved by: julian (mentor)
2009-05-05 10:56:12 +00:00
CURVNET_RESTORE();
}
void
ieee80211_notify_replay_failure(struct ieee80211vap *vap,
const struct ieee80211_frame *wh, const struct ieee80211_key *k,
u_int64_t rsc, int tid)
{
struct ifnet *ifp = vap->iv_ifp;
IEEE80211_NOTE_MAC(vap, IEEE80211_MSG_CRYPTO, wh->i_addr2,
"%s replay detected tid %d <rsc %ju, csc %ju, keyix %u rxkeyix %u>",
k->wk_cipher->ic_name, tid, (intmax_t) rsc,
(intmax_t) k->wk_keyrsc[tid],
Split crypto tx+rx key indices and add a key index -> node mapping table: Crypto changes: o change driver/net80211 key_alloc api to return tx+rx key indices; a driver can leave the rx key index set to IEEE80211_KEYIX_NONE or set it to be the same as the tx key index (the former disables use of the key index in building the keyix->node mapping table and is the default setup for naive drivers by null_key_alloc) o add cs_max_keyid to crypto state to specify the max h/w key index a driver will return; this is used to allocate the key index mapping table and to bounds check table loookups o while here introduce ieee80211_keyix (finally) for the type of a h/w key index o change crypto notifiers for rx failures to pass the rx key index up as appropriate (michael failure, replay, etc.) Node table changes: o optionally allocate a h/w key index to node mapping table for the station table using the max key index setting supplied by drivers (note the scan table does not get a map) o defer node table allocation to lateattach so the driver has a chance to set the max key id to size the key index map o while here also defer the aid bitmap allocation o add new ieee80211_find_rxnode_withkey api to find a sta/node entry on frame receive with an optional h/w key index to use in checking mapping table; also updates the map if it does a hash lookup and the found node has a rx key index set in the unicast key; note this work is separated from the old ieee80211_find_rxnode call so drivers do not need to be aware of the new mechanism o move some node table manipulation under the node table lock to close a race on node delete o add ieee80211_node_delucastkey to do the dirty work of deleting unicast key state for a node (deletes any key and handles key map references) Ath driver: o nuke private sc_keyixmap mechansim in favor of net80211 support o update key alloc api These changes close several race conditions for the ath driver operating in ap mode. Other drivers should see no change. Station mode operation for ath no longer uses the key index map but performance tests show no noticeable change and this will be fixed when the scan table is eliminated with the new scanning support. Tested by: Michal Mertl, avatar, others Reviewed by: avatar, others MFC after: 2 weeks
2005-08-08 18:46:36 +00:00
k->wk_keyix, k->wk_rxkeyix);
if (ifp != NULL) { /* NB: for cipher test modules */
struct ieee80211_replay_event iev;
IEEE80211_ADDR_COPY(iev.iev_dst, wh->i_addr1);
IEEE80211_ADDR_COPY(iev.iev_src, wh->i_addr2);
iev.iev_cipher = k->wk_cipher->ic_cipher;
Split crypto tx+rx key indices and add a key index -> node mapping table: Crypto changes: o change driver/net80211 key_alloc api to return tx+rx key indices; a driver can leave the rx key index set to IEEE80211_KEYIX_NONE or set it to be the same as the tx key index (the former disables use of the key index in building the keyix->node mapping table and is the default setup for naive drivers by null_key_alloc) o add cs_max_keyid to crypto state to specify the max h/w key index a driver will return; this is used to allocate the key index mapping table and to bounds check table loookups o while here introduce ieee80211_keyix (finally) for the type of a h/w key index o change crypto notifiers for rx failures to pass the rx key index up as appropriate (michael failure, replay, etc.) Node table changes: o optionally allocate a h/w key index to node mapping table for the station table using the max key index setting supplied by drivers (note the scan table does not get a map) o defer node table allocation to lateattach so the driver has a chance to set the max key id to size the key index map o while here also defer the aid bitmap allocation o add new ieee80211_find_rxnode_withkey api to find a sta/node entry on frame receive with an optional h/w key index to use in checking mapping table; also updates the map if it does a hash lookup and the found node has a rx key index set in the unicast key; note this work is separated from the old ieee80211_find_rxnode call so drivers do not need to be aware of the new mechanism o move some node table manipulation under the node table lock to close a race on node delete o add ieee80211_node_delucastkey to do the dirty work of deleting unicast key state for a node (deletes any key and handles key map references) Ath driver: o nuke private sc_keyixmap mechansim in favor of net80211 support o update key alloc api These changes close several race conditions for the ath driver operating in ap mode. Other drivers should see no change. Station mode operation for ath no longer uses the key index map but performance tests show no noticeable change and this will be fixed when the scan table is eliminated with the new scanning support. Tested by: Michal Mertl, avatar, others Reviewed by: avatar, others MFC after: 2 weeks
2005-08-08 18:46:36 +00:00
if (k->wk_rxkeyix != IEEE80211_KEYIX_NONE)
iev.iev_keyix = k->wk_rxkeyix;
else
iev.iev_keyix = k->wk_keyix;
iev.iev_keyrsc = k->wk_keyrsc[tid];
iev.iev_rsc = rsc;
Change the curvnet variable from a global const struct vnet *, previously always pointing to the default vnet context, to a dynamically changing thread-local one. The currvnet context should be set on entry to networking code via CURVNET_SET() macros, and reverted to previous state via CURVNET_RESTORE(). Recursions on curvnet are permitted, though strongly discuouraged. This change should have no functional impact on nooptions VIMAGE kernel builds, where CURVNET_* macros expand to whitespace. The curthread->td_vnet (aka curvnet) variable's purpose is to be an indicator of the vnet context in which the current network-related operation takes place, in case we cannot deduce the current vnet context from any other source, such as by looking at mbuf's m->m_pkthdr.rcvif->if_vnet, sockets's so->so_vnet etc. Moreover, so far curvnet has turned out to be an invaluable consistency checking aid: it helps to catch cases when sockets, ifnets or any other vnet-aware structures may have leaked from one vnet to another. The exact placement of the CURVNET_SET() / CURVNET_RESTORE() macros was a result of an empirical iterative process, whith an aim to reduce recursions on CURVNET_SET() to a minimum, while still reducing the scope of CURVNET_SET() to networking only operations - the alternative would be calling CURVNET_SET() on each system call entry. In general, curvnet has to be set in three typicall cases: when processing socket-related requests from userspace or from within the kernel; when processing inbound traffic flowing from device drivers to upper layers of the networking stack, and when executing timer-driven networking functions. This change also introduces a DDB subcommand to show the list of all vnet instances. Approved by: julian (mentor)
2009-05-05 10:56:12 +00:00
CURVNET_SET(ifp->if_vnet);
rt_ieee80211msg(ifp, RTM_IEEE80211_REPLAY, &iev, sizeof(iev));
Change the curvnet variable from a global const struct vnet *, previously always pointing to the default vnet context, to a dynamically changing thread-local one. The currvnet context should be set on entry to networking code via CURVNET_SET() macros, and reverted to previous state via CURVNET_RESTORE(). Recursions on curvnet are permitted, though strongly discuouraged. This change should have no functional impact on nooptions VIMAGE kernel builds, where CURVNET_* macros expand to whitespace. The curthread->td_vnet (aka curvnet) variable's purpose is to be an indicator of the vnet context in which the current network-related operation takes place, in case we cannot deduce the current vnet context from any other source, such as by looking at mbuf's m->m_pkthdr.rcvif->if_vnet, sockets's so->so_vnet etc. Moreover, so far curvnet has turned out to be an invaluable consistency checking aid: it helps to catch cases when sockets, ifnets or any other vnet-aware structures may have leaked from one vnet to another. The exact placement of the CURVNET_SET() / CURVNET_RESTORE() macros was a result of an empirical iterative process, whith an aim to reduce recursions on CURVNET_SET() to a minimum, while still reducing the scope of CURVNET_SET() to networking only operations - the alternative would be calling CURVNET_SET() on each system call entry. In general, curvnet has to be set in three typicall cases: when processing socket-related requests from userspace or from within the kernel; when processing inbound traffic flowing from device drivers to upper layers of the networking stack, and when executing timer-driven networking functions. This change also introduces a DDB subcommand to show the list of all vnet instances. Approved by: julian (mentor)
2009-05-05 10:56:12 +00:00
CURVNET_RESTORE();
}
}
void
ieee80211_notify_michael_failure(struct ieee80211vap *vap,
const struct ieee80211_frame *wh, u_int keyix)
{
struct ifnet *ifp = vap->iv_ifp;
IEEE80211_NOTE_MAC(vap, IEEE80211_MSG_CRYPTO, wh->i_addr2,
"michael MIC verification failed <keyix %u>", keyix);
vap->iv_stats.is_rx_tkipmic++;
if (ifp != NULL) { /* NB: for cipher test modules */
struct ieee80211_michael_event iev;
IEEE80211_ADDR_COPY(iev.iev_dst, wh->i_addr1);
IEEE80211_ADDR_COPY(iev.iev_src, wh->i_addr2);
iev.iev_cipher = IEEE80211_CIPHER_TKIP;
iev.iev_keyix = keyix;
Change the curvnet variable from a global const struct vnet *, previously always pointing to the default vnet context, to a dynamically changing thread-local one. The currvnet context should be set on entry to networking code via CURVNET_SET() macros, and reverted to previous state via CURVNET_RESTORE(). Recursions on curvnet are permitted, though strongly discuouraged. This change should have no functional impact on nooptions VIMAGE kernel builds, where CURVNET_* macros expand to whitespace. The curthread->td_vnet (aka curvnet) variable's purpose is to be an indicator of the vnet context in which the current network-related operation takes place, in case we cannot deduce the current vnet context from any other source, such as by looking at mbuf's m->m_pkthdr.rcvif->if_vnet, sockets's so->so_vnet etc. Moreover, so far curvnet has turned out to be an invaluable consistency checking aid: it helps to catch cases when sockets, ifnets or any other vnet-aware structures may have leaked from one vnet to another. The exact placement of the CURVNET_SET() / CURVNET_RESTORE() macros was a result of an empirical iterative process, whith an aim to reduce recursions on CURVNET_SET() to a minimum, while still reducing the scope of CURVNET_SET() to networking only operations - the alternative would be calling CURVNET_SET() on each system call entry. In general, curvnet has to be set in three typicall cases: when processing socket-related requests from userspace or from within the kernel; when processing inbound traffic flowing from device drivers to upper layers of the networking stack, and when executing timer-driven networking functions. This change also introduces a DDB subcommand to show the list of all vnet instances. Approved by: julian (mentor)
2009-05-05 10:56:12 +00:00
CURVNET_SET(ifp->if_vnet);
rt_ieee80211msg(ifp, RTM_IEEE80211_MICHAEL, &iev, sizeof(iev));
Change the curvnet variable from a global const struct vnet *, previously always pointing to the default vnet context, to a dynamically changing thread-local one. The currvnet context should be set on entry to networking code via CURVNET_SET() macros, and reverted to previous state via CURVNET_RESTORE(). Recursions on curvnet are permitted, though strongly discuouraged. This change should have no functional impact on nooptions VIMAGE kernel builds, where CURVNET_* macros expand to whitespace. The curthread->td_vnet (aka curvnet) variable's purpose is to be an indicator of the vnet context in which the current network-related operation takes place, in case we cannot deduce the current vnet context from any other source, such as by looking at mbuf's m->m_pkthdr.rcvif->if_vnet, sockets's so->so_vnet etc. Moreover, so far curvnet has turned out to be an invaluable consistency checking aid: it helps to catch cases when sockets, ifnets or any other vnet-aware structures may have leaked from one vnet to another. The exact placement of the CURVNET_SET() / CURVNET_RESTORE() macros was a result of an empirical iterative process, whith an aim to reduce recursions on CURVNET_SET() to a minimum, while still reducing the scope of CURVNET_SET() to networking only operations - the alternative would be calling CURVNET_SET() on each system call entry. In general, curvnet has to be set in three typicall cases: when processing socket-related requests from userspace or from within the kernel; when processing inbound traffic flowing from device drivers to upper layers of the networking stack, and when executing timer-driven networking functions. This change also introduces a DDB subcommand to show the list of all vnet instances. Approved by: julian (mentor)
2009-05-05 10:56:12 +00:00
CURVNET_RESTORE();
}
}
void
ieee80211_notify_wds_discover(struct ieee80211_node *ni)
{
struct ieee80211vap *vap = ni->ni_vap;
struct ifnet *ifp = vap->iv_ifp;
notify_macaddr(ifp, RTM_IEEE80211_WDS, ni->ni_macaddr);
}
void
ieee80211_notify_csa(struct ieee80211com *ic,
const struct ieee80211_channel *c, int mode, int count)
{
struct ieee80211_csa_event iev;
struct ieee80211vap *vap;
struct ifnet *ifp;
memset(&iev, 0, sizeof(iev));
iev.iev_flags = c->ic_flags;
iev.iev_freq = c->ic_freq;
iev.iev_ieee = c->ic_ieee;
iev.iev_mode = mode;
iev.iev_count = count;
TAILQ_FOREACH(vap, &ic->ic_vaps, iv_next) {
ifp = vap->iv_ifp;
CURVNET_SET(ifp->if_vnet);
rt_ieee80211msg(ifp, RTM_IEEE80211_CSA, &iev, sizeof(iev));
CURVNET_RESTORE();
}
}
void
ieee80211_notify_radar(struct ieee80211com *ic,
const struct ieee80211_channel *c)
{
struct ieee80211_radar_event iev;
struct ieee80211vap *vap;
struct ifnet *ifp;
memset(&iev, 0, sizeof(iev));
iev.iev_flags = c->ic_flags;
iev.iev_freq = c->ic_freq;
iev.iev_ieee = c->ic_ieee;
TAILQ_FOREACH(vap, &ic->ic_vaps, iv_next) {
ifp = vap->iv_ifp;
CURVNET_SET(ifp->if_vnet);
rt_ieee80211msg(ifp, RTM_IEEE80211_RADAR, &iev, sizeof(iev));
CURVNET_RESTORE();
}
}
void
ieee80211_notify_cac(struct ieee80211com *ic,
const struct ieee80211_channel *c, enum ieee80211_notify_cac_event type)
{
struct ieee80211_cac_event iev;
struct ieee80211vap *vap;
struct ifnet *ifp;
memset(&iev, 0, sizeof(iev));
iev.iev_flags = c->ic_flags;
iev.iev_freq = c->ic_freq;
iev.iev_ieee = c->ic_ieee;
iev.iev_type = type;
TAILQ_FOREACH(vap, &ic->ic_vaps, iv_next) {
ifp = vap->iv_ifp;
CURVNET_SET(ifp->if_vnet);
rt_ieee80211msg(ifp, RTM_IEEE80211_CAC, &iev, sizeof(iev));
CURVNET_RESTORE();
}
}
void
ieee80211_notify_node_deauth(struct ieee80211_node *ni)
{
struct ieee80211vap *vap = ni->ni_vap;
struct ifnet *ifp = vap->iv_ifp;
IEEE80211_NOTE(vap, IEEE80211_MSG_NODE, ni, "%s", "node deauth");
notify_macaddr(ifp, RTM_IEEE80211_DEAUTH, ni->ni_macaddr);
}
void
ieee80211_notify_node_auth(struct ieee80211_node *ni)
{
struct ieee80211vap *vap = ni->ni_vap;
struct ifnet *ifp = vap->iv_ifp;
IEEE80211_NOTE(vap, IEEE80211_MSG_NODE, ni, "%s", "node auth");
notify_macaddr(ifp, RTM_IEEE80211_AUTH, ni->ni_macaddr);
}
void
ieee80211_notify_country(struct ieee80211vap *vap,
const uint8_t bssid[IEEE80211_ADDR_LEN], const uint8_t cc[2])
{
struct ifnet *ifp = vap->iv_ifp;
struct ieee80211_country_event iev;
memset(&iev, 0, sizeof(iev));
IEEE80211_ADDR_COPY(iev.iev_addr, bssid);
iev.iev_cc[0] = cc[0];
iev.iev_cc[1] = cc[1];
CURVNET_SET(ifp->if_vnet);
rt_ieee80211msg(ifp, RTM_IEEE80211_COUNTRY, &iev, sizeof(iev));
CURVNET_RESTORE();
}
void
ieee80211_notify_radio(struct ieee80211com *ic, int state)
{
struct ieee80211_radio_event iev;
struct ieee80211vap *vap;
struct ifnet *ifp;
memset(&iev, 0, sizeof(iev));
iev.iev_state = state;
TAILQ_FOREACH(vap, &ic->ic_vaps, iv_next) {
ifp = vap->iv_ifp;
CURVNET_SET(ifp->if_vnet);
rt_ieee80211msg(ifp, RTM_IEEE80211_RADIO, &iev, sizeof(iev));
CURVNET_RESTORE();
}
}
void
ieee80211_load_module(const char *modname)
{
#ifdef notyet
(void)kern_kldload(curthread, modname, NULL);
#else
printf("%s: load the %s module by hand for now.\n", __func__, modname);
#endif
}
static eventhandler_tag wlan_bpfevent;
static void
bpf_track(void *arg, struct ifnet *ifp, int dlt, int attach)
{
/* NB: identify vap's by if_init */
if (dlt == DLT_IEEE802_11_RADIO &&
ifp->if_init == ieee80211_init) {
struct ieee80211vap *vap = ifp->if_softc;
/*
* Track bpf radiotap listener state. We mark the vap
* to indicate if any listener is present and the com
* to indicate if any listener exists on any associated
* vap. This flag is used by drivers to prepare radiotap
* state only when needed.
*/
if (attach) {
ieee80211_syncflag_ext(vap, IEEE80211_FEXT_BPF);
if (vap->iv_opmode == IEEE80211_M_MONITOR)
atomic_add_int(&vap->iv_ic->ic_montaps, 1);
} else if (!bpf_peers_present(vap->iv_rawbpf)) {
ieee80211_syncflag_ext(vap, -IEEE80211_FEXT_BPF);
if (vap->iv_opmode == IEEE80211_M_MONITOR)
atomic_subtract_int(&vap->iv_ic->ic_montaps, 1);
}
}
}
/*
* Module glue.
*
* NB: the module name is "wlan" for compatibility with NetBSD.
*/
static int
wlan_modevent(module_t mod, int type, void *unused)
{
switch (type) {
case MOD_LOAD:
if (bootverbose)
printf("wlan: <802.11 Link Layer>\n");
wlan_bpfevent = EVENTHANDLER_REGISTER(bpf_track,
bpf_track, 0, EVENTHANDLER_PRI_ANY);
wlan_cloner = if_clone_simple(wlanname, wlan_clone_create,
wlan_clone_destroy, 0);
return 0;
case MOD_UNLOAD:
if_clone_detach(wlan_cloner);
EVENTHANDLER_DEREGISTER(bpf_track, wlan_bpfevent);
return 0;
}
return EINVAL;
}
static moduledata_t wlan_mod = {
wlanname,
wlan_modevent,
0
};
DECLARE_MODULE(wlan, wlan_mod, SI_SUB_DRIVERS, SI_ORDER_FIRST);
MODULE_VERSION(wlan, 1);
MODULE_DEPEND(wlan, ether, 1, 1, 1);
#ifdef IEEE80211_ALQ
MODULE_DEPEND(wlan, alq, 1, 1, 1);
#endif /* IEEE80211_ALQ */