By setting 'auto', the zero address or the empty string as source
address (option ipaddr, option ip6addr), vxlan will choose one
dynamically. This helps in setups where a wan ip or prefix changes.
This corresponse to setting up an vxlan tunnel with:
proto vxlan6:
# ip link add vx0 type vxlan id ID local :: ...
proto vxlan:
# ip link add vx0 type vxlan id ID local 0.0.0.0 ...
While it is possible to not specify a source ip at all, the kernel will
default to setting up a ipv4 tunnel. The kernel will take any hint from
source and peer ips to figure out, what tunnel type to use. To make sure
we setup an ipv6 tunnel for proto vxlan6, this workaround is needed.
This will not change the behaviour of currently working configurations.
However this will allow former broken configurations, namely those not
specifying both a source address and tunnel interface, to setup a
tunnel interface. Previously those configurations weren't reporting an
error and were stueck in a setup loop like in Bug FS#3426.
This change lifts the currently very strict behaviour and should fix the
following bug:
Fixes: FS#3426
Ref: https://bugs.openwrt.org/index.php?do=details&task_id=3426
Signed-off-by: Johannes Kimmel <fff@bareminimum.eu>
b75bcad dhcpv6-ia: remove assignment equal to 0 checks
d1ae052 dhcpv6-ia: fix logic to include IA_PD prefix with lifetimes set to 0
9d5e379 dhcpv6-ia: fix prefix delegation behavior
Signed-off-by: Hans Dedecker <dedeckeh@gmail.com>
As of hostapd upstream commit 7d2ed8ba "Remove CONFIG_IEEE80211W build parameter"
https://w1.fi/cgit/hostap/commit?id=7d2ed8bae86a31dd2df45c24b3f7281d55315482
802.11w feature is always enabled in the build time.
It doesn't make sense to opt-in 802.11w per driver as hostapd will always
be compiled with this feature enabled.
As suggested by Hauke Mehrtens, for now keep 11w enabled in build_features.h
for compatibility reasons. This option will be dropped when LuCI is adjusted.
Signed-off-by: Dobroslaw Kijowski <dobo90@gmail.com>
When hostapd gets restarted to often/quickly will cause procd to not restart it
anymore. it will think that hapd is in a crash loop.
Signed-off-by: John Crispin <john@phrozen.org>
Signed-off-by: Felix Fietkau <nbd@nbd.name> [adjust respawn time]
Currently, EAPOLv2 (802.1X-2004) is used by default for legacy clients that
are not WPA2 (RSN) capable. These legacy clients are often intolerant to this
EAPOL version and fail to connect.
hostapd.conf upstream documents for eapol_version the following and that this
is a known compatibility issue with version 2:
// IEEE 802.1X/EAPOL version
// hostapd is implemented based on IEEE Std 802.1X-2004 which defines EAPOL
// version 2. However, there are many client implementations that do not handle
// the new version number correctly (they seem to drop the frames completely).
// In order to make hostapd interoperate with these clients, the version number
// can be set to the older version (1) with this configuration value.
// Note: When using MACsec, eapol_version shall be set to 3, which is
// defined in IEEE Std 802.1X-2010.
//eapol_version=2
For the wpa parameter, hostapd.conf upstream documents that this is a bitfield,
configured as follows:
// Enable WPA. Setting this variable configures the AP to require WPA (either
// WPA-PSK or WPA-RADIUS/EAP based on other configuration). For WPA-PSK, either
// wpa_psk or wpa_passphrase must be set and wpa_key_mgmt must include WPA-PSK.
// Instead of wpa_psk / wpa_passphrase, wpa_psk_radius might suffice.
// For WPA-RADIUS/EAP, ieee8021x must be set (but without dynamic WEP keys),
// RADIUS authentication server must be configured, and WPA-EAP must be included
// in wpa_key_mgmt.
// This field is a bit field that can be used to enable WPA (IEEE 802.11i/D3.0)
// and/or WPA2 (full IEEE 802.11i/RSN):
// bit0 = WPA
// bit1 = IEEE 802.11i/RSN (WPA2) (dot11RSNAEnabled)
// Note that WPA3 is also configured with bit1 since it uses RSN just like WPA2.
// In other words, for WPA3, wpa=2 is used the configuration (and
// wpa_key_mgmt=SAE for WPA3-Personal instead of wpa_key_mgmt=WPA-PSK).
//wpa=2
For client compatibility therefore:
EAPOLv1 (802.1X-2001) should be used by default where WPA is enabled.
EAPOLv2 (802.1X-2004) should be used by default where WPA is disabled.
To fix this, we can therefore change in the script:
set_default eapol_version 0
To the following:
set_default eapol_version $((wpa & 1))
This therefore:
1) Sets eapol_version to 1 where WPA has been enabled via wpa bit0 being set.
2) Sets eapol_version to 0 where WPA has been disabled via wpa bit0 being unset.
For usual configurations that only have WPA2 enabled, EAPOLv2 is then used.
Signed-off-by: Nick Lowe <nick.lowe@gmail.com>
The patch removes a libpcap check to avoid a problem with libpcap. Fix
libpcap instead.
Modernize Makefile:
Use a normal autoconf bool instead of checking for CONFIG_IPV6.
Remove old configure and MAKE_FLAGS hacks. Removing them results in
compilation continuing to work without a problem.
Signed-off-by: Rosen Penev <rosenp@gmail.com>
hostapd.sh does not parse skip_inactivity_poll boolean from
/etc/config/wireless despite being mentioned in the documentation [1].
This change fixes this, and by default sets its value to 0 [1].
[1] https://openwrt.org/docs/guide-user/network/wifi/basic
Signed-off-by: Nadim Atiya <nadim.atiya@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Golle <daniel@makrotopia.org>
[fix and reformat commit message, make patch apply]
So we can ship px5g-wolfssl by default in the release image, but still
make the HTTPS for LuCI optional. This small change with addition of
`CONFIG_PACKAGE_px5g-wolfssl=y` into the buildbot's seed config for the
next release should provide optional HTTPS in the next release.
Disabling the current default automatic uhttpd's redirect to HTTPS
should make the HTTPS optional. That's it, user would either need to
switch to HTTPS by manually switching to https:// protocol in the URL or
by issuing the following commands to make the HTTPS automatic redirect
permanent:
$ uci set uhttpd.main.redirect_https=1
$ uci commit uhttpd
$ service uhttpd reload
Signed-off-by: Petr Štetiar <ynezz@true.cz>
You shouldn't need the overhead of GRE just to add multicast
capability on a point-to-point interface (for instance, you might
want to run mDNS over IPsec transport connections, and Avahi
requires IFF_MULTICAST be set on interfaces, even point-to-point
ones).
Borrowed heavily from:
b3c9321b9e gre: Support multicast configurable gre interfaces
Signed-off-by: Philip Prindeville <philipp@redfish-solutions.com>
Bump package version after previous changes.
Signed-off-by: Konstantin Demin <rockdrilla@gmail.com>
[added missing commit description]
Signed-off-by: Petr Štetiar <ynezz@true.cz>
binary size cost is much less than 1k.
tested on ath79/generic:
bin: 215128 -> 215132 (+4b)
ipk: 111183 -> 111494 (+311b)
Signed-off-by: Konstantin Demin <rockdrilla@gmail.com>
this commit removes manual recipes for options and introduces mapping lists:
- DB_OPT_COMMON holds option mappings which are common for all builds;
- DB_OPT_CONFIG holds option mappings which are depend on config settings.
DB_OPT_COMMON is space-separated list of 'words', each of them is in format:
'header_option|value'
'header_option' is added with value 'value' to 'localoptions.h'.
if 'header_option' is preceded by two exclamation marks ('!!')
then option is not added to 'localoptions.h' but replaced in 'sysoptions.h'.
in short:
option|value - add option to localoptions.h
!!option|value - replace option in sysoptions.h
DB_OPT_CONFIG is space-separated list of 'words', each of them is in format:
'header_option|config_variable|value_enabled|value_disabled'
'header_option' is handled likewise in DB_OPT_COMMON.
if 'config_variable' is enabled (technically: not disabled)
then 'header_option' is set to 'value_enabled' and 'value_disabled' otherwise.
in short:
option|config|enabled|disabled = add option to localoptions.h
!!option|config|enabled|disabled = replace option in sysoptions.h
option := (config) ? enabled : disabled
If you're not sure that option's value doesn't have '|' within - add your recipe
manually right after '$(Build/Configure/dropbear_headers)' and write some words
about your decision.
PS about two exclamation marks:
early idea was to use one exclamation mark to denote such header options
but then i thought single exclamation mark may be overlooked by mistake.
Signed-off-by: Konstantin Demin <rockdrilla@gmail.com>
- add two helper functions to avoid mistakes with
choice of correct header file to work with
- update rules accordingly
Signed-off-by: Konstantin Demin <rockdrilla@gmail.com>
put static options at first place, then place configurable options.
also put DROPBEAR_ECC right before DROPBEAR_ECC_FULL to ease maintainance.
Signed-off-by: Konstantin Demin <rockdrilla@gmail.com>
this option was disabled in 2011 and these long nine years showed us that change was definitely wrong.
binary size cost is much less than 1k.
tested on ath79/generic:
bin: 215128 -> 215128 (no change)
ipk: 111108 -> 111183 (+75b)
Fixes: 3c801b3dc0 ("tune some more options by default to decrease size")
Signed-off-by: Konstantin Demin <rockdrilla@gmail.com>
The package has no reason to be in openwrt.git. Move it to packages.git.
Signed-off-by: Paul Spooren <mail@aparcar.org>
Acked-by: Jo-Philipp Wich <jo@mein.io>
The lldpd sources ship a modified local AX_LIB_READLINE M4 macro which
conflicts with the official macro shipped by autoconf-archive.
Due to the official macro having the same name and a higher serial
number, autoconf will prefer including that one instead of the local
copy, preventing the substitution of @READLINE_LIBS@ in Makefile.in
templates, ultimately leading to the following build failure when
linking lldpcli:
...-gcc: error: READLINE_LIBS@: No such file or directory
Avoid this problem by renaming the locally shipped macro to not clash
with the official implementation anymore.
Ref: https://github.com/lldpd/lldpd/pull/423
Acked-by: Stijn Tintel <stijn@linux-ipv6.be>
Tested-by: Rosen Penev <rosenp@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jo-Philipp Wich <jo@mein.io>
Set legacy_rates to 0 by default to disable 802.11b data rates by default.
The time has long come where 802.11b DSSS/CCK data rates should be disabled
by default in OpenWRT. Users in need of 802.11b client support can reasonably
enable these where they are needed.
The balance of equities has significantly, and for a long time, tipped
such that dropping backwards compatibility by default with 802.11b
devices is appropriate, proportionate and justified. By doing so,
management and control traffic is moved by default to a 20
MHz wide 6 Mb/s OFDM data rate instead of a 22 MHz wide 1 Mb/s DSSS data
rate. This is significantly more airtime efficient.
Signed-off-by: Nick Lowe <nick.lowe@gmail.com>
faed29a dhcpv6: only refresh timers when reconfigure is valid
9c50975 dhcpv6: fix printing identity association id
a7b2221 dhcpv6: avoid sending continuous renew/rebind messages
d7afa2b dhcpv6: add extra syslog info traces
f5728e4 odhcp6c_find_entry: exclude priority from the list of fields that must match
Signed-off-by: Hans Dedecker <dedeckeh@gmail.com>
d6bd1047d004 vlandev: dump vlan id in device status
e0c838bd06a6 vlandev: support bridge-vlan aliases in the vid config parameter
574dc4a17105 system-dummy: print configured mac address
14f0e8ff928f system-linux: simplify mask check in system_if_apply_settings
524310276f20 system-linux: move device settings handling to device.c
42c48866f1c1 config: parse default mac address from board.json
Signed-off-by: Felix Fietkau <nbd@nbd.name>
This should fix an issue when user have a router with enabled seccomp
and tries to run umdns package which was build with SDK with disabled
seccomp support.
Signed-off-by: Jan Pavlinec <jan.pavlinec@nic.cz>
Add a cell_density option to configure data rates for normal, high and
very high cell density wireless deployments.
The purpose of using a minimum basic/mandatory data rate that is higher
than 6 Mb/s, or 5.5 Mb/s (802.11b compatible), in high cell density
environments is to transmit broadcast/multicast data frames using less
airtime or to reduce management overheads where significant co-channel
interference (CCI) exists and cannot be avoided.
Caution: Without careful design and validation, configuration of a too
high minimum basic/mandatory data rate can sacrifice connection stability
or disrupt the ability to reliably connect and authenticate for little to
no capacity benefit. This is because this configuration affects the
ability of clients to hear and demodulate management, control and
broadcast/multicast data frames.
Deployments that have not been specifically designed and validated are
usually best suited to use 6, 12 and 24 Mb/s as basic/mandatory data
rates.
Only usually seek to configure a 12 Mb/s, or 11 Mb/s (802.11b
compatible), minimum basic/mandatory rate in high cell density
deployments that have been designed and validated for this.
For many deployments, the minimum basic/mandatory data rate should not be
configured above 12 Mb/s to 18 Mb/s, 24 Mb/s or higher. Such a
configuration is only appropriate for use in very high cell density
deployment scenarios.
A cell_density of Very High (3) should only be used where a deployment
has a valid use case and has been designed and validated specifically for
this use, nearly always with highly directional antennas - an example
would be stadium deployments. For example, with a 24 Mb/s OFDM minimum
basic/mandatory data rate, approximately a -73 dBm RSSI is required to
decode frames. Many clients will not have roamed elsewhere by the time
that they experience -73 dBm and, where they do, they frequently may not
hear and be able to demodulate beacon, control or broadcast/multicast
data frames causing connectivity issues.
There is a myth that disabling lower basic/mandatory data rates will
improve roaming and avoid sticky clients. For 802.11n, 802.11ac and
802.11ax clients this is not correct as clients will shift to and use
lower MCS rates and not to the 802.11b or 802.11g/802.11a rates that are
able to be used as basic/mandatory data rates.
There is a myth that disabling lower basic/mandatory data rates will
ensure that clients only use higher data rates and that better
performance is assured. For 802.11n, 802.11ac and 802.11ax clients this
is not correct as clients will shift around and use MCS rates and not the
802.11b or 802.11g/802.11a rates that able to be used as basic/mandatory
data rates.
Cell Density
0 - Disabled (Default)
Setting cell_density to 0 does not configure data rates. This is the
default.
1 - Normal Cell Density
Setting cell_density to 1 configures the basic/mandatory rates to 6, 12
and 24 Mb/s OFDM rates where legacy_rates is 0. Supported rates lower
than the minimum basic/mandatory rate are not offered.
Setting cell_density to 1 configures the basic/mandatory rates to the 5.5
and 11 Mb/s DSSS rates where legacy_rates is 1. Supported rates lower
than the minimum basic/mandatory rate are not offered.
2 - High Cell Density
Setting the cell_density to 2 configures the basic/mandatory rates to the
12 and 24 Mb/s OFDM rates where legacy_rates is 0. Supported rates lower
than the minimum basic/mandatory rate are not offered.
Setting the cell_density to 2 configures the basic/mandatory rates to the
11 Mb/s DSSS rate where legacy_rates is 1. Supported rates lower than the
minimum basic/mandatory rate are not offered.
3 - Very High Cell Density
Setting the cell_density to 3 configures the basic/mandatory rates to the
24 Mb/s OFDM rate where legacy_rates is 0. Supported rates lower than the
minimum basic/mandatory rate are not offered.
Setting the cell_density to 3 only has effect where legacy_rates is 0,
else this has the same effect as being configured with a cell_density of 2.
Where specified, the basic_rate and supported_rates options continue to
override both the cell_density and legacy_rates options.
Signed-off-by: Nick Lowe <nick.lowe@gmail.com>
Several variables in hostapd.sh can be used uninitialized in numerical
comparisons, causing errors in logread:
netifd: radio24 (1668): sh: out of range
Set defaults for those variables to silence those errors.
Fixes: b518f07d4b ("hostapd: remove ieee80211v option")
Fixes: cc80cf53c5 ("hostapd: add FTM responder support")
Fixes: e66bd0eb04 ("hostapd: make rrm report independent of ieee80211k setting")
Signed-off-by: Stijn Tintel <stijn@linux-ipv6.be>
This PR backports upstream fix for CVE-2020-8037. This fix is only
relevant for tcpdump package, tcpdump-mini is not affeted by this issue.
Signed-off-by: Jan Pavlinec <jan.pavlinec@nic.cz>
[added missing commit description]
Signed-off-by: Petr Štetiar <ynezz@true.cz>
Setting the plmn to '0' (auto) will implicitly lead to a (delayed)
network re-registration, which could further lead to some timing
related issues in the qmi proto handler.
On the other hand, if you switch back from manual plmn selection
to auto mode you have to set it to '0', because this setting is
permanently "saved" in the wwan module.
Conclusion:
If plmn is configured, check if it's already set euqally in the module.
If so, do nothing. Otherwise set it.
Signed-off-by: Martin Schiller <ms@dev.tdt.de>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Golle <daniel@makrotopia.org>
Fixes the offset of the patch added in 93bbd998aa
("hostapd: enter DFS state if no available channel is found").
Signed-off-by: Leon M. George <leon@georgemail.eu>
213748a9bcd9 system-linux: implement full device present state management for force-external devices
3abe1fc87151 system-linux: add retry for adding member devices to a bridge
Signed-off-by: Felix Fietkau <nbd@nbd.name>
There already was an option for autoconfiguring IPv4 from QMI but this
was removed by commit 3b9b963e6e ("uqmi: always use DHCP for IPv4").
DHCP does not work on MR400 LTE module (in TL-MR6400 v4) so let's readd
support for IPv4 autoconf from QMI but this time allow to configure this
for IPv4 and IPv6 independently and keep DHCP default on IPv4.
Signed-off-by: Filip Moc <lede@moc6.cz>
Give possibility to wait forever the registration by setting timeout
option to 0.
No timeout can be useful if the interface starts whereas no network is
available, because at the end of timeout the interface will be stopped
and never restarted.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Richard <thomas.richard@kontron.com>
351d690f1a09 wireless: fix passing bridge name for vlan hotplug pass-through
c1c2728946b5 config: initialize bridge and bridge vlans before other devices
5e18d5b9ccb1 interface: do not force link-ext hotplug interfaces to present by default
4544f026bb09 bridge-vlan: add support for defining aliases for vlan ids
Signed-off-by: Felix Fietkau <nbd@nbd.name>
No special changes, just get in sync with recent code.
See here for the changelog:
http://software.es.net/iperf/news.html#iperf-3-9-released
The ipkg sizes changes as follows for mips 24kc :
3.7 : iperf3_3.7-1_mips_24kc.ipk 39675
3.9 : iperf3_3.9-1_mips_24kc.ipk 41586
Signed-off-by: Hauke Mehrtens <hauke@hauke-m.de>
This sets the validity interval for the BSS transition candidate
list to the same value as the disassociation timer.
Currently the value is always 0, which is the specification states is a
reserved value. Also, wpa_supplicant and from the looks of it some
Android implementations will outright ignore the candidate list in this
case.
Signed-off-by: David Bauer <mail@david-bauer.net>
* Add support for passing airtime_sta_weight into hostapd configuration.
* Since that commit it is possible to configure station weights. Set higher
value for larger airtime share, lower for smaller share.
I have tested this functionality by modyfing /etc/config/wireless to:
config wifi-device 'radio0'
...
option airtime_mode '1'
config wifi-iface 'default_radio0'
...
list airtime_sta_weight '01:02:03:04:05:06 1024'
Now, when the station associates with the access point it has been assigned
a higher weight value.
root@OpenWrt:~# cat /sys/kernel/debug/ieee80211/phy0/netdev\:wlan0/stations/01\:02\:03\:04\:05\:06/airtime
RX: 12656 us
TX: 10617 us
Weight: 1024
Deficit: VO: -2075 us VI: 256 us BE: -206 us BK: 256 us
[MAC address has been changed into a dummy one.]
Signed-off-by: Dobroslaw Kijowski <dobo90@gmail.com>