NAME
ieee80211_scan — 802.11 scanning supportSYNOPSIS
#include <net80211/ieee80211_var.h>int
ieee80211_start_scan(struct ieee80211vap *, int flags, u_int duration, u_int mindwell, u_int maxdwell, u_int nssid, const struct ieee80211_scan_ssid ssids[]); int
ieee80211_check_scan(struct ieee80211vap *, int flags, u_int duration, u_int mindwell, u_int maxdwell, u_int nssid, const struct ieee80211_scan_ssid ssids[]); int
ieee80211_check_scan_current(struct ieee80211vap *); int
ieee80211_bg_scan(struct ieee80211vap *, int); int
ieee80211_cancel_scan(struct ieee80211vap *); int
ieee80211_cancel_scan_any(struct ieee80211vap *); int
ieee80211_scan_next(struct ieee80211vap *); int
ieee80211_scan_done(struct ieee80211vap *); int
ieee80211_probe_curchan(struct ieee80211vap *, int); void
ieee80211_add_scan(struct ieee80211vap *, const struct ieee80211_scanparams *, const struct ieee80211_frame *, int subtype, int rssi, int noise); void
ieee80211_scan_timeout(struct ieee80211com *); void
ieee80211_scan_assoc_fail(struct ieee80211vap *, const uint8_t mac[IEEE80211_ADDR_LEN], int reason); void
ieee80211_scan_flush(struct ieee80211vap *); void
ieee80211_scan_iterate(struct ieee80211vap *, ieee80211_scan_iter_func, void *); void
ieee80211_scan_dump_channels(const struct ieee80211_scan_state *); void
ieee80211_scanner_register(enum ieee80211_opmode, const struct ieee80211_scanner *); void
ieee80211_scanner_unregister(enum ieee80211_opmode, const struct ieee80211_scanner *); void
ieee80211_scanner_unregister_all(const struct ieee80211_scanner *); const struct ieee80211_scanner *
ieee80211_scanner_get(enum ieee80211_opmode);
DESCRIPTION
The net80211 software layer provides an extensible framework for scanning. Scanning is the procedure by which a station locates a BSS to join (in infrastructure and IBSS mode), or a channel to use (when operating as an AP or an IBSS master). Scans are either “active” or “passive”. An active scan causes one or more ProbeRequest frames to be sent on visiting each channel. A passive request causes each channel in the scan set to be visited but no frames to be transmitted; the station only listens for traffic. Note that active scanning may still need to listen for traffic before sending ProbeRequest frames depending on regulatory constraints. A scan operation involves constructing a set of channels to inspect (the scan set), visiting each channel and collecting information (e.g. what BSS are present), and then analyzing the results to make decisions such as which BSS to join. This process needs to be as fast as possible so net80211 does things like intelligently construct scan sets and dwell on a channel only as long as necessary. Scan results are cached and the scan cache is used to avoid scanning when possible and to enable roaming between access points when operating in infrastructure mode. Scanning is handled by pluggable modules that implement policy per-operating mode. The core scanning support provides an infrastructure to support these modules and exports a common API to the rest of the net80211 layer. Policy modules decide what channels to visit, what state to record to make decisions, and selects the final station/channel to return as the result of a scan. Scanning is done synchronously when initially bringing a vap to an operational state and optionally in the background to maintain the scan cache for doing roaming and rogue AP monitoring. Scanning is not tied to the net80211 state machine that governs vaps except for linkage to theIEEE80211_S_SCAN
state.
Only one vap at a time may be scanning; this scheduling policy is handled in
ieee80211_new_state() and is transparent to
scanning code.
Scanning is controlled by a set of parameters that (potentially) constrains the
channel set and any desired SSID's and BSSID's.
net80211 comes with a standard scanner module
that works with all available operating modes and supports “background
scanning” and “roaming” operation.
SCANNER MODULES
Scanning modules use a registration mechanism to hook into the net80211 layer. Use ieee80211_scanner_register() to register a scan module for a particular operating mode and ieee80211_scanner_unregister() or ieee80211_scanner_unregister_all() to clear entries (typically on module unload). Only one scanner module can be registered at any time for an operating mode.DRIVER SUPPORT
Scanning operations are usually managed by the net80211 layer. Drivers must provide ic_scan_start and ic_scan_stop methods that are called at the start of a scan and when the work is done; these should handle work such as enabling receive of Beacon and ProbeResponse frames and disable any BSSID matching. The ic_set_channel method is used to change channels while scanning. net80211 will generate ProbeRequest frames and transmit them using the ic_raw_xmit method. Frames received while scanning are dispatched to net80211 using the normal receive path. Devices that off-load scan work to firmware most easily mesh with net80211 by operating on a channel-at-a-time basis as this defers control to net80211's scan machine scheduler. But multi-channel scanning is supported if the driver manually dispatches results using ieee80211_add_scan() routine to enter results into the scan cache.SCAN REQUESTS
Scan requests occur by way of theIEEE80211_SCAN_REQUEST
ioctl or through a
change in a vap's state machine that requires scanning. In both cases the scan
cache can be checked first and, if it is deemed suitably “warm”
then it's contents are used without leaving the current channel. To start a
scan without checking the cache
ieee80211_start_scan() can be called; otherwise
ieee80211_check_scan() can be used to first check
the scan cache, kicking off a scan if the cache contents are out of date.
There is also ieee80211_check_scan_current()
which is a shorthand for using previously set scan parameters for checking the
scan cache and then scanning.
Background scanning is done using
ieee80211_bg_scan() in a co-routine fashion. The
first call to this routine will start a background scan that runs for a
limited period of time before returning to the BSS channel. Subsequent calls
advance through the scan set until all channels are visited. Typically these
later calls are timed to allow receipt of frames buffered by an access point
for the station.
A scan operation can be canceled using
ieee80211_cancel_scan() if it was initiated by
the specified vap, or ieee80211_cancel_scan_any()
to force termination regardless which vap started it. These requests are
mostly used by net80211 in the transmit path to
cancel background scans when frames are to be sent. Drivers should not need to
use these calls (or most of the calls described on this page).
The ieee80211_scan_next() and
ieee80211_scan_done() routines do explicit
iteration through the scan set and should not normally be used by drivers.
ieee80211_probe_curchan() handles the work of
transmitting ProbeRequest frames when visiting a channel during an active
scan. When the channel attributes are marked with
IEEE80211_CHAN_PASSIVE
this function will
arrange that before any frame is transmitted 802.11 traffic is first received
(in order to comply with regulatory constraints).
Min/max dwell time parameters are used to constrain time spent visiting a
channel. The maximum dwell time constrains the time spent listening for
traffic. The minimum dwell time is used to reduce this time--when it is
reached and one or more frames have been received then an immediate channel
change will be done. Drivers can override this behaviour through the
iv_scan_mindwell method.
SCAN CACHE MANAGEMENT
The scan cache contents are managed by the scan policy module and are opaque outside this module. The net80211 scan framework defines API's for interacting. The validity of the scan cache contents are controlled by iv_scanvalid which is exported to user space through theIEEE80211_SCAN_VALID
request.
The cache contents can be explicitly flushed with
ieee80211_scan_flush() or by setting the
IEEE80211_SCAN_FLUSH
flag when starting a
scan operation.
Scan cache entries are created with the
ieee80211_add_scan() routine; usually on receipt
of Beacon or ProbeResponse frames. Existing entries are typically updated
based on the latest information though some information such as RSSI and noise
floor readings may be combined to present an average.
The cache contents is aged through
ieee80211_scan_timeout() calls. Typically these
happen together with other station table activity; every
IEEE80211_INACT_WAIT
seconds (default 15).
Individual cache entries are marked usable with
ieee80211_scan_assoc_success() and faulty with
ieee80211_scan_assoc_fail() with the latter
taking an argument to identify if there was no response to
Authentication/Association requests or if a negative response was received
(which might hasten cache eviction or blacklist the entry).
The cache contents can be viewed using the
ieee80211_scan_iterate() call. Cache entries are
exported in a public format that is exported to user applications through the
IEEE80211_SCAN_RESULTS
request.
SEE ALSO
ioctl(2), ieee80211(9), ieee80211_proto(9)March 29, 2010 | Debian |