diff options
| author | Jesse Gilles <jgilles@multitech.com> | 2013-04-18 11:29:07 -0500 |
|---|---|---|
| committer | Jesse Gilles <jgilles@multitech.com> | 2013-04-18 11:29:07 -0500 |
| commit | 55fa64278b0c3dda9144b0fac0d133e70dacdc5f (patch) | |
| tree | f2cc776beb3337acb642f956466f3c8285447da9 /multitech | |
| parent | 5dac55e131fb9cbe1b24b5a560559b9bda56201e (diff) | |
| parent | c68bafcef449dffb836bb2c9489db597a514afb9 (diff) | |
Merge branch 'ruby-1.9.3' of sw.multitech.prv:/usr/local/git/jjg/corecdp-dev
Diffstat (limited to 'multitech')
35 files changed, 2241 insertions, 5 deletions
diff --git a/multitech/recipes/busybox/busybox-1.18.3/corecdp/udhcpd.conf.example b/multitech/recipes/busybox/busybox-1.18.3/corecdp/udhcpd.conf.example new file mode 100644 index 0000000..bf34ab6 --- /dev/null +++ b/multitech/recipes/busybox/busybox-1.18.3/corecdp/udhcpd.conf.example @@ -0,0 +1,6 @@ +start 192.168.2.100 +end 192.168.2.254 +interface wlan0 +option subnet 255.0.0.0 +option router 192.168.2.1 +option dns 8.8.8.8 # google's DNS server diff --git a/multitech/recipes/busybox/busybox_1.18.3.bbappend b/multitech/recipes/busybox/busybox_1.18.3.bbappend index 93284e0..c5122bb 100644 --- a/multitech/recipes/busybox/busybox_1.18.3.bbappend +++ b/multitech/recipes/busybox/busybox_1.18.3.bbappend @@ -2,3 +2,9 @@ FILESEXTRA := "${THISDIR}" FILESPATHBASE =. "${FILESEXTRA}:" PR .= ".corecdp2" + +SRC_URI += "file://busybox-1.18.3/corecdp/udhcpd.conf.example" + +do_install_append () { + install -m 600 ${WORKDIR}/busybox-1.18.3/corecdp/udhcpd.conf.example ${D}${sysconfdir}/ +} diff --git a/multitech/recipes/hostap/hostap-daemon-1.0.inc b/multitech/recipes/hostap/hostap-daemon-1.0.inc index b0b6a44..ad7cb24 100644 --- a/multitech/recipes/hostap/hostap-daemon-1.0.inc +++ b/multitech/recipes/hostap/hostap-daemon-1.0.inc @@ -18,6 +18,7 @@ do_compile() { do_install() { install -d ${D}${sbindir} ${D}${sysconfdir}/init.d install -m 0644 ${WORKDIR}/hostapd.conf ${D}${sysconfdir} + install -m 0644 ${WORKDIR}/hostapd.conf.example ${D}${sysconfdir} install -m 0755 ${S}/hostapd ${D}${sbindir} install -m 0755 ${S}/hostapd_cli ${D}${sbindir} install -m 755 ${WORKDIR}/init ${D}${sysconfdir}/init.d/hostapd diff --git a/multitech/recipes/hostap/hostap-daemon-1.0/hostapd.conf b/multitech/recipes/hostap/hostap-daemon-1.0/hostapd.conf index 27d9e46..dc09269 100644 --- a/multitech/recipes/hostap/hostap-daemon-1.0/hostapd.conf +++ b/multitech/recipes/hostap/hostap-daemon-1.0/hostapd.conf @@ -83,7 +83,7 @@ ctrl_interface_group=0 ##### IEEE 802.11 related configuration ####################################### # SSID to be used in IEEE 802.11 management frames -ssid=test +ssid=ocg-wifi # Country code (ISO/IEC 3166-1). Used to set regulatory domain. # Set as needed to indicate country in which device is operating. diff --git a/multitech/recipes/hostap/hostap-daemon-1.0/hostapd.conf.example b/multitech/recipes/hostap/hostap-daemon-1.0/hostapd.conf.example new file mode 100644 index 0000000..095851e --- /dev/null +++ b/multitech/recipes/hostap/hostap-daemon-1.0/hostapd.conf.example @@ -0,0 +1,1131 @@ +##### hostapd configuration file ############################################## +# Empty lines and lines starting with # are ignored + +# AP netdevice name (without 'ap' postfix, i.e., wlan0 uses wlan0ap for +# management frames); ath0 for madwifi +interface=wlan0 + +# In case of madwifi, atheros, and nl80211 driver interfaces, an additional +# configuration parameter, bridge, may be used to notify hostapd if the +# interface is included in a bridge. This parameter is not used with Host AP +# driver. If the bridge parameter is not set, the drivers will automatically +# figure out the bridge interface (assuming sysfs is enabled and mounted to +# /sys) and this parameter may not be needed. +# +# For nl80211, this parameter can be used to request the AP interface to be +# added to the bridge automatically (brctl may refuse to do this before hostapd +# has been started to change the interface mode). If needed, the bridge +# interface is also created. +#bridge=br0 + +# Driver interface type (hostap/wired/madwifi/test/none/nl80211/bsd); +# default: hostap). nl80211 is used with all Linux mac80211 drivers. +# Use driver=none if building hostapd as a standalone RADIUS server that does +# not control any wireless/wired driver. +driver=nl80211 + +# hostapd event logger configuration +# +# Two output method: syslog and stdout (only usable if not forking to +# background). +# +# Module bitfield (ORed bitfield of modules that will be logged; -1 = all +# modules): +# bit 0 (1) = IEEE 802.11 +# bit 1 (2) = IEEE 802.1X +# bit 2 (4) = RADIUS +# bit 3 (8) = WPA +# bit 4 (16) = driver interface +# bit 5 (32) = IAPP +# bit 6 (64) = MLME +# +# Levels (minimum value for logged events): +# 0 = verbose debugging +# 1 = debugging +# 2 = informational messages +# 3 = notification +# 4 = warning +# +logger_syslog=-1 +logger_syslog_level=2 +logger_stdout=-1 +logger_stdout_level=2 + +# Dump file for state information (on SIGUSR1) +dump_file=/tmp/hostapd.dump + +# Interface for separate control program. If this is specified, hostapd +# will create this directory and a UNIX domain socket for listening to requests +# from external programs (CLI/GUI, etc.) for status information and +# configuration. The socket file will be named based on the interface name, so +# multiple hostapd processes/interfaces can be run at the same time if more +# than one interface is used. +# /var/run/hostapd is the recommended directory for sockets and by default, +# hostapd_cli will use it when trying to connect with hostapd. +ctrl_interface=/var/run/hostapd + +# Access control for the control interface can be configured by setting the +# directory to allow only members of a group to use sockets. This way, it is +# possible to run hostapd as root (since it needs to change network +# configuration and open raw sockets) and still allow GUI/CLI components to be +# run as non-root users. However, since the control interface can be used to +# change the network configuration, this access needs to be protected in many +# cases. By default, hostapd is configured to use gid 0 (root). If you +# want to allow non-root users to use the contron interface, add a new group +# and change this value to match with that group. Add users that should have +# control interface access to this group. +# +# This variable can be a group name or gid. +#ctrl_interface_group=wheel +ctrl_interface_group=0 + + +##### IEEE 802.11 related configuration ####################################### + +# SSID to be used in IEEE 802.11 management frames +ssid=ocg-wifi + +# Country code (ISO/IEC 3166-1). Used to set regulatory domain. +# Set as needed to indicate country in which device is operating. +# This can limit available channels and transmit power. +#country_code=US + +# Enable IEEE 802.11d. This advertises the country_code and the set of allowed +# channels and transmit power levels based on the regulatory limits. The +# country_code setting must be configured with the correct country for +# IEEE 802.11d functions. +# (default: 0 = disabled) +#ieee80211d=1 + +# Operation mode (a = IEEE 802.11a, b = IEEE 802.11b, g = IEEE 802.11g, +# Default: IEEE 802.11b +hw_mode=g + +# Channel number (IEEE 802.11) +# (default: 0, i.e., not set) +# Please note that some drivers do not use this value from hostapd and the +# channel will need to be configured separately with iwconfig. +channel=1 + +# Beacon interval in kus (1.024 ms) (default: 100; range 15..65535) +beacon_int=100 + +# DTIM (delivery traffic information message) period (range 1..255): +# number of beacons between DTIMs (1 = every beacon includes DTIM element) +# (default: 2) +dtim_period=2 + +# Maximum number of stations allowed in station table. New stations will be +# rejected after the station table is full. IEEE 802.11 has a limit of 2007 +# different association IDs, so this number should not be larger than that. +# (default: 2007) +max_num_sta=255 + +# RTS/CTS threshold; 2347 = disabled (default); range 0..2347 +# If this field is not included in hostapd.conf, hostapd will not control +# RTS threshold and 'iwconfig wlan# rts <val>' can be used to set it. +rts_threshold=2347 + +# Fragmentation threshold; 2346 = disabled (default); range 256..2346 +# If this field is not included in hostapd.conf, hostapd will not control +# fragmentation threshold and 'iwconfig wlan# frag <val>' can be used to set +# it. +fragm_threshold=2346 + +# Rate configuration +# Default is to enable all rates supported by the hardware. This configuration +# item allows this list be filtered so that only the listed rates will be left +# in the list. If the list is empty, all rates are used. This list can have +# entries that are not in the list of rates the hardware supports (such entries +# are ignored). The entries in this list are in 100 kbps, i.e., 11 Mbps = 110. +# If this item is present, at least one rate have to be matching with the rates +# hardware supports. +# default: use the most common supported rate setting for the selected +# hw_mode (i.e., this line can be removed from configuration file in most +# cases) +#supported_rates=10 20 55 110 60 90 120 180 240 360 480 540 + +# Basic rate set configuration +# List of rates (in 100 kbps) that are included in the basic rate set. +# If this item is not included, usually reasonable default set is used. +#basic_rates=10 20 +#basic_rates=10 20 55 110 +#basic_rates=60 120 240 + +# Short Preamble +# This parameter can be used to enable optional use of short preamble for +# frames sent at 2 Mbps, 5.5 Mbps, and 11 Mbps to improve network performance. +# This applies only to IEEE 802.11b-compatible networks and this should only be +# enabled if the local hardware supports use of short preamble. If any of the +# associated STAs do not support short preamble, use of short preamble will be +# disabled (and enabled when such STAs disassociate) dynamically. +# 0 = do not allow use of short preamble (default) +# 1 = allow use of short preamble +#preamble=1 + +# Station MAC address -based authentication +# Please note that this kind of access control requires a driver that uses +# hostapd to take care of management frame processing and as such, this can be +# used with driver=hostap or driver=nl80211, but not with driver=madwifi. +# 0 = accept unless in deny list +# 1 = deny unless in accept list +# 2 = use external RADIUS server (accept/deny lists are searched first) +macaddr_acl=0 + +# Accept/deny lists are read from separate files (containing list of +# MAC addresses, one per line). Use absolute path name to make sure that the +# files can be read on SIGHUP configuration reloads. +#accept_mac_file=/etc/hostapd.accept +#deny_mac_file=/etc/hostapd.deny + +# IEEE 802.11 specifies two authentication algorithms. hostapd can be +# configured to allow both of these or only one. Open system authentication +# should be used with IEEE 802.1X. +# Bit fields of allowed authentication algorithms: +# bit 0 = Open System Authentication +# bit 1 = Shared Key Authentication (requires WEP) +auth_algs=3 + +# Send empty SSID in beacons and ignore probe request frames that do not +# specify full SSID, i.e., require stations to know SSID. +# default: disabled (0) +# 1 = send empty (length=0) SSID in beacon and ignore probe request for +# broadcast SSID +# 2 = clear SSID (ASCII 0), but keep the original length (this may be required +# with some clients that do not support empty SSID) and ignore probe +# requests for broadcast SSID +ignore_broadcast_ssid=0 + +# TX queue parameters (EDCF / bursting) +# tx_queue_<queue name>_<param> +# queues: data0, data1, data2, data3, after_beacon, beacon +# (data0 is the highest priority queue) +# parameters: +# aifs: AIFS (default 2) +# cwmin: cwMin (1, 3, 7, 15, 31, 63, 127, 255, 511, 1023) +# cwmax: cwMax (1, 3, 7, 15, 31, 63, 127, 255, 511, 1023); cwMax >= cwMin +# burst: maximum length (in milliseconds with precision of up to 0.1 ms) for +# bursting +# +# Default WMM parameters (IEEE 802.11 draft; 11-03-0504-03-000e): +# These parameters are used by the access point when transmitting frames +# to the clients. +# +# Low priority / AC_BK = background +#tx_queue_data3_aifs=7 +#tx_queue_data3_cwmin=15 +#tx_queue_data3_cwmax=1023 +#tx_queue_data3_burst=0 +# Note: for IEEE 802.11b mode: cWmin=31 cWmax=1023 burst=0 +# +# Normal priority / AC_BE = best effort +#tx_queue_data2_aifs=3 +#tx_queue_data2_cwmin=15 +#tx_queue_data2_cwmax=63 +#tx_queue_data2_burst=0 +# Note: for IEEE 802.11b mode: cWmin=31 cWmax=127 burst=0 +# +# High priority / AC_VI = video +#tx_queue_data1_aifs=1 +#tx_queue_data1_cwmin=7 +#tx_queue_data1_cwmax=15 +#tx_queue_data1_burst=3.0 +# Note: for IEEE 802.11b mode: cWmin=15 cWmax=31 burst=6.0 +# +# Highest priority / AC_VO = voice +#tx_queue_data0_aifs=1 +#tx_queue_data0_cwmin=3 +#tx_queue_data0_cwmax=7 +#tx_queue_data0_burst=1.5 +# Note: for IEEE 802.11b mode: cWmin=7 cWmax=15 burst=3.3 + +# 802.1D Tag (= UP) to AC mappings +# WMM specifies following mapping of data frames to different ACs. This mapping +# can be configured using Linux QoS/tc and sch_pktpri.o module. +# 802.1D Tag 802.1D Designation Access Category WMM Designation +# 1 BK AC_BK Background +# 2 - AC_BK Background +# 0 BE AC_BE Best Effort +# 3 EE AC_BE Best Effort +# 4 CL AC_VI Video +# 5 VI AC_VI Video +# 6 VO AC_VO Voice +# 7 NC AC_VO Voice +# Data frames with no priority information: AC_BE +# Management frames: AC_VO +# PS-Poll frames: AC_BE + +# Default WMM parameters (IEEE 802.11 draft; 11-03-0504-03-000e): +# for 802.11a or 802.11g networks +# These parameters are sent to WMM clients when they associate. +# The parameters will be used by WMM clients for frames transmitted to the +# access point. +# +# note - txop_limit is in units of 32microseconds +# note - acm is admission control mandatory flag. 0 = admission control not +# required, 1 = mandatory +# note - here cwMin and cmMax are in exponent form. the actual cw value used +# will be (2^n)-1 where n is the value given here +# +wmm_enabled=1 +# +# WMM-PS Unscheduled Automatic Power Save Delivery [U-APSD] +# Enable this flag if U-APSD supported outside hostapd (eg., Firmware/driver) +#uapsd_advertisement_enabled=1 +# +# Low priority / AC_BK = background +wmm_ac_bk_cwmin=4 +wmm_ac_bk_cwmax=10 +wmm_ac_bk_aifs=7 +wmm_ac_bk_txop_limit=0 +wmm_ac_bk_acm=0 +# Note: for IEEE 802.11b mode: cWmin=5 cWmax=10 +# +# Normal priority / AC_BE = best effort +wmm_ac_be_aifs=3 +wmm_ac_be_cwmin=4 +wmm_ac_be_cwmax=10 +wmm_ac_be_txop_limit=0 +wmm_ac_be_acm=0 +# Note: for IEEE 802.11b mode: cWmin=5 cWmax=7 +# +# High priority / AC_VI = video +wmm_ac_vi_aifs=2 +wmm_ac_vi_cwmin=3 +wmm_ac_vi_cwmax=4 +wmm_ac_vi_txop_limit=94 +wmm_ac_vi_acm=0 +# Note: for IEEE 802.11b mode: cWmin=4 cWmax=5 txop_limit=188 +# +# Highest priority / AC_VO = voice +wmm_ac_vo_aifs=2 +wmm_ac_vo_cwmin=2 +wmm_ac_vo_cwmax=3 +wmm_ac_vo_txop_limit=47 +wmm_ac_vo_acm=0 +# Note: for IEEE 802.11b mode: cWmin=3 cWmax=4 burst=102 + +# Static WEP key configuration +# +# The key number to use when transmitting. +# It must be between 0 and 3, and the corresponding key must be set. +# default: not set +#wep_default_key=0 +# The WEP keys to use. +# A key may be a quoted string or unquoted hexadecimal digits. +# The key length should be 5, 13, or 16 characters, or 10, 26, or 32 +# digits, depending on whether 40-bit (64-bit), 104-bit (128-bit), or +# 128-bit (152-bit) WEP is used. +# Only the default key must be supplied; the others are optional. +# default: not set +#wep_key0=123456789a +#wep_key1="vwxyz" +#wep_key2=0102030405060708090a0b0c0d +#wep_key3=".2.4.6.8.0.23" + +# Station inactivity limit +# +# If a station does not send anything in ap_max_inactivity seconds, an +# empty data frame is sent to it in order to verify whether it is +# still in range. If this frame is not ACKed, the station will be +# disassociated and then deauthenticated. This feature is used to +# clear station table of old entries when the STAs move out of the +# range. +# +# The station can associate again with the AP if it is still in range; +# this inactivity poll is just used as a nicer way of verifying +# inactivity; i.e., client will not report broken connection because +# disassociation frame is not sent immediately without first polling +# the STA with a data frame. +# default: 300 (i.e., 5 minutes) +#ap_max_inactivity=300 + +# Disassociate stations based on excessive transmission failures or other +# indications of connection loss. This depends on the driver capabilities and +# may not be available with all drivers. +#disassoc_low_ack=1 + +# Maximum allowed Listen Interval (how many Beacon periods STAs are allowed to +# remain asleep). Default: 65535 (no limit apart from field size) +#max_listen_interval=100 + +# WDS (4-address frame) mode with per-station virtual interfaces +# (only supported with driver=nl80211) +# This mode allows associated stations to use 4-address frames to allow layer 2 +# bridging to be used. +#wds_sta=1 + +# If bridge parameter is set, the WDS STA interface will be added to the same +# bridge by default. This can be overridden with the wds_bridge parameter to +# use a separate bridge. +#wds_bridge=wds-br0 + +# Client isolation can be used to prevent low-level bridging of frames between +# associated stations in the BSS. By default, this bridging is allowed. +#ap_isolate=1 + +##### IEEE 802.11n related configuration ###################################### + +# ieee80211n: Whether IEEE 802.11n (HT) is enabled +# 0 = disabled (default) +# 1 = enabled +# Note: You will also need to enable WMM for full HT functionality. +ieee80211n=1 + +# ht_capab: HT capabilities (list of flags) +# LDPC coding capability: [LDPC] = supported +# Supported channel width set: [HT40-] = both 20 MHz and 40 MHz with secondary +# channel below the primary channel; [HT40+] = both 20 MHz and 40 MHz +# with secondary channel below the primary channel +# (20 MHz only if neither is set) +# Note: There are limits on which channels can be used with HT40- and +# HT40+. Following table shows the channels that may be available for +# HT40- and HT40+ use per IEEE 802.11n Annex J: +# freq HT40- HT40+ +# 2.4 GHz 5-13 1-7 (1-9 in Europe/Japan) +# 5 GHz 40,48,56,64 36,44,52,60 +# (depending on the location, not all of these channels may be available +# for use) +# Please note that 40 MHz channels may switch their primary and secondary +# channels if needed or creation of 40 MHz channel maybe rejected based +# on overlapping BSSes. These changes are done automatically when hostapd +# is setting up the 40 MHz channel. +# Spatial Multiplexing (SM) Power Save: [SMPS-STATIC] or [SMPS-DYNAMIC] +# (SMPS disabled if neither is set) +# HT-greenfield: [GF] (disabled if not set) +# Short GI for 20 MHz: [SHORT-GI-20] (disabled if not set) +# Short GI for 40 MHz: [SHORT-GI-40] (disabled if not set) +# Tx STBC: [TX-STBC] (disabled if not set) +# Rx STBC: [RX-STBC1] (one spatial stream), [RX-STBC12] (one or two spatial +# streams), or [RX-STBC123] (one, two, or three spatial streams); Rx STBC +# disabled if none of these set +# HT-delayed Block Ack: [DELAYED-BA] (disabled if not set) +# Maximum A-MSDU length: [MAX-AMSDU-7935] for 7935 octets (3839 octets if not +# set) +# DSSS/CCK Mode in 40 MHz: [DSSS_CCK-40] = allowed (not allowed if not set) +# PSMP support: [PSMP] (disabled if not set) +# L-SIG TXOP protection support: [LSIG-TXOP-PROT] (disabled if not set) +#ht_capab=[HT40-][SHORT-GI-20][SHORT-GI-40] +ht_capab=[GF][SHORT-GI-20][RX-STBC1] + +# Require stations to support HT PHY (reject association if they do not) +#require_ht=1 + +##### IEEE 802.1X-2004 related configuration ################################## + +# Require IEEE 802.1X authorization +#ieee8021x=1 + +# 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. +#eapol_version=2 + +# Optional displayable message sent with EAP Request-Identity. The first \0 +# in this string will be converted to ASCII-0 (nul). This can be used to +# separate network info (comma separated list of attribute=value pairs); see, +# e.g., RFC 4284. +#eap_message=hello +#eap_message=hello\0networkid=netw,nasid=foo,portid=0,NAIRealms=example.com + +# WEP rekeying (disabled if key lengths are not set or are set to 0) +# Key lengths for default/broadcast and individual/unicast keys: +# 5 = 40-bit WEP (also known as 64-bit WEP with 40 secret bits) +# 13 = 104-bit WEP (also known as 128-bit WEP with 104 secret bits) +#wep_key_len_broadcast=5 +#wep_key_len_unicast=5 +# Rekeying period in seconds. 0 = do not rekey (i.e., set keys only once) +#wep_rekey_period=300 + +# EAPOL-Key index workaround (set bit7) for WinXP Supplicant (needed only if +# only broadcast keys are used) +eapol_key_index_workaround=0 + +# EAP reauthentication period in seconds (default: 3600 seconds; 0 = disable +# reauthentication). +#eap_reauth_period=3600 + +# Use PAE group address (01:80:c2:00:00:03) instead of individual target +# address when sending EAPOL frames with driver=wired. This is the most common +# mechanism used in wired authentication, but it also requires that the port +# is only used by one station. +#use_pae_group_addr=1 + +##### Integrated EAP server ################################################### + +# Optionally, hostapd can be configured to use an integrated EAP server +# to process EAP authentication locally without need for an external RADIUS +# server. This functionality can be used both as a local authentication server +# for IEEE 802.1X/EAPOL and as a RADIUS server for other devices. + +# Use integrated EAP server instead of external RADIUS authentication +# server. This is also needed if hostapd is configured to act as a RADIUS +# authentication server. +eap_server=0 + +# Path for EAP server user database +#eap_user_file=/etc/hostapd.eap_user + +# CA certificate (PEM or DER file) for EAP-TLS/PEAP/TTLS +#ca_cert=/etc/hostapd.ca.pem + +# Server certificate (PEM or DER file) for EAP-TLS/PEAP/TTLS +#server_cert=/etc/hostapd.server.pem + +# Private key matching with the server certificate for EAP-TLS/PEAP/TTLS +# This may point to the same file as server_cert if both certificate and key +# are included in a single file. PKCS#12 (PFX) file (.p12/.pfx) can also be +# used by commenting out server_cert and specifying the PFX file as the +# private_key. +#private_key=/etc/hostapd.server.prv + +# Passphrase for private key +#private_key_passwd=secret passphrase + +# Enable CRL verification. +# Note: hostapd does not yet support CRL downloading based on CDP. Thus, a +# valid CRL signed by the CA is required to be included in the ca_cert file. +# This can be done by using PEM format for CA certificate and CRL and +# concatenating these into one file. Whenever CRL changes, hostapd needs to be +# restarted to take the new CRL into use. +# 0 = do not verify CRLs (default) +# 1 = check the CRL of the user certificate +# 2 = check all CRLs in the certificate path +#check_crl=1 + +# dh_file: File path to DH/DSA parameters file (in PEM format) +# This is an optional configuration file for setting parameters for an +# ephemeral DH key exchange. In most cases, the default RSA authentication does +# not use this configuration. However, it is possible setup RSA to use +# ephemeral DH key exchange. In addition, ciphers with DSA keys always use +# ephemeral DH keys. This can be used to achieve forward secrecy. If the file +# is in DSA parameters format, it will be automatically converted into DH +# params. This parameter is required if anonymous EAP-FAST is used. +# You can generate DH parameters file with OpenSSL, e.g., +# "openssl dhparam -out /etc/hostapd.dh.pem 1024" +#dh_file=/etc/hostapd.dh.pem + +# Fragment size for EAP methods +#fragment_size=1400 + +# Configuration data for EAP-SIM database/authentication gateway interface. +# This is a text string in implementation specific format. The example +# implementation in eap_sim_db.c uses this as the UNIX domain socket name for +# the HLR/AuC gateway (e.g., hlr_auc_gw). In this case, the path uses "unix:" +# prefix. +#eap_sim_db=unix:/tmp/hlr_auc_gw.sock + +# Encryption key for EAP-FAST PAC-Opaque values. This key must be a secret, +# random value. It is configured as a 16-octet value in hex format. It can be +# generated, e.g., with the following command: +# od -tx1 -v -N16 /dev/random | colrm 1 8 | tr -d ' ' +#pac_opaque_encr_key=000102030405060708090a0b0c0d0e0f + +# EAP-FAST authority identity (A-ID) +# A-ID indicates the identity of the authority that issues PACs. The A-ID +# should be unique across all issuing servers. In theory, this is a variable +# length field, but due to some existing implementations requiring A-ID to be +# 16 octets in length, it is strongly recommended to use that length for the +# field to provid interoperability with deployed peer implementations. This +# field is configured in hex format. +#eap_fast_a_id=101112131415161718191a1b1c1d1e1f + +# EAP-FAST authority identifier information (A-ID-Info) +# This is a user-friendly name for the A-ID. For example, the enterprise name +# and server name in a human-readable format. This field is encoded as UTF-8. +#eap_fast_a_id_info=test server + +# Enable/disable different EAP-FAST provisioning modes: +#0 = provisioning disabled +#1 = only anonymous provisioning allowed +#2 = only authenticated provisioning allowed +#3 = both provisioning modes allowed (default) +#eap_fast_prov=3 + +# EAP-FAST PAC-Key lifetime in seconds (hard limit) +#pac_key_lifetime=604800 + +# EAP-FAST PAC-Key refresh time in seconds (soft limit on remaining hard +# limit). The server will generate a new PAC-Key when this number of seconds +# (or fewer) of the lifetime remains. +#pac_key_refresh_time=86400 + +# EAP-SIM and EAP-AKA protected success/failure indication using AT_RESULT_IND +# (default: 0 = disabled). +#eap_sim_aka_result_ind=1 + +# Trusted Network Connect (TNC) +# If enabled, TNC validation will be required before the peer is allowed to +# connect. Note: This is only used with EAP-TTLS and EAP-FAST. If any other +# EAP method is enabled, the peer will be allowed to connect without TNC. +#tnc=1 + + +##### IEEE 802.11f - Inter-Access Point Protocol (IAPP) ####################### + +# Interface to be used for IAPP broadcast packets +#iapp_interface=eth0 + + +##### RADIUS client configuration ############################################# +# for IEEE 802.1X with external Authentication Server, IEEE 802.11 +# authentication with external ACL for MAC addresses, and accounting + +# The own IP address of the access point (used as NAS-IP-Address) +own_ip_addr=127.0.0.1 + +# Optional NAS-Identifier string for RADIUS messages. When used, this should be +# a unique to the NAS within the scope of the RADIUS server. For example, a +# fully qualified domain name can be used here. +# When using IEEE 802.11r, nas_identifier must be set and must be between 1 and +# 48 octets long. +#nas_identifier=ap.example.com + +# RADIUS authentication server +#auth_server_addr=127.0.0.1 +#auth_server_port=1812 +#auth_server_shared_secret=secret + +# RADIUS accounting server +#acct_server_addr=127.0.0.1 +#acct_server_port=1813 +#acct_server_shared_secret=secret + +# Secondary RADIUS servers; to be used if primary one does not reply to +# RADIUS packets. These are optional and there can be more than one secondary +# server listed. +#auth_server_addr=127.0.0.2 +#auth_s |
