table of contents
| IEEE80211_PROTO(9) | Kernel Developer's Manual | IEEE80211_PROTO(9) | 
NAME¶
ieee80211_proto —
    802.11 state machine support
SYNOPSIS¶
#include
    <net80211/ieee80211_var.h>
  
  void
  
  ieee80211_start_all(struct
    ieee80211com *);
void
  
  ieee80211_stop_all(struct
    ieee80211com *);
void
  
  ieee80211_suspend_all(struct
    ieee80211com *);
void
  
  ieee80211_resume_all(struct
    ieee80211com *);
enum ieee80211_state;
  
  int
  
  ieee80211_new_state(struct
    ieee80211vap *, enum
    ieee80211_state,
    int);
  
  void
  
  ieee80211_wait_for_parent(struct
    ieee80211com *);
DESCRIPTION¶
The net80211 layer that supports 802.11
    device drivers uses a state machine to control operation of vaps. These
    state machines vary according to the vap operating mode. Station mode state
    machines follow the 802.11 MLME states in the protocol specification. Other
    state machines are simpler and reflect operational work such as scanning for
    a BSS or automatically selecting a channel to operate on. When multiple vaps
    are operational the state machines are used to coordinate operation such as
    choosing a channel. The state machine mechanism also serves to bind the
    net80211 layer to a driver; this is described more
    below.
The following states are defined for state machines:
- IEEE80211_S_INIT
- Default/initial state. A vap in this state should not hold any dynamic state (e.g. entries for associated stations in the node table). The driver must quiesce the hardware; e.g. there should be no interrupts firing.
- IEEE80211_S_SCAN
- Scanning for a BSS or choosing a channel to operate on. Note that scanning can also take place in other states (e.g. when background scanning is active); this state is entered when initially bringing a vap to an operational state or after an event such as a beacon miss (in station mode).
- IEEE80211_S_AUTH
- Authenticating to an access point (in station mode). This state is
      normally reached from IEEE80211_S_SCANafter selecting a BSS, but may also be reached fromIEEE80211_S_ASSOCorIEEE80211_S_RUNif the authentication handshake fails.
- IEEE80211_S_ASSOC
- Associating to an access point (in station mode). This state is reached
      from IEEE80211_S_AUTHafter successfully authenticating or fromIEEE80211_S_RUNif a DisAssoc frame is received.
- IEEE80211_S_CAC
- Doing Channel Availability Check (CAC). This state is entered only when DFS is enabled and the channel selected for operation requires CAC.
- IEEE80211_S_RUN
- Operational. In this state a vap can transmit data frames, accept requests for stations associating, etc. Beware that data traffic is also gated by whether the associated “port” is authorized. When WPA/802.11i/802.1x is operational authorization may happen separately; e.g. in station mode wpa_supplicant(8) must complete the handshakes and plumb the necessary keys before a port is authorized. In this state a BSS is operational and associated state is valid and may be used; e.g. ic_bss and ic_bsschan are guaranteed to be usable.
- IEEE80211_S_CSA
- Channel Switch Announcement (CSA) is pending. This state is reached only
      from IEEE80211_S_RUNwhen either a CSA is received from an access point (in station mode) or the local station is preparing to change channel. In this state traffic may be muted depending on the Mute setting in the CSA.
- IEEE80211_S_SLEEP
- Asleep to save power (in station mode). This state is reached only from
      IEEE80211_S_RUNwhen power save operation is enabled and the local station is deemed sufficiently idle to enter low power mode.
Note that states are ordered (as shown above); e.g. a vap must be
    in the IEEE80211_S_RUN or “greater”
    before it can transmit frames. Certain net80211 data
    are valid only in certain states; e.g. the iv_bsschan
    that specifies the channel for the operating BSS should never be used except
    in IEEE80211_S_RUN or greater.
STATE CHANGES¶
State machine changes are typically handled internal to the
    net80211 layer in response to
    ioctl(2) requests, received frames, or external events
    such as a beacon miss. The
    ieee80211_new_state()
    function is used to initiate a state machine change on a vap. The new state
    and an optional argument are supplied. The request is initially processed to
    handle coordination of multiple vaps. For example, only one vap at a time
    can be scanning, if multiple vaps request a change to
    IEEE80211_S_SCAN the first will be permitted to run
    and the others will be
    deferred
    until the scan operation completes at which time the selected channel will
    be adopted. Similarly net80211 handles coordination
    of combinations of vaps such as an AP and station vap where the station may
    need to roam to follow the AP it is associated to (dragging along the AP vap
    to the new channel). Another important coordination is the handling of
    IEEE80211_S_CAC and
    IEEE80211_S_CSA. No more than one vap can ever be
    actively changing state at a time. In fact net80211
    single-threads the state machine logic in a dedicated
    taskqueue(9) thread that is also used to synchronize work
    such as scanning and beacon miss handling.
After multi-vap scheduling/coordination is done the per-vap
    iv_newstate method is called to carry out the state
    change work. Drivers use this entry to setup private state and then dispatch
    the call to the net80211 layer using the previously
    defined method pointer (in OOP-parlance they call the “super
    method” ).
net80211 handles two state changes
    specially. On transition to IEEE80211_S_RUN the
    IFF_DRV_OACTIVE bit on the vap's transmit queue is
    cleared so traffic can flow. On transition to
    IEEE80211_S_INIT any state in the scan cache
    associated with the vap is flushed and any frames pending on the transmit
    queue are flushed.
DRIVER INTEGRATION¶
Drivers are expected to override the
    iv_newstate method to interpose their own code and
    handle setup work required by state changes. Otherwise drivers must call
    ieee80211_start_all()
    in response to being marked up through an
    SIOCSIFFLAGS ioctl request and they should use
    ieee80211_suspend_all()
    and
    ieee80211_resume_all()
    to implement suspend/resume support.
There is also an
    ieee80211_stop_all()
    call to force all vaps to an IEEE80211_S_INIT state
    but this should not be needed by a driver; control is usually handled by
    net80211 or, in the case of card eject or vap
    destroy, work will be initiated outside the driver.
SEE ALSO¶
ioctl(2), wpa_supplicant(8), ieee80211(9), ifnet(9), taskqueue(9)
HISTORY¶
The state machine concept was part of the original
    ieee80211 code base that first appeared in
    NetBSD 1.5.
| August 4, 2009 | Debian |