openwrt/package/network/services/hostapd/files/hostapd.sh

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hostapd_set_bss_options() {
local var="$1"
local vif="$2"
local enc wep_rekey wpa_group_rekey wpa_pair_rekey wpa_master_rekey wps_possible
config_get enc "$vif" encryption "none"
config_get wep_rekey "$vif" wep_rekey # 300
config_get wpa_group_rekey "$vif" wpa_group_rekey # 300
config_get wpa_pair_rekey "$vif" wpa_pair_rekey # 300
config_get wpa_master_rekey "$vif" wpa_master_rekey # 640
config_get_bool ap_isolate "$vif" isolate 0
config_get_bool disassoc_low_ack "$vif" disassoc_low_ack 1
config_get max_num_sta "$vif" max_num_sta 0
config_get max_inactivity "$vif" max_inactivity 0
config_get_bool preamble "$vif" short_preamble 1
config_get device "$vif" device
config_get hwmode "$device" hwmode
config_get phy "$device" phy
append "$var" "ctrl_interface=/var/run/hostapd-$phy" "$N"
if [ "$ap_isolate" -gt 0 ]; then
append "$var" "ap_isolate=$ap_isolate" "$N"
fi
if [ "$max_num_sta" -gt 0 ]; then
append "$var" "max_num_sta=$max_num_sta" "$N"
fi
if [ "$max_inactivity" -gt 0 ]; then
append "$var" "ap_max_inactivity=$max_inactivity" "$N"
fi
append "$var" "disassoc_low_ack=$disassoc_low_ack" "$N"
if [ "$preamble" -gt 0 ]; then
append "$var" "preamble=$preamble" "$N"
fi
# Examples:
# psk-mixed/tkip => WPA1+2 PSK, TKIP
# wpa-psk2/tkip+aes => WPA2 PSK, CCMP+TKIP
# wpa2/tkip+aes => WPA2 RADIUS, CCMP+TKIP
# ...
# TODO: move this parsing function somewhere generic, so that
# later it can be reused by drivers that don't use hostapd
# crypto defaults: WPA2 vs WPA1
case "$enc" in
wpa2*|*psk2*)
wpa=2
crypto="CCMP"
;;
*mixed*)
wpa=3
crypto="CCMP TKIP"
;;
*)
wpa=1
crypto="TKIP"
;;
esac
# explicit override for crypto setting
case "$enc" in
*tkip+aes|*tkip+ccmp|*aes+tkip|*ccmp+tkip) crypto="CCMP TKIP";;
*aes|*ccmp) crypto="CCMP";;
*tkip) crypto="TKIP";;
esac
# enforce CCMP for 11ng and 11na
case "$hwmode:$crypto" in
*ng:TKIP|*na:TKIP) crypto="CCMP TKIP";;
esac
# use crypto/auth settings for building the hostapd config
case "$enc" in
none)
wps_possible=1
wpa=0
crypto=
# Here we make the assumption that if we're in open mode
# with WPS enabled, we got to be in unconfigured state.
wps_not_configured=1
;;
*psk*)
config_get psk "$vif" key
if [ ${#psk} -eq 64 ]; then
append "$var" "wpa_psk=$psk" "$N"
else
append "$var" "wpa_passphrase=$psk" "$N"
fi
wps_possible=1
[ -n "$wpa_group_rekey" ] && append "$var" "wpa_group_rekey=$wpa_group_rekey" "$N"
[ -n "$wpa_pair_rekey" ] && append "$var" "wpa_ptk_rekey=$wpa_pair_rekey" "$N"
[ -n "$wpa_master_rekey" ] && append "$var" "wpa_gmk_rekey=$wpa_master_rekey" "$N"
;;
*wpa*|*8021x*)
# required fields? formats?
# hostapd is particular, maybe a default configuration for failures
config_get auth_server "$vif" auth_server
[ -z "$auth_server" ] && config_get auth_server "$vif" server
append "$var" "auth_server_addr=$auth_server" "$N"
config_get auth_port "$vif" auth_port
[ -z "$auth_port" ] && config_get auth_port "$vif" port
auth_port=${auth_port:-1812}
append "$var" "auth_server_port=$auth_port" "$N"
config_get auth_secret "$vif" auth_secret
[ -z "$auth_secret" ] && config_get auth_secret "$vif" key
append "$var" "auth_server_shared_secret=$auth_secret" "$N"
hostapd: fix hostapd RSN preauthentication PMKSA caching In 2009 OpenWrt's hostapd config added an "auth_cache" boolean to be used to address a reported issue #12129 [0] on a forum [1]. The reported issue on the ticket is different that the one described on the forum. The commit was r33359. This change broke proper RSN preauthentication [2] [3] [4] expectations on hostapd's configuration for WPA2 and this in turn disabled PMKSA caching and Opportunistic Key Caching. This change: * Leaves the "auth_cache" to be used only for WPA networks for those looking to use this as a workaround to a reported issue but annotates a warning over its usage. * Separate "auth_cache" from WPA2 RSN preauthentication, leaving WPA2 RSN preauthentication to enabled only with "rsn_preauth" with the expected and recommended settings. * Adds a new WPA2 RSN preauthentication "rsn_preauth_testing" to be used when evaluating funcionality for WPA2 RSN preauthentication with the expected and recommended settings with the only difference so far with what should be enabled by default to disable Opportunistic Key Caching. Disabling the PMKSA cache should mean the STA could not roam off and back onto the AP that had PMKSA caching disabled and would require a full authentication cycle. This fixes this for WPA2 networks with RSN preauthentication enabled. This change should be applied to AA as well as trunk. TL DR; The issue described on the forum has to do with failure of a STA being able to try to authenticate again with the AP if it failed its first try. This may have been an issue with hostapd in 2009 but as per some tests I cannot reproduce this today on a WPA2 network. The issue described on the ticket alludes to a security issue with the design of using a Radius server to authenticate to an AP. The issue vaguely alludes to the circumstances of zapping a user, deleting their authentication credentials to log in to the network, and that if RSN preauthentication is enabled with PMKSA caching that the user that was zapped would still be able to authenticate. Lets treat these as separate issues. I cannot reproduce the first issue reported on the forums of not being able to authenticate anymore on a WPA2 network. The issue reported on the ticket modified WPA2 RSN preauthentication by adding two fields to the hostapd configuration if auth_cache was enabled: * disable_pmksa_caching=1 * okc=0 The first one disables PMKSA authentication cache. The second one disables Opportunistic Key Caching. The issue reported on the ticket was fixed by implementing a workaround in hostapd's configuration. Disabling PMKSA caching breaks proper use of WPA2 RSN pre authentication. The usage of disable_pmksa_caching=1 prevents hostapd from adding PMKSA entries into its cache when a successful 802.1x authentication occurs. In practice RSN preauthentication would trigger a STA to perform authentication with other APs on the same SSID, it would then have its own supplicant PMKSA cache held. If a STA roams between one AP to another no new authenitcation would need to be performed as the new AP would already have authenticated the STA. The purpose of the PMKSA cache on the AP side would be for the AP to use the same PMKID for a STA when the STA roams off onto another BSSID and later comes back to it. Disabling Opportunistic Key Caching could help the reported issue as well but its not the correct place to address this. Opportunistic Key Caching enables an AP with different interfaces to share the PMKSA cache. Its a technical enhancement and disabling it would be useful to let a testing suite properly test for RSN preauthentication given that otherwise Opportunistic Key Caching would enable an interface being tested to derive its own derive the PMKSA entry. In production though okc=1 should be enabled to help with RSN preauthentication. The real fix for this particular issue outside of the scope of hostapd's configuration and it should not be dealt with as a workaround to its configuration and breaking expected RSN preauthentication and technical optimizations. Revert this change and enable users to pick and choose to enable or disable disable_pmksa_caching and okc expecting them to instead have read clearly more what these do. As for the core issure ported, the correct place to fix this is to enable a sort of messaging between the RADIUS server and its peers so that if caching for authentication is enabled that cache can be cleared upon user credential updates. Updating a user password (not just zapping a user) is another possible issue that would need to be resolved here. Another part of the solution might be to reduce the cache timing to account for any systematic limitations (RADIUS server not able to ask peers to clear cache might be one). [0] https://dev.openwrt.org/changeset/33359 [1] https://forum.openwrt.org/viewtopic.php?id=19596 [2] http://wireless.kernel.org/en/users/Documentation/hostapd#IEEE_802.11i.2FRSN.2FWPA2_pre-authentication [3] http://wireless.kernel.org/en/users/Documentation/wpa_supplicant#RSN_preauthentication [4] http://wiki.openwrt.org/doc/recipes/rsn_preauthentication Signed-off-by: Luis R. Rodriguez <mcgrof@do-not-panic.com> SVN-Revision: 38336
2013-10-08 11:09:40 +00:00
# You don't really want to enable this unless you are doing
# some corner case testing or are using OpenWrt as a work around
# for some systematic issues.
config_get_bool auth_cache "$vif" auth_cache 0
hostapd: fix hostapd RSN preauthentication PMKSA caching In 2009 OpenWrt's hostapd config added an "auth_cache" boolean to be used to address a reported issue #12129 [0] on a forum [1]. The reported issue on the ticket is different that the one described on the forum. The commit was r33359. This change broke proper RSN preauthentication [2] [3] [4] expectations on hostapd's configuration for WPA2 and this in turn disabled PMKSA caching and Opportunistic Key Caching. This change: * Leaves the "auth_cache" to be used only for WPA networks for those looking to use this as a workaround to a reported issue but annotates a warning over its usage. * Separate "auth_cache" from WPA2 RSN preauthentication, leaving WPA2 RSN preauthentication to enabled only with "rsn_preauth" with the expected and recommended settings. * Adds a new WPA2 RSN preauthentication "rsn_preauth_testing" to be used when evaluating funcionality for WPA2 RSN preauthentication with the expected and recommended settings with the only difference so far with what should be enabled by default to disable Opportunistic Key Caching. Disabling the PMKSA cache should mean the STA could not roam off and back onto the AP that had PMKSA caching disabled and would require a full authentication cycle. This fixes this for WPA2 networks with RSN preauthentication enabled. This change should be applied to AA as well as trunk. TL DR; The issue described on the forum has to do with failure of a STA being able to try to authenticate again with the AP if it failed its first try. This may have been an issue with hostapd in 2009 but as per some tests I cannot reproduce this today on a WPA2 network. The issue described on the ticket alludes to a security issue with the design of using a Radius server to authenticate to an AP. The issue vaguely alludes to the circumstances of zapping a user, deleting their authentication credentials to log in to the network, and that if RSN preauthentication is enabled with PMKSA caching that the user that was zapped would still be able to authenticate. Lets treat these as separate issues. I cannot reproduce the first issue reported on the forums of not being able to authenticate anymore on a WPA2 network. The issue reported on the ticket modified WPA2 RSN preauthentication by adding two fields to the hostapd configuration if auth_cache was enabled: * disable_pmksa_caching=1 * okc=0 The first one disables PMKSA authentication cache. The second one disables Opportunistic Key Caching. The issue reported on the ticket was fixed by implementing a workaround in hostapd's configuration. Disabling PMKSA caching breaks proper use of WPA2 RSN pre authentication. The usage of disable_pmksa_caching=1 prevents hostapd from adding PMKSA entries into its cache when a successful 802.1x authentication occurs. In practice RSN preauthentication would trigger a STA to perform authentication with other APs on the same SSID, it would then have its own supplicant PMKSA cache held. If a STA roams between one AP to another no new authenitcation would need to be performed as the new AP would already have authenticated the STA. The purpose of the PMKSA cache on the AP side would be for the AP to use the same PMKID for a STA when the STA roams off onto another BSSID and later comes back to it. Disabling Opportunistic Key Caching could help the reported issue as well but its not the correct place to address this. Opportunistic Key Caching enables an AP with different interfaces to share the PMKSA cache. Its a technical enhancement and disabling it would be useful to let a testing suite properly test for RSN preauthentication given that otherwise Opportunistic Key Caching would enable an interface being tested to derive its own derive the PMKSA entry. In production though okc=1 should be enabled to help with RSN preauthentication. The real fix for this particular issue outside of the scope of hostapd's configuration and it should not be dealt with as a workaround to its configuration and breaking expected RSN preauthentication and technical optimizations. Revert this change and enable users to pick and choose to enable or disable disable_pmksa_caching and okc expecting them to instead have read clearly more what these do. As for the core issure ported, the correct place to fix this is to enable a sort of messaging between the RADIUS server and its peers so that if caching for authentication is enabled that cache can be cleared upon user credential updates. Updating a user password (not just zapping a user) is another possible issue that would need to be resolved here. Another part of the solution might be to reduce the cache timing to account for any systematic limitations (RADIUS server not able to ask peers to clear cache might be one). [0] https://dev.openwrt.org/changeset/33359 [1] https://forum.openwrt.org/viewtopic.php?id=19596 [2] http://wireless.kernel.org/en/users/Documentation/hostapd#IEEE_802.11i.2FRSN.2FWPA2_pre-authentication [3] http://wireless.kernel.org/en/users/Documentation/wpa_supplicant#RSN_preauthentication [4] http://wiki.openwrt.org/doc/recipes/rsn_preauthentication Signed-off-by: Luis R. Rodriguez <mcgrof@do-not-panic.com> SVN-Revision: 38336
2013-10-08 11:09:40 +00:00
config_get rsn_preauth "$vif" rsn_preauth
[ "$auth_cache" -gt 0 ] || [[ "$rsn_preauth" = 1 ]] || append "$var" "disable_pmksa_caching=1" "$N"
[ "$auth_cache" -gt 0 ] || [[ "$rsn_preauth" = 1 ]] || append "$var" "okc=0" "$N"
config_get acct_server "$vif" acct_server
[ -n "$acct_server" ] && append "$var" "acct_server_addr=$acct_server" "$N"
config_get acct_port "$vif" acct_port
[ -n "$acct_port" ] && acct_port=${acct_port:-1813}
[ -n "$acct_port" ] && append "$var" "acct_server_port=$acct_port" "$N"
config_get acct_secret "$vif" acct_secret
[ -n "$acct_secret" ] && append "$var" "acct_server_shared_secret=$acct_secret" "$N"
config_get eap_reauth_period "$vif" eap_reauth_period
[ -n "$eap_reauth_period" ] && append "$var" "eap_reauth_period=$eap_reauth_period" "$N"
config_get dae_client "$vif" dae_client
config_get dae_secret "$vif" dae_secret
[ -n "$dae_client" -a -n "$dae_secret" ] && {
config_get dae_port "$vif" dae_port
append "$var" "radius_das_port=${dae_port:-3799}" "$N"
append "$var" "radius_das_client=$dae_client $dae_secret" "$N"
}
config_get nasid "$vif" nasid
config_get ownip "$vif" ownip
append "$var" "nas_identifier=$nasid" "$N"
append "$var" "own_ip_addr=$ownip" "$N"
append "$var" "eapol_key_index_workaround=1" "$N"
append "$var" "ieee8021x=1" "$N"
append "$var" "wpa_key_mgmt=WPA-EAP" "$N"
[ -n "$wpa_group_rekey" ] && append "$var" "wpa_group_rekey=$wpa_group_rekey" "$N"
[ -n "$wpa_pair_rekey" ] && append "$var" "wpa_ptk_rekey=$wpa_pair_rekey" "$N"
[ -n "$wpa_master_rekey" ] && append "$var" "wpa_gmk_rekey=$wpa_master_rekey" "$N"
;;
*wep*)
config_get key "$vif" key
key="${key:-1}"
case "$key" in
[1234])
for idx in 1 2 3 4; do
local zidx
zidx=$(($idx - 1))
config_get ckey "$vif" "key${idx}"
[ -n "$ckey" ] && \
append "$var" "wep_key${zidx}=$(prepare_key_wep "$ckey")" "$N"
done
append "$var" "wep_default_key=$((key - 1))" "$N"
;;
*)
append "$var" "wep_key0=$(prepare_key_wep "$key")" "$N"
append "$var" "wep_default_key=0" "$N"
[ -n "$wep_rekey" ] && append "$var" "wep_rekey_period=$wep_rekey" "$N"
;;
esac
case "$enc" in
*shared*)
auth_algs=2
;;
*mixed*)
auth_algs=3
;;
esac
wpa=0
crypto=
;;
*)
wpa=0
crypto=
;;
esac
append "$var" "auth_algs=${auth_algs:-1}" "$N"
append "$var" "wpa=$wpa" "$N"
[ -n "$crypto" ] && append "$var" "wpa_pairwise=$crypto" "$N"
[ -n "$wpa_group_rekey" ] && append "$var" "wpa_group_rekey=$wpa_group_rekey" "$N"
config_get ssid "$vif" ssid
config_get bridge "$vif" bridge
config_get ieee80211d "$vif" ieee80211d
config_get iapp_interface "$vif" iapp_interface
config_get_bool wps_pbc "$vif" wps_pushbutton 0
config_get_bool wps_label "$vif" wps_label 0
config_get config_methods "$vif" wps_config
[ "$wps_pbc" -gt 0 ] && append config_methods push_button
[ -n "$wps_possible" -a -n "$config_methods" ] && {
config_get device_type "$vif" wps_device_type "6-0050F204-1"
config_get device_name "$vif" wps_device_name "OpenWrt AP"
config_get manufacturer "$vif" wps_manufacturer "openwrt.org"
config_get wps_pin "$vif" wps_pin
config_get_bool ext_registrar "$vif" ext_registrar 0
[ "$ext_registrar" -gt 0 -a -n "$bridge" ] && append "$var" "upnp_iface=$bridge" "$N"
append "$var" "eap_server=1" "$N"
[ -n "$wps_pin" ] && append "$var" "ap_pin=$wps_pin" "$N"
append "$var" "wps_state=${wps_not_configured:-2}" "$N"
append "$var" "ap_setup_locked=0" "$N"
append "$var" "device_type=$device_type" "$N"
append "$var" "device_name=$device_name" "$N"
append "$var" "manufacturer=$manufacturer" "$N"
append "$var" "config_methods=$config_methods" "$N"
}
append "$var" "ssid=$ssid" "$N"
[ -n "$bridge" ] && append "$var" "bridge=$bridge" "$N"
[ -n "$ieee80211d" ] && append "$var" "ieee80211d=$ieee80211d" "$N"
[ -n "$iapp_interface" ] && append "$var" iapp_interface=$(uci_get_state network "$iapp_interface" ifname "$iapp_interface") "$N"
if [ "$wpa" -ge "2" ]
then
hostapd: fix hostapd RSN preauthentication PMKSA caching In 2009 OpenWrt's hostapd config added an "auth_cache" boolean to be used to address a reported issue #12129 [0] on a forum [1]. The reported issue on the ticket is different that the one described on the forum. The commit was r33359. This change broke proper RSN preauthentication [2] [3] [4] expectations on hostapd's configuration for WPA2 and this in turn disabled PMKSA caching and Opportunistic Key Caching. This change: * Leaves the "auth_cache" to be used only for WPA networks for those looking to use this as a workaround to a reported issue but annotates a warning over its usage. * Separate "auth_cache" from WPA2 RSN preauthentication, leaving WPA2 RSN preauthentication to enabled only with "rsn_preauth" with the expected and recommended settings. * Adds a new WPA2 RSN preauthentication "rsn_preauth_testing" to be used when evaluating funcionality for WPA2 RSN preauthentication with the expected and recommended settings with the only difference so far with what should be enabled by default to disable Opportunistic Key Caching. Disabling the PMKSA cache should mean the STA could not roam off and back onto the AP that had PMKSA caching disabled and would require a full authentication cycle. This fixes this for WPA2 networks with RSN preauthentication enabled. This change should be applied to AA as well as trunk. TL DR; The issue described on the forum has to do with failure of a STA being able to try to authenticate again with the AP if it failed its first try. This may have been an issue with hostapd in 2009 but as per some tests I cannot reproduce this today on a WPA2 network. The issue described on the ticket alludes to a security issue with the design of using a Radius server to authenticate to an AP. The issue vaguely alludes to the circumstances of zapping a user, deleting their authentication credentials to log in to the network, and that if RSN preauthentication is enabled with PMKSA caching that the user that was zapped would still be able to authenticate. Lets treat these as separate issues. I cannot reproduce the first issue reported on the forums of not being able to authenticate anymore on a WPA2 network. The issue reported on the ticket modified WPA2 RSN preauthentication by adding two fields to the hostapd configuration if auth_cache was enabled: * disable_pmksa_caching=1 * okc=0 The first one disables PMKSA authentication cache. The second one disables Opportunistic Key Caching. The issue reported on the ticket was fixed by implementing a workaround in hostapd's configuration. Disabling PMKSA caching breaks proper use of WPA2 RSN pre authentication. The usage of disable_pmksa_caching=1 prevents hostapd from adding PMKSA entries into its cache when a successful 802.1x authentication occurs. In practice RSN preauthentication would trigger a STA to perform authentication with other APs on the same SSID, it would then have its own supplicant PMKSA cache held. If a STA roams between one AP to another no new authenitcation would need to be performed as the new AP would already have authenticated the STA. The purpose of the PMKSA cache on the AP side would be for the AP to use the same PMKID for a STA when the STA roams off onto another BSSID and later comes back to it. Disabling Opportunistic Key Caching could help the reported issue as well but its not the correct place to address this. Opportunistic Key Caching enables an AP with different interfaces to share the PMKSA cache. Its a technical enhancement and disabling it would be useful to let a testing suite properly test for RSN preauthentication given that otherwise Opportunistic Key Caching would enable an interface being tested to derive its own derive the PMKSA entry. In production though okc=1 should be enabled to help with RSN preauthentication. The real fix for this particular issue outside of the scope of hostapd's configuration and it should not be dealt with as a workaround to its configuration and breaking expected RSN preauthentication and technical optimizations. Revert this change and enable users to pick and choose to enable or disable disable_pmksa_caching and okc expecting them to instead have read clearly more what these do. As for the core issure ported, the correct place to fix this is to enable a sort of messaging between the RADIUS server and its peers so that if caching for authentication is enabled that cache can be cleared upon user credential updates. Updating a user password (not just zapping a user) is another possible issue that would need to be resolved here. Another part of the solution might be to reduce the cache timing to account for any systematic limitations (RADIUS server not able to ask peers to clear cache might be one). [0] https://dev.openwrt.org/changeset/33359 [1] https://forum.openwrt.org/viewtopic.php?id=19596 [2] http://wireless.kernel.org/en/users/Documentation/hostapd#IEEE_802.11i.2FRSN.2FWPA2_pre-authentication [3] http://wireless.kernel.org/en/users/Documentation/wpa_supplicant#RSN_preauthentication [4] http://wiki.openwrt.org/doc/recipes/rsn_preauthentication Signed-off-by: Luis R. Rodriguez <mcgrof@do-not-panic.com> SVN-Revision: 38336
2013-10-08 11:09:40 +00:00
# RSN -> allow preauthentication. You have two
# options, rsn_preauth for production or rsn_preauth_testing
# for validation / testing.
if [ -n "$bridge" -a "$rsn_preauth" = 1 ]
then
append "$var" "rsn_preauth=1" "$N"
append "$var" "rsn_preauth_interfaces=$bridge" "$N"
hostapd: fix hostapd RSN preauthentication PMKSA caching In 2009 OpenWrt's hostapd config added an "auth_cache" boolean to be used to address a reported issue #12129 [0] on a forum [1]. The reported issue on the ticket is different that the one described on the forum. The commit was r33359. This change broke proper RSN preauthentication [2] [3] [4] expectations on hostapd's configuration for WPA2 and this in turn disabled PMKSA caching and Opportunistic Key Caching. This change: * Leaves the "auth_cache" to be used only for WPA networks for those looking to use this as a workaround to a reported issue but annotates a warning over its usage. * Separate "auth_cache" from WPA2 RSN preauthentication, leaving WPA2 RSN preauthentication to enabled only with "rsn_preauth" with the expected and recommended settings. * Adds a new WPA2 RSN preauthentication "rsn_preauth_testing" to be used when evaluating funcionality for WPA2 RSN preauthentication with the expected and recommended settings with the only difference so far with what should be enabled by default to disable Opportunistic Key Caching. Disabling the PMKSA cache should mean the STA could not roam off and back onto the AP that had PMKSA caching disabled and would require a full authentication cycle. This fixes this for WPA2 networks with RSN preauthentication enabled. This change should be applied to AA as well as trunk. TL DR; The issue described on the forum has to do with failure of a STA being able to try to authenticate again with the AP if it failed its first try. This may have been an issue with hostapd in 2009 but as per some tests I cannot reproduce this today on a WPA2 network. The issue described on the ticket alludes to a security issue with the design of using a Radius server to authenticate to an AP. The issue vaguely alludes to the circumstances of zapping a user, deleting their authentication credentials to log in to the network, and that if RSN preauthentication is enabled with PMKSA caching that the user that was zapped would still be able to authenticate. Lets treat these as separate issues. I cannot reproduce the first issue reported on the forums of not being able to authenticate anymore on a WPA2 network. The issue reported on the ticket modified WPA2 RSN preauthentication by adding two fields to the hostapd configuration if auth_cache was enabled: * disable_pmksa_caching=1 * okc=0 The first one disables PMKSA authentication cache. The second one disables Opportunistic Key Caching. The issue reported on the ticket was fixed by implementing a workaround in hostapd's configuration. Disabling PMKSA caching breaks proper use of WPA2 RSN pre authentication. The usage of disable_pmksa_caching=1 prevents hostapd from adding PMKSA entries into its cache when a successful 802.1x authentication occurs. In practice RSN preauthentication would trigger a STA to perform authentication with other APs on the same SSID, it would then have its own supplicant PMKSA cache held. If a STA roams between one AP to another no new authenitcation would need to be performed as the new AP would already have authenticated the STA. The purpose of the PMKSA cache on the AP side would be for the AP to use the same PMKID for a STA when the STA roams off onto another BSSID and later comes back to it. Disabling Opportunistic Key Caching could help the reported issue as well but its not the correct place to address this. Opportunistic Key Caching enables an AP with different interfaces to share the PMKSA cache. Its a technical enhancement and disabling it would be useful to let a testing suite properly test for RSN preauthentication given that otherwise Opportunistic Key Caching would enable an interface being tested to derive its own derive the PMKSA entry. In production though okc=1 should be enabled to help with RSN preauthentication. The real fix for this particular issue outside of the scope of hostapd's configuration and it should not be dealt with as a workaround to its configuration and breaking expected RSN preauthentication and technical optimizations. Revert this change and enable users to pick and choose to enable or disable disable_pmksa_caching and okc expecting them to instead have read clearly more what these do. As for the core issure ported, the correct place to fix this is to enable a sort of messaging between the RADIUS server and its peers so that if caching for authentication is enabled that cache can be cleared upon user credential updates. Updating a user password (not just zapping a user) is another possible issue that would need to be resolved here. Another part of the solution might be to reduce the cache timing to account for any systematic limitations (RADIUS server not able to ask peers to clear cache might be one). [0] https://dev.openwrt.org/changeset/33359 [1] https://forum.openwrt.org/viewtopic.php?id=19596 [2] http://wireless.kernel.org/en/users/Documentation/hostapd#IEEE_802.11i.2FRSN.2FWPA2_pre-authentication [3] http://wireless.kernel.org/en/users/Documentation/wpa_supplicant#RSN_preauthentication [4] http://wiki.openwrt.org/doc/recipes/rsn_preauthentication Signed-off-by: Luis R. Rodriguez <mcgrof@do-not-panic.com> SVN-Revision: 38336
2013-10-08 11:09:40 +00:00
append "$var" "okc=1" "$N"
else
# RSN preauthentication testings hould disable
# Opportunistic Key Caching (okc) as otherwise the PMKSA
# entry for a test could come from the Opportunistic Key Caching
config_get rsn_preauth_testing "$vif" rsn_preauth_testing
if [ -n "$bridge" -a "$rsn_preauth_testing" = 1 ]
then
append "$var" "rsn_preauth=1" "$N"
append "$var" "rsn_preauth_interfaces=$bridge" "$N"
append "$var" "okc=0" "$N"
fi
fi
# RSN -> allow management frame protection
config_get ieee80211w "$vif" ieee80211w
case "$ieee80211w" in
[012])
append "$var" "ieee80211w=$ieee80211w" "$N"
[ "$ieee80211w" -gt "0" ] && {
config_get ieee80211w_max_timeout "$vif" ieee80211w_max_timeout
config_get ieee80211w_retry_timeout "$vif" ieee80211w_retry_timeout
[ -n "$ieee80211w_max_timeout" ] && \
append "$var" "assoc_sa_query_max_timeout=$ieee80211w_max_timeout" "$N"
[ -n "$ieee80211w_retry_timeout" ] && \
append "$var" "assoc_sa_query_retry_timeout=$ieee80211w_retry_timeout" "$N"
}
;;
esac
fi
config_get macfile "$vif" macfile
config_get maclist "$vif" maclist
if [ -z "$macfile" ]
then
# if no macfile has been specified, fallback to the default name
# and truncate file to avoid aggregating entries over time
macfile="/var/run/hostapd-$ifname.maclist"
echo "" > "$macfile"
else
if [ -n "$maclist" ]
then
# to avoid to overwrite the original file, make a copy
# before appending the entries specified by the maclist
# option
cp $macfile $macfile.maclist
macfile=$macfile.maclist
fi
fi
if [ -n "$maclist" ]
then
for mac in $maclist; do
echo "$mac" >> $macfile
done
fi
config_get macfilter "$vif" macfilter
case "$macfilter" in
allow)
append "$var" "macaddr_acl=1" "$N"
append "$var" "accept_mac_file=$macfile" "$N"
;;
deny)
append "$var" "macaddr_acl=0" "$N"
append "$var" "deny_mac_file=$macfile" "$N"
;;
esac
}
hostapd_set_log_options() {
local var="$1"
local cfg="$2"
local log_level log_80211 log_8021x log_radius log_wpa log_driver log_iapp log_mlme
config_get log_level "$cfg" log_level 2
config_get_bool log_80211 "$cfg" log_80211 1
config_get_bool log_8021x "$cfg" log_8021x 1
config_get_bool log_radius "$cfg" log_radius 1
config_get_bool log_wpa "$cfg" log_wpa 1
config_get_bool log_driver "$cfg" log_driver 1
config_get_bool log_iapp "$cfg" log_iapp 1
config_get_bool log_mlme "$cfg" log_mlme 1
local log_mask=$(( \
($log_80211 << 0) | \
($log_8021x << 1) | \
($log_radius << 2) | \
($log_wpa << 3) | \
($log_driver << 4) | \
($log_iapp << 5) | \
($log_mlme << 6) \
))
append "$var" "logger_syslog=$log_mask" "$N"
append "$var" "logger_syslog_level=$log_level" "$N"
append "$var" "logger_stdout=$log_mask" "$N"
append "$var" "logger_stdout_level=$log_level" "$N"
}
hostapd_setup_vif() {
local vif="$1"
local driver="$2"
local ifname device channel hwmode
hostapd_cfg=
config_get ifname "$vif" ifname
config_get device "$vif" device
config_get channel "$device" channel
config_get hwmode "$device" hwmode
hostapd_set_log_options hostapd_cfg "$device"
hostapd_set_bss_options hostapd_cfg "$vif"
case "$hwmode" in
*bg|*gdt|*gst|*fh) hwmode=g;;
*adt|*ast) hwmode=a;;
esac
[ "$channel" = auto ] && channel=
[ -n "$channel" -a -z "$hwmode" ] && wifi_fixup_hwmode "$device"
cat > /var/run/hostapd-$ifname.conf <<EOF
driver=$driver
interface=$ifname
${hwmode:+hw_mode=${hwmode#11}}
${channel:+channel=$channel}
$hostapd_cfg
EOF
2008-10-30 22:49:15 +00:00
hostapd -P /var/run/wifi-$ifname.pid -B /var/run/hostapd-$ifname.conf
}