Commit 0c7dc45d authored by Luis R. Rodriguez's avatar Luis R. Rodriguez Committed by John W. Linville

cfg80211: Fix regression with 11d on bands

This fixes a regression on disallowing bands introduced with the new
802.11d support. The issue is that IEEE-802.11 allows APs to send
a subset of what a country regulatory domain defines. This was clarified
in this document:

http://tinyurl.com/11d-clarification

As such it is possible, and this is what is done in practice, that a
single band 2.4 GHz AP will only send 2.4 GHz band regulatory information
through the 802.11 country information element and then the current
intersection with what CRDA provided yields a regulatory domain with
no 5 GHz information -- even though that country may actually allow
5 GHz operation. We correct this by only applying the intersection rules
on a channel if the the intersection yields a regulatory rule on the
same band the channel is on.
Signed-off-by: default avatarLuis R. Rodriguez <lrodriguez@atheros.com>
Acked-by: default avatarJohannes Berg <johannes@sipsolutions.net>
Signed-off-by: default avatarJohn W. Linville <linville@tuxdriver.com>
parent a92a3ce7
......@@ -421,6 +421,31 @@ static u32 freq_max_bandwidth(const struct ieee80211_freq_range *freq_range,
return 0;
}
/**
* freq_in_rule_band - tells us if a frequency is in a frequency band
* @freq_range: frequency rule we want to query
* @freq_khz: frequency we are inquiring about
*
* This lets us know if a specific frequency rule is or is not relevant to
* a specific frequency's band. Bands are device specific and artificial
* definitions (the "2.4 GHz band" and the "5 GHz band"), however it is
* safe for now to assume that a frequency rule should not be part of a
* frequency's band if the start freq or end freq are off by more than 2 GHz.
* This resolution can be lowered and should be considered as we add
* regulatory rule support for other "bands".
**/
static bool freq_in_rule_band(const struct ieee80211_freq_range *freq_range,
u32 freq_khz)
{
#define ONE_GHZ_IN_KHZ 1000000
if (abs(freq_khz - freq_range->start_freq_khz) <= (2 * ONE_GHZ_IN_KHZ))
return true;
if (abs(freq_khz - freq_range->end_freq_khz) <= (2 * ONE_GHZ_IN_KHZ))
return true;
return false;
#undef ONE_GHZ_IN_KHZ
}
/* Converts a country IE to a regulatory domain. A regulatory domain
* structure has a lot of information which the IE doesn't yet have,
* so for the other values we use upper max values as we will intersect
......@@ -748,12 +773,23 @@ static u32 map_regdom_flags(u32 rd_flags)
* this value to the maximum allowed bandwidth.
* @reg_rule: the regulatory rule which we have for this frequency
*
* Use this function to get the regulatory rule for a specific frequency.
* Use this function to get the regulatory rule for a specific frequency on
* a given wireless device. If the device has a specific regulatory domain
* it wants to follow we respect that unless a country IE has been received
* and processed already.
*
* Returns 0 if it was able to find a valid regulatory rule which does
* apply to the given center_freq otherwise it returns non-zero. It will
* also return -ERANGE if we determine the given center_freq does not even have
* a regulatory rule for a frequency range in the center_freq's band. See
* freq_in_rule_band() for our current definition of a band -- this is purely
* subjective and right now its 802.11 specific.
*/
static int freq_reg_info(u32 center_freq, u32 *bandwidth,
const struct ieee80211_reg_rule **reg_rule)
{
int i;
bool band_rule_found = false;
u32 max_bandwidth = 0;
if (!cfg80211_regdomain)
......@@ -767,7 +803,15 @@ static int freq_reg_info(u32 center_freq, u32 *bandwidth,
rr = &cfg80211_regdomain->reg_rules[i];
fr = &rr->freq_range;
pr = &rr->power_rule;
/* We only need to know if one frequency rule was
* was in center_freq's band, that's enough, so lets
* not overwrite it once found */
if (!band_rule_found)
band_rule_found = freq_in_rule_band(fr, center_freq);
max_bandwidth = freq_max_bandwidth(fr, center_freq);
if (max_bandwidth && *bandwidth <= max_bandwidth) {
*reg_rule = rr;
*bandwidth = max_bandwidth;
......@@ -775,6 +819,9 @@ static int freq_reg_info(u32 center_freq, u32 *bandwidth,
}
}
if (!band_rule_found)
return -ERANGE;
return !max_bandwidth;
}
......@@ -799,8 +846,37 @@ static void handle_channel(struct wiphy *wiphy, enum ieee80211_band band,
&max_bandwidth, &reg_rule);
if (r) {
flags |= IEEE80211_CHAN_DISABLED;
chan->flags = flags;
/* This means no regulatory rule was found in the country IE
* with a frequency range on the center_freq's band, since
* IEEE-802.11 allows for a country IE to have a subset of the
* regulatory information provided in a country we ignore
* disabling the channel unless at least one reg rule was
* found on the center_freq's band. For details see this
* clarification:
*
* http://tinyurl.com/11d-clarification
*/
if (r == -ERANGE &&
last_request->initiator == REGDOM_SET_BY_COUNTRY_IE) {
#ifdef CONFIG_CFG80211_REG_DEBUG
printk(KERN_DEBUG "cfg80211: Leaving channel %d MHz "
"intact on %s - no rule found in band on "
"Country IE\n",
chan->center_freq, wiphy_name(wiphy));
#endif
} else {
/* In this case we know the country IE has at least one reg rule
* for the band so we respect its band definitions */
#ifdef CONFIG_CFG80211_REG_DEBUG
if (last_request->initiator == REGDOM_SET_BY_COUNTRY_IE)
printk(KERN_DEBUG "cfg80211: Disabling "
"channel %d MHz on %s due to "
"Country IE\n",
chan->center_freq, wiphy_name(wiphy));
#endif
flags |= IEEE80211_CHAN_DISABLED;
chan->flags = flags;
}
return;
}
......
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