Date: Thu, 20 Oct 2005 04:35:32 -1000 From: Jim Thompson <jim@netgate.com> To: Andrew Atrens <atrens@nortel.com> Cc: freebsd-current@freebsd.org, Jiri Mikulas <konfer@mikulas.com>, Andrew Thompson <thompsa@freebsd.org> Subject: Re: ath client bridge Message-ID: <7B0B2AA4-5178-4C0F-BB7B-869CB7FC29AC@netgate.com> In-Reply-To: <D89799D0-71A2-45FC-8AF5-9C1902FFF5F1@netgate.com> References: <43560B6A.4070505@mikulas.com> <20051019091559.GA45009@heff.fud.org.nz> <43565782.8080706@nortel.com> <D89799D0-71A2-45FC-8AF5-9C1902FFF5F1@netgate.com>
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On Oct 20, 2005, at 3:24 AM, Jim Thompson wrote: > 1 0 DA BSSID SA X more importantly, when a device "behind" the AP sends a packet for and SA that is behind your "client bridge", how does the AP know where to send the frame on the wireless medium? Or, in this case: > 0 1 BSSID SA DA X When a device "behind" your client bridge sends a frame through your client bridge, and "SA" is this "device behind", how can the AP possibly accept the frame. It doesn't (appear) to come from an associated STA (SA isn't the address for the device that sent the packet), and the AP certainly can't ACK the frame, (so why would it forward it?) This is why the "4 address" frame type (with FromDS and ToDS both set) exists. 1 1 RA TA DA SA RA = device on wireless media "receiving" the frame TA = device on the wireless media "transmitting the frame" SA = original source of the packet DA = original (and ultimate) destination of the packet jim
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