Date: Fri, 03 May 2002 17:58:01 -0600 (MDT) From: "M. Warner Losh" <imp@village.org> To: grog@lemis.com Cc: doconnor@gsoft.com.au, freebsd-mobile@FreeBSD.org, wes@softweyr.com, dunham@dunham.org, jdunham@m3designinc.com, jdunham@texas.net Subject: Re: Ad-Hoc with Windows? Message-ID: <20020503.175801.101616114.imp@village.org> In-Reply-To: <20020504092022.J12386@wantadilla.lemis.com> References: <1020331032.442.168.camel@chowder.gsoft.com.au> <20020503.082221.37493394.imp@village.org> <20020504092022.J12386@wantadilla.lemis.com>
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In message: <20020504092022.J12386@wantadilla.lemis.com> "Greg 'groggy' Lehey" <grog@lemis.com> writes: : On Friday, 3 May 2002 at 8:22:21 -0600, Warner Losh wrote: : >>> - The BSDs are doing it wrong. We should be using IBSS mode, not demo : >>> ad-hoc. : > : > ad-hoc is insufficient. We should create a media option like OpenBSD : > has called master-ibss which does the right thing for the different : > types of hardware. : : Why master-ibss? What's the difference between that and IBSS? I : haven't found this term in the standard. 'ibss-master' is the master ibss you need one of these. 'ibss' is for all the other nodes on the network. This is approximately the -c flag. : >>> - On the Lucent cards, you don't get a signal strength indication. : > : > Lucent cards are the only ones I've seen that have good signal : > indication. However, it is in wicontrol -C only, not in the normal : > wicontrol output. : : Ah, interesting. On one machine (running CURRENT from 12 December : 2001), it only shows the last machine contacted, but on a more recent : CURRENT it shows at least two of them. Is this a difference in the : cards or in CURRENT? It does it at the mac level, so only those mac addresses that you are talking to will have entries. I routinely get 10 or so when I connect via an access point. : >>> One of the details about which Wes and I couldn't agree was whether an : >>> IBSS can route to the outside world. I say yes, because any system in : >>> the IBSS can have other interfaces as well. This isn't covered in the : >>> 802.11 standard, of course. Wes says no, because the 802.11 standard : >>> (available for free from : >>> http://standards.ieee.org/getieee802/download/802.11-1999.pdf, which : >>> is nevertheless a web page) says that interconnection only works with : >>> BSS (i.e. managed) mode. I claim that this just refers to link-level : >>> interconnection, and that IP routing has nothing to do with 802.11. : >>> Comments welcome. : > : > IBSS is a mode that you need to do routing with. It won't bridge for : > you. You need access point for that. Maybe that's what Wes is : > talking about: the ability to put the access point on a network and : > have it deal properly with bridging the traffic onto the lan. : : No, Wes was saying that the standard required an access point in order : to connect to an external network at all, and the fact that I could do : it without an access point was a coincidence which "shouldn't work". That's not true. Either you misunderstood wes, or wes was confused. : > Finally, a lot of stuff is in flux right now :-) : : I can't see anything significant in the drivers. For me, it Just : Works. The hostap stuff is in flux. Warner To Unsubscribe: send mail to majordomo@FreeBSD.org with "unsubscribe freebsd-mobile" in the body of the message
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