Date: Wed, 25 Mar 2009 20:31:34 -0700 From: Sam Leffler <sam@freebsd.org> To: David Cornejo <dcornejo@gmail.com> Cc: freebsd-net@freebsd.org Subject: Re: wds how-to? Message-ID: <49CAF716.6080105@freebsd.org> In-Reply-To: <6b8e8f4f0903251921h285c65c6i41444d577631158d@mail.gmail.com> References: <6b8e8f4f0903251921h285c65c6i41444d577631158d@mail.gmail.com>
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David Cornejo wrote: > Aloha, > > I'm trying to get WDS running - I am working my way through the stuff > in /usr/src/tools/tools/net80211/scripts, but it really only gives > examples and doesn't explain the why of it - is there a more verbose > how to somewhere that would help me understand this? > I've written nothing. You say the "why" is missing but you don't ask any questions. There are 2 flavors of wds, legacy and dynamic. The legacy stuff is trivial to setup; ifconfig wlan create wlandev ath0 wlanmode wds wlanbssid ... wdslegacy The bssid is the peer's mac address. This is just a fixed 4-address conduit for frames. There must be an ap vap already created. You want to plumb the vap into a bridge or assign it an ip address and route (not sure about routing; I always use it bridged). Dynamic wds setup depends on whether you're on the ap side or the sta side; the scripts are the best examples. The idea is you have a sta-ap association that carries 4-address traffic. Because there's a full-blown association you get discovery, roaming, and security for free. This is what you'll find in Apple's ap products though they've done a bunch of work to make it more production-quality. Note that wds is implemented above the drivers (modulo a bit of glue code). ath is just one driver that supports wds, ral is another. Sam
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