linux-sg2042/include/net/wireless.h

446 lines
14 KiB
C

#ifndef __NET_WIRELESS_H
#define __NET_WIRELESS_H
/*
* 802.11 device management
*
* Copyright 2007 Johannes Berg <johannes@sipsolutions.net>
*/
#include <linux/netdevice.h>
#include <linux/debugfs.h>
#include <linux/list.h>
#include <linux/ieee80211.h>
#include <net/cfg80211.h>
/**
* enum ieee80211_band - supported frequency bands
*
* The bands are assigned this way because the supported
* bitrates differ in these bands.
*
* @IEEE80211_BAND_2GHZ: 2.4GHz ISM band
* @IEEE80211_BAND_5GHZ: around 5GHz band (4.9-5.7)
*/
enum ieee80211_band {
IEEE80211_BAND_2GHZ,
IEEE80211_BAND_5GHZ,
/* keep last */
IEEE80211_NUM_BANDS
};
/**
* enum ieee80211_channel_flags - channel flags
*
* Channel flags set by the regulatory control code.
*
* @IEEE80211_CHAN_DISABLED: This channel is disabled.
* @IEEE80211_CHAN_PASSIVE_SCAN: Only passive scanning is permitted
* on this channel.
* @IEEE80211_CHAN_NO_IBSS: IBSS is not allowed on this channel.
* @IEEE80211_CHAN_RADAR: Radar detection is required on this channel.
* @IEEE80211_CHAN_NO_FAT_ABOVE: extension channel above this channel
* is not permitted.
* @IEEE80211_CHAN_NO_FAT_BELOW: extension channel below this channel
* is not permitted.
*/
enum ieee80211_channel_flags {
IEEE80211_CHAN_DISABLED = 1<<0,
IEEE80211_CHAN_PASSIVE_SCAN = 1<<1,
IEEE80211_CHAN_NO_IBSS = 1<<2,
IEEE80211_CHAN_RADAR = 1<<3,
IEEE80211_CHAN_NO_FAT_ABOVE = 1<<4,
IEEE80211_CHAN_NO_FAT_BELOW = 1<<5,
};
/**
* struct ieee80211_channel - channel definition
*
* This structure describes a single channel for use
* with cfg80211.
*
* @center_freq: center frequency in MHz
* @max_bandwidth: maximum allowed bandwidth for this channel, in MHz
* @hw_value: hardware-specific value for the channel
* @flags: channel flags from &enum ieee80211_channel_flags.
* @orig_flags: channel flags at registration time, used by regulatory
* code to support devices with additional restrictions
* @band: band this channel belongs to.
* @max_antenna_gain: maximum antenna gain in dBi
* @max_power: maximum transmission power (in dBm)
* @orig_mag: internal use
* @orig_mpwr: internal use
*/
struct ieee80211_channel {
enum ieee80211_band band;
u16 center_freq;
u8 max_bandwidth;
u16 hw_value;
u32 flags;
int max_antenna_gain;
int max_power;
u32 orig_flags;
int orig_mag, orig_mpwr;
};
/**
* enum ieee80211_rate_flags - rate flags
*
* Hardware/specification flags for rates. These are structured
* in a way that allows using the same bitrate structure for
* different bands/PHY modes.
*
* @IEEE80211_RATE_SHORT_PREAMBLE: Hardware can send with short
* preamble on this bitrate; only relevant in 2.4GHz band and
* with CCK rates.
* @IEEE80211_RATE_MANDATORY_A: This bitrate is a mandatory rate
* when used with 802.11a (on the 5 GHz band); filled by the
* core code when registering the wiphy.
* @IEEE80211_RATE_MANDATORY_B: This bitrate is a mandatory rate
* when used with 802.11b (on the 2.4 GHz band); filled by the
* core code when registering the wiphy.
* @IEEE80211_RATE_MANDATORY_G: This bitrate is a mandatory rate
* when used with 802.11g (on the 2.4 GHz band); filled by the
* core code when registering the wiphy.
* @IEEE80211_RATE_ERP_G: This is an ERP rate in 802.11g mode.
*/
enum ieee80211_rate_flags {
IEEE80211_RATE_SHORT_PREAMBLE = 1<<0,
IEEE80211_RATE_MANDATORY_A = 1<<1,
IEEE80211_RATE_MANDATORY_B = 1<<2,
IEEE80211_RATE_MANDATORY_G = 1<<3,
IEEE80211_RATE_ERP_G = 1<<4,
};
/**
* struct ieee80211_rate - bitrate definition
*
* This structure describes a bitrate that an 802.11 PHY can
* operate with. The two values @hw_value and @hw_value_short
* are only for driver use when pointers to this structure are
* passed around.
*
* @flags: rate-specific flags
* @bitrate: bitrate in units of 100 Kbps
* @hw_value: driver/hardware value for this rate
* @hw_value_short: driver/hardware value for this rate when
* short preamble is used
*/
struct ieee80211_rate {
u32 flags;
u16 bitrate;
u16 hw_value, hw_value_short;
};
/**
* struct ieee80211_sta_ht_cap - STA's HT capabilities
*
* This structure describes most essential parameters needed
* to describe 802.11n HT capabilities for an STA.
*
* @ht_supported: is HT supported by the STA
* @cap: HT capabilities map as described in 802.11n spec
* @ampdu_factor: Maximum A-MPDU length factor
* @ampdu_density: Minimum A-MPDU spacing
* @mcs: Supported MCS rates
*/
struct ieee80211_sta_ht_cap {
u16 cap; /* use IEEE80211_HT_CAP_ */
bool ht_supported;
u8 ampdu_factor;
u8 ampdu_density;
struct ieee80211_mcs_info mcs;
};
/**
* struct ieee80211_supported_band - frequency band definition
*
* This structure describes a frequency band a wiphy
* is able to operate in.
*
* @channels: Array of channels the hardware can operate in
* in this band.
* @band: the band this structure represents
* @n_channels: Number of channels in @channels
* @bitrates: Array of bitrates the hardware can operate with
* in this band. Must be sorted to give a valid "supported
* rates" IE, i.e. CCK rates first, then OFDM.
* @n_bitrates: Number of bitrates in @bitrates
*/
struct ieee80211_supported_band {
struct ieee80211_channel *channels;
struct ieee80211_rate *bitrates;
enum ieee80211_band band;
int n_channels;
int n_bitrates;
struct ieee80211_sta_ht_cap ht_cap;
};
/**
* struct wiphy - wireless hardware description
* @idx: the wiphy index assigned to this item
* @class_dev: the class device representing /sys/class/ieee80211/<wiphy-name>
* @fw_handles_regulatory: tells us the firmware for this device
* has its own regulatory solution and cannot identify the
* ISO / IEC 3166 alpha2 it belongs to. When this is enabled
* we will disregard the first regulatory hint (when the
* initiator is %REGDOM_SET_BY_CORE).
* @reg_notifier: the driver's regulatory notification callback
* @regd: the driver's regulatory domain, if one was requested via
* the regulatory_hint() API. This can be used by the driver
* on the reg_notifier() if it chooses to ignore future
* regulatory domain changes caused by other drivers.
*/
struct wiphy {
/* assign these fields before you register the wiphy */
/* permanent MAC address */
u8 perm_addr[ETH_ALEN];
/* Supported interface modes, OR together BIT(NL80211_IFTYPE_...) */
u16 interface_modes;
bool fw_handles_regulatory;
/* If multiple wiphys are registered and you're handed e.g.
* a regular netdev with assigned ieee80211_ptr, you won't
* know whether it points to a wiphy your driver has registered
* or not. Assign this to something global to your driver to
* help determine whether you own this wiphy or not. */
void *privid;
struct ieee80211_supported_band *bands[IEEE80211_NUM_BANDS];
/* Lets us get back the wiphy on the callback */
int (*reg_notifier)(struct wiphy *wiphy, enum reg_set_by setby);
/* fields below are read-only, assigned by cfg80211 */
const struct ieee80211_regdomain *regd;
/* the item in /sys/class/ieee80211/ points to this,
* you need use set_wiphy_dev() (see below) */
struct device dev;
/* dir in debugfs: ieee80211/<wiphyname> */
struct dentry *debugfsdir;
char priv[0] __attribute__((__aligned__(NETDEV_ALIGN)));
};
/** struct wireless_dev - wireless per-netdev state
*
* This structure must be allocated by the driver/stack
* that uses the ieee80211_ptr field in struct net_device
* (this is intentional so it can be allocated along with
* the netdev.)
*
* @wiphy: pointer to hardware description
* @iftype: interface type
*/
struct wireless_dev {
struct wiphy *wiphy;
enum nl80211_iftype iftype;
/* private to the generic wireless code */
struct list_head list;
struct net_device *netdev;
};
/**
* wiphy_priv - return priv from wiphy
*/
static inline void *wiphy_priv(struct wiphy *wiphy)
{
BUG_ON(!wiphy);
return &wiphy->priv;
}
/**
* set_wiphy_dev - set device pointer for wiphy
*/
static inline void set_wiphy_dev(struct wiphy *wiphy, struct device *dev)
{
wiphy->dev.parent = dev;
}
/**
* wiphy_dev - get wiphy dev pointer
*/
static inline struct device *wiphy_dev(struct wiphy *wiphy)
{
return wiphy->dev.parent;
}
/**
* wiphy_name - get wiphy name
*/
static inline const char *wiphy_name(struct wiphy *wiphy)
{
return dev_name(&wiphy->dev);
}
/**
* wdev_priv - return wiphy priv from wireless_dev
*/
static inline void *wdev_priv(struct wireless_dev *wdev)
{
BUG_ON(!wdev);
return wiphy_priv(wdev->wiphy);
}
/**
* wiphy_new - create a new wiphy for use with cfg80211
*
* create a new wiphy and associate the given operations with it.
* @sizeof_priv bytes are allocated for private use.
*
* the returned pointer must be assigned to each netdev's
* ieee80211_ptr for proper operation.
*/
struct wiphy *wiphy_new(struct cfg80211_ops *ops, int sizeof_priv);
/**
* wiphy_register - register a wiphy with cfg80211
*
* register the given wiphy
*
* Returns a non-negative wiphy index or a negative error code.
*/
extern int wiphy_register(struct wiphy *wiphy);
/**
* wiphy_unregister - deregister a wiphy from cfg80211
*
* unregister a device with the given priv pointer.
* After this call, no more requests can be made with this priv
* pointer, but the call may sleep to wait for an outstanding
* request that is being handled.
*/
extern void wiphy_unregister(struct wiphy *wiphy);
/**
* wiphy_free - free wiphy
*/
extern void wiphy_free(struct wiphy *wiphy);
/**
* ieee80211_channel_to_frequency - convert channel number to frequency
*/
extern int ieee80211_channel_to_frequency(int chan);
/**
* ieee80211_frequency_to_channel - convert frequency to channel number
*/
extern int ieee80211_frequency_to_channel(int freq);
/*
* Name indirection necessary because the ieee80211 code also has
* a function named "ieee80211_get_channel", so if you include
* cfg80211's header file you get cfg80211's version, if you try
* to include both header files you'll (rightfully!) get a symbol
* clash.
*/
extern struct ieee80211_channel *__ieee80211_get_channel(struct wiphy *wiphy,
int freq);
/**
* ieee80211_get_channel - get channel struct from wiphy for specified frequency
*/
static inline struct ieee80211_channel *
ieee80211_get_channel(struct wiphy *wiphy, int freq)
{
return __ieee80211_get_channel(wiphy, freq);
}
/**
* ieee80211_get_response_rate - get basic rate for a given rate
*
* @sband: the band to look for rates in
* @basic_rates: bitmap of basic rates
* @bitrate: the bitrate for which to find the basic rate
*
* This function returns the basic rate corresponding to a given
* bitrate, that is the next lower bitrate contained in the basic
* rate map, which is, for this function, given as a bitmap of
* indices of rates in the band's bitrate table.
*/
struct ieee80211_rate *
ieee80211_get_response_rate(struct ieee80211_supported_band *sband,
u32 basic_rates, int bitrate);
/**
* regulatory_hint - driver hint to the wireless core a regulatory domain
* @wiphy: the wireless device giving the hint (used only for reporting
* conflicts)
* @alpha2: the ISO/IEC 3166 alpha2 the driver claims its regulatory domain
* should be in. If @rd is set this should be NULL. Note that if you
* set this to NULL you should still set rd->alpha2 to some accepted
* alpha2.
*
* Wireless drivers can use this function to hint to the wireless core
* what it believes should be the current regulatory domain by
* giving it an ISO/IEC 3166 alpha2 country code it knows its regulatory
* domain should be in or by providing a completely build regulatory domain.
* If the driver provides an ISO/IEC 3166 alpha2 userspace will be queried
* for a regulatory domain structure for the respective country.
*/
extern void regulatory_hint(struct wiphy *wiphy, const char *alpha2);
/**
* regulatory_hint_11d - hints a country IE as a regulatory domain
* @wiphy: the wireless device giving the hint (used only for reporting
* conflicts)
* @country_ie: pointer to the country IE
* @country_ie_len: length of the country IE
*
* We will intersect the rd with the what CRDA tells us should apply
* for the alpha2 this country IE belongs to, this prevents APs from
* sending us incorrect or outdated information against a country.
*/
extern void regulatory_hint_11d(struct wiphy *wiphy,
u8 *country_ie,
u8 country_ie_len);
/**
* wiphy_apply_custom_regulatory - apply a custom driver regulatory domain
* @wiphy: the wireless device we want to process the regulatory domain on
* @regd: the custom regulatory domain to use for this wiphy
*
* Drivers can sometimes have custom regulatory domains which do not apply
* to a specific country. Drivers can use this to apply such custom regulatory
* domains. This routine must be called prior to wiphy registration. The
* custom regulatory domain will be trusted completely and as such previous
* default channel settings will be disregarded. If no rule is found for a
* channel on the regulatory domain the channel will be disabled.
*/
extern void wiphy_apply_custom_regulatory(
struct wiphy *wiphy,
const struct ieee80211_regdomain *regd);
/**
* freq_reg_info - get regulatory information for the given frequency
* @wiphy: the wiphy for which we want to process this rule for
* @center_freq: Frequency in KHz for which we want regulatory information for
* @bandwidth: the bandwidth requirement you have in KHz, if you do not have one
* you can set this to 0. If this frequency is allowed we then set
* 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 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.
*/
extern int freq_reg_info(struct wiphy *wiphy, u32 center_freq, u32 *bandwidth,
const struct ieee80211_reg_rule **reg_rule);
#endif /* __NET_WIRELESS_H */