C - ioctl wlan operstate, link quality, and tx/rx status - c

I borrowed from this gentleman in order to request the signal strength of a wireless connection on my device. I would also like to use ioctl to get the operstate and whether or not there's up/down stream information flowing over the connection.
Basically, I'm attempting to modernize the look of this device, adding to it real-time status icons of link operability, quality, and activity. Originally, I was using popen() to cat and parse /proc/net/wireless and /sys/class/net/wlan0/operstate. The only issue was that occasionally that would fail (I assume because the OS had locked the file) so it was causing crashes.
So, my questions are two:
One, can I use ioctl in a way similar to the one described in the link above to monitor the operstate and connection activity? The information I could find pertaining to this was only for ifreq, not iwreq.
Two, it occurred to me while writing this that I should probably just have the kernel telling my application when the status of the wireless device changes, shouldn't I? I can't imagine various desktops' system trays have polling loops in them.
Actual Two: is there a way to have the kernel feed information into my application about operstate, link quality, and link activity in real-time?
Thank you in advance. =)

Related

Linux serial port (tty) redirection

I have a question linked to Linux and serial port.
I want to be able to receive and send messages to a dedicated serial port and to redirect it to another port (/dev/tty).
For the first part, I’m able to dialog with my hardware equipment without any problem, but I’m just wondering if it’s possible to intercept and redirect message coming from a serial port #1 to another port #2.
To give more context, I had used a GPS Antenna and NTP open source software for years.
Since 2018, the new GPS antenna protocol has modified the order of bytes in the message used by NTP to steer and now it’s not working anymore.
So my idea is to put a simple C program (middleware) which fixes this byte ordering; but I’m wondering if I have to build a kernel-specific module or if it can be done in another way. The NTP software uses the symbolic link to dialog.
Thanks for your help.
You can probably use a simple redirect, look here:
Pipe One Serial Port to Another in Linux
If the ports are in different rates you can use stty or perhaps screen to adjust: https://unix.stackexchange.com/a/117064
If you need it to be in c program to manipulate it you can use the following: https://stackoverflow.com/a/6947758/8901188
Using c it will need to run in an infinite loop so it can constantly read, manipulate and write the data.

Can IOCTL be used in sending custom input to a Driver

Sorry If this is a noob question, but I'm developing a software "add on" for a game. I'm doing this through a driver simply because the anti-cheat doesn't support ring 0 detection. I haven't seen much info on how IOCTL can be used and i was wondering if you can send custom inputs like process ids and other information that may change or is it all set in stone like a switch function or something. Once again sorry for noob question.
You can communicate with a kernel-mode device driver via IOCTL using the DeviceIoControl Win32 API routine. This routine internally calls NtDeviceIoControlFile (NTDLL) which performs a system call to get NtDeviceIoControlFile (NTOSKRNL) executed.
The DeviceIoControl routine is documented at MSDN: https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/windows/desktop/aa363216(v=vs.85).aspx
The kernel-mode device driver will have a prerequisite to fulfill: https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/windows-hardware/drivers/kernel/named-device-objects
I haven't seen much info on how IOCTL can be used and i was wondering if you can send custom inputs like process ids and other information
The answer is yes, you can send custom buffers via IOCTL. You can also receive an output buffer back from your kernel-mode device driver to the user-mode application which initiated the IOCTL operation - this is optional of course.
If you need to send multiple pieces of information at the same time, consider using a structure.
I also recommend you read the following:
https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/windows-hardware/drivers/kernel/methods-for-accessing-data-buffers

How to unsafely remove blockdevice driver in Linux

I am writing a block device driver for linux.
It is crucial to support unsafe removal (like usb unplug). In other words, I want to be able to shut down the block device without creating memory leaks / crashes even while applications hold open files or performing IO on my device or if it is mounted with file system.
Surely unsafe removal would possibly corrupt the data which is stored on the device, but that is something the customers are willing to accept.
Here is the basics steps I have done:
Upon unsafe removal, block device spawns a zombie which will automatically fail all new IO requests, ioctls, etc. The zombie substitutes make_request function and changes other function pointers so kernel would not need the original block device.
Block device waits for all IO which is running now (and use my internal resources) to complete
It does del_gendisk(); however this does not really free's kernel resources because they are still used.
Block device frees itself.
The zombie keeps track of the amount of opens() and close() on the block device and when last close() occurs it automatically free() itself
Result - I am not leaking the blockdevice, request queue, gen disk, etc.
However this is a very difficult mechanism which requires a lot of code and is extremely prone to race conditions. I am still struggling with corner cases, per_cpu counting of io's and occasional crashes
My questions: Is there a mechanism in the kernel which already does that? I searched manuals, literature, and countless source code examples of block device drivers, ram disks and USB drivers but could not find a solution. I am sure, that I am not the first one to encounter this problem.
Edited:
I learned from the answer below, by Dave S about the hot-plug mechanism but it does not help me. I need a solution of how to safely shut down the driver and not how to notify the kernel that driver was shut down.
Example of one problem:
blk_queue_make_request() registers a function through which my block devices serves IO. In that function I increment per_cpu counters to know how many IO's are in flight by each cpu. However there is a race condition of function being called but counter was not increased yet, so my device thinks there are 0 IO's, releases the resources and then IO comes and crashes the system. Hotplug will not assist me with this problem as far as I understand
About a decade ago I used hotplugging on a software driver project to safely add/remove an external USB disk drive which interfaced to an embedded Linux driven Set-top Box.
For your project you will also need to write a hot plug. A hotplug is a program which is used by the kernel to notify user mode software when some significant (usually hardware-related) events take place. An example is when a USB device has just been plugged in or removed.
From Linux 2.6 kernel onwards, hotplugging has been integrated with the driver model core so that any bus or class can report hotplug events when devices are added or removed.
In the kernel tree, /usr/src/linux/Documentation/usb/hotplug.txt has basic information about USB Device Driver API support for hotplugging.
See also this link, and GOOGLE as well for examples and documentation.
http://linux-hotplug.sourceforge.net/
Another very helpful document which discusses hotplugging with block devices can be found here:
https://www.kernel.org/doc/pending/hotplug.txt
This document also gives a good example of illustrating hotplug events handling:
Below is a table of the main variables you should be aware of:
Hotplug event variables:
Every hotplug event should provide at least the following variables:
ACTION
The current hotplug action: "add" to add the device, "remove" to remove it.
The 2.6.22 kernel can also generate "change", "online", "offline", and
"move" actions.
DEVPATH
Path under /sys at which this device's sysfs directory can be found.
SUBSYSTEM
If this is "block", it's a block device. Anything other subsystem is
either a char device or does not have an associated device node.
The following variables are also provided for some devices:
MAJOR and MINOR
If these are present, a device node can be created in /dev for this device.
Some devices (such as network cards) don't generate a /dev node.
DRIVER
If present, a suggested driver (module) for handling this device. No
relation to whether or not a driver is currently handling the device.
INTERFACE and IFINDEX
When SUBSYSTEM=net, these variables indicate the name of the interface
and a unique integer for the interface. (Note that "INTERFACE=eth0" could
be paired with "IFINDEX=2" because eth0 isn't guaranteed to come before lo
and the count doesn't start at 0.)
FIRMWARE
The system is requesting firmware for the device.
If the driver is creating device it could be possible to suddenly delete it:
echo 1 > /sys/block/device-name/device/delete where device-name may be sde, for example,
or
echo 1 > /sys/class/scsi_device/h:c:t:l/device/delete, where h is the HBA number, c is the channel on the HBA, t is the SCSI target ID, and l is the LUN.
In my case, it perfectly simulates scenarios for crushing writes and recovery of data from journaling.
Normally to safely remove device more steps is needed so deleting device is a pretty drastic event for data and could be useful for testing :)
please consider this:
https://access.redhat.com/documentation/en-us/red_hat_enterprise_linux/5/html/online_storage_reconfiguration_guide/removing_devices
http://www.sysadminshare.com/2012/09/add-remove-single-disk-device-in-linux.html

How to get WIFI parameters (bandwidth, delay) on Ubuntu using C

I am student and I am writting simple application in C99 standard. Program should working on Ubuntu.
I have one problem - I don't know how can I get some Wifi parameters like bandwidth or delay. I haven't any idea how to do this. It is possible to do this using standard functions or any linux API (ech I am windows user)?.
In general, you don't know the bandwidth or delay of a wifi device.
Bandwidth and delay is the type of information from a link.
As far as I know, there is no such information holding in WiFi drivers.
The most link-related information is SINR.
For measuring bandwidth or delay, you should write your own code.
Maybe you should tell us more about your concrete problem. For now, I assume that you are interested in the throughput and latency of a specific wireless link, i.e. a link between two 802.11 stations. This could be a link between an access point and a client or between two ad-hoc stations.
The short answer is that there is no such API. In fact, it is not trivial even to estimate these two link parameters. They depend on the signal quality, on the data rate used by the sending station, on the interference, on the channel utilization, on the load of the computer systems at both ends, and probably a lot of other factors.
Depending on the wireless driver you are using it may be possible to obtain information about the currently used data rate and some packet loss statistics for the station you are communicating with. Have a look at net/mac80211/sta_info.h in your Linux kernel source tree. If you are using MadWifi, you may find useful information in the files below /proc/net/madwifi/ath0/ and in the output of wlanconfig ath0 list sta.
However, all you can do is to make a prediction. If the link quality changes suddenly, your prediction may be entirely wrong.

Establish direct peer-to-peer Wi-Fi communication between laptops

TL;DR available at the bottom
I've been trying to figure out a way to get two laptops (both running Ubuntu) to be able to pass basic messages back and forth without the need for them to be connected via a wireless network,either by an AP or ad-hoc. I want to reiterate here that ad-hoc networking is not what I'm looking for, I've seen many similar questions here with that as the answer.
I guess what I'm asking is: how do I achieve this? All I really need is for one computer to be able to send a packet, and then for another to pick it up via a packet sniffer of some kind.
Currently: I have both laptops in monitor mode (via a mon0 interface created from aircrack-ng's airmon-ng)so that they can sniff nearby traffic (with Wireshark, tcpdump,tcpcump.org's sample libpcap code, and opening a raw socket and just printing out all the packets. I tried each just because I thought one could be doing something differently/leaving something out). I also have a very basic program that consists of opening a raw socket to send crafted ethernet frames out to the air, but I can't get my two machines to see the other's packets. The sniffer running on each machine can only see the packets going out of that machine (in addition to nearby beacons/control traffic from wifi in the area).
Some things to note that might be important are:
-the packets I'm sending out appear in Wireshark (only on the sending machine) as malformed 802.11 packets (probably because I'm just filling them with junk data for now). I was under the impression that my other laptop would also see them as malformed packets, but it gets nothing
-the sockets I'm using are from a call to socket(PF_PACKET,SOCK_RAW,ETH_P_ALL). Raw sockets are something I just recently was aware of, so I could be misunderstanding how they work, but my impression is that I can craft a layer 2 packet by hand and ship out straight out to the wire/air.
If you're curious as to why I want to do something like this, it's part curiosity, part research for a project I'm working on. I want to streamline / automate the process of setting up an ad-hoc network, and what I'm trying to do here is for the laptops to do a small exchange to figure out the specifics of the adhoc network they are about to create and then make/join that network automatically, instead of either one person explicitly setting up the network OR having both people pre-decide the name, etc of the network and have both computers constantly trying to connect to that specific one.
I'm more interested if I'm going about this process in the right way rather than if my code works or not, if someone thinks me posting my (very basic, taken from another post on Stack Overflow) raw socket code will help, I can.
Edit: I am more than happy to post a complete set of code with instructions if I can get this working. I couldn't find much helpful info on this topic on the internet, and I'd love to put it up for future people trying to do the same thing.
TL;DR I want to send out a packet from one laptop and pick it up on another via a packent sniffer of some sort. No wifi network or ad-hoc network involved. Something akin to spoofing an AP's beacon frame (or similar) for the purpose of sending small amounts of data.
Edit 2:After some thought, perhaps what I'm looking for is some kind of raw 802.11 use? Having direct control of the wifi radio? Is such a thing possible?
I found out I was able to send packets out through my monitor mode interface as long as I had correct 802.11 with radiotap headers. I think the problem I was originally experiencing (not being able to sniff the packets) was because they were malformed and thus not actually getting sent out.
I was able to accomplish this by adapting the example code found here, courtesy of someone named Evan Jones, except I did not need to use an Atheros based card or Madwifi drivers, everything worked fine with the mon0 interface created with aircrack-ng.
I am certain that Apple Mac do this. Apple call it 'bonjour'. There may well be a proper IETF spec for it. This is an Article on Bonjour this is Wikipedia on an open component of bonjour which might help get you moving.

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