On Friday 06 January 2006 12:38, you wrote: > Hi Michael, > > > How would the virtual interfaces look like? That is quite easy to answer. > > They are net_devices, as they transfer data. > > They should probaly _not_ be on top of the ethernet, as 80211 does not > > have very much in common with ethernet. Basically they share the same > > MAC address format. Does someone have another thing, which he thinks > > is shared? > > How would the master interface look like? A somewhat unusual idea came > > up. Using a device node in /dev. So every wireless card in the system > > would have a node in /dev associated (/dev/wlan0 for example). > > A node for the master device would be ok, because no data is transferred > > through it. It is only a configuration interface. > > So you would tell the, yet-to-be-written userspace tool wconfig (or something > > like that) "I need a STA in INFRA mode and want to drive it on the > > wlan0 card". So wconfig goes and write()s some data to /dev/wlan0 > > telling the 80211 code to setup a virtual net_device for the driver > > associated to /dev/wlan0. > > The virtual interface is then configured though /dev/wlan0 using write() > > (no ugly ioctl anymore, you see...). Config data like TX rate, > > current essid,.... basically everything + xyz which is done by WE today, > > is written to /dev/wlan0. > > This config data is entirely cached in the 80211 code for the /dev/wlan0 > > instance. This is important, to have the data persistent throughout > > suspend/resume cycles, if up/down cycles. > > After configuring, a virtual net_device (let's call it wlan0) exists, > > which can be brought up by ifconfig and data can be transferred though > > it as usual. > > what is wrong with using netlink and/or sysfs for it? I don't see the > advantage of defining another /dev something interface. Nothing is wrong with that. "brainstorming" was the most dominant word in the whole text. ;) I just personally liked the idea of having a device node in /dev for every existing hardware wlan card. Like we have device nodes for other real hardware, too. It felt like a bit of a "unix way" to do this to me. I don't say this is the way to go. If a netlink socket is used (which is possible, for sure), we stay with the old way of having no device node in /dev for networking devices. That is ok. But that is really only an implementation detail (and for sure a matter of taste). The _real_ main point I wanted to make was to _not_ use a net_device for the master device. What else should be used for master device, let it be a device node or a netlink socket, is rather unimportant at this stage. -- Greetings Michael.
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