On Mon, 2006-10-02 at 11:55 -0700, Jean Tourrilhes wrote:
> On Mon, Oct 02, 2006 at 11:15:37AM -0700, Andrew Morton wrote:
> > On Mon, 02 Oct 2006 12:58:24 -0400
> > >
> > > You have a mismatch between your wireless-tools, your kernel, and/or
> > > wpa_supplicant. WE-21 uses the _real_ ssid length rather than the
> > > kludge of hacking off the last byte used previously. Please ensure that
> > > your tools, driver, and kernel are using WE-21.
> > > 'cat /proc/net/wireless' should tell you what your kernel is using.
> > > Getting the driver WE is a bit harder and you may have to look at the
> > > source.
> >
> > Jean, John: the amount of trouble which this change is causing is quite
> > high considering that we're not even at -rc1 yet. It's going to get worse.
>
> We have to split between the different issues we have seen.
> Tools issue (the wpa_supplicant problem). -> those can only be
> fixed by people upgrading. Fortunately, there are not so many tools
> affected, and new version of those tools were released last
> April/May. As I said, most distro have those in the pipe.
> In-Kernel driver issues (the Orinoco driver problem). -> those
> can be patched and fixed as we go along. I would not worry about
> those.
> Out-of-kernel issues (the ipw3945 driver problem). -> those
> drivers need to be updated. That's the problem of living outside the
> kernel. Very often those drivers are reactive with respect to kernel
> API changes, rather than pro-active, so there is not much we can do.
>
> > It doesn't sound like it'll be too hard to arrange for the kernel to
> > continue to work correctly with old userspace?
>
> Actually, it's impossible. New userspace can work across both
> version, old userspace fails on new version.
>
> The whole point of the -rc process is to find problems and the
> scope of it, there is no way I can know everything. At this point, we
> can decide if WE-21 should go in 2.6.19 or wait for 2.6.20. But I know
> that most Linux-Wireless people such as Dan and Jouni have been
> waiting impatiently for those changes...
Right; we need to get this settled and we need to figure out a way with
Wireless Extensions to allow exact SSIDs to be sent and retrieved from
the card/driver. How much cruft do we add to drivers and/or WE bits to
bend over backwards and preserve compatibility with a lot of older bits?
I can think of a few ways here to preserve backwards compat, but most
involve adding bits to 3 places in each driver and a new flag to WE,
which puts us right back in the same situation we're in right now;
inconsistent drivers and poor semantics both inside and outside the
kernel.
Maybe the answer here _is_ to bend over backwards to preserve
compatibility, restore null-termination-and-increment-length bits in
drivers and WE, and kludge all the user-space tools. Then just Do The
Right Thing with nl80211/cfg80211 (whenever they come around) and fix
stuff up in the nl80211 WE compat layer. I don't know. But nl80211
isn't here yet, and it's unclear when it will be.
Dan
> Have fun...
>
> Jean
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