Johann's Research: Difference between revisions

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                             17dBm @ 54Mbps
                             17dBm @ 54Mbps


There are lots of wifi/antenna/distance calculators available on the WEB. Here is a couple of links.
There are lots of wifi/antenna/distance calculators available on the WEB. Most of these calculators cannot calculate the max distance for a link, you have to specify the distance and it will calculate you dBm margin. Links to Wifi/antenna/distance calculators:


Wifi antenna / distance calculators:
http://www.radiolabs.com/stations/wifi_calc.html
http://www.radiolabs.com/stations/wifi_calc.html
http://www.zytrax.com/tech/wireless/calc.htm
http://www.zytrax.com/tech/wireless/calc.htm
http://www.widgetbox.com/widget/wifi-link-calculator
http://www.widgetbox.com/widget/wifi-link-calculator
http://www.wifiextreme.com.au/index.php?main_page=page_5

Revision as of 14:57, 28 August 2008


I'm not sure if my stuff is really research, but this is some of the stuff that I'm busy with:

High Performance Node - WEP/WPA

One of the requirements of the High Performance Node is to have WEP or WPA enabled between the wireless links of the mesh nodes. This is one of the functionalities that we would like to sort out before we install any of the nodes in the field. It's very difficult to change the encryption mode after an installation because the mesh nodes will lose connectivity if one node is upgraded to use WEP, while another is still using older software without WEP.

WEP and WPA are both methods to enable the encryption of data that it is send over the air. WEP (Wired equivalence privacy) is an older standard and it makes use of a WEP encryption engine while the newer WPA standard added the use of an AES encryption engine. WEP encryption has some security flaws embedded into the protocol and there are several tools available on the Internet that can crack WEP keys. These tools are more effective with the cracking of 64bit WEP keys than with 128bit keys and they require a large amount of captured data and processing power to crack a key. Note that not all WEP keys can be cracked, but only weak keys and that flaw was addressed and fixed by WPA.

Wireless adapters on Unix Systems can operate in three different modes: Client, Hostap (Access Point) and Adhoc mode. Most of implementations of wireless (802.11) networks are based on a model where there is one Access Point with several wireless clients attached to to it.

AP / client pic

Wireless Mesh networks make use of the less tested Adhoc mode of 802.11.

Mesh network pic

WEP and WPA requires a couple of kld's to be loaded before they can be configured. The following kld's should be added to loader.conf wlan_acl_load="YES" wlan_amrr_load="YES" wlan_ccmp_load="YES" wlan_tkip_load="YES" wlan_wep_load="YES" wlan_xauth_load="YES"

WEP

Enable and test WEP in Adhoc mode on the HPN. WEP makes use of a single PSK that needs to be configured on all the wireless nodes. Any node or wireless device that is configured with this PSK will have the capability to crypt and decrypt these wireless packets. There are two methods to configure WEP in FreeBSD. You can use either use ifconfig directly or you can make use of the WPA supplicant utility.

ifconfig e.g.

mesh-9e69:~ # ifconfig ath0 10.10.1.2/24 wep deftxkey 1 wepkey 128bitwepison
mesh-9e69:~ # ifconfig ath0
ath0: flags=8843<UP,BROADCAST,RUNNING,SIMPLEX,MULTICAST> metric 0 mtu 1500
       ether 00:80:48:50:9e:69
       inet6 fe80::280:48ff:fe50:9e69%ath0 prefixlen 64 scopeid 0x1
       inet6 fd9c:6829:597c:20:280:48ff:fe50:9e69 prefixlen 64
       inet6 fd9c:6829:597c:20:: prefixlen 64 anycast
       inet 10.10.1.2 netmask 0xffffff00 broadcast 10.10.1.255
       media: IEEE 802.11 Wireless Ethernet autoselect mode 11g <adhoc>
       status: associated
       ssid ptamesh channel 13 (2472 Mhz 11g) bssid 56:e5:be:30:14:5a
       authmode OPEN privacy ON deftxkey 1 wepkey 1:104-bit txpower 31.5
       scanvalid 60 bgscan bgscanintvl 300 bgscanidle 250 roam:rssi11g 7
       roam:rate11g 5 protmode CTS burst

Test configuration:

   Host A ----- wep ------- Host B ----- wep Host C

Enable WEP on three mesh nodes and test connectivity.

mesh-9e69:~ # ping6 ff02::1%ath0
16 bytes from fe80::280:48ff:fe50:9e69%ath0, icmp_seq=87 hlim=64 time=2.122 ms
16 bytes from fe80::280:48ff:fe50:9ddd%ath0, icmp_seq=87 hlim=64 time=5.625 ms(DUP!)
16 bytes from fe80::280:48ff:fe50:9a44%ath0, icmp_seq=87 hlim=64 time=32.358 ms(DUP!)

Everything seems to work fine (as expeted) with WEP enabled in the mesh.

WPA

WPA was designed to work in an environment where you have one AP and several clients and not for Adhoc (mesh) networks. On the AP you have the Authenticator software and on the client you have the supplicant software. This means that if one would like to use WPA to it's full then every mesh node needs to be an Authenticator for all the other nodes it can see, as well as a supplicant for every node it can see. According to the WPA design document http://wirelessafrica.meraka.org.za/wiki/images/3/39/Wpa_supplicant-devel-04.pdf one can use WPA in Adhoc mode only in a static way with PSK's:

IEEE 802.11 operation mode (Infrastucture/IBSS).
0 = infrastructure (Managed) mode, i.e., associate with an AP.
1 = IBSS (ad-hoc, peer-to-peer)
Note: IBSS can only be used with key_mgmt NONE (plaintext and static WEP) and key_mgmt=WPA-
NONE (fixed group key TKIP/CCMP). In addition, ap_scan has to be set to 2 for IBSS. WPA-None requires
following network block options: proto=WPA, key_mgmt=WPA-NONE, pairwise=NONE, group=TKIP
(or CCMP, but not both), and psk must also be set (either directly or using ASCII passphrase).

This is methods is very similar to the way that WEP is being used. This means the the only advantage of using WPA over WEP is that one can make use of the AES encryption engine that comes with WPA. Please note that with this mode of WPA and with WEP that anyone can decrypt the data being send over the air if they get hold of the mesh-wide PSK that is configured on every node in the network. If security is of importance them end users should consider the use of point-to-point security mechanisms like VPN's.

The configuration of WPA is not supported in command line mode, but only with the wpa_supplicant software. This is an example of a wpa_supplicant.conf file to enable WPA in Adhoc mode:

ap_scan=2
#
network={
  ssid="ptamesh"
# Channel  13 : 2472  Mhz 11g
  frequency=2472
  mode=1
  proto=WPA
  key_mgmt=WPA-NONE
  pairwise=NONE
  group=TKIP
  psk="mesh-ipv6"
}

To start the WPA software during boot-up one needs to add WPA to the ifconfig line in rc.conf. E.g.

ifconfig_ath0="WPA 10.10.1.1/24 mode 11g mediaopt adhoc channel 13 ssid ptamesh"

Test configuration:

   Host A ----- wep ------- Host B ----- wep Host C

Unfortunately WPA did not work as easy as WEP, so it's off to debugging.

Starting wpa_supplicant in the foreground with debugging enabled. E.g

wpa_supplicant -d -i ath0 -c /etc/wpa_supplicant.conf

The debugging output shows that something happens that initiates a wlan scan operation, while the card is in Adhoc mode. This should not happen and wpa_supplicant software never completes the configuration due to this error.

mesh-9ddd:~ # wpa_supplicant -d -i ath0 -c /etc/wpa_supplicant.conf
Initializing interface 'ath0' conf '/etc/wpa_supplicant.conf' driver 'default' 
ctrl_interface 'N/A' bridge 'N/A'
Configuration file '/etc/wpa_supplicant.conf' -> '/etc/wpa_supplicant.conf'
Reading configuration file '/etc/wpa_supplicant.conf'
ap_scan=2
Priority group 0
  id=0 ssid='ptamesh'
Initializing interface (2) 'ath0'
EAPOL: SUPP_PAE entering state DISCONNECTED
EAPOL: KEY_RX entering state NO_KEY_RECEIVE
EAPOL: SUPP_BE entering state INITIALIZE
EAP: EAP entering state DISABLED
EAPOL: External notification - portEnabled=0
EAPOL: External notification - portValid=0
Own MAC address: 00:80:48:50:9d:dd
wpa_driver_bsd_set_wpa: enabled=1
wpa_driver_bsd_set_wpa_internal: wpa=3 privacy=1
wpa_driver_bsd_del_key: keyidx=0
wpa_driver_bsd_del_key: keyidx=1
wpa_driver_bsd_del_key: keyidx=2
wpa_driver_bsd_del_key: keyidx=3
wpa_driver_bsd_set_countermeasures: enabled=0
wpa_driver_bsd_set_drop_unencrypted: enabled=1
Setting scan request: 0 sec 100000 usec
Added interface ath0
State: DISCONNECTED -> SCANNING
Trying to associate with SSID 'ptamesh'
Cancelling scan request
WPA: clearing own WPA/RSN IE
Automatic auth_alg selection: 0x1
wpa_driver_bsd_set_auth_alg alg 0x1 authmode 1
WPA: No WPA/RSN IE available from association info
WPA: Set cipher suites based on configuration
WPA: Selected cipher suites: group 8 pairwise 1 key_mgmt 16 proto 1
WPA: clearing AP WPA IE
WPA: clearing AP RSN IE
WPA: using GTK TKIP
WPA: using PTK NONE
WPA: using KEY_MGMT WPA-NONE
WPA: Set own WPA IE default - hexdump(len=24): dd 16 00 50 f2 01 01 00 00 50 
f2 02 01 00 00 50 f2 00 01 00 00 50 f2 00
No keys have been configured - skip key clearing
wpa_driver_bsd_set_key: alg=TKIP addr=ff:ff:ff:ff:ff:ff key_idx=0 set_tx=1 
seq_len=6 key_len=32
wpa_driver_bsd_set_drop_unencrypted: enabled=1
State: SCANNING -> ASSOCIATING
wpa_driver_bsd_associate: ssid 'ptamesh' wpa ie len 24 pairwise 0 group 2 key 
mgmt 4
ioctl[SIOCS80211, op 22, len 24]: Invalid argument
Association request to the driver failed
wpa_driver_bsd_set_key: alg=TKIP addr=ff:ff:ff:ff:ff:ff key_idx=0 set_tx=1 
seq_len=6 key_len=32
Cancelling authentication timeout
State: ASSOCIATING -> COMPLETED
CTRL-EVENT-CONNECTED - Connection to 00:00:00:00:00:00 completed (auth) [id=-1 
id_str=]
EAPOL: External notification - portControl=ForceAuthorized

Next was to install fresh copy of the FreeBSD src code onto my PC. I found the wpa_supplicant source code under /usr/src/usr.sbin/wpa/wpa_supplicant/driver_freebsd.c Build a new driver from source code and run it on a router. After that I've added in a lot of printf statements to trace how the driver works and to locate the code that puts the wifi card in scanning mode. In the end I found out that wpa_supplicant driver did not put the card in scanning mode, but it somehow caused the 802.11 stack to start the scanning. Unfortunately I don't know enough about the 802.11 code in FreeBSD to do any mode debugging. I've send a mail about the problem to one of the FreeBSD mailing lists and the originator of most of the 802.11 code in FreeBSD (Sam Leffler) said I must log a problem report. So I logged a problem report with FreeBSD and now we have to wait and see if someone to take responsibility to fix this problem. More information on the problem report can be found at: http://www.freebsd.org/cgi/query-pr.cgi?pr=126822

For now I recommend that we make use of WEP instead of WPA in our implementation as it is working and there isn't such a big advantage in using WPA over WEP in this mode except for the encryption algorithm that changes from WEP to AES.

Voip - IP04

High performance node - Antenna calculations

Every HP-node has two 5.15-5.6 GHz antennas. The one as a build in patch antenna and the other is an 5.1 - 5.8 Ghz omni-directional antenna. The idea is that a node patch antenna will either be aligned to the omni or the patch antenna of another node. The following calculations is to get an feeling of what distances should be possible between these antennas.

South Africa Wifi channels: Channel 1 : 2412 Mhz 11g Channel 48 : 5240 Mhz 11a Channel 2 : 2417 Mhz 11g Channel 52 : 5260* Mhz 11a Channel 3 : 2422 Mhz 11g Channel 56 : 5280* Mhz 11a Channel 4 : 2427 Mhz 11g Channel 60 : 5300* Mhz 11a Channel 5 : 2432 Mhz 11g Channel 64 : 5320* Mhz 11a Channel 6 : 2437 Mhz 11g Channel 100 : 5500* Mhz 11a Channel 7 : 2442 Mhz 11g Channel 104 : 5520* Mhz 11a Channel 8 : 2447 Mhz 11g Channel 108 : 5540* Mhz 11a Channel 9 : 2452 Mhz 11g Channel 112 : 5560* Mhz 11a Channel 10 : 2457 Mhz 11g Channel 116 : 5580* Mhz 11a Channel 11 : 2462 Mhz 11g Channel 120 : 5600* Mhz 11a Channel 12 : 2467 Mhz 11g Channel 124 : 5620* Mhz 11a Channel 13 : 2472 Mhz 11g Channel 128 : 5640* Mhz 11a Channel 36 : 5180 Mhz 11a Channel 132 : 5660* Mhz 11a Channel 40 : 5200 Mhz 11a Channel 136 : 5680* Mhz 11a Channel 44 : 5220 Mhz 11a Channel 140 : 5700* Mhz 11a

HP-Node detailed specs:

Pigtail detail specs:

Wireless adapter detail specs:

Node specs summary:

Patch antenna       - 21-23 dBi,   16 deg H,  11 deg V, 5.15 -5.6 GHz
5Ghz Omni antenna   - 8-11 dBi,    360 deg H, 10 deg V, 5.1 - 5.85 GHz
2.4Ghz Omni antenna - 7.5-8.5 dBi, 360 deg H, 12 deg V, 2.4 - 2.5 GHz
30mm U.FL-SMA pigtail - RG178 cable insertion loss, 2.4 GHZ = -1.1dB, 5.6 GHz = -2dB
Compex WLM54AG adapter - RECEIVER SENSITIVITY 802.11a
                           -90 dBm @ 6Mbps
                           -70 dBm @ 54Mbps
                       - OUTPUT POWER 802.11a
                           23dBm @ 6-24Mbps
                           22dBm @ 36Mbps
                           19dBm @ 48Mbps
                           17dBm @ 54Mbps

There are lots of wifi/antenna/distance calculators available on the WEB. Most of these calculators cannot calculate the max distance for a link, you have to specify the distance and it will calculate you dBm margin. Links to Wifi/antenna/distance calculators:

http://www.radiolabs.com/stations/wifi_calc.html
http://www.zytrax.com/tech/wireless/calc.htm
http://www.widgetbox.com/widget/wifi-link-calculator
http://www.wifiextreme.com.au/index.php?main_page=page_5