Message ID | 1480715949-20169-2-git-send-email-jouni@qca.qualcomm.com (mailing list archive) |
---|---|
State | Changes Requested |
Delegated to: | Johannes Berg |
Headers | show |
> v2: address comments from Luca, Arend, and Johannes
What about Arend's comment regarding this functionality overlapping
with the BSS selection offload configuration?
Do you think there's any ability to share attributes/functionality?
johannes
> -----Original Message----- > From: Johannes Berg [mailto:johannes@sipsolutions.net] > What about Arend's comment regarding this functionality overlapping with the > BSS selection offload configuration? > > Do you think there's any ability to share attributes/functionality? Hi Johannes, I think the later comment from Luca on this which I pasted below is more agreeable. Yes, similar but not quite the same. The existing case is for finding BSSs that are worth waking the host up for (while disconnected), so it needs to be better than the RSSI passed (absolute number). Now this is about relative RSSI as compared to the current connection, so RELATIVE_RSSI is different than RSSI and I think the same attribute should not be used, to avoid confusion. Thanks, Vamsi
On 7-12-2016 10:33, Vamsi, Krishna wrote: >> -----Original Message----- >> From: Johannes Berg [mailto:johannes@sipsolutions.net] > >> What about Arend's comment regarding this functionality overlapping with the >> BSS selection offload configuration? >> >> Do you think there's any ability to share attributes/functionality? > > Hi Johannes, > > I think the later comment from Luca on this which I pasted below is more agreeable. > > Yes, similar but not quite the same. The existing case is for finding BSSs that are worth waking the host up for (while disconnected), so it needs to be better than the RSSI passed (absolute number). Now this is about relative RSSI as compared to the current connection, so RELATIVE_RSSI is different than RSSI and I think the same attribute should not be used, to avoid confusion. I noticed the response from Luca, but did not get back on this. I know it is not the same, but what I meant is whether we could extend it so it also covers your scenario. Regards, Arend
On 2-12-2016 22:59, Jouni Malinen wrote: > From: vamsi krishna <vamsin@qti.qualcomm.com> > > Enhance sched scan to support option of finding a better BSS while in > connected state. Firmware scans the medium and reports when it finds a > known BSS which has better RSSI than the current connected BSS. New > attributes to specify the relative RSSI (compared to the current BSS) > are added to the sched scan to implement this. > > Signed-off-by: vamsi krishna <vamsin@qti.qualcomm.com> > Signed-off-by: Jouni Malinen <jouni@qca.qualcomm.com> > --- > include/net/cfg80211.h | 19 +++++++++++++++++++ > include/uapi/linux/nl80211.h | 18 ++++++++++++++++++ > net/wireless/nl80211.c | 29 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++-- > 3 files changed, 64 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-) > > v2: address comments from Luca, Arend, and Johannes > > diff --git a/include/net/cfg80211.h b/include/net/cfg80211.h > index ef42749..dcdd0c4 100644 > --- a/include/net/cfg80211.h > +++ b/include/net/cfg80211.h > @@ -1626,6 +1626,22 @@ struct cfg80211_sched_scan_plan { > * cycle. The driver may ignore this parameter and start > * immediately (or at any other time), if this feature is not > * supported. > + * @relative_rssi: Relative RSSI threshold in dB to restrict scan result > + * reporting in connected state to cases where a matching BSS is determined > + * to have better RSSI than the current connected BSS. The relative RSSI > + * threshold values are ignored in disconnected state. > + * @relative_rssi_5g_pref: The amount of RSSI preference in dB that is given to > + * a 5 GHz BSS over 2.4 GHz BSS while looking for better BSSs in connected > + * state. A negative value can be passed if 2.4 GHz band should be given > + * priority to 5 GHz band. > + * If the current connected BSS is in the 2.4 GHz band, other BSSs in the > + * 2.4 GHz band to be reported should have better RSSI by @relative_rssi > + * and other BSSs in the 5 GHz band to be reported should have better RSSI > + * by (@relative_rssi - @relative_rssi_5g_pref). > + * If the current connected BSS is in the 5 GHz band, other BSSs in the > + * 2.4 GHz band to be reported should have better RSSI by > + * (@relative_rssi + @relative_rssi_5g_pref) and other BSSs in the 5 GHz > + * band to be reported should have better RSSI by by @relative_rssi. The choice of these attributes makes the implicit assumption that the BSS-es in 5G are preferred. The relative_rssi_5g_pref is actually more a bonus or penalty is negative value is used. I guess for speed junkies that want their 11ac card maxed out that is true, but if you need to cross a couple of concrete floors you might want to stick with 2.4G. I introduced a similar attribute to be provided in the NL80211_CMD_CONNECT (see [1]). Regards, Arend [1] http://lxr.free-electrons.com/source/include/uapi/linux/nl80211.h#L1815 > */ > struct cfg80211_sched_scan_request { > struct cfg80211_ssid *ssids; > @@ -1645,6 +1661,9 @@ struct cfg80211_sched_scan_request { > u8 mac_addr[ETH_ALEN] __aligned(2); > u8 mac_addr_mask[ETH_ALEN] __aligned(2); > > + s8 relative_rssi; > + s8 relative_rssi_5g_pref; > + > /* internal */ > struct wiphy *wiphy; > struct net_device *dev; > diff --git a/include/uapi/linux/nl80211.h b/include/uapi/linux/nl80211.h > index 6b76e3b..fc29bdb 100644 > --- a/include/uapi/linux/nl80211.h > +++ b/include/uapi/linux/nl80211.h > @@ -1980,6 +1980,17 @@ enum nl80211_commands { > * @NL80211_ATTR_BSSID: The BSSID of the AP. Note that %NL80211_ATTR_MAC is also > * used in various commands/events for specifying the BSSID. > * > + * @NL80211_ATTR_SCHED_SCAN_RELATIVE_RSSI: Relative RSSI threshold by which > + * other BSSs has to be better than the current connected BSS so that they > + * get reported to user space. This will give an opportunity to userspace > + * to consider connecting to other matching BSSs which have better RSSI > + * than the current connected BSS by using an offloaded operation to avoid > + * unnecessary wakeups. > + * > + * @NL80211_ATTR_SCHED_SCAN_RELATIVE_RSSI_5G_PREF: The amount of RSSI preference > + * to be given to 5 GHz APs over 2.4 GHz APs while searching for better > + * BSSs than the current connected BSS. > + * > * @NUM_NL80211_ATTR: total number of nl80211_attrs available > * @NL80211_ATTR_MAX: highest attribute number currently defined > * @__NL80211_ATTR_AFTER_LAST: internal use > @@ -2386,6 +2397,9 @@ enum nl80211_attrs { > > NL80211_ATTR_BSSID, > > + NL80211_ATTR_SCHED_SCAN_RELATIVE_RSSI, > + NL80211_ATTR_SCHED_SCAN_RELATIVE_RSSI_5G_PREF, > + > /* add attributes here, update the policy in nl80211.c */ > > __NL80211_ATTR_AFTER_LAST, > @@ -4697,6 +4711,9 @@ enum nl80211_feature_flags { > * configuration (AP/mesh) with VHT rates. > * @NL80211_EXT_FEATURE_FILS_STA: This driver supports Fast Initial Link Setup > * with user space SME (NL80211_CMD_AUTHENTICATE) in station mode. > + * @NL80211_EXT_FEATURE_SCHED_SCAN_RELATIVE_RSSI: The driver supports sched_scan > + * for reporting BSSs with better RSSI than the current connected BSS > + * (%NL80211_ATTR_SCHED_SCAN_RELATIVE_RSSI). > * > * @NUM_NL80211_EXT_FEATURES: number of extended features. > * @MAX_NL80211_EXT_FEATURES: highest extended feature index. > @@ -4712,6 +4729,7 @@ enum nl80211_ext_feature_index { > NL80211_EXT_FEATURE_BEACON_RATE_HT, > NL80211_EXT_FEATURE_BEACON_RATE_VHT, > NL80211_EXT_FEATURE_FILS_STA, > + NL80211_EXT_FEATURE_SCHED_SCAN_RELATIVE_RSSI, > > /* add new features before the definition below */ > NUM_NL80211_EXT_FEATURES, > diff --git a/net/wireless/nl80211.c b/net/wireless/nl80211.c > index 7762231..549f239 100644 > --- a/net/wireless/nl80211.c > +++ b/net/wireless/nl80211.c > @@ -405,6 +405,8 @@ enum nl80211_multicast_groups { > [NL80211_ATTR_FILS_NONCES] = { .len = 2 * FILS_NONCE_LEN }, > [NL80211_ATTR_MULTICAST_TO_UNICAST_ENABLED] = { .type = NLA_FLAG, }, > [NL80211_ATTR_BSSID] = { .len = ETH_ALEN }, > + [NL80211_ATTR_SCHED_SCAN_RELATIVE_RSSI] = { .type = NLA_S8 }, > + [NL80211_ATTR_SCHED_SCAN_RELATIVE_RSSI_5G_PREF] = { .type = NLA_S8 }, > }; > > /* policy for the key attributes */ > @@ -6950,6 +6952,12 @@ static int nl80211_abort_scan(struct sk_buff *skb, struct genl_info *info) > if (!n_plans || n_plans > wiphy->max_sched_scan_plans) > return ERR_PTR(-EINVAL); > > + if (!wiphy_ext_feature_isset( > + wiphy, NL80211_EXT_FEATURE_SCHED_SCAN_RELATIVE_RSSI) && > + (attrs[NL80211_ATTR_SCHED_SCAN_RELATIVE_RSSI] || > + attrs[NL80211_ATTR_SCHED_SCAN_RELATIVE_RSSI_5G_PREF])) > + return ERR_PTR(-EINVAL); > + > request = kzalloc(sizeof(*request) > + sizeof(*request->ssids) * n_ssids > + sizeof(*request->match_sets) * n_match_sets > @@ -7156,6 +7164,14 @@ static int nl80211_abort_scan(struct sk_buff *skb, struct genl_info *info) > request->delay = > nla_get_u32(attrs[NL80211_ATTR_SCHED_SCAN_DELAY]); > > + if (attrs[NL80211_ATTR_SCHED_SCAN_RELATIVE_RSSI]) > + request->relative_rssi = nla_get_s8( > + attrs[NL80211_ATTR_SCHED_SCAN_RELATIVE_RSSI]); > + > + if (attrs[NL80211_ATTR_SCHED_SCAN_RELATIVE_RSSI_5G_PREF]) > + request->relative_rssi_5g_pref = nla_get_s8( > + attrs[NL80211_ATTR_SCHED_SCAN_RELATIVE_RSSI_5G_PREF]); > + > err = nl80211_parse_sched_scan_plans(wiphy, n_plans, request, attrs); > if (err) > goto out_free; > @@ -9649,7 +9665,8 @@ static int nl80211_send_wowlan_tcp(struct sk_buff *msg, > return 0; > } > > -static int nl80211_send_wowlan_nd(struct sk_buff *msg, > +static int nl80211_send_wowlan_nd(struct wiphy *wiphy, > + struct sk_buff *msg, > struct cfg80211_sched_scan_request *req) > { > struct nlattr *nd, *freqs, *matches, *match, *scan_plans, *scan_plan; > @@ -9670,6 +9687,14 @@ static int nl80211_send_wowlan_nd(struct sk_buff *msg, > if (nla_put_u32(msg, NL80211_ATTR_SCHED_SCAN_DELAY, req->delay)) > return -ENOBUFS; > > + if (wiphy_ext_feature_isset( > + wiphy, NL80211_EXT_FEATURE_SCHED_SCAN_RELATIVE_RSSI) && > + (nla_put_s8(msg, NL80211_ATTR_SCHED_SCAN_RELATIVE_RSSI, > + req->relative_rssi) || > + nla_put_s8(msg, NL80211_ATTR_SCHED_SCAN_RELATIVE_RSSI_5G_PREF, > + req->relative_rssi_5g_pref))) > + return -ENOBUFS; > + > freqs = nla_nest_start(msg, NL80211_ATTR_SCAN_FREQUENCIES); > if (!freqs) > return -ENOBUFS; > @@ -9783,7 +9808,7 @@ static int nl80211_get_wowlan(struct sk_buff *skb, struct genl_info *info) > goto nla_put_failure; > > if (nl80211_send_wowlan_nd( > - msg, > + &rdev->wiphy, msg, > rdev->wiphy.wowlan_config->nd_config)) > goto nla_put_failure; > >
On Wed, Dec 07, 2016 at 09:03:23PM +0100, Arend Van Spriel wrote: > On 7-12-2016 10:33, Vamsi, Krishna wrote: > >> -----Original Message----- > >> From: Johannes Berg [mailto:johannes@sipsolutions.net] > > > >> What about Arend's comment regarding this functionality overlapping with the > >> BSS selection offload configuration? > >> > >> Do you think there's any ability to share attributes/functionality? > > > > Hi Johannes, > > > > I think the later comment from Luca on this which I pasted below is more agreeable. > > > > Yes, similar but not quite the same. The existing case is for finding BSSs that are worth waking the host up for (while disconnected), so it needs to be better than the RSSI passed (absolute number). Now this is about relative RSSI as compared to the current connection, so RELATIVE_RSSI is different than RSSI and I think the same attribute should not be used, to avoid confusion. > > I noticed the response from Luca, but did not get back on this. I know > it is not the same, but what I meant is whether we could extend it so it > also covers your scenario. I'm not sure I see the point of trying to avoid the new RELATIVE_RSSI attribute. We need to clearly specify that this new constraint is indeed for relative comparison against the currently connected BSS. As far as your second email is concerned, it might make more sense to use the existing NL80211_ATTR_BSS_SELECT instead of the new NL80211_ATTR_SCHED_SCAN_RELATIVE_RSSI_5G_PREF since they cover very similar purpose in defining RSSI preference between bands. We can take a look at doing so. One thing to be a careful about this is in what claims there are about using NL80211_ATTR_BSS_SELECT for capability indication in GET_WIPHY. I guess we can leave that as-is to apply for _CONNECT and the new EXT_FEATURE flag we are adding for sched_scan applies for this attribute in SCHED_SCAN.
On 8-12-2016 18:52, Malinen, Jouni wrote: > On Wed, Dec 07, 2016 at 09:03:23PM +0100, Arend Van Spriel wrote: >> On 7-12-2016 10:33, Vamsi, Krishna wrote: >>>> -----Original Message----- >>>> From: Johannes Berg [mailto:johannes@sipsolutions.net] >>> >>>> What about Arend's comment regarding this functionality overlapping with the >>>> BSS selection offload configuration? >>>> >>>> Do you think there's any ability to share attributes/functionality? >>> >>> Hi Johannes, >>> >>> I think the later comment from Luca on this which I pasted below is more agreeable. >>> >>> Yes, similar but not quite the same. The existing case is for finding BSSs that are worth waking the host up for (while disconnected), so it needs to be better than the RSSI passed (absolute number). Now this is about relative RSSI as compared to the current connection, so RELATIVE_RSSI is different than RSSI and I think the same attribute should not be used, to avoid confusion. >> >> I noticed the response from Luca, but did not get back on this. I know >> it is not the same, but what I meant is whether we could extend it so it >> also covers your scenario. > > I'm not sure I see the point of trying to avoid the new RELATIVE_RSSI > attribute. We need to clearly specify that this new constraint is indeed > for relative comparison against the currently connected BSS. Hi Jouni, I am not saying it should be avoided. Just looking at it conceptually the scheduled scan request holds so-called matchsets that specify the constraints to determine whether a BSS was found that is worth notifying the host/user-space about. As such I would expect the relative RSSI attribute(s) to be part of the matchset. That way you can specify it together with the currently connected SSID in a single matchset. > As far as your second email is concerned, it might make more sense to > use the existing NL80211_ATTR_BSS_SELECT instead of the new > NL80211_ATTR_SCHED_SCAN_RELATIVE_RSSI_5G_PREF since they cover very > similar purpose in defining RSSI preference between bands. We can take a > look at doing so. One thing to be a careful about this is in what claims > there are about using NL80211_ATTR_BSS_SELECT for capability indication > in GET_WIPHY. I guess we can leave that as-is to apply for _CONNECT and > the new EXT_FEATURE flag we are adding for sched_scan applies for this > attribute in SCHED_SCAN. The NL80211_ATTR_BSS_SELECT supports different methods for BSS selection. One of them being RSSI_ADJUST which is similar to this. It lets user-space specify the band and adjustment instead of having a band implied in the attribute name. Agree that if reusing it for scheduled scan you would still need the EXT_FEATURE flag. Regards, Arend
Ok... this is getting complicated :) Regarding reusing attributes, we have (for the BSS selection thing) the attribute NL80211_BSS_SELECT_ATTR_RSSI_ADJUST, which is really quite similar to your new NL80211_ATTR_SCHED_SCAN_RELATIVE_RSSI_5G_PREF since while connected (which BSS_SELECT_ATTR_* assumes) the current BSS is always part of the considered BSSes, I'd think. However, I tend to think now that reusing the attribute is perhaps not the right thing to do - but defining them with the same semantics would still make sense. Assuming that the value defined in NL80211_BSS_SELECT_ATTR_RSSI_ADJUST applies also to the *current* BSS, it's actually quite pointless to define there the band to adjust - if you want to adjust 2.4 GHz positively you might as well adjust 5 GHz negatively, and vice versa, and both ways are supported. OTOH, the new NL80211_ATTR_SCHED_SCAN_RELATIVE_RSSI_5G_PREF doesn't make this quite clear - is the current BSS to be adjusted before comparing, if it's 5 GHz? If so, the semantics are equivalent. If not, it doesn't actually make much sense ;-) So assuming that it is in fact taken into account after the same adjustment, the two attributes are equivalent, and then perhaps it would make sense to use struct nl80211_bss_select_rssi_adjust for the new attribute. If a driver doesn't support arbitrary bands, but just 5 GHz as in your example, it can just flip it around to 2.4 GHz by switching the sign. Perhaps we should even consider doing that in cfg80211 and adjusting the internal API for both that way? > I am not saying it should be avoided. Just looking at it conceptually > the scheduled scan request holds so-called matchsets that specify the > constraints to determine whether a BSS was found that is worth > notifying the host/user-space about. As such I would expect the > relative RSSI attribute(s) to be part of the matchset. That way you > can specify it together with the currently connected SSID in a single > matchset. I think this makes a lot of sense. We already have NL80211_SCHED_SCAN_MATCH_ATTR_RSSI, which asks to be reporting only networks that have an *absolute* RSSI value above the value of the attribute - a new attribute to make it relative to the current network instead would make sense. That would indeed be equivalent to NL80211_BSS_SELECT_ATTR_RSSI then. Now, if we consider this, NL80211_ATTR_SCHED_SCAN_RELATIVE_RSSI actually is equivalent to NL80211_BSS_SELECT_ATTR_RSSI (a flag attribute indicating whether or not RSSI-based selection/matching is done) and NL80211_ATTR_SCHED_SCAN_RELATIVE_RSSI_5G_PREF is equivalent to NL80211_BSS_SELECT_ATTR_RSSI_ADJUST, both need to be given with the flag and affect operation. However, NL80211_BSS_SELECT_ATTR_BAND_PREF doesn't exist, and reusing the BSS_SELECT namespace also doesn't make sense. So, how about we move these into NL80211_SCHED_SCAN_MATCH_ATTR_* as suggested by Arend, and define them with the same content as the corresponding NL80211_BSS_SELECT_ATTR_*? If they're part of match attributes, we might even remove the feature flag entirely - those were always defined to be optional, but it very well be worthwhile for userspace to know if they're supported if it wants to behave differently depending on whether they're supported or not, I'll leave that up to you since presumably you know the userspace implementation that you're planning to create. johannes
On Tue, Dec 13, 2016 at 04:56:55PM +0100, Johannes Berg wrote: > Regarding reusing attributes, we have (for the BSS selection thing) the > attribute NL80211_BSS_SELECT_ATTR_RSSI_ADJUST, which is really quite > similar to your new NL80211_ATTR_SCHED_SCAN_RELATIVE_RSSI_5G_PREF since > while connected (which BSS_SELECT_ATTR_* assumes) the current BSS is > always part of the considered BSSes, I'd think. It seems to have somewhat similar meaning, but it looks more generic by not being tied to just two bands (2.4 and 5). And now that I actually looked again at this, it does not look like NL80211_BSS_SELECT_ATTR_RSSI_ADJUST actually allows more than a single band,delta pair to be provided and as such, it actually would not work very well with more than two bands even if it might be a bit more generic by allowing band to be set to something else than 2.4 or 5. By the way, nl80211.h does not seem to document what values struct nl82011_bss_select_rssi_adjust band uses.. Is this enum nl80211_band? Neither does it say that delta is in dB (is it?). > OTOH, the new NL80211_ATTR_SCHED_SCAN_RELATIVE_RSSI_5G_PREF doesn't > make this quite clear - is the current BSS to be adjusted before > comparing, if it's 5 GHz? If so, the semantics are equivalent. If not, > it doesn't actually make much sense ;-) Maybe the nl80211.h description was not clear enough, but the comments in cfg80211.h should be quite clear on how this was designed to work at the implementation level: "If the current connected BSS is in the 2.4 GHz band, other BSSs in the 2.4 GHz band to be reported should have better RSSI by @relative_rssi and other BSSs in the 5 GHz band to be reported should have better RSSI by (@relative_rssi - @relative_rssi_5g_pref). If the current connected BSS is in the 5 GHz band, other BSSs in the 2.4 GHz band to be reported should have better RSSI by (@relative_rssi + @relative_rssi_5g_pref) and other BSSs in the 5 GHz band to be reported should have better RSSI by by @relative_rssi." I'm not sure I'd describe this as adjusting the current BSS RSSI, but more like adjusting the RSSI threshold value if roaming would be from one band to another and doing that adjustment by adding or decrementing based on whether the roam would be from 2.4 to 5 or from 5 to 2.4. > So assuming that it is in fact taken into account after the same > adjustment, the two attributes are equivalent, and then perhaps it > would make sense to use struct nl80211_bss_select_rssi_adjust for the > new attribute. If a driver doesn't support arbitrary bands, but just 5 > GHz as in your example, it can just flip it around to 2.4 GHz by > switching the sign. > > Perhaps we should even consider doing that in cfg80211 and adjusting > the internal API for both that way? I'm not completely sure I understood. One thing to note about differences here is that NL80211_BSS_SELECT_ATTR_* seems to be defining some preferences for BSS selection based on RSSI with an additional band preference, but it does not seem to define the threshold by how many dB the new candidate BSS should be better. At minimum, we would need to clearly document struct nl80211_bss_select_rssi_adjust, but even if we do, I'm not sure it really is ideal mechanism to move to now that I realized it is not an array, but a single band,delta pair. Arend: > > I am not saying it should be avoided. Just looking at it conceptually > > the scheduled scan request holds so-called matchsets that specify the > > constraints to determine whether a BSS was found that is worth > > notifying the host/user-space about. As such I would expect the > > relative RSSI attribute(s) to be part of the matchset. That way you > > can specify it together with the currently connected SSID in a single > > matchset. > > I think this makes a lot of sense. If we are talking only about roaming within an ESS (a single SSID), that would sound clear, but which relative RSSI rules would apply if there are match sets for both the currently connected SSID and another SSID that the candidate BSS is for? > We already have NL80211_SCHED_SCAN_MATCH_ATTR_RSSI, which asks to be > reporting only networks that have an *absolute* RSSI value above the > value of the attribute - a new attribute to make it relative to the > current network instead would make sense. When you say "current network", do you mean the current BSS? This gets complex when thinking about multiple SSIDs (which some call "networks") and there being NL80211_SCHED_SCAN_MATCH_ATTR_SSID and multiple match sets.. > That would indeed be equivalent to NL80211_BSS_SELECT_ATTR_RSSI then. NL80211_BSS_SELECT_ATTR_RSSI is a flag attribute.. BSS select mechanism does not provide an absolute RSSI value or threshold; it just seems to indicate use of RSSI-based selection mechanism without defining what exactly is better. There is NL80211_BSS_SELECT_ATTR_BAND_PREF that gives a preference to a specific band (without defining what that preference is) and then the NL80211_BSS_SELECT_ATTR_RSSI_ADJUST that can actually give a specific RSSI adjustment value (in dB?). > Now, if we consider this, NL80211_ATTR_SCHED_SCAN_RELATIVE_RSSI > actually is equivalent to NL80211_BSS_SELECT_ATTR_RSSI (a flag > attribute indicating whether or not RSSI-based selection/matching is > done) and NL80211_ATTR_SCHED_SCAN_RELATIVE_RSSI_5G_PREF is equivalent > to NL80211_BSS_SELECT_ATTR_RSSI_ADJUST, both need to be given with the > flag and affect operation. Hmm.. So you did notice it is a flag attribute.. So how would this match NL80211_ATTR_SCHED_SCAN_RELATIVE_RSSI which provides the threshold value for how many dB better the new BSS needs to be for it to be reported? > So, how about we move these into NL80211_SCHED_SCAN_MATCH_ATTR_* as > suggested by Arend, and define them with the same content as the > corresponding NL80211_BSS_SELECT_ATTR_*? I think I'm missing something here.. Where would the threshold value (how much better new BSS needs to be) be stored? And do we really want something like the combination of NL80211_BSS_SELECT_ATTR_BAND_PREF and NL80211_BSS_SELECT_ATTR_RSSI_ADJUST which seems to be two different ways of doing band preference (the former without specifying delta and the latter with specific delta)? Or am I still not understanding how NL80211_BSS_SELECT_ATTR_* really works? > If they're part of match attributes, we might even remove the feature > flag entirely - those were always defined to be optional, but it very > well be worthwhile for userspace to know if they're supported if it > wants to behave differently depending on whether they're supported or > not, I'll leave that up to you since presumably you know the userspace > implementation that you're planning to create. The main concern I have for optional features with sched_scan is in whether the device ends up being woken up constantly if the driver does not understand a constraint that user space is trying to use to avoid being notified all the time. -- Jouni Malinen PGP id EFC895FA
On Thu, 2016-12-15 at 11:06 +0000, Malinen, Jouni wrote: > On Tue, Dec 13, 2016 at 04:56:55PM +0100, Johannes Berg wrote: > > Regarding reusing attributes, we have (for the BSS selection thing) > > the attribute NL80211_BSS_SELECT_ATTR_RSSI_ADJUST, which is really > > quite similar to your > > new NL80211_ATTR_SCHED_SCAN_RELATIVE_RSSI_5G_PREF since while > > connected (which BSS_SELECT_ATTR_* assumes) the current BSS is > > always part of the considered BSSes, I'd think. > > It seems to have somewhat similar meaning, but it looks more generic > by not being tied to just two bands (2.4 and 5). And now that I > actually looked again at this, it does not look like > NL80211_BSS_SELECT_ATTR_RSSI_ADJUST actually allows more than a > single band,delta pair to be provided and as such, it actually would > not work very well with more than two bands even if it might be a bit > more generic by allowing band to be set to something else than 2.4 or > 5. Agree, it wouldn't work well with more than 2 bands. Not that we have them now (60GHz doesn't really count here). > By the way, nl80211.h does not seem to document what values struct > nl82011_bss_select_rssi_adjust band uses.. Is this enum > nl80211_band? I believe so, we should fix that. > Neither does it say that delta is in dB (is it?). We should also fix that, but let's assume so for the sake of this discussion. > > OTOH, the new NL80211_ATTR_SCHED_SCAN_RELATIVE_RSSI_5G_PREF doesn't > > make this quite clear - is the current BSS to be adjusted before > > comparing, if it's 5 GHz? If so, the semantics are equivalent. If > > not, it doesn't actually make much sense ;-) > > Maybe the nl80211.h description was not clear enough, but the > comments in cfg80211.h should be quite clear on how this was designed > to work at the implementation level: > > "If the current connected BSS is in the 2.4 GHz band, other BSSs in > the 2.4 GHz band to be reported should have better RSSI by > @relative_rssi and other BSSs in the 5 GHz band to be reported should > have better RSSI by (@relative_rssi - @relative_rssi_5g_pref). > If the current connected BSS is in the 5 GHz band, other BSSs in the > 2.4 GHz band to be reported should have better RSSI by > (@relative_rssi + @relative_rssi_5g_pref) and other BSSs in the 5 GHz > band to be reported should have better RSSI by by @relative_rssi." Oh, right. Should probably be in nl80211.h too, to set expectations from userspace. > I'm not sure I'd describe this as adjusting the current BSS RSSI, but > more like adjusting the RSSI threshold value if roaming would be from > one band to another and doing that adjustment by adding or > decrementing based on whether the roam would be from 2.4 to 5 or from > 5 to 2.4. It's functionally equivalent to doing the following adjustment compare_rssi = current_bss_rssi if current_bss_is_5ghz: compare_rssi += relative_rssi_5g_pref and then comparing all values (again adjusted for 5 GHz BSSes) to this. (which is what I meant by "adjusting the current BSS RSSI"). > > So assuming that it is in fact taken into account after the same > > adjustment, the two attributes are equivalent, and then perhaps it > > would make sense to use struct nl80211_bss_select_rssi_adjust for > > the new attribute. If a driver doesn't support arbitrary bands, but > > just 5 GHz as in your example, it can just flip it around to 2.4 > > GHz by switching the sign. > > > > Perhaps we should even consider doing that in cfg80211 and > > adjusting the internal API for both that way? > > I'm not completely sure I understood. One thing to note about > differences here is that NL80211_BSS_SELECT_ATTR_* seems to be > defining some preferences for BSS selection based on RSSI with an > additional band preference, but it does not seem to define the > threshold by how many dB the new candidate BSS should be better. It's defining more than what we're talking about here, absolutely. Clearly somebody thought a pure band preference might be useful (to never connect to a 2.4GHz AP if a 5 GHz AP is available, regardless of their relative RSSI), but that's not what we're looking at here. (That could probably also be achieved by setting the adjustment to 90dB, but whatever) > At minimum, we would need to clearly document struct > nl80211_bss_select_rssi_adjust, but even if we do, I'm not sure it > really is ideal mechanism to move to now that I realized it is not an > array, but a single band,delta pair. We can move to an array easily in the future by extending the attribute length and advertising the number of array entries that are supported, if that's your biggest concern? I don't see it as being very useful right now since I don't think we'll see offloaded roaming between 2.4/5 and 60 GHz anytime soon. This may change when we add more bands later, I suppose. > Arend: > > > I am not saying it should be avoided. Just looking at it > > > conceptually > > > the scheduled scan request holds so-called matchsets that specify > > > the > > > constraints to determine whether a BSS was found that is worth > > > notifying the host/user-space about. As such I would expect the > > > relative RSSI attribute(s) to be part of the matchset. That way > > > you > > > can specify it together with the currently connected SSID in a > > > single > > > matchset. > > > > I think this makes a lot of sense. > > If we are talking only about roaming within an ESS (a single SSID), > that would sound clear, but which relative RSSI rules would apply if > there are match sets for both the currently connected SSID and > another SSID that the candidate BSS is for? Right, I see how this might become a problem. I generally see no issue with supporting multiple matchsets with different SSIDs but all having the "relative to connected BSS RSSI filter" (which would disregard the SSID specified in the matchset), but this then would become a problem when multiple matchsets are specified with *different* such RSSI filters, e.g. one matchset would specify that you want a 5G preference of 10dB, but the other would specify a preference of only 5dB. Conceptually in this approach, that would be supported, but firmware likely would not be able to express this, I suppose? > > We already have NL80211_SCHED_SCAN_MATCH_ATTR_RSSI, which asks to > > be reporting only networks that have an *absolute* RSSI value above > > the value of the attribute - a new attribute to make it relative to > > the current network instead would make sense. > > When you say "current network", do you mean the current BSS? This > gets complex when thinking about multiple SSIDs (which some call > "networks") and there being NL80211_SCHED_SCAN_MATCH_ATTR_SSID and > multiple match sets.. Yes, I did mean "current BSS". And yes - it does seem complex, see above. > > That would indeed be equivalent to NL80211_BSS_SELECT_ATTR_RSSI > > then. > > NL80211_BSS_SELECT_ATTR_RSSI is a flag attribute.. BSS select > mechanism does not provide an absolute RSSI value or threshold; it > just seems to indicate use of RSSI-based selection mechanism without > defining what exactly is better. There is > NL80211_BSS_SELECT_ATTR_BAND_PREF that gives a preference to a > specific band (without defining what that preference is) and then the > NL80211_BSS_SELECT_ATTR_RSSI_ADJUST that can actually give a specific > RSSI adjustment value (in dB?). > > > Now, if we consider this, NL80211_ATTR_SCHED_SCAN_RELATIVE_RSSI > > actually is equivalent to NL80211_BSS_SELECT_ATTR_RSSI (a flag > > attribute indicating whether or not RSSI-based selection/matching > > is done) and NL80211_ATTR_SCHED_SCAN_RELATIVE_RSSI_5G_PREF is > > equivalent to NL80211_BSS_SELECT_ATTR_RSSI_ADJUST, both need to be > > given with the flag and affect operation. > > Hmm.. So you did notice it is a flag attribute.. So how would this > match NL80211_ATTR_SCHED_SCAN_RELATIVE_RSSI which provides the > threshold value for how many dB better the new BSS needs to be for it > to be reported? Yeah, umm, I think I got confused. There's no threshold in the BSS_SELECT case, and maybe there doesn't need to be (at least not to avoid host wakeups, though you'd want some hysteresis to avoid swapping around too much). > > So, how about we move these into NL80211_SCHED_SCAN_MATCH_ATTR_* as > > suggested by Arend, and define them with the same content as the > > corresponding NL80211_BSS_SELECT_ATTR_*? > > I think I'm missing something here.. Where would the threshold value > (how much better new BSS needs to be) be stored? And do we really > want something like the combination of > NL80211_BSS_SELECT_ATTR_BAND_PREF and > NL80211_BSS_SELECT_ATTR_RSSI_ADJUST which seems to be two different > ways of doing band preference (the former without specifying delta > and the latter with specific delta)? Or am I still not understanding > how NL80211_BSS_SELECT_ATTR_* really works? No, you're right, I missed the "better by" threshold. I think between that (unless we add that, we could technically extend flag attributes to allow them being an int as well, or add a new one) and the fact that the device may not support different relative RSSI matches in different matchsets, I'm almost convinced that adding new attributes is better. > The main concern I have for optional features with sched_scan is in > whether the device ends up being woken up constantly if the driver > does not understand a constraint that user space is trying to use to > avoid being notified all the time. Agree. johannes
On Fri, Dec 16, 2016 at 10:56:51AM +0100, Johannes Berg wrote: > On Thu, 2016-12-15 at 11:06 +0000, Malinen, Jouni wrote: > > Maybe the nl80211.h description was not clear enough, but the > > comments in cfg80211.h should be quite clear on how this was designed > > to work at the implementation level: > > > > "If the current connected BSS is in the 2.4 GHz band, other BSSs in > > the 2.4 GHz band to be reported should have better RSSI by > > @relative_rssi and other BSSs in the 5 GHz band to be reported should > > have better RSSI by (@relative_rssi - @relative_rssi_5g_pref). > > If the current connected BSS is in the 5 GHz band, other BSSs in the > > 2.4 GHz band to be reported should have better RSSI by > > (@relative_rssi + @relative_rssi_5g_pref) and other BSSs in the 5 GHz > > band to be reported should have better RSSI by by @relative_rssi." > > Oh, right. Should probably be in nl80211.h too, to set expectations > from userspace. Sure, we can update that in the next revision. > > At minimum, we would need to clearly document struct > > nl80211_bss_select_rssi_adjust, but even if we do, I'm not sure it > > really is ideal mechanism to move to now that I realized it is not an > > array, but a single band,delta pair. > > We can move to an array easily in the future by extending the attribute > length and advertising the number of array entries that are supported, > if that's your biggest concern? I don't see it as being very useful > right now since I don't think we'll see offloaded roaming between 2.4/5 > and 60 GHz anytime soon. This may change when we add more bands later, > I suppose. Hmm.. So do you want us to move to using this packed struct in the new attribute instead of using a signed 8-bit integer as the variable value? > > If we are talking only about roaming within an ESS (a single SSID), > > that would sound clear, but which relative RSSI rules would apply if > > there are match sets for both the currently connected SSID and > > another SSID that the candidate BSS is for? > > Right, I see how this might become a problem. I generally see no issue > with supporting multiple matchsets with different SSIDs but all having > the "relative to connected BSS RSSI filter" (which would disregard the > SSID specified in the matchset), but this then would become a problem > when multiple matchsets are specified with *different* such RSSI > filters, e.g. one matchset would specify that you want a 5G preference > of 10dB, but the other would specify a preference of only 5dB. > > Conceptually in this approach, that would be supported, but firmware > likely would not be able to express this, I suppose? That's certainly not at the level we were planning on implementing.. :) > > I think I'm missing something here.. Where would the threshold value > > (how much better new BSS needs to be) be stored? And do we really > > want something like the combination of > > NL80211_BSS_SELECT_ATTR_BAND_PREF and > > NL80211_BSS_SELECT_ATTR_RSSI_ADJUST which seems to be two different > > ways of doing band preference (the former without specifying delta > > and the latter with specific delta)? Or am I still not understanding > > how NL80211_BSS_SELECT_ATTR_* really works? > > No, you're right, I missed the "better by" threshold. > > I think between that (unless we add that, we could technically extend > flag attributes to allow them being an int as well, or add a new one) > and the fact that the device may not support different relative RSSI > matches in different matchsets, I'm almost convinced that adding new > attributes is better. I'm not completely sure how to interpret all this and also the last email from Arend in this thread. Could either (or both :) of you provide more detailed suggestion on what exactly you would like us to change, if anything, in the attribute design now so that we can try to close on this?
On 20-12-2016 21:52, Malinen, Jouni wrote: > On Fri, Dec 16, 2016 at 10:56:51AM +0100, Johannes Berg wrote: >> On Thu, 2016-12-15 at 11:06 +0000, Malinen, Jouni wrote: >>> Maybe the nl80211.h description was not clear enough, but the >>> comments in cfg80211.h should be quite clear on how this was designed >>> to work at the implementation level: >>> >>> "If the current connected BSS is in the 2.4 GHz band, other BSSs in >>> the 2.4 GHz band to be reported should have better RSSI by >>> @relative_rssi and other BSSs in the 5 GHz band to be reported should >>> have better RSSI by (@relative_rssi - @relative_rssi_5g_pref). >>> If the current connected BSS is in the 5 GHz band, other BSSs in the >>> 2.4 GHz band to be reported should have better RSSI by >>> (@relative_rssi + @relative_rssi_5g_pref) and other BSSs in the 5 GHz >>> band to be reported should have better RSSI by by @relative_rssi." >> >> Oh, right. Should probably be in nl80211.h too, to set expectations >> from userspace. > > Sure, we can update that in the next revision. > >>> At minimum, we would need to clearly document struct >>> nl80211_bss_select_rssi_adjust, but even if we do, I'm not sure it >>> really is ideal mechanism to move to now that I realized it is not an >>> array, but a single band,delta pair. >> >> We can move to an array easily in the future by extending the attribute >> length and advertising the number of array entries that are supported, >> if that's your biggest concern? I don't see it as being very useful >> right now since I don't think we'll see offloaded roaming between 2.4/5 >> and 60 GHz anytime soon. This may change when we add more bands later, >> I suppose. > > Hmm.. So do you want us to move to using this packed struct in the new > attribute instead of using a signed 8-bit integer as the variable value? That was my suggestion so it is more clear what user-space wants by making it specify the band explicitly. So in the explanation above reference to "5g" should be "specified band" etc. Whether you reuse the packed struct nl80211_bss_select_rssi_adjust or come up with a new (identical?) one is irrelevant to me. Also I don't see the array issue. @relative_rssi_5g_pref with s8 value seems same as @rssi_adjust with (band=5g, s8 value) packed together. Or am I missing something here. >>> If we are talking only about roaming within an ESS (a single SSID), >>> that would sound clear, but which relative RSSI rules would apply if >>> there are match sets for both the currently connected SSID and >>> another SSID that the candidate BSS is for? >> >> Right, I see how this might become a problem. I generally see no issue >> with supporting multiple matchsets with different SSIDs but all having >> the "relative to connected BSS RSSI filter" (which would disregard the >> SSID specified in the matchset), but this then would become a problem >> when multiple matchsets are specified with *different* such RSSI >> filters, e.g. one matchset would specify that you want a 5G preference >> of 10dB, but the other would specify a preference of only 5dB. >> >> Conceptually in this approach, that would be supported, but firmware >> likely would not be able to express this, I suppose? > > That's certainly not at the level we were planning on implementing.. :) Right. So having "relative rssi" matchset attribute is off the table as far as I am concerned. >>> I think I'm missing something here.. Where would the threshold value >>> (how much better new BSS needs to be) be stored? And do we really >>> want something like the combination of >>> NL80211_BSS_SELECT_ATTR_BAND_PREF and >>> NL80211_BSS_SELECT_ATTR_RSSI_ADJUST which seems to be two different >>> ways of doing band preference (the former without specifying delta >>> and the latter with specific delta)? Or am I still not understanding >>> how NL80211_BSS_SELECT_ATTR_* really works? It is documented here: /** * enum nl80211_bss_select_attr - attributes for bss selection. * [...] * * One and only one of these attributes are found within %NL80211_ATTR_BSS_SELECT * for %NL80211_CMD_CONNECT. It specifies the required BSS selection behaviour * which the driver shall use. */ It is checked in nl80211.c [1] >> No, you're right, I missed the "better by" threshold. >> >> I think between that (unless we add that, we could technically extend >> flag attributes to allow them being an int as well, or add a new one) >> and the fact that the device may not support different relative RSSI >> matches in different matchsets, I'm almost convinced that adding new >> attributes is better. > > I'm not completely sure how to interpret all this and also the last > email from Arend in this thread. Could either (or both :) of you provide > more detailed suggestion on what exactly you would like us to change, if > anything, in the attribute design now so that we can try to close on > this? To summarize: 1) stick with the new attributes on request level (so not matchset level), 2) use packed struct for @relative_rssi_5g_pref. Regards, Arend [1] http://lxr.free-electrons.com/source/net/wireless/nl80211.c#L6382
> Also I don't see the array issue. @relative_rssi_5g_pref with s8 > value seems same as @rssi_adjust with (band=5g, s8 value) packed > together. Or am I missing something here. Jouni is arguing that if you can specify which band to adjust, you might want to adjust more than one band - and need an array of (band,adjustment) rather than just a single such tuple. But if we introduce this attribute with the tuple now, we can extend it to an array of tuples later if we really need that. johannes
On Tue, 2016-12-20 at 20:52 +0000, Malinen, Jouni wrote: > > I think between that (unless we add that, we could technically > > extend flag attributes to allow them being an int as well, or add a > > new one) and the fact that the device may not support different > > relative RSSI matches in different matchsets, I'm almost convinced > > that adding new attributes is better. > > I'm not completely sure how to interpret all this and also the last > email from Arend in this thread. Could either (or both :) of you > providemore detailed suggestion on what exactly you would like us to > change, if anything, in the attribute design now so that we can try > to close on this? I guess I'm thinking out loud too much :-) Moving to the (band,adjustment) struct thing, like we have it in the BSS select now, would be good I think - instead of the single value that has the band hardcoded in the name. It's fairly useless with just two bands since you can adjust one or the other to achieve the same result, but for consistency it'd be good. And then doing a match attribute we more or less discarded here, so conceptually nothing else really changes. johannes
diff --git a/include/net/cfg80211.h b/include/net/cfg80211.h index ef42749..dcdd0c4 100644 --- a/include/net/cfg80211.h +++ b/include/net/cfg80211.h @@ -1626,6 +1626,22 @@ struct cfg80211_sched_scan_plan { * cycle. The driver may ignore this parameter and start * immediately (or at any other time), if this feature is not * supported. + * @relative_rssi: Relative RSSI threshold in dB to restrict scan result + * reporting in connected state to cases where a matching BSS is determined + * to have better RSSI than the current connected BSS. The relative RSSI + * threshold values are ignored in disconnected state. + * @relative_rssi_5g_pref: The amount of RSSI preference in dB that is given to + * a 5 GHz BSS over 2.4 GHz BSS while looking for better BSSs in connected + * state. A negative value can be passed if 2.4 GHz band should be given + * priority to 5 GHz band. + * If the current connected BSS is in the 2.4 GHz band, other BSSs in the + * 2.4 GHz band to be reported should have better RSSI by @relative_rssi + * and other BSSs in the 5 GHz band to be reported should have better RSSI + * by (@relative_rssi - @relative_rssi_5g_pref). + * If the current connected BSS is in the 5 GHz band, other BSSs in the + * 2.4 GHz band to be reported should have better RSSI by + * (@relative_rssi + @relative_rssi_5g_pref) and other BSSs in the 5 GHz + * band to be reported should have better RSSI by by @relative_rssi. */ struct cfg80211_sched_scan_request { struct cfg80211_ssid *ssids; @@ -1645,6 +1661,9 @@ struct cfg80211_sched_scan_request { u8 mac_addr[ETH_ALEN] __aligned(2); u8 mac_addr_mask[ETH_ALEN] __aligned(2); + s8 relative_rssi; + s8 relative_rssi_5g_pref; + /* internal */ struct wiphy *wiphy; struct net_device *dev; diff --git a/include/uapi/linux/nl80211.h b/include/uapi/linux/nl80211.h index 6b76e3b..fc29bdb 100644 --- a/include/uapi/linux/nl80211.h +++ b/include/uapi/linux/nl80211.h @@ -1980,6 +1980,17 @@ enum nl80211_commands { * @NL80211_ATTR_BSSID: The BSSID of the AP. Note that %NL80211_ATTR_MAC is also * used in various commands/events for specifying the BSSID. * + * @NL80211_ATTR_SCHED_SCAN_RELATIVE_RSSI: Relative RSSI threshold by which + * other BSSs has to be better than the current connected BSS so that they + * get reported to user space. This will give an opportunity to userspace + * to consider connecting to other matching BSSs which have better RSSI + * than the current connected BSS by using an offloaded operation to avoid + * unnecessary wakeups. + * + * @NL80211_ATTR_SCHED_SCAN_RELATIVE_RSSI_5G_PREF: The amount of RSSI preference + * to be given to 5 GHz APs over 2.4 GHz APs while searching for better + * BSSs than the current connected BSS. + * * @NUM_NL80211_ATTR: total number of nl80211_attrs available * @NL80211_ATTR_MAX: highest attribute number currently defined * @__NL80211_ATTR_AFTER_LAST: internal use @@ -2386,6 +2397,9 @@ enum nl80211_attrs { NL80211_ATTR_BSSID, + NL80211_ATTR_SCHED_SCAN_RELATIVE_RSSI, + NL80211_ATTR_SCHED_SCAN_RELATIVE_RSSI_5G_PREF, + /* add attributes here, update the policy in nl80211.c */ __NL80211_ATTR_AFTER_LAST, @@ -4697,6 +4711,9 @@ enum nl80211_feature_flags { * configuration (AP/mesh) with VHT rates. * @NL80211_EXT_FEATURE_FILS_STA: This driver supports Fast Initial Link Setup * with user space SME (NL80211_CMD_AUTHENTICATE) in station mode. + * @NL80211_EXT_FEATURE_SCHED_SCAN_RELATIVE_RSSI: The driver supports sched_scan + * for reporting BSSs with better RSSI than the current connected BSS + * (%NL80211_ATTR_SCHED_SCAN_RELATIVE_RSSI). * * @NUM_NL80211_EXT_FEATURES: number of extended features. * @MAX_NL80211_EXT_FEATURES: highest extended feature index. @@ -4712,6 +4729,7 @@ enum nl80211_ext_feature_index { NL80211_EXT_FEATURE_BEACON_RATE_HT, NL80211_EXT_FEATURE_BEACON_RATE_VHT, NL80211_EXT_FEATURE_FILS_STA, + NL80211_EXT_FEATURE_SCHED_SCAN_RELATIVE_RSSI, /* add new features before the definition below */ NUM_NL80211_EXT_FEATURES, diff --git a/net/wireless/nl80211.c b/net/wireless/nl80211.c index 7762231..549f239 100644 --- a/net/wireless/nl80211.c +++ b/net/wireless/nl80211.c @@ -405,6 +405,8 @@ enum nl80211_multicast_groups { [NL80211_ATTR_FILS_NONCES] = { .len = 2 * FILS_NONCE_LEN }, [NL80211_ATTR_MULTICAST_TO_UNICAST_ENABLED] = { .type = NLA_FLAG, }, [NL80211_ATTR_BSSID] = { .len = ETH_ALEN }, + [NL80211_ATTR_SCHED_SCAN_RELATIVE_RSSI] = { .type = NLA_S8 }, + [NL80211_ATTR_SCHED_SCAN_RELATIVE_RSSI_5G_PREF] = { .type = NLA_S8 }, }; /* policy for the key attributes */ @@ -6950,6 +6952,12 @@ static int nl80211_abort_scan(struct sk_buff *skb, struct genl_info *info) if (!n_plans || n_plans > wiphy->max_sched_scan_plans) return ERR_PTR(-EINVAL); + if (!wiphy_ext_feature_isset( + wiphy, NL80211_EXT_FEATURE_SCHED_SCAN_RELATIVE_RSSI) && + (attrs[NL80211_ATTR_SCHED_SCAN_RELATIVE_RSSI] || + attrs[NL80211_ATTR_SCHED_SCAN_RELATIVE_RSSI_5G_PREF])) + return ERR_PTR(-EINVAL); + request = kzalloc(sizeof(*request) + sizeof(*request->ssids) * n_ssids + sizeof(*request->match_sets) * n_match_sets @@ -7156,6 +7164,14 @@ static int nl80211_abort_scan(struct sk_buff *skb, struct genl_info *info) request->delay = nla_get_u32(attrs[NL80211_ATTR_SCHED_SCAN_DELAY]); + if (attrs[NL80211_ATTR_SCHED_SCAN_RELATIVE_RSSI]) + request->relative_rssi = nla_get_s8( + attrs[NL80211_ATTR_SCHED_SCAN_RELATIVE_RSSI]); + + if (attrs[NL80211_ATTR_SCHED_SCAN_RELATIVE_RSSI_5G_PREF]) + request->relative_rssi_5g_pref = nla_get_s8( + attrs[NL80211_ATTR_SCHED_SCAN_RELATIVE_RSSI_5G_PREF]); + err = nl80211_parse_sched_scan_plans(wiphy, n_plans, request, attrs); if (err) goto out_free; @@ -9649,7 +9665,8 @@ static int nl80211_send_wowlan_tcp(struct sk_buff *msg, return 0; } -static int nl80211_send_wowlan_nd(struct sk_buff *msg, +static int nl80211_send_wowlan_nd(struct wiphy *wiphy, + struct sk_buff *msg, struct cfg80211_sched_scan_request *req) { struct nlattr *nd, *freqs, *matches, *match, *scan_plans, *scan_plan; @@ -9670,6 +9687,14 @@ static int nl80211_send_wowlan_nd(struct sk_buff *msg, if (nla_put_u32(msg, NL80211_ATTR_SCHED_SCAN_DELAY, req->delay)) return -ENOBUFS; + if (wiphy_ext_feature_isset( + wiphy, NL80211_EXT_FEATURE_SCHED_SCAN_RELATIVE_RSSI) && + (nla_put_s8(msg, NL80211_ATTR_SCHED_SCAN_RELATIVE_RSSI, + req->relative_rssi) || + nla_put_s8(msg, NL80211_ATTR_SCHED_SCAN_RELATIVE_RSSI_5G_PREF, + req->relative_rssi_5g_pref))) + return -ENOBUFS; + freqs = nla_nest_start(msg, NL80211_ATTR_SCAN_FREQUENCIES); if (!freqs) return -ENOBUFS; @@ -9783,7 +9808,7 @@ static int nl80211_get_wowlan(struct sk_buff *skb, struct genl_info *info) goto nla_put_failure; if (nl80211_send_wowlan_nd( - msg, + &rdev->wiphy, msg, rdev->wiphy.wowlan_config->nd_config)) goto nla_put_failure;