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Message-ID: <1407789645.28221.68.camel@chimera>
Date: Mon, 11 Aug 2014 13:40:45 -0700
From: Daniel Gimpelevich <daniel@...pelevich.san-francisco.ca.us>
To: Marcel Holtmann <marcel@...tmann.org>
Cc: "John W. Linville" <linville@...driver.com>,
"linux-wireless@...r.kernel.org Wireless"
<linux-wireless@...r.kernel.org>,
Johannes Berg <johannes@...solutions.net>,
"David S. Miller" <davem@...emloft.net>,
Network Development <netdev@...r.kernel.org>,
linux-kernel@...r.kernel.org
Subject: Re: [PATCH] allow setting wiphy.perm_addr after driver probe
On Mon, 2014-08-11 at 13:25 -0700, Marcel Holtmann wrote:
> isn't this dangerous to just allow writing to wiphy.perm_addr via
> sysfs. We ran into the same issue with Bluetooth and ROM only devices
> that have to unique address. Doing this via sysfs seems the wrong
> approach. It is messy and full of potential race conditions. I clearly
> opted against the sysfs solution for Bluetooth. Instead we build an
> infrastructure that allowed doing it cleanly via the Bluetooth mgmt
> API. Controllers that have no unique address are brought up as
> unconfigured and userspace clearly knows that it has to take steps to
> get an address programmed into the controller.
My inclination is to agree; however, this does not exist for WiFi and
implementing it would require modifying every single driver.
> And I think something similar should be done for WiFi. It might be
> better to not create the initial wlan0 netdev interface if the
> hardware has not a single unique address available. That way the
> supplicant can just either get one from the flash filesystem or make
> up a proper random one before creating the netdev interface.
>
The initial wlan0 netdev interface is *not* created, but the PHY records
a MAC address that cannot be overriden at the level that this sysfs node
reads. Perhaps a compromise would be to create a single new syscall to
write to it?
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