hostapd —
Host Access Point daemon
hostapd |
[ -dv ]
[-D
macro=value ]
[-f
file ] |
hostapd is a daemon which allows
communication between different 802.11 wireless access points running in
Host AP mode.
hostapd implements the Inter Access Point
Protocol (IAPP). Its purpose is to exchange station association updates
between access points in large wireless networks. IAPP has been designed to
speed up roaming between different access points in the same Extended Service
Set (ESS). IAPP is described in the IEEE 802.11f standard.
hostapd additionally allows the monitoring
and logging of station associations on a non-hostap host which is receiving
IAPP messages.
hostapd uses two network interfaces on
startup specified in the configuration file
hostapd.conf(5). The first
interface is used to access the Host AP, which is a wireless interface running
in Host AP mode. Host AP mode can be enabled using
ifconfig(8). The second
interface is used to communicate with other
hostapd in the same broadcast domain or
multicast group. Usually a wired interface is used to communicate with other
hostapd.
hostapd broadcasts an
ADD.notify IAPP message when a new station is
associated to the Host AP. When
hostapd
receives an ADD.notify message it tells the Host AP to remove the specified
station.
hostapd may also handle dynamic roaming of IP
addresses and routes in addition to the standard IAPP ADD.notify behaviour.
See the section called IP Roaming in
hostapd.conf(5) for
details.
The options are as follows:
-
-
-D
macro=value
- Define macro to be set to
value on the command line. Overrides the
definition of macro in the configuration
file.
-
-
-d
- Do not daemonize and log to stderr.
-
-
-f
file
- Use file as the configuration file,
instead of the default
/etc/hostapd.conf.
-
-
-v
- Produce more verbose output.
- /etc/hostapd.conf
- default
hostapd configuration file
hostapd.conf(5),
ifconfig(8)
Inter Access Point
Protocol, IEEE 802.11f,
March 2001.
The
hostapd program first appeared at the
21st Chaos Communication Congress
(
http://www.ccc.de/congress/2004/)
and later in
OpenBSD 3.8.
The
hostapd program was written by
Reyk Floeter
<
reyk@openbsd.org>.
hostapd depends on drivers using the net80211
kernel wireless layer with support of Host AP mode. For traditional reasons,
the
wi(4) driver still uses its own
Host AP code in
if_wi_hostap(), which is
not supported by
hostapd.
The IEEE 802.11 WLAN protocol lacks authentication of management frames and is
vulnerable to various denial of service and man-in-the-middle attacks. That
should be considered when implementing wireless networks with
hostapd.