NAME
bwi
—
Broadcom AirForce IEEE 802.11b/g
wireless network device
SYNOPSIS
bwi* at cardbus?
bwi* at pci?
DESCRIPTION
The bwi
driver provides support for
Broadcom AirForce based PCI/Cardbus network adapters.
These are the modes the bwi
driver can
operate in:
- BSS mode
- Also known as infrastructure mode, this is used when associating with an access point, through which all traffic passes. This mode is the default.
- monitor mode
- In this mode the driver is able to receive packets without associating with an access point. This disables the internal receive filter and enables the card to capture packets from networks which it wouldn't normally have access to, or to scan for access points.
The bwi
driver can be configured to use
Wired Equivalent Privacy (WEP) or Wi-Fi Protected Access (WPA1 and WPA2).
WPA2 is the current encryption standard for wireless networks. It is
strongly recommended that neither WEP nor WPA1 are used as the sole
mechanism to secure wireless communication, due to serious weaknesses. WPA1
is disabled by default and may be enabled using the option
"wpaprotos
wpa1,wpa2". For standard WPA networks which use
pre-shared keys (PSK), keys are configured using the
"wpakey
" option. WPA-Enterprise networks
require use of the wpa_supplicant package. The bwi
driver relies on the software 802.11 stack for both encryption and
decryption of data frames.
The transmit speed is user-selectable or can be adapted automatically by the driver depending on the received signal strength and on the number of hardware transmission retries.
The bwi
driver can be configured at
runtime with
ifconfig(8) or on boot with
hostname.if(5).
FILES
The driver needs a firmware file which is loaded when an interface is brought up:
- /etc/firmware/bwi-airforce
A prepackaged version of the firmware can be installed using fw_update(8).
HARDWARE
The following cards are among those supported by the
bwi
driver:
Card | Chip | Bus | Standard |
Apple Airport Extreme | BCM4306 | PCI | b/g |
Apple Airport Extreme | BCM4318 | PCI | b/g |
ASUS WL-138g | BCM4318 | PCI | b/g |
Buffalo WLI-CB-G54 | BCM4306 | CardBus | b/g |
Compaq R4035 onboard | BCM4306 | PCI | b/g |
HP nx6125 | BCM4319 | PCI | b/g |
Linksys WPC54G Ver 3 | BCM4318 | CardBus | b/g |
Linksys WPC54GS Ver 2 | BCM4318 | CardBus | b/g |
TRENDnet TEW-401PCplus | BCM4306 | CardBus | b/g |
US Robotics 5411 | BCM4318 | CardBus | b/g |
EXAMPLES
The following example scans for available networks:
# ifconfig bwi0 scan
The following hostname.if(5) example configures bwi0 to join network “mynwid”, using WPA key “mywpakey”, obtaining an IP address using DHCP:
join mynwid wpakey mywpakey inet autoconf
SEE ALSO
arp(4), cardbus(4), ifmedia(4), intro(4), netintro(4), pci(4), hostname.if(5), ifconfig(8)
HISTORY
The bwi
driver first appeared in
OpenBSD 4.3.
AUTHORS
The bwi
driver was written for
DragonFly by Sepherosa
Ziehau and ported to OpenBSD by
Jonathan Gray and Marcus
Glocker.
CAVEATS
Some chips are incorrectly calibrated due to the lack of documentation, which can slow the amount of traffic to the point of being unusable. Furthermore this driver only supports firmware version 3.
The BCM4331 chip isn't supported by this driver but the driver disables the chip if detected, since some buggy EFI revisions found in 2011-2012 Macs leave the chip enabled, causing it to emit spurious interrupts when the shared interrupt line is enabled.
This driver does not support powersave mode.