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hostp2pd

PyPI Python Versions PyPI download month GitHub license

The Wi-Fi Direct Session Manager

hostp2pd implements a soft host Access Point (AP) software in Wi-Fi Direct mode, enabling a wireless network interface card to act as Ad hoc access point and Wi-Fi Protected Setup (WPS) authentication server. It features basic functionalities roughly similar to hostapd (with its hostapd.conf configuration file), which is the common AP software integrated with wpa_supplicant, generally used for infrastructure mode networking. When implementing a P2P persistent group, wpa_supplicant offers the P2P-GO features enabled by hostp2pd to connect P2P Clients like Android smartphones, as well as provide the standard infrastructure AP mode to the same P2P-GO group, without the need of hostapd.

In order to accept Wi-Fi Direct connections from P2P Clients, to activate a local P2P-GO (Wi-Fi Direct Group Owner) and to perform WPS authentication, hostp2pd fully relies on wpa_supplicant, interfacing it through the wpa_cli command-line interface (CLI): wpa_cli is run in background and p2p commands are piped via pseudo-tty communication, while events returned by wpa_cli are read and processed.

hostp2pd includes a command-line interface mode for monitoring and controlling; it can be executed as a batch or as a daemon and provides an API for integration into other Python programs.

Connecting via Wi-Fi Direct with Android devices

Wi-Fi Direct (formerly named Wi-Fi Peer-to-Peer, or P2P) allows devices to connect directly to each other, without the need for a traditional Wireless Access Point (AP). The role of the access point is replaced by the so-called Group Owner (GO), either negotiated during the connection setup, or autonomously created.

An advantage of Wi-Fi Direct with Android is that it can coexist with a traditional Wi-Fi connection as well as with a cellular connection: it means that an Android smartphone can be connected to a mobile network, or to an infrastructure-mode Wi-Fi AP with internet access and at the same time connect to a UNIX device via Wi-Fi Direct, without losing the routing to the mobile (or AP) network. This is because with Android, differently from the standard infrastructure-mode Wi-Fi AP connection where an active Wi-Fi session always takes routing priority to the mobile network for its internal Android routing configuration that disables mobile routing, Wi-Fi Direct does not interfere with the routing table.

Apple iOS devices do not support Wi-Fi Direct, but can concurrently connect to a P2P persistent group in AP mode the same way as for traditional infrastructure-mode Access Points managed by hostapd. Differently from Android phones, if the persistent group does not configure a default router, iOS does not change the routing tables of the cellular network, which is by consequence not lost.

Installation

Check that the Python version is 3.6 or higher (python3 -V), then install hostp2pd with the following command:

python3 -m pip install hostp2pd

To install from GitHub:

sudo apt-get install git
python3 -m pip install git+https://github.com/Ircama/hostp2pd

To uninstall:

python3 -m pip uninstall -y hostp2pd

Prerequisite components (already included in the installation procedure): pyyaml, python-daemon.

Usage

To run hostp2pd in interactive mode, use the following command:

python3 -m hostp2pd

or simply:

hostp2pd

The above command uses the automatically detected P2P-Device interface and the internal default configuration file.

Using a P2P-Device interface and a configuration file:

hostp2pd -i p2p-dev-wlan0 -c /etc/hostp2pd.yaml
  • -i option: The P2P-Device interface used by hostp2pd is created by wpa_supplicant over the physical wlan interface (if default options are used). Use iw dev to list the available wlan interfaces. An unnamed/non-netdev interface with type P2P-device should be found. If no P2P-Device is shown (e.g., only the physical phy#0 Interface wlan0 is present), either wpa_supplicant is not active or it is not appropriately compiled/configured. With wlan0 as physical interface (ref. iw dev), to get the name of the P2P-Interface use the command wpa_cli -i wlan0 interface: it should return the interface device wlan0 and the P2P-device (e.g., p2p-dev-wlan0). Use this name as argument to the -i option of hostp2pd. Notice also that, if a P2P-Device is configured, wpa_cli without option should automatically point to this interface. If -i option is not used, hostp2pd tries to automatically detect the right interface.
  • -c option: a YAML configuration file (here an example) is not strictly necessary to start a first test; a minimum parameter would be the PIN, which can be alternatively defined using a shell Here Document expression:
    hostp2pd -i p2p-dev-wlan0 -c - <<\eof
    pin: "00000000"
    eof

In this documentation, the UNIX system is where hostp2pd is installed and run, generally acting as P2P-GO. The P2P device is generally an Android smartphone (or another Linux/Windows system).

To start a Wi-Fi Direct connection of an Android smartphone and connect a UNIX system running hostp2pd, tap Settings > Wi-Fi > Advanced settings > Wi-Fi Direct and wait for the peer UNIX device to appear. Select it, optionally type the PIN and wait for connection established. If the default configuration is used, which exploits a predefined persistent group, any subsequent reconnection to this group is done without repeating the WPS authorization process. As previously explained, through this process the mobile/cellular connection is not disabled while the Wi-Fi Direct connection is active.

Depending on the capabilities of the wlan device driver, the AP virtual interface has to be stopped before creating a P2P-GO group. As already mentioned, a persistent P2P-GO group can provide AP capabilities together with the Wi-Fi Direct functionalities.

Check the supported interface modes with this command:

iw list | grep "Supported interface modes" -A 8

It should return one line including P2P-GO (together with P2P-device). If only STA and managed are returned, the device driver of the board (or the hw itself) does not support creating a P2P-GO interface.

As an example, this is the output of the Raspberry Pi 4:

        Supported interface modes:
                 * IBSS
                 * managed
                 * AP
                 * P2P-client
                 * P2P-GO
                 * P2P-device

Use this command to check the allowed combination options:

iw list | grep "valid interface combinations" -A 8

Every line contains alternative combinations. For instance, with the Broadcom BCM2711 SoC included in a Raspberry Pi 4 B, we get the following:

        valid interface combinations:
                 * #{ managed } <= 1, #{ P2P-device } <= 1, #{ P2P-client, P2P-GO } <= 1,
                   total <= 3, #channels <= 2
                 * #{ managed } <= 1, #{ AP } <= 1, #{ P2P-client } <= 1, #{ P2P-device } <= 1,
                   total <= 4, #channels <= 1
        Device supports scan flush.
        Device supports randomizing MAC-addr in sched scans.
        Supported extended features:
                * [ 4WAY_HANDSHAKE_STA_PSK ]: 4-way handshake with PSK in station mode

It means that not more than one AP or P2P-GO interface can be configured at the same time, with a single P2P-GO group supported.

Same for the Intel Wireless-AC 9560 Ubuntu driver:

valid interface combinations:
     * #{ managed } <= 1, #{ AP, P2P-client, P2P-GO } <= 1, #{ P2P-device } <= 1,
       total <= 3, #channels <= 2

Optionally, hostp2pd allows the -p option, which defines an external program to be run with specific arguments each time preconfigured events occur, like activating or deactivating a group; this for instance allows controlling external AP resources before groups are created or after groups are removed.

Preconfigured events:

  • "started": executed at hostp2pd startup
  • "terminated": executed at hostp2pd termination
  • "start_group": executed before creating a P2P GO group
  • "stop_group": executed after removing a P2P GO group
  • "connect": executed after a station connects to a group
  • "disconnect": executed after a station disconnects from a group

Events might have additional arguments, which are used to add related attributes.

This is an example of RUN_PROGRAM (/tmp/run_program_sample):

#!/bin/bash
# /tmp/run_program_sample
set -o errexit -o nounset -o pipefail -o functrace -o errtrace -eE
case "$1" in
started) echo "hpstp2pd startup - $@";;
terminated) echo "hpstp2pd terminated - $@";;
start_group) echo "P2P-GO group creation - $@";;
stop_group) echo "P2P-GO group removal - $@";;
connect) echo "Station connected - $@";;
disconnect) echo "Station disconnected - $@";;
*) echo "Unknown command - $@";;
esac

Related test case:

hostp2pd -i p2p-dev-wlan0 -c /etc/hostp2pd.yaml -p /tmp/run_program_sample

In all cases, wpa_cli can be used in parallel to hostp2pd. Specifically, wpa_cli can be started on the physical interface (wpa_cli -i wlan0), on the P2P-Device (wpa_cli -i p2p-dev-wlan0) and on a specific P2P-GO group when available (e.g., wpa_cli -i p2p-wlan0-0).

Configuration files

hostp2pd needs wpa_supplicant.conf and optionally hostp2pd.yaml.

wpa_supplicant.conf

For a reference description of the file format of wpa_supplicant.conf, ref. these relevant documents:

Ensure that wpa_supplicant.conf includes the following P2P configuration lines (skip all comments):

ctrl_interface=DIR=/var/run/wpa_supplicant GROUP=netdev # This allows using wpa_cli as wpa_supplicant client.
          # Note: /var/run/wpa_supplicant is the directory where wpa_supplicant creates UNIX sockets to allow interaction with wpa_cli. The group name is the
          # one associated with the sockets; use the appropriated group configured for your wpa_supplicant installation (might not be used).
update_config=1                                         # This allows wpa_supplicant to update the wpa_supplicant.conf configuration file
device_name=DIRECT-test                                 # This is the P2P name shown to the Android phones while connecting via Wi-Fi Direct;
                                                        # Use any name in place of "test" and keep the "DIRECT-" prefix.
device_type=6-0050F204-1                                # (Optional: Microsoft wireless device, Network Infrastructure, AP)
config_methods=keypad                                   # "keypad" uses a fixed PIN on UNIX, which is asked from a keypad popped up on the Android devices
p2p_go_intent=15                                        # Optional, only to be used in case of negotiation. Force UNIX to become a P2P-GO (Group Owner)
persistent_reconnect=1                                  # Allow reconnecting to a persistent group without user acknowledgement
p2p_go_ht40=1                                           # Optional: use HT40 channel bandwidth (300 Mbps) when operating as GO (instead of 144.5Mbps).
country=<country ID>                                    # Use your country code here
p2p_device_persistent_mac_addr=<mac address>            # Fixed MAC address overcoming MAC Randomization, to be used with persistent group
p2p_device_random_mac_addr=<mode>                       # MAC address management to create the P2P Device interface

# This is an example of P2P persistent group:
network={                                               # Network profile
        ssid="DIRECT-PP-group"                          # Name of the persistent group saved on the Android phone and shown within the AP names;
                                                        # use any name in place of "PP-group" and keep the "DIRECT-xx-" prefix.
        mode=3                                          # WPAS MODE P2P-GO
        disabled=2                                      # Persistent P2P group
        psk="mysecretpassword"                          # Password used when connecting to the AP (unrelated to P2P-GO enrolment, which is done via WPS)
        proto=RSN                                       # For the security parameters, the persistent group profile is like a normal network profile
        key_mgmt=WPA-PSK
        pairwise=CCMP
        auth_alg=OPEN
}

The above example shows how to predefine a P2P persistent group. Specifically, the network profiles will define persistent GO groups if the following three conditions occur:

  • The SSID of the P2P-GO shall begin with the DIRECT-xx-... prefix (P2P_WILDCARD_SSID), otherwise the group is not appropriately announced to the network as a P2P group; any alphanumeric string can be used after DIRECT- prefix; the format DIRECT-<random two octets>[-<optional postfix>] is suggested.
  • A mode=3 directive shall be present, meaning WPAS_MODE_P2P_GO, otherwise the related p2p_group_add command fails for unproper group specification.
  • A disabled=2 directive shall be present, meaning persistent P2P group, otherwise the stanza is not even recognized and listed as persistent (disabled=0 indicates normal network; disabled=1 will announce a disabled network).

If no persistent group is predefined in wpa_supplicant.conf and if activate_persistent_group is set to True, then hostp2pd asks wpa_supplicant to create a generic persistent group, giving it a name with format DIRECT-<random two octets>.

If update_config is set to 1, the configuration file is automatically updated by wpa_supplicant in the following cases:

  • a new network block is added
  • a password is changed
  • a P2P group is created

Notice that, whenever the configuration file is automatically updated

  • all comments are stripped,
  • all parameters set to default values are removed from the configuration file.

The p2p_go_intent parameter is a number between 0 and 15 which controls the default group owner intent: higher numbers indicate preference to become the GO. It is not needed in case of autonomous or persistent groups (in these cases the UNIX system is always a GO) and it is used only when the GO role is negotiated.

The optional parameter ssid_postfix in the hostp2pd configuration file allows adding a fixed postfix string to the SSID whenever a group is created by wpa_supplicant (the form DIRECT-<random two octets>-<ssid_postfix string> is used).

Other parameters (like freq_list) can be used.

See below for the usage of p2p_device_random_mac_addr; in summary, if the device driver uses persistent MAC addresses by default, this option shall be set to 0 (usage of the default persistent MAC address) or to 1 (usage of random MAC addresses only if a group is not set, otherwise, the MAC address is changed to p2p_device_persistent_mac_addr); some 802.11 device drivers do not allow p2p_device_random_mac_addr=1 and need a modification of the wpa_supplicant code to use p2p_device_random_mac_addr=2.

The following usage modes of hostp2pd are allowed:

  • interactive mode (when neither -b option nor -d is used, by default hostp2pd starts in this mode and a prompt is shown)
  • batch mode with input commands, activated with the -b option (-b file or -b -; e.g., -b - for standard log output, or -b output_file_name). This mode reads the standard input for the same commands that can be issued by the user in interactive mode;
  • batch mode light, without input commands (no separate thread is created and the command interpreter is not used). This is activated when both -b and -d options are used;
  • daemon mode (use -d option). Suggested configuration. If a daemon process is active, option -t terminates a running daemon and option -r dynamically reloads the configuration of a running program.

When running as a daemon, hostp2pd prevents multiple instances over the same P2P-Device interface by using lock files with name /var/run/hostp2pd-<interface>.pid, where <interface> is the name of the P2P-Device interface. (For instance, /var/run/hostp2pd-p2p-dev-wlan0.pid.)

Example of execution in batch mode with input commands (where also Python instructions can be used):

hostp2pd -c /etc/hostp2pd.yaml -b - <<\eof
stats
wait 60
stats
stations
eof

Device Identification Parameters

The wpa_supplicant configuration file allows including optional parameters identifying the UNIX system when presenting itself on the network.

device_type represents the primary device type with information of category, sub-category, and a manufacturer specific OUI (Organization ID) conforming to "Annex B P2P Specific WSC IE Attributes" in "Wi-Fi Peer-to-Peer (P2P) Technical Specification".

Used format from the hostapd.conf manual related to the Primary Device Type parameter:

categ-OUI-subcateg

  • categ = Category as an integer value: "Category ID" defined in the Annex B format of the Wi-Fi Direct specification.
  • OUI = A four-byte subdivided "OUI and type" field, consisting of a 4-octet hex-encoded value which identifies a product from a specific company and is basically the first three octets of a MAC address with the addition of a type subfield. As documented by Microsoft, the 0050F204 CDI-32 OUI is a Vendor­Specific IE referred to Microsoft (00:50:f2), with subtype 4 (wireless device). Anyway, as reported in the Wi-Fi Peer-to-Peer (P2P) Technical Specification, 0050F204 is the predefined value for a default OUI for a generic vendor.
  • subcateg = OUI-specific Sub Category: "Sub Category ID" defined in the Annex B format of the Wi-Fi Direct specification

The following table reports some commented examples:

device_type Device Type Description
1-0050F204-1 Computer / PC Category 1 = Computer, Sub Category 1 = PC
1-0050F204-2 Computer / Server Category 1 = Computer, Sub Category 2 = Server
5-0050F204-1 Storage / NAS Category 5 = Storage, Sub Category 1 = NAS
6-0050F204-1 Network Infrastructure / AP Category 6 = Network Infrastructure, Sub Category 1 = AP
10-0050F204-5 Telephone / Smartphone – dual mode Category 10 = Telephone, Sub Category 5 = Smartphone – dual mode (typical Android device_type)
3-0050F204-1 Printer Category 3 = Printers, Scanners, Faxes and Copiers, Sub Category 1 = Printer or Print Server
3-0050F204-5 All-in-one Printer Category 3 = Printers, Scanners, Faxes and Copiers, Sub Category 1 = All-in-one (Printer, Scanner, Fax, Copier)

The Primary Device Type parameter is for instance used to identify the device with the "pri_dev_type" field of "P2P-DEVICE-FOUND", "P2P-PROV-DISC-ENTER-PIN", "P2P-PROV-DISC-PBC-REQ", "P2P-PROV-DISC-SHOW-PIN" (or in WPS-ENROLLEE-SEEN).

Suggested device type for hostp2pd:

device_type=6-0050F204-1

Other possible elements that can be declared in wpa_supplicant.conf:

# Manufacturer
# The manufacturer of the device (up to 64 ASCII characters)
manufacturer=my_manufacturer_name

# Model Name
# Model of the device (up to 32 ASCII characters)
model_name=my_model_name

# Model Number
# Additional device description (up to 32 ASCII characters)
model_number=my_model_number

# Serial Number
# Serial number of the device (up to 32 characters)
serial_number=12345

# OS Version
# 4-octet operating system version number (hex string)
os_version=01020300

hostp2pd.yaml

Check the hostp2pd.yaml example file. It is suggested to install it to /etc/hostp2pd.yaml.

Installing the service

Run the following to install the service:

sudo SYSTEMD_EDITOR=tee systemctl edit --force --full hostp2pd <<\EOF
[Unit]
Description=hostp2pd - The Wi-Fi Direct Session Manager
After=network.target

[Service]
Type=forking
Environment="CONF=/etc/hostp2pd.yaml" "P2PDEVICE=p2p-dev-wlan0"
ExecStart=/usr/bin/python3 -m hostp2pd  -i ${P2PDEVICE} -c ${CONF} -d
ExecReload=/usr/bin/python3 -m hostp2pd -i ${P2PDEVICE} -c ${CONF} -r
ExecStop=/usr/bin/python3 -m hostp2pd -i ${P2PDEVICE} -c ${CONF} -t
PIDFile=/var/run/hostp2pd-p2p-dev-wlan0.pid

[Install]
WantedBy=multi-user.target
EOF

sudo systemctl enable hostp2pd
sudo systemctl start hostp2pd

Note: PIDFile variable cannot be parametrized with ${CONF} and ${P2PDEVICE}.

WPS Authorization methods

The program allows the following WPS authorization methods, named "config_methods"/configuration methods in wpa_supplicant, which can be defined in hostp2pd.yaml:

  • pbc_in_use: None: setting pbc_in_use to None will retrieve the configuration method defined in wpa_supplicant.conf (this is the suggested mode, where also the keypad method is the suggested one to adopt in wpa_supplicant.conf);
  • pbc_in_use: False: force the keypad configuration method, performing the enrolment with configured PIN;
  • pbc_in_use: True: force the virtual_push_button configuration method, performing the enrolment without PIN.

Configuration methods:

  • keypad: the Android phone prompts a soft keypad; the user has to enter a fixed passkey compliant to the one set in the hostp2pd.yaml configuration file.
  • virtual_push_button (pbc): no PIN is used. Anyway, a whitelist of client names can be defined (pbc_white_list).

The keypad configuration method needs a PIN configured in hostp2pd.yaml through the pin directive (e.g., pin: "12345678"; notice also that any PIN different from eight digits is not accepted by wpa_supplicant, unless differently specified by p2p_passphrase_len).

Using virtual_push_button is extremely weak and discovering the P2P client names can be easily made by any user.

Use cases

In summary, with the standard group formation technique negotiated on demand, when a P2P Client starts a connection, the UNIX device will always become a GO (Group Owner) if p2p_go_intent in wpa_supplicant.conf is set to 15. In autonomous and persistent group formation technique, the UNIX device becomes a group owner by itself without any client request. Persistent groups are saved in the wpa_supplicant configuration file and can be reused after restarting wpa_supplicant or rebooting the UNIX system (and after rebooting the Android device). While Wi-Fi MAC addresses are generally randomized, with persistent groups both the Android device and the UNIX system keep the same wireless MAC address (see note below on wpa_supplicant).

The following table details the use cases:

Group Formation technique Configuration Description
Negotiated on demand activate_persistent_group: False, activate_autonomous_group: False, dynamic_group: True Non-persistent P2P Group formation method using non-autonomous negotiation technique; groups are dynamically created and removed by hostp2pd via p2p_connect and p2p_group_remove; in other terms, no group is created at startup and the first client connection performs the P2P group formation. Subsequent sessions are enrolled to the same group. Only a single P2P-GO group is kept active. The group is removed when the last client session is disconnected. The related virtual network interface is activated only on demand and the related device driver resource is released when not in use. The P2P Client enrolment with its authorization process is slow (especially when forming the group) and always needed.
Autonomous on demand activate_persistent_group: False, activate_autonomous_group: False, dynamic_group: False P2P Group Formation using on-demand Autonomous GO Method, configuring a non-persistent autonomous group activated upon the first connection: hostp2pd uses p2p_connect to setup the first session, while all subsequent connections are managed through WPS enrolment. Once created, the related virtual network interface will be kept active. Authorization process is always needed and generally slow (especially the first time, when the group formation is required on the GO).
Autonomous activate_persistent_group: False, activate_autonomous_group: True, dynamic_group: False P2P Group Formation using Autonomous GO Method, configuring a non-persistent autonomous group at startup (using p2p_group_create); all connections are managed through WPS enrolment. The related virtual network interface will always be active. Authorization process is always needed.
Persistent on demand activate_persistent_group: True, activate_autonomous_group: False, dynamic_group: True Negotiated persistent group. To setup the first session, hostp2pd uses p2p_connect ... persistent or persistent=<network id>, depending on the existence of a valid persistent group in wpa_supplicant configuration file). The authorization process is only performed the first time (slow), than all reconnections are pretty fast and fully automated by wpa_supplicant. With this setting, the P2P Client is able on demand to automatically restart the P2P-GO group on the UNIX system and then connect to this group without WPS enrolment. So, after the P2P-GO group is saved to the P2P Client, any subsequent reconnection of the same client is not mediated by hostp2pd; the only task of hostp2pd is to enrol new clients, in order to allow them to locally save the persistent group. The related virtual network interface is activated only on demand and then kept active.
Persistent activate_persistent_group: True, activate_autonomous_group: False, dynamic_group: False The persistent group is autonomously activated at program startup. If the persistent group is predefined in wpa_supplicant.conf, it is restarted, otherwise a new persistent group is created. The virtual network interface is kept constantly active. The authorization process of a P2P Device is only performed the first time (if the persistent group is not saved in the peer), through WPS enrolment technique; after the persistent group data is saved to the P2P Device, all reconnections of the same device are fast and automatically done without WPS enrolment (so not mediated by hostp2pd). The creation of the persistent group is done via p2p_group_add persistent. If a persistent group is already (e.g., manually) defined in wpa_supplicant (and this is the suggested method), it is re-invoked via p2p_group_add persistent=n. If a persistent group is not defined in wpa_supplicant and if the network_parms list exists in the hostp2pd configuration, the persistent group is created with the parameters set in the network_parms list, that is used to automatically create and save the network profile (mode=3 and disabled=2 are automatically added and so they are not required in the network_parms list); if also this configuration parameter is not set, the persistent group is created with the default parameters set by wpa_supplicant.

Using an autonomous GO for a non-persistent group, the passphrase and SSID are automatically created by wpa_supplicant (using random strings) and the related settings should not be modified. A persistent group can be either manually or automatically created.

Using the standard group negotiation method with fixed PIN, an Android client (at least, up to Android 11) will not save the PIN (the authorization has to be performed on every connection). Using persistent groups, with newer Android releases a local group information element is permanently stored in the Android handset (until it is deleted by hand) and this enables to directly perform all subsequent reconnections without separate authorization (e.g., without user interaction). Ref. also Compatibility

In all cases that foresee a negotiation (usage of p2p_connect), the UNIX System will always become GO (ref. p2p_go_intent=15 in wpa_supplicant.conf).

If a whitelist (pbc_white_list: ...) is configured with push button mode/PBC (pbc_in_use: True or config_methods=virtual_push_button) and if the client name does not correspond to any whitelisted names, then the configuration method is changed from pbc to keypad.

Internally, connections to Autonomous/Persistent Groups are managed by a subprocess named Enroller, which does wps_pin or wps_pbc over the group interface. The interface and list_networks commands of wpa_cli are used to check groups. p2p_find is periodically executed to ensure that announcements are performed (especially when P2P group beacons are not active). A number of events are managed.

If different P2P-GO persistent groups are defined in the wpa_supplicant configuration file, by default the first one in the configuration file is used (e.g., the first group listed by the wpa_cli list_networks command including [P2P-PERSISTENT]); use persistent_network_id to force a specific network id instead of the first one (provided that it is correctly configured in the wpa_supplicant configuration file, so that it is recognized as persistent group).

Invitation (p2p_invite) is not used by the current version of hostp2pd, which is at the moment designed to enable integration of the Wi-Fi Direct Android connection panel with a P2P-GO group on the UNIX system running wpa_supplicant; in such use case, invitation is not actually needed, because the Android user must manually form the connection and in some cases Android P2P clients announce themselves (P2P-DEVICE-FOUND event) only at connection time.

Compatibility

Only UNIX operating systems running wpa_supplicant and wpa_cli are allowed.

Important Note: with the current hostp2pd version, the only working Operating System is Raspberry Pi 4 Model B with Raspbian Buster O.S. - Other Linux O.S. like Ubuntu are not supported at the moment.

Current Ubuntu 20.04.1 LTS issues with wpa_cli (which make hostp2pd useless with that O.S.):

  • wpa_cli is not automatically terminated when hostp2pd exits.
  • Always occurring error Invalid negotiation request from station with address "fe:c1:3f:1c:b1:b7". while performing a session connection from an Android phone.

Current Ubuntu 20.04.2 LTS issues with wpa_supplicant v2.9:

  • wpa_supplicant dies when hostp2pd updates the configuration without configuration file in the parameter and with NetworkManager integration (through -u) (disable update_config: 1 config_parms to avoid the problem).
  • wpa_supplicant does not support p2p_device_random_mac_addr=1 and p2p_device_random_mac_addr=2
  • wpa_supplicant v2.9 included in Ubuntu 20.04.2 LTS crashes when creating persistent groups. See previous point on disabling update_config: 1, or recompile the program with the latest sources and install the compiled version.

hostp2pd has been tested with:

  • Raspberry Pi 4 Model B hw
  • Raspberry Pi OS Buster O.S.
  • UNIX wpa_cli and wpa_supplicant version v2.8-devel (Debian Buster); it is suggested to use the latest wpa_supplicant development version to take advantage of p2p_device_random_mac_addr which overcomes the MAC randomization issue with persistent groups.
  • Python 3.7.3 on Debian (Raspberry Pi OS Buster). Python 2 and Python versions older than 3.6 are not supported.
  • P2P Clients including Android 11, Android 10, Android 9, Android 8, Android 7 and Android 6 smartphones.

Wi-Fi Direct is present in most smartphones with at least Android 4.0 (API level 14); notice anyway that only recent Android versions support the local saving of persistent groups. With some Android 6 and 7 devices (depending on the ROM), the enrolment is always needed when connecting a persistent group. Some devices have a slower notification of announced groups; generally if the UNIX system device does not appear after a P2P-GO is created, try exiting from the Android Wi-Fi Direct panel and then and re-entering. Some devices also show the AP icon. Sometimes the enrolling might fail, often depending on the Android version (this is possibly due to timeout issues, especially correlated to missing WPS-ENROLLEE-SEEN events sent by the Android device).

Built-in keywords

At the CMD> prompt in interactive mode, hostp2pd accepts the following commands:

  • version = Print hostp2pd version.
  • loglevel = If an argument is given, set the logging level, otherwise show the current one. Valid numbers: CRITICAL=50, ERROR=40, WARNING=30, INFO=20, DEBUG=10.
  • reload = Reload configuration from the latest valid configuration file. Optional argument is a new configuration file; to load defaults use reset as argument.
  • reset = Reset the hostp2pd statistics.
  • stations = Print all discovered stations. Besides, the following variables can be used at prompt level:
    • hostp2pd.addr_register: peer name for each discovered peer
    • hostp2pd.dev_type_register: peer type for each discovered peer
  • stats = Print execution statistics. Besides, the following variable can be used at prompt level:
    • hostp2pd.statistics: list of all commands issued by wpa_supplicant
  • quit (or end-of-file/Control-D, or break/Control-C) = quit the program
  • help = List available commands (a detailed help can be obtained with the command name as argument).
  • pause = pause the execution. (Related attribute is hostp2pd.threadState = THREAD.PAUSED.)
  • prompt = toggle prompt off/on if no argument is used, or change the prompt if using an argument
  • resume = resume the execution after pausing; also prints the used device. (Related attribute is hostp2pd.threadState = THREAD.ACTIVE)
  • wait <n> = delay the execution of the next command of <n> seconds (floating point number; default is 10 seconds)
  • color = toggle off/on the usage of colors in the prompt
  • history [<n>] = print the last 20 items of the command history; if an argument is given, print the last n items in the history; with argument clear, clears the history. The command history is permanently saved to file .hostp2pd_mgr_history within the home directory.

In addition to the previously listed keywords, any Python command is allowed to query/configure the backend thread.

At the command prompt, cursors and keyboard shortcuts are allowed. Autocompletion (via TAB key) is active with UNIX systems for all previously described commands and also allows Python keywords and namespaces (built-ins, self and global). If the autocompletion matches a single item, this is immediately expanded; Conversely, if more possibilities are matched, none of them is returned, but pressing TAB again displays a list of available options.

The reload command refreshes the configuration of hostp2pd as well as the one of wpa_supplicant.

Suggested scenario

The suggested scenario configures a persistent group. Specifically:

  • single persistent group for the whole UNIX system;
  • predefinition of a persistent P2P group in the wpa_supplicant configuration file;
  • appropriate configuration of wpa_supplicant so that the persistent P2P group will not randomize the MAC address of the related virtual wireless interface;
  • usage of appropriate group name and related WPA configuration in the wpa_supplicant configuration file (e.g., WPA2 password), so that this P2P group can also act as AP (instead of using hostapd); defining a secret WPA2 password is a workaround to deny AP connections;
  • for better usage of Wi-Fi Direct naming, differentiate the name of the P2P device and the P2P group in the wpa_supplicant configuration file (e.g., P2P-Device = "DIRECT-Host"; P2P group = "DIRECT-PP-group");
  • hostp2pd configuration to use a persistent P2P group activated at process startup, with "keypad" authorization method;
  • hostp2pd service setup to start at system boot time;
  • read access protection of wpa_supplicant and hostp2pd configuration files to non-root users;
  • hostp2pd logging set to root level WARNING (instead of DEBUG mode, which can be used for initial testing);
  • for improved security, definition of a non-standard number of WPS digits (ref. p2p_passphrase_lenin the wpa_supplicant configuration file).

Limitations

The current hostp2pd implementation has the following limitations:

  • tested with an Android 10 smartphone connecting to a Raspberry Pi 4 with Wi-Fi Direct protocol (and also using AP mode); all use cases are referred to this scenario.
  • At the moment, hostp2pd is tested with only one station; two or more stations should concurrently connect to the same persistent group.
  • At the moment, hostp2pd manages only one active P2P GO group for a specific P2P-Device, even if more instances of hostp2pd are allowed, each one referred to a specific P2P-Device (generally a specific wireless wlan board). This is because wpa_supplicant appears to announce the P2P-Device name to the Android clients (ref. "device_name" in the wpa_supplicant configuration, which is the same for all groups) and not the specific active P2P GO groups; likewise, it is not known how an Android client can inform wpa_supplicant to enrol a specific group of a known P2P-device through the default Wi-Fi Direct user interface. Notice also that some wireless drivers on UNIX systems only allow one P2P-GO group.
  • The enrolment procedure (WPS authorization made by the hostp2pd Enroller subprocess) is activated in sync with the start of the P2P group made by hostp2pd (either p2p_connect or p2p_group_add commands) and remains active until the group is removed (reception of P2P-GROUP-REMOVED event); single connection requests by P2P Clients (controlled by respective P2P-PROV-DISC-... events) will not directly start the WPS authorization process, but will start a group formation (via p2p_connect) if a group is not active. While a P2P group is kept active by hostp2pd, any P2P Client requesting a P2P connection to the P2P-Device wireless interface will be part of the same active hostp2pd enrolment process to the active group.
  • As hostp2pd is fully unattended, the following WPS credential methods are available: pbc and keypad. The display configuration method (much more secure than keypad) is not implemented and needs interaction (to insert the PIN presented by the Android handset). This means that at the moment the enrolment is done with either a static PIN saved in the hostp2pd configuration file or with no PIN at all (PBC mode). To protect PBC (no PIN), a list of enabled enrollees names can be defined. Notice that this is a weak authentication method, because the enrollees names are publicly announced. After all, MAC address filtering is not appropriate because, if a persistent group is not active, MAC addresses are randomized.
  • When dynamic_group option is set to True, only a single station a time is accepted, because when a station disconnects, the group is removed by hostp2pd and any other connected station loses the session.

Logging

Logging is configured in hostp2pd.yaml. This is in Python logging configuration format. By default, logs are saved in /var/log/hostp2pd.log, rolled into three files. Also, logs can be forced to a specific log level through the force_logging configuration attribute.

In interactive mode, logging can be changed using loglevel.

To browse the log files, lnav is suggested.

If the following error message occurs: CRITICAL:root:Wrong "logging" section in YAML configuration file "/etc/hostp2pd.yaml": Unable to configure handler 'file'., it means that the current hostp2pd permissions do not allow updating the log file; try sudo chmod a+rw /var/log/hostp2pd.log*.

Command-line arguments

Output of hostp2pd -h:

usage: hostp2pd [-h] [-V] [-v] [-vv] [-t] [-r] [-c CONFIG_FILE]
                           [-d] [-b FILE] [-i INTERFACE] [-p RUN_PROGRAM]

optional arguments:
  -h, --help            show this help message and exit
  -V, --version         print hostp2pd version and exit
  -v, --verbosity       print execution logging
  -vv, --debug          print debug logging information
  -t, --terminate       terminate a daemon process sending SIGTERM
  -r, --reload          reload configuration of a daemon process sending
                        SIGHUP
  -c CONFIG_FILE, --config CONFIG_FILE
                        Configuration file.
  -d, --daemon          Run hostp2pd in daemon mode.
  -b FILE, --batch FILE
                        Run hostp2pd in batch mode. Argument is the output
                        file. Use an hyphen (-) for standard output.
  -i INTERFACE, --interface INTERFACE
                        Set the interface managed by hostp2pd.
  -p RUN_PROGRAM, --run_program RUN_PROGRAM
                        Name of the program to run with start and stop
                        arguments.

hostp2pd v.0.1.0 - The Wi-Fi Direct Session Manager. wpa_cli controller of Wi-
Fi Direct connections handled by wpa_supplicant.

When running as a daemon, standard and error outputs are closed, but log file is always configurable (see Logging chapter).

Python API

Instantiating the class

All arguments are optional.

from hostp2pd import HostP2pD

hostp2pd = HostP2pD(
    config_file="config_file",  # optional pathname of the hostp2pd.yaml configuration file
    interface="p2p-dev-wlan0",  # optional string defining the wlan interface (check it with iw dev)
    run_program="",             # optional run_program
    force_logging=None,         # optional logging mode
    pbc_white_list=[],          # optional name white list of allowed PBC station names
    pin="00000000")             # optional PIN of keypad enrolment

Check __init__.py for usage examples of the three allowed invocation methods: interactive, batch and daemon modes.

Interactive mode

Interactive mode uses the Context Manager:

import time

with hostp2pd as session:
    # do interactive monitoring while the process run
    time.sleep(40) # example

The following example browses the registered Wi-Fi Direct stations after collecting information for 40 seconds.

from hostp2pd import HostP2pD
import time

with HostP2pD() as hostp2pd:
    time.sleep(40)
    if hostp2pd.addr_register:
        print("Station addresses:")
        for i in hostp2pd.addr_register:
            print("  {} = {:35s} ({})".format(i,
                    hostp2pd.addr_register[i],
                    (hostp2pd.dev_type_register[i]
                        if i in hostp2pd.dev_type_register
                        else "(unknown device type)")
                )
            )

print("Completed.")

Example of output:

Station addresses:
  ae:e2:d3:41:27:14 = DIRECT-14-HP ENVY 5000 series       (Printer)
  ee:11:6c:59:a3:d4 = DIRECT-Example                      (AP Network Infrastructure device)
Completed.

Batch/daemon mode

Batch/daemon mode does not need the Context Manager:

hostp2pd.run()

To terminate the process:

hostp2pd.terminate()

To perform process reconfiguration:

hostp2pd.read_configuration(
    configuration_file=hostp2pd.config_file,
    do_activation=True
    )

Software architecture

When using the Context Manager, a thread is started: the current context, named "Main", is returned to the user. The created thread, named "Core", runs the hostp2pd engine in background.

With batch (selecting the option not to send input commands) and daemon modes, the "Core" does not run in a background thread.

The "Core" engine starts wpa_cli as subprocess connected to the P2P-Device, bidirectionally interfacing it via pty, using no-echo mode. The internal "read" function gets one character a time mediated by a select method which controls read timeout that is used to perform a number of periodic checks.

When a group is activated, a second process is started, named Enroller, to manage WPS Enrolling. This process writes to the Core via the same pty and in turn starts another wpa_cli subprocess, connected to the P2P group, interfaced the same way as what done by the Core.

Example of process list when running as a daemon (p2p-dev-wlan0 is the P2P-Device and p2p-wlan0-0 is the group; the P2P-Device controller is the Core, the group controller is the Enroller):

UID        PID  PPID  C STIME TTY      STAT   TIME CMD
root     20452     1  4 08:36 ?        S      0:01 /usr/bin/python3 -m hostp2pd -c /etc/hostp2pd.yaml -d
root     20453 20452  0 08:36 ?        S      0:00  \_ wpa_cli -i p2p-dev-wlan0
root     20458 20452  0 08:36 ?        S      0:00  \_ /usr/bin/python3 -m hostp2pd -c /etc/hostp2pd.yaml -d
root     20460 20458  0 08:36 ?        S      0:00      \_ wpa_cli -i p2p-wlan0-0

Signals are configured among processes, so that termination is synced. Core sends SIGHUP to Enroller if a configuration needs to be reloaded.

Interfacing wpa_supplicant

Currently, there seem to be two possibilities to interface wpa_supplicant on P2P (Wi-Fi Direct) sessions: using the UNIX sockets (like wpa_cli does) or by directly screenscraping the wpa_cli client via bidirectional pipe.

wpa_supplicant also allows the dbus interface when wpa_supplicant is run with the -u option; anyway, with the current wpa_supplicant version (v2.8-devel), the internal P2P objects do not seem to be registered to the dbus interface, so a Python request like the following one fails with message dbus.exceptions.DBusException: fi.w1.wpa_supplicant1.InterfaceUnknown: wpa_supplicant knows nothing about this interface..:

python3 -c 'import dbus;\
dbus.Interface(dbus.SystemBus().get_object("fi.w1.wpa_supplicant1",\
"/fi/w1/wpa_supplicant1"), "fi.w1.wpa_supplicant1")\
.GetInterface("p2p-dev-wlan0")'

This is because wpa_supplicant does not expose p2p-dev-wlan0 to dbus. It means that the old Python test examples included in wpa_supplicant sources, which exploited dbus, are not usable. Notice also that if p2p-dev-wlan0 in the above Python command is changed to wlan0 (which is unrelated to P2P anyway), the command returns with no errors.

If NetworkManager is used to configure the network interfaces, it connects wpa_supplicant via dbus and the -u option is needed for appropriate interaction between the two programs. Anyway, NetworkManager does not manage P2P functions.

hostp2pd relies on wpa_cli considering that:

  • it is natively integrated with wpa_supplicant via proven and robust communication method,
  • it allows easy P2P commands and in parallel it outputs all needed real time events,
  • the consumed UNIX resources are very limited,
  • the resulting Python program is very simple to maintain.

Wi-Fi Direct configuration on a Raspberry Pi

To configure Wi-Fi Direct on a Raspberry Pi, follow this link.

Notice that with Raspberry Pi, running AP and P2P concurrently is not supported. Specifically, if a command like iw dev wlan0 interface add uap0 type __ap is issued to create a virtual Wi-Fi interface (in order for an access point to be managed for instance by hostapd), wpa_cli -i p2p-dev-wlan0 p2p_connect <address> pbc subsequently fails to create the p2p-wlan0-0 interface and wpa_supplicant returns EBUSY error code -16 (Device or resource busy). Deleting the virtual interface (via iw dev uap0 del) restores the correct behavior.

MAC Randomization

Some Linux and Android device drivers use by default randomized MAC addresses when starting network interfaces.

This might be probably checked with iw list | grep 'randomizing MAC-addr'; many devices, (including Raspberry Pi) return this:

Device supports randomizing MAC-addr in sched scans.

MAC randomization prevents listeners from using MAC addresses to build a history of device activity, thus increasing user privacy.

Anyway, when using persistent groups, MAC addresses shall not vary in order to avoid breaking the group restart: if a device supports MAC Randomization, restarting wpa_supplicant will change the local MAC address of the related virtual interface; a persistent group re-invoked with different MAC address denies the reuse of the saved group in the peer system. This appears to be appropriately managed by Android devices.

A configuration strategy that appears to prevent MAC randomization with persistent groups might be the one mentioned in a patch and it possibly only applicable to some nl80211 device drivers supporting it; so, for some devices, using p2p_device_random_mac_addr=1 and p2p_device_persistent_mac_addr=<mac address> can do the job. Otherwise, the latest wpa_supplicant version might be needed, which includes another patch exploiting the usage of the p2p_device_persistent_mac_addr parameter with option p2p_device_random_mac_addr=2. Notice that also update_config=1 is required.

The following commands allow downloading the latest version of the wpa_supplicant sources, preparing the environment on Ubuntu, compiling the code and installing:

sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install -y git libnl-genl-3-dev libnl-route-3-dev build-essential libdbus-glib-1-dev libgirepository1.0-dev libssl-dev libdbus-1-dev

git clone git://w1.fi/srv/git/hostap.git
cd hostap
cp wpa_supplicant/defconfig wpa_supplicant/.config
cd wpa_supplicant
make -j$(($(nproc)+1))

# Example of installation:
sudo mv /sbin/wpa_supplicant /sbin/wpa_supplicant-org
sudo systemctl stop dhcpcd # in case wpa_supplicant is managed by dhcpcd (Debian, Raspberry)
# sudo systemctl stop NetworkManager # in case wpa_supplicant is managed by the NetworkManager (Ubuntu)
# sudo systemctl stop wpa_supplicant.service # in case wpa_supplicant is managed by a specific service (NetworkManager or custom setup)
sudo killall wpa_supplicant # in other cases
sudo cp wpa_supplicant /sbin
sudo systemctl start dhcpcd # in case wpa_supplicant is managed by dhcpcd
# sudo systemctl start NetworkManager # in case wpa_supplicant is managed by the NetworkManager
# sudo systemctl start wpa_supplicant.service # in case wpa_supplicant is managed by a specific service (NetworkManager or custom setup)
pgrep -l wpa_supplicant

# Alternative standard installation example:
#sudo make install

Add the following in wpa_supplicant.conf:

p2p_device_random_mac_addr=2

A description of the p2p_device_random_mac_addr configuration settings obtained with this patch follows.

p2p_device_random_mac_addr=0

This is the default option and uses the MAC address set by the device driver. If the default is a static MAC address, this address is kept unaltered. If the device driver is configured by default to always use random MAC addresses, this flag breaks reinvoking a persistent group (which needs reusing the same MAC address used during the group creation phase), so flags 1 or 2 should be used instead.

p2p_device_random_mac_addr=1

On creating the interface, if there is no persistent group, this option changes the interface MAC address using random numbers computed by wpa_supplicant. Besides, if a persistent group is created, p2p_device_persistent_mac_addr is set to the MAC address of the P2P Device interface, so that this address will be subsequently reused to change the MAC address of the P2P Device interface. This option relies on SIOCGIFFLAGS/SIOCSIFFLAGS ioctl interface control operations to change the MAC address, which implies that the device driver shall support this mode.

p2p_device_random_mac_addr=2

This flag should be used when the device driver uses internally generated random MAC addresses by default when a P2P Device interface is created. If p2p_device_persistent_mac_addr is set, this MAC address is used on creating the P2P Device interface (in place of the one produced by the device driver). If not set, the default method adopted by the device driver (e.g., random MAC address) is used. Besides, if a persistent group is created, p2p_device_persistent_mac_addr is set to the MAC address of the P2P Device interface, so that this address will be subsequently used in place of the default address set by the device driver. (This option does not need support of SIOCGIFFLAGS/SIOCSIFFLAGS ioctl interface control operations to change the MAC address and uses the NL80211_ATTR_MAC attribute).

Notice that the default wpa_supplicant code manages p2p_device_random_mac_addr=2 the same as p2p_device_random_mac_addr=1. So, if returning back to the original code and if the device driver does not support SIOCGIFFLAGS/SIOCSIFFLAGS ioctl interface control operations to change the MAC address, also remove p2p_device_random_mac_addr or set it to 0.

Compiling wpa_gui

cd hostap/wpa_supplicant
sudo apt-get install -y qt5-default qttools5-dev-tools
make wpa_gui-qt4
cd wpa_gui-qt4
./wpa_gui

Notice that wpa_gui connects the wireless interface, but not P2P devices and P2P Groups.


Notes

wpa_supplicant issues

wpa_cli does not connect to wpa_supplicant

Example of error messagge: Could not connect to wpa_supplicant: (nil) - re-trying.

Check the existence of the UNIX sockets (generally under /var/run/wpa_supplicant, see the ctrl_interface parameter in the wpa_supplicant configuration file, or the wpa_supplicant command line arguments):

ls -l /var/run/wpa_supplicant

If one or more UNIX socket special files exist, generally this error means that wpa_cli has not permissions enough to access the wpa_supplicant UNIX socket. Try running wpa_cli and hostp2pd with root or netdev permissions.

If the connection succeeds with root permission, follow these steps to configure a non-root user to connect:

  • create a group (say "netdev", which should already exist in most distributions; if not existing: sudo groupadd netdev);

  • associate the user to that group (e.g., for the user "my_user": sudo usermod -a -G netdev my_user);

  • check how wpa_supplicant is started (ps -ef | grep wpa_supplicant):

    • if the -O option is used, like -O /run/wpa_supplicant, change it to a string including DIR and GROUP attributes, assigning GROUP to netdev, like in -O "DIR=/run/wpa_supplicant GROUP=netdev";
    • if -O and -i are not used, while -s is used, then you need to set the -O option like before; notice that any setting included in the wpa_supplicant configuration file (e.g., -c option) will not be used in this case; example of correct configuration: /sbin/wpa_supplicant -u -s -O "DIR=/run/wpa_supplicant GROUP=netdev";
    • if -O is not used, while -i and -c are used, then you can set the GROUP attribute in the wpa_supplicant configuration file (e.g., specified with -c option); example: ctrl_interface=DIR=/run/wpa_supplicant GROUP=netdev.

    You can use /var/run in place of /run in the above examples, as generally /var/run is a symbolic link of /run.

If the ctrl_interface directory does not exist (also checked with root user), either wpa_supplicant is not running, or it is running with not appropriate configuration.

If wpa_cli connects the network device (e.g., wlan0, like wpa_cli -i wlan0) but not the P2P-Device (e.g., p2p-dev-wlan0), use iw dev to check the presence of a P2P-Device. If not existing, then wpa_supplicant has configuration issues. Run wpa_supplicant with -dd options and verify the error messages:

kill <wpa supplicant process>
sudo /sbin/wpa_supplicant -c<configuration file> -Dnl80211,wext -i<network device> -dd

Android device never browsing the UNIX system running wpa_supplicant

Check that the Android device supports both 2.4 GHz and 5 GHz bands: wpa_supplicant might have used a 5 GHz channel for the P2P-GO group, which will not be received by an Android device only supporting the 2.4 GHz band.

To force wpa_supplicant to use the 2.4 GHz band for the P2P-GO group, set p2p_group_add_opts: freq=2 in hostp2pd.yaml. Anyway, on some devices (Raspberry Pi) after some time the band might be autonomously moved to the 5 GHz band (by the wireless device driver); in such cases, the only possible method to force the permanent usage of 2.4 GHz band is by setting a country code that denies the allocation of 5 GHz frequencies according to the related regulatory domain; for instance, depending on the device driver setup, adding country=RU to the wpa_supplicant configuration file should only allow Wi-Fi channels 1 to 13.

Failed to create a P2P Device -22 (Invalid argument)

wpa_supplicant error message:

gen 10 20:07:20 ubuntu wpa_supplicant[46251]: Successfully initialized wpa_supplicant
gen 10 20:07:20 ubuntu wpa_supplicant[46251]: nl80211: kernel reports: Attribute failed policy validation
gen 10 20:07:20 ubuntu wpa_supplicant[46251]: Failed to create interface p2p-dev-wlp0s20f3: -22 (Invalid argument)
gen 10 20:07:20 ubuntu wpa_supplicant[46251]: nl80211: Failed to create a P2P Device interface p2p-dev-wlp0s20f3
gen 10 20:07:20 ubuntu wpa_supplicant[46251]: P2P: Failed to enable P2P Device interface

This might occur because the interface name could be too long for some internal procedures; for instance: wlp0s20f3 should not work; change it to wlan0:

ip link set down wlp0s20f3 # this avoid error "RTNETLINK answers: Device or resource busy"
ip link set wlp0s20f3 name wlan0
ip link set up wlan0

wpa_supplicant crash

If no configuration file is set with wpa_supplicant, old versions of this program will crash (segmentation fault) when the save_config command is issued by wpa_cli, or when the internal functions of wpa_supplicant require to save the configuration file (e.g., following a P2P Group creation). This is typical of Ubuntu versions where wpa_supplicant is started by the NetworkManager via dbus (-u option), without any need of configuration file. Example: wpa_supplicant -u -s -O /run/wpa_supplicant. To fix this issue, either upgrade wpa_supplicant (e.g., recompiling it from sources) or ensure that the hostp2pd configuration file (hostp2pd.yaml) does not configure a config_parms with update_config: 1.

Other notes

The specifications of Wi-Fi Direct are developed and published by the Wi-Fi Alliance consortium.

Running wpa_supplicant from the command line

Standard UNIX distributions already include a wpa_supplicant service. Anyway, for information, the following allows running it from the command line:

sudo /sbin/wpa_supplicant -c/etc/wpa_supplicant/wpa_supplicant-wlan0.conf -Dnl80211,wext -iwlan0

There is a relevant blog with in-depth notes on Wi-Fi Direct.


License

=========

Copyright (c) Ircama 2021 - CC BY-NC-SA 4.0

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Wi-Fi Direct Session Manager, implementing a host AP daemon in Wi-Fi Direct mode, including P2P WPS enrolment

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