1##### hostapd configuration file ############################################## 2# Empty lines and lines starting with # are ignored 3 4# AP netdevice name (without 'ap' postfix, i.e., wlan0 uses wlan0ap for 5# management frames with the Host AP driver); wlan0 with many nl80211 drivers 6# Note: This attribute can be overridden by the values supplied with the '-i' 7# command line parameter. 8interface=wlan0 9 10# In case of atheros and nl80211 driver interfaces, an additional 11# configuration parameter, bridge, may be used to notify hostapd if the 12# interface is included in a bridge. This parameter is not used with Host AP 13# driver. If the bridge parameter is not set, the drivers will automatically 14# figure out the bridge interface (assuming sysfs is enabled and mounted to 15# /sys) and this parameter may not be needed. 16# 17# For nl80211, this parameter can be used to request the AP interface to be 18# added to the bridge automatically (brctl may refuse to do this before hostapd 19# has been started to change the interface mode). If needed, the bridge 20# interface is also created. 21#bridge=br0 22 23# Driver interface type (hostap/wired/none/nl80211/bsd); 24# default: hostap). nl80211 is used with all Linux mac80211 drivers. 25# Use driver=none if building hostapd as a standalone RADIUS server that does 26# not control any wireless/wired driver. 27# driver=hostap 28 29# Driver interface parameters (mainly for development testing use) 30# driver_params=<params> 31 32# hostapd event logger configuration 33# 34# Two output method: syslog and stdout (only usable if not forking to 35# background). 36# 37# Module bitfield (ORed bitfield of modules that will be logged; -1 = all 38# modules): 39# bit 0 (1) = IEEE 802.11 40# bit 1 (2) = IEEE 802.1X 41# bit 2 (4) = RADIUS 42# bit 3 (8) = WPA 43# bit 4 (16) = driver interface 44# bit 6 (64) = MLME 45# 46# Levels (minimum value for logged events): 47# 0 = verbose debugging 48# 1 = debugging 49# 2 = informational messages 50# 3 = notification 51# 4 = warning 52# 53logger_syslog=-1 54logger_syslog_level=2 55logger_stdout=-1 56logger_stdout_level=2 57 58# Interface for separate control program. If this is specified, hostapd 59# will create this directory and a UNIX domain socket for listening to requests 60# from external programs (CLI/GUI, etc.) for status information and 61# configuration. The socket file will be named based on the interface name, so 62# multiple hostapd processes/interfaces can be run at the same time if more 63# than one interface is used. 64# /var/run/hostapd is the recommended directory for sockets and by default, 65# hostapd_cli will use it when trying to connect with hostapd. 66ctrl_interface=/var/run/hostapd 67 68# Access control for the control interface can be configured by setting the 69# directory to allow only members of a group to use sockets. This way, it is 70# possible to run hostapd as root (since it needs to change network 71# configuration and open raw sockets) and still allow GUI/CLI components to be 72# run as non-root users. However, since the control interface can be used to 73# change the network configuration, this access needs to be protected in many 74# cases. By default, hostapd is configured to use gid 0 (root). If you 75# want to allow non-root users to use the control interface, add a new group 76# and change this value to match with that group. Add users that should have 77# control interface access to this group. 78# 79# This variable can be a group name or gid. 80#ctrl_interface_group=wheel 81ctrl_interface_group=0 82 83 84##### IEEE 802.11 related configuration ####################################### 85 86# SSID to be used in IEEE 802.11 management frames 87ssid=test 88# Alternative formats for configuring SSID 89# (double quoted string, hexdump, printf-escaped string) 90#ssid2="test" 91#ssid2=74657374 92#ssid2=P"hello\nthere" 93 94# UTF-8 SSID: Whether the SSID is to be interpreted using UTF-8 encoding 95#utf8_ssid=1 96 97# Country code (ISO/IEC 3166-1). Used to set regulatory domain. 98# Set as needed to indicate country in which device is operating. 99# This can limit available channels and transmit power. 100# These two octets are used as the first two octets of the Country String 101# (dot11CountryString) 102#country_code=US 103 104# The third octet of the Country String (dot11CountryString) 105# This parameter is used to set the third octet of the country string. 106# 107# All environments of the current frequency band and country (default) 108#country3=0x20 109# Outdoor environment only 110#country3=0x4f 111# Indoor environment only 112#country3=0x49 113# Noncountry entity (country_code=XX) 114#country3=0x58 115# IEEE 802.11 standard Annex E table indication: 0x01 .. 0x1f 116# Annex E, Table E-4 (Global operating classes) 117#country3=0x04 118 119# Enable IEEE 802.11d. This advertises the country_code and the set of allowed 120# channels and transmit power levels based on the regulatory limits. The 121# country_code setting must be configured with the correct country for 122# IEEE 802.11d functions. 123# (default: 0 = disabled) 124#ieee80211d=1 125 126# Enable IEEE 802.11h. This enables radar detection and DFS support if 127# available. DFS support is required on outdoor 5 GHz channels in most countries 128# of the world. This can be used only with ieee80211d=1. 129# (default: 0 = disabled) 130#ieee80211h=1 131 132# Add Power Constraint element to Beacon and Probe Response frames 133# This config option adds Power Constraint element when applicable and Country 134# element is added. Power Constraint element is required by Transmit Power 135# Control. This can be used only with ieee80211d=1. 136# Valid values are 0..255. 137#local_pwr_constraint=3 138 139# Set Spectrum Management subfield in the Capability Information field. 140# This config option forces the Spectrum Management bit to be set. When this 141# option is not set, the value of the Spectrum Management bit depends on whether 142# DFS or TPC is required by regulatory authorities. This can be used only with 143# ieee80211d=1 and local_pwr_constraint configured. 144#spectrum_mgmt_required=1 145 146# Operation mode (a = IEEE 802.11a (5 GHz), b = IEEE 802.11b (2.4 GHz), 147# g = IEEE 802.11g (2.4 GHz), ad = IEEE 802.11ad (60 GHz); a/g options are used 148# with IEEE 802.11n (HT), too, to specify band). For IEEE 802.11ac (VHT), this 149# needs to be set to hw_mode=a. For IEEE 802.11ax (HE) on 6 GHz this needs 150# to be set to hw_mode=a. When using ACS (see channel parameter), a 151# special value "any" can be used to indicate that any support band can be used. 152# This special case is currently supported only with drivers with which 153# offloaded ACS is used. 154# Default: IEEE 802.11b 155hw_mode=g 156 157# Channel number (IEEE 802.11) 158# (default: 0, i.e., not set) 159# Please note that some drivers do not use this value from hostapd and the 160# channel will need to be configured separately with iwconfig. 161# 162# If CONFIG_ACS build option is enabled, the channel can be selected 163# automatically at run time by setting channel=acs_survey or channel=0, both of 164# which will enable the ACS survey based algorithm. 165channel=1 166 167# Global operating class (IEEE 802.11, Annex E, Table E-4) 168# This option allows hostapd to specify the operating class of the channel 169# configured with the channel parameter. channel and op_class together can 170# uniquely identify channels across different bands, including the 6 GHz band. 171#op_class=131 172 173# ACS tuning - Automatic Channel Selection 174# See: https://wireless.wiki.kernel.org/en/users/documentation/acs 175# 176# You can customize the ACS survey algorithm with following variables: 177# 178# acs_num_scans requirement is 1..100 - number of scans to be performed that 179# are used to trigger survey data gathering of an underlying device driver. 180# Scans are passive and typically take a little over 100ms (depending on the 181# driver) on each available channel for given hw_mode. Increasing this value 182# means sacrificing startup time and gathering more data wrt channel 183# interference that may help choosing a better channel. This can also help fine 184# tune the ACS scan time in case a driver has different scan dwell times. 185# 186# acs_chan_bias is a space-separated list of <channel>:<bias> pairs. It can be 187# used to increase (or decrease) the likelihood of a specific channel to be 188# selected by the ACS algorithm. The total interference factor for each channel 189# gets multiplied by the specified bias value before finding the channel with 190# the lowest value. In other words, values between 0.0 and 1.0 can be used to 191# make a channel more likely to be picked while values larger than 1.0 make the 192# specified channel less likely to be picked. This can be used, e.g., to prefer 193# the commonly used 2.4 GHz band channels 1, 6, and 11 (which is the default 194# behavior on 2.4 GHz band if no acs_chan_bias parameter is specified). 195# 196# Defaults: 197#acs_num_scans=5 198#acs_chan_bias=1:0.8 6:0.8 11:0.8 199 200# Channel list restriction. This option allows hostapd to select one of the 201# provided channels when a channel should be automatically selected. 202# Channel list can be provided as range using hyphen ('-') or individual 203# channels can be specified by space (' ') separated values 204# Default: all channels allowed in selected hw_mode 205#chanlist=100 104 108 112 116 206#chanlist=1 6 11-13 207 208# Frequency list restriction. This option allows hostapd to select one of the 209# provided frequencies when a frequency should be automatically selected. 210# Frequency list can be provided as range using hyphen ('-') or individual 211# frequencies can be specified by comma (',') separated values 212# Default: all frequencies allowed in selected hw_mode 213#freqlist=2437,5955,5975 214#freqlist=2437,5985-6105 215 216# Exclude DFS channels from ACS 217# This option can be used to exclude all DFS channels from the ACS channel list 218# in cases where the driver supports DFS channels. 219#acs_exclude_dfs=1 220 221# Include only preferred scan channels from 6 GHz band for ACS 222# This option can be used to include only preferred scan channels in the 6 GHz 223# band. This can be useful in particular for devices that operate only a 6 GHz 224# BSS without a collocated 2.4/5 GHz BSS. 225# Default behavior is to include all PSC and non-PSC channels. 226#acs_exclude_6ghz_non_psc=1 227 228# Enable background radar feature 229# This feature allows CAC to be run on dedicated radio RF chains while the 230# radio(s) are otherwise running normal AP activities on other channels. 231# This requires that the driver and the radio support it before feature will 232# actually be enabled, i.e., this parameter value is ignored with drivers that 233# do not advertise support for the capability. 234# 0: Leave disabled (default) 235# 1: Enable it. 236#enable_background_radar=1 237 238# Set minimum permitted max TX power (in dBm) for ACS and DFS channel selection. 239# (default 0, i.e., not constraint) 240#min_tx_power=20 241 242# Beacon interval in kus (1.024 ms) (default: 100; range 15..65535) 243beacon_int=100 244 245# DTIM (delivery traffic information message) period (range 1..255): 246# number of beacons between DTIMs (1 = every beacon includes DTIM element) 247# (default: 2) 248dtim_period=2 249 250# Maximum number of stations allowed in station table. New stations will be 251# rejected after the station table is full. IEEE 802.11 has a limit of 2007 252# different association IDs, so this number should not be larger than that. 253# (default: 2007) 254max_num_sta=255 255 256# RTS/CTS threshold; -1 = disabled (default); range -1..65535 257# If this field is not included in hostapd.conf, hostapd will not control 258# RTS threshold and 'iwconfig wlan# rts <val>' can be used to set it. 259rts_threshold=-1 260 261# Fragmentation threshold; -1 = disabled (default); range -1, 256..2346 262# If this field is not included in hostapd.conf, hostapd will not control 263# fragmentation threshold and 'iwconfig wlan# frag <val>' can be used to set 264# it. 265fragm_threshold=-1 266 267# Rate configuration 268# Default is to enable all rates supported by the hardware. This configuration 269# item allows this list be filtered so that only the listed rates will be left 270# in the list. If the list is empty, all rates are used. This list can have 271# entries that are not in the list of rates the hardware supports (such entries 272# are ignored). The entries in this list are in 100 kbps, i.e., 11 Mbps = 110. 273# If this item is present, at least one rate have to be matching with the rates 274# hardware supports. 275# default: use the most common supported rate setting for the selected 276# hw_mode (i.e., this line can be removed from configuration file in most 277# cases) 278#supported_rates=10 20 55 110 60 90 120 180 240 360 480 540 279 280# Basic rate set configuration 281# List of rates (in 100 kbps) that are included in the basic rate set. 282# If this item is not included, usually reasonable default set is used. 283#basic_rates=10 20 284#basic_rates=10 20 55 110 285#basic_rates=60 120 240 286 287# Beacon frame TX rate configuration 288# This sets the TX rate that is used to transmit Beacon frames. If this item is 289# not included, the driver default rate (likely lowest rate) is used. 290# Legacy (CCK/OFDM rates): 291# beacon_rate=<legacy rate in 100 kbps> 292# HT: 293# beacon_rate=ht:<HT MCS> 294# VHT: 295# beacon_rate=vht:<VHT MCS> 296# HE: 297# beacon_rate=he:<HE MCS> 298# 299# For example, beacon_rate=10 for 1 Mbps or beacon_rate=60 for 6 Mbps (OFDM). 300#beacon_rate=10 301 302# Short Preamble 303# This parameter can be used to enable optional use of short preamble for 304# frames sent at 2 Mbps, 5.5 Mbps, and 11 Mbps to improve network performance. 305# This applies only to IEEE 802.11b-compatible networks and this should only be 306# enabled if the local hardware supports use of short preamble. If any of the 307# associated STAs do not support short preamble, use of short preamble will be 308# disabled (and enabled when such STAs disassociate) dynamically. 309# 0 = do not allow use of short preamble (default) 310# 1 = allow use of short preamble 311#preamble=1 312 313# Station MAC address -based authentication 314# Please note that this kind of access control requires a driver that uses 315# hostapd to take care of management frame processing and as such, this can be 316# used with driver=hostap or driver=nl80211, but not with driver=atheros. 317# 0 = accept unless in deny list 318# 1 = deny unless in accept list 319# 2 = use external RADIUS server (accept/deny lists are searched first) 320macaddr_acl=0 321 322# Accept/deny lists are read from separate files (containing list of 323# MAC addresses, one per line). Use absolute path name to make sure that the 324# files can be read on SIGHUP configuration reloads. 325#accept_mac_file=/etc/hostapd.accept 326#deny_mac_file=/etc/hostapd.deny 327 328# IEEE 802.11 specifies two authentication algorithms. hostapd can be 329# configured to allow both of these or only one. Open system authentication 330# should be used with IEEE 802.1X. 331# Bit fields of allowed authentication algorithms: 332# bit 0 = Open System Authentication 333# bit 1 = Shared Key Authentication (requires WEP) 334auth_algs=3 335 336# Send empty SSID in beacons and ignore probe request frames that do not 337# specify full SSID, i.e., require stations to know SSID. 338# default: disabled (0) 339# 1 = send empty (length=0) SSID in beacon and ignore probe request for 340# broadcast SSID 341# 2 = clear SSID (ASCII 0), but keep the original length (this may be required 342# with some clients that do not support empty SSID) and ignore probe 343# requests for broadcast SSID 344ignore_broadcast_ssid=0 345 346# Do not reply to broadcast Probe Request frames from unassociated STA if there 347# is no room for additional stations (max_num_sta). This can be used to 348# discourage a STA from trying to associate with this AP if the association 349# would be rejected due to maximum STA limit. 350# Default: 0 (disabled) 351#no_probe_resp_if_max_sta=0 352 353# Additional vendor specific elements for Beacon and Probe Response frames 354# This parameter can be used to add additional vendor specific element(s) into 355# the end of the Beacon and Probe Response frames. The format for these 356# element(s) is a hexdump of the raw information elements (id+len+payload for 357# one or more elements) 358#vendor_elements=dd0411223301 359 360# Additional vendor specific elements for (Re)Association Response frames 361# This parameter can be used to add additional vendor specific element(s) into 362# the end of the (Re)Association Response frames. The format for these 363# element(s) is a hexdump of the raw information elements (id+len+payload for 364# one or more elements) 365#assocresp_elements=dd0411223301 366 367# TX queue parameters (EDCF / bursting) 368# tx_queue_<queue name>_<param> 369# queues: data0, data1, data2, data3 370# (data0 is the highest priority queue) 371# parameters: 372# aifs: AIFS (default 2) 373# cwmin: cwMin (1, 3, 7, 15, 31, 63, 127, 255, 511, 1023, 2047, 4095, 8191, 374# 16383, 32767) 375# cwmax: cwMax (same values as cwMin, cwMax >= cwMin) 376# burst: maximum length (in milliseconds with precision of up to 0.1 ms) for 377# bursting 378# 379# Default WMM parameters (IEEE 802.11 draft; 11-03-0504-03-000e): 380# These parameters are used by the access point when transmitting frames 381# to the clients. 382# 383# Low priority / AC_BK = background 384#tx_queue_data3_aifs=7 385#tx_queue_data3_cwmin=15 386#tx_queue_data3_cwmax=1023 387#tx_queue_data3_burst=0 388# Note: for IEEE 802.11b mode: cWmin=31 cWmax=1023 burst=0 389# 390# Normal priority / AC_BE = best effort 391#tx_queue_data2_aifs=3 392#tx_queue_data2_cwmin=15 393#tx_queue_data2_cwmax=63 394#tx_queue_data2_burst=0 395# Note: for IEEE 802.11b mode: cWmin=31 cWmax=127 burst=0 396# 397# High priority / AC_VI = video 398#tx_queue_data1_aifs=1 399#tx_queue_data1_cwmin=7 400#tx_queue_data1_cwmax=15 401#tx_queue_data1_burst=3.0 402# Note: for IEEE 802.11b mode: cWmin=15 cWmax=31 burst=6.0 403# 404# Highest priority / AC_VO = voice 405#tx_queue_data0_aifs=1 406#tx_queue_data0_cwmin=3 407#tx_queue_data0_cwmax=7 408#tx_queue_data0_burst=1.5 409# Note: for IEEE 802.11b mode: cWmin=7 cWmax=15 burst=3.3 410 411# 802.1D Tag (= UP) to AC mappings 412# WMM specifies following mapping of data frames to different ACs. This mapping 413# can be configured using Linux QoS/tc and sch_pktpri.o module. 414# 802.1D Tag 802.1D Designation Access Category WMM Designation 415# 1 BK AC_BK Background 416# 2 - AC_BK Background 417# 0 BE AC_BE Best Effort 418# 3 EE AC_BE Best Effort 419# 4 CL AC_VI Video 420# 5 VI AC_VI Video 421# 6 VO AC_VO Voice 422# 7 NC AC_VO Voice 423# Data frames with no priority information: AC_BE 424# Management frames: AC_VO 425# PS-Poll frames: AC_BE 426 427# Default WMM parameters (IEEE 802.11 draft; 11-03-0504-03-000e): 428# for 802.11a or 802.11g networks 429# These parameters are sent to WMM clients when they associate. 430# The parameters will be used by WMM clients for frames transmitted to the 431# access point. 432# 433# note - txop_limit is in units of 32microseconds 434# note - acm is admission control mandatory flag. 0 = admission control not 435# required, 1 = mandatory 436# note - Here cwMin and cmMax are in exponent form. The actual cw value used 437# will be (2^n)-1 where n is the value given here. The allowed range for these 438# wmm_ac_??_{cwmin,cwmax} is 0..15 with cwmax >= cwmin. 439# 440wmm_enabled=1 441# 442# WMM-PS Unscheduled Automatic Power Save Delivery [U-APSD] 443# Enable this flag if U-APSD supported outside hostapd (eg., Firmware/driver) 444#uapsd_advertisement_enabled=1 445# 446# Low priority / AC_BK = background 447wmm_ac_bk_cwmin=4 448wmm_ac_bk_cwmax=10 449wmm_ac_bk_aifs=7 450wmm_ac_bk_txop_limit=0 451wmm_ac_bk_acm=0 452# Note: for IEEE 802.11b mode: cWmin=5 cWmax=10 453# 454# Normal priority / AC_BE = best effort 455wmm_ac_be_aifs=3 456wmm_ac_be_cwmin=4 457wmm_ac_be_cwmax=10 458wmm_ac_be_txop_limit=0 459wmm_ac_be_acm=0 460# Note: for IEEE 802.11b mode: cWmin=5 cWmax=7 461# 462# High priority / AC_VI = video 463wmm_ac_vi_aifs=2 464wmm_ac_vi_cwmin=3 465wmm_ac_vi_cwmax=4 466wmm_ac_vi_txop_limit=94 467wmm_ac_vi_acm=0 468# Note: for IEEE 802.11b mode: cWmin=4 cWmax=5 txop_limit=188 469# 470# Highest priority / AC_VO = voice 471wmm_ac_vo_aifs=2 472wmm_ac_vo_cwmin=2 473wmm_ac_vo_cwmax=3 474wmm_ac_vo_txop_limit=47 475wmm_ac_vo_acm=0 476# Note: for IEEE 802.11b mode: cWmin=3 cWmax=4 burst=102 477 478# Enable Multi-AP functionality 479# 0 = disabled (default) 480# 1 = AP support backhaul BSS 481# 2 = AP support fronthaul BSS 482# 3 = AP supports both backhaul BSS and fronthaul BSS 483#multi_ap=0 484 485# Static WEP key configuration 486# 487# The key number to use when transmitting. 488# It must be between 0 and 3, and the corresponding key must be set. 489# default: not set 490#wep_default_key=0 491# The WEP keys to use. 492# A key may be a quoted string or unquoted hexadecimal digits. 493# The key length should be 5, 13, or 16 characters, or 10, 26, or 32 494# digits, depending on whether 40-bit (64-bit), 104-bit (128-bit), or 495# 128-bit (152-bit) WEP is used. 496# Only the default key must be supplied; the others are optional. 497# default: not set 498#wep_key0=123456789a 499#wep_key1="vwxyz" 500#wep_key2=0102030405060708090a0b0c0d 501#wep_key3=".2.4.6.8.0.23" 502 503# Station inactivity limit 504# 505# If a station does not send anything in ap_max_inactivity seconds, an 506# empty data frame is sent to it in order to verify whether it is 507# still in range. If this frame is not ACKed, the station will be 508# disassociated and then deauthenticated. This feature is used to 509# clear station table of old entries when the STAs move out of the 510# range. 511# 512# The station can associate again with the AP if it is still in range; 513# this inactivity poll is just used as a nicer way of verifying 514# inactivity; i.e., client will not report broken connection because 515# disassociation frame is not sent immediately without first polling 516# the STA with a data frame. 517# default: 300 (i.e., 5 minutes) 518#ap_max_inactivity=300 519# 520# The inactivity polling can be disabled to disconnect stations based on 521# inactivity timeout so that idle stations are more likely to be disconnected 522# even if they are still in range of the AP. This can be done by setting 523# skip_inactivity_poll to 1 (default 0). 524#skip_inactivity_poll=0 525# 526# BSS max idle period management 527# 0 = disabled (do not advertise and manage BSS max idle period) 528# 1 = enabled (advertise and manage BSS max idle period; default) 529# 2 = enabled requiring protected frames (advertise and manage BSS max idle 530# period and require STAs to use protected keep-alive frames) 531#bss_max_idle=1 532# 533# Maximum acceptable BSS maximum idle period 534# If this is set to a nonzero value, the AP allows STAs to request different 535# maximum idle period values. This is in the units to 1000 TUs (1.024 s) 536#max_acceptable_idle_period=600 537# 538# Allow STA to skip group key handshake without getting disconnection when 539# BSS max idle period management is enabled. 540# 0 = disconnect STA if it does not reply to group key handshake (default) 541# 1 = do not disconnect STA if it does not reply to group key handshake and 542# if BSS max idle period management is enabled 543#no_disconnect_on_group_keyerror=0 544 545# Disassociate stations based on excessive transmission failures or other 546# indications of connection loss. This depends on the driver capabilities and 547# may not be available with all drivers. 548#disassoc_low_ack=1 549 550# Maximum allowed Listen Interval (how many Beacon periods STAs are allowed to 551# remain asleep). Default: 65535 (no limit apart from field size) 552#max_listen_interval=100 553 554# WDS (4-address frame) mode with per-station virtual interfaces 555# (only supported with driver=nl80211) 556# This mode allows associated stations to use 4-address frames to allow layer 2 557# bridging to be used. 558#wds_sta=1 559 560# If bridge parameter is set, the WDS STA interface will be added to the same 561# bridge by default. This can be overridden with the wds_bridge parameter to 562# use a separate bridge. 563#wds_bridge=wds-br0 564 565# Start the AP with beaconing disabled by default. 566#start_disabled=0 567 568# Client isolation can be used to prevent low-level bridging of frames between 569# associated stations in the BSS. By default, this bridging is allowed. 570#ap_isolate=1 571 572# BSS Load update period (in BUs) 573# This field is used to enable and configure adding a BSS Load element into 574# Beacon and Probe Response frames. 575#bss_load_update_period=50 576 577# Channel utilization averaging period (in BUs) 578# This field is used to enable and configure channel utilization average 579# calculation with bss_load_update_period. This should be in multiples of 580# bss_load_update_period for more accurate calculation. 581#chan_util_avg_period=600 582 583# Fixed BSS Load value for testing purposes 584# This field can be used to configure hostapd to add a fixed BSS Load element 585# into Beacon and Probe Response frames for testing purposes. The format is 586# <station count>:<channel utilization>:<available admission capacity> 587#bss_load_test=12:80:20000 588 589# Multicast to unicast conversion 590# Request that the AP will do multicast-to-unicast conversion for ARP, IPv4, and 591# IPv6 frames (possibly within 802.1Q). If enabled, such frames are to be sent 592# to each station separately, with the DA replaced by their own MAC address 593# rather than the group address. 594# 595# Note that this may break certain expectations of the receiver, such as the 596# ability to drop unicast IP packets received within multicast L2 frames, or the 597# ability to not send ICMP destination unreachable messages for packets received 598# in L2 multicast (which is required, but the receiver can't tell the difference 599# if this new option is enabled). 600# 601# This also doesn't implement the 802.11 DMS (directed multicast service). 602# 603#multicast_to_unicast=0 604 605# Send broadcast Deauthentication frame on AP start/stop 606# Default: 1 (enabled) 607#broadcast_deauth=1 608 609# Get notifications for received Management frames on control interface 610# Default: 0 (disabled) 611#notify_mgmt_frames=0 612 613##### IEEE 802.11n related configuration ###################################### 614 615# ieee80211n: Whether IEEE 802.11n (HT) is enabled 616# 0 = disabled (default) 617# 1 = enabled 618# Note: You will also need to enable WMM for full HT functionality. 619# Note: hw_mode=g (2.4 GHz) and hw_mode=a (5 GHz) is used to specify the band. 620#ieee80211n=1 621 622# disable_11n: Boolean (0/1) to disable HT for a specific BSS 623#disable_11n=0 624 625# ht_capab: HT capabilities (list of flags) 626# LDPC coding capability: [LDPC] = supported 627# Supported channel width set: [HT40-] = both 20 MHz and 40 MHz with secondary 628# channel below the primary channel; [HT40+] = both 20 MHz and 40 MHz 629# with secondary channel above the primary channel 630# (20 MHz only if neither is set) 631# Note: There are limits on which channels can be used with HT40- and 632# HT40+. Following table shows the channels that may be available for 633# HT40- and HT40+ use per IEEE 802.11n Annex J: 634# freq HT40- HT40+ 635# 2.4 GHz 5-13 1-7 (1-9 in Europe/Japan) 636# 5 GHz 40,48,56,64 36,44,52,60 637# (depending on the location, not all of these channels may be available 638# for use) 639# Please note that 40 MHz channels may switch their primary and secondary 640# channels if needed or creation of 40 MHz channel maybe rejected based 641# on overlapping BSSes. These changes are done automatically when hostapd 642# is setting up the 40 MHz channel. 643# HT-greenfield: [GF] (disabled if not set) 644# Short GI for 20 MHz: [SHORT-GI-20] (disabled if not set) 645# Short GI for 40 MHz: [SHORT-GI-40] (disabled if not set) 646# Tx STBC: [TX-STBC] (disabled if not set) 647# Rx STBC: [RX-STBC1] (one spatial stream), [RX-STBC12] (one or two spatial 648# streams), or [RX-STBC123] (one, two, or three spatial streams); Rx STBC 649# disabled if none of these set 650# HT-delayed Block Ack: [DELAYED-BA] (disabled if not set) 651# Maximum A-MSDU length: [MAX-AMSDU-7935] for 7935 octets (3839 octets if not 652# set) 653# DSSS/CCK Mode in 40 MHz: [DSSS_CCK-40] = allowed (not allowed if not set) 654# 40 MHz intolerant [40-INTOLERANT] (not advertised if not set) 655# L-SIG TXOP protection support: [LSIG-TXOP-PROT] (disabled if not set) 656#ht_capab=[HT40-][SHORT-GI-20][SHORT-GI-40] 657 658# Require stations to support HT PHY (reject association if they do not) 659#require_ht=1 660 661# If set non-zero, require stations to perform scans of overlapping 662# channels to test for stations which would be affected by 40 MHz traffic. 663# This parameter sets the interval in seconds between these scans. Setting this 664# to non-zero allows 2.4 GHz band AP to move dynamically to a 40 MHz channel if 665# no co-existence issues with neighboring devices are found. 666#obss_interval=0 667 668# ht_vht_twt_responder: Whether TWT responder is enabled in HT and VHT modes 669# 0 = disable; Disable TWT responder support in HT and VHT modes (default). 670# 1 = enable; Enable TWT responder support in HT and VHT modes if supported by 671# the driver. 672#ht_vht_twt_responder=0 673 674##### IEEE 802.11ac related configuration ##################################### 675 676# ieee80211ac: Whether IEEE 802.11ac (VHT) is enabled 677# 0 = disabled (default) 678# 1 = enabled 679# Note: You will also need to enable WMM for full VHT functionality. 680# Note: hw_mode=a is used to specify that 5 GHz band is used with VHT. 681#ieee80211ac=1 682 683# disable_11ac: Boolean (0/1) to disable VHT for a specific BSS 684#disable_11ac=0 685 686# vht_capab: VHT capabilities (list of flags) 687# 688# vht_max_mpdu_len: [MAX-MPDU-7991] [MAX-MPDU-11454] 689# Indicates maximum MPDU length 690# 0 = 3895 octets (default) 691# 1 = 7991 octets 692# 2 = 11454 octets 693# 3 = reserved 694# 695# supported_chan_width: [VHT160] [VHT160-80PLUS80] 696# Indicates supported Channel widths 697# 0 = 160 MHz & 80+80 channel widths are not supported (default) 698# 1 = 160 MHz channel width is supported 699# 2 = 160 MHz & 80+80 channel widths are supported 700# 3 = reserved 701# 702# Rx LDPC coding capability: [RXLDPC] 703# Indicates support for receiving LDPC coded pkts 704# 0 = Not supported (default) 705# 1 = Supported 706# 707# Short GI for 80 MHz: [SHORT-GI-80] 708# Indicates short GI support for reception of packets transmitted with TXVECTOR 709# params format equal to VHT and CBW = 80Mhz 710# 0 = Not supported (default) 711# 1 = Supported 712# 713# Short GI for 160 MHz: [SHORT-GI-160] 714# Indicates short GI support for reception of packets transmitted with TXVECTOR 715# params format equal to VHT and CBW = 160Mhz 716# 0 = Not supported (default) 717# 1 = Supported 718# 719# Tx STBC: [TX-STBC-2BY1] 720# Indicates support for the transmission of at least 2x1 STBC 721# 0 = Not supported (default) 722# 1 = Supported 723# 724# Rx STBC: [RX-STBC-1] [RX-STBC-12] [RX-STBC-123] [RX-STBC-1234] 725# Indicates support for the reception of PPDUs using STBC 726# 0 = Not supported (default) 727# 1 = support of one spatial stream 728# 2 = support of one and two spatial streams 729# 3 = support of one, two and three spatial streams 730# 4 = support of one, two, three and four spatial streams 731# 5,6,7 = reserved 732# 733# SU Beamformer Capable: [SU-BEAMFORMER] 734# Indicates support for operation as a single user beamformer 735# 0 = Not supported (default) 736# 1 = Supported 737# 738# SU Beamformee Capable: [SU-BEAMFORMEE] 739# Indicates support for operation as a single user beamformee 740# 0 = Not supported (default) 741# 1 = Supported 742# 743# Compressed Steering Number of Beamformer Antennas Supported: 744# [BF-ANTENNA-2] [BF-ANTENNA-3] [BF-ANTENNA-4] 745# Beamformee's capability indicating the maximum number of beamformer 746# antennas the beamformee can support when sending compressed beamforming 747# feedback 748# If SU beamformer capable, set to maximum value minus 1 749# else reserved (default) 750# 751# Number of Sounding Dimensions: 752# [SOUNDING-DIMENSION-2] [SOUNDING-DIMENSION-3] [SOUNDING-DIMENSION-4] 753# Beamformer's capability indicating the maximum value of the NUM_STS parameter 754# in the TXVECTOR of a VHT NDP 755# If SU beamformer capable, set to maximum value minus 1 756# else reserved (default) 757# 758# MU Beamformer Capable: [MU-BEAMFORMER] 759# Indicates support for operation as an MU beamformer 760# 0 = Not supported or sent by Non-AP STA (default) 761# 1 = Supported 762# 763# VHT TXOP PS: [VHT-TXOP-PS] 764# Indicates whether or not the AP supports VHT TXOP Power Save Mode 765# or whether or not the STA is in VHT TXOP Power Save mode 766# 0 = VHT AP doesn't support VHT TXOP PS mode (OR) VHT STA not in VHT TXOP PS 767# mode 768# 1 = VHT AP supports VHT TXOP PS mode (OR) VHT STA is in VHT TXOP power save 769# mode 770# 771# +HTC-VHT Capable: [HTC-VHT] 772# Indicates whether or not the STA supports receiving a VHT variant HT Control 773# field. 774# 0 = Not supported (default) 775# 1 = supported 776# 777# Maximum A-MPDU Length Exponent: [MAX-A-MPDU-LEN-EXP0]..[MAX-A-MPDU-LEN-EXP7] 778# Indicates the maximum length of A-MPDU pre-EOF padding that the STA can recv 779# This field is an integer in the range of 0 to 7. 780# The length defined by this field is equal to 781# 2 pow(13 + Maximum A-MPDU Length Exponent) -1 octets 782# 783# VHT Link Adaptation Capable: [VHT-LINK-ADAPT2] [VHT-LINK-ADAPT3] 784# Indicates whether or not the STA supports link adaptation using VHT variant 785# HT Control field 786# If +HTC-VHTcapable is 1 787# 0 = (no feedback) if the STA does not provide VHT MFB (default) 788# 1 = reserved 789# 2 = (Unsolicited) if the STA provides only unsolicited VHT MFB 790# 3 = (Both) if the STA can provide VHT MFB in response to VHT MRQ and if the 791# STA provides unsolicited VHT MFB 792# Reserved if +HTC-VHTcapable is 0 793# 794# Rx Antenna Pattern Consistency: [RX-ANTENNA-PATTERN] 795# Indicates the possibility of Rx antenna pattern change 796# 0 = Rx antenna pattern might change during the lifetime of an association 797# 1 = Rx antenna pattern does not change during the lifetime of an association 798# 799# Tx Antenna Pattern Consistency: [TX-ANTENNA-PATTERN] 800# Indicates the possibility of Tx antenna pattern change 801# 0 = Tx antenna pattern might change during the lifetime of an association 802# 1 = Tx antenna pattern does not change during the lifetime of an association 803#vht_capab=[SHORT-GI-80][HTC-VHT] 804# 805# Require stations to support VHT PHY (reject association if they do not) 806#require_vht=1 807 808# 0 = 20 or 40 MHz operating Channel width 809# 1 = 80 MHz channel width 810# 2 = 160 MHz channel width 811# 3 = 80+80 MHz channel width 812#vht_oper_chwidth=1 813# 814# center freq = 5 GHz + (5 * index) 815# So index 42 gives center freq 5.210 GHz 816# which is channel 42 in 5G band 817# 818#vht_oper_centr_freq_seg0_idx=42 819# 820# center freq = 5 GHz + (5 * index) 821# So index 159 gives center freq 5.795 GHz 822# which is channel 159 in 5G band 823# 824#vht_oper_centr_freq_seg1_idx=159 825 826# Workaround to use station's nsts capability in (Re)Association Response frame 827# This may be needed with some deployed devices as an interoperability 828# workaround for beamforming if the AP's capability is greater than the 829# station's capability. This is disabled by default and can be enabled by 830# setting use_sta_nsts=1. 831#use_sta_nsts=0 832 833##### IEEE 802.11ax related configuration ##################################### 834 835#ieee80211ax: Whether IEEE 802.11ax (HE) is enabled 836# 0 = disabled (default) 837# 1 = enabled 838#ieee80211ax=1 839 840# Require stations to support HE PHY (reject association if they do not) 841#require_he=1 842 843# disable_11ax: Boolean (0/1) to disable HE for a specific BSS 844#disable_11ax=0 845 846#he_su_beamformer: HE single user beamformer support 847# 0 = not supported (default) 848# 1 = supported 849#he_su_beamformer=1 850 851#he_su_beamformee: HE single user beamformee support 852# 0 = not supported (default) 853# 1 = supported 854#he_su_beamformee=1 855 856#he_mu_beamformer: HE multiple user beamformer support 857# 0 = not supported (default) 858# 1 = supported 859#he_mu_beamformer=1 860 861# he_bss_color: BSS color (1-63) 862#he_bss_color=1 863 864# he_bss_color_partial: BSS color AID equation 865#he_bss_color_partial=0 866 867#he_default_pe_duration: The duration of PE field in an HE PPDU in us 868# Possible values are 0 us (default), 4 us, 8 us, 12 us, and 16 us 869#he_default_pe_duration=0 870 871#he_twt_required: Whether TWT is required 872# 0 = not required (default) 873# 1 = required 874#he_twt_required=0 875 876#he_twt_responder: Whether TWT (HE) responder is enabled 877# 0 = disabled 878# 1 = enabled if supported by the driver (default) 879#he_twt_responder=1 880 881#he_rts_threshold: Duration of STA transmission 882# 0 = not set (default) 883# unsigned integer = duration in units of 16 us 884#he_rts_threshold=0 885 886#he_er_su_disable: Disable 242-tone HE ER SU PPDU reception by the AP 887# 0 = enable reception (default) 888# 1 = disable reception 889#he_er_su_disable=0 890 891# HE operating channel information; see matching vht_* parameters for details. 892# he_oper_centr_freq_seg0_idx field is used to indicate center frequency of 80 893# and 160 MHz bandwidth operation. In 80+80 MHz operation, it is the center 894# frequency of the lower frequency segment. he_oper_centr_freq_seg1_idx field 895# is used only with 80+80 MHz bandwidth operation and it is used to transmit 896# the center frequency of the second segment. 897# On the 6 GHz band the center freq calculation starts from 5.950 GHz offset. 898# For example idx=3 would result in 5965 MHz center frequency. In addition, 899# he_oper_chwidth is ignored, and the channel width is derived from the 900# configured operating class or center frequency indexes (see 901# IEEE P802.11ax/D6.1 Annex E, Table E-4). 902#he_oper_chwidth (see vht_oper_chwidth) 903#he_oper_centr_freq_seg0_idx 904#he_oper_centr_freq_seg1_idx 905 906#he_basic_mcs_nss_set: Basic NSS/MCS set 907# 16-bit combination of 2-bit values of Max HE-MCS For 1..8 SS; each 2-bit 908# value having following meaning: 909# 0 = HE-MCS 0-7, 1 = HE-MCS 0-9, 2 = HE-MCS 0-11, 3 = not supported 910#he_basic_mcs_nss_set 911 912#he_mu_edca_qos_info_param_count 913#he_mu_edca_qos_info_q_ack 914#he_mu_edca_qos_info_queue_request=1 915#he_mu_edca_qos_info_txop_request 916#he_mu_edca_ac_be_aifsn=0 917#he_mu_edca_ac_be_ecwmin=15 918#he_mu_edca_ac_be_ecwmax=15 919#he_mu_edca_ac_be_timer=255 920#he_mu_edca_ac_bk_aifsn=0 921#he_mu_edca_ac_bk_aci=1 922#he_mu_edca_ac_bk_ecwmin=15 923#he_mu_edca_ac_bk_ecwmax=15 924#he_mu_edca_ac_bk_timer=255 925#he_mu_edca_ac_vi_ecwmin=15 926#he_mu_edca_ac_vi_ecwmax=15 927#he_mu_edca_ac_vi_aifsn=0 928#he_mu_edca_ac_vi_aci=2 929#he_mu_edca_ac_vi_timer=255 930#he_mu_edca_ac_vo_aifsn=0 931#he_mu_edca_ac_vo_aci=3 932#he_mu_edca_ac_vo_ecwmin=15 933#he_mu_edca_ac_vo_ecwmax=15 934#he_mu_edca_ac_vo_timer=255 935 936# Spatial Reuse Parameter Set 937# 938# SR Control field value 939# B0 = PSR Disallowed 940# B1 = Non-SRG OBSS PD SR Disallowed 941# B2 = Non-SRG Offset Present 942# B3 = SRG Information Present 943# B4 = HESIGA_Spatial_reuse_value15_allowed 944#he_spr_sr_control 945# 946# Non-SRG OBSS PD Max Offset (included if he_spr_sr_control B2=1) 947#he_spr_non_srg_obss_pd_max_offset 948 949# SRG OBSS PD Min Offset (included if he_spr_sr_control B3=1) 950#he_spr_srg_obss_pd_min_offset 951# 952# SRG OBSS PD Max Offset (included if he_spr_sr_control B3=1) 953#he_spr_srg_obss_pd_max_offset 954# 955# SPR SRG BSS Color (included if he_spr_sr_control B3=1) 956# This config represents SRG BSS Color Bitmap field of Spatial Reuse Parameter 957# Set element that indicates the BSS color values used by members of the 958# SRG of which the transmitting STA is a member. The value is in range of 0-63. 959#he_spr_srg_bss_colors=1 2 10 63 960# 961# SPR SRG Partial BSSID (included if he_spr_sr_control B3=1) 962# This config represents SRG Partial BSSID Bitmap field of Spatial Reuse 963# Parameter Set element that indicates the Partial BSSID values used by members 964# of the SRG of which the transmitting STA is a member. The value range 965# corresponds to one of the 64 possible values of BSSID[39:44], where the lowest 966# numbered bit corresponds to Partial BSSID value 0 and the highest numbered bit 967# corresponds to Partial BSSID value 63. 968#he_spr_srg_partial_bssid=0 1 3 63 969# 970#he_6ghz_max_mpdu: Maximum MPDU Length of HE 6 GHz band capabilities. 971# Indicates maximum MPDU length 972# 0 = 3895 octets 973# 1 = 7991 octets 974# 2 = 11454 octets (default) 975#he_6ghz_max_mpdu=2 976# 977#he_6ghz_max_ampdu_len_exp: Maximum A-MPDU Length Exponent of HE 6 GHz band 978# capabilities. Indicates the maximum length of A-MPDU pre-EOF padding that 979# the STA can receive. This field is an integer in the range of 0 to 7. 980# The length defined by this field is equal to 981# 2 pow(13 + Maximum A-MPDU Length Exponent) -1 octets 982# 0 = AMPDU length of 8k 983# 1 = AMPDU length of 16k 984# 2 = AMPDU length of 32k 985# 3 = AMPDU length of 65k 986# 4 = AMPDU length of 131k 987# 5 = AMPDU length of 262k 988# 6 = AMPDU length of 524k 989# 7 = AMPDU length of 1048k (default) 990#he_6ghz_max_ampdu_len_exp=7 991# 992#he_6ghz_rx_ant_pat: Rx Antenna Pattern Consistency of HE 6 GHz capability. 993# Indicates the possibility of Rx antenna pattern change 994# 0 = Rx antenna pattern might change during the lifetime of an association 995# 1 = Rx antenna pattern does not change during the lifetime of an association 996# (default) 997#he_6ghz_rx_ant_pat=1 998# 999#he_6ghz_tx_ant_pat: Tx Antenna Pattern Consistency of HE 6 GHz capability. 1000# Indicates the possibility of Tx antenna pattern change 1001# 0 = Tx antenna pattern might change during the lifetime of an association 1002# 1 = Tx antenna pattern does not change during the lifetime of an association 1003# (default) 1004#he_6ghz_tx_ant_pat=1 1005 1006# 6 GHz Access Point type 1007# This config is to set the 6 GHz Access Point type. Possible options are: 1008# 0 = Indoor AP 1009# 1 = Standard power AP 1010# 2 = Very low power AP (default) 1011# 3 = Indoor enabled AP 1012# 4 = Indoor standard power AP 1013# This has no impact for operation on other bands. 1014# See IEEE P802.11-REVme/D4.0, Table E-12 (Regulatory Info subfield encoding) 1015# for more details. 1016#he_6ghz_reg_pwr_type=0 1017# 1018# 6 GHz Maximum Tx Power used in Transmit Power Envelope elements, where the 1019# "Transmit Power Interpretation" is set to "Regulatory client EIRP PSD". 1020# For Maximum Transmit Power Category subfield encoding set to default (0): 1021#reg_def_cli_eirp_psd=-1 1022# For Maximum Transmit Power Category subfield encoding set to subordinate (1): 1023#reg_sub_cli_eirp_psd=-1 1024 1025# Unsolicited broadcast Probe Response transmission settings 1026# This is for the 6 GHz band only. If the interval is set to a non-zero value, 1027# the AP schedules unsolicited broadcast Probe Response frames to be 1028# transmitted for in-band discovery. Refer to 1029# IEEE P802.11ax/D8.0 26.17.2.3.2, AP behavior for fast passive scanning. 1030# Valid range: 0..20 TUs; default is 0 (disabled) 1031#unsol_bcast_probe_resp_interval=0 1032 1033##### IEEE 802.11be related configuration ##################################### 1034 1035#ieee80211be: Whether IEEE 802.11be (EHT) is enabled 1036# 0 = disabled (default) 1037# 1 = enabled 1038#ieee80211be=1 1039 1040#disable_11be: Boolean (0/1) to disable EHT for a specific BSS 1041#disable_11be=0 1042 1043#eht_su_beamformer: EHT single user beamformer support 1044# 0 = not supported (default) 1045# 1 = supported 1046#eht_su_beamformer=1 1047 1048#eht_su_beamformee: EHT single user beamformee support 1049# 0 = not supported (default) 1050# 1 = supported 1051#eht_su_beamformee=1 1052 1053#eht_mu_beamformer: EHT multiple user beamformer support 1054# 0 = not supported (default) 1055# 1 = supported 1056#eht_mu_beamformer=1 1057 1058# EHT operating channel information; see matching he_* parameters for details. 1059# The field eht_oper_centr_freq_seg0_idx field is used to indicate center 1060# frequency of 40, 80, and 160 MHz bandwidth operation. 1061# In the 6 GHz band, eht_oper_chwidth is ignored and the channel width is 1062# derived from the configured operating class (IEEE P802.11be/D1.5, 1063# Annex E.1 - Country information and operating classes). 1064#eht_oper_chwidth (see vht_oper_chwidth) 1065#eht_oper_centr_freq_seg0_idx 1066 1067#eht_default_pe_duration: The duration of PE field in EHT TB PPDU 1068# 0 = PE field duration is the same as he_default_pe_duration (default) 1069# 1 = PE field duration is 20 us 1070#eht_default_pe_duration=0 1071 1072#eht_bw320_offset: For automatic channel selection (ACS) to indicate a preferred 1073# 320 MHz channelization in EHT mode. 1074# If the channel is decided or the bandwidth is not 320 MHz, this option is 1075# meaningless. 1076# 0 = auto-detect by hostapd 1077# 1 = 320 MHz-1 (channel center frequency 31, 95, 159) 1078# 2 = 320 MHz-2 (channel center frequency 63, 127, 191) 1079#eht_bw320_offset=0 1080 1081# Disabled subchannel bitmap (16 bits) as per IEEE P802.11be/3.0, 1082# Figure 9-1002c (EHT Operation Information field format). Each bit corresponds 1083# to a 20 MHz channel, the lowest bit corresponds to the lowest frequency. A 1084# bit set to 1 indicates that the channel is punctured (disabled). The default 1085# value is 0 indicating that all channels are active. 1086#punct_bitmap=0 1087 1088# Preamble puncturing threshold in automatic channel selection (ACS). 1089# The value indicates the percentage of ideal channel average interference 1090# factor above which a channel should be punctured. 1091# Default is 0, indicates that ACS algorithm should not puncture any channel. 1092#punct_acs_threshold=75 1093 1094# AP MLD - Whether this AP is a part of an AP MLD 1095# 0 = no (no MLO) 1096# 1 = yes (MLO) 1097#mld_ap=0 1098 1099# AP MLD MAC address 1100# The configured address will be set as the interface hardware address and used 1101# as the AP MLD MAC address. If not set, the current interface hardware address 1102# will be used as the AP MLD MAC address. 1103#mld_addr=02:03:04:05:06:07 1104 1105##### IEEE 802.1X-2004 related configuration ################################## 1106 1107# Require IEEE 802.1X authorization 1108#ieee8021x=1 1109 1110# IEEE 802.1X/EAPOL version 1111# hostapd is implemented based on IEEE Std 802.1X-2004 which defines EAPOL 1112# version 2. However, there are many client implementations that do not handle 1113# the new version number correctly (they seem to drop the frames completely). 1114# In order to make hostapd interoperate with these clients, the version number 1115# can be set to the older version (1) with this configuration value. 1116# Note: When using MACsec, eapol_version shall be set to 3, which is 1117# defined in IEEE Std 802.1X-2010. 1118#eapol_version=2 1119 1120# Optional displayable message sent with EAP Request-Identity. The first \0 1121# in this string will be converted to ASCII-0 (nul). This can be used to 1122# separate network info (comma separated list of attribute=value pairs); see, 1123# e.g., RFC 4284. 1124#eap_message=hello 1125#eap_message=hello\0networkid=netw,nasid=foo,portid=0,NAIRealms=example.com 1126 1127# WEP rekeying (disabled if key lengths are not set or are set to 0) 1128# Key lengths for default/broadcast and individual/unicast keys: 1129# 5 = 40-bit WEP (also known as 64-bit WEP with 40 secret bits) 1130# 13 = 104-bit WEP (also known as 128-bit WEP with 104 secret bits) 1131#wep_key_len_broadcast=5 1132#wep_key_len_unicast=5 1133# Rekeying period in seconds. 0 = do not rekey (i.e., set keys only once) 1134#wep_rekey_period=300 1135 1136# EAPOL-Key index workaround (set bit7) for WinXP Supplicant (needed only if 1137# only broadcast keys are used) 1138eapol_key_index_workaround=0 1139 1140# EAP reauthentication period in seconds (default: 3600 seconds; 0 = disable 1141# reauthentication). 1142# Note: Reauthentications may enforce a disconnection, check the related 1143# parameter wpa_deny_ptk0_rekey for details. 1144#eap_reauth_period=3600 1145 1146# Use PAE group address (01:80:c2:00:00:03) instead of individual target 1147# address when sending EAPOL frames with driver=wired. This is the most common 1148# mechanism used in wired authentication, but it also requires that the port 1149# is only used by one station. 1150#use_pae_group_addr=1 1151 1152# EAP Re-authentication Protocol (ERP) authenticator (RFC 6696) 1153# 1154# Whether to initiate EAP authentication with EAP-Initiate/Re-auth-Start before 1155# EAP-Identity/Request 1156#erp_send_reauth_start=1 1157# 1158# Domain name for EAP-Initiate/Re-auth-Start. Omitted from the message if not 1159# set (no local ER server). This is also used by the integrated EAP server if 1160# ERP is enabled (eap_server_erp=1). 1161#erp_domain=example.com 1162 1163##### MACsec ################################################################## 1164 1165# macsec_policy: IEEE 802.1X/MACsec options 1166# This determines how sessions are secured with MACsec (only for MACsec 1167# drivers). 1168# 0: MACsec not in use (default) 1169# 1: MACsec enabled - Should secure, accept key server's advice to 1170# determine whether to use a secure session or not. 1171# 1172# macsec_integ_only: IEEE 802.1X/MACsec transmit mode 1173# This setting applies only when MACsec is in use, i.e., 1174# - macsec_policy is enabled 1175# - the key server has decided to enable MACsec 1176# 0: Encrypt traffic (default) 1177# 1: Integrity only 1178# 1179# macsec_replay_protect: IEEE 802.1X/MACsec replay protection 1180# This setting applies only when MACsec is in use, i.e., 1181# - macsec_policy is enabled 1182# - the key server has decided to enable MACsec 1183# 0: Replay protection disabled (default) 1184# 1: Replay protection enabled 1185# 1186# macsec_replay_window: IEEE 802.1X/MACsec replay protection window 1187# This determines a window in which replay is tolerated, to allow receipt 1188# of frames that have been misordered by the network. 1189# This setting applies only when MACsec replay protection active, i.e., 1190# - macsec_replay_protect is enabled 1191# - the key server has decided to enable MACsec 1192# 0: No replay window, strict check (default) 1193# 1..2^32-1: number of packets that could be misordered 1194# 1195# macsec_offload: IEEE 802.1X/MACsec hardware offload 1196# This setting applies only when MACsec is in use, i.e., 1197# - macsec_policy is enabled 1198# - the key server has decided to enable MACsec 1199# 0 = MACSEC_OFFLOAD_OFF (default) 1200# 1 = MACSEC_OFFLOAD_PHY 1201# 2 = MACSEC_OFFLOAD_MAC 1202# 1203# macsec_port: IEEE 802.1X/MACsec port 1204# Port component of the SCI 1205# Range: 1-65534 (default: 1) 1206# 1207# mka_priority (Priority of MKA Actor) 1208# Range: 0..255 (default: 255) 1209# 1210# macsec_csindex: IEEE 802.1X/MACsec cipher suite 1211# 0 = GCM-AES-128 (default) 1212# 1 = GCM-AES-256 (default) 1213# 1214# mka_cak, mka_ckn, and mka_priority: IEEE 802.1X/MACsec pre-shared key mode 1215# This allows to configure MACsec with a pre-shared key using a (CAK,CKN) pair. 1216# In this mode, instances of hostapd can act as MACsec peers. The peer 1217# with lower priority will become the key server and start distributing SAKs. 1218# mka_cak (CAK = Secure Connectivity Association Key) takes a 16-byte (128-bit) 1219# hex-string (32 hex-digits) or a 32-byte (256-bit) hex-string (64 hex-digits) 1220# mka_ckn (CKN = CAK Name) takes a 1..32-bytes (8..256 bit) hex-string 1221# (2..64 hex-digits) 1222 1223##### Integrated EAP server ################################################### 1224 1225# Optionally, hostapd can be configured to use an integrated EAP server 1226# to process EAP authentication locally without need for an external RADIUS 1227# server. This functionality can be used both as a local authentication server 1228# for IEEE 802.1X/EAPOL and as a RADIUS server for other devices. 1229 1230# Use integrated EAP server instead of external RADIUS authentication 1231# server. This is also needed if hostapd is configured to act as a RADIUS 1232# authentication server. 1233eap_server=0 1234 1235# Path for EAP server user database 1236# If SQLite support is included, this can be set to "sqlite:/path/to/sqlite.db" 1237# to use SQLite database instead of a text file. 1238#eap_user_file=/etc/hostapd.eap_user 1239 1240# CA certificate (PEM or DER file) for EAP-TLS/PEAP/TTLS 1241#ca_cert=/etc/hostapd.ca.pem 1242 1243# Server certificate (PEM or DER file) for EAP-TLS/PEAP/TTLS 1244#server_cert=/etc/hostapd.server.pem 1245 1246# Private key matching with the server certificate for EAP-TLS/PEAP/TTLS 1247# This may point to the same file as server_cert if both certificate and key 1248# are included in a single file. PKCS#12 (PFX) file (.p12/.pfx) can also be 1249# used by commenting out server_cert and specifying the PFX file as the 1250# private_key. 1251#private_key=/etc/hostapd.server.prv 1252 1253# Passphrase for private key 1254#private_key_passwd=secret passphrase 1255 1256# An alternative server certificate and private key can be configured with the 1257# following parameters (with values just like the parameters above without the 1258# '2' suffix). The ca_cert file (in PEM encoding) is used to add the trust roots 1259# for both server certificates and/or client certificates). 1260# 1261# The main use case for this alternative server certificate configuration is to 1262# enable both RSA and ECC public keys. The server will pick which one to use 1263# based on the client preferences for the cipher suite (in the TLS ClientHello 1264# message). It should be noted that number of deployed EAP peer implementations 1265# do not filter out the cipher suite list based on their local configuration and 1266# as such, configuration of alternative types of certificates on the server may 1267# result in interoperability issues. 1268#server_cert2=/etc/hostapd.server-ecc.pem 1269#private_key2=/etc/hostapd.server-ecc.prv 1270#private_key_passwd2=secret passphrase 1271 1272 1273# Server identity 1274# EAP methods that provide mechanism for authenticated server identity delivery 1275# use this value. If not set, "hostapd" is used as a default. 1276#server_id=server.example.com 1277 1278# Enable CRL verification. 1279# Note: hostapd does not yet support CRL downloading based on CDP. Thus, a 1280# valid CRL signed by the CA is required to be included in the ca_cert file. 1281# This can be done by using PEM format for CA certificate and CRL and 1282# concatenating these into one file. Whenever CRL changes, hostapd needs to be 1283# restarted to take the new CRL into use. Alternatively, crl_reload_interval can 1284# be used to configure periodic updating of the loaded CRL information. 1285# 0 = do not verify CRLs (default) 1286# 1 = check the CRL of the user certificate 1287# 2 = check all CRLs in the certificate path 1288#check_crl=1 1289 1290# Specify whether to ignore certificate CRL validity time mismatches with 1291# errors X509_V_ERR_CRL_HAS_EXPIRED and X509_V_ERR_CRL_NOT_YET_VALID. 1292# 1293# 0 = ignore errors 1294# 1 = do not ignore errors (default) 1295#check_crl_strict=1 1296 1297# CRL reload interval in seconds 1298# This can be used to reload ca_cert file and the included CRL on every new TLS 1299# session if difference between last reload and the current reload time in 1300# seconds is greater than crl_reload_interval. 1301# Note: If interval time is very short, CPU overhead may be negatively affected 1302# and it is advised to not go below 300 seconds. 1303# This is applicable only with check_crl values 1 and 2. 1304# 0 = do not reload CRLs (default) 1305# crl_reload_interval = 300 1306 1307# If check_cert_subject is set, the value of every field will be checked 1308# against the DN of the subject in the client certificate. If the values do 1309# not match, the certificate verification will fail, rejecting the user. 1310# This option allows hostapd to match every individual field in the right order 1311# against the DN of the subject in the client certificate. 1312# 1313# For example, check_cert_subject=C=US/O=XX/OU=ABC/OU=XYZ/CN=1234 will check 1314# every individual DN field of the subject in the client certificate. If OU=XYZ 1315# comes first in terms of the order in the client certificate (DN field of 1316# client certificate C=US/O=XX/OU=XYZ/OU=ABC/CN=1234), hostapd will reject the 1317# client because the order of 'OU' is not matching the specified string in 1318# check_cert_subject. 1319# 1320# This option also allows '*' as a wildcard. This option has some limitation. 1321# It can only be used as per the following example. 1322# 1323# For example, check_cert_subject=C=US/O=XX/OU=Production* and we have two 1324# clients and DN of the subject in the first client certificate is 1325# (C=US/O=XX/OU=Production Unit) and DN of the subject in the second client is 1326# (C=US/O=XX/OU=Production Factory). In this case, hostapd will allow both 1327# clients because the value of 'OU' field in both client certificates matches 1328# 'OU' value in 'check_cert_subject' up to 'wildcard'. 1329# 1330# * (Allow all clients, e.g., check_cert_subject=*) 1331#check_cert_subject=string 1332 1333# TLS Session Lifetime in seconds 1334# This can be used to allow TLS sessions to be cached and resumed with an 1335# abbreviated handshake when using EAP-TLS/TTLS/PEAP. 1336# (default: 0 = session caching and resumption disabled) 1337#tls_session_lifetime=3600 1338 1339# TLS flags 1340# [ALLOW-SIGN-RSA-MD5] = allow MD5-based certificate signatures (depending on 1341# the TLS library, these may be disabled by default to enforce stronger 1342# security) 1343# [DISABLE-TIME-CHECKS] = ignore certificate validity time (this requests 1344# the TLS library to accept certificates even if they are not currently 1345# valid, i.e., have expired or have not yet become valid; this should be 1346# used only for testing purposes) 1347# [DISABLE-TLSv1.0] = disable use of TLSv1.0 1348# [ENABLE-TLSv1.0] = explicitly enable use of TLSv1.0 (this allows 1349# systemwide TLS policies to be overridden) 1350# [DISABLE-TLSv1.1] = disable use of TLSv1.1 1351# [ENABLE-TLSv1.1] = explicitly enable use of TLSv1.1 (this allows 1352# systemwide TLS policies to be overridden) 1353# [DISABLE-TLSv1.2] = disable use of TLSv1.2 1354# [ENABLE-TLSv1.2] = explicitly enable use of TLSv1.2 (this allows 1355# systemwide TLS policies to be overridden) 1356# [DISABLE-TLSv1.3] = disable use of TLSv1.3 1357# [ENABLE-TLSv1.3] = enable TLSv1.3 (experimental - disabled by default) 1358#tls_flags=[flag1][flag2]... 1359 1360# Maximum number of EAP message rounds with data (default: 100) 1361#max_auth_rounds=100 1362 1363# Maximum number of short EAP message rounds (default: 50) 1364#max_auth_rounds_short=50 1365 1366# Cached OCSP stapling response (DER encoded) 1367# If set, this file is sent as a certificate status response by the EAP server 1368# if the EAP peer requests certificate status in the ClientHello message. 1369# This cache file can be updated, e.g., by running following command 1370# periodically to get an update from the OCSP responder: 1371# openssl ocsp \ 1372# -no_nonce \ 1373# -CAfile /etc/hostapd.ca.pem \ 1374# -issuer /etc/hostapd.ca.pem \ 1375# -cert /etc/hostapd.server.pem \ 1376# -url http://ocsp.example.com:8888/ \ 1377# -respout /tmp/ocsp-cache.der 1378#ocsp_stapling_response=/tmp/ocsp-cache.der 1379 1380# Cached OCSP stapling response list (DER encoded OCSPResponseList) 1381# This is similar to ocsp_stapling_response, but the extended version defined in 1382# RFC 6961 to allow multiple OCSP responses to be provided. 1383#ocsp_stapling_response_multi=/tmp/ocsp-multi-cache.der 1384 1385# dh_file: File path to DH/DSA parameters file (in PEM format) 1386# This is an optional configuration file for setting parameters for an 1387# ephemeral DH key exchange. If the file is in DSA parameters format, it will 1388# be automatically converted into DH params. If the used TLS library supports 1389# automatic DH parameter selection, that functionality will be used if this 1390# parameter is not set. DH parameters are required if anonymous EAP-FAST is 1391# used. 1392# You can generate DH parameters file with OpenSSL, e.g., 1393# "openssl dhparam -out /etc/hostapd.dh.pem 2048" 1394#dh_file=/etc/hostapd.dh.pem 1395 1396# OpenSSL cipher string 1397# 1398# This is an OpenSSL specific configuration option for configuring the default 1399# ciphers. If not set, the value configured at build time ("DEFAULT:!EXP:!LOW" 1400# by default) is used. 1401# See https://www.openssl.org/docs/apps/ciphers.html for OpenSSL documentation 1402# on cipher suite configuration. This is applicable only if hostapd is built to 1403# use OpenSSL. 1404#openssl_ciphers=DEFAULT:!EXP:!LOW 1405 1406# OpenSSL ECDH curves 1407# 1408# This is an OpenSSL specific configuration option for configuring the ECDH 1409# curves for EAP-TLS/TTLS/PEAP/FAST server. If not set, automatic curve 1410# selection is enabled. If set to an empty string, ECDH curve configuration is 1411# not done (the exact library behavior depends on the library version). 1412# Otherwise, this is a colon separated list of the supported curves (e.g., 1413# P-521:P-384:P-256). This is applicable only if hostapd is built to use 1414# OpenSSL. This must not be used for Suite B cases since the same OpenSSL 1415# parameter is set differently in those cases and this might conflict with that 1416# design. 1417#openssl_ecdh_curves=P-521:P-384:P-256 1418 1419# Fragment size for EAP methods 1420#fragment_size=1400 1421 1422# Finite cyclic group for EAP-pwd. Number maps to group of domain parameters 1423# using the IANA repository for IKE (RFC 2409). 1424#pwd_group=19 1425 1426# Configuration data for EAP-SIM database/authentication gateway interface. 1427# This is a text string in implementation specific format. The example 1428# implementation in eap_sim_db.c uses this as the UNIX domain socket name for 1429# the HLR/AuC gateway (e.g., hlr_auc_gw). In this case, the path uses "unix:" 1430# prefix. If hostapd is built with SQLite support (CONFIG_SQLITE=y in .config), 1431# database file can be described with an optional db=<path> parameter. 1432#eap_sim_db=unix:/tmp/hlr_auc_gw.sock 1433#eap_sim_db=unix:/tmp/hlr_auc_gw.sock db=/tmp/hostapd.db 1434 1435# EAP-SIM DB request timeout 1436# This parameter sets the maximum time to wait for a database request response. 1437# The parameter value is in seconds. 1438#eap_sim_db_timeout=1 1439 1440# Encryption key for EAP-FAST PAC-Opaque values. This key must be a secret, 1441# random value. It is configured as a 16-octet value in hex format. It can be 1442# generated, e.g., with the following command: 1443# od -tx1 -v -N16 /dev/random | colrm 1 8 | tr -d ' ' 1444#pac_opaque_encr_key=000102030405060708090a0b0c0d0e0f 1445 1446# EAP-FAST authority identity (A-ID) 1447# A-ID indicates the identity of the authority that issues PACs. The A-ID 1448# should be unique across all issuing servers. In theory, this is a variable 1449# length field, but due to some existing implementations requiring A-ID to be 1450# 16 octets in length, it is strongly recommended to use that length for the 1451# field to provide interoperability with deployed peer implementations. This 1452# field is configured in hex format. 1453#eap_fast_a_id=101112131415161718191a1b1c1d1e1f 1454 1455# EAP-FAST authority identifier information (A-ID-Info) 1456# This is a user-friendly name for the A-ID. For example, the enterprise name 1457# and server name in a human-readable format. This field is encoded as UTF-8. 1458#eap_fast_a_id_info=test server 1459 1460# Enable/disable different EAP-FAST provisioning modes: 1461#0 = provisioning disabled 1462#1 = only anonymous provisioning allowed 1463#2 = only authenticated provisioning allowed 1464#3 = both provisioning modes allowed (default) 1465#eap_fast_prov=3 1466 1467# EAP-FAST PAC-Key lifetime in seconds (hard limit) 1468#pac_key_lifetime=604800 1469 1470# EAP-FAST PAC-Key refresh time in seconds (soft limit on remaining hard 1471# limit). The server will generate a new PAC-Key when this number of seconds 1472# (or fewer) of the lifetime remains. 1473#pac_key_refresh_time=86400 1474 1475# EAP-TEAP authentication type 1476# 0 = inner EAP (default) 1477# 1 = Basic-Password-Auth 1478# 2 = Do not require Phase 2 authentication if client can be authenticated 1479# during Phase 1 1480#eap_teap_auth=0 1481 1482# EAP-TEAP authentication behavior when using PAC 1483# 0 = perform inner authentication (default) 1484# 1 = skip inner authentication (inner EAP/Basic-Password-Auth) 1485#eap_teap_pac_no_inner=0 1486 1487# EAP-TEAP behavior with Result TLV 1488# 0 = include with Intermediate-Result TLV (default) 1489# 1 = send in a separate message (for testing purposes) 1490#eap_teap_separate_result=0 1491 1492# EAP-TEAP identities 1493# 0 = allow any identity type (default) 1494# 1 = require user identity 1495# 2 = require machine identity 1496# 3 = request user identity; accept either user or machine identity 1497# 4 = request machine identity; accept either user or machine identity 1498# 5 = require both user and machine identity 1499#eap_teap_id=0 1500 1501# EAP-TEAP tunneled EAP method behavior 1502# 0 = minimize roundtrips by merging start of the next EAP method with the 1503# crypto-binding of the previous one. 1504# 1 = complete crypto-binding before starting the next EAP method 1505#eap_teap_method_sequence=0 1506 1507# EAP-SIM and EAP-AKA protected success/failure indication using AT_RESULT_IND 1508# (default: 0 = disabled). 1509#eap_sim_aka_result_ind=1 1510 1511# EAP-SIM and EAP-AKA identity options 1512# 0 = do not use pseudonyms or fast reauthentication 1513# 1 = use pseudonyms, but not fast reauthentication 1514# 2 = do not use pseudonyms, but use fast reauthentication 1515# 3 = use pseudonyms and use fast reauthentication (default) 1516# 4 = do not use pseudonyms or fast reauthentication and allow 1517# EAP-Response/Identity to be used without method specific identity exchange 1518# 5 = use pseudonyms, but not fast reauthentication and allow 1519# EAP-Response/Identity to be used without method specific identity exchange 1520# 6 = do not use pseudonyms, but use fast reauthentication and allow 1521# EAP-Response/Identity to be used without method specific identity exchange 1522# 7 = use pseudonyms and use fast reauthentication and allow 1523# EAP-Response/Identity to be used without method specific identity exchange 1524#eap_sim_id=3 1525 1526# IMSI privacy key (PEM encoded RSA 2048-bit private key) for decrypting 1527# permanent identity when using EAP-SIM/AKA/AKA'. 1528#imsi_privacy_key=imsi-privacy-key.pem 1529 1530# EAP-SIM and EAP-AKA fast re-authentication limit 1531# Maximum number of fast re-authentications allowed after each full 1532# authentication. 1533#eap_sim_aka_fast_reauth_limit=1000 1534 1535# Trusted Network Connect (TNC) 1536# If enabled, TNC validation will be required before the peer is allowed to 1537# connect. Note: This is only used with EAP-TTLS and EAP-FAST. If any other 1538# EAP method is enabled, the peer will be allowed to connect without TNC. 1539#tnc=1 1540 1541# EAP Re-authentication Protocol (ERP) - RFC 6696 1542# 1543# Whether to enable ERP on the EAP server. 1544#eap_server_erp=1 1545 1546 1547##### RADIUS client configuration ############################################# 1548# for IEEE 802.1X with external Authentication Server, IEEE 802.11 1549# authentication with external ACL for MAC addresses, and accounting 1550 1551# The own IP address of the access point (used as NAS-IP-Address) 1552own_ip_addr=127.0.0.1 1553 1554# NAS-Identifier string for RADIUS messages. When used, this should be unique 1555# to the NAS within the scope of the RADIUS server. Please note that hostapd 1556# uses a separate RADIUS client for each BSS and as such, a unique 1557# nas_identifier value should be configured separately for each BSS. This is 1558# particularly important for cases where RADIUS accounting is used 1559# (Accounting-On/Off messages are interpreted as clearing all ongoing sessions 1560# and that may get interpreted as applying to all BSSes if the same 1561# NAS-Identifier value is used.) For example, a fully qualified domain name 1562# prefixed with a unique identifier of the BSS (e.g., BSSID) can be used here. 1563# 1564# When using IEEE 802.11r, nas_identifier must be set and must be between 1 and 1565# 48 octets long. 1566# 1567# It is mandatory to configure either own_ip_addr or nas_identifier to be 1568# compliant with the RADIUS protocol. When using RADIUS accounting, it is 1569# strongly recommended that nas_identifier is set to a unique value for each 1570# BSS. 1571#nas_identifier=ap.example.com 1572 1573# RADIUS client forced local IP address for the access point 1574# Normally the local IP address is determined automatically based on configured 1575# IP addresses, but this field can be used to force a specific address to be 1576# used, e.g., when the device has multiple IP addresses. 1577#radius_client_addr=127.0.0.1 1578 1579# RADIUS client forced local interface. Helps run properly with VRF 1580# Default is none set which allows the network stack to pick the appropriate 1581# interface automatically. 1582# Example below binds to eth0 1583#radius_client_dev=eth0 1584 1585# RADIUS authentication server 1586#auth_server_addr=127.0.0.1 1587#auth_server_port=1812 1588#auth_server_shared_secret=secret 1589 1590# RADIUS accounting server 1591#acct_server_addr=127.0.0.1 1592#acct_server_port=1813 1593#acct_server_shared_secret=secret 1594 1595# Secondary RADIUS servers; to be used if primary one does not reply to 1596# RADIUS packets. These are optional and there can be more than one secondary 1597# server listed. 1598#auth_server_addr=127.0.0.2 1599#auth_server_port=1812 1600#auth_server_shared_secret=secret2 1601# 1602#acct_server_addr=127.0.0.2 1603#acct_server_port=1813 1604#acct_server_shared_secret=secret2 1605 1606# RADIUS/TLS instead of RADIUS/UDP 1607#auth_server_addr=127.0.0.1 1608#auth_server_port=2083 1609#auth_server_type=TLS 1610#auth_server_shared_secret=radsec 1611#auth_server_ca_cert=<path to trusted CA certificate(s)> 1612#auth_server_client_cert=<path to client certificate> 1613#auth_server_private_key=<path to private key> 1614#auth_server_private_key_passwd=<password for decrypting private key> 1615 1616# Retry interval for trying to return to the primary RADIUS server (in 1617# seconds). RADIUS client code will automatically try to use the next server 1618# when the current server is not replying to requests. If this interval is set, 1619# primary server will be retried after configured amount of time even if the 1620# currently used secondary server is still working. 1621#radius_retry_primary_interval=600 1622 1623# Message-Authenticator attribute requirement for non-EAP cases 1624# hostapd requires Message-Authenticator attribute to be included in all cases 1625# where RADIUS is used for EAP authentication. This is also required for cases 1626# where RADIUS is used for MAC ACL (macaddr_acl=2) by default, but that case 1627# can be configured to not require this for compatibility with RADIUS servers 1628# that do not include the attribute. This is not recommended due to potential 1629# security concerns, but can be used as a temporary workaround in networks where 1630# the connection to the RADIUS server is secure. 1631# 0 = Do not require Message-Authenticator in MAC ACL response 1632# 1 = Require Message-Authenticator in all authentication cases (default) 1633#radius_require_message_authenticator=1 1634 1635# Interim accounting update interval 1636# If this is set (larger than 0) and acct_server is configured, hostapd will 1637# send interim accounting updates every N seconds. Note: if set, this overrides 1638# possible Acct-Interim-Interval attribute in Access-Accept message. Thus, this 1639# value should not be configured in hostapd.conf, if RADIUS server is used to 1640# control the interim interval. 1641# This value should not be less 600 (10 minutes) and must not be less than 1642# 60 (1 minute). 1643#radius_acct_interim_interval=600 1644 1645# Request Chargeable-User-Identity (RFC 4372) 1646# This parameter can be used to configure hostapd to request CUI from the 1647# RADIUS server by including Chargeable-User-Identity attribute into 1648# Access-Request packets. 1649#radius_request_cui=1 1650 1651# Dynamic VLAN mode; allow RADIUS authentication server to decide which VLAN 1652# is used for the stations. This information is parsed from following RADIUS 1653# attributes based on RFC 3580 and RFC 2868: Tunnel-Type (value 13 = VLAN), 1654# Tunnel-Medium-Type (value 6 = IEEE 802), Tunnel-Private-Group-ID (value 1655# VLANID as a string). Optionally, the local MAC ACL list (accept_mac_file) can 1656# be used to set static client MAC address to VLAN ID mapping. 1657# Dynamic VLAN mode is also used with VLAN ID assignment based on WPA/WPA2 1658# passphrase from wpa_psk_file or vlan_id parameter from sae_password. 1659# 0 = disabled (default); only VLAN IDs from accept_mac_file will be used 1660# 1 = optional; use default interface if RADIUS server does not include VLAN ID 1661# 2 = required; reject authentication if RADIUS server does not include VLAN ID 1662#dynamic_vlan=0 1663 1664# Per-Station AP_VLAN interface mode 1665# If enabled, each station is assigned its own AP_VLAN interface. 1666# This implies per-station group keying and ebtables filtering of inter-STA 1667# traffic (when passed through the AP). 1668# If the sta is not assigned to any VLAN, then its AP_VLAN interface will be 1669# added to the bridge given by the "bridge" configuration option (see above). 1670# Otherwise, it will be added to the per-VLAN bridge. 1671# 0 = disabled (default) 1672# 1 = enabled 1673#per_sta_vif=0 1674 1675# VLAN interface list for dynamic VLAN mode is read from a separate text file. 1676# This list is used to map VLAN ID from the RADIUS server to a network 1677# interface. Each station is bound to one interface in the same way as with 1678# multiple BSSIDs or SSIDs. Each line in this text file is defining a new 1679# interface and the line must include VLAN ID and interface name separated by 1680# white space (space or tab). 1681# If no entries are provided by this file, the station is statically mapped 1682# to <bss-iface>.<vlan-id> interfaces. 1683# Each line can optionally also contain the name of a bridge to add the VLAN to 1684#vlan_file=/etc/hostapd.vlan 1685 1686# Interface where 802.1q tagged packets should appear when a RADIUS server is 1687# used to determine which VLAN a station is on. hostapd creates a bridge for 1688# each VLAN. Then hostapd adds a VLAN interface (associated with the interface 1689# indicated by 'vlan_tagged_interface') and the appropriate wireless interface 1690# to the bridge. 1691#vlan_tagged_interface=eth0 1692 1693# Bridge (prefix) to add the wifi and the tagged interface to. This gets the 1694# VLAN ID appended. It defaults to brvlan%d if no tagged interface is given 1695# and br%s.%d if a tagged interface is given, provided %s = tagged interface 1696# and %d = VLAN ID. 1697#vlan_bridge=brvlan 1698 1699# When hostapd creates a VLAN interface on vlan_tagged_interfaces, it needs 1700# to know how to name it. 1701# 0 = vlan<XXX>, e.g., vlan1 1702# 1 = <vlan_tagged_interface>.<XXX>, e.g. eth0.1 1703#vlan_naming=0 1704 1705# Arbitrary RADIUS attributes can be added into Access-Request and 1706# Accounting-Request packets by specifying the contents of the attributes with 1707# the following configuration parameters. There can be multiple of these to 1708# add multiple attributes. These parameters can also be used to override some 1709# of the attributes added automatically by hostapd. 1710# Format: <attr_id>[:<syntax:value>] 1711# attr_id: RADIUS attribute type (e.g., 26 = Vendor-Specific) 1712# syntax: s = string (UTF-8), d = integer, x = octet string 1713# value: attribute value in format indicated by the syntax 1714# If syntax and value parts are omitted, a null value (single 0x00 octet) is 1715# used. 1716# 1717# Additional Access-Request attributes 1718# radius_auth_req_attr=<attr_id>[:<syntax:value>] 1719# Examples: 1720# Operator-Name = "Operator" 1721#radius_auth_req_attr=126:s:Operator 1722# Service-Type = Framed (2) 1723#radius_auth_req_attr=6:d:2 1724# Connect-Info = "testing" (this overrides the automatically generated value) 1725#radius_auth_req_attr=77:s:testing 1726# Same Connect-Info value set as a hexdump 1727#radius_auth_req_attr=77:x:74657374696e67 1728 1729# 1730# Additional Accounting-Request attributes 1731# radius_acct_req_attr=<attr_id>[:<syntax:value>] 1732# Examples: 1733# Operator-Name = "Operator" 1734#radius_acct_req_attr=126:s:Operator 1735 1736# If SQLite support is included, path to a database from which additional 1737# RADIUS request attributes are extracted based on the station MAC address. 1738# 1739# The schema for the radius_attributes table is: 1740# id | sta | reqtype | attr : multi-key (sta, reqtype) 1741# id = autonumber 1742# sta = station MAC address in `11:22:33:44:55:66` format. 1743# type = `auth` | `acct` | NULL (match any) 1744# attr = existing config file format, e.g. `126:s:Test Operator` 1745#radius_req_attr_sqlite=radius_attr.sqlite 1746 1747# Dynamic Authorization Extensions (RFC 5176) 1748# This mechanism can be used to allow dynamic changes to user session based on 1749# commands from a RADIUS server (or some other disconnect client that has the 1750# needed session information). For example, Disconnect message can be used to 1751# request an associated station to be disconnected. 1752# 1753# This is disabled by default. Set radius_das_port to non-zero UDP port 1754# number to enable. 1755#radius_das_port=3799 1756# 1757# DAS client (the host that can send Disconnect/CoA requests) and shared secret 1758# Format: <IP address> <shared secret> 1759# IP address 0.0.0.0 can be used to allow requests from any address. 1760#radius_das_client=192.168.1.123 shared secret here 1761# 1762# DAS Event-Timestamp time window in seconds 1763#radius_das_time_window=300 1764# 1765# DAS require Event-Timestamp 1766#radius_das_require_event_timestamp=1 1767# 1768# DAS require Message-Authenticator 1769#radius_das_require_message_authenticator=1 1770 1771##### RADIUS authentication server configuration ############################## 1772 1773# hostapd can be used as a RADIUS authentication server for other hosts. This 1774# requires that the integrated EAP server is also enabled and both 1775# authentication services are sharing the same configuration. 1776 1777# File name of the RADIUS clients configuration for the RADIUS server. If this 1778# commented out, RADIUS server is disabled. 1779#radius_server_clients=/etc/hostapd.radius_clients 1780 1781# The UDP port number for the RADIUS authentication server 1782#radius_server_auth_port=1812 1783 1784# The UDP port number for the RADIUS accounting server 1785# Commenting this out or setting this to 0 can be used to disable RADIUS 1786# accounting while still enabling RADIUS authentication. 1787#radius_server_acct_port=1813 1788 1789# Use IPv6 with RADIUS server (IPv4 will also be supported using IPv6 API) 1790#radius_server_ipv6=1 1791 1792 1793##### WPA/IEEE 802.11i configuration ########################################## 1794 1795# Enable WPA. Setting this variable configures the AP to require WPA (either 1796# WPA-PSK or WPA-RADIUS/EAP based on other configuration). For WPA-PSK, either 1797# wpa_psk or wpa_passphrase must be set and wpa_key_mgmt must include WPA-PSK. 1798# Instead of wpa_psk / wpa_passphrase, wpa_psk_radius might suffice. 1799# For WPA-RADIUS/EAP, ieee8021x must be set (but without dynamic WEP keys), 1800# RADIUS authentication server must be configured, and WPA-EAP must be included 1801# in wpa_key_mgmt. 1802# This field is a bit field that can be used to enable WPA (IEEE 802.11i/D3.0) 1803# and/or WPA2 (full IEEE 802.11i/RSN): 1804# bit0 = WPA 1805# bit1 = IEEE 802.11i/RSN (WPA2) (dot11RSNAEnabled) 1806# Note that WPA3 is also configured with bit1 since it uses RSN just like WPA2. 1807# In other words, for WPA3, wpa=2 is used the configuration (and 1808# wpa_key_mgmt=SAE for WPA3-Personal instead of wpa_key_mgmt=WPA-PSK). 1809#wpa=2 1810 1811# Extended Key ID support for Individually Addressed frames 1812# 1813# Extended Key ID allows to rekey PTK keys without the impacts the "normal" 1814# PTK rekeying with only a single Key ID 0 has. It can only be used when the 1815# driver supports it and RSN/WPA2 is used with a CCMP/GCMP pairwise cipher. 1816# 1817# 0 = force off, i.e., use only Key ID 0 (default) 1818# 1 = enable and use Extended Key ID support when possible 1819# 2 = identical to 1 but start with Key ID 1 when possible 1820#extended_key_id=0 1821 1822# WPA pre-shared keys for WPA-PSK. This can be either entered as a 256-bit 1823# secret in hex format (64 hex digits), wpa_psk, or as an ASCII passphrase 1824# (8..63 characters) that will be converted to PSK. This conversion uses SSID 1825# so the PSK changes when ASCII passphrase is used and the SSID is changed. 1826# wpa_psk (dot11RSNAConfigPSKValue) 1827# wpa_passphrase (dot11RSNAConfigPSKPassPhrase) 1828#wpa_psk=0123456789abcdef0123456789abcdef0123456789abcdef0123456789abcdef 1829#wpa_passphrase=secret passphrase 1830 1831# Optionally, WPA PSKs can be read from a separate text file (containing list 1832# of (PSK,MAC address) pairs. This allows more than one PSK to be configured. 1833# Use absolute path name to make sure that the files can be read on SIGHUP 1834# configuration reloads. 1835#wpa_psk_file=/etc/hostapd.wpa_psk 1836 1837# Optionally, WPA passphrase can be received from RADIUS authentication server 1838# This requires macaddr_acl to be set to 2 (RADIUS) for wpa_psk_radius values 1839# 1 and 2. 1840# 0 = disabled (default) 1841# 1 = optional; use default passphrase/psk if RADIUS server does not include 1842# Tunnel-Password 1843# 2 = required; reject authentication if RADIUS server does not include 1844# Tunnel-Password 1845# 3 = ask RADIUS server during 4-way handshake if there is no locally 1846# configured PSK/passphrase for the STA 1847# 1848# The Tunnel-Password attribute in Access-Accept can contain either the 1849# 8..63 character ASCII passphrase or a 64 hex character encoding of the PSK. 1850# 1851#wpa_psk_radius=0 1852 1853# Set of accepted key management algorithms (WPA-PSK, WPA-EAP, or both). The 1854# entries are separated with a space. WPA-PSK-SHA256 and WPA-EAP-SHA256 can be 1855# added to enable SHA256-based stronger algorithms. 1856# WPA-PSK = WPA-Personal / WPA2-Personal 1857# WPA-PSK-SHA256 = WPA2-Personal using SHA256 1858# WPA-EAP = WPA-Enterprise / WPA2-Enterprise 1859# WPA-EAP-SHA256 = WPA2-Enterprise using SHA256 1860# SAE = SAE (WPA3-Personal) 1861# WPA-EAP-SUITE-B-192 = WPA3-Enterprise with 192-bit security/CNSA suite 1862# FT-PSK = FT with passphrase/PSK 1863# FT-EAP = FT with EAP 1864# FT-EAP-SHA384 = FT with EAP using SHA384 1865# FT-SAE = FT with SAE 1866# FILS-SHA256 = Fast Initial Link Setup with SHA256 1867# FILS-SHA384 = Fast Initial Link Setup with SHA384 1868# FT-FILS-SHA256 = FT and Fast Initial Link Setup with SHA256 1869# FT-FILS-SHA384 = FT and Fast Initial Link Setup with SHA384 1870# OWE = Opportunistic Wireless Encryption (a.k.a. Enhanced Open) 1871# DPP = Device Provisioning Protocol 1872# OSEN = Hotspot 2.0 online signup with encryption 1873# (dot11RSNAConfigAuthenticationSuitesTable) 1874#wpa_key_mgmt=WPA-PSK WPA-EAP 1875 1876# Set of accepted cipher suites (encryption algorithms) for pairwise keys 1877# (unicast packets). This is a space separated list of algorithms: 1878# CCMP = AES in Counter mode with CBC-MAC (CCMP-128) 1879# TKIP = Temporal Key Integrity Protocol 1880# CCMP-256 = AES in Counter mode with CBC-MAC with 256-bit key 1881# GCMP = Galois/counter mode protocol (GCMP-128) 1882# GCMP-256 = Galois/counter mode protocol with 256-bit key 1883# Group cipher suite (encryption algorithm for broadcast and multicast frames) 1884# is automatically selected based on this configuration. If only CCMP is 1885# allowed as the pairwise cipher, group cipher will also be CCMP. Otherwise, 1886# TKIP will be used as the group cipher. The optional group_cipher parameter can 1887# be used to override this automatic selection. 1888# 1889# (dot11RSNAConfigPairwiseCiphersTable) 1890# Pairwise cipher for WPA (v1) (default: TKIP) 1891#wpa_pairwise=TKIP CCMP 1892# Pairwise cipher for RSN/WPA2 (default: use wpa_pairwise value) 1893#rsn_pairwise=CCMP 1894 1895# Optional override for automatic group cipher selection 1896# This can be used to select a specific group cipher regardless of which 1897# pairwise ciphers were enabled for WPA and RSN. It should be noted that 1898# overriding the group cipher with an unexpected value can result in 1899# interoperability issues and in general, this parameter is mainly used for 1900# testing purposes. 1901#group_cipher=CCMP 1902 1903# Time interval for rekeying GTK (broadcast/multicast encryption keys) in 1904# seconds. (dot11RSNAConfigGroupRekeyTime) 1905# This defaults to 86400 seconds (once per day) when using CCMP/GCMP as the 1906# group cipher and 600 seconds (once per 10 minutes) when using TKIP as the 1907# group cipher. 1908#wpa_group_rekey=86400 1909 1910# Rekey GTK when any STA that possesses the current GTK is leaving the BSS. 1911# (dot11RSNAConfigGroupRekeyStrict) 1912#wpa_strict_rekey=1 1913 1914# The number of times EAPOL-Key Message 1/2 in the RSN Group Key Handshake is 1915#retried per GTK Handshake attempt. (dot11RSNAConfigGroupUpdateCount) 1916# This value should only be increased when stations are constantly 1917# deauthenticated during GTK rekeying with the log message 1918# "group key handshake failed...". 1919# You should consider to also increase wpa_pairwise_update_count then. 1920# Range 1..4294967295; default: 4 1921#wpa_group_update_count=4 1922 1923# Time interval for rekeying GMK (master key used internally to generate GTKs 1924# (in seconds). 1925#wpa_gmk_rekey=86400 1926 1927# Maximum lifetime for PTK in seconds. This can be used to enforce rekeying of 1928# PTK to mitigate some attacks against TKIP deficiencies. 1929# Warning: PTK rekeying is buggy with many drivers/devices and with such 1930# devices, the only secure method to rekey the PTK without Extended Key ID 1931# support requires a disconnection. Check the related parameter 1932# wpa_deny_ptk0_rekey for details. 1933#wpa_ptk_rekey=600 1934 1935# Workaround for PTK rekey issues 1936# 1937# PTK0 rekeys (rekeying the PTK without "Extended Key ID for Individually 1938# Addressed Frames") can degrade the security and stability with some cards. 1939# To avoid such issues hostapd can replace those PTK rekeys (including EAP 1940# reauthentications) with disconnects. 1941# 1942# Available options: 1943# 0 = always rekey when configured/instructed (default) 1944# 1 = only rekey when the local driver is explicitly indicating it can perform 1945# this operation without issues 1946# 2 = never allow PTK0 rekeys 1947#wpa_deny_ptk0_rekey=0 1948 1949# The number of times EAPOL-Key Message 1/4 and Message 3/4 in the RSN 4-Way 1950# Handshake are retried per 4-Way Handshake attempt. 1951# (dot11RSNAConfigPairwiseUpdateCount) 1952# Range 1..4294967295; default: 4 1953#wpa_pairwise_update_count=4 1954 1955# Workaround for key reinstallation attacks 1956# 1957# This parameter can be used to disable retransmission of EAPOL-Key frames that 1958# are used to install keys (EAPOL-Key message 3/4 and group message 1/2). This 1959# is similar to setting wpa_group_update_count=1 and 1960# wpa_pairwise_update_count=1, but with no impact to message 1/4 and with 1961# extended timeout on the response to avoid causing issues with stations that 1962# may use aggressive power saving have very long time in replying to the 1963# EAPOL-Key messages. 1964# 1965# This option can be used to work around key reinstallation attacks on the 1966# station (supplicant) side in cases those station devices cannot be updated 1967# for some reason. By removing the retransmissions the attacker cannot cause 1968# key reinstallation with a delayed frame transmission. This is related to the 1969# station side vulnerabilities CVE-2017-13077, CVE-2017-13078, CVE-2017-13079, 1970# CVE-2017-13080, and CVE-2017-13081. 1971# 1972# This workaround might cause interoperability issues and reduced robustness of 1973# key negotiation especially in environments with heavy traffic load due to the 1974# number of attempts to perform the key exchange is reduced significantly. As 1975# such, this workaround is disabled by default (unless overridden in build 1976# configuration). To enable this, set the parameter to 1. 1977#wpa_disable_eapol_key_retries=1 1978 1979# Enable IEEE 802.11i/RSN/WPA2 pre-authentication. This is used to speed up 1980# roaming be pre-authenticating IEEE 802.1X/EAP part of the full RSN 1981# authentication and key handshake before actually associating with a new AP. 1982# (dot11RSNAPreauthenticationEnabled) 1983#rsn_preauth=1 1984# 1985# Space separated list of interfaces from which pre-authentication frames are 1986# accepted (e.g., 'eth0' or 'eth0 wlan0wds0'. This list should include all 1987# interface that are used for connections to other APs. This could include 1988# wired interfaces and WDS links. The normal wireless data interface towards 1989# associated stations (e.g., wlan0) should not be added, since 1990# pre-authentication is only used with APs other than the currently associated 1991# one. 1992#rsn_preauth_interfaces=eth0 1993 1994# ieee80211w: Whether management frame protection (MFP) is enabled 1995# 0 = disabled (default) 1996# 1 = optional 1997# 2 = required 1998#ieee80211w=0 1999# The most common configuration options for this based on the PMF (protected 2000# management frames) certification program are: 2001# PMF enabled: ieee80211w=1 and wpa_key_mgmt=WPA-EAP WPA-EAP-SHA256 2002# PMF required: ieee80211w=2 and wpa_key_mgmt=WPA-EAP-SHA256 2003# (and similarly for WPA-PSK and WPA-PSK-SHA256 if WPA2-Personal is used) 2004# WPA3-Personal-only mode: ieee80211w=2 and wpa_key_mgmt=SAE 2005 2006# Group management cipher suite 2007# Default: AES-128-CMAC (BIP) 2008# Other options (depending on driver support): 2009# BIP-GMAC-128 2010# BIP-GMAC-256 2011# BIP-CMAC-256 2012# Note: All the stations connecting to the BSS will also need to support the 2013# selected cipher. The default AES-128-CMAC is the only option that is commonly 2014# available in deployed devices. 2015#group_mgmt_cipher=AES-128-CMAC 2016 2017# Beacon Protection (management frame protection for Beacon frames) 2018# This depends on management frame protection being enabled (ieee80211w != 0) 2019# and beacon protection support indication from the driver. 2020# 0 = disabled (default) 2021# 1 = enabled 2022#beacon_prot=0 2023 2024# Association SA Query maximum timeout (in TU = 1.024 ms; for MFP) 2025# (maximum time to wait for a SA Query response) 2026# dot11AssociationSAQueryMaximumTimeout, 1...4294967295 2027#assoc_sa_query_max_timeout=1000 2028 2029# Association SA Query retry timeout (in TU = 1.024 ms; for MFP) 2030# (time between two subsequent SA Query requests) 2031# dot11AssociationSAQueryRetryTimeout, 1...4294967295 2032#assoc_sa_query_retry_timeout=201 2033 2034# ocv: Operating Channel Validation 2035# This is a countermeasure against multi-channel on-path attacks. 2036# Enabling this depends on the driver's support for OCV when the driver SME is 2037# used. If hostapd SME is used, this will be enabled just based on this 2038# configuration. 2039# Enabling this automatically also enables ieee80211w, if not yet enabled. 2040# 0 = disabled (default) 2041# 1 = enabled 2042# 2 = enabled in workaround mode - Allow STA that claims OCV capability to 2043# connect even if the STA doesn't send OCI or negotiate PMF. This 2044# workaround is to improve interoperability with legacy STAs which are 2045# wrongly copying reserved bits of RSN capabilities from the AP's 2046# RSNE into (Re)Association Request frames. When this configuration is 2047# enabled, the AP considers STA is OCV capable only when the STA indicates 2048# MFP capability in (Re)Association Request frames and sends OCI in 2049# EAPOL-Key msg 2/4/FT Reassociation Request frame/FILS (Re)Association 2050# Request frame; otherwise, the AP disables OCV for the current connection 2051# with the STA. Enabling this workaround mode reduced OCV protection to 2052# some extend since it allows misbehavior to go through. As such, this 2053# should be enabled only if interoperability with misbehaving STAs is 2054# needed. 2055#ocv=1 2056 2057# disable_pmksa_caching: Disable PMKSA caching 2058# This parameter can be used to disable caching of PMKSA created through EAP 2059# authentication. RSN preauthentication may still end up using PMKSA caching if 2060# it is enabled (rsn_preauth=1). 2061# 0 = PMKSA caching enabled (default) 2062# 1 = PMKSA caching disabled 2063#disable_pmksa_caching=0 2064 2065# okc: Opportunistic Key Caching (aka Proactive Key Caching) 2066# Allow PMK cache to be shared opportunistically among configured interfaces 2067# and BSSes (i.e., all configurations within a single hostapd process). 2068# 0 = disabled (default) 2069# 1 = enabled 2070#okc=1 2071 2072# SAE password 2073# This parameter can be used to set passwords for SAE. By default, the 2074# wpa_passphrase value is used if this separate parameter is not used, but 2075# wpa_passphrase follows the WPA-PSK constraints (8..63 characters) even though 2076# SAE passwords do not have such constraints. If the BSS enabled both SAE and 2077# WPA-PSK and both values are set, SAE uses the sae_password values and WPA-PSK 2078# uses the wpa_passphrase value. 2079# 2080# Each sae_password entry is added to a list of available passwords. This 2081# corresponds to the dot11RSNAConfigPasswordValueEntry. sae_password value 2082# starts with the password (dot11RSNAConfigPasswordCredential). That value can 2083# be followed by optional peer MAC address (dot11RSNAConfigPasswordPeerMac) and 2084# by optional password identifier (dot11RSNAConfigPasswordIdentifier). In 2085# addition, an optional VLAN ID specification can be used to bind the station 2086# to the specified VLAN whenever the specific SAE password entry is used. 2087# 2088# If the peer MAC address is not included or is set to the wildcard address 2089# (ff:ff:ff:ff:ff:ff), the entry is available for any station to use. If a 2090# specific peer MAC address is included, only a station with that MAC address 2091# is allowed to use the entry. 2092# 2093# If the password identifier (with non-zero length) is included, the entry is 2094# limited to be used only with that specified identifier. 2095 2096# The last matching (based on peer MAC address and identifier) entry is used to 2097# select which password to use. Setting sae_password to an empty string has a 2098# special meaning of removing all previously added entries. 2099# 2100# sae_password uses the following encoding: 2101#<password/credential>[|mac=<peer mac>][|vlanid=<VLAN ID>] 2102#[|pk=<m:ECPrivateKey-base64>][|id=<identifier>] 2103# Examples: 2104#sae_password=secret 2105#sae_password=really secret|mac=ff:ff:ff:ff:ff:ff 2106#sae_password=example secret|mac=02:03:04:05:06:07|id=pw identifier 2107#sae_password=example secret|vlanid=3|id=pw identifier 2108# 2109# SAE passwords can also be read from a separate file in which each line 2110# contains and entry in the same format as sae_password uses. 2111#sae_password_file=/tc/hostapd.sae_passwords 2112 2113# SAE threshold for anti-clogging mechanism (dot11RSNASAEAntiCloggingThreshold) 2114# This parameter defines how many open SAE instances can be in progress at the 2115# same time before the anti-clogging mechanism is taken into use. 2116#sae_anti_clogging_threshold=5 (deprecated) 2117#anti_clogging_threshold=5 2118 2119# Maximum number of SAE synchronization errors (dot11RSNASAESync) 2120# The offending SAE peer will be disconnected if more than this many 2121# synchronization errors happen. 2122#sae_sync=3 2123 2124# Enabled SAE finite cyclic groups 2125# SAE implementation are required to support group 19 (ECC group defined over a 2126# 256-bit prime order field). This configuration parameter can be used to 2127# specify a set of allowed groups. If not included, only the mandatory group 19 2128# is enabled. 2129# The group values are listed in the IANA registry: 2130# http://www.iana.org/assignments/ipsec-registry/ipsec-registry.xml#ipsec-registry-9 2131# Note that groups 1, 2, 5, 22, 23, and 24 should not be used in production 2132# purposes due limited security (see RFC 8247). Groups that are not as strong as 2133# group 19 (ECC, NIST P-256) are unlikely to be useful for production use cases 2134# since all implementations are required to support group 19. 2135#sae_groups=19 20 21 2136 2137# Require MFP for all associations using SAE 2138# This parameter can be used to enforce negotiation of MFP for all associations 2139# that negotiate use of SAE. This is used in cases where SAE-capable devices are 2140# known to be MFP-capable and the BSS is configured with optional MFP 2141# (ieee80211w=1) for legacy support. The non-SAE stations can connect without 2142# MFP while SAE stations are required to negotiate MFP if sae_require_mfp=1. 2143#sae_require_mfp=0 2144 2145# SAE Confirm behavior 2146# By default, AP will send out only SAE Commit message in response to a received 2147# SAE Commit message. This parameter can be set to 1 to override that behavior 2148# to send both SAE Commit and SAE Confirm messages without waiting for the STA 2149# to send its SAE Confirm message first. 2150#sae_confirm_immediate=0 2151 2152# SAE mechanism for PWE derivation 2153# 0 = hunting-and-pecking loop only (default without password identifier) 2154# 1 = hash-to-element only (default with password identifier) 2155# 2 = both hunting-and-pecking loop and hash-to-element enabled 2156# Note: The default value is likely to change from 0 to 2 once the new 2157# hash-to-element mechanism has received more interoperability testing. 2158# When using SAE password identifier, the hash-to-element mechanism is used 2159# regardless of the sae_pwe parameter value. 2160#sae_pwe=0 2161 2162# FILS Cache Identifier (16-bit value in hexdump format) 2163#fils_cache_id=0011 2164 2165# FILS Realm Information 2166# One or more FILS realms need to be configured when FILS is enabled. This list 2167# of realms is used to define which realms (used in keyName-NAI by the client) 2168# can be used with FILS shared key authentication for ERP. 2169#fils_realm=example.com 2170#fils_realm=example.org 2171 2172# FILS DH Group for PFS 2173# 0 = PFS disabled with FILS shared key authentication (default) 2174# 1-65535 DH Group to use for FILS PFS 2175#fils_dh_group=0 2176 2177# OWE DH groups 2178# OWE implementations are required to support group 19 (NIST P-256). All groups 2179# that are supported by the implementation (e.g., groups 19, 20, and 21 when 2180# using OpenSSL) are enabled by default. This configuration parameter can be 2181# used to specify a limited set of allowed groups. The group values are listed 2182# in the IANA registry: 2183# http://www.iana.org/assignments/ipsec-registry/ipsec-registry.xml#ipsec-registry-10 2184#owe_groups=19 20 21 2185 2186# OWE PTK derivation workaround 2187# Initial OWE implementation used SHA256 when deriving the PTK for all OWE 2188# groups. This was supposed to change to SHA384 for group 20 and SHA512 for 2189# group 21. This parameter can be used to enable workaround for interoperability 2190# with stations that use SHA256 with groups 20 and 21. By default (0) only the 2191# appropriate hash function is accepted. When workaround is enabled (1), the 2192# appropriate hash function is tried first and if that fails, SHA256-based PTK 2193# derivation is attempted. This workaround can result in reduced security for 2194# groups 20 and 21, but is required for interoperability with older 2195# implementations. There is no impact to group 19 behavior. The workaround is 2196# disabled by default and can be enabled by uncommenting the following line. 2197#owe_ptk_workaround=1 2198 2199# OWE transition mode configuration 2200# Pointer to the matching open/OWE BSS 2201#owe_transition_bssid=<bssid> 2202# SSID in same format as ssid2 described above. 2203#owe_transition_ssid=<SSID> 2204# Alternatively, OWE transition mode BSSID/SSID can be configured with a 2205# reference to a BSS operated by this hostapd process. 2206#owe_transition_ifname=<ifname> 2207 2208# DHCP server for FILS HLP 2209# If configured, hostapd will act as a DHCP relay for all FILS HLP requests 2210# that include a DHCPDISCOVER message and send them to the specific DHCP 2211# server for processing. hostapd will then wait for a response from that server 2212# before replying with (Re)Association Response frame that encapsulates this 2213# DHCP response. own_ip_addr is used as the local address for the communication 2214# with the DHCP server. 2215#dhcp_server=127.0.0.1 2216 2217# DHCP server UDP port 2218# Default: 67 2219#dhcp_server_port=67 2220 2221# DHCP relay UDP port on the local device 2222# Default: 67; 0 means not to bind any specific port 2223#dhcp_relay_port=67 2224 2225# DHCP rapid commit proxy 2226# If set to 1, this enables hostapd to act as a DHCP rapid commit proxy to 2227# allow the rapid commit options (two message DHCP exchange) to be used with a 2228# server that supports only the four message DHCP exchange. This is disabled by 2229# default (= 0) and can be enabled by setting this to 1. 2230#dhcp_rapid_commit_proxy=0 2231 2232# Wait time for FILS HLP (dot11HLPWaitTime) in TUs 2233# default: 30 TUs (= 30.72 milliseconds) 2234#fils_hlp_wait_time=30 2235 2236# FILS Discovery frame transmission minimum and maximum interval settings. 2237# If fils_discovery_max_interval is non-zero, the AP enables FILS Discovery 2238# frame transmission. These values use TUs as the unit and have allowed range 2239# of 0-10000. fils_discovery_min_interval defaults to 20. 2240# This feature is currently supported only when ieee80211ax is enabled for 2241# the radio and disable_11ax is not set for the BSS. 2242#fils_discovery_min_interval=20 2243#fils_discovery_max_interval=0 2244 2245# Transition Disable indication 2246# The AP can notify authenticated stations to disable transition mode in their 2247# network profiles when the network has completed transition steps, i.e., once 2248# sufficiently large number of APs in the ESS have been updated to support the 2249# more secure alternative. When this indication is used, the stations are 2250# expected to automatically disable transition mode and less secure security 2251# options. This includes use of WEP, TKIP (including use of TKIP as the group 2252# cipher), and connections without PMF. 2253# Bitmap bits: 2254# bit 0 (0x01): WPA3-Personal (i.e., disable WPA2-Personal = WPA-PSK and only 2255# allow SAE to be used) 2256# bit 1 (0x02): SAE-PK (disable SAE without use of SAE-PK) 2257# bit 2 (0x04): WPA3-Enterprise (move to requiring PMF) 2258# bit 3 (0x08): Enhanced Open (disable use of open network; require OWE) 2259# (default: 0 = do not include Transition Disable KDE) 2260#transition_disable=0x01 2261 2262# PASN ECDH groups 2263# PASN implementations are required to support group 19 (NIST P-256). If this 2264# parameter is not set, only group 19 is supported by default. This 2265# configuration parameter can be used to specify a limited set of allowed 2266# groups. The group values are listed in the IANA registry: 2267# http://www.iana.org/assignments/ipsec-registry/ipsec-registry.xml#ipsec-registry-10 2268#pasn_groups=19 20 21 2269 2270# PASN comeback after time in TUs 2271# In case the AP is temporarily unable to handle a PASN authentication exchange 2272# due to a too large number of parallel operations, this value indicates to the 2273# peer after how many TUs it can try the PASN exchange again. 2274# (default: 10 TUs) 2275#pasn_comeback_after=10 2276 2277# Unauthenticated PASN activated (dot11NoAuthPASNActivated) 2278# This indicates whether PASN without mutual authentication is allowed. 2279# (default: 1 = activated) 2280#pasn_noauth=1 2281 2282# SSID protection in 4-way handshake 2283# The IEEE 802.11i-2004 RSN design did not provide means for protecting the 2284# SSID in the general case. IEEE P802.11REVme/D6.0 added support for this in 2285# 4-way handshake. This capability allows a STA to confirm that the AP has the 2286# same understanding on which SSID is being used for an association in a 2287# protected manner in cases where both the AP and the STA has this capability. 2288# This can be used to mitigate CVE-2023-52424 (a.k.a. the SSID Confusion 2289# Attack). 2290# 2291# Ideally, this capability would be enabled by default on the AP, but since this 2292# is new functionality with limited testing, the default is to disable this for 2293# now and require explicitly configuration to enable. The default behavior is 2294# like to change once this capability has received more testing. 2295# 2296# 0 = SSID protection in 4-way handshake disabled (default) 2297# 1 = SSID protection in 4-way handshake enabled 2298# 2299#ssid_protection=0 2300 2301##### IEEE 802.11r configuration ############################################## 2302 2303# Mobility Domain identifier (dot11FTMobilityDomainID, MDID) 2304# MDID is used to indicate a group of APs (within an ESS, i.e., sharing the 2305# same SSID) between which a STA can use Fast BSS Transition. 2306# 2-octet identifier as a hex string. 2307#mobility_domain=a1b2 2308 2309# PMK-R0 Key Holder identifier (dot11FTR0KeyHolderID) 2310# 1 to 48 octet identifier. 2311# This is configured with nas_identifier (see RADIUS client section above). 2312 2313# Default lifetime of the PMK-R0 in seconds; range 60..4294967295 2314# (default: 14 days / 1209600 seconds; 0 = disable timeout) 2315# (dot11FTR0KeyLifetime) 2316#ft_r0_key_lifetime=1209600 2317 2318# Maximum lifetime for PMK-R1; applied only if not zero 2319# PMK-R1 is removed at latest after this limit. 2320# Removing any PMK-R1 for expiry can be disabled by setting this to -1. 2321# (default: 0) 2322#r1_max_key_lifetime=0 2323 2324# PMK-R1 Key Holder identifier (dot11FTR1KeyHolderID) 2325# 6-octet identifier as a hex string. 2326# Defaults to BSSID. 2327#r1_key_holder=000102030405 2328 2329# Reassociation deadline in time units (TUs / 1.024 ms; range 1000..65535) 2330# (dot11FTReassociationDeadline) 2331#reassociation_deadline=1000 2332 2333# List of R0KHs in the same Mobility Domain 2334# format: <MAC address> <NAS Identifier> <256-bit key as hex string> 2335# This list is used to map R0KH-ID (NAS Identifier) to a destination MAC 2336# address when requesting PMK-R1 key from the R0KH that the STA used during the 2337# Initial Mobility Domain Association. 2338#r0kh=02:01:02:03:04:05 r0kh-1.example.com 000102030405060708090a0b0c0d0e0f000102030405060708090a0b0c0d0e0f 2339#r0kh=02:01:02:03:04:06 r0kh-2.example.com 00112233445566778899aabbccddeeff00112233445566778899aabbccddeeff 2340# And so on.. One line per R0KH. 2341# Wildcard entry: 2342# Upon receiving a response from R0KH, it will be added to this list, so 2343# subsequent requests won't be broadcast. If R0KH does not reply, it will be 2344# temporarily blocked (see rkh_neg_timeout). 2345#r0kh=ff:ff:ff:ff:ff:ff * 00112233445566778899aabbccddeeff 2346 2347# List of R1KHs in the same Mobility Domain 2348# format: <MAC address> <R1KH-ID> <256-bit key as hex string> 2349# This list is used to map R1KH-ID to a destination MAC address when sending 2350# PMK-R1 key from the R0KH. This is also the list of authorized R1KHs in the MD 2351# that can request PMK-R1 keys. 2352#r1kh=02:01:02:03:04:05 02:11:22:33:44:55 000102030405060708090a0b0c0d0e0f000102030405060708090a0b0c0d0e0f 2353#r1kh=02:01:02:03:04:06 02:11:22:33:44:66 00112233445566778899aabbccddeeff00112233445566778899aabbccddeeff 2354# And so on.. One line per R1KH. 2355# Wildcard entry: 2356# Upon receiving a request from an R1KH not yet known, it will be added to this 2357# list and thus will receive push notifications. 2358#r1kh=00:00:00:00:00:00 00:00:00:00:00:00 00112233445566778899aabbccddeeff 2359 2360# Optionally, the list of RxKHs can be read from a text file. Format is the same 2361# as specified above. File shall contain both r0kh and r1kh. Once this variable 2362# is set, RxKHs can be reloaded at runtime without bringing down an interface 2363# using the RELOAD_RXKHS command. 2364#rxkh_file=<path> 2365 2366# Timeout (seconds) for newly discovered R0KH/R1KH (see wildcard entries above) 2367# Special values: 0 -> do not expire 2368# Warning: do not cache implies no sequence number validation with wildcards 2369#rkh_pos_timeout=86400 (default = 1 day) 2370 2371# Timeout (milliseconds) for requesting PMK-R1 from R0KH using PULL request 2372# and number of retries. 2373#rkh_pull_timeout=1000 (default = 1 second) 2374#rkh_pull_retries=4 (default) 2375 2376# Timeout (seconds) for non replying R0KH (see wildcard entries above) 2377# Special values: 0 -> do not cache 2378# default: 60 seconds 2379#rkh_neg_timeout=60 2380 2381# Note: The R0KH/R1KH keys used to be 128-bit in length before the message 2382# format was changed. That shorter key length is still supported for backwards 2383# compatibility of the configuration files. If such a shorter key is used, a 2384# 256-bit key is derived from it. For new deployments, configuring the 256-bit 2385# key is recommended. 2386 2387# Whether PMK-R1 push is enabled at R0KH 2388# 0 = do not push PMK-R1 to all configured R1KHs (default) 2389# 1 = push PMK-R1 to all configured R1KHs whenever a new PMK-R0 is derived 2390#pmk_r1_push=1 2391 2392# Whether to enable FT-over-DS 2393# 0 = FT-over-DS disabled 2394# 1 = FT-over-DS enabled (default) 2395#ft_over_ds=1 2396 2397# Whether to generate FT response locally for PSK networks 2398# This avoids use of PMK-R1 push/pull from other APs with FT-PSK networks as 2399# the required information (PSK and other session data) is already locally 2400# available. 2401# 0 = disabled (default) 2402# 1 = enabled 2403#ft_psk_generate_local=0 2404 2405##### Neighbor table ########################################################## 2406# Maximum number of entries kept in AP table (either for neighbor table or for 2407# detecting Overlapping Legacy BSS Condition). The oldest entry will be 2408# removed when adding a new entry that would make the list grow over this 2409# limit. Note! WFA certification for IEEE 802.11g requires that OLBC is 2410# enabled, so this field should not be set to 0 when using IEEE 802.11g. 2411# default: 255 2412#ap_table_max_size=255 2413 2414# Number of seconds of no frames received after which entries may be deleted 2415# from the AP table. Since passive scanning is not usually performed frequently 2416# this should not be set to very small value. In addition, there is no 2417# guarantee that every scan cycle will receive beacon frames from the 2418# neighboring APs. 2419# default: 60 2420#ap_table_expiration_time=3600 2421 2422# Maximum number of stations to track on the operating channel 2423# This can be used to detect dualband capable stations before they have 2424# associated, e.g., to provide guidance on which colocated BSS to use. 2425# Default: 0 (disabled) 2426#track_sta_max_num=100 2427 2428# Maximum age of a station tracking entry in seconds 2429# Default: 180 2430#track_sta_max_age=180 2431 2432# Do not reply to group-addressed Probe Request from a station that was seen on 2433# another radio. 2434# Default: Disabled 2435# 2436# This can be used with enabled track_sta_max_num configuration on another 2437# interface controlled by the same hostapd process to restrict Probe Request 2438# frame handling from replying to group-addressed Probe Request frames from a 2439# station that has been detected to be capable of operating on another band, 2440# e.g., to try to reduce likelihood of the station selecting a 2.4 GHz BSS when 2441# the AP operates both a 2.4 GHz and 5 GHz BSS concurrently. 2442# 2443# Note: Enabling this can cause connectivity issues and increase latency for 2444# discovering the AP. 2445#no_probe_resp_if_seen_on=wlan1 2446 2447# Reject authentication from a station that was seen on another radio. 2448# Default: Disabled 2449# 2450# This can be used with enabled track_sta_max_num configuration on another 2451# interface controlled by the same hostapd process to reject authentication 2452# attempts from a station that has been detected to be capable of operating on 2453# another band, e.g., to try to reduce likelihood of the station selecting a 2454# 2.4 GHz BSS when the AP operates both a 2.4 GHz and 5 GHz BSS concurrently. 2455# 2456# Note: Enabling this can cause connectivity issues and increase latency for 2457# connecting with the AP. 2458#no_auth_if_seen_on=wlan1 2459 2460##### Wi-Fi Protected Setup (WPS) ############################################# 2461 2462# WPS state 2463# 0 = WPS disabled (default) 2464# 1 = WPS enabled, not configured 2465# 2 = WPS enabled, configured 2466#wps_state=2 2467 2468# Whether to manage this interface independently from other WPS interfaces 2469# By default, a single hostapd process applies WPS operations to all configured 2470# interfaces. This parameter can be used to disable that behavior for a subset 2471# of interfaces. If this is set to non-zero for an interface, WPS commands 2472# issued on that interface do not apply to other interfaces and WPS operations 2473# performed on other interfaces do not affect this interface. 2474#wps_independent=0 2475 2476# AP can be configured into a locked state where new WPS Registrar are not 2477# accepted, but previously authorized Registrars (including the internal one) 2478# can continue to add new Enrollees. 2479#ap_setup_locked=1 2480 2481# Universally Unique IDentifier (UUID; see RFC 4122) of the device 2482# This value is used as the UUID for the internal WPS Registrar. If the AP 2483# is also using UPnP, this value should be set to the device's UPnP UUID. 2484# If not configured, UUID will be generated based on the local MAC address. 2485#uuid=12345678-9abc-def0-1234-56789abcdef0 2486 2487# Note: If wpa_psk_file is set, WPS is used to generate random, per-device PSKs 2488# that will be appended to the wpa_psk_file. If wpa_psk_file is not set, the 2489# default PSK (wpa_psk/wpa_passphrase) will be delivered to Enrollees. Use of 2490# per-device PSKs is recommended as the more secure option (i.e., make sure to 2491# set wpa_psk_file when using WPS with WPA-PSK). 2492 2493# When an Enrollee requests access to the network with PIN method, the Enrollee 2494# PIN will need to be entered for the Registrar. PIN request notifications are 2495# sent to hostapd ctrl_iface monitor. In addition, they can be written to a 2496# text file that could be used, e.g., to populate the AP administration UI with 2497# pending PIN requests. If the following variable is set, the PIN requests will 2498# be written to the configured file. 2499#wps_pin_requests=/var/run/hostapd_wps_pin_requests 2500 2501# Device Name 2502# User-friendly description of device; up to 32 octets encoded in UTF-8 2503#device_name=Wireless AP 2504 2505# Manufacturer 2506# The manufacturer of the device (up to 64 ASCII characters) 2507#manufacturer=Company 2508 2509# Model Name 2510# Model of the device (up to 32 ASCII characters) 2511#model_name=WAP 2512 2513# Model Number 2514# Additional device description (up to 32 ASCII characters) 2515#model_number=123 2516 2517# Serial Number 2518# Serial number of the device (up to 32 characters) 2519#serial_number=12345 2520 2521# Primary Device Type 2522# Used format: <categ>-<OUI>-<subcateg> 2523# categ = Category as an integer value 2524# OUI = OUI and type octet as a 4-octet hex-encoded value; 0050F204 for 2525# default WPS OUI 2526# subcateg = OUI-specific Sub Category as an integer value 2527# Examples: 2528# 1-0050F204-1 (Computer / PC) 2529# 1-0050F204-2 (Computer / Server) 2530# 5-0050F204-1 (Storage / NAS) 2531# 6-0050F204-1 (Network Infrastructure / AP) 2532#device_type=6-0050F204-1 2533 2534# OS Version 2535# 4-octet operating system version number (hex string) 2536#os_version=01020300 2537 2538# Config Methods 2539# List of the supported configuration methods 2540# Available methods: usba ethernet label display ext_nfc_token int_nfc_token 2541# nfc_interface push_button keypad virtual_display physical_display 2542# virtual_push_button physical_push_button 2543#config_methods=label virtual_display virtual_push_button keypad 2544 2545# WPS capability discovery workaround for PBC with Windows 7 2546# Windows 7 uses incorrect way of figuring out AP's WPS capabilities by acting 2547# as a Registrar and using M1 from the AP. The config methods attribute in that 2548# message is supposed to indicate only the configuration method supported by 2549# the AP in Enrollee role, i.e., to add an external Registrar. For that case, 2550# PBC shall not be used and as such, the PushButton config method is removed 2551# from M1 by default. If pbc_in_m1=1 is included in the configuration file, 2552# the PushButton config method is left in M1 (if included in config_methods 2553# parameter) to allow Windows 7 to use PBC instead of PIN (e.g., from a label 2554# in the AP). 2555#pbc_in_m1=1 2556 2557# Static access point PIN for initial configuration and adding Registrars 2558# If not set, hostapd will not allow external WPS Registrars to control the 2559# access point. The AP PIN can also be set at runtime with hostapd_cli 2560# wps_ap_pin command. Use of temporary (enabled by user action) and random 2561# AP PIN is much more secure than configuring a static AP PIN here. As such, 2562# use of the ap_pin parameter is not recommended if the AP device has means for 2563# displaying a random PIN. 2564#ap_pin=12345670 2565 2566# Skip building of automatic WPS credential 2567# This can be used to allow the automatically generated Credential attribute to 2568# be replaced with pre-configured Credential(s). 2569#skip_cred_build=1 2570 2571# Additional Credential attribute(s) 2572# This option can be used to add pre-configured Credential attributes into M8 2573# message when acting as a Registrar. If skip_cred_build=1, this data will also 2574# be able to override the Credential attribute that would have otherwise been 2575# automatically generated based on network configuration. This configuration 2576# option points to an external file that much contain the WPS Credential 2577# attribute(s) as binary data. 2578#extra_cred=hostapd.cred 2579 2580# Credential processing 2581# 0 = process received credentials internally (default) 2582# 1 = do not process received credentials; just pass them over ctrl_iface to 2583# external program(s) 2584# 2 = process received credentials internally and pass them over ctrl_iface 2585# to external program(s) 2586# Note: With wps_cred_processing=1, skip_cred_build should be set to 1 and 2587# extra_cred be used to provide the Credential data for Enrollees. 2588# 2589# wps_cred_processing=1 will disabled automatic updates of hostapd.conf file 2590# both for Credential processing and for marking AP Setup Locked based on 2591# validation failures of AP PIN. An external program is responsible on updating 2592# the configuration appropriately in this case. 2593#wps_cred_processing=0 2594 2595# Whether to enable SAE (WPA3-Personal transition mode) automatically for 2596# WPA2-PSK credentials received using WPS. 2597# 0 = only add the explicitly listed WPA2-PSK configuration (default) 2598# 1 = add both the WPA2-PSK and SAE configuration and enable PMF so that the 2599# AP gets configured in WPA3-Personal transition mode (supports both 2600# WPA2-Personal (PSK) and WPA3-Personal (SAE) clients). 2601#wps_cred_add_sae=0 2602 2603# AP Settings Attributes for M7 2604# By default, hostapd generates the AP Settings Attributes for M7 based on the 2605# current configuration. It is possible to override this by providing a file 2606# with pre-configured attributes. This is similar to extra_cred file format, 2607# but the AP Settings attributes are not encapsulated in a Credential 2608# attribute. 2609#ap_settings=hostapd.ap_settings 2610 2611# Multi-AP backhaul BSS config 2612# Used in WPS when multi_ap=2 or 3. Defines "backhaul BSS" credentials. 2613# These are passed in WPS M8 instead of the normal (fronthaul) credentials 2614# if the Enrollee has the Multi-AP subelement set. Backhaul SSID is formatted 2615# like ssid2. The key is set like wpa_psk or wpa_passphrase. 2616#multi_ap_backhaul_ssid="backhaul" 2617#multi_ap_backhaul_wpa_psk=0123456789abcdef0123456789abcdef0123456789abcdef0123456789abcdef 2618#multi_ap_backhaul_wpa_passphrase=secret passphrase 2619 2620# Multi-AP Profile 2621# Indicate the supported Multi-AP profile (default: 2) 2622# 1 = Supports Multi-AP profile 1 as defined in Wi-Fi EasyMesh specification 2623# 2 = Supports Multi-AP profile 2 as defined in Wi-Fi EasyMesh specification 2624#multi_ap_profile=2 2625 2626# Multi-AP client disallow 2627# Used to disallow profile specific backhaul STA association 2628# Bitmap of the disallowed Profile-X profiles 2629# 1 = Profile-1 Backhaul STA association disallowed 2630# 2 = Profile-2 Backhaul STA association disallowed 2631#multi_ap_client_disallow=0 2632 2633# Multi-AP VLAN ID 2634# A valid non-zero VLAN ID will be used to update Default IEEE 802.1Q Setting 2635#multi_ap_vlanid=0 2636 2637# WPS UPnP interface 2638# If set, support for external Registrars is enabled. 2639#upnp_iface=br0 2640 2641# Friendly Name (required for UPnP) 2642# Short description for end use. Should be less than 64 characters. 2643#friendly_name=WPS Access Point 2644 2645# Manufacturer URL (optional for UPnP) 2646#manufacturer_url=http://www.example.com/ 2647 2648# Model Description (recommended for UPnP) 2649# Long description for end user. Should be less than 128 characters. 2650#model_description=Wireless Access Point 2651 2652# Model URL (optional for UPnP) 2653#model_url=http://www.example.com/model/ 2654 2655# Universal Product Code (optional for UPnP) 2656# 12-digit, all-numeric code that identifies the consumer package. 2657#upc=123456789012 2658 2659# WPS RF Bands (a = 5G, b = 2.4G, g = 2.4G, ag = dual band, ad = 60 GHz) 2660# This value should be set according to RF band(s) supported by the AP if 2661# hw_mode is not set. For dual band dual concurrent devices, this needs to be 2662# set to ag to allow both RF bands to be advertized. 2663#wps_rf_bands=ag 2664 2665# NFC password token for WPS 2666# These parameters can be used to configure a fixed NFC password token for the 2667# AP. This can be generated, e.g., with nfc_pw_token from wpa_supplicant. When 2668# these parameters are used, the AP is assumed to be deployed with a NFC tag 2669# that includes the matching NFC password token (e.g., written based on the 2670# NDEF record from nfc_pw_token). 2671# 2672#wps_nfc_dev_pw_id: Device Password ID (16..65535) 2673#wps_nfc_dh_pubkey: Hexdump of DH Public Key 2674#wps_nfc_dh_privkey: Hexdump of DH Private Key 2675#wps_nfc_dev_pw: Hexdump of Device Password 2676 2677# Application Extension attribute for Beacon and Probe Response frames 2678# This parameter can be used to add application extension into WPS IE. The 2679# contents of this parameter starts with 16-octet (32 hexdump characters) of 2680# UUID to identify the specific application and that is followed by the actual 2681# application specific data. 2682#wps_application_ext=<hexdump> 2683 2684##### Wi-Fi Direct (P2P) ###################################################### 2685 2686# Enable P2P Device management 2687#manage_p2p=1 2688 2689# Allow cross connection 2690#allow_cross_connection=1 2691 2692##### Device Provisioning Protocol (DPP) ###################################### 2693 2694# Name for Enrollee's DPP Configuration Request 2695#dpp_name=Test 2696 2697# MUD URL for Enrollee's DPP Configuration Request (optional) 2698#dpp_mud_url=https://example.com/mud 2699 2700# JSON node name of additional data for Enrollee's DPP Configuration Request 2701#dpp_extra_conf_req_name=org.example 2702 2703# JSON node data of additional data for Enrollee's DPP Configuration Request 2704#dpp_extra_conf_req_value="abc":123 2705 2706#dpp_connector 2707#dpp_netaccesskey 2708#dpp_netaccesskey_expiry 2709#dpp_csign 2710#dpp_controller 2711 2712# DPP Relay port number 2713# TCP port to listen to for incoming connections from a Controller. This can be 2714# used to allow Controller initiated exchanges in addition to the 2715# Controller-as-responder cases covered by the dpp_controller parameter. 2716#dpp_relay_port=12345 2717 2718# Configurator Connectivity indication 2719# 0: no Configurator is currently connected (default) 2720# 1: advertise that a Configurator is available 2721#dpp_configurator_connectivity=0 2722 2723# DPP PFS 2724# 0: allow PFS to be used or not used (default) 2725# 1: require PFS to be used (note: not compatible with DPP R1) 2726# 2: do not allow PFS to be used 2727#dpp_pfs=0 2728 2729#### TDLS (IEEE 802.11z-2010) ################################################# 2730 2731# Prohibit use of TDLS in this BSS 2732#tdls_prohibit=1 2733 2734# Prohibit use of TDLS Channel Switching in this BSS 2735#tdls_prohibit_chan_switch=1 2736 2737##### IEEE 802.11v-2011 ####################################################### 2738 2739# Time advertisement 2740# 0 = disabled (default) 2741# 2 = UTC time at which the TSF timer is 0 2742#time_advertisement=2 2743 2744# Local time zone as specified in 8.3 of IEEE Std 1003.1-2004: 2745# stdoffset[dst[offset][,start[/time],end[/time]]] 2746#time_zone=EST5 2747 2748# WNM-Sleep Mode (extended sleep mode for stations) 2749# 0 = disabled (default) 2750# 1 = enabled (allow stations to use WNM-Sleep Mode) 2751#wnm_sleep_mode=1 2752 2753# WNM-Sleep Mode GTK/IGTK workaround 2754# Normally, WNM-Sleep Mode exit with management frame protection negotiated 2755# would result in the current GTK/IGTK getting added into the WNM-Sleep Mode 2756# Response frame. Some station implementations may have a vulnerability that 2757# results in GTK/IGTK reinstallation based on this frame being replayed. This 2758# configuration parameter can be used to disable that behavior and use EAPOL-Key 2759# frames for GTK/IGTK update instead. This would likely be only used with 2760# wpa_disable_eapol_key_retries=1 that enables a workaround for similar issues 2761# with EAPOL-Key. This is related to station side vulnerabilities CVE-2017-13087 2762# and CVE-2017-13088. To enable this AP-side workaround, set the parameter to 1. 2763#wnm_sleep_mode_no_keys=0 2764 2765# BSS Transition Management 2766# 0 = disabled (default) 2767# 1 = enabled 2768#bss_transition=1 2769 2770# Proxy ARP 2771# 0 = disabled (default) 2772# 1 = enabled 2773#proxy_arp=1 2774 2775# IPv6 Neighbor Advertisement multicast-to-unicast conversion 2776# This can be used with Proxy ARP to allow multicast NAs to be forwarded to 2777# associated STAs using link layer unicast delivery. 2778# 0 = disabled (default) 2779# 1 = enabled 2780#na_mcast_to_ucast=0 2781 2782##### IEEE 802.11u-2011 ####################################################### 2783 2784# Enable Interworking service 2785#interworking=1 2786 2787# Access Network Type 2788# 0 = Private network 2789# 1 = Private network with guest access 2790# 2 = Chargeable public network 2791# 3 = Free public network 2792# 4 = Personal device network 2793# 5 = Emergency services only network 2794# 14 = Test or experimental 2795# 15 = Wildcard 2796#access_network_type=0 2797 2798# Whether the network provides connectivity to the Internet 2799# 0 = Unspecified 2800# 1 = Network provides connectivity to the Internet 2801#internet=1 2802 2803# Additional Step Required for Access 2804# Note: This is only used with open network, i.e., ASRA shall ne set to 0 if 2805# RSN is used. 2806#asra=0 2807 2808# Emergency services reachable 2809#esr=0 2810 2811# Unauthenticated emergency service accessible 2812#uesa=0 2813 2814# Venue Info (optional) 2815# The available values are defined in IEEE Std 802.11u-2011, 7.3.1.34. 2816# Example values (group,type): 2817# 0,0 = Unspecified 2818# 1,7 = Convention Center 2819# 1,13 = Coffee Shop 2820# 2,0 = Unspecified Business 2821# 7,1 Private Residence 2822#venue_group=7 2823#venue_type=1 2824 2825# Homogeneous ESS identifier (optional; dot11HESSID) 2826# If set, this shall be identifical to one of the BSSIDs in the homogeneous 2827# ESS and this shall be set to the same value across all BSSs in homogeneous 2828# ESS. 2829#hessid=02:03:04:05:06:07 2830 2831# Roaming Consortium List 2832# Arbitrary number of Roaming Consortium OIs can be configured with each line 2833# adding a new OI to the list. The first three entries are available through 2834# Beacon and Probe Response frames. Any additional entry will be available only 2835# through ANQP queries. Each OI is between 3 and 15 octets and is configured as 2836# a hexstring. 2837#roaming_consortium=021122 2838#roaming_consortium=2233445566 2839 2840# Venue Name information 2841# This parameter can be used to configure one or more Venue Name Duples for 2842# Venue Name ANQP information. Each entry has a two or three character language 2843# code (ISO-639) separated by colon from the venue name string. 2844# Note that venue_group and venue_type have to be set for Venue Name 2845# information to be complete. 2846#venue_name=eng:Example venue 2847#venue_name=fin:Esimerkkipaikka 2848# Alternative format for language:value strings: 2849# (double quoted string, printf-escaped string) 2850#venue_name=P"eng:Example\nvenue" 2851 2852# Venue URL information 2853# This parameter can be used to configure one or more Venue URL Duples to 2854# provide additional information corresponding to Venue Name information. 2855# Each entry has a Venue Number value separated by colon from the Venue URL 2856# string. Venue Number indicates the corresponding venue_name entry (1 = 1st 2857# venue_name, 2 = 2nd venue_name, and so on; 0 = no matching venue_name) 2858#venue_url=1:http://www.example.com/info-eng 2859#venue_url=2:http://www.example.com/info-fin 2860 2861# Network Authentication Type 2862# This parameter indicates what type of network authentication is used in the 2863# network. 2864# format: <network auth type indicator (1-octet hex str)> [redirect URL] 2865# Network Authentication Type Indicator values: 2866# 00 = Acceptance of terms and conditions 2867# 01 = On-line enrollment supported 2868# 02 = http/https redirection 2869# 03 = DNS redirection 2870#network_auth_type=00 2871#network_auth_type=02http://www.example.com/redirect/me/here/ 2872 2873# IP Address Type Availability 2874# format: <1-octet encoded value as hex str> 2875# (ipv4_type & 0x3f) << 2 | (ipv6_type & 0x3) 2876# ipv4_type: 2877# 0 = Address type not available 2878# 1 = Public IPv4 address available 2879# 2 = Port-restricted IPv4 address available 2880# 3 = Single NATed private IPv4 address available 2881# 4 = Double NATed private IPv4 address available 2882# 5 = Port-restricted IPv4 address and single NATed IPv4 address available 2883# 6 = Port-restricted IPv4 address and double NATed IPv4 address available 2884# 7 = Availability of the address type is not known 2885# ipv6_type: 2886# 0 = Address type not available 2887# 1 = Address type available 2888# 2 = Availability of the address type not known 2889#ipaddr_type_availability=14 2890 2891# Domain Name 2892# format: <variable-octet str>[,<variable-octet str>] 2893#domain_name=example.com,another.example.com,yet-another.example.com 2894 2895# 3GPP Cellular Network information 2896# format: <MCC1,MNC1>[;<MCC2,MNC2>][;...] 2897#anqp_3gpp_cell_net=244,91;310,026;234,56 2898 2899# NAI Realm information 2900# One or more realm can be advertised. Each nai_realm line adds a new realm to 2901# the set. These parameters provide information for stations using Interworking 2902# network selection to allow automatic connection to a network based on 2903# credentials. 2904# format: <encoding>,<NAI Realm(s)>[,<EAP Method 1>][,<EAP Method 2>][,...] 2905# encoding: 2906# 0 = Realm formatted in accordance with IETF RFC 4282 2907# 1 = UTF-8 formatted character string that is not formatted in 2908# accordance with IETF RFC 4282 2909# NAI Realm(s): Semi-colon delimited NAI Realm(s) 2910# EAP Method: <EAP Method>[:<[AuthParam1:Val1]>][<[AuthParam2:Val2]>][...] 2911# EAP Method types, see: 2912# http://www.iana.org/assignments/eap-numbers/eap-numbers.xhtml#eap-numbers-4 2913# AuthParam (Table 8-188 in IEEE Std 802.11-2012): 2914# ID 2 = Non-EAP Inner Authentication Type 2915# 1 = PAP, 2 = CHAP, 3 = MSCHAP, 4 = MSCHAPV2 2916# ID 3 = Inner authentication EAP Method Type 2917# ID 5 = Credential Type 2918# 1 = SIM, 2 = USIM, 3 = NFC Secure Element, 4 = Hardware Token, 2919# 5 = Softoken, 6 = Certificate, 7 = username/password, 9 = Anonymous, 2920# 10 = Vendor Specific 2921#nai_realm=0,example.com;example.net 2922# EAP methods EAP-TLS with certificate and EAP-TTLS/MSCHAPv2 with 2923# username/password 2924#nai_realm=0,example.org,13[5:6],21[2:4][5:7] 2925 2926# Arbitrary ANQP-element configuration 2927# Additional ANQP-elements with arbitrary values can be defined by specifying 2928# their contents in raw format as a hexdump of the payload. Note that these 2929# values will override ANQP-element contents that may have been specified in the 2930# more higher layer configuration parameters listed above. 2931# format: anqp_elem=<InfoID>:<hexdump of payload> 2932# For example, AP Geospatial Location ANQP-element with unknown location: 2933#anqp_elem=265:0000 2934# For example, AP Civic Location ANQP-element with unknown location: 2935#anqp_elem=266:000000 2936 2937# GAS Address 3 behavior 2938# 0 = P2P specification (Address3 = AP BSSID) workaround enabled by default 2939# based on GAS request Address3 2940# 1 = IEEE 802.11 standard compliant regardless of GAS request Address3 2941# 2 = Force non-compliant behavior (Address3 = AP BSSID for all cases) 2942#gas_address3=0 2943 2944# QoS Map Set configuration 2945# 2946# Comma delimited QoS Map Set in decimal values 2947# (see IEEE Std 802.11-2012, 8.4.2.97) 2948# 2949# format: 2950# [<DSCP Exceptions[DSCP,UP]>,]<UP 0 range[low,high]>,...<UP 7 range[low,high]> 2951# 2952# There can be up to 21 optional DSCP Exceptions which are pairs of DSCP Value 2953# (0..63 or 255) and User Priority (0..7). This is followed by eight DSCP Range 2954# descriptions with DSCP Low Value and DSCP High Value pairs (0..63 or 255) for 2955# each UP starting from 0. If both low and high value are set to 255, the 2956# corresponding UP is not used. 2957# 2958# default: not set 2959#qos_map_set=53,2,22,6,8,15,0,7,255,255,16,31,32,39,255,255,40,47,255,255 2960 2961##### Hotspot 2.0 ############################################################# 2962 2963# Enable Hotspot 2.0 support 2964#hs20=1 2965 2966# Disable Downstream Group-Addressed Forwarding (DGAF) 2967# This can be used to configure a network where no group-addressed frames are 2968# allowed. The AP will not forward any group-address frames to the stations and 2969# random GTKs are issued for each station to prevent associated stations from 2970# forging such frames to other stations in the BSS. 2971#disable_dgaf=1 2972 2973# OSU Server-Only Authenticated L2 Encryption Network 2974#osen=1 2975 2976# ANQP Domain ID (0..65535) 2977# An identifier for a set of APs in an ESS that share the same common ANQP 2978# information. 0 = Some of the ANQP information is unique to this AP (default). 2979#anqp_domain_id=1234 2980 2981# Deauthentication request timeout 2982# If the RADIUS server indicates that the station is not allowed to connect to 2983# the BSS/ESS, the AP can allow the station some time to download a 2984# notification page (URL included in the message). This parameter sets that 2985# timeout in seconds. If the RADIUS server provides no URL, this value is 2986# reduced to two seconds with an additional trigger for immediate 2987# deauthentication when the STA acknowledges reception of the deauthentication 2988# imminent indication. Note that setting this value to 0 will prevent delivery 2989# of the notification to the STA, so a value of at least 1 should be used here 2990# for normal use cases. 2991#hs20_deauth_req_timeout=60 2992 2993# Operator Friendly Name 2994# This parameter can be used to configure one or more Operator Friendly Name 2995# Duples. Each entry has a two or three character language code (ISO-639) 2996# separated by colon from the operator friendly name string. 2997#hs20_oper_friendly_name=eng:Example operator 2998#hs20_oper_friendly_name=fin:Esimerkkioperaattori 2999 3000# Connection Capability 3001# This can be used to advertise what type of IP traffic can be sent through the 3002# hotspot (e.g., due to firewall allowing/blocking protocols/ports). 3003# format: <IP Protocol>:<Port Number>:<Status> 3004# IP Protocol: 1 = ICMP, 6 = TCP, 17 = UDP 3005# Port Number: 0..65535 3006# Status: 0 = Closed, 1 = Open, 2 = Unknown 3007# Each hs20_conn_capab line is added to the list of advertised tuples. 3008#hs20_conn_capab=1:0:2 3009#hs20_conn_capab=6:22:1 3010#hs20_conn_capab=17:5060:0 3011 3012# WAN Metrics 3013# format: <WAN Info>:<DL Speed>:<UL Speed>:<DL Load>:<UL Load>:<LMD> 3014# WAN Info: B0-B1: Link Status, B2: Symmetric Link, B3: At Capabity 3015# (encoded as two hex digits) 3016# Link Status: 1 = Link up, 2 = Link down, 3 = Link in test state 3017# Downlink Speed: Estimate of WAN backhaul link current downlink speed in kbps; 3018# 1..4294967295; 0 = unknown 3019# Uplink Speed: Estimate of WAN backhaul link current uplink speed in kbps 3020# 1..4294967295; 0 = unknown 3021# Downlink Load: Current load of downlink WAN connection (scaled to 255 = 100%) 3022# Uplink Load: Current load of uplink WAN connection (scaled to 255 = 100%) 3023# Load Measurement Duration: Duration for measuring downlink/uplink load in 3024# tenths of a second (1..65535); 0 if load cannot be determined 3025#hs20_wan_metrics=01:8000:1000:80:240:3000 3026 3027# Operating Class Indication 3028# List of operating classes the BSSes in this ESS use. The Global operating 3029# classes in Table E-4 of IEEE Std 802.11-2012 Annex E define the values that 3030# can be used in this. 3031# format: hexdump of operating class octets 3032# for example, operating classes 81 (2.4 GHz channels 1-13) and 115 (5 GHz 3033# channels 36-48): 3034#hs20_operating_class=5173 3035 3036# Terms and Conditions information 3037# 3038# hs20_t_c_filename contains the Terms and Conditions filename that the AP 3039# indicates in RADIUS Access-Request messages. 3040#hs20_t_c_filename=terms-and-conditions 3041# 3042# hs20_t_c_timestamp contains the Terms and Conditions timestamp that the AP 3043# indicates in RADIUS Access-Request messages. Usually, this contains the number 3044# of seconds since January 1, 1970 00:00 UTC showing the time when the file was 3045# last modified. 3046#hs20_t_c_timestamp=1234567 3047# 3048# hs20_t_c_server_url contains a template for the Terms and Conditions server 3049# URL. This template is used to generate the URL for a STA that needs to 3050# acknowledge Terms and Conditions. Unlike the other hs20_t_c_* parameters, this 3051# parameter is used on the authentication server, not the AP. 3052# Macros: 3053# @1@ = MAC address of the STA (colon separated hex octets) 3054#hs20_t_c_server_url=https://example.com/t_and_c?addr=@1@&ap=123 3055 3056# OSU and Operator icons 3057# <Icon Width>:<Icon Height>:<Language code>:<Icon Type>:<Name>:<file path> 3058#hs20_icon=32:32:eng:image/png:icon32:/tmp/icon32.png 3059#hs20_icon=64:64:eng:image/png:icon64:/tmp/icon64.png 3060 3061# OSU SSID (see ssid2 for format description) 3062# This is the SSID used for all OSU connections to all the listed OSU Providers. 3063#osu_ssid="example" 3064 3065# OSU Providers 3066# One or more sets of following parameter. Each OSU provider is started by the 3067# mandatory osu_server_uri item. The other parameters add information for the 3068# last added OSU provider. osu_nai specifies the OSU_NAI value for OSEN 3069# authentication when using a standalone OSU BSS. osu_nai2 specifies the OSU_NAI 3070# value for OSEN authentication when using a shared BSS (Single SSID) for OSU. 3071# 3072#osu_server_uri=https://example.com/osu/ 3073#osu_friendly_name=eng:Example operator 3074#osu_friendly_name=fin:Esimerkkipalveluntarjoaja 3075#osu_nai=anonymous@example.com 3076#osu_nai2=anonymous@example.com 3077#osu_method_list=1 0 3078#osu_icon=icon32 3079#osu_icon=icon64 3080#osu_service_desc=eng:Example services 3081#osu_service_desc=fin:Esimerkkipalveluja 3082# 3083#osu_server_uri=... 3084 3085# Operator Icons 3086# Operator icons are specified using references to the hs20_icon entries 3087# (Name subfield). This information, if present, is advertsised in the 3088# Operator Icon Metadata ANQO-element. 3089#operator_icon=icon32 3090#operator_icon=icon64 3091 3092##### Multiband Operation (MBO) ############################################### 3093# 3094# MBO enabled 3095# 0 = disabled (default) 3096# 1 = enabled 3097#mbo=1 3098# 3099# Cellular data connection preference 3100# 0 = Excluded - AP does not want STA to use the cellular data connection 3101# 1 = AP prefers the STA not to use cellular data connection 3102# 255 = AP prefers the STA to use cellular data connection 3103#mbo_cell_data_conn_pref=1 3104 3105##### Optimized Connectivity Experience (OCE) ################################# 3106# 3107# Enable OCE specific features (bitmap) 3108# BIT(0) - Reserved 3109# Set BIT(1) (= 2) to enable OCE in STA-CFON mode 3110# Set BIT(2) (= 4) to enable OCE in AP mode 3111# Default is 0 = OCE disabled 3112#oce=0 3113 3114# RSSI-based association rejection 3115# 3116# Reject STA association if RSSI is below given threshold (in dBm) 3117# Allowed range: -60 to -90 dBm; default = 0 (rejection disabled) 3118# Note: This rejection happens based on a signal strength detected while 3119# receiving a single frame and as such, there is significant risk of the value 3120# not being accurate and this resulting in valid stations being rejected. As 3121# such, this functionality is not recommended to be used for purposes other than 3122# testing. 3123#rssi_reject_assoc_rssi=-75 3124# 3125# Association retry delay in seconds allowed by the STA if RSSI has not met the 3126# threshold (range: 0..255, default=30). 3127#rssi_reject_assoc_timeout=30 3128 3129# Ignore Probe Request frames if RSSI is below given threshold (in dBm) 3130# Allowed range: -60 to -90 dBm; default = 0 (rejection disabled) 3131#rssi_ignore_probe_request=-75 3132 3133##### Fast Session Transfer (FST) support ##################################### 3134# 3135# The options in this section are only available when the build configuration 3136# option CONFIG_FST is set while compiling hostapd. They allow this interface 3137# to be a part of FST setup. 3138# 3139# FST is the transfer of a session from a channel to another channel, in the 3140# same or different frequency bands. 3141# 3142# For detals, see IEEE Std 802.11ad-2012. 3143 3144# Identifier of an FST Group the interface belongs to. 3145#fst_group_id=bond0 3146 3147# Interface priority within the FST Group. 3148# Announcing a higher priority for an interface means declaring it more 3149# preferable for FST switch. 3150# fst_priority is in 1..255 range with 1 being the lowest priority. 3151#fst_priority=100 3152 3153# Default LLT value for this interface in milliseconds. The value used in case 3154# no value provided during session setup. Default is 50 ms. 3155# fst_llt is in 1..4294967 range (due to spec limitation, see 10.32.2.2 3156# Transitioning between states). 3157#fst_llt=100 3158 3159##### Radio measurements / location ########################################### 3160 3161# The content of a LCI measurement subelement 3162#lci=<Hexdump of binary data of the LCI report> 3163 3164# The content of a location civic measurement subelement 3165#civic=<Hexdump of binary data of the location civic report> 3166 3167# Enable neighbor report via radio measurements 3168#rrm_neighbor_report=1 3169 3170# Enable link measurement report via radio measurements 3171#rrm_link_measurement_report=1 3172 3173# Enable beacon report via radio measurements 3174#rrm_beacon_report=1 3175 3176# Publish fine timing measurement (FTM) responder functionality 3177# This parameter only controls publishing via Extended Capabilities element. 3178# Actual functionality is managed outside hostapd. 3179#ftm_responder=0 3180 3181# Publish fine timing measurement (FTM) initiator functionality 3182# This parameter only controls publishing via Extended Capabilities element. 3183# Actual functionality is managed outside hostapd. 3184#ftm_initiator=0 3185# 3186# Stationary AP config indicates that the AP doesn't move hence location data 3187# can be considered as always up to date. If configured, LCI data will be sent 3188# as a radio measurement even if the request doesn't contain a max age element 3189# that allows sending of such data. Default: 0. 3190#stationary_ap=0 3191 3192# Enable reduced neighbor reporting (RNR) 3193#rnr=0 3194 3195##### Airtime policy configuration ########################################### 3196 3197# Set the airtime policy operating mode: 3198# 0 = disabled (default) 3199# 1 = static config 3200# 2 = per-BSS dynamic config 3201# 3 = per-BSS limit mode 3202#airtime_mode=0 3203 3204# Interval (in milliseconds) to poll the kernel for updated station activity in 3205# dynamic and limit modes 3206#airtime_update_interval=200 3207 3208# Static configuration of station weights (when airtime_mode=1). Kernel default 3209# weight is 256; set higher for larger airtime share, lower for smaller share. 3210# Each entry is a MAC address followed by a weight. 3211#airtime_sta_weight=02:01:02:03:04:05 256 3212#airtime_sta_weight=02:01:02:03:04:06 512 3213 3214# Per-BSS airtime weight. In multi-BSS mode, set for each BSS and hostapd will 3215# configure station weights to enforce the correct ratio between BSS weights 3216# depending on the number of active stations. The *ratios* between different 3217# BSSes is what's important, not the absolute numbers. 3218# Must be set for all BSSes if airtime_mode=2 or 3, has no effect otherwise. 3219#airtime_bss_weight=1 3220 3221# Whether the current BSS should be limited (when airtime_mode=3). 3222# 3223# If set, the BSS weight ratio will be applied in the case where the current BSS 3224# would exceed the share defined by the BSS weight ratio. E.g., if two BSSes are 3225# set to the same weights, and one is set to limited, the limited BSS will get 3226# no more than half the available airtime, but if the non-limited BSS has more 3227# stations active, that *will* be allowed to exceed its half of the available 3228# airtime. 3229#airtime_bss_limit=1 3230 3231##### EDMG support ############################################################ 3232# 3233# Enable EDMG capability for AP mode in the 60 GHz band. Default value is false. 3234# To configure channel bonding for an EDMG AP use edmg_channel below. 3235# If enable_edmg is set and edmg_channel is not set, EDMG CB1 will be 3236# configured. 3237#enable_edmg=1 3238# 3239# Configure channel bonding for AP mode in the 60 GHz band. 3240# This parameter is relevant only if enable_edmg is set. 3241# Default value is 0 (no channel bonding). 3242#edmg_channel=9 3243 3244##### TESTING OPTIONS ######################################################### 3245# 3246# The options in this section are only available when the build configuration 3247# option CONFIG_TESTING_OPTIONS is set while compiling hostapd. They allow 3248# testing some scenarios that are otherwise difficult to reproduce. 3249# 3250# Ignore probe requests sent to hostapd with the given probability, must be a 3251# floating point number in the range [0, 1). 3252#ignore_probe_probability=0.0 3253# 3254# Ignore authentication frames with the given probability 3255#ignore_auth_probability=0.0 3256# 3257# Ignore association requests with the given probability 3258#ignore_assoc_probability=0.0 3259# 3260# Ignore reassociation requests with the given probability 3261#ignore_reassoc_probability=0.0 3262# 3263# Corrupt Key MIC in GTK rekey EAPOL-Key frames with the given probability 3264#corrupt_gtk_rekey_mic_probability=0.0 3265# 3266# Include only ECSA IE without CSA IE where possible 3267# (channel switch operating class is needed) 3268#ecsa_ie_only=0 3269# 3270# Delay EAPOL-Key messages 1/4 and 3/4 by not sending the frame until the last 3271# attempt (wpa_pairwise_update_count). This will trigger a timeout on all 3272# previous attempts and thus delays the frame. (testing only) 3273#delay_eapol_tx=0 3274# 3275# Additional elements for Probe Response frames. 3276# This parameter can be used to add additional element(s) to the end of the 3277# Probe Response frames. The format for these element(s) is a hexdump of the 3278# raw information elements (id+len+payload for one or more elements). 3279# These elements are added after the 'vendor_elements'. 3280#presp_elements= 3281 3282##### Multiple BSSID support ################################################## 3283# 3284# Above configuration is using the default interface (wlan#, or multi-SSID VLAN 3285# interfaces). Other BSSIDs can be added by using separator 'bss' with 3286# default interface name to be allocated for the data packets of the new BSS. 3287# 3288# hostapd will generate BSSID mask based on the BSSIDs that are 3289# configured. hostapd will verify that dev_addr & MASK == dev_addr. If this is 3290# not the case, the MAC address of the radio must be changed before starting 3291# hostapd (ifconfig wlan0 hw ether <MAC addr>). If a BSSID is configured for 3292# every secondary BSS, this limitation is not applied at hostapd and other 3293# masks may be used if the driver supports them (e.g., swap the locally 3294# administered bit) 3295# 3296# BSSIDs are assigned in order to each BSS, unless an explicit BSSID is 3297# specified using the 'bssid' parameter. 3298# If an explicit BSSID is specified, it must be chosen such that it: 3299# - results in a valid MASK that covers it and the dev_addr 3300# - is not the same as the MAC address of the radio 3301# - is not the same as any other explicitly specified BSSID 3302# 3303# Alternatively, the 'use_driver_iface_addr' parameter can be used to request 3304# hostapd to use the driver auto-generated interface address (e.g., to use the 3305# exact MAC addresses allocated to the device). 3306# 3307# Not all drivers support multiple BSSes. The exact mechanism for determining 3308# the driver capabilities is driver specific. With the current (i.e., a recent 3309# kernel) drivers using nl80211, this information can be checked with "iw list" 3310# (search for "valid interface combinations"). 3311# 3312# Please note that hostapd uses some of the values configured for the first BSS 3313# as the defaults for the following BSSes. However, it is recommended that all 3314# BSSes include explicit configuration of all relevant configuration items. 3315# 3316#bss=wlan0_0 3317#ssid=test2 3318# most of the above items can be used here (apart from radio interface specific 3319# items, like channel) 3320 3321#bss=wlan0_1 3322#bssid=00:13:10:95:fe:0b 3323# ... 3324# 3325# Multiple BSSID Advertisement in IEEE 802.11ax 3326# IEEE Std 802.11ax-2021 added a feature where instead of multiple interfaces 3327# on a common radio transmitting individual Beacon frames, those interfaces can 3328# form a set with a common Beacon frame transmitted for all. The interface 3329# which is brought up first is called the transmitting profile of the MBSSID 3330# set which transmits the Beacon frames. The remaining interfaces are called 3331# the non-transmitting profiles and these are advertised inside the Multiple 3332# BSSID element in the Beacon and Probe Response frames from the first 3333# interface. 3334# 3335# The transmitting interface is visible to all stations in the vicinity, however 3336# the stations that do not support parsing of the Multiple BSSID element will 3337# not be able to connect to the non-transmitting interfaces. 3338# 3339# Enhanced Multiple BSSID Advertisements (EMA) 3340# When enabled, the non-transmitting interfaces are split into multiple 3341# Beacon frames. The number of Beacon frames required to cover all the 3342# non-transmitting profiles is called the profile periodicity. 3343# 3344# Refer to IEEE Std 802.11-2020 for details regarding the procedure and 3345# required MAC address assignment. 3346# 3347# Following configuration is per radio. 3348# 0 = Disabled (default) 3349# 1 = Multiple BSSID advertisement enabled. 3350# 2 = Enhanced multiple BSSID advertisement enabled. 3351#mbssid=0 3352# 3353# The transmitting interface should be added with the 'interface' option while 3354# the non-transmitting interfaces should be added using the 'bss' option. 3355# Security configuration should be added separately per interface, if required. 3356# 3357# Example: 3358#mbssid=2 3359#interface=wlan2 3360#ctrl_interface=/var/run/hostapd 3361#wpa_passphrase=0123456789 3362#ieee80211w=2 3363#sae_pwe=1 3364#auth_algs=1 3365#wpa=2 3366#wpa_pairwise=CCMP 3367#ssid=<SSID-0> 3368#bridge=br-lan 3369#wpa_key_mgmt=SAE 3370#bssid=00:03:7f:12:84:84 3371# 3372#bss=wlan2-1 3373#ctrl_interface=/var/run/hostapd 3374#wpa_passphrase=0123456789 3375#ieee80211w=2 3376#sae_pwe=1 3377#auth_algs=1 3378#wpa=2 3379#wpa_pairwise=CCMP 3380#ssid=<SSID-1> 3381#bridge=br-lan 3382#wpa_key_mgmt=SAE 3383#bssid=00:03:7f:12:84:85 3384