The extended rates element is only needed if there are more than 8 rates
to report - which is normal for G operation, but not necessary. It only
exists because a particularly popular old 11b MAC codebase crashed when
the normal rate element had more than 8 elements, and this hurt
interoperability with early G AP implementations - so the spec was
changed.

Simon

-----Original Message-----
From: Michael Wu [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Saturday, September 16, 2006 10:05 AM
To: mabbas
Cc: Simon Barber; netdev@vger.kernel.org
Subject: Re: [d80211] connecting to B-mode AP

On Friday 15 September 2006 19:50, mabbas wrote:
> I see your point here, although some one will file some bugs against 
> the driver about showing G while associating with B-mode AP. By the 
> way how can you figure if the AP is B/G other than the rates?
>
IIRC, only 802.11g APs will send the extended rate information element,
though I don't know if forcing 802.11b on the AP will cause it to stop
sending that. 
(but it might still be okay if it doesn't - it's still a 802.11g AP,
with the faster speeds turned off..)

-Michael Wu
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