On 29-3-2017 9:34, Johannes Berg wrote:
> On Fri, 2017-03-24 at 21:32 -0400, Dennis New wrote:
>> Ever since I upgraded to the 4.10 kernels (I don't think this
>> behavior existed in the 4.8 series), after I startup my laptop
>> (either from cold boot, or from standby), my wlan0 interface keeps
>> deauthenticating
>
>> ...
>> 19:23:29 kernel: wlan0: authenticate with 00:11:22:33:44:55
>> 19:23:29 kernel: ------------[ cut here ]------------
>> 19:23:29 kernel: WARNING: CPU: 0 PID: 18925 at
>> net/mac80211/mlme.c:287 ieee80211_determine_chantype+0x12e/0x380
284 while (!cfg80211_chandef_usable(sdata->local->hw.wiphy, chandef,
285 tracking ? 0 :
286 IEEE80211_CHAN_DISABLED)) {
287 if (WARN_ON(chandef->width == NL80211_CHAN_WIDTH_20_NOHT)) {
288 ret = IEEE80211_STA_DISABLE_HT |
289 IEEE80211_STA_DISABLE_VHT;
290 break;
291 }
> This is already indicating a severe problem. I don't know how you end
> up in this situation with b43, since that doesn't have any regulatory
> magic afaict.
The only way this WARN_ON can kick in is below so may be interesting to
log the three variables checked in 'if' statement.
161 chandef->chan = channel;
162 chandef->width = NL80211_CHAN_WIDTH_20_NOHT;
163 chandef->center_freq1 = channel->center_freq;
164 chandef->center_freq2 = 0;
165
166 if (!ht_cap || !ht_oper || !sta_ht_cap.ht_supported) {
167 ret = IEEE80211_STA_DISABLE_HT | IEEE80211_STA_DISABLE_VHT;
168 goto out;
169 }
170
171 chandef->width = NL80211_CHAN_WIDTH_20;
>> 19:23:29 kernel: wlan0: associated
>>
>> 19:24:29 kernel: wlan0: deauthenticating from 00:11:22:33:44:55 by
>> local choice (Reason: 3=DEAUTH_LEAVING)
>>
>
> I'm convinced that this comes from reg_check_channels().
>
> The above WARN_ON() already told you that the channel was considered
> invalid.
>
> Do you know what channel your AP is on? Perhaps show the output of "iw
> wlan0 scan dump" while it's connected (you have 60 seconds :P)
>
> Can you please show the output of "iw list" and "iw phy0 channels"?
Could it be a radar channel and it's waiting for CAC timeout or whatever
the term is ;-) ?
Regards,
Arend