----- Original Message ----- > From: "todd rme" <[email protected]> > 1. Implement one item on the TODO list. I was going to propose > implement WPS, but I see this is already on the todo list.
It doesn't matter whether it's on the todo list or not. > 2. Implement wifi-direct/p2p. This allows two wireless devices to > connect directly to each other, securely sending files without going > over a WIFI network. We have ad-hoc networking and you can use just any protocol over that. Where's the documentation for this protocol, what's its purpose and why is it specific to wifi while other protocols work over any link? > Android now supports this, and the iPhone has > some implementation although it is compatible with normal ones. So far I don't see whether and why it is related to the link-layer protocol. > Further, it is a prerequisite for the new miracast standard, which > allows wireless streaming of videos between supported devices. Same as above. > Android now supports it for sending video, and it looks like TVs will > start implementing it for receiving video in the near future. People > have been working on this in wpa_supplicant, but I don't know its > status so this project may require some hacking there too. > > 3. Implement auto-detection of connection status. This is already supported roughly in a way you are describing it below. > This would be a > check that is carried out after connecting to a wired or wireless > network. It would check whether you are actually able to browse the > internet. The most likely approach would be to have website hosted > on > one or more free-software servers that would contain a particular > code > in its HTML, and networkmanager would check for that code. If it > gets > an error, it would send a signal of some sort to the front-end that > it > cannot connect. If it is instead returned a different web page, it > will assume you are at an airport, hotel, or other such public space > that requires that you do something on a web page before it will let > you connect, and it will signal the front-end of this so the > front-end > can open a browser or display the page in some other way. Front-ends > should also be able to signal the backend to re-check the status, and > it should probably automatically re-check at some interval. I know > windows 7 has a built-in connectivity test, and android has the > ability to automatically check whether one of these login sites is in > the way. I don't think any of the above features are appealing enough to attract a mentor to devote his time to it. Someone with different opinion? Pavel _______________________________________________ networkmanager-list mailing list [email protected] https://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/networkmanager-list
