Hi Stefan,
Many thanks for that explanation! It makes sense. You're right, some
low level code is really difficult to debug!
Kind regards,
Tom
On 07/02/17 20:41, Stefan Sperling wrote:
> On Tue, Feb 07, 2017 at 08:16:10PM +, Tom Murphy wrote:
>> Hi Stefan,
>>
>> I upgraded my kernel to
On Tue, Feb 07, 2017 at 08:16:10PM +, Tom Murphy wrote:
> Hi Stefan,
>
> I upgraded my kernel to 24 January 2017 and every once in a while I get:
>
> athn0: device timeout
>
> I've gotten 3 of these in 12 days. Running:
>
> ifconfig athn0 down; sh /etc/netstart athn0
>
> fixes
Hi Stefan,
I upgraded my kernel to 24 January 2017 and every once in a while I get:
athn0: device timeout
I've gotten 3 of these in 12 days. Running:
ifconfig athn0 down; sh /etc/netstart athn0
fixes this, but not had this on mode 11g. Could it be something in the 11n
hostap code?
On Tue, Jan 24, 2017 at 09:00:26PM +, Tom Murphy wrote:
> Hi Stefan,
>
> I've done some more testing. I managed to get 802.11n working in
> hostap mode for a while but then it crashed (not a kernel panic but the
> driver dropped into ddb mode). Not sure if these help:
>
> ddb{0}> trace
>
On 15/01/17 20:13, Stefan Sperling wrote:
> On Sun, Jan 15, 2017 at 01:53:41PM +, Tom Murphy wrote:
>> Hi,
>>
>> I was wondering if OpenBSD had a way to do mixed b/g/n mode with hostap?
>> Recently 802.11n support was added for athn(4). I have 4 802.11n devices,
>> but 1 device which only
On Sun, Jan 15, 2017 at 01:53:41PM +, Tom Murphy wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I was wondering if OpenBSD had a way to do mixed b/g/n mode with hostap?
> Recently 802.11n support was added for athn(4). I have 4 802.11n devices,
> but 1 device which only does 802.11g. If I use 'mode 11n' or even -mode,
>
Hi,
I was wondering if OpenBSD had a way to do mixed b/g/n mode with hostap?
Recently 802.11n support was added for athn(4). I have 4 802.11n devices,
but 1 device which only does 802.11g. If I use 'mode 11n' or even -mode,
the hostap is in 802.11n-only mode and the 802.11g device cannot
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