Widy/Access Point
From charlesreid1
Widy as an Access Point
Step by step:
1. Get access point on and broadcasting
2. Connect to access point from another computer
3. DHCP server on Widy, successfully assigning IP addresses
4. Everyone getting on the wifi network can get a DHCP lease
5. Reproduce from scratch. Luci interface, clear out, start from square one, have DHCP config file in a repo somewhere, widy repo, multi clients communicate via network
Luci interface, clear out, start from square one, have DHCP config file in a repo somewhere (widy repo), multiple clients communicating via the network.
Basic Setup
Start by plugging in the Widy router to the computer via the Ethernet cable. Your computer should be assigned an IP address like 192.168.1.109. Now the Widy router and its web interface (Luci) should be available by typing 192.168.1.1 into your browser.
The first page you'll see is the login page. Start by logging in with your root username and password.
Set Up the AP Interface
Now click Network > Interfaces. You should see this page:
Create a new interface:
Call it wrtwifi (or whatever you want) - this is the name the connection will be given in Unix, not the AP's BSSID that will be broadcast. Associate it with your wireless network interface wlan0 (you may need to add a custom interface if you don't have a wlan0 interface listed).
The next step is to set up the DHCP settings, and govern how IP addresses will be handed out. When configuring the wireless access point, you will set the IP address of the access point, as well as the subnet mask and other details. You should probably stick to 192.168.{0,1}.X and 10.{0,1}.{0,1}.X as your IP address namespaces - if your network is large enough to need subnets, it probably carries enough traffic to need a beefier router.
Now save the changes. Those will be applied and the page will be updated LIVE:
Double-Check Associated Clients
Now it's time to double-check that our wireless network can, in fact, receive new clients. Click Network > Wifi, then check the "Associated Stations" list - this is a list of clients connected to the wireless access point.
Note that the associated station that is listed is just the direct ethernet connection that we have - nothing to get excited about.
Next, we connect to the freshly-created wireless network, either from the same computer, or from a different computer. Here, I connect to the OpenWrts wireless network, served up by my Widy AP:
And finally, the payoff - we can see the newly-connected station.
Problems (Solved)
I can successfully ping machine B from machine A, when the two machines are connected to the Widy wireless network.
I can't SSH into machine B from machine A, or vice versa.
However, I can SSH from machine B into the Widy, and from machine A into the Widy.
Debug notes: Widy/Access Point/SSH
Finished. Debugged. dpkg-reconfigure openssh-server to the rescue!
Other Notes
Test Connection to Access Point
To troubleshoot the process of connecting clients to the access point (for example, if you are connecting but not getting IP addresses), or at least monitor it to make sure it goes as planned, is to connect to the Widy via ethernet, and run tcpdump to monitor the wireless network interface. Then, connect to the OpenWrt wireless network with another computer, and watch the packet traffic that passes through the wireless network interface. You should see some DHCP requests and BOOTP requests, which is the new computer that is connecting to the wireless network getting an IP address.
$ tcpdump -i wlan0 09:10:46.662109 00:21:6a:07:17:14 (oui Unknown) > Broadcast Null Unnumbered, xid, Flags [Response], length 6: 01 00 09:10:46.663583 EAPOL key (3) v2, len 95 09:10:46.672735 EAPOL key (3) v1, len 117 09:10:46.674190 EAPOL key (3) v2, len 151 09:10:46.677946 EAPOL key (3) v1, len 95 09:10:46.699734 IP6 :: > ff02::16: HBH ICMP6, multicast listener report v2, 1 group record(s), length 28 09:10:46.699917 IP6 :: > ff02::16: HBH ICMP6, multicast listener report v2, 1 group record(s), length 28 09:10:46.745280 IP 0.0.0.0.bootpc > 255.255.255.255.bootps: BOOTP/DHCP, Request from 00:21:6a:07:17:14 (oui Unknown), length 300 09:10:46.745457 IP 0.0.0.0.bootpc > 255.255.255.255.bootps: BOOTP/DHCP, Request from 00:21:6a:07:17:14 (oui Unknown), length 300 09:10:46.748579 IP 10.0.0.1.bootps > morpheus.lan.bootpc: BOOTP/DHCP, Reply, length 307 09:10:46.766606 IP morpheus.lan > 224.0.0.22: igmp v3 report, 1 group record(s) 09:10:46.766770 IP morpheus.lan > 224.0.0.22: igmp v3 report, 1 group record(s) 09:10:47.019375 IP morpheus.lan.mdns > 224.0.0.251.mdns: 0 [4q] [7n] ANY (QM)? morpheus._udisks-ssh._tcp.local. ANY (QM)? morpheus.local. ANY (QM)? 228.0.0.10.in-addr.arpa. ANY (QM)? morpheus [00:21:6a:07:17:14]._workstation._tcp.local. (262) 09:10:47.019499 IP morpheus.lan.mdns > 224.0.0.251.mdns: 0 [4q] [7n] ANY (QM)? morpheus._udisks-ssh._tcp.local. ANY (QM)? morpheus.local. ANY (QM)? 228.0.0.10.in-addr.arpa. ANY (QM)? morpheus [00:21:6a:07:17:14]._workstation._tcp.local. (262) 09:10:47.060955 IP morpheus.lan.mdns > 224.0.0.251.mdns: 0*- [0q] 4/0/0 PTR _udisks-ssh._tcp.local., PTR morpheus [00:21:6a:07:17:14]._workstation._tcp.local., PTR _workstation._tcp.local., PTR morpheus._udisks-ssh._tcp.local. (164) 09:10:47.061073 IP morpheus.lan.mdns > 224.0.0.251.mdns: 0*- [0q] 4/0/0 PTR _udisks-ssh._tcp.local., PTR morpheus [00:21:6a:07:17:14]._workstation._tcp.local., PTR _workstation._tcp.local., PTR morpheus._udisks-ssh._tcp.local. (164)
Check that you have gotten an IP address by running ifconfig from the connecting client.
Related
| Widy running OpenWRT on a router to make it into a wearable wireless ear
The Widy Device: Widy installation: Widy/Installing · Widy/Redux Widy Wireless Internet Gateway: Widy/Wireless Gateway Widy Ethernet Internet Gateway: Widy/Ethernet Gateway Widy post-installation: Widy/Post-Install Widy configuration: Widy/Configuration
Using tools on the Widy: Widy/Toolbox Using tcpdump on Widy: Widy/Tcpdump Using aircrack on Widy: Widy/Aircrack Python/Scapy on Widy: Widy/Scapy
Scripting the slider button on the Widy: Widy/Configuration#Slider Button Configuration Using widy as a wireless access point: Widy/Access_Point Debugging some SSH problems: Widy/Access_Point/SSH Bridging widy wireless and ethernet connections: Widy/Bridging Widy startup services: Widy/Startup Services Create a hard-wired serial/TTL connection: Widy/Serial
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