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6 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Jouni Malinen
48cfb52b7e Rename blacklist.[ch] to bssid_ignore.[ch]
This completes renaming of this functionality for a list of temporarily
ignored BSSIDs.

Signed-off-by: Jouni Malinen <j@w1.fi>
2021-02-07 17:28:45 +02:00
Jouni Malinen
626fc0dcd0 Rename wpa_blacklist to wpa_bssid_ignore
This is more accurate name for this functionality of temporarily
ignoring BSSIDs.

Signed-off-by: Jouni Malinen <j@w1.fi>
2021-02-07 17:28:45 +02:00
Kevin Lund
164b8dd8e4 wpa_supplicant: Add wpa_blacklist_update()
This change adds the function wpa_blacklist_update(), which goes through
all blacklist entries and deletes them if their blacklist expired over
an hour ago. The purpose of this is to remove stale entries from the
blacklist which likely do not reflect the current condition of device's
network surroundings. This function is called whenever the blacklist is
polled, meaning that the caller always gets an up-to-date reflection of
the blacklist.

Another solution to clearing the blacklist that was considered was
to slowly reduce the counts of blacklist entries over time, and delete
them if the counts dropped below 0. We decided to go with the current
solution instead because an AP's "problematic" status is really a binary
thing: either the AP is no longer problematic, or it's still causing us
problems. So if we see any more problems within a reasonable amount of
time, it makes sense to just keep the blacklist where it was since the
AP is likely still undergoing the same issue. If we go a significant
amount of time (semi-arbitrarily chosen as 1 hour) without any issues
with an AP, it's reasonable to behave as if the AP is no longer
undergoing the same issue. If we see more problems at a later time, we
can start the blacklisting process fresh again, treating this as a brand
new issue.

Signed-off-by: Kevin Lund <kglund@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Brian Norris <briannorris@chromium.org>
2020-10-10 18:34:59 +03:00
Kevin Lund
d530110028 wpa_supplicant: Implement time-based blacklisting
wpa_supplicant keeps a blacklist of BSSs in order to prevent repeated
associations to problematic APs*. Currently, this blacklist is
completely cleared whenever we successfully connect to any AP. This
causes problematic behavior when in the presence of both a bad AP and
a good AP. The device can repeatedly attempt to roam to the bad AP
because it is clearing the blacklist every time it connects to the good
AP. This results in the connection constantly ping-ponging between the
APs, leaving the user stuck without connection.

Instead of clearing the blacklist, implement timeout functionality which
allows association attempts to blacklisted APs after some time has
passed. Each time a BSS would be added to the blacklist, increase the
duration of this timeout exponentially, up to a cap of 1800 seconds.
This means that the device will no longer be able to immediately attempt
to roam back to a bad AP whenever it successfully connects to any other
AP.

Other details:
The algorithm for building up the blacklist count and timeout duration
on a given AP has been designed to be minimally obtrusive. Starting with
a fresh blacklist, the device may attempt to connect to a problematic AP
no more than 6 times in any ~45 minute period. Once an AP has reached a
blacklist count >= 6, the device may attempt to connect to it no more
than once every 30 minutes. The goal of these limits is to find an
ideal balance between minimizing connection attempts to bad APs while
still trying them out occasionally to see if the problems have stopped.

The only exception to the above limits is that the blacklist is still
completely cleared whenever there are no APs available in a scan. This
means that if all nearby APs have been blacklisted, all APs will be
completely exonerated regardless of their blacklist counts or how close
their blacklist entries are to expiring. When all nearby APs have been
blacklisted we know that every nearby AP is in some way problematic.
Once we know that every AP is causing problems, it doesn't really make
sense to sort them beyond that because the blacklist count and timeout
duration don't necessarily reflect the degree to which an AP is
problematic (i.e. they can be manipulated by external factors such as
the user physically moving around). Instead, its best to restart the
blacklist and let the normal roaming algorithm take over to maximize
our chance of getting the best possible connection quality.

As stated above, the time-based blacklisting algorithm is designed to
be minimally obtrusive to user experience, so occasionally restarting
the process is not too impactful on the user.

*problematic AP: rejects new clients, frequently de-auths clients, very
poor connection quality, etc.

Signed-off-by: Kevin Lund <kglund@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Brian Norris <briannorris@chromium.org>
2020-10-10 18:34:59 +03:00
Jouni Malinen
0f3d578efc Remove the GPL notification from files contributed by Jouni Malinen
Remove the GPL notification text from the files that were
initially contributed by myself.

Signed-hostap: Jouni Malinen <j@w1.fi>
2012-02-11 19:39:36 +02:00
Jouni Malinen
6fc6879bd5 Re-initialize hostapd/wpa_supplicant git repository based on 0.6.3 release 2008-02-27 17:34:43 -08:00