578 lines
17 KiB
Groff
Executable File
578 lines
17 KiB
Groff
Executable File
.\" Jean II - HPLB - 1996 => HPL - 2004
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.\" iwconfig.8
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.\"
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.TH IWCONFIG 8 "09 March 2006" "wireless-tools" "Linux Programmer's Manual"
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.\"
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.\" NAME part
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.\"
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.SH NAME
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iwconfig \- configure a wireless network interface
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.\"
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.\" SYNOPSIS part
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.\"
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.SH SYNOPSIS
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.BI "iwconfig [" interface ]
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.br
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.BI "iwconfig " interface " [essid " X "] [nwid " N "] [mode " M "] [freq " F "]
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.br
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.BI " [channel " C ] [sens " S "] [ap " A "] [nick " NN ]
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.br
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.BI " [rate " R "] [rts " RT "] [frag " FT "] [txpower " T ]
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.br
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.BI " [enc " E "] [key " K "] [power " P "] [retry " R ]
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.br
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.BI " [commit]
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.br
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.BI "iwconfig --help"
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.br
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.BI "iwconfig --version"
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.\"
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.\" DESCRIPTION part
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.\"
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.SH DESCRIPTION
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.B Iwconfig
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is similar to
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.IR ifconfig (8),
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but is dedicated to the wireless interfaces. It is used to set the
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parameters of the network interface which are specific to the wireless
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operation (for example : the frequency).
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.B Iwconfig
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may also be used to display those parameters, and the wireless
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statistics (extracted from
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.IR /proc/net/wireless ).
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.PP
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All these parameters and statistics are device dependent. Each driver
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will provide only some of them depending on hardware support, and the
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range of values may change. Please refer to the man page of each
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device for details.
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.\"
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.\" PARAMETER part
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.\"
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.SH PARAMETERS
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.TP
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.B essid
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Set the ESSID (or Network Name - in some products it may also be
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called Domain ID). The ESSID is used to identify cells which are part
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of the same virtual network.
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.br
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As opposed to the AP Address or NWID which define a single cell, the
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ESSID defines a group of cells connected via repeaters or
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infrastructure, where the user may roam transparently.
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.br
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With some cards, you may disable the ESSID checking (ESSID
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promiscuous) with
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.IR off " or " any " (and " on
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to reenable it).
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.br
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If the ESSID of your network is one of the special keywords
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.RI ( off ", " on " or " any ),
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you should use
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.I --
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to escape it.
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.br
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.B Examples :
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.br
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.I " iwconfig eth0 essid any"
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.br
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.I " iwconfig eth0 essid ""My Network""
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.br
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.I " iwconfig eth0 essid -- ""ANY""
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.TP
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.BR nwid / domain
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Set the Network ID (in some products it may also be called Domain
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ID). As all adjacent wireless networks share the same medium, this
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parameter is used to differenciate them (create logical colocated
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networks) and identify nodes belonging to the same cell.
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.br
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This parameter is only used for pre-802.11 hardware, the 802.11
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protocol uses the ESSID and AP Address for this function.
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.br
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With some cards, you may disable the Network ID checking (NWID
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promiscuous) with
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.IR off " (and " on
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to reenable it).
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.br
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.B Examples :
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.br
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.I " iwconfig eth0 nwid AB34
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.br
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.I " iwconfig eth0 nwid off"
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.TP
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.BR nick [name]
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Set the nickname, or the station name. Some 802.11 products do define
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it, but this is not used as far as the protocols (MAC, IP, TCP) are
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concerned and completely useless as far as configuration goes. Only
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some wireless diagnostic tools may use it.
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.br
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.B Example :
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.br
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.I " iwconfig eth0 nickname ""My Linux Node""
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.TP
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.B mode
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Set the operating mode of the device, which depends on the network
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topology. The mode can be
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.I Ad-Hoc
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(network composed of only one cell and without Access Point),
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.I Managed
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(node connects to a network composed of many Access Points, with roaming),
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.I Master
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(the node is the synchronisation master or acts as an Access Point),
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.I Repeater
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(the node forwards packets between other wireless nodes),
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.I Secondary
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(the node acts as a backup master/repeater),
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.I Monitor
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(the node is not associated with any cell and passively monitor all
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packets on the frequency) or
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.IR Auto .
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.br
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.B Example :
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.br
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.I " iwconfig eth0 mode Managed"
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.br
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.I " iwconfig eth0 mode Ad-Hoc"
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.TP
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.BR freq / channel
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Set the operating frequency or channel in the device. A value below
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1000 indicates a channel number, a value greater than 1000 is a
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frequency in Hz. You may append the suffix k, M or G to the value (for
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example, "2.46G" for 2.46 GHz frequency), or add enough '0'.
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.br
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Channels are usually numbered starting at 1, and you may use
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.IR iwlist (8)
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to get the total number of channels, list the available frequencies,
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and display the current frequency as a channel. Depending on
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regulations, some frequencies/channels may not be available.
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.br
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When using Managed mode, most often the Access Point dictates the
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channel and the driver may refuse the setting of the frequency. In
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Ad-Hoc mode, the frequency setting may only be used at initial cell
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creation, and may be ignored when joining an existing cell.
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.br
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You may also use
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.I off
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or
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.I auto
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to let the card pick up the best channel (when supported).
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.br
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.B Examples :
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.br
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.I " iwconfig eth0 freq 2422000000"
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.br
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.I " iwconfig eth0 freq 2.422G"
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.br
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.I " iwconfig eth0 channel 3"
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.br
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.I " iwconfig eth0 channel auto"
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.TP
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.B ap
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Force the card to register to the Access Point given by the address,
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if it is possible. This address is the cell identity of the Access
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Point, as reported by wireless scanning, which may be different from
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its network MAC address. If the wireless link is point to point, set
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the address of the other end of the link. If the link is ad-hoc, set
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the cell identity of the ad-hoc network.
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.br
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When the quality of the connection goes too low, the driver may revert
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back to automatic mode (the card selects the best Access Point in
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range).
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.br
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You may also use
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.I off
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to re-enable automatic mode without changing the current Access Point,
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or you may use
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.I any
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or
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.I auto
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to force the card to reassociate with the currently best Access Point.
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.br
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.B Example :
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.br
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.I " iwconfig eth0 ap 00:60:1D:01:23:45"
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.br
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.I " iwconfig eth0 ap any"
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.br
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.I " iwconfig eth0 ap off"
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.TP
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.BR rate / bit [rate]
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For cards supporting multiple bit rates, set the bit-rate in b/s. The
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bit-rate is the speed at which bits are transmitted over the medium,
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the user speed of the link is lower due to medium sharing and
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various overhead.
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.br
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You may append the suffix k, M or G to the value (decimal multiplier :
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10^3, 10^6 and 10^9 b/s), or add enough '0'. Values below 1000 are
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card specific, usually an index in the bit-rate list. Use
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.I auto
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to select automatic bit-rate mode (fallback to lower rate on noisy
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channels), which is the default for most cards, and
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.I fixed
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to revert back to fixed setting. If you specify a bit-rate value and append
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.IR auto ,
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the driver will use all bit-rates lower and equal than this value.
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.br
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.B Examples :
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.br
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.I " iwconfig eth0 rate 11M"
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.br
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.I " iwconfig eth0 rate auto"
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.br
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.I " iwconfig eth0 rate 5.5M auto"
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.TP
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.BR txpower
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For cards supporting multiple transmit powers, sets the transmit power
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in dBm. If
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.I W
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is the power in Watt, the power in dBm is
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.IR "P = 30 + 10.log(W)" .
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If the value is postfixed by
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.IR mW ,
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it will be automatically converted to dBm.
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.br
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In addition,
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.IR on " and " off
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enable and disable the radio, and
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.IR auto " and " fixed
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enable and disable power control (if those features are available).
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.br
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.B Examples :
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.br
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.I " iwconfig eth0 txpower 15"
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.br
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.I " iwconfig eth0 txpower 30mW"
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.br
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.I " iwconfig eth0 txpower auto"
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.br
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.I " iwconfig eth0 txpower off"
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.TP
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.B sens
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Set the sensitivity threshold. This define how sensitive is the card
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to poor operating conditions (low signal, interference). Positive
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values are assumed to be the raw value used by the hardware or a
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percentage, negative values are assumed to be dBm. Depending on the
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hardware implementation, this parameter may control various functions.
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.br
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On modern cards, this parameter usually control handover/roaming
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threshold, the lowest signal level for which the hardware remains
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associated with the current Access Point. When the signal level goes
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below this threshold the card starts looking for a new/better Access
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Point. Some cards may use the number of missed beacons to trigger
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this. For high density of Access Points, a higher threshold make sure
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the card is always associated with the best AP, for low density of
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APs, a lower threshold minimise the number of failed handoffs.
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.br
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On more ancient card this parameter usually controls the defer
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threshold, the lowest signal level for which the hardware considers
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the channel busy. Signal levels above this threshold make the hardware
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inhibits its own transmission whereas signals weaker than this are
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ignored and the hardware is free to transmit. This is usually strongly
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linked to the receive threshold, the lowest signal level for which the
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hardware attempts packet reception. Proper setting of these thresholds
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prevent the card to waste time on background noise while still
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receiving weak transmissions. Modern designs seems to control those
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thresholds automatically.
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.br
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.br
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.B Example :
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.br
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.I " iwconfig eth0 sens -80"
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.br
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.I " iwconfig eth0 sens 2"
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.TP
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.BR retry
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Most cards have MAC retransmissions, and some allow to set the
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behaviour of the retry mechanism.
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.br
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To set the maximum number of retries, enter
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.IR "limit `value'" .
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This is an absolute value (without unit).
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To set the maximum length of time the MAC should retry, enter
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.IR "lifetime `value'" .
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By defaults, this value in in seconds, append the suffix m or u to
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specify values in milliseconds or microseconds.
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.br
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You can also add the
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.IR min " and " max
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modifiers. If the card supports automatic mode, they define the bounds
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of the limit or lifetime. Some other cards define different values
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depending on packet size, for example in 802.11
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.I min limit
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is the short retry limit (non RTS/CTS packets).
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.br
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.B Examples :
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.br
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.I " iwconfig eth0 retry 16"
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.br
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.I " iwconfig eth0 retry lifetime 300m"
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.br
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.I " iwconfig eth0 retry min limit 8"
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.TP
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.BR rts [_threshold]
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RTS/CTS adds a handshake before each packet transmission to make sure
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that the channel is clear. This adds overhead, but increases
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performance in case of hidden nodes or a large number of active
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nodes. This parameter sets the size of the smallest packet for which
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the node sends RTS ; a value equal to the maximum packet size disables
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the mechanism. You may also set this parameter to
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.IR auto ", " fixed " or " off .
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.br
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.B Examples :
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.br
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.I " iwconfig eth0 rts 250"
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.br
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.I " iwconfig eth0 rts off"
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.TP
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.BR frag [mentation_threshold]
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Fragmentation allows to split an IP packet in a burst of smaller
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fragments transmitted on the medium. In most cases this adds overhead,
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but in a very noisy environment this reduces the error penalty and
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allow packets to get through interference bursts. This parameter sets
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the maximum fragment size which is always lower than the maximum
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packet size.
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.br
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This parameter may also control Frame Bursting available on some
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cards, the ability to send multiple IP packets together. This
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mechanism would be enabled if the fragment size is larger than the
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maximum packet size.
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.br
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You may also set this parameter to
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.IR auto ", " fixed " or " off .
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.br
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.B Examples :
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.br
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.I " iwconfig eth0 frag 512"
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.br
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.I " iwconfig eth0 frag off"
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.TP
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.BR key / enc [ryption]
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Used to manipulate encryption or scrambling keys and security mode.
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.br
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To set the current encryption key, just enter the key in hex digits as
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.IR XXXX-XXXX-XXXX-XXXX " or " XXXXXXXX .
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To set a key other than the current key, prepend or append
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.I [index]
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to the key itself (this won't change which is the active key). You can
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also enter the key as an ASCII string by using the
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.I s:
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prefix. Passphrase is currently not supported.
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.br
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To change which key is the currently active key, just enter
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.I [index]
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(without entering any key value).
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.br
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.IR off " and " on
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disable and reenable encryption.
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.br
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The security mode may be
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.I open
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or
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.IR restricted ,
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and its meaning depends on the card used. With most cards, in
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.I open
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mode no authentication is used and the card may also accept
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non-encrypted sessions, whereas in
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.I restricted
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mode only encrypted sessions are accepted and the card will use
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authentication if available.
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.br
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If you need to set multiple keys, or set a key and change the active
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key, you need to use multiple
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.B key
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directives. Arguments can be put in any order, the last one will take
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precedence.
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.br
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.B Examples :
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.br
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.I " iwconfig eth0 key 0123-4567-89"
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.br
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.I " iwconfig eth0 key [3] 0123-4567-89"
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.br
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.I " iwconfig eth0 key s:password [2]"
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.br
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.I " iwconfig eth0 key [2]"
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.br
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.I " iwconfig eth0 key open"
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.br
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.I " iwconfig eth0 key off"
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.br
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.I " iwconfig eth0 key restricted [3] 0123456789"
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.br
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.I " iwconfig eth0 key 01-23 key 45-67 [4] key [4]"
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.TP
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.BR power
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Used to manipulate power management scheme parameters and mode.
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.br
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To set the period between wake ups, enter
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.IR "period `value'" .
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To set the timeout before going back to sleep, enter
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.IR "timeout `value'" .
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You can also add the
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.IR min " and " max
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modifiers. By default, those values are in seconds, append the suffix
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m or u to specify values in milliseconds or microseconds. Sometimes,
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those values are without units (number of beacon periods, dwell or
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similar).
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.br
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.IR off " and " on
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disable and reenable power management. Finally, you may set the power
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management mode to
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.I all
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(receive all packets),
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.I unicast
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(receive unicast packets only, discard multicast and broadcast) and
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.I multicast
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(receive multicast and broadcast only, discard unicast packets).
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.br
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.B Examples :
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.br
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.I " iwconfig eth0 power period 2"
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.br
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.I " iwconfig eth0 power 500m unicast"
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.br
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.I " iwconfig eth0 power timeout 300u all"
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.br
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.I " iwconfig eth0 power off"
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.br
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.I " iwconfig eth0 power min period 2 power max period 4"
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.TP
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.BR commit
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Some cards may not apply changes done through Wireless Extensions
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immediately (they may wait to aggregate the changes or apply it only
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when the card is brought up via ifconfig). This command (when
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available) forces the card to apply all pending changes.
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.br
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This is normally not needed, because the card will eventually apply
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the changes, but can be useful for debugging.
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.\"
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.\" DISPLAY part
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.\"
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.SH DISPLAY
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For each device which supports wireless extensions,
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.I iwconfig
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will display the name of the
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.B MAC protocol
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used (name of device for proprietary protocols), the
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.B ESSID
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(Network Name), the
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.BR NWID ,
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the
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.B frequency
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(or channel), the
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.BR sensitivity ,
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the
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.B mode
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of operation, the
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.B Access Point
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address, the
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.BR bit-rate ,
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the
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.BR "RTS threshold" ", the " "fragmentation threshold" ,
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the
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.B encryption key
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and the
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.B power management
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settings (depending on availability).
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.PP
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The parameters displayed have the same meaning and values as the
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parameters you can set, please refer to the previous part for a
|
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detailed explanation of them.
|
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.br
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Some parameters are only displayed in short/abbreviated form (such as
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encryption). You may use
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.IR iwlist (8)
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to get all the details.
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.br
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Some parameters have two modes (such as bitrate). If the value is
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prefixed by
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.RB ` = ',
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it means that the parameter is fixed and forced to that value, if it
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is prefixed by
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.RB ` : ',
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the parameter is in automatic mode and the current value is shown (and
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may change).
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.TP
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.BR "Access Point" / Cell
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An address equal to 00:00:00:00:00:00 means that the card failed to
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associate with an Access Point (most likely a configuration
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issue). The
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.B Access Point
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parameter will be shown as
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.B Cell
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in ad-hoc mode (for obvious reasons), but otherwise works the same.
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.PP
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If
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.I /proc/net/wireless
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exists,
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.I iwconfig
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will also display its content. Note that those values will depend on
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the driver and the hardware specifics, so you need to refer to your
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driver documentation for proper interpretation of those values.
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.TP
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.B Link quality
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Overall quality of the link. May be based on the level of contention
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or interference, the bit or frame error rate, how good the received
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signal is, some timing synchronisation, or other hardware metric. This
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is an aggregate value, and depends totally on the driver and hardware.
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.TP
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.B Signal level
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|
Received signal strength (RSSI - how strong the received signal
|
|
is). May be arbitrary units or dBm,
|
|
.I iwconfig
|
|
uses driver meta information to interpret the raw value given by
|
|
.I /proc/net/wireless
|
|
and display the proper unit or maximum value (using 8 bit arithmetic). In
|
|
.I Ad-Hoc
|
|
mode, this may be undefined and you should use
|
|
.IR iwspy .
|
|
.TP
|
|
.B Noise level
|
|
Background noise level (when no packet is transmitted). Similar
|
|
comments as for
|
|
.BR "Signal level" .
|
|
.TP
|
|
.B Rx invalid nwid
|
|
Number of packets received with a different NWID or ESSID. Used to
|
|
detect configuration problems or adjacent network existence (on the
|
|
same frequency).
|
|
.TP
|
|
.B Rx invalid crypt
|
|
Number of packets that the hardware was unable to decrypt. This can be
|
|
used to detect invalid encryption settings.
|
|
.TP
|
|
.B Rx invalid frag
|
|
Number of packets for which the hardware was not able to properly
|
|
re-assemble the link layer fragments (most likely one was missing).
|
|
.TP
|
|
.B Tx excessive retries
|
|
Number of packets that the hardware failed to deliver. Most MAC
|
|
protocols will retry the packet a number of times before giving up.
|
|
.TP
|
|
.B Invalid misc
|
|
Other packets lost in relation with specific wireless operations.
|
|
.TP
|
|
.B Missed beacon
|
|
Number of periodic beacons from the Cell or the Access Point we have
|
|
missed. Beacons are sent at regular intervals to maintain the cell
|
|
coordination, failure to receive them usually indicates that the card
|
|
is out of range.
|
|
.\"
|
|
.\" AUTHOR part
|
|
.\"
|
|
.SH AUTHOR
|
|
Jean Tourrilhes \- jt@hpl.hp.com
|
|
.\"
|
|
.\" FILES part
|
|
.\"
|
|
.SH FILES
|
|
.I /proc/net/wireless
|
|
.\"
|
|
.\" SEE ALSO part
|
|
.\"
|
|
.SH SEE ALSO
|
|
.BR ifconfig (8),
|
|
.BR iwspy (8),
|
|
.BR iwlist (8),
|
|
.BR iwevent (8),
|
|
.BR iwpriv (8),
|
|
.BR wireless (7).
|