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      1 <!doctype refentry PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD DocBook V4.1//EN">
      2 
      3 <refentry>
      4   <refmeta>
      5     <refentrytitle>wpa_supplicant</refentrytitle>
      6     <manvolnum>8</manvolnum>
      7   </refmeta>
      8   <refnamediv>
      9     <refname>wpa_supplicant</refname>
     10     <refpurpose>Wi-Fi Protected Access client and IEEE 802.1X supplicant</refpurpose>
     11   </refnamediv>
     12   <refsynopsisdiv>
     13     <cmdsynopsis>
     14       <command>wpa_supplicant</command>
     15       <arg>-BddfhKLqqsTtuvW</arg>
     16       <arg>-i<replaceable>ifname</replaceable></arg>
     17       <arg>-c<replaceable>config file</replaceable></arg>
     18       <arg>-D<replaceable>driver</replaceable></arg>
     19       <arg>-P<replaceable>PID_file</replaceable></arg>
     20       <arg>-f<replaceable>output file</replaceable></arg>
     21     </cmdsynopsis>
     22   </refsynopsisdiv>
     23   <refsect1>
     24     <title>Overview</title>
     25 
     26     <para>
     27     Wireless networks do not require physical access to the network equipment
     28     in the same way as wired networks. This makes it easier for unauthorized
     29     users to passively monitor a network and capture all transmitted frames.
     30     In addition, unauthorized use of the network is much easier. In many cases,
     31     this can happen even without user's explicit knowledge since the wireless
     32     LAN adapter may have been configured to automatically join any available
     33     network.
     34     </para>
     35 
     36     <para>
     37     Link-layer encryption can be used to provide a layer of security for
     38     wireless networks. The original wireless LAN standard, IEEE 802.11,
     39     included a simple encryption mechanism, WEP. However, that proved to
     40     be flawed in many areas and network protected with WEP cannot be consider
     41     secure. IEEE 802.1X authentication and frequently changed dynamic WEP keys
     42     can be used to improve the network security, but even that has inherited
     43     security issues due to the use of WEP for encryption. Wi-Fi Protected
     44     Access and IEEE 802.11i amendment to the wireless LAN standard introduce
     45     a much improvement mechanism for securing wireless networks. IEEE 802.11i
     46     enabled networks that are using CCMP (encryption mechanism based on strong
     47     cryptographic algorithm AES) can finally be called secure used for
     48     applications which require efficient protection against unauthorized
     49     access.
     50     </para>
     51 
     52     <para><command>wpa_supplicant</command> is an implementation of
     53     the WPA Supplicant component, i.e., the part that runs in the
     54     client stations. It implements WPA key negotiation with a WPA
     55     Authenticator and EAP authentication with Authentication
     56     Server. In addition, it controls the roaming and IEEE 802.11
     57     authentication/association of the wireless LAN driver.</para>
     58 
     59     <para><command>wpa_supplicant</command> is designed to be a
     60     "daemon" program that runs in the background and acts as the
     61     backend component controlling the wireless
     62     connection. <command>wpa_supplicant</command> supports separate
     63     frontend programs and an example text-based frontend,
     64     <command>wpa_cli</command>, is included with
     65     wpa_supplicant.</para>
     66 
     67     <para>Before wpa_supplicant can do its work, the network interface
     68     must be available.  That means that the physical device must be
     69     present and enabled, and the driver for the device must be
     70     loaded. The daemon will exit immediately if the device is not already
     71     available.</para>
     72 
     73     <para>After <command>wpa_supplicant</command> has configured the
     74     network device, higher level configuration such as DHCP may
     75     proceed.  There are a variety of ways to integrate wpa_supplicant
     76     into a machine's networking scripts, a few of which are described
     77     in sections below.</para>
     78 
     79     <para>The following steps are used when associating with an AP
     80     using WPA:</para>
     81 
     82     <itemizedlist>
     83       <listitem>
     84 	<para><command>wpa_supplicant</command> requests the kernel
     85 	driver to scan neighboring BSSes</para>
     86       </listitem>
     87 
     88       <listitem>
     89 	<para><command>wpa_supplicant</command> selects a BSS based on
     90 	its configuration</para>
     91       </listitem>
     92 
     93       <listitem>
     94 	<para><command>wpa_supplicant</command> requests the kernel
     95         driver to associate with the chosen BSS</para>
     96       </listitem>
     97 
     98       <listitem>
     99 	<para>If WPA-EAP: integrated IEEE 802.1X Supplicant
    100         completes EAP authentication with the
    101         authentication server (proxied by the Authenticator in the
    102         AP)</para>
    103       </listitem>
    104 
    105       <listitem>
    106 	<para>If WPA-EAP: master key is received from the IEEE 802.1X
    107 	Supplicant</para>
    108       </listitem>
    109 
    110       <listitem>
    111 	<para>If WPA-PSK: <command>wpa_supplicant</command> uses PSK
    112 	as the master session key</para>
    113       </listitem>
    114 
    115       <listitem>
    116 	<para><command>wpa_supplicant</command> completes WPA 4-Way
    117         Handshake and Group Key Handshake with the Authenticator
    118         (AP)</para>
    119       </listitem>
    120 
    121       <listitem>
    122 	<para><command>wpa_supplicant</command> configures encryption
    123 	keys for unicast and broadcast</para>
    124       </listitem>
    125 
    126       <listitem>
    127 	<para>normal data packets can be transmitted and received</para>
    128       </listitem>
    129     </itemizedlist>
    130   </refsect1>
    131 
    132   <refsect1>
    133     <title>Supported Features</title>
    134     <para>Supported WPA/IEEE 802.11i features:</para>
    135     <itemizedlist>
    136       <listitem>
    137 	<para>WPA-PSK ("WPA-Personal")</para>
    138       </listitem>
    139 
    140       <listitem>
    141 	<para>WPA with EAP (e.g., with RADIUS authentication server)
    142        ("WPA-Enterprise") Following authentication methods are
    143        supported with an integrate IEEE 802.1X Supplicant:</para>
    144 
    145 	<itemizedlist>
    146 	  <listitem>
    147 	    <para>EAP-TLS</para>
    148 	  </listitem>
    149 	</itemizedlist>
    150 
    151 	<itemizedlist>
    152 	  <listitem>
    153 	    <para>EAP-PEAP/MSCHAPv2 (both PEAPv0 and PEAPv1)</para>
    154 	  </listitem>
    155 
    156 
    157 	  <listitem>
    158 	    <para>EAP-PEAP/TLS (both PEAPv0 and PEAPv1)</para>
    159 	  </listitem>
    160 
    161 	  <listitem>
    162 	    <para>EAP-PEAP/GTC (both PEAPv0 and PEAPv1)</para>
    163 	  </listitem>
    164 
    165 	  <listitem>
    166 	    <para>EAP-PEAP/OTP (both PEAPv0 and PEAPv1)</para>
    167 	  </listitem>
    168 
    169 	  <listitem>
    170 	    <para>EAP-PEAP/MD5-Challenge (both PEAPv0 and PEAPv1)</para>
    171 	  </listitem>
    172 
    173 	  <listitem>
    174 	    <para>EAP-TTLS/EAP-MD5-Challenge</para>
    175 	  </listitem>
    176 
    177 	  <listitem>
    178 	    <para>EAP-TTLS/EAP-GTC</para>
    179 	  </listitem>
    180 
    181           <listitem><para>EAP-TTLS/EAP-OTP</para></listitem>
    182 
    183           <listitem><para>EAP-TTLS/EAP-MSCHAPv2</para></listitem>
    184 
    185           <listitem><para>EAP-TTLS/EAP-TLS</para></listitem>
    186 
    187           <listitem><para>EAP-TTLS/MSCHAPv2</para></listitem>
    188 
    189           <listitem><para>EAP-TTLS/MSCHAP</para></listitem>
    190 
    191           <listitem><para>EAP-TTLS/PAP</para></listitem>
    192 
    193           <listitem><para>EAP-TTLS/CHAP</para></listitem>
    194 
    195           <listitem><para>EAP-SIM</para></listitem>
    196 
    197           <listitem><para>EAP-AKA</para></listitem>
    198 
    199           <listitem><para>EAP-PSK</para></listitem>
    200 
    201           <listitem><para>EAP-PAX</para></listitem>
    202 
    203           <listitem><para>LEAP (note: requires special support from
    204           the driver for IEEE 802.11 authentication)</para></listitem>
    205 
    206           <listitem><para>(following methods are supported, but since
    207           they do not generate keying material, they cannot be used
    208           with WPA or IEEE 802.1X WEP keying)</para></listitem>
    209 
    210           <listitem><para>EAP-MD5-Challenge </para></listitem>
    211 
    212           <listitem><para>EAP-MSCHAPv2</para></listitem>
    213 
    214           <listitem><para>EAP-GTC</para></listitem>
    215 
    216           <listitem><para>EAP-OTP</para></listitem>
    217 	</itemizedlist>
    218       </listitem>
    219 
    220       <listitem>
    221 	<para>key management for CCMP, TKIP, WEP104, WEP40</para>
    222       </listitem>
    223 
    224       <listitem>
    225 	<para>RSN/WPA2 (IEEE 802.11i)</para>
    226 	<itemizedlist>
    227 	  <listitem>
    228 	    <para>pre-authentication</para>
    229 	  </listitem>
    230 
    231 	  <listitem>
    232 	    <para>PMKSA caching</para>
    233 	  </listitem>
    234 	</itemizedlist>
    235       </listitem>
    236     </itemizedlist>
    237   </refsect1>
    238 
    239   <refsect1>
    240     <title>Available Drivers</title>
    241     <para>A summary of available driver backends is below. Support for each
    242     of the driver backends is chosen at wpa_supplicant compile time. For a
    243     list of supported driver backends that may be used with the -D option on
    244     your system, refer to the help output of wpa_supplicant
    245     (<emphasis>wpa_supplicant -h</emphasis>).</para>
    246 
    247     <variablelist>
    248       <varlistentry>
    249 	<term>wext</term>
    250 	<listitem>
    251 	  <para>Linux wireless extensions (generic).</para>
    252 	</listitem>
    253       </varlistentry>
    254 
    255       <varlistentry>
    256 	<term>wired</term>
    257 	<listitem>
    258 	  <para>wpa_supplicant wired Ethernet driver</para>
    259 	</listitem>
    260       </varlistentry>
    261 
    262       <varlistentry>
    263 	<term>roboswitch</term>
    264 	<listitem>
    265 	  <para>wpa_supplicant Broadcom switch driver</para>
    266 	</listitem>
    267       </varlistentry>
    268 
    269       <varlistentry>
    270 	<term>bsd</term>
    271 	<listitem>
    272 	  <para>BSD 802.11 support (Atheros, etc.).</para>
    273 	</listitem>
    274       </varlistentry>
    275 
    276       <varlistentry>
    277 	<term>ndis</term>
    278 	<listitem>
    279 	  <para>Windows NDIS driver.</para>
    280 	</listitem>
    281       </varlistentry>
    282     </variablelist>
    283   </refsect1>
    284 
    285   <refsect1>
    286     <title>Command Line Options</title>
    287     <para>Most command line options have global scope. Some are given per
    288     interface, and are only valid if at least one <option>-i</option> option
    289     is specified, otherwise they're ignored. Option groups for different
    290     interfaces must be separated by <option>-N</option> option.</para>
    291     <variablelist>
    292       <varlistentry>
    293 	<term>-b br_ifname</term>
    294 	<listitem>
    295 	  <para>Optional bridge interface name. (Per interface)</para>
    296 	</listitem>
    297       </varlistentry>
    298 
    299       <varlistentry>
    300 	<term>-B</term>
    301 	<listitem>
    302 	  <para>Run daemon in the background.</para>
    303 	</listitem>
    304       </varlistentry>
    305 
    306       <varlistentry>
    307 	<term>-c filename</term>
    308 	<listitem>
    309 	  <para>Path to configuration file. (Per interface)</para>
    310 	</listitem>
    311       </varlistentry>
    312 
    313       <varlistentry>
    314 	<term>-C ctrl_interface</term>
    315 	<listitem>
    316 	  <para>Path to ctrl_interface socket (Per interface. Only used if
    317 		  <option>-c</option> is not).</para>
    318 	</listitem>
    319       </varlistentry>
    320 
    321       <varlistentry>
    322 	<term>-i ifname</term>
    323 	<listitem>
    324 	  <para>Interface to listen on. Multiple instances of this option can
    325 	  be present, one per interface, separated by <option>-N</option>
    326 	  option (see below).</para>
    327 	</listitem>
    328       </varlistentry>
    329 
    330       <varlistentry>
    331 	<term>-d</term>
    332 	<listitem>
    333 	  <para>Increase debugging verbosity (<option>-dd</option> even
    334 		  more).</para>
    335 	</listitem>
    336       </varlistentry>
    337 
    338       <varlistentry>
    339 	<term>-D driver</term>
    340 	<listitem>
    341 	  <para>Driver to use (can be multiple drivers: nl80211,wext).
    342 		  (Per interface, see the available options below.)</para>
    343 	</listitem>
    344       </varlistentry>
    345 
    346       <varlistentry>
    347 	<term>-e entropy file</term>
    348 	<listitem>
    349 	  <para>File for <command>wpa_supplicant</command> to use to
    350 	  maintain its internal entropy store in over restarts.</para>
    351 	</listitem>
    352       </varlistentry>
    353 
    354       <varlistentry>
    355 	<term>-f output file</term>
    356 	<listitem>
    357 	  <para>Log output to specified file instead of stdout. (This
    358 	  is only available if <command>wpa_supplicant</command> was
    359 	  built with the <literal>CONFIG_DEBUG_FILE</literal>
    360 	  option.)</para>
    361 	</listitem>
    362       </varlistentry>
    363 
    364       <varlistentry>
    365 	<term>-g global ctrl_interface</term>
    366 	<listitem>
    367 	  <para>Path to global ctrl_interface socket. If specified, interface
    368 	  definitions may be omitted.</para>
    369 	</listitem>
    370       </varlistentry>
    371 
    372       <varlistentry>
    373 	<term>-K</term>
    374 	<listitem>
    375 	  <para>Include keys (passwords, etc.) in debug output.</para>
    376 	</listitem>
    377       </varlistentry>
    378 
    379       <varlistentry>
    380 	<term>-t</term>
    381 	<listitem>
    382 	  <para>Include timestamp in debug messages.</para>
    383 	</listitem>
    384       </varlistentry>
    385 
    386       <varlistentry>
    387 	<term>-h</term>
    388 	<listitem>
    389 	  <para>Help.  Show a usage message.</para>
    390 	</listitem>
    391       </varlistentry>
    392 
    393       <varlistentry>
    394 	<term>-L</term>
    395 	<listitem>
    396 	  <para>Show license (BSD).</para>
    397 	</listitem>
    398       </varlistentry>
    399 
    400       <varlistentry>
    401 	<term>-o override driver</term>
    402 	<listitem>
    403 	  <para>Override the driver parameter for new
    404 	  interfaces.</para>
    405 	</listitem>
    406       </varlistentry>
    407 
    408       <varlistentry>
    409 	<term>-O override ctrl_interface</term>
    410 	<listitem>
    411 	  <para>Override the ctrl_interface parameter for new
    412 	  interfaces.</para>
    413 	</listitem>
    414       </varlistentry>
    415 
    416       <varlistentry>
    417 	<term>-p</term>
    418 	<listitem>
    419 	  <para>Driver parameters. (Per interface)</para>
    420 	</listitem>
    421       </varlistentry>
    422 
    423       <varlistentry>
    424 	<term>-P PID_file</term>
    425 	<listitem>
    426 	  <para>Path to PID file.</para>
    427 	</listitem>
    428       </varlistentry>
    429 
    430       <varlistentry>
    431 	<term>-q</term>
    432 	<listitem>
    433 	  <para>Decrease debugging verbosity (<option>-qq</option> even
    434 		  less).</para>
    435 	</listitem>
    436       </varlistentry>
    437 
    438       <varlistentry>
    439 	<term>-s</term>
    440 	<listitem>
    441 	  <para>Log output to syslog instead of stdout. (This is only
    442 	  available if <command>wpa_supplicant</command> was built
    443 	  with the <literal>CONFIG_DEBUG_SYSLOG</literal>
    444 	  option.)</para>
    445 	</listitem>
    446       </varlistentry>
    447 
    448       <varlistentry>
    449 	<term>-T</term>
    450 	<listitem>
    451 	  <para>Log output to Linux tracing in addition to any other
    452 	  destinations. (This is only available
    453 	  if <command>wpa_supplicant</command> was built with
    454 	  the <literal>CONFIG_DEBUG_LINUX_TRACING</literal>
    455 	  option.)</para>
    456 	</listitem>
    457       </varlistentry>
    458 
    459       <varlistentry>
    460 	<term>-t</term>
    461 	<listitem>
    462 	  <para>Include timestamp in debug messages.</para>
    463 	</listitem>
    464       </varlistentry>
    465 
    466       <varlistentry>
    467 	<term>-u</term>
    468 	<listitem>
    469 	  <para>Enable DBus control interface. If enabled, interface
    470 	  definitions may be omitted. (This is only available
    471 	  if <command>wpa_supplicant</command> was built with
    472 	  the <literal>CONFIG_DBUS</literal> option.)</para>0
    473 	</listitem>
    474       </varlistentry>
    475 
    476       <varlistentry>
    477 	<term>-v</term>
    478 	<listitem>
    479 	  <para>Show version.</para>
    480 	</listitem>
    481       </varlistentry>
    482 
    483       <varlistentry>
    484 	<term>-W</term>
    485 	<listitem>
    486 	  <para>Wait for a control interface monitor before starting.</para>
    487 	</listitem>
    488       </varlistentry>
    489 
    490       <varlistentry>
    491 	<term>-N</term>
    492 	<listitem>
    493 	  <para>Start describing new interface.</para>
    494 	</listitem>
    495       </varlistentry>
    496     </variablelist>
    497   </refsect1>
    498 
    499   <refsect1>
    500     <title>Examples</title>
    501 
    502     <para>In most common cases, <command>wpa_supplicant</command> is
    503     started with:</para>
    504 
    505 <blockquote><programlisting>
    506 wpa_supplicant -B -c/etc/wpa_supplicant.conf -iwlan0
    507 </programlisting></blockquote>
    508 
    509     <para>This makes the process fork into background.</para>
    510 
    511     <para>The easiest way to debug problems, and to get debug log for
    512     bug reports, is to start <command>wpa_supplicant</command> on
    513     foreground with debugging enabled:</para>
    514 
    515 <blockquote><programlisting>
    516 wpa_supplicant -c/etc/wpa_supplicant.conf -iwlan0 -d
    517 </programlisting></blockquote>
    518 
    519     <para>If the specific driver wrapper is not known beforehand, it is
    520     possible to specify multiple comma separated driver wrappers on the command
    521     line. <command>wpa_supplicant</command> will use the first driver
    522     wrapper that is able to initialize the interface.</para>
    523 
    524 <blockquote><programlisting>
    525 wpa_supplicant -Dnl80211,wext -c/etc/wpa_supplicant.conf -iwlan0
    526 </programlisting></blockquote>
    527 
    528     <para><command>wpa_supplicant</command> can control multiple
    529     interfaces (radios) either by running one process for each
    530     interface separately or by running just one process and list of
    531     options at command line. Each interface is separated with -N
    532     argument. As an example, following command would start
    533     wpa_supplicant for two interfaces:</para>
    534 
    535 <blockquote><programlisting>
    536 wpa_supplicant \
    537 	-c wpa1.conf -i wlan0 -D nl80211 -N \
    538 	-c wpa2.conf -i ath0 -D wext
    539 </programlisting></blockquote>
    540   </refsect1>
    541 
    542   <refsect1>
    543     <title>OS Requirements</title>
    544     <para>Current hardware/software requirements:</para>
    545 
    546     <itemizedlist>
    547       <listitem>
    548 	<para>Linux kernel 2.4.x or 2.6.x with Linux Wireless
    549 	Extensions v15 or newer</para>
    550       </listitem>
    551 
    552 
    553       <listitem>
    554 	<para>FreeBSD 6-CURRENT</para>
    555       </listitem>
    556 
    557       <listitem>
    558 	<para>Microsoft Windows with WinPcap (at least WinXP, may work
    559 	with other versions)</para>
    560       </listitem>
    561     </itemizedlist>
    562   </refsect1>
    563 
    564   <refsect1>
    565     <title>Supported Drivers</title>
    566     <variablelist>
    567       <varlistentry>
    568 	<term>Linux wireless extensions</term>
    569 	<listitem>
    570 	  <para>In theory, any driver that supports Linux wireless
    571 	extensions can be used with IEEE 802.1X (i.e., not WPA) when
    572 	using ap_scan=0 option in configuration file.</para>
    573 	</listitem>
    574       </varlistentry>
    575       
    576       <varlistentry>
    577 	<term>Wired Ethernet drivers</term>
    578 	<listitem>
    579 	  <para>Use ap_scan=0.</para>
    580 	</listitem>
    581       </varlistentry>
    582 
    583       <varlistentry>
    584 	<term>BSD net80211 layer (e.g., Atheros driver)</term>
    585 	<listitem>
    586 	  <para>At the moment, this is for FreeBSD 6-CURRENT branch.</para>
    587 	</listitem>
    588       </varlistentry>
    589 
    590       <varlistentry>
    591 	<term>Windows NDIS</term>
    592 	<listitem>
    593 	  <para>The current Windows port requires WinPcap
    594 	(http://winpcap.polito.it/).  See README-Windows.txt for more
    595 	information.</para>
    596 	</listitem>
    597       </varlistentry>
    598     </variablelist>
    599 
    600 	
    601     <para>wpa_supplicant was designed to be portable for different
    602     drivers and operating systems. Hopefully, support for more wlan
    603     cards and OSes will be added in the future. See developer.txt for
    604     more information about the design of wpa_supplicant and porting to
    605     other drivers. One main goal is to add full WPA/WPA2 support to
    606     Linux wireless extensions to allow new drivers to be supported
    607     without having to implement new driver-specific interface code in
    608     wpa_supplicant.</para>
    609   </refsect1>
    610 
    611   <refsect1>
    612     <title>Architecture</title> <para>The
    613     <command>wpa_supplicant</command> system consists of the following
    614     components:</para>
    615 
    616     <variablelist>
    617       <varlistentry>
    618 	<term><filename>wpa_supplicant.conf</filename> </term>
    619 	<listitem>
    620         <para>the configuration file describing all networks that the
    621         user wants the computer to connect to.  </para>
    622 	</listitem>
    623       </varlistentry>
    624       <varlistentry>
    625 	<term><command>wpa_supplicant</command></term>
    626         <listitem><para>the program that directly interacts with the
    627         network interface.  </para></listitem>
    628       </varlistentry>
    629       <varlistentry>
    630 	<term><command>wpa_cli</command></term> <listitem><para> the
    631 	client program that provides a high-level interface to the
    632 	functionality of the daemon.  </para></listitem>
    633       </varlistentry>
    634       <varlistentry>
    635 	<term><command>wpa_passphrase</command></term>
    636         <listitem><para>a utility needed to construct
    637         <filename>wpa_supplicant.conf</filename> files that include
    638         encrypted passwords.</para></listitem>
    639       </varlistentry>
    640     </variablelist>
    641   </refsect1>
    642 
    643   <refsect1>
    644     <title>Quick Start</title>
    645 
    646     <para>First, make a configuration file, e.g.
    647     <filename>/etc/wpa_supplicant.conf</filename>, that describes the networks
    648     you are interested in.  See <citerefentry>
    649 	<refentrytitle>wpa_supplicant.conf</refentrytitle>
    650 	<manvolnum>5</manvolnum>
    651       </citerefentry>
    652     for details.</para>
    653 
    654     <para>Once the configuration is ready, you can test whether the
    655     configuration works by running <command>wpa_supplicant</command>
    656     with following command to start it on foreground with debugging
    657     enabled:</para>
    658 
    659     <blockquote><programlisting>
    660 wpa_supplicant -iwlan0 -c/etc/wpa_supplicant.conf -d
    661     </programlisting></blockquote>
    662 
    663     <para>Assuming everything goes fine, you can start using following
    664     command to start <command>wpa_supplicant</command> on background
    665     without debugging:</para>
    666 
    667     <blockquote><programlisting>
    668 wpa_supplicant -iwlan0 -c/etc/wpa_supplicant.conf -B
    669     </programlisting></blockquote>
    670 
    671     <para>Please note that if you included more than one driver
    672     interface in the build time configuration (.config), you may need
    673     to specify which interface to use by including -D&lt;driver
    674     name&gt; option on the command line.</para>
    675 
    676     <!-- XXX at this point, the page could include a little script
    677          based on wpa_cli to wait for a connection and then run
    678          dhclient -->
    679 
    680   </refsect1>
    681 
    682   <refsect1>
    683     <title>Interface to pcmcia-cs/cardmrg</title>
    684 
    685     <para>For example, following small changes to pcmcia-cs scripts
    686     can be used to enable WPA support:</para>
    687 
    688     <para>Add MODE="Managed" and WPA="y" to the network scheme in
    689     <filename>/etc/pcmcia/wireless.opts</filename>.</para>
    690 
    691     <para>Add the following block to the end of <emphasis>start</emphasis>
    692     action handler in <filename>/etc/pcmcia/wireless</filename>:</para>
    693 
    694     <blockquote><programlisting>
    695 if [ "$WPA" = "y" -a -x /usr/local/bin/wpa_supplicant ]; then
    696     /usr/local/bin/wpa_supplicant -B -c/etc/wpa_supplicant.conf -i$DEVICE
    697 fi
    698     </programlisting></blockquote>
    699 
    700 
    701     <para>Add the following block to the end of <emphasis>stop</emphasis>
    702     action handler (may need to be separated from other actions) in
    703     <filename>/etc/pcmcia/wireless</filename>:</para>
    704 
    705     <blockquote><programlisting>
    706 if [ "$WPA" = "y" -a -x /usr/local/bin/wpa_supplicant ]; then
    707     killall wpa_supplicant
    708 fi
    709     </programlisting></blockquote>
    710 
    711     <para>This will make <command>cardmgr</command> start
    712     <command>wpa_supplicant</command> when the card is plugged
    713     in.</para>
    714   </refsect1>
    715 
    716   <refsect1>
    717     <title>See Also</title>
    718     <para>
    719       <citerefentry>
    720 	<refentrytitle>wpa_background</refentrytitle>
    721 	<manvolnum>8</manvolnum>
    722       </citerefentry>
    723       <citerefentry>
    724 	<refentrytitle>wpa_supplicant.conf</refentrytitle>
    725 	<manvolnum>5</manvolnum>
    726       </citerefentry>
    727       <citerefentry>
    728 	<refentrytitle>wpa_cli</refentrytitle>
    729 	<manvolnum>8</manvolnum>
    730       </citerefentry>
    731       <citerefentry>
    732 	<refentrytitle>wpa_passphrase</refentrytitle>
    733 	<manvolnum>8</manvolnum>
    734       </citerefentry>
    735     </para>
    736   </refsect1>
    737   <refsect1>
    738     <title>Legal</title>
    739     <para>wpa_supplicant is copyright (c) 2003-2014,
    740     Jouni Malinen <email>j (a] w1.fi</email> and
    741     contributors.
    742     All Rights Reserved.</para>
    743 
    744     <para>This program is licensed under the BSD license (the one with
    745     advertisement clause removed).</para>
    746   </refsect1>
    747 </refentry>
    748