* wireless-regdb: flaw in general functionality @ 2008-11-24 22:32 Richard Farina 2008-11-24 23:12 ` Luis R. Rodriguez 0 siblings, 1 reply; 17+ messages in thread From: Richard Farina @ 2008-11-24 22:32 UTC (permalink / raw) To: John Linville; +Cc: wireless First of all I would like to say that the entire idea and function behind crda is vastly improved from the old regulatory settings hard coded in the kernel. In light of this, however, we all seem to be avoiding a very clear part of reality. crda and the regulatory database restrain the channels that a person can legally transmit on based on their (presumed) current regulatory legislation. Unfortunately, when I learned about radios I was taught that radios can RECEIVE as well as transmit. In fact, in the USA (the country I live in and hence where I am most familiar with the laws) it is 100% legal to monitor any frequency that you desire. crda clearly misses that fact and doesn't permit proper legal operation of the radio device. crda and the regulatory database should be modified so that I can use my cards in the legal manner prescribed by the FCC (my regulatory body here in the USA). Thanks, Rick Farina PS> those of you that are warming up to tell me "it's not legal to monitor cell phones" please save the key strokes. It is not legal to modify, buy, sell or create a device that can monitor cell phones, if you already own one then it is legal to use, as it always has been and always will be. (FYI I've not found a device yet that can hit the cell phone bands.) Long ago it was promised that the FCC would never make listening against the law, surprisingly they have kept their promise so far. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 17+ messages in thread
* Re: wireless-regdb: flaw in general functionality 2008-11-24 22:32 wireless-regdb: flaw in general functionality Richard Farina @ 2008-11-24 23:12 ` Luis R. Rodriguez 2008-11-24 23:21 ` Pavel Roskin 0 siblings, 1 reply; 17+ messages in thread From: Luis R. Rodriguez @ 2008-11-24 23:12 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Richard Farina; +Cc: John Linville, wireless On Mon, Nov 24, 2008 at 02:32:20PM -0800, Richard Farina wrote: > First of all I would like to say that the entire idea and function > behind crda is vastly improved from the old regulatory settings hard > coded in the kernel. In light of this, however, we all seem to be > avoiding a very clear part of reality. > > crda and the regulatory database restrain the channels that a person can > legally transmit on based on their (presumed) current regulatory > legislation. Unfortunately, when I learned about radios I was taught > that radios can RECEIVE as well as transmit. In fact, in the USA (the > country I live in and hence where I am most familiar with the laws) it > is 100% legal to monitor any frequency that you desire. crda clearly > misses that fact and doesn't permit proper legal operation of the radio > device. > > crda and the regulatory database should be modified so that I can use my > cards in the legal manner prescribed by the FCC (my regulatory body here > in the USA). The reguluatory database is designed with 802.11 in mind, its database also provides enablement on frequency, not disablement. By default cfg80211 disallows everything except what is listed for the current regulatory domain being used. Your point about not being able to listen is a good one, and a patch to update the the US in consideration of part 15 rules would be appreciated. Keep in mind we have flags for such things: -Passive scan -No-IBSS We should probably rename no-ibss to no-beaconing though as that is the real meaning inention behind it. Luis ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 17+ messages in thread
* Re: wireless-regdb: flaw in general functionality 2008-11-24 23:12 ` Luis R. Rodriguez @ 2008-11-24 23:21 ` Pavel Roskin 2008-11-24 23:26 ` Luis R. Rodriguez 0 siblings, 1 reply; 17+ messages in thread From: Pavel Roskin @ 2008-11-24 23:21 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Luis R. Rodriguez; +Cc: Richard Farina, John Linville, wireless On Mon, 2008-11-24 at 15:12 -0800, Luis R. Rodriguez wrote: > Your point about not being able to listen is a good one, and a patch to > update the the US in consideration of part 15 rules would be > appreciated. Keep in mind we have flags for such things: > > -Passive scan > -No-IBSS > > We should probably rename no-ibss to no-beaconing though as that is the > real meaning inention behind it. Maybe you mean no-transmit? I don't think seeing an AP transmitting on a wrong frequency is an excuse for doing the same. At least in some jurisdictions. -- Regards, Pavel Roskin ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 17+ messages in thread
* Re: wireless-regdb: flaw in general functionality 2008-11-24 23:21 ` Pavel Roskin @ 2008-11-24 23:26 ` Luis R. Rodriguez 2008-11-25 2:26 ` Richard Farina 0 siblings, 1 reply; 17+ messages in thread From: Luis R. Rodriguez @ 2008-11-24 23:26 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Pavel Roskin; +Cc: Richard Farina, John Linville, wireless On Mon, Nov 24, 2008 at 3:21 PM, Pavel Roskin <proski@gnu.org> wrote: > On Mon, 2008-11-24 at 15:12 -0800, Luis R. Rodriguez wrote: > >> Your point about not being able to listen is a good one, and a patch to >> update the the US in consideration of part 15 rules would be >> appreciated. Keep in mind we have flags for such things: >> >> -Passive scan >> -No-IBSS >> >> We should probably rename no-ibss to no-beaconing though as that is the >> real meaning inention behind it. > > Maybe you mean no-transmit? Yeah sure, that seems to make more sense. Luis ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 17+ messages in thread
* Re: wireless-regdb: flaw in general functionality 2008-11-24 23:26 ` Luis R. Rodriguez @ 2008-11-25 2:26 ` Richard Farina 2008-11-25 2:31 ` Pavel Roskin 0 siblings, 1 reply; 17+ messages in thread From: Richard Farina @ 2008-11-25 2:26 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Luis R. Rodriguez; +Cc: Pavel Roskin, John Linville, wireless Luis R. Rodriguez wrote: > On Mon, Nov 24, 2008 at 3:21 PM, Pavel Roskin <proski@gnu.org> wrote: > >> On Mon, 2008-11-24 at 15:12 -0800, Luis R. Rodriguez wrote: >> >> >>> Your point about not being able to listen is a good one, and a patch to >>> update the the US in consideration of part 15 rules would be >>> appreciated. Keep in mind we have flags for such things: >>> >>> -Passive scan >>> -No-IBSS >>> >>> We should probably rename no-ibss to no-beaconing though as that is the >>> real meaning inention behind it. >>> >> Maybe you mean no-transmit? >> > > Yeah sure, that seems to make more sense. > > I'm all for adding it to crda as no-transmit but, is that a valid flag? Also, how well does it work? From a monitor mode interface you can inject raw packets out of the interface. Would just adding "no-transmit" into the crda line work? I certainly don't see this in the crda code anywhere, nor in the definition of regdb file. I presume this has to be added? Thanks, Rick Farina > Luis > > ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 17+ messages in thread
* Re: wireless-regdb: flaw in general functionality 2008-11-25 2:26 ` Richard Farina @ 2008-11-25 2:31 ` Pavel Roskin 2008-11-26 0:19 ` Luis R. Rodriguez 0 siblings, 1 reply; 17+ messages in thread From: Pavel Roskin @ 2008-11-25 2:31 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Richard Farina; +Cc: Luis R. Rodriguez, John Linville, wireless On Mon, 2008-11-24 at 21:26 -0500, Richard Farina wrote: > I'm all for adding it to crda as no-transmit but, is that a valid flag? > Also, how well does it work? From a monitor mode interface you can > inject raw packets out of the interface. Would just adding > "no-transmit" into the crda line work? I certainly don't see this in > the crda code anywhere, nor in the definition of regdb file. I presume > this has to be added? I don't know anything about the process for introducing new CRDA flags. If it's hard to do, maybe the transmit power could be set to 0? -- Regards, Pavel Roskin ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 17+ messages in thread
* Re: wireless-regdb: flaw in general functionality 2008-11-25 2:31 ` Pavel Roskin @ 2008-11-26 0:19 ` Luis R. Rodriguez 2008-11-26 0:35 ` Pavel Roskin 0 siblings, 1 reply; 17+ messages in thread From: Luis R. Rodriguez @ 2008-11-26 0:19 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Pavel Roskin; +Cc: Richard Farina, Luis Rodriguez, John Linville, wireless On Mon, Nov 24, 2008 at 06:31:39PM -0800, Pavel Roskin wrote: > On Mon, 2008-11-24 at 21:26 -0500, Richard Farina wrote: > > > I'm all for adding it to crda as no-transmit but, is that a valid flag? > > Also, how well does it work? From a monitor mode interface you can > > inject raw packets out of the interface. Would just adding > > "no-transmit" into the crda line work? I certainly don't see this in > > the crda code anywhere, nor in the definition of regdb file. I presume > > this has to be added? > > I don't know anything about the process for introducing new CRDA flags. This is documented here: http://wireless.kernel.org/en/developers/Regulatory#Changingthedatabasefileformat Luis ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 17+ messages in thread
* Re: wireless-regdb: flaw in general functionality 2008-11-26 0:19 ` Luis R. Rodriguez @ 2008-11-26 0:35 ` Pavel Roskin 2008-11-26 1:02 ` Luis R. Rodriguez 0 siblings, 1 reply; 17+ messages in thread From: Pavel Roskin @ 2008-11-26 0:35 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Luis R. Rodriguez; +Cc: Richard Farina, John Linville, wireless On Tue, 2008-11-25 at 16:19 -0800, Luis R. Rodriguez wrote: > This is documented here: > > http://wireless.kernel.org/en/developers/Regulatory#Changingthedatabasefileformat I mean, I don't know how painful it can be. Perhaps it's better to anticipate some requirements earlier than to change them later. I think both "don't transmit" and "don't transmit unless permitted by the AP" could be useful in some jurisdictions. -- Regards, Pavel Roskin ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 17+ messages in thread
* Re: wireless-regdb: flaw in general functionality 2008-11-26 0:35 ` Pavel Roskin @ 2008-11-26 1:02 ` Luis R. Rodriguez 2008-11-26 3:10 ` Richard Farina 2008-11-26 5:53 ` Michael Renzmann 0 siblings, 2 replies; 17+ messages in thread From: Luis R. Rodriguez @ 2008-11-26 1:02 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Pavel Roskin Cc: Luis Rodriguez, Richard Farina, John Linville, wireless, Michael Green On Tue, Nov 25, 2008 at 04:35:54PM -0800, Pavel Roskin wrote: > On Tue, 2008-11-25 at 16:19 -0800, Luis R. Rodriguez wrote: > > > This is documented here: > > > > http://wireless.kernel.org/en/developers/Regulatory#Changingthedatabasefileformat > > I mean, I don't know how painful it can be. Perhaps it's better to > anticipate some requirements earlier than to change them later. Its painful to add anything new. To understand this better it helps to understand why some flags were added in the first place to regulatory rules. The short and sweet answer is DFS. And the general rule of thumb goes like this: When in a DFS freq, if you don't support DFS in your mode of operation, then you cannot TX. So if you don't support DFS in IBSS, you get NO-IBSS. If your AP doesn't support DFS then you can't use DFS channels. If you don't support DFS then you better not use active scanning on a STA, hence the passive scan flag (I guess this should be renamed to NO-ACTIVE-SCAN to be more consistent). The NO-HT20 is historical, we're not aware of countries disallowing this. No-HT40 is also a bit historical as it seems the countries which do not allow this will soon allow for it. The NO-OFDM and NO-CCK flag is unused and purely historical. So before adding a flag I think its *really* good to think about it thrice and see if there is a need of it, otherwise the answer should usually be that its not a good idea to add it. If anything we can consolidate flags or remove flags, that would be nicer if possible. > I think > both "don't transmit" and "don't transmit unless permitted by the AP" > could be useful in some jurisdictions. Don't transmit is implicit, CRDA just "allows", so the flags we have now are all negative for special considerations on "allowing", such as NO IBSS, etc. Luis ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 17+ messages in thread
* Re: wireless-regdb: flaw in general functionality 2008-11-26 1:02 ` Luis R. Rodriguez @ 2008-11-26 3:10 ` Richard Farina 2008-11-26 17:05 ` Luis R. Rodriguez 2008-11-26 5:53 ` Michael Renzmann 1 sibling, 1 reply; 17+ messages in thread From: Richard Farina @ 2008-11-26 3:10 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Luis R. Rodriguez Cc: Pavel Roskin, Luis Rodriguez, John Linville, wireless, Michael Green Luis R. Rodriguez wrote: > On Tue, Nov 25, 2008 at 04:35:54PM -0800, Pavel Roskin wrote: > >> On Tue, 2008-11-25 at 16:19 -0800, Luis R. Rodriguez wrote: >> >> >>> This is documented here: >>> >>> http://wireless.kernel.org/en/developers/Regulatory#Changingthedatabasefileformat >>> >> I mean, I don't know how painful it can be. Perhaps it's better to >> anticipate some requirements earlier than to change them later. >> > > Its painful to add anything new. To understand this better it helps to > understand why some flags were added in the first place to regulatory rules. > The short and sweet answer is DFS. And the general rule of thumb goes like this: > > When in a DFS freq, if you don't support DFS in your mode of operation, > then you cannot TX. > > So if you don't support DFS in IBSS, you get NO-IBSS. If your AP doesn't > support DFS then you can't use DFS channels. If you don't support DFS > then you better not use active scanning on a STA, hence the passive scan > flag (I guess this should be renamed to NO-ACTIVE-SCAN to be more > consistent). > > The NO-HT20 is historical, we're not aware of countries disallowing > this. No-HT40 is also a bit historical as it seems the countries which > do not allow this will soon allow for it. > > The NO-OFDM and NO-CCK flag is unused and purely historical. > > So before adding a flag I think its *really* good to think about it > thrice and see if there is a need of it, otherwise the answer should > usually be that its not a good idea to add it. > > If anything we can consolidate flags or remove flags, that would be nicer > if possible. > > >> I think >> both "don't transmit" and "don't transmit unless permitted by the AP" >> could be useful in some jurisdictions. >> > > Don't transmit is implicit, CRDA just "allows", so the flags we have now > are all negative for special considerations on "allowing", such as NO > IBSS, etc. > > This is simply not the case. Implicit is don't tune the radio, this prevents both transmission and reception which needlessly limits useful features of a device for no regulatory reason. This is why we are discussing it. A flag of "no-transmit" is likely accurate in most regulatory domains and would allow driver developers to enable more advanced usage of the devices (if they choose). I grant, most users really have no reason for this and that is an acceptable reason for someone to refuse to take the time to code it. If someone is willing to take the time to add the flag, it should not be turned down as it is both accurate and proper to support receive only frequencies. thanks, Rick Farina > Luis > > ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 17+ messages in thread
* Re: wireless-regdb: flaw in general functionality 2008-11-26 3:10 ` Richard Farina @ 2008-11-26 17:05 ` Luis R. Rodriguez 0 siblings, 0 replies; 17+ messages in thread From: Luis R. Rodriguez @ 2008-11-26 17:05 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Richard Farina Cc: Luis Rodriguez, Pavel Roskin, John Linville, wireless, Michael Green On Tue, Nov 25, 2008 at 07:10:07PM -0800, Richard Farina wrote: > Luis R. Rodriguez wrote: > > On Tue, Nov 25, 2008 at 04:35:54PM -0800, Pavel Roskin wrote: > > > >> On Tue, 2008-11-25 at 16:19 -0800, Luis R. Rodriguez wrote: > >> > >> > >>> This is documented here: > >>> > >>> http://wireless.kernel.org/en/developers/Regulatory#Changingthedatabasefileformat > >>> > >> I mean, I don't know how painful it can be. Perhaps it's better to > >> anticipate some requirements earlier than to change them later. > >> > > > > Its painful to add anything new. To understand this better it helps to > > understand why some flags were added in the first place to regulatory rules. > > The short and sweet answer is DFS. And the general rule of thumb goes like this: > > > > When in a DFS freq, if you don't support DFS in your mode of operation, > > then you cannot TX. > > > > So if you don't support DFS in IBSS, you get NO-IBSS. If your AP doesn't > > support DFS then you can't use DFS channels. If you don't support DFS > > then you better not use active scanning on a STA, hence the passive scan > > flag (I guess this should be renamed to NO-ACTIVE-SCAN to be more > > consistent). > > > > The NO-HT20 is historical, we're not aware of countries disallowing > > this. No-HT40 is also a bit historical as it seems the countries which > > do not allow this will soon allow for it. > > > > The NO-OFDM and NO-CCK flag is unused and purely historical. > > > > So before adding a flag I think its *really* good to think about it > > thrice and see if there is a need of it, otherwise the answer should > > usually be that its not a good idea to add it. > > > > If anything we can consolidate flags or remove flags, that would be nicer > > if possible. > > > > > >> I think > >> both "don't transmit" and "don't transmit unless permitted by the AP" > >> could be useful in some jurisdictions. > >> > > > > Don't transmit is implicit, CRDA just "allows", so the flags we have now > > are all negative for special considerations on "allowing", such as NO > > IBSS, etc. > > > > > This is simply not the case. Implicit is don't tune the radio, this > prevents both transmission and reception which needlessly limits useful > features of a device for no regulatory reason. This is why we are > discussing it. > > A flag of "no-transmit" is likely accurate in most regulatory domains > and would allow driver developers to enable more advanced usage of the > devices (if they choose). I grant, most users really have no reason for > this and that is an acceptable reason for someone to refuse to take the > time to code it. If someone is willing to take the time to add the > flag, it should not be turned down as it is both accurate and proper to > support receive only frequencies. Passive scan | NO-IBSS should suffice. And to be clear NO-IBSS should probably be renamed to NO-BEACONING. Luis ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 17+ messages in thread
* Re: wireless-regdb: flaw in general functionality 2008-11-26 1:02 ` Luis R. Rodriguez 2008-11-26 3:10 ` Richard Farina @ 2008-11-26 5:53 ` Michael Renzmann 2008-11-26 17:17 ` Luis R. Rodriguez 2008-11-26 17:19 ` Johannes Berg 1 sibling, 2 replies; 17+ messages in thread From: Michael Renzmann @ 2008-11-26 5:53 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Luis R. Rodriguez Cc: Pavel Roskin, Richard Farina, John Linville, wireless, Michael Green Hi. Luis R. Rodriguez wrote: > When in a DFS freq, if you don't support DFS in your mode of operation, > then you cannot TX. Side note: this behaviour is not required in all jurisdictions. German regulatory body for example allows use of non-DFS-compliant gear even on (at least some) DFS channels, but only with low TX power. Is that supported already? Bye, Mike ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 17+ messages in thread
* Re: wireless-regdb: flaw in general functionality 2008-11-26 5:53 ` Michael Renzmann @ 2008-11-26 17:17 ` Luis R. Rodriguez 2008-11-26 19:55 ` Michael Renzmann 2008-11-26 17:19 ` Johannes Berg 1 sibling, 1 reply; 17+ messages in thread From: Luis R. Rodriguez @ 2008-11-26 17:17 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Michael Renzmann Cc: Luis Rodriguez, Pavel Roskin, Richard Farina, John Linville, wireless, Michael Green On Tue, Nov 25, 2008 at 09:53:44PM -0800, Michael Renzmann wrote: > Hi. > > Luis R. Rodriguez wrote: > > When in a DFS freq, if you don't support DFS in your mode of operation, > > then you cannot TX. > > Side note: this behaviour is not required in all jurisdictions. German > regulatory body for example allows use of non-DFS-compliant gear even on > (at least some) DFS channels, but only with low TX power. Is that > supported already? Michael, I reviewed this internally and there is disagreement on your statement about German rules. Perhaps there is also a terminology disconnect between "DFS" and "Radar Detection" and how this applies to a STA or an AP. For STA devices "DFS" is required for all Europe regdomains including Germany for channels 52 to 140 inclusive. "DFS" for STAs means passive scanning and no adhoc for STA devices (or Mesh, hence NO-BEACONING name suggestion for the flag). When on AP and on these channels the AP must do radar detection, in Germany and rest of Europe and in all other regions. Radar detection includes a bunch of required functions for APs which we won't get into on this thread. Perhaps you are thinking of old interim rules that applies in Germany and elsewhere. But they no longer apply anyway in Europe. Luis ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 17+ messages in thread
* Re: wireless-regdb: flaw in general functionality 2008-11-26 17:17 ` Luis R. Rodriguez @ 2008-11-26 19:55 ` Michael Renzmann 2008-11-26 20:04 ` Johannes Berg 0 siblings, 1 reply; 17+ messages in thread From: Michael Renzmann @ 2008-11-26 19:55 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Luis R. Rodriguez Cc: Luis Rodriguez, Pavel Roskin, Richard Farina, John Linville, wireless, Michael Green Hi Luis. Luis R. Rodriguez wrote: >> Side note: this behaviour is not required in all jurisdictions. German >> regulatory body for example allows use of non-DFS-compliant gear even on >> (at least some) DFS channels, but only with low TX power. Is that >> supported already? > I reviewed this internally and there is disagreement on your statement > about German rules. Indeed, and that is for a good reason. I have rechecked, and I found that I have confused TPC and DFS (doh!). > For STA devices "DFS" is required for all Europe regdomains including > Germany for channels 52 to 140 inclusive. Ack. Plus, if I understand the regulatory rules [1] correctly, channels 36 to 48 don't require DFS in Germany, but may only be used in confined spaces. However, given that I was wrong with my understanding before, it would be good if someone else could double-check. Sorry for any caused confusion. Bye, Mike [1] http://www.bundesnetzagentur.de/media/archive/5009.pdf (german language, ) ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 17+ messages in thread
* Re: wireless-regdb: flaw in general functionality 2008-11-26 19:55 ` Michael Renzmann @ 2008-11-26 20:04 ` Johannes Berg 2008-11-27 5:26 ` Michael Renzmann 0 siblings, 1 reply; 17+ messages in thread From: Johannes Berg @ 2008-11-26 20:04 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Michael Renzmann Cc: Luis R. Rodriguez, Luis Rodriguez, Pavel Roskin, Richard Farina, John Linville, wireless, Michael Green [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 378 bytes --] On Wed, 2008-11-26 at 20:55 +0100, Michael Renzmann wrote: > Plus, if I understand the regulatory rules [1] correctly, channels 36 to > [1] http://www.bundesnetzagentur.de/media/archive/5009.pdf (german > language, ) Is that still current? I went through http://www.bundesnetzagentur.de/media/archive/13358.pdf when I did the rules for Germany in crda. johannes [-- Attachment #2: This is a digitally signed message part --] [-- Type: application/pgp-signature, Size: 836 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 17+ messages in thread
* Re: wireless-regdb: flaw in general functionality 2008-11-26 20:04 ` Johannes Berg @ 2008-11-27 5:26 ` Michael Renzmann 0 siblings, 0 replies; 17+ messages in thread From: Michael Renzmann @ 2008-11-27 5:26 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Johannes Berg Cc: Luis R. Rodriguez, Luis Rodriguez, Pavel Roskin, Richard Farina, John Linville, wireless, Michael Green Hi. Johannes Berg wrote: >> [1] http://www.bundesnetzagentur.de/media/archive/5009.pdf (german >> language, ) > Is that still current? Afaict yes, at least the information contained in the above file seem to be similar (although just a very small subset) of the information you linked to. Yours is more current, however, so if in doubt yours is that what one should rely on. Bye, Mike ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 17+ messages in thread
* Re: wireless-regdb: flaw in general functionality 2008-11-26 5:53 ` Michael Renzmann 2008-11-26 17:17 ` Luis R. Rodriguez @ 2008-11-26 17:19 ` Johannes Berg 1 sibling, 0 replies; 17+ messages in thread From: Johannes Berg @ 2008-11-26 17:19 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Michael Renzmann Cc: Luis R. Rodriguez, Pavel Roskin, Richard Farina, John Linville, wireless, Michael Green [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 453 bytes --] On Wed, 2008-11-26 at 06:53 +0100, Michael Renzmann wrote: > Side note: this behaviour is not required in all jurisdictions. German > regulatory body for example allows use of non-DFS-compliant gear even on > (at least some) DFS channels, but only with low TX power. Is that > supported already? Can you point to the relevant frequency plan numbers? I haven't seen such a thing when reviewing it, but I could well have missed it. johannes [-- Attachment #2: This is a digitally signed message part --] [-- Type: application/pgp-signature, Size: 836 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 17+ messages in thread
end of thread, other threads:[~2008-11-27 5:26 UTC | newest] Thread overview: 17+ messages (download: mbox.gz follow: Atom feed -- links below jump to the message on this page -- 2008-11-24 22:32 wireless-regdb: flaw in general functionality Richard Farina 2008-11-24 23:12 ` Luis R. Rodriguez 2008-11-24 23:21 ` Pavel Roskin 2008-11-24 23:26 ` Luis R. Rodriguez 2008-11-25 2:26 ` Richard Farina 2008-11-25 2:31 ` Pavel Roskin 2008-11-26 0:19 ` Luis R. Rodriguez 2008-11-26 0:35 ` Pavel Roskin 2008-11-26 1:02 ` Luis R. Rodriguez 2008-11-26 3:10 ` Richard Farina 2008-11-26 17:05 ` Luis R. Rodriguez 2008-11-26 5:53 ` Michael Renzmann 2008-11-26 17:17 ` Luis R. Rodriguez 2008-11-26 19:55 ` Michael Renzmann 2008-11-26 20:04 ` Johannes Berg 2008-11-27 5:26 ` Michael Renzmann 2008-11-26 17:19 ` Johannes Berg
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