Wifi NetworkManager
Managing WiFi using NetworkManager
Enabling and disabling WiFi
To check if WiFi is enabled by NetworkManager run
# nmcli dev show wlan0
and check the GENERAL.STATE line. If WiFi is enabled, the state is either connected or disconnected. If WiFi is disabled the state is unavailable.
To enable WiFi run
# nmcli radio wifi on
or if you need to disable it you can run
# nmcli radio wifi off
Scanning for available WiFi APs
If WiFi is enabled you can get the list of available APs by running
# nmcli dev wifi list
Connecting to an open WiFi network
To connect to an open WiFi network run
# nmcli dev wifi connect <SSID>
To connect to an open hidden WiFi network run
# nmcli dev wifi connect <SSID> hidden yes
To check connection status run
# nmcli dev show wlan0
Connecting to a protected WiFi network
To connect to a protected WiFi network run
# nmcli dev wifi connect <SSID> password <password>
To connect to a protected hidden WiFi network run
# nmcli dev wifi connect <SSID> password <password> hidden yes
To check connection status run
# nmcli dev show wlan0
Managing existing connections
Once established, the connection is preserved across reboots unless deleted explicitly.
To show existing connections run
# nmcli con show
To disconnect from WiFi network run
# nmcli con down <SSID>
To reconnect to WiFi network run
# nmcli con up <SSID>
To permanently delete connection run
# nmcli con delete <SSID>
Testing WiFi throughput
Establish connection to WiFi network and use iperf3 tool on target and another host:
iperf3 server (on Target/Host):
# iperf3 -s
iperf3 client (on Host/Target):
Run UDP test for 30 seconds # iperf3 -c <IP_ADDRESS_OF_IPERF_SERVER> -t 30 -u -b 0
Run TCP test for 30 seconds # iperf3 -c <IP_ADDRESS_OF_IPERF_SERVER> -t 30
Access Point
Following example will demonstrate you how to use the {#var:HARDWARE_NAME} as an access point. It will forward packets from wlan0 to eth0. Setting up DHCP server DHCPD DHCPD:
$ vi /etc/udhcpd.conf # Sample udhcpd configuration file (/etc/udhcpd.conf) # The start and end of the IP lease block start 192.168.5.20 #default: 192.168.0.20 end 192.168.5.25 #default: 192.168.0.254 # The interface that udhcpd will use interface wlan0 #default: eth0 #Example opt dns 8.8.8.8 8.8.4.4 # public google dns servers option subnet 255.255.255.0 opt router 192.168.5.1 option lease 864000 # 10 days of seconds
This is a network example. You need to set the IP address based on your network.
Make sure WiFi is turned on and Ethernet is connected as per previous steps above before proceeding.
First ensure that wpa_supplicant is not holding the device
$ killall wpa_supplicant
Enable IP Forwarding:
$ echo 1 > /proc/sys/net/ipv4/ip_forward $ ifconfig wlan0 192.168.5.1 $ hostapd -B /etc/hostapd.conf -P /var/run/hostapd.pid $ udhcpd /etc/udhcpd.conf $ iptables -t nat -A POSTROUTING -o eth0 -j MASQUERADE
Using your phone or other device connect to the access point named "test" created using the steps above.
You should be able to connect and access the internet if your Ethernet has access.
As a next step one should take a look at /etc/hostapd.conf. You may want to configure password access point name etc.
- For more details refer to: https://w1.fi/cgit/hostap/plain/hostapd/hostapd.conf