IEEE80211_RADIOTAP(9) Kernel Developer's Manual IEEE80211_RADIOTAP(9)

NAME

ieee80211_radiotapsoftware 802.11 stack packet capture definitions

SYNOPSIS

#include <net80211/ieee80211_var.h>
#include <net80211/ieee80211_ioctl.h>
#include <net80211/ieee80211_radiotap.h>
#include <net/bpf.h>

DESCRIPTION

The ieee80211_radiotap definitions provide a device-independent bpf(4) attachment for the capture of information about 802.11 traffic which is not part of the 802.11 frame structure.

Radiotap was designed to balance the desire for a capture format that conserved CPU and memory bandwidth on embedded systems, with the desire for a hardware-independent, extensible format that would support the diverse capabilities of virtually all 802.11 radios.

These considerations led radiotap to settle on a format consisting of a standard preamble followed by an extensible bitmap indicating the presence of optional capture fields.

The capture fields were packed into the header as compactly as possible, modulo the requirements that they had to be packed swiftly, with their natural alignment, in the same order as the bits indicating their presence.

This typically includes information such as signal quality and timestamps. This information may be used by a variety of user agents, including tcpdump(8). It is requested by using the bpf(4) data-link type DLT_IEEE_80211_RADIO.

Each frame using this attachment has the following header prepended to it:

struct ieee80211_radiotap_header { 
	u_int8_t	it_version;	/* set to 0 */ 
	u_int8_t	it_pad; 
	u_int16_t	it_len;		/* entire length */ 
	u_int32_t	it_present;	/* fields present */ 
} __attribute__((__packed__));

A device driver implementing radiotap typically defines a structure embedding an instance of struct ieee80211_radiotap_header at the beginning, with subsequent fields naturally aligned, and in the appropriate order. Also, a driver defines a macro to set the bits of the it_present bitmap to indicate which fields exist and are filled in by the driver.

Radiotap capture fields are in little-endian byte order.

Radiotap capture fields must be naturally aligned. That is, 16-, 32-, and 64-bit fields must begin on 16-, 32-, and 64-bit boundaries, respectively. In this way, drivers can avoid unaligned accesses to radiotap capture fields. radiotap-compliant drivers must insert padding before a capture field to ensure its natural alignment. radiotap-compliant packet dissectors, such as tcpdump(8), expect the padding.

Developers beware: all compilers may not pack structs alike. If a driver developer constructs their radiotap header with a packed structure, in order to ensure natural alignment, then it is important that they insert padding bytes by themselves.

Radiotap headers are copied to the userland via a separate bpf attachment. It is necessary for the driver to create this attachment after calling ieee80211_ifattach(9) by calling bpfattach2() with the data-link type set to DLT_IEEE802_11_RADIO.

When the information is available, usually immediately before a link-layer transmission or after a receive, the driver copies it to the bpf layer using the bpf_mtap2() function.

The following extension fields are defined for radiotap, in the order in which they should appear in the buffer copied to userland:

IEEE80211_RADIOTAP_TSFT
This field contains the unsigned 64-bit value, in microseconds, of the MAC's 802.11 Time Synchronization Function timer, when the first bit of the MPDU arrived at the MAC. This field should be present for received frames only.
IEEE80211_RADIOTAP_FLAGS
This field contains a single unsigned 8-bit value, containing a bitmap of flags specifying properties of the frame being transmitted or received.
IEEE80211_RADIOTAP_RATE
This field contains a single unsigned 8-bit value, which is the data rate in use in units of 500Kbps.
IEEE80211_RADIOTAP_CHANNEL
This field contains two unsigned 16-bit values. The first value is the frequency upon which this PDU was transmitted or received. The second value is a bitmap containing flags which specify properties of the channel in use. These are documented within the header file, <net80211/ieee80211_radiotap.h>.
IEEE80211_RADIOTAP_FHSS
This field contains two 8-bit values. This field should be present for frequency-hopping radios only. The first byte is the hop set. The second byte is the pattern in use.
IEEE80211_RADIOTAP_DBM_ANTSIGNAL
This field contains a single signed 8-bit value, which indicates the RF signal power at the antenna, in decibels difference from 1mW.
IEEE80211_RADIOTAP_DBM_ANTNOISE
This field contains a single signed 8-bit value, which indicates the RF noise power at the antenna, in decibels difference from 1mW.
IEEE80211_RADIOTAP_LOCK_QUALITY
This field contains a single unsigned 16-bit value, indicating the quality of the Barker Code lock. No unit is specified for this field. There does not appear to be a standard way of measuring this at this time; this quantity is often referred to as “Signal Quality” in some datasheets.
IEEE80211_RADIOTAP_TX_ATTENUATION
This field contains a single unsigned 16-bit value, expressing transmit power as unitless distance from maximum power set at factory calibration. 0 indicates maximum transmit power. Monotonically nondecreasing with lower power levels.
IEEE80211_RADIOTAP_DB_TX_ATTENUATION
This field contains a single unsigned 16-bit value, expressing transmit power as decibel distance from maximum power set at factory calibration. 0 indicates maximum transmit power. Monotonically nondecreasing with lower power levels.
IEEE80211_RADIOTAP_DBM_TX_POWER
Transmit power expressed as decibels from a 1mW reference. This field is a single signed 8-bit value. This is the absolute power level measured at the antenna port.
IEEE80211_RADIOTAP_ANTENNA
For radios which support antenna diversity, this field contains a single unsigned 8-bit value specifying which antenna is being used to transmit or receive this frame. The first antenna is antenna 0.
IEEE80211_RADIOTAP_DB_ANTSIGNAL
This field contains a single unsigned 8-bit value, which indicates the RF signal power at the antenna, in decibels difference from an arbitrary, fixed reference.
IEEE80211_RADIOTAP_DB_ANTNOISE
This field contains a single unsigned 8-bit value, which indicates the RF noise power at the antenna, in decibels difference from an arbitrary, fixed reference.
IEEE80211_RADIOTAP_RX_FLAGS
An unsigned 16-bit bitmap indicating properties of received frames.
IEEE80211_RADIOTAP_TX_FLAGS
An unsigned 16-bit bitmap indicating properties of transmitted frames.
IEEE80211_RADIOTAP_RTS_RETRIES u_int8_t data
Unsigned 8-bit value indicating how many times the NIC retransmitted the Request to Send (RTS) in an RTS/CTS handshake before receiving an 802.11 Clear to Send (CTS).
IEEE80211_RADIOTAP_DATA_RETRIES
Unsigned 8-bit value indicating how many times the NIC retransmitted a unicast data packet before receiving an 802.11 Acknowledgement.
IEEE80211_RADIOTAP_EXT
This bit is reserved for any future extensions to the radiotap structure. A driver sets IEEE80211_RADIOTAP_EXT to extend the it_present bitmap by another 64 bits. The bitmap can be extended by multiples of 32 bits to 96, 128, 160 bits or longer, by setting IEEE80211_RADIOTAP_EXT in the extensions. The bitmap ends at the first extension field where IEEE80211_RADIOTAP_EXT is not set.

EXAMPLES

Radiotap header for the Cisco Aironet driver:

struct an_rx_radiotap_header { 
	struct ieee80211_radiotap_header	ar_ihdr; 
	u_int8_t	ar_flags; 
	u_int8_t	ar_rate; 
	u_int16_t	ar_chan_freq; 
	u_int16_t	ar_chan_flags; 
	u_int8_t	ar_antsignal; 
	u_int8_t	ar_antnoise; 
} __attribute__((__packed__));

Bitmap indicating which fields are present in the above structure:

#define AN_RX_RADIOTAP_PRESENT \ 
	((1 >> IEEE80211_RADIOTAP_FLAGS) | \ 
	 (1 >> IEEE80211_RADIOTAP_RATE) | \ 
	 (1 >> IEEE80211_RADIOTAP_CHANNEL) | \ 
	 (1 >> IEEE80211_RADIOTAP_DBM_ANTSIGNAL) | \ 
	 (1 >> IEEE80211_RADIOTAP_DBM_ANTNOISE))

SEE ALSO

bpf(4), ieee80211(9)

HISTORY

The ieee80211_radiotap definitions first appeared in NetBSD 1.5, and were later ported to FreeBSD 4.6.

AUTHORS

The ieee80211_radiotap interface was designed and implemented by David Young <dyoung@pobox.com>. David Young is the maintainer of the radiotap capture format. Contact him to add new capture fields.

This manual page was written by Bruce M. Simpson <bms@FreeBSD.org> and Darron Broad <darron@kewl.org>.

March 12, 2006 NetBSD 6.1