From 21d5affb846356fd486b06656835164f0b29324e Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Martin Dietze Date: Fri, 8 Sep 2006 13:02:49 +0000 Subject: various packages: added mtx-2 configuration * where necessary, additional mtx-2 subdirs for files created * where necessary, additional entries in bitbake files created --- .../base-files/base-files/mtx-2/.mtn2git_empty | 0 packages/base-files/base-files/mtx-2/fstab | 8 + packages/base-files/base-files/mtx-2/profile | 25 ++ .../kismet/kismet-2004-04-R1/mtx-2/.mtn2git_empty | 0 .../kismet/kismet-2004-04-R1/mtx-2/kismet.conf | 328 ++++++++++++++++ packages/kismet/kismet_2004-04-R1.bb | 1 + packages/modutils/files/mtx-2/.mtn2git_empty | 0 packages/modutils/files/mtx-2/modules | 3 + packages/net-snmp/files/mtx-2/.mtn2git_empty | 0 packages/net-snmp/files/mtx-2/snmpd.conf | 434 +++++++++++++++++++++ packages/netbase/netbase/mtx-2/.mtn2git_empty | 0 packages/netbase/netbase/mtx-2/interfaces | 29 ++ packages/wpa-supplicant/files/mtx-2/.mtn2git_empty | 0 packages/wpa-supplicant/files/mtx-2/defconfig | 157 ++++++++ packages/wpa-supplicant/wpa-supplicant_0.3.8.bb | 1 + packages/wpa-supplicant/wpa-supplicant_0.4.7.bb | 1 + 16 files changed, 987 insertions(+) create mode 100644 packages/base-files/base-files/mtx-2/.mtn2git_empty create mode 100644 packages/base-files/base-files/mtx-2/fstab create mode 100644 packages/base-files/base-files/mtx-2/profile create mode 100644 packages/kismet/kismet-2004-04-R1/mtx-2/.mtn2git_empty create mode 100644 packages/kismet/kismet-2004-04-R1/mtx-2/kismet.conf create mode 100644 packages/modutils/files/mtx-2/.mtn2git_empty create mode 100644 packages/modutils/files/mtx-2/modules create mode 100644 packages/net-snmp/files/mtx-2/.mtn2git_empty create mode 100644 packages/net-snmp/files/mtx-2/snmpd.conf create mode 100644 packages/netbase/netbase/mtx-2/.mtn2git_empty create mode 100644 packages/netbase/netbase/mtx-2/interfaces create mode 100644 packages/wpa-supplicant/files/mtx-2/.mtn2git_empty create mode 100644 packages/wpa-supplicant/files/mtx-2/defconfig (limited to 'packages') diff --git a/packages/base-files/base-files/mtx-2/.mtn2git_empty b/packages/base-files/base-files/mtx-2/.mtn2git_empty new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..e69de29bb2 diff --git a/packages/base-files/base-files/mtx-2/fstab b/packages/base-files/base-files/mtx-2/fstab new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..f6f23ac2aa --- /dev/null +++ b/packages/base-files/base-files/mtx-2/fstab @@ -0,0 +1,8 @@ +# /etc/fstab: static file system information. mtx-2 +# +# +rootfs / auto defaults 1 1 +tmpfs /var tmpfs size=10m 0 0 +proc /proc proc defaults 0 0 +devpts /dev/pts devpts mode=0620,gid=5 0 0 +usbdevfs /proc/bus/usb usbdevfs noauto 0 0 diff --git a/packages/base-files/base-files/mtx-2/profile b/packages/base-files/base-files/mtx-2/profile new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..bedf2fc7d8 --- /dev/null +++ b/packages/base-files/base-files/mtx-2/profile @@ -0,0 +1,25 @@ +# /etc/profile: system-wide .profile file for the Bourne shell (sh(1)) +# and Bourne compatible shells (bash(1), ksh(1), ash(1), ...). + +PATH="/usr/local/bin:/usr/bin:/bin" + +if [ "`id -u`" -eq 0 ]; then + PATH=$PATH:/usr/local/sbin:/usr/sbin:/sbin: +fi +if [ "$PS1" ]; then +# works for bash and ash (no other shells known to be in use here) + PS1='\u@\h:\w\$ ' +fi + +if [ -d /etc/profile.d ]; then + for i in `ls /etc/profile.d/`; do + . /etc/profile.d/$i + done + unset i +fi + +export PATH PS1 + +umask 022 + +alias ll="ls -lah" \ No newline at end of file diff --git a/packages/kismet/kismet-2004-04-R1/mtx-2/.mtn2git_empty b/packages/kismet/kismet-2004-04-R1/mtx-2/.mtn2git_empty new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..e69de29bb2 diff --git a/packages/kismet/kismet-2004-04-R1/mtx-2/kismet.conf b/packages/kismet/kismet-2004-04-R1/mtx-2/kismet.conf new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..233aec378a --- /dev/null +++ b/packages/kismet/kismet-2004-04-R1/mtx-2/kismet.conf @@ -0,0 +1,328 @@ +# Kismet config file +# Most of the "static" configs have been moved to here -- the command line +# config was getting way too crowded and cryptic. We want functionality, +# not continually reading --help! + +# Version of Kismet config +version=2004.03.devel.a + +# Name of server (Purely for organiational purposes) +servername=Kismet + +# User to setid to (should be your normal user) +suiduser=your_user_here + +# Sources are defined as: +# source=cardtype,interface,name[,initialchannel] +# Card types and required drivers are listed in the README. +# The initial channel is optional, if hopping is not enabled it can be used +# to set the channel the interface listens on. +source=hostap,wlan0,wlan0 +source=hostap,wlan1,wlan1 +# Other common source configs: +# source=prism2,wlan0,prism2source +# source=prism2_avs,wlan0,newprism2source +# source=orinoco,eth0,orinocosource +# An example source line with an initial channel: +# source=orinoco,eth0,silver,11 + +# Comma-separated list of sources to enable. This is only needed if you defined +# multiple sources and only want to enable some of them. By default, all defined +# sources are enabled. +# For example: +# enablesources=prismsource,ciscosource + +# Do we channelhop? +channelhop=true + +# How many channels per second do we hop? (1-10) +channelvelocity=5 + +# By setting the dwell time for channel hopping we override the channelvelocity +# setting above and dwell on each channel for the given number of seconds. +#channeldwell=10 + +# Do we split channels between cards on the same spectrum? This means if +# multiple 802.11b capture sources are defined, they will be offset to cover +# the most possible spectrum at a given time. This also controls splitting +# fine-tuned sourcechannels lines which cover multiple interfaces (see below) +channelsplit=true + +# Basic channel hopping control: +# These define the channels the cards hop through for various frequency ranges +# supported by Kismet. More finegrain control is available via the +# "sourcechannels" configuration option. +# +# Don't change the IEEE80211 identifiers or channel hopping won't work. + +# Users outside the US might want to use this list: +# defaultchannels=IEEE80211b:1,7,13,2,8,3,14,9,4,10,5,11,6,12 +defaultchannels=IEEE80211b:1,6,11,2,7,3,8,4,9,5,10 + +# 802.11g uses the same channels as 802.11b... +defaultchannels=IEEE80211g:1,6,11,2,7,3,8,4,9,5,10 + +# 802.11a channels are non-overlapping so sequential is fine. You may want to +# adjust the list depending on the channels your card actually supports. +# defaultchannels=IEEE80211a:36,40,44,48,52,56,60,64,100,104,108,112,116,120,124,128,132,136,140,149,153,157,161,184,188,192,196,200,204,208,212,216 +defaultchannels=IEEE80211a:36,40,44,48,52,56,60,64 + +# Combo cards like Atheros use both 'a' and 'b/g' channels. Of course, you +# can also explicitly override a given source. You can use the script +# extras/listchan.pl to extract all the channels your card supports. +defaultchannels=IEEE80211ab:1,6,11,2,7,3,8,4,9,5,10,36,40,44,48,52,56,60,64 + +# Fine-tuning channel hopping control: +# The sourcechannels option can be used to set the channel hopping for +# specific interfaces, and to control what interfaces share a list of +# channels for split hopping. This can also be used to easily lock +# one card on a single channel while hopping with other cards. +# Any card without a sourcechannel definition will use the standard hopping +# list. +# sourcechannels=sourcename[,sourcename]:ch1,ch2,ch3,...chN + +# ie, for us channels on the source 'prism2source' (same as normal channel +# hopping behavior): +# sourcechannels=prism2source:1,6,11,2,7,3,8,4,9,5,10 + +# Given two capture sources, "prism2a" and "prism2b", we want prism2a to stay +# on channel 6 and prism2b to hop normally. By not setting a sourcechannels +# line for prism2b, it will use the standard hopping. +# sourcechannels=prism2a:6 + +# To assign the same custom hop channel to multiple sources, or to split the +# same custom hop channel over two sources (if splitchannels is true), list +# them all on the same sourcechannels line: +# sourcechannels=prism2a,prism2b,prism2c:1,6,11 + +# Port to serve GUI data +tcpport=2501 +# People allowed to connect, comma seperated IP addresses or network/mask +# blocks. Netmasks can be expressed as dotted quad (/255.255.255.0) or as +# numbers (/24) +allowedhosts=127.0.0.1 +# Maximum number of concurrent GUI's +maxclients=5 + +# Do we have a GPS? +gps=true +# Host:port that GPSD is running on. This can be localhost OR remote! +gpshost=localhost:2947 +# Do we lock the mode? This overrides coordinates of lock "0", which will +# generate some bad information until you get a GPS lock, but it will +# fix problems with GPS units with broken NMEA that report lock 0 +gpsmodelock=false + +# Packet filtering options: +# filter_tracker - Packets filtered from the tracker are not processed or +# recorded in any way. +# filter_dump - Packets filtered at the dump level are tracked, displayed, +# and written to the csv/xml/network/etc files, but not +# recorded in the packet dump +# filter_export - Controls what packets influence the exported CSV, network, +# xml, gps, etc files. +# All filtering options take arguments containing the type of address and +# addresses to be filtered. Valid address types are 'ANY', 'BSSID', +# 'SOURCE', and 'DEST'. Filtering can be inverted by the use of '!' before +# the address. For example, +# filter_tracker=ANY(!00:00:DE:AD:BE:EF) +# has the same effect as the previous mac_filter config file option. +# filter_tracker=... +# filter_dump=... +# filter_export=... + +# Alerts to be reported and the throttling rates. +# alert=name,throttle/unit,burst +# The throttle/unit describes the number of alerts of this type that are +# sent per time unit. Valid time units are second, minute, hour, and day. +# Burst describes the number of alerts sent before throttling takes place. +# For example: +# alert=FOO,10/min,5 +# Would allow 5 alerts through before throttling is enabled, and will then +# limit the number of alerts to 10 per minute. +# A throttle rate of 0 disables throttling of the alert. +# See the README for a list of alert types. +alert=NETSTUMBLER,5/min,2 +alert=WELLENREITER,5/min,2 +alert=LUCENTTEST,5/min,2 +alert=DEAUTHFLOOD,5/min,4 +alert=BCASTDISCON,5/min,4 +alert=CHANCHANGE,5/min,4 +alert=AIRJACKSSID,5/min,2 +alert=PROBENOJOIN,5/min,2 +alert=DISASSOCTRAFFIC,5/min,2 +alert=NULLPROBERESP,5/min,5 + +# Known WEP keys to decrypt, bssid,hexkey. This is only for networks where +# the keys are already known, and it may impact throughput on slower hardware. +# Multiple wepkey lines may be used for multiple BSSIDs. +# wepkey=00:DE:AD:C0:DE:00,FEEDFACEDEADBEEF01020304050607080900 + +# Is transmission of the keys to the client allowed? This may be a security +# risk for some. If you disable this, you will not be able to query keys from +# a client. +allowkeytransmit=true + +# How often (in seconds) do we write all our data files (0 to disable) +writeinterval=300 + +# Do we use sound? +# Not to be confused with GUI sound parameter, this controls wether or not the +# server itself will play sound. Primarily for headless or automated systems. +sound=false +# Path to sound player +soundplay=/usr/bin/play +# Optional parameters to pass to the player +# soundopts=--volume=.3 +# New network found +sound_new=/usr/share/kismet/wav/new_network.wav +# Wepped new network +# sound_new_wep=/usr/com/kismet/wav/new_wep_network.wav +# Network traffic sound +sound_traffic=/usr/share/kismet/wav/traffic.wav +# Network junk traffic found +sound_junktraffic=/usr/share/kismet/wav/junk_traffic.wav +# GPS lock aquired sound +# sound_gpslock=/usr/share/kismet/wav/foo.wav +# GPS lock lost sound +# sound_gpslost=/usr/share/kismet/wav/bar.wav +# Alert sound +sound_alert=/usr/share/kismet/wav/alert.wav + +# Does the server have speech? (Again, not to be confused with the GUI's speech) +speech=false +# Server's path to Festival +festival=/usr/bin/festival +# How do we speak? Valid options: +# speech Normal speech +# nato NATO spellings (alpha, bravo, charlie) +# spell Spell the letters out (aye, bee, sea) +speech_type=nato +# speech_encrypted and speech_unencrypted - Speech templates +# Similar to the logtemplate option, this lets you customize the speech output. +# speech_encrypted is used for an encrypted network spoken string +# speech_unencrypted is used for an unencrypted network spoken string +# +# %b is replaced by the BSSID (MAC) of the network +# %s is replaced by the SSID (name) of the network +# %c is replaced by the CHANNEL of the network +# %r is replaced by the MAX RATE of the network +speech_encrypted=New network detected, s.s.i.d. %s, channel %c, network encrypted. +speech_unencrypted=New network detected, s.s.i.d. %s, channel %c, network open. + +# Where do we get our manufacturer fingerprints from? Assumed to be in the +# default config directory if an absolute path is not given. +ap_manuf=ap_manuf +client_manuf=client_manuf + +# Use metric measurements in the output? +metric=false + +# Do we write waypoints for gpsdrive to load? Note: This is NOT related to +# recent versions of GPSDrive's native support of Kismet. +waypoints=false +# GPSMap waypoint file. This WILL be truncated. +waypointdata=%h/.gpsdrive/way_kismet.txt + +# How many alerts do we backlog for new clients? Only change this if you have +# a -very- low memory system and need those extra bytes, or if you have a high +# memory system and a huge number of alert conditions. +alertbacklog=50 + +# File types to log, comma seperated +# dump - raw packet dump +# network - plaintext detected networks +# csv - plaintext detected networks in CSV format +# xml - XML formatted network and cisco log +# weak - weak packets (in airsnort format) +# cisco - cisco equipment CDP broadcasts +# gps - gps coordinates +logtypes=dump,network,csv,xml,weak,cisco,gps + +# Do we track probe responses and merge probe networks into their owners? +# This isn't always desireable, depending on the type of monitoring you're +# trying to do. +trackprobenets=true + +# Do we log "noise" packets that we can't decipher? I tend to not, since +# they don't have anything interesting at all in them. +noiselog=false + +# Do we log corrupt packets? Corrupt packets have enough header information +# to see what they are, but someting is wrong with them that prevents us from +# completely dissecting them. Logging these is usually not a bad idea. +corruptlog=true + +# Do we log beacon packets or do we filter them out of the dumpfile +beaconlog=true + +# Do we log PHY layer packets or do we filter them out of the dumpfile +phylog=true + +# Do we mangle packets if we can decrypt them or if they're fuzzy-detected +mangledatalog=true + +# Do we do "fuzzy" crypt detection? (byte-based detection instead of 802.11 +# frame headers) +# valid option: Comma seperated list of card types to perform fuzzy detection +# on, or 'all' +fuzzycrypt=wtapfile,wlanng,wlanng_legacy,wlanng_avs,hostap,wlanng_wext + +# What type of dump do we generate? +# valid option: "wiretap" +dumptype=wiretap +# Do we limit the size of dump logs? Sometimes ethereal can't handle big ones. +# 0 = No limit +# Anything else = Max number of packets to log to a single file before closing +# and opening a new one. +dumplimit=0 + +# Do we write data packets to a FIFO for an external data-IDS (such as Snort)? +# See the docs before enabling this. +#fifo=/tmp/kismet_dump + +# Default log title +logdefault=Kismet + +# logtemplate - Filename logging template. +# This is, at first glance, really nasty and ugly, but you'll hardly ever +# have to touch it so don't complain too much. +# +# %n is replaced by the logging instance name +# %d is replaced by the current date as Mon-DD-YYYY +# %D is replaced by the current date as YYYYMMDD +# %t is replaced by the starting log time +# %i is replaced by the increment log in the case of multiple logs +# %l is replaced by the log type (dump, status, crypt, etc) +# %h is replaced by the home directory +# ie, "netlogs/%n-%d-%i.dump" called with a logging name of "Pok" could expand +# to something like "netlogs/Pok-Dec-20-01-1.dump" for the first instance and +# "netlogs/Pok-Dec-20-01-2.%l" for the second logfile generated. +# %h/netlots/%n-%d-%i.dump could expand to +# /home/foo/netlogs/Pok-Dec-20-01-2.dump +# +# Other possibilities: Sorting by directory +# logtemplate=%l/%n-%d-%i +# Would expand to, for example, +# dump/Pok-Dec-20-01-1 +# crypt/Pok-Dec-20-01-1 +# and so on. The "dump", "crypt", etc, dirs must exist before kismet is run +# in this case. +logtemplate=/tmp/%n-%d-%i.%l + +# Where do we store the pid file of the server? +piddir=/var/run/ + +# Where state info, etc, is stored. You shouldnt ever need to change this. +# This is a directory. +configdir=%h/.kismet/ + +# cloaked SSID file. You shouldn't ever need to change this. +ssidmap=ssid_map + +# Group map file. You shouldn't ever need to change this. +groupmap=group_map + +# IP range map file. You shouldn't ever need to change this. +ipmap=ip_map + diff --git a/packages/kismet/kismet_2004-04-R1.bb b/packages/kismet/kismet_2004-04-R1.bb index f1510f9e87..9c864a3f86 100644 --- a/packages/kismet/kismet_2004-04-R1.bb +++ b/packages/kismet/kismet_2004-04-R1.bb @@ -13,6 +13,7 @@ SRC_URI = "http://www.kismetwireless.net/code/kismet-2004-04-R1.tar.gz \ file://glibc3.3.2-getopt-throw.diff;patch=1;pnum=0" SRC_URI_append_mtx-1 = " file://kismet.conf" +SRC_URI_append_mtx-2 = " file://kismet.conf" EXTRA_OECONF = "--with-pcap=linux --disable-setuid" diff --git a/packages/modutils/files/mtx-2/.mtn2git_empty b/packages/modutils/files/mtx-2/.mtn2git_empty new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..e69de29bb2 diff --git a/packages/modutils/files/mtx-2/modules b/packages/modutils/files/mtx-2/modules new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..3eb719acf9 --- /dev/null +++ b/packages/modutils/files/mtx-2/modules @@ -0,0 +1,3 @@ +tun +ppp_async +hostap_pci \ No newline at end of file diff --git a/packages/net-snmp/files/mtx-2/.mtn2git_empty b/packages/net-snmp/files/mtx-2/.mtn2git_empty new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..e69de29bb2 diff --git a/packages/net-snmp/files/mtx-2/snmpd.conf b/packages/net-snmp/files/mtx-2/snmpd.conf new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..9067f68d22 --- /dev/null +++ b/packages/net-snmp/files/mtx-2/snmpd.conf @@ -0,0 +1,434 @@ +############################################################################### +# +# EXAMPLE.conf: +# An example configuration file for configuring the ucd-snmp snmpd agent. +# +############################################################################### +# +# This file is intended to only be an example. If, however, you want +# to use it, it should be placed in /etc/snmp/snmpd.conf. +# When the snmpd agent starts up, this is where it will look for it. +# +# You might be interested in generating your own snmpd.conf file using +# the "snmpconf" program (perl script) instead. It's a nice menu +# based interface to writing well commented configuration files. Try it! +# +# Note: This file is automatically generated from EXAMPLE.conf.def. +# Do NOT read the EXAMPLE.conf.def file! Instead, after you have run +# configure & make, and then make sure you read the EXAMPLE.conf file +# instead, as it will tailor itself to your configuration. + +# All lines beginning with a '#' are comments and are intended for you +# to read. All other lines are configuration commands for the agent. + +# +# PLEASE: read the snmpd.conf(5) manual page as well! +# + + +############################################################################### +# Access Control +############################################################################### + +# YOU SHOULD CHANGE THE "COMMUNITY" TOKEN BELOW TO A NEW KEYWORD ONLY +# KNOWN AT YOUR SITE. YOU *MUST* CHANGE THE NETWORK TOKEN BELOW TO +# SOMETHING REFLECTING YOUR LOCAL NETWORK ADDRESS SPACE. + +# By far, the most common question I get about the agent is "why won't +# it work?", when really it should be "how do I configure the agent to +# allow me to access it?" +# +# By default, the agent responds to the "public" community for read +# only access, if run out of the box without any configuration file in +# place. The following examples show you other ways of configuring +# the agent so that you can change the community names, and give +# yourself write access as well. +# +# The following lines change the access permissions of the agent so +# that the COMMUNITY string provides read-only access to your entire +# NETWORK (EG: 10.10.10.0/24), and read/write access to only the +# localhost (127.0.0.1, not its real ipaddress). +# +# For more information, read the FAQ as well as the snmpd.conf(5) +# manual page. + +#### +# First, map the community name (COMMUNITY) into a security name +# (local and mynetwork, depending on where the request is coming +# from): + +# sec.name source community +#com2sec paranoid default public +com2sec readonly default public +#com2sec readwrite default private + +#### +# Second, map the security names into group names: + +# sec.model sec.name +group MyROSystem v1 paranoid +group MyROSystem v2c paranoid +group MyROSystem usm paranoid +group MyROGroup v1 readonly +group MyROGroup v2c readonly +group MyROGroup usm readonly +group MyRWGroup v1 readwrite +group MyRWGroup v2c readwrite +group MyRWGroup usm readwrite + +#### +# Third, create a view for us to let the groups have rights to: + +# incl/excl subtree mask +view all included .1 80 +view system included .iso.org.dod.internet.mgmt.mib-2.system + +#### +# Finally, grant the 2 groups access to the 1 view with different +# write permissions: + +# context sec.model sec.level match read write notif +access MyROSystem "" any noauth exact system none none +access MyROGroup "" any noauth exact all none none +access MyRWGroup "" any noauth exact all all none + +# ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- + + +############################################################################### +# System contact information +# + +# It is also possible to set the sysContact and sysLocation system +# variables through the snmpd.conf file. **PLEASE NOTE** that setting +# the value of these objects here makes these objects READ-ONLY +# (regardless of any access control settings). Any attempt to set the +# value of an object whose value is given here will fail with an error +# status of notWritable. + +syslocation Unknown (configure /etc/snmp/snmpd.local.conf) +syscontact Root (configure /etc/snmp/snmpd.local.conf) + +# Example output of snmpwalk: +# % snmpwalk -v 1 -c public localhost system +# system.sysDescr.0 = "SunOS name sun4c" +# system.sysObjectID.0 = OID: enterprises.ucdavis.ucdSnmpAgent.sunos4 +# system.sysUpTime.0 = Timeticks: (595637548) 68 days, 22:32:55 +# system.sysContact.0 = "Me " +# system.sysName.0 = "name" +# system.sysLocation.0 = "Right here, right now." +# system.sysServices.0 = 72 + + +# ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- + + +############################################################################### +# Process checks. +# +# The following are examples of how to use the agent to check for +# processes running on the host. The syntax looks something like: +# +# proc NAME [MAX=0] [MIN=0] +# +# NAME: the name of the process to check for. It must match +# exactly (ie, http will not find httpd processes). +# MAX: the maximum number allowed to be running. Defaults to 0. +# MIN: the minimum number to be running. Defaults to 0. + +# +# Examples: +# + +# Make sure mountd is running +#proc mountd + +# Make sure there are no more than 4 ntalkds running, but 0 is ok too. +#proc ntalkd 4 + +# Make sure at least one sendmail, but less than or equal to 10 are running. +#proc sendmail 10 1 + +# A snmpwalk of the prTable would look something like this: +# +# % snmpwalk -v 1 -c public localhost .1.3.6.1.4.1.2021.2 +# enterprises.ucdavis.procTable.prEntry.prIndex.1 = 1 +# enterprises.ucdavis.procTable.prEntry.prIndex.2 = 2 +# enterprises.ucdavis.procTable.prEntry.prIndex.3 = 3 +# enterprises.ucdavis.procTable.prEntry.prNames.1 = "mountd" +# enterprises.ucdavis.procTable.prEntry.prNames.2 = "ntalkd" +# enterprises.ucdavis.procTable.prEntry.prNames.3 = "sendmail" +# enterprises.ucdavis.procTable.prEntry.prMin.1 = 0 +# enterprises.ucdavis.procTable.prEntry.prMin.2 = 0 +# enterprises.ucdavis.procTable.prEntry.prMin.3 = 1 +# enterprises.ucdavis.procTable.prEntry.prMax.1 = 0 +# enterprises.ucdavis.procTable.prEntry.prMax.2 = 4 +# enterprises.ucdavis.procTable.prEntry.prMax.3 = 10 +# enterprises.ucdavis.procTable.prEntry.prCount.1 = 0 +# enterprises.ucdavis.procTable.prEntry.prCount.2 = 0 +# enterprises.ucdavis.procTable.prEntry.prCount.3 = 1 +# enterprises.ucdavis.procTable.prEntry.prErrorFlag.1 = 1 +# enterprises.ucdavis.procTable.prEntry.prErrorFlag.2 = 0 +# enterprises.ucdavis.procTable.prEntry.prErrorFlag.3 = 0 +# enterprises.ucdavis.procTable.prEntry.prErrMessage.1 = "No mountd process running." +# enterprises.ucdavis.procTable.prEntry.prErrMessage.2 = "" +# enterprises.ucdavis.procTable.prEntry.prErrMessage.3 = "" +# enterprises.ucdavis.procTable.prEntry.prErrFix.1 = 0 +# enterprises.ucdavis.procTable.prEntry.prErrFix.2 = 0 +# enterprises.ucdavis.procTable.prEntry.prErrFix.3 = 0 +# +# Note that the errorFlag for mountd is set to 1 because one is not +# running (in this case an rpc.mountd is, but thats not good enough), +# and the ErrMessage tells you what's wrong. The configuration +# imposed in the snmpd.conf file is also shown. +# +# Special Case: When the min and max numbers are both 0, it assumes +# you want a max of infinity and a min of 1. +# + + +# ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- + + +############################################################################### +# Executables/scripts +# + +# +# You can also have programs run by the agent that return a single +# line of output and an exit code. Here are two examples. +# +# exec NAME PROGRAM [ARGS ...] +# +# NAME: A generic name. +# PROGRAM: The program to run. Include the path! +# ARGS: optional arguments to be passed to the program + +# a simple hello world +#exec echotest /bin/echo hello world + +# Run a shell script containing: +# +# #!/bin/sh +# echo hello world +# echo hi there +# exit 35 +# +# Note: this has been specifically commented out to prevent +# accidental security holes due to someone else on your system writing +# a /tmp/shtest before you do. Uncomment to use it. +# +#exec shelltest /bin/sh /tmp/shtest + +# Then, +# % snmpwalk -v 1 -c public localhost .1.3.6.1.4.1.2021.8 +# enterprises.ucdavis.extTable.extEntry.extIndex.1 = 1 +# enterprises.ucdavis.extTable.extEntry.extIndex.2 = 2 +# enterprises.ucdavis.extTable.extEntry.extNames.1 = "echotest" +# enterprises.ucdavis.extTable.extEntry.extNames.2 = "shelltest" +# enterprises.ucdavis.extTable.extEntry.extCommand.1 = "/bin/echo hello world" +# enterprises.ucdavis.extTable.extEntry.extCommand.2 = "/bin/sh /tmp/shtest" +# enterprises.ucdavis.extTable.extEntry.extResult.1 = 0 +# enterprises.ucdavis.extTable.extEntry.extResult.2 = 35 +# enterprises.ucdavis.extTable.extEntry.extOutput.1 = "hello world." +# enterprises.ucdavis.extTable.extEntry.extOutput.2 = "hello world." +# enterprises.ucdavis.extTable.extEntry.extErrFix.1 = 0 +# enterprises.ucdavis.extTable.extEntry.extErrFix.2 = 0 + +# Note that the second line of the /tmp/shtest shell script is cut +# off. Also note that the exit status of 35 was returned. + +# ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- + + +############################################################################### +# disk checks +# + +# The agent can check the amount of available disk space, and make +# sure it is above a set limit. + +# disk PATH [MIN=DEFDISKMINIMUMSPACE] +# +# PATH: mount path to the disk in question. +# MIN: Disks with space below this value will have the Mib's errorFlag set. +# Default value = DEFDISKMINIMUMSPACE. + +# Check the / partition and make sure it contains at least 10 megs. + +#disk / 10000 + +# % snmpwalk -v 1 -c public localhost .1.3.6.1.4.1.2021.9 +# enterprises.ucdavis.diskTable.dskEntry.diskIndex.1 = 0 +# enterprises.ucdavis.diskTable.dskEntry.diskPath.1 = "/" Hex: 2F +# enterprises.ucdavis.diskTable.dskEntry.diskDevice.1 = "/dev/dsk/c201d6s0" +# enterprises.ucdavis.diskTable.dskEntry.diskMinimum.1 = 10000 +# enterprises.ucdavis.diskTable.dskEntry.diskTotal.1 = 837130 +# enterprises.ucdavis.diskTable.dskEntry.diskAvail.1 = 316325 +# enterprises.ucdavis.diskTable.dskEntry.diskUsed.1 = 437092 +# enterprises.ucdavis.diskTable.dskEntry.diskPercent.1 = 58 +# enterprises.ucdavis.diskTable.dskEntry.diskErrorFlag.1 = 0 +# enterprises.ucdavis.diskTable.dskEntry.diskErrorMsg.1 = "" + +# ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- + + +############################################################################### +# load average checks +# + +# load [1MAX=DEFMAXLOADAVE] [5MAX=DEFMAXLOADAVE] [15MAX=DEFMAXLOADAVE] +# +# 1MAX: If the 1 minute load average is above this limit at query +# time, the errorFlag will be set. +# 5MAX: Similar, but for 5 min average. +# 15MAX: Similar, but for 15 min average. + +# Check for loads: +#load 12 14 14 + +# % snmpwalk -v 1 -c public localhost .1.3.6.1.4.1.2021.10 +# enterprises.ucdavis.loadTable.laEntry.loadaveIndex.1 = 1 +# enterprises.ucdavis.loadTable.laEntry.loadaveIndex.2 = 2 +# enterprises.ucdavis.loadTable.laEntry.loadaveIndex.3 = 3 +# enterprises.ucdavis.loadTable.laEntry.loadaveNames.1 = "Load-1" +# enterprises.ucdavis.loadTable.laEntry.loadaveNames.2 = "Load-5" +# enterprises.ucdavis.loadTable.laEntry.loadaveNames.3 = "Load-15" +# enterprises.ucdavis.loadTable.laEntry.loadaveLoad.1 = "0.49" Hex: 30 2E 34 39 +# enterprises.ucdavis.loadTable.laEntry.loadaveLoad.2 = "0.31" Hex: 30 2E 33 31 +# enterprises.ucdavis.loadTable.laEntry.loadaveLoad.3 = "0.26" Hex: 30 2E 32 36 +# enterprises.ucdavis.loadTable.laEntry.loadaveConfig.1 = "12.00" +# enterprises.ucdavis.loadTable.laEntry.loadaveConfig.2 = "14.00" +# enterprises.ucdavis.loadTable.laEntry.loadaveConfig.3 = "14.00" +# enterprises.ucdavis.loadTable.laEntry.loadaveErrorFlag.1 = 0 +# enterprises.ucdavis.loadTable.laEntry.loadaveErrorFlag.2 = 0 +# enterprises.ucdavis.loadTable.laEntry.loadaveErrorFlag.3 = 0 +# enterprises.ucdavis.loadTable.laEntry.loadaveErrMessage.1 = "" +# enterprises.ucdavis.loadTable.laEntry.loadaveErrMessage.2 = "" +# enterprises.ucdavis.loadTable.laEntry.loadaveErrMessage.3 = "" + +# ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- + + +############################################################################### +# Extensible sections. +# + +# This alleviates the multiple line output problem found in the +# previous executable mib by placing each mib in its own mib table: + +# Run a shell script containing: +# +# #!/bin/sh +# echo hello world +# echo hi there +# exit 35 +# +# Note: this has been specifically commented out to prevent +# accidental security holes due to someone else on your system writing +# a /tmp/shtest before you do. Uncomment to use it. +# +# exec .1.3.6.1.4.1.2021.50 shelltest /bin/sh /tmp/shtest + +# % snmpwalk -v 1 -c public localhost .1.3.6.1.4.1.2021.50 +# enterprises.ucdavis.50.1.1 = 1 +# enterprises.ucdavis.50.2.1 = "shelltest" +# enterprises.ucdavis.50.3.1 = "/bin/sh /tmp/shtest" +# enterprises.ucdavis.50.100.1 = 35 +# enterprises.ucdavis.50.101.1 = "hello world." +# enterprises.ucdavis.50.101.2 = "hi there." +# enterprises.ucdavis.50.102.1 = 0 + +# Now the Output has grown to two lines, and we can see the 'hi +# there.' output as the second line from our shell script. +# +# Note that you must alter the mib.txt file to be correct if you want +# the .50.* outputs above to change to reasonable text descriptions. + +# Other ideas: +# +# exec .1.3.6.1.4.1.2021.51 ps /bin/ps +# exec .1.3.6.1.4.1.2021.52 top /usr/local/bin/top +# exec .1.3.6.1.4.1.2021.53 mailq /usr/bin/mailq + +# ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- + + +############################################################################### +# Pass through control. +# + +# Usage: +# pass MIBOID EXEC-COMMAND +# +# This will pass total control of the mib underneath the MIBOID +# portion of the mib to the EXEC-COMMAND. +# +# Note: You'll have to change the path of the passtest script to your +# source directory or install it in the given location. +# +# Example: (see the script for details) +# (commented out here since it requires that you place the +# script in the right location. (its not installed by default)) + +# pass .1.3.6.1.4.1.2021.255 /bin/sh /usr/local/passtest + +# % snmpwalk -v 1 -c public localhost .1.3.6.1.4.1.2021.255 +# enterprises.ucdavis.255.1 = "life the universe and everything" +# enterprises.ucdavis.255.2.1 = 42 +# enterprises.ucdavis.255.2.2 = OID: 42.42.42 +# enterprises.ucdavis.255.3 = Timeticks: (363136200) 42 days, 0:42:42 +# enterprises.ucdavis.255.4 = IpAddress: 127.0.0.1 +# enterprises.ucdavis.255.5 = 42 +# enterprises.ucdavis.255.6 = Gauge: 42 +# +# % snmpget -v 1 -c public localhost .1.3.6.1.4.1.2021.255.5 +# enterprises.ucdavis.255.5 = 42 +# +# % snmpset -v 1 -c public localhost .1.3.6.1.4.1.2021.255.1 s "New string" +# enterprises.ucdavis.255.1 = "New string" +# + +# For specific usage information, see the man/snmpd.conf.5 manual page +# as well as the local/passtest script used in the above example. + +############################################################################### +# Subagent control +# + +# The agent can support subagents using a number of extension mechanisms. +# From the 4.2.1 release, AgentX support is being compiled in by default. +# However, this is still experimental code, so should not be used on +# critical production systems. +# Please see the file README.agentx for more details. +# +# If having read, marked, learnt and inwardly digested this information, +# you decide that you do wish to make use of this mechanism, simply +# uncomment the following directive. +# +# master agentx +# +# I repeat - this is *NOT* regarded as suitable for front-line production +# systems, though it is probably stable enough for day-to-day use. +# Probably. +# +# No refunds will be given. + +############################################################################### +# Further Information +# +# See the snmpd.conf manual page, and the output of "snmpd -H". +# MUCH more can be done with the snmpd.conf than is shown as an +# example here. + +############################################################################### +# interfaces + +# types: +# ieee80211(71) +# ethernetCsmacd(6), + +# interface name type speed +interface eth0 6 100000000 +interface wlan0 71 5000000 +interface wlan1 71 5000000 diff --git a/packages/netbase/netbase/mtx-2/.mtn2git_empty b/packages/netbase/netbase/mtx-2/.mtn2git_empty new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..e69de29bb2 diff --git a/packages/netbase/netbase/mtx-2/interfaces b/packages/netbase/netbase/mtx-2/interfaces new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..a7c6da5752 --- /dev/null +++ b/packages/netbase/netbase/mtx-2/interfaces @@ -0,0 +1,29 @@ +# /etc/network/interfaces -- configuration file for ifup(8), ifdown(8) + +# The loopback interface +auto lo +iface lo inet loopback + +# Ethernet +auto eth0 +iface eth0 inet dhcp + +# wlan interface 1 for clients +auto wlan0 +iface wlan0 inet static + address 10.0.0.1 + netmask 255.0.0.0 + wireless_mode master + wireless_essid cube-ap + wireless_channel 1 + +# wlan interface 2 for mesh +auto wlan1 +iface wlan1 inet static + address 172.16.0.1 + netmask 255.240.0.0 + broadcast 172.31.255.255 + wireless_mode ad-hoc + wireless_essid cube-mesh + wireless_channel 11 + wireless_rts 250 diff --git a/packages/wpa-supplicant/files/mtx-2/.mtn2git_empty b/packages/wpa-supplicant/files/mtx-2/.mtn2git_empty new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..e69de29bb2 diff --git a/packages/wpa-supplicant/files/mtx-2/defconfig b/packages/wpa-supplicant/files/mtx-2/defconfig new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..a0d9b73d3f --- /dev/null +++ b/packages/wpa-supplicant/files/mtx-2/defconfig @@ -0,0 +1,157 @@ +# This file lists the configuration options that are used when building the +# hostapd binary. All lines starting with # are ignored. Configuration option +# lines must be commented out complete, if they are not to be included, i.e., +# just setting VARIABLE=n is not disabling that variable. +# +# This file is included in Makefile, so variables like CFLAGS and LIBS can also +# be modified from here. In most cass, these lines should use += in order not +# to override previous values of the variables. + +CFLAGS = $(TARGET_CFLAGS) -I../hostapd -I../utils -I../driver/modules -Wall -MMD + +# for wpa_supplicant, wpa_cli +LIBS = $(TARGET_LDFLAGS) + +# for wpa_passphrase: +LIBS_p = $(TARGET_LDFLAGS) + + +# Uncomment following two lines and fix the paths if you have installed openssl +# in non-default location +#CFLAGS += -I/usr/local/openssl/include +#LIBS += -L/usr/local/openssl/lib + +# Example configuration for various cross-compilation platforms + +#### sveasoft (e.g., for Linksys WRT54G) ###################################### +#CC=mipsel-uclibc-gcc +#CC=/opt/brcm/hndtools-mipsel-uclibc/bin/mipsel-uclibc-gcc +#CFLAGS += -Os +#CPPFLAGS += -I../src/include -I../../src/router/openssl/include +#LIBS += -L/opt/brcm/hndtools-mipsel-uclibc-0.9.19/lib -lssl +############################################################################### + +#### openwrt (e.g., for Linksys WRT54G) ####################################### +#CC=mipsel-uclibc-gcc +#CC=/opt/brcm/hndtools-mipsel-uclibc/bin/mipsel-uclibc-gcc +#CFLAGS += -Os +#CPPFLAGS=-I../src/include -I../openssl-0.9.7d/include \ +# -I../WRT54GS/release/src/include +#LIBS = -lssl +############################################################################### + + +# Driver interface for Host AP driver +CONFIG_DRIVER_HOSTAP=y + +# Driver interface for Agere driver +#CONFIG_DRIVER_HERMES=y + +# Driver interface for madwifi driver +CONFIG_DRIVER_MADWIFI=y +# Change include directories to match with the local setup +#CFLAGS += -I../madwifi/wpa + +# Driver interface for Prism54 driver +CONFIG_DRIVER_PRISM54=y + +# Driver interface for ndiswrapper +#CONFIG_DRIVER_NDISWRAPPER=y + +# Driver interface for Atmel driver +#CONFIG_DRIVER_ATMEL=y + +# Driver interface for Broadcom driver +#CONFIG_DRIVER_BROADCOM=y +# Example path for wlioctl.h; change to match your configuration +#CFLAGS += -I/opt/WRT54GS/release/src/include + +# Driver interface for Intel ipw2100 driver +#CONFIG_DRIVER_IPW2100=y + +# Driver interface for generic Linux wireless extensions +CONFIG_DRIVER_WEXT=y + +# Driver interface for FreeBSD net80211 layer (e.g., Atheros driver) +#CONFIG_DRIVER_BSD=y +#CFLAGS += -I/usr/local/include +#LIBS += -L/usr/local/lib + +# Driver interface for Windows NDIS +#CONFIG_DRIVER_NDIS=y +#CFLAGS += -I/usr/include/w32api/ddk +#LIBS += -L/usr/local/lib +# For native build using mingw +#CONFIG_NATIVE_WINDOWS=y +# Additional directories for cross-compilation on Linux host for mingw target +#CFLAGS += -I/opt/mingw/mingw32/include/ddk +#LIBS += -L/opt/mingw/mingw32/lib +#CC=mingw32-gcc + +# Driver interface for development testing +#CONFIG_DRIVER_TEST=y + +# Enable IEEE 802.1X Supplicant (automatically included if any EAP method is +# included) +CONFIG_IEEE8021X_EAPOL=y + +# EAP-MD5 (automatically included if EAP-TTLS is enabled) +CONFIG_EAP_MD5=y + +# EAP-MSCHAPv2 (automatically included if EAP-PEAP is enabled) +CONFIG_EAP_MSCHAPV2=y + +# EAP-TLS +CONFIG_EAP_TLS=y + +# EAL-PEAP +CONFIG_EAP_PEAP=y + +# EAP-TTLS +CONFIG_EAP_TTLS=y + +# EAP-GTC +CONFIG_EAP_GTC=y + +# EAP-OTP +CONFIG_EAP_OTP=y + +# EAP-SIM (enable CONFIG_PCSC, if EAP-SIM is used) +#CONFIG_EAP_SIM=y + +# EAP-PSK (experimental; this is _not_ needed for WPA-PSK) +#CONFIG_EAP_PSK=y + +# LEAP +CONFIG_EAP_LEAP=y + +# EAP-AKA (enable CONFIG_PCSC, if EAP-AKA is used) +#CONFIG_EAP_AKA=y + +# PKCS#12 (PFX) support (used to read private key and certificate file from +# a file that usually has extension .p12 or .pfx) +CONFIG_PKCS12=y + +# PC/SC interface for smartcards (USIM, GSM SIM) +# Enable this if EAP-SIM or EAP-AKA is included +#CONFIG_PCSC=y + +# Development testing +#CONFIG_EAPOL_TEST=y + +# Replace native Linux implementation of packet sockets with libdnet/libpcap. +# This will be automatically set for non-Linux OS. +#CONFIG_DNET_PCAP=y + +# Include control interface for external programs, e.g, wpa_cli +CONFIG_CTRL_IFACE=y + +# Include interface for using external supplicant (Xsupplicant) for EAP +# authentication +#CONFIG_XSUPPLICANT_IFACE=y + +# Include support for GNU Readline and History Libraries in wpa_cli. +# When building a wpa_cli binary for distribution, please note that these +# libraries are licensed under GPL and as such, BSD license may not apply for +# the resulting binary. +#CONFIG_READLINE=y diff --git a/packages/wpa-supplicant/wpa-supplicant_0.3.8.bb b/packages/wpa-supplicant/wpa-supplicant_0.3.8.bb index 684d7da8eb..d125fb4027 100644 --- a/packages/wpa-supplicant/wpa-supplicant_0.3.8.bb +++ b/packages/wpa-supplicant/wpa-supplicant_0.3.8.bb @@ -5,6 +5,7 @@ MAINTAINER = "Holger Schurig" HOMEPAGE = "http://hostap.epitest.fi/wpa_supplicant/" DEPENDS = "openssl" DEPENDS_mtx-1_append = "madwifi-modules" +DEPENDS_mtx-2_append = "madwifi-modules" PR = "r1" SRC_URI = "http://hostap.epitest.fi/releases/wpa_supplicant-${PV}.tar.gz \ diff --git a/packages/wpa-supplicant/wpa-supplicant_0.4.7.bb b/packages/wpa-supplicant/wpa-supplicant_0.4.7.bb index 03aa3f6d0d..bbb42879d9 100644 --- a/packages/wpa-supplicant/wpa-supplicant_0.4.7.bb +++ b/packages/wpa-supplicant/wpa-supplicant_0.4.7.bb @@ -5,6 +5,7 @@ MAINTAINER = "Holger Schurig" HOMEPAGE = "http://hostap.epitest.fi/wpa_supplicant/" DEPENDS = "openssl" DEPENDS_mtx-1_append = "madwifi-modules" +DEPENDS_mtx-2_append = "madwifi-modules" PR = "r1" SRC_URI = "http://hostap.epitest.fi/releases/wpa_supplicant-${PV}.tar.gz \ -- cgit 1.2.3-korg