forgot to add wifi settings

This commit is contained in:
brent s. 2019-11-30 01:22:28 -05:00
parent 3a2eca4b98
commit 3e33abe0a6
5 changed files with 33 additions and 5 deletions

View File

@ -244,7 +244,7 @@
<xs:restriction base="xs:token">
<xs:enumeration value="netctl"/>
<xs:enumeration value="nm"/>
<xs:enumeration value="systemd"/>
<xs:enumeration value="networkd"/>
<xs:whiteSpace value="collapse"/>
</xs:restriction>
</xs:simpleType>
@ -465,6 +465,7 @@
</xs:sequence>
<xs:attribute name="essid" type="xs:string" use="required"/>
<xs:attribute name="bssid" type="aif:t_mac_addr" use="optional"/>
<xs:attribute name="hidden" type="xs:boolean" use="optional" default="false"/>
</xs:extension>
</xs:complexContent>
</xs:complexType>
@ -887,7 +888,7 @@
</xs:choice>
<!-- It's nearly impossible to validate FQDNs/hostnames in XSD, so we do it in-code. -->
<xs:attribute name="hostname" type="aif:t_nonempty" use="required"/>
<xs:attribute name="provider" type="aif:t_netprov" use="optional" default="systemd"/>
<xs:attribute name="provider" type="aif:t_netprov" use="optional" default="networkd"/>
<xs:attribute name="dhcpClient" type="aif:t_dhcp_clients" use="optional" default="dhcpcd"/>
</xs:complexType>
<xs:unique name="uniq_iface_eth">

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@ -5,13 +5,13 @@ class Network(object):
def __init__(self, network_xml):
self.xml = network_xml
self.hostname = self.xml.attrib['hostname'].strip()
self.provider = self.xml.attrib.get('provider', 'systemd').strip()
self.provider = self.xml.attrib.get('provider', 'networkd').strip()
handler = None
if self.provider == 'netctl':
import aif.network.netctl as handler
elif self.provider == 'nm':
import aif.network.networkmanager as handler
elif self.provider == 'systemd':
elif self.provider == 'networkd':
import aif.network.networkd as handler
self.provider = handler
if not self.provider:

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@ -275,3 +275,29 @@ class Wireless(Connection):
super().__init__(iface_xml)
self.connection_type = 'wireless'
self._initCfg()
self._initConnCfg()

def _initConnCfg(self):
self._cfg['BASE']['ESSID'] = "'{0}'".format(self.xml.attrib['essid'])
hidden = aif.utils.xmlBool(self.xml.attrib.get('hidden', 'false'))
if hidden:
self._cfg['BASE']['Hidden'] = 'yes'
try:
bssid = self.xml.attrib.get('bssid').strip()
except AttributeError:
bssid = None
if bssid:
bssid = aif.network._common.canonizeEUI(bssid)
self._cfg['BASE']['AP'] = bssid
crypto = self.xml.find('encryption')
if crypto:
self.packages.add('wpa_supplicant')
crypto = aif.network._common.convertWifiCrypto(crypto)
# if crypto['type'] in ('wpa', 'wpa2', 'wpa3'):
if crypto['type'] in ('wpa', 'wpa2'):
# TODO: WPA2 enterprise
self._cfg['BASE']['Security'] = 'wpa'
# if crypto['type'] in ('wep', 'wpa', 'wpa2', 'wpa3'):
if crypto['type'] in ('wpa', 'wpa2'):
self._cfg['BASE']['Key'] = crypto['auth']['psk']
return()

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@ -5,3 +5,4 @@ import socket
# (https://stackoverflow.com/a/38286559/733214), there's no way to *write* an INI with them using configparser.
# So we use Jinja2 logic.
import jinja2


View File

@ -589,7 +589,7 @@ This is going to be highly unpredictable based on the networking provider you ch
=== "I'm using netctl as my network provider, and-"
I'ma let you finish, but netctl is a *really* simple network provider. I mean REALLY simple. As such, a lot of things (like mixing auto DNS and non-auto addressing) don't work at all feasibly, and probably might not ever. It's great for simple and flat configurations (i.e. all static everything, all automatic everything, etc.) and I even use it on my own machines where I can, but it just simply doesn't make allowances for more complex setups. (This is why init scripts were replaced by systemd for init, remember? Script-and-shell-based utilities, such as netctl -- seriously, the entire thing's written in Bash -- just can't handle more complex jobs reliably.)

If you need more advanced functionality but don't want a lot of cruft or bloat, I recommend `systemd` as your network provider. It requires no extra packages (other than wpa_supplicant, if you're using wireless) because it's part of the systemd package (which is part of the most basic install of Arch) and handles more advanced configurations a lot more reliably.
If you need more advanced functionality but don't want a lot of cruft or bloat, I recommend `networkd` as your network provider. It requires no extra packages (other than wpa_supplicant, if you're using wireless) because it's part of the systemd package (which is part of the most basic install of Arch) and handles more advanced configurations a lot more reliably.

=== "How do I specify WEP for a wireless network?"
You can't. WEP's pretty broken. I understand some legacy networks may still use it, but I'm incredibly uncomfortable supporting it.