Hello Hernan and all the others; Sergey Ryazanov <ryazanov.s.a@...> writes: > > Cc linux-wireless since Rostislav Lisovy just working on adding > 802.11p to the stack. > > 2014-11-07 16:49 GMT+03:00 Hernán Maximiliano González Calderón > <hernan.gonzalez.calderon@...>: > > Hello everyone, > > > > I am still working to adapt the ath5k module to transmit in the > > 5850..5925GHz range, in order to comply with IEEE 802.11p requirements. 802.11p implementation is not just about the "WNIC driver" modification -- some work has to be done in the cfg80211/mac80211 subsystem as well. All the necessary changes are already in the mac80211-next git. To make this work, you will need to modify the WNIC driver (as you are trying to accomplish) + user-space configuration tool. Some quick and dirty ath9k modification to support 5.9GHz is at https://github.com/CTU-IIG/802.11p-linux/commits/its-g5_v2 (I read the other email pointing out that the EEPROM should contain the information about the 5.9GHz channels so I am not sure how dangerous is what I am doing). The 'iw' modification is at https://github.com/CTU-IIG/802.11p-iw/tree/its-g5_v2 A bit obsolete but still helpful tutorial on how to run the thing is at https://gist.github.com/lisovy/80dde5a792e774a706a9 (obsolete in the sense that the ath9k driver modification should be rebased to the newest mac80211-next). The questions that are still unanswered (and will definitely require more effort to answer) are the 802.11p standard interpretation regarding the OCB mode / 5.9GHz usage limitation. More specific -- Is the 5.9GHz limited for ITS (Intelligent transportation system) usage only. Or for any usage as long as it uses the OCB mode? If one of this limitation is valid, who does actually define the restriction -- regulatory rules of particular countries? Another question is if the OCB mode may be used outside the 5.9GHz range? Do we need to define the OCB_ONLY flag for 5.9GHz channels in CRDA/wireless-regdb? Best regards; Rostislav -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-wireless" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html