Table of Contents
TBD
Some parts of the if_conf should be discussed here instead
Insert notes about VLAN interfaces with hw crypto here or in the hw crypto chapter.
In order to implement AP and P2P GO modes, mac80211 has support for client powersaving, both “legacy” PS (PS-Poll/null data) and uAPSD. There currently is no support for sAPSD.
There is one assumption that mac80211 makes, namely that a client will not poll with PS-Poll and trigger with uAPSD at the same time. Both are supported, and both can be used by the same client, but they can't be used concurrently by the same client. This simplifies the driver code.
   The first thing to keep in mind is that there is a flag for complete
   driver implementation: IEEE80211_HW_AP_LINK_PS. If this flag is set,
   mac80211 expects the driver to handle most of the state machine for
   powersaving clients and will ignore the PM bit in incoming frames.
   Drivers then use ieee80211_sta_ps_transition to inform mac80211 of
   stations' powersave transitions. In this mode, mac80211 also doesn't
   handle PS-Poll/uAPSD.
   
   In the mode without IEEE80211_HW_AP_LINK_PS, mac80211 will check the
   PM bit in incoming frames for client powersave transitions. When a
   station goes to sleep, we will stop transmitting to it. There is,
   however, a race condition: a station might go to sleep while there is
   data buffered on hardware queues. If the device has support for this
   it will reject frames, and the driver should give the frames back to
   mac80211 with the IEEE80211_TX_STAT_TX_FILTERED flag set which will
   cause mac80211 to retry the frame when the station wakes up. The
   driver is also notified of powersave transitions by calling its
   sta_notify callback.
   
   When the station is asleep, it has three choices: it can wake up,
   it can PS-Poll, or it can possibly start a uAPSD service period.
   Waking up is implemented by simply transmitting all buffered (and
   filtered) frames to the station. This is the easiest case. When
   the station sends a PS-Poll or a uAPSD trigger frame, mac80211
   will inform the driver of this with the allow_buffered_frames
   callback; this callback is optional. mac80211 will then transmit
   the frames as usual and set the IEEE80211_TX_CTL_NO_PS_BUFFER
   on each frame. The last frame in the service period (or the only
   response to a PS-Poll) also has IEEE80211_TX_STATUS_EOSP set to
   indicate that it ends the service period; as this frame must have
   TX status report it also sets IEEE80211_TX_CTL_REQ_TX_STATUS.
   When TX status is reported for this frame, the service period is
   marked has having ended and a new one can be started by the peer.
   
   Additionally, non-bufferable MMPDUs can also be transmitted by
   mac80211 with the IEEE80211_TX_CTL_NO_PS_BUFFER set in them.
   
   Another race condition can happen on some devices like iwlwifi
   when there are frames queued for the station and it wakes up
   or polls; the frames that are already queued could end up being
   transmitted first instead, causing reordering and/or wrong
   processing of the EOSP. The cause is that allowing frames to be
   transmitted to a certain station is out-of-band communication to
   the device. To allow this problem to be solved, the driver can
   call ieee80211_sta_block_awake if frames are buffered when it
   is notified that the station went to sleep. When all these frames
   have been filtered (see above), it must call the function again
   to indicate that the station is no longer blocked.
   
   If the driver buffers frames in the driver for aggregation in any
   way, it must use the ieee80211_sta_set_buffered call when it is
   notified of the station going to sleep to inform mac80211 of any
   TIDs that have frames buffered. Note that when a station wakes up
   this information is reset (hence the requirement to call it when
   informed of the station going to sleep). Then, when a service
   period starts for any reason, release_buffered_frames is called
   with the number of frames to be released and which TIDs they are
   to come from. In this case, the driver is responsible for setting
   the EOSP (for uAPSD) and MORE_DATA bits in the released frames,
   to help the more_data parameter is passed to tell the driver if
   there is more data on other TIDs -- the TIDs to release frames
   from are ignored since mac80211 doesn't know how many frames the
   buffers for those TIDs contain.
   
   If the driver also implement GO mode, where absence periods may
   shorten service periods (or abort PS-Poll responses), it must
   filter those response frames except in the case of frames that
   are buffered in the driver -- those must remain buffered to avoid
   reordering. Because it is possible that no frames are released
   in this case, the driver must call ieee80211_sta_eosp
   to indicate to mac80211 that the service period ended anyway.
   
   Finally, if frames from multiple TIDs are released from mac80211
   but the driver might reorder them, it must clear & set the flags
   appropriately (only the last frame may have IEEE80211_TX_STATUS_EOSP)
   and also take care of the EOSP and MORE_DATA bits in the frame.
   The driver may also use ieee80211_sta_eosp in this case.
   
Note that if the driver ever buffers frames other than QoS-data frames, it must take care to never send a non-QoS-data frame as the last frame in a service period, adding a QoS-nulldata frame after a non-QoS-data frame if needed.