1# Example hostapd build time configuration 2# 3# This file lists the configuration options that are used when building the 4# hostapd binary. All lines starting with # are ignored. Configuration option 5# lines must be commented out complete, if they are not to be included, i.e., 6# just setting VARIABLE=n is not disabling that variable. 7# 8# This file is included in Makefile, so variables like CFLAGS and LIBS can also 9# be modified from here. In most cass, these lines should use += in order not 10# to override previous values of the variables. 11 12# Driver interface for Host AP driver 13CONFIG_DRIVER_HOSTAP=y 14 15# Driver interface for wired authenticator 16#CONFIG_DRIVER_WIRED=y 17 18# Driver interface for drivers using the nl80211 kernel interface 19CONFIG_DRIVER_NL80211=y 20 21# QCA vendor extensions to nl80211 22#CONFIG_DRIVER_NL80211_QCA=y 23 24# driver_nl80211.c requires libnl. If you are compiling it yourself 25# you may need to point hostapd to your version of libnl. 26# 27#CFLAGS += -I$<path to libnl include files> 28#LIBS += -L$<path to libnl library files> 29 30# Use libnl v2.0 (or 3.0) libraries. 31#CONFIG_LIBNL20=y 32 33# Use libnl 3.2 libraries (if this is selected, CONFIG_LIBNL20 is ignored) 34CONFIG_LIBNL32=y 35 36 37# Driver interface for FreeBSD net80211 layer (e.g., Atheros driver) 38#CONFIG_DRIVER_BSD=y 39#CFLAGS += -I/usr/local/include 40#LIBS += -L/usr/local/lib 41#LIBS_p += -L/usr/local/lib 42#LIBS_c += -L/usr/local/lib 43 44# Driver interface for no driver (e.g., RADIUS server only) 45#CONFIG_DRIVER_NONE=y 46 47# WPA2/IEEE 802.11i RSN pre-authentication 48CONFIG_RSN_PREAUTH=y 49 50# Support Operating Channel Validation 51#CONFIG_OCV=y 52 53# Integrated EAP server 54CONFIG_EAP=y 55 56# EAP Re-authentication Protocol (ERP) in integrated EAP server 57CONFIG_ERP=y 58 59# EAP-MD5 for the integrated EAP server 60CONFIG_EAP_MD5=y 61 62# EAP-TLS for the integrated EAP server 63CONFIG_EAP_TLS=y 64 65# EAP-MSCHAPv2 for the integrated EAP server 66CONFIG_EAP_MSCHAPV2=y 67 68# EAP-PEAP for the integrated EAP server 69CONFIG_EAP_PEAP=y 70 71# EAP-GTC for the integrated EAP server 72CONFIG_EAP_GTC=y 73 74# EAP-TTLS for the integrated EAP server 75CONFIG_EAP_TTLS=y 76 77# EAP-SIM for the integrated EAP server 78#CONFIG_EAP_SIM=y 79 80# EAP-AKA for the integrated EAP server 81#CONFIG_EAP_AKA=y 82 83# EAP-AKA' for the integrated EAP server 84# This requires CONFIG_EAP_AKA to be enabled, too. 85#CONFIG_EAP_AKA_PRIME=y 86 87# EAP-PAX for the integrated EAP server 88#CONFIG_EAP_PAX=y 89 90# EAP-PSK for the integrated EAP server (this is _not_ needed for WPA-PSK) 91#CONFIG_EAP_PSK=y 92 93# EAP-pwd for the integrated EAP server (secure authentication with a password) 94#CONFIG_EAP_PWD=y 95 96# EAP-SAKE for the integrated EAP server 97#CONFIG_EAP_SAKE=y 98 99# EAP-GPSK for the integrated EAP server 100#CONFIG_EAP_GPSK=y 101# Include support for optional SHA256 cipher suite in EAP-GPSK 102#CONFIG_EAP_GPSK_SHA256=y 103 104# EAP-FAST for the integrated EAP server 105#CONFIG_EAP_FAST=y 106 107# EAP-TEAP for the integrated EAP server 108# Note: The current EAP-TEAP implementation is experimental and should not be 109# enabled for production use. The IETF RFC 7170 that defines EAP-TEAP has number 110# of conflicting statements and missing details and the implementation has 111# vendor specific workarounds for those and as such, may not interoperate with 112# any other implementation. This should not be used for anything else than 113# experimentation and interoperability testing until those issues has been 114# resolved. 115#CONFIG_EAP_TEAP=y 116 117# Wi-Fi Protected Setup (WPS) 118#CONFIG_WPS=y 119# Enable UPnP support for external WPS Registrars 120#CONFIG_WPS_UPNP=y 121# Enable WPS support with NFC config method 122#CONFIG_WPS_NFC=y 123 124# EAP-IKEv2 125#CONFIG_EAP_IKEV2=y 126 127# Trusted Network Connect (EAP-TNC) 128#CONFIG_EAP_TNC=y 129 130# EAP-EKE for the integrated EAP server 131#CONFIG_EAP_EKE=y 132 133# PKCS#12 (PFX) support (used to read private key and certificate file from 134# a file that usually has extension .p12 or .pfx) 135CONFIG_PKCS12=y 136 137# RADIUS authentication server. This provides access to the integrated EAP 138# server from external hosts using RADIUS. 139#CONFIG_RADIUS_SERVER=y 140 141# Build IPv6 support for RADIUS operations 142CONFIG_IPV6=y 143 144# IEEE Std 802.11r-2008 (Fast BSS Transition) 145#CONFIG_IEEE80211R=y 146 147# Use the hostapd's IEEE 802.11 authentication (ACL), but without 148# the IEEE 802.11 Management capability (e.g., FreeBSD/net80211) 149#CONFIG_DRIVER_RADIUS_ACL=y 150 151# Wireless Network Management (IEEE Std 802.11v-2011) 152# Note: This is experimental and not complete implementation. 153#CONFIG_WNM=y 154 155# IEEE 802.11ac (Very High Throughput) support 156#CONFIG_IEEE80211AC=y 157 158# IEEE 802.11ax HE support 159#CONFIG_IEEE80211AX=y 160 161# IEEE 802.11be EHT support 162# CONFIG_IEEE80211AX is mandatory for setting CONFIG_IEEE80211BE. 163# Note: This is experimental and work in progress. The definitions are still 164# subject to change and this should not be expected to interoperate with the 165# final IEEE 802.11be version. 166#CONFIG_IEEE80211BE=y 167 168# Simultaneous Authentication of Equals (SAE), WPA3-Personal 169#CONFIG_SAE=y 170 171# SAE Public Key, WPA3-Personal 172#CONFIG_SAE_PK=y 173 174# Remove debugging code that is printing out debug messages to stdout. 175# This can be used to reduce the size of the hostapd considerably if debugging 176# code is not needed. 177#CONFIG_NO_STDOUT_DEBUG=y 178 179# Add support for writing debug log to a file: -f /tmp/hostapd.log 180# Disabled by default. 181#CONFIG_DEBUG_FILE=y 182 183# Send debug messages to syslog instead of stdout 184#CONFIG_DEBUG_SYSLOG=y 185 186# Add support for sending all debug messages (regardless of debug verbosity) 187# to the Linux kernel tracing facility. This helps debug the entire stack by 188# making it easy to record everything happening from the driver up into the 189# same file, e.g., using trace-cmd. 190#CONFIG_DEBUG_LINUX_TRACING=y 191 192# Remove support for RADIUS accounting 193#CONFIG_NO_ACCOUNTING=y 194 195# Remove support for RADIUS 196#CONFIG_NO_RADIUS=y 197 198# Remove support for VLANs 199#CONFIG_NO_VLAN=y 200 201# Enable support for fully dynamic VLANs. This enables hostapd to 202# automatically create bridge and VLAN interfaces if necessary. 203#CONFIG_FULL_DYNAMIC_VLAN=y 204 205# Use netlink-based kernel API for VLAN operations instead of ioctl() 206# Note: This requires libnl 3.1 or newer. 207#CONFIG_VLAN_NETLINK=y 208 209# Remove support for dumping internal state through control interface commands 210# This can be used to reduce binary size at the cost of disabling a debugging 211# option. 212#CONFIG_NO_DUMP_STATE=y 213 214# Enable tracing code for developer debugging 215# This tracks use of memory allocations and other registrations and reports 216# incorrect use with a backtrace of call (or allocation) location. 217#CONFIG_WPA_TRACE=y 218# For BSD, comment out these. 219#LIBS += -lexecinfo 220#LIBS_p += -lexecinfo 221#LIBS_c += -lexecinfo 222 223# Use libbfd to get more details for developer debugging 224# This enables use of libbfd to get more detailed symbols for the backtraces 225# generated by CONFIG_WPA_TRACE=y. 226#CONFIG_WPA_TRACE_BFD=y 227# For BSD, comment out these. 228#LIBS += -lbfd -liberty -lz 229#LIBS_p += -lbfd -liberty -lz 230#LIBS_c += -lbfd -liberty -lz 231 232# hostapd depends on strong random number generation being available from the 233# operating system. os_get_random() function is used to fetch random data when 234# needed, e.g., for key generation. On Linux and BSD systems, this works by 235# reading /dev/urandom. It should be noted that the OS entropy pool needs to be 236# properly initialized before hostapd is started. This is important especially 237# on embedded devices that do not have a hardware random number generator and 238# may by default start up with minimal entropy available for random number 239# generation. 240# 241# As a safety net, hostapd is by default trying to internally collect 242# additional entropy for generating random data to mix in with the data 243# fetched from the OS. This by itself is not considered to be very strong, but 244# it may help in cases where the system pool is not initialized properly. 245# However, it is very strongly recommended that the system pool is initialized 246# with enough entropy either by using hardware assisted random number 247# generator or by storing state over device reboots. 248# 249# hostapd can be configured to maintain its own entropy store over restarts to 250# enhance random number generation. This is not perfect, but it is much more 251# secure than using the same sequence of random numbers after every reboot. 252# This can be enabled with -e<entropy file> command line option. The specified 253# file needs to be readable and writable by hostapd. 254# 255# If the os_get_random() is known to provide strong random data (e.g., on 256# Linux/BSD, the board in question is known to have reliable source of random 257# data from /dev/urandom), the internal hostapd random pool can be disabled. 258# This will save some in binary size and CPU use. However, this should only be 259# considered for builds that are known to be used on devices that meet the 260# requirements described above. 261#CONFIG_NO_RANDOM_POOL=y 262 263# Should we attempt to use the getrandom(2) call that provides more reliable 264# yet secure randomness source than /dev/random on Linux 3.17 and newer. 265# Requires glibc 2.25 to build, falls back to /dev/random if unavailable. 266#CONFIG_GETRANDOM=y 267 268# Should we use poll instead of select? Select is used by default. 269#CONFIG_ELOOP_POLL=y 270 271# Should we use epoll instead of select? Select is used by default. 272#CONFIG_ELOOP_EPOLL=y 273 274# Should we use kqueue instead of select? Select is used by default. 275#CONFIG_ELOOP_KQUEUE=y 276 277# Select TLS implementation 278# openssl = OpenSSL (default) 279# gnutls = GnuTLS 280# internal = Internal TLSv1 implementation (experimental) 281# linux = Linux kernel AF_ALG and internal TLSv1 implementation (experimental) 282# none = Empty template 283#CONFIG_TLS=openssl 284 285# TLS-based EAP methods require at least TLS v1.0. Newer version of TLS (v1.1) 286# can be enabled to get a stronger construction of messages when block ciphers 287# are used. 288#CONFIG_TLSV11=y 289 290# TLS-based EAP methods require at least TLS v1.0. Newer version of TLS (v1.2) 291# can be enabled to enable use of stronger crypto algorithms. 292#CONFIG_TLSV12=y 293 294# Select which ciphers to use by default with OpenSSL if the user does not 295# specify them. 296#CONFIG_TLS_DEFAULT_CIPHERS="DEFAULT:!EXP:!LOW" 297 298# If CONFIG_TLS=internal is used, additional library and include paths are 299# needed for LibTomMath. Alternatively, an integrated, minimal version of 300# LibTomMath can be used. See beginning of libtommath.c for details on benefits 301# and drawbacks of this option. 302#CONFIG_INTERNAL_LIBTOMMATH=y 303#ifndef CONFIG_INTERNAL_LIBTOMMATH 304#LTM_PATH=/usr/src/libtommath-0.39 305#CFLAGS += -I$(LTM_PATH) 306#LIBS += -L$(LTM_PATH) 307#LIBS_p += -L$(LTM_PATH) 308#endif 309# At the cost of about 4 kB of additional binary size, the internal LibTomMath 310# can be configured to include faster routines for exptmod, sqr, and div to 311# speed up DH and RSA calculation considerably 312#CONFIG_INTERNAL_LIBTOMMATH_FAST=y 313 314# Interworking (IEEE 802.11u) 315# This can be used to enable functionality to improve interworking with 316# external networks. 317#CONFIG_INTERWORKING=y 318 319# Hotspot 2.0 320#CONFIG_HS20=y 321 322# Enable SQLite database support in hlr_auc_gw, EAP-SIM DB, and eap_user_file 323#CONFIG_SQLITE=y 324 325# Enable Fast Session Transfer (FST) 326#CONFIG_FST=y 327 328# Enable CLI commands for FST testing 329#CONFIG_FST_TEST=y 330 331# Testing options 332# This can be used to enable some testing options (see also the example 333# configuration file) that are really useful only for testing clients that 334# connect to this hostapd. These options allow, for example, to drop a 335# certain percentage of probe requests or auth/(re)assoc frames. 336# 337#CONFIG_TESTING_OPTIONS=y 338 339# Automatic Channel Selection 340# This will allow hostapd to pick the channel automatically when channel is set 341# to "acs_survey" or "0". Eventually, other ACS algorithms can be added in 342# similar way. 343# 344# Automatic selection is currently only done through initialization, later on 345# we hope to do background checks to keep us moving to more ideal channels as 346# time goes by. ACS is currently only supported through the nl80211 driver and 347# your driver must have survey dump capability that is filled by the driver 348# during scanning. 349# 350# You can customize the ACS survey algorithm with the hostapd.conf variable 351# acs_num_scans. 352# 353# Supported ACS drivers: 354# * ath9k 355# * ath5k 356# * ath10k 357# 358# For more details refer to: 359# https://wireless.wiki.kernel.org/en/users/documentation/acs 360# 361#CONFIG_ACS=y 362 363# Multiband Operation support 364# These extensions facilitate efficient use of multiple frequency bands 365# available to the AP and the devices that may associate with it. 366#CONFIG_MBO=y 367 368# Client Taxonomy 369# Has the AP retain the Probe Request and (Re)Association Request frames from 370# a client, from which a signature can be produced which can identify the model 371# of client device like "Nexus 6P" or "iPhone 5s". 372#CONFIG_TAXONOMY=y 373 374# Fast Initial Link Setup (FILS) (IEEE 802.11ai) 375#CONFIG_FILS=y 376# FILS shared key authentication with PFS 377#CONFIG_FILS_SK_PFS=y 378 379# Include internal line edit mode in hostapd_cli. This can be used to provide 380# limited command line editing and history support. 381#CONFIG_WPA_CLI_EDIT=y 382 383# Opportunistic Wireless Encryption (OWE) 384# Experimental implementation of draft-harkins-owe-07.txt 385#CONFIG_OWE=y 386 387# WLAN Authentication and Privacy Infrastructure (WAPI): interface only. 388# Configure the building of the interface which allows WAPI configuration. 389# Note: does not configure WAPI implementation itself. 390#CONFIG_WAPI_INTERFACE=y 391 392# Airtime policy support 393#CONFIG_AIRTIME_POLICY=y 394 395# Override default value for the wpa_disable_eapol_key_retries configuration 396# parameter. See that parameter in hostapd.conf for more details. 397#CFLAGS += -DDEFAULT_WPA_DISABLE_EAPOL_KEY_RETRIES=1 398 399# Wired equivalent privacy (WEP) 400# WEP is an obsolete cryptographic data confidentiality algorithm that is not 401# considered secure. It should not be used for anything anymore. The 402# functionality needed to use WEP is available in the current hostapd 403# release under this optional build parameter. This functionality is subject to 404# be completely removed in a future release. 405#CONFIG_WEP=y 406 407# Remove all TKIP functionality 408# TKIP is an old cryptographic data confidentiality algorithm that is not 409# considered secure. It should not be used anymore. For now, the default hostapd 410# build includes this to allow mixed mode WPA+WPA2 networks to be enabled, but 411# that functionality is subject to be removed in the future. 412#CONFIG_NO_TKIP=y 413 414# Pre-Association Security Negotiation (PASN) 415# Experimental implementation based on IEEE P802.11z/D2.6 and the protocol 416# design is still subject to change. As such, this should not yet be enabled in 417# production use. 418# This requires CONFIG_IEEE80211W=y to be enabled, too. 419#CONFIG_PASN=y 420 421# Device Provisioning Protocol (DPP) (also known as Wi-Fi Easy Connect) 422CONFIG_DPP=y 423# DPP version 2 support 424CONFIG_DPP2=y 425# DPP version 3 support (experimental and still changing; do not enable for 426# production use) 427#CONFIG_DPP3=y 428