* wireless core it thinks its knows the regulatory domain we should be in.
* @NL80211_REGDOM_SET_BY_COUNTRY_IE: the wireless core has received an
* 802.11 country information element with regulatory information it
- * thinks we should consider.
+ * thinks we should consider. cfg80211 only processes the country
+ * code from the IE, and relies on the regulatory domain information
+ * structure pased by userspace (CRDA) from our wireless-regdb.
+ * If a channel is enabled but the country code indicates it should
+ * be disabled we disable the channel and re-enable it upon disassociation.
*/
enum nl80211_reg_initiator {
NL80211_REGDOM_SET_BY_CORE,
desired_bw_khz,
®_rule);
- if (r)
+ if (r) {
+ /*
+ * We will disable all channels that do not match our
+ * recieved regulatory rule unless the hint is coming
+ * from a Country IE and the Country IE had no information
+ * about a band. The IEEE 802.11 spec allows for an AP
+ * to send only a subset of the regulatory rules allowed,
+ * so an AP in the US that only supports 2.4 GHz may only send
+ * a country IE with information for the 2.4 GHz band
+ * while 5 GHz is still supported.
+ */
+ if (initiator == NL80211_REGDOM_SET_BY_COUNTRY_IE &&
+ r == -ERANGE)
+ return;
+
+ REG_DBG_PRINT("cfg80211: Disabling freq %d MHz\n",
+ chan->center_freq);
+ chan->flags = IEEE80211_CHAN_DISABLED;
return;
+ }
power_rule = ®_rule->power_rule;
freq_range = ®_rule->freq_range;