How to use packet injection with mac80211 ========================================= mac80211 now allows arbitrary packets to be injected down any Monitor Mode interface from userland. The packet you inject needs to be composed in the following format: [ radiotap header ] [ ieee80211 header ] [ payload ] The radiotap format is discussed in ./Documentation/networking/radiotap-headers.txt. Despite 13 radiotap argument types are currently defined, most only make sense to appear on received packets. Currently three kinds of argument are used by the injection code, although it knows to skip any other arguments that are present (facilitating replay of captured radiotap headers directly): - IEEE80211_RADIOTAP_RATE - u8 arg in 500kbps units (0x02 --> 1Mbps) - IEEE80211_RADIOTAP_ANTENNA - u8 arg, 0x00 = ant1, 0x01 = ant2 - IEEE80211_RADIOTAP_DBM_TX_POWER - u8 arg, dBm Here is an example valid radiotap header defining these three parameters 0x00, 0x00, // <-- radiotap version 0x0b, 0x00, // <- radiotap header length 0x04, 0x0c, 0x00, 0x00, // <-- bitmap 0x6c, // <-- rate 0x0c, //<-- tx power 0x01 //<-- antenna The ieee80211 header follows immediately afterwards, looking for example like this: 0x08, 0x01, 0x00, 0x00, 0xFF, 0xFF, 0xFF, 0xFF, 0xFF, 0xFF, 0x13, 0x22, 0x33, 0x44, 0x55, 0x66, 0x13, 0x22, 0x33, 0x44, 0x55, 0x66, 0x10, 0x86 Then lastly there is the payload. After composing the packet contents, it is sent by send()-ing it to a logical mac80211 interface that is in Monitor mode. Libpcap can also be used, (which is easier than doing the work to bind the socket to the right interface), along the following lines: ppcap = pcap_open_live(szInterfaceName, 800, 1, 20, szErrbuf); ... r = pcap_inject(ppcap, u8aSendBuffer, nLength); You can also find sources for a complete inject test applet here: http://penumbra.warmcat.com/_twk/tiki-index.php?page=packetspammer Andy Green