| /** |
| \page eap_server_module EAP server implementation |
| |
| Extensible Authentication Protocol (EAP) is an authentication framework |
| defined in RFC 3748. hostapd uses a separate code module for EAP server |
| implementation. This module was designed to use only a minimal set of |
| direct function calls (mainly, to debug/event functions) in order for |
| it to be usable in other programs. The design of the EAP |
| implementation is based loosely on RFC 4137. The state machine is |
| defined in this RFC and so is the interface between the server state |
| machine and methods. As such, this RFC provides useful information for |
| understanding the EAP server implementation in hostapd. |
| |
| Some of the terminology used in EAP state machine is referring to |
| EAPOL (IEEE 802.1X), but there is no strict requirement on the lower |
| layer being IEEE 802.1X if EAP module is built for other programs than |
| wpa_supplicant. These terms should be understood to refer to the |
| lower layer as defined in RFC 4137. |
| |
| |
| \section adding_eap_methods Adding EAP methods |
| |
| Each EAP method is implemented as a separate module, usually as one C |
| file named eap_server_<name of the method>.c, e.g., \ref eap_server_md5.c. All EAP |
| methods use the same interface between the server state machine and |
| method specific functions. This allows new EAP methods to be added |
| without modifying the core EAP state machine implementation. |
| |
| New EAP methods need to be registered by adding them into the build |
| (Makefile) and the EAP method registration list in the |
| \ref eap_server_register_methods() function of \ref eap_server_methods.c. Each EAP |
| method should use a build-time configuration option, e.g., EAP_TLS, in |
| order to make it possible to select which of the methods are included |
| in the build. |
| |
| EAP methods must implement the interface defined in \ref eap_i.h. struct |
| \ref eap_method defines the needed function pointers that each EAP method |
| must provide. In addition, the EAP type and name are registered using |
| this structure. This interface is based on section 4.4 of RFC 4137. |
| |
| It is recommended that the EAP methods would use generic helper |
| functions, \ref eap_msg_alloc() and \ref eap_hdr_validate() when processing |
| messages. This allows code sharing and can avoid missing some of the |
| needed validation steps for received packets. In addition, these |
| functions make it easier to change between expanded and legacy EAP |
| header, if needed. |
| |
| When adding an EAP method that uses a vendor specific EAP type |
| (Expanded Type as defined in RFC 3748, Chapter 5.7), the new method |
| must be registered by passing vendor id instead of EAP_VENDOR_IETF to |
| \ref eap_server_method_alloc(). These methods must not try to emulate |
| expanded types by registering a legacy EAP method for type 254. See |
| \ref eap_server_vendor_test.c for an example of an EAP method implementation that |
| is implemented as an expanded type. |
| |
| */ |