hostapd

hostapd (host access point daemon) is a user space daemon software enabling a network interface card to act as an access point and authentication server. There are three implementations: Jouni Malinen's hostapd, OpenBSD's hostapd and Devicescape's hostapd.

Jouni Malinen's hostapd[1]

Jouni Malinen's hostapd
Developer(s)Jouni Malinen & others
Stable release
2.10 / 16 January 2022 (2022-01-16)
Repository
Operating systemCross-platform
TypeWLAN tools
LicenseBSD
Websitew1.fi/hostapd

Jouni Malinen's hostapd is a user space daemon for access point and authentication servers. It can be used to create a wireless hotspot using a Linux computer.[2] It implements IEEE 802.11 access point management, IEEE 802.1X/WPA/WPA2/EAP Authenticators, RADIUS client, EAP server, and RADIUS authentication server. The current version supports Linux (Host AP, MadWifi, Prism54 and some of the drivers which use the kernel's mac80211 subsystem), QNX, FreeBSD (net80211), and DragonFlyBSD.

OpenBSD's hostapd

OpenBSD's hostapd
Developer(s)Reyk Floeter
Stable release
3.9 / May 1, 2006
Repository
Operating systemOpenBSD
TypeWLAN tools
LicenseBSD
WebsiteOpenBSD's hostapd

OpenBSD's hostapd is a user space daemon that helps to improve roaming and monitoring of OpenBSD-based wireless networks. It implements Inter Access Point Protocol (IAPP) for exchanging station association information between access points. It can trigger a set of actions like frame injection or logging when receiving specified IEEE 802.11 frames.

Devicescape's hostapd

Open Wireless Linux version of hostapd
Developer(s)John Gordon
Stable release
none yet / Date: N/A
Repository
Operating systemLinux
TypeWLAN tools
LicenseGPL version 2
WebsiteOWL hostapd

The Open Wireless Linux version of hostapd. It is kept as close as possible to the original open source release, but with OWL specific packaging and defaults. The website appears to be dead (April 2013), probably as the project itself.

See also

References

  1. , Linux Wireless Wiki
  2. , Creating A Wireless Hotspot with Linux


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.