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Raspberry Pi as Hotspot with WPS  

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karl-herbert
(@karl-herbert)
Illustrious Member
Raspberry Pi as Hotspot with WPS

Hallo Leute,

ich habe das Thema einfach mal hier eröffnet und ich hoffe, dass jemand etwas dazu sagen kann, bzw. weiß wo man das Thema hinschieben könnte:

Ich habe einige Altbestände an IPcams der Marke Foscam C1 Lite und habe mir gedacht, diese zu Überwachungszwecken mit einem herumliegenden RPI3B zu verwenden. Accesspoint (ohne Internetbrücke) habe ich (siehe Anhang am Schluss) eingerichtet und funktioniert soweit. Allerdings scheitert es mit der Verbindung per WPS zur Cam.

Weiß jemand wie man WPS in der "hostapd.conf" konfiguriert, damit sich die Cam mit dem AP verbindet.

Ich weiß, es ginge mit einer Raspi- oder Webcam einfacher, aber ich möchte diese Cams gerne zur Druckerüberwachung und auch zur Überwachung anderer Objekte einsetzen und nicht im Schrank vermodern lassen.

Vorerst vielen Dank für Eure Bemühungen!

LG, Karl

 

Setting up a Raspberry Pi as a Wireless Access Point:

 

Before proceeding, please ensure your Raspberry Pi is up to date and rebooted.

Setting up a Raspberry Pi as an access point in a standalone network (NAT)

The Raspberry Pi can be used as a wireless access point, running a standalone network. This can be done using the inbuilt wireless features of the Raspberry Pi 3 or Raspberry Pi Zero W, or by using a suitable USB wireless dongle that supports access points.

Note that this documentation was tested on a Raspberry Pi 3, and it is possible that some USB dongles may need slight changes to their settings. If you are having trouble with a USB wireless dongle, please check the forums.

To add a Raspberry Pi-based access point to an existing network, see this section.

In order to work as an access point, the Raspberry Pi will need to have access point software installed, along with DHCP server software to provide connecting devices with a network address.

To create an access point, we'll need DNSMasq and HostAPD. Install all the required software in one go with this command:

sudo apt install dnsmasq hostapd

Since the configuration files are not ready yet, turn the new software off as follows:

sudo systemctl stop dnsmasq

sudo systemctl stop hostapd

Configuring a static IP

We are configuring a standalone network to act as a server, so the Raspberry Pi needs to have a static IP address assigned to the wireless port. This documentation assumes that we are using the standard 192.168.x.x IP addresses for our wireless network, so we will assign the server the IP address 192.168.4.1. It is also assumed that the wireless device being used is wlan0.

To configure the static IP address, edit the dhcpcd configuration file with:

sudo nano /etc/dhcpcd.conf

Go to the end of the file and edit it so that it looks like the following:

interface wlan0

    static ip_address=192.168.4.1/24

    nohook wpa_supplicant

Now restart the dhcpcd daemon and set up the new wlan0 configuration:

sudo service dhcpcd restart

Configuring the DHCP server (dnsmasq)

The DHCP service is provided by dnsmasq. By default, the configuration file contains a lot of information that is not needed, and it is easier to start from scratch. Rename this configuration file, and edit a new one:

sudo mv /etc/dnsmasq.conf /etc/dnsmasq.conf.orig

sudo nano /etc/dnsmasq.conf

Type or copy the following information into the dnsmasq configuration file and save it:

interface=wlan0      # Use the require wireless interface - usually wlan0

dhcp-range=192.168.4.2,192.168.4.20,255.255.255.0,24h

So for wlan0, we are going to provide IP addresses between 192.168.4.2 and 192.168.4.20, with a lease time of 24 hours. If you are providing DHCP services for other network devices (e.g. eth0), you could add more sections with the appropriate interface header, with the range of addresses you intend to provide to that interface.

There are many more options for dnsmasq; see the dnsmasq documentation for more details.

Restart dnsmasq to use the updated configuration:

sudo systemctl restart dnsmasq

Configuring the access point host software (hostapd)

You need to edit the hostapd configuration file, located at /etc/hostapd/hostapd.conf, to add the various parameters for your wireless network. After initial install, this will be a new/empty file.

sudo nano /etc/hostapd/hostapd.conf

Add the information below to the configuration file. This configuration assumes we are using channel 7, with a network name of NameOfNetwork, and a password AardvarkBadgerHedgehog. Note that the name and password should not have quotes around them. The passphrase should be between 8 and 64 characters in length.

To use the 5 GHz band, you can change the operations mode from hw_mode=g to hw_mode=a. Possible values for hw_mode are:

  • a = IEEE 802.11a (5 GHz)
  • b = IEEE 802.11b (2.4 GHz)
  • g = IEEE 802.11g (2.4 GHz)
  • ad = IEEE 802.11ad (60 GHz)

 

 

interface=wlan0

driver=nl80211

ssid=NameOfNetwork

hw_mode=g

channel=7

wmm_enabled=0

macaddr_acl=0

auth_algs=1

ignore_broadcast_ssid=0

wpa=2

wpa_passphrase=AardvarkBadgerHedgehog

wpa_key_mgmt=WPA-PSK

wpa_pairwise=TKIP

rsn_pairwise=CCMP

We now need to tell the system where to find this configuration file.

sudo nano /etc/default/hostapd

Find the line with #DAEMON_CONF, and replace it with this:

DAEMON_CONF="/etc/hostapd/hostapd.conf"

Start it up

Now enable and start hostapd:

sudo systemctl unmask hostapd

sudo systemctl enable hostapd

sudo systemctl start hostapd

Do a quick check of their status to ensure they are active and running:

sudo systemctl status hostapd

sudo systemctl status dnsmasq

Add routing and masquerade

Edit /etc/sysctl.conf and uncomment this line:

net.ipv4.ip_forward=1

Add a masquerade for outbound traffic on eth0:

sudo iptables -t nat -A  POSTROUTING -o eth0 -j MASQUERADE

Save the iptables rule.

sudo sh -c "iptables-save > /etc/iptables.ipv4.nat"

Edit /etc/rc.local and add this just above "exit 0" to install these rules on boot.

sudo reboot

 

Reboot and ensure it still functions.

Using a wireless device, search for networks. The network SSID you specified in the hostapd configuration should now be present, and it should be accessible with the specified password.

If SSH is enabled on the Raspberry Pi access point, it should be possible to connect to it from another Linux box (or a system with SSH connectivity present) as follows, assuming the pi account is present:

ssh [email protected]

By this point, the Raspberry Pi is acting as an access point, and other devices can associate with it. Associated devices can access the Raspberry Pi access point via its IP address for operations such as rsync, scp, or ssh.

 

 

Using the Raspberry Pi as an access point to share an internet connection (bridge)

One common use of the Raspberry Pi as an access point is to provide wireless connections to a wired Ethernet connection, so that anyone logged into the access point can access the internet, providing of course that the wired Ethernet on the Pi can connect to the internet via some sort of router.

To do this, a 'bridge' needs to put in place between the wireless device and the Ethernet device on the access point Raspberry Pi. This bridge will pass all traffic between the two interfaces. Install the following packages to enable the access point setup and bridging.

sudo apt install hostapd bridge-utils

Since the configuration files are not ready yet, turn the new software off as follows:

sudo systemctl stop hostapd

Bridging creates a higher-level construct over the two ports being bridged. It is the bridge that is the network device, so we need to stop the eth0 and wlan0 ports being allocated IP addresses by the DHCP client on the Raspberry Pi.

sudo nano /etc/dhcpcd.conf

Add denyinterfaces wlan0 and denyinterfaces eth0 to the end of the file (but above any other added interface lines) and save the file.

Add a new bridge, which in this case is called br0.

sudo brctl addbr br0

Connect the network ports. In this case, connect eth0 to the bridge br0.

sudo brctl addif br0 eth0

Now the interfaces file needs to be edited to adjust the various devices to work with bridging. To make this work with the newer systemd configuration options, you'll need to create a set of network configuration files.

If you want to create a Linux bridge (br0) and add a physical interface (eth0) to the bridge, create the following configuration.

sudo nano /etc/systemd/network/bridge-br0.netdev

 

[NetDev]

Name=br0

Kind=bridge

Then configure the bridge interface br0 and the slave interface eth0 using .network files as follows:

sudo nano /etc/systemd/network/bridge-br0-slave.network

 

[Match]

Name=eth0

 

[Network]

Bridge=br0

sudo nano /etc/systemd/network/bridge-br0.network

 

[Match]

Name=br0

 

[Network]

Address=192.168.10.100/24

Gateway=192.168.10.1

DNS=8.8.8.8

Finally, restart systemd-networkd:

sudo systemctl restart systemd-networkd

You can also use the brctl tool to verify that a bridge br0 has been created.

The access point setup is almost the same as that shown in the previous section. Follow the instructions above to set up the hostapd.conf file, but add bridge=br0 below the interface=wlan0 line, and remove or comment out the driver line. The passphrase must be between 8 and 64 characters long.

To use the 5 GHz band, you can change the operations mode from 'hw_mode=g' to 'hw_mode=a'. The possible values for hw_mode are:

  • a = IEEE 802.11a (5 GHz)
  • b = IEEE 802.11b (2.4 GHz)
  • g = IEEE 802.11g (2.4 GHz)
  • ad = IEEE 802.11ad (60 GHz)

interface=wlan0

bridge=br0

#driver=nl80211

ssid=NameOfNetwork

hw_mode=g

channel=7

wmm_enabled=0

macaddr_acl=0

auth_algs=1

ignore_broadcast_ssid=0

wpa=2

wpa_passphrase=AardvarkBadgerHedgehog

wpa_key_mgmt=WPA-PSK

wpa_pairwise=TKIP

rsn_pairwise=CCMP

Edit /etc/rc.local and add this just above "exit 0" to install these rules on boot.

sudo brctl addif br0 eth0

 

 

Now reboot the Raspberry Pi.

sudo systemctl unmask hostapd

sudo systemctl enable hostapd

sudo systemctl start hostapd

There should now be a functioning bridge between the wireless LAN and the Ethernet connection on the Raspberry Pi, and any device associated with the Raspberry Pi access point will act as if it is connected to the access point's wired Ethernet.

The bridge will have been allocated an IP address via the wired Ethernet's DHCP server. Do a quick check of the network interfaces configuration via:

ip addr

The wlan0 and eth0 no longer have IP addresses, as they are now controlled by the bridge. It is possible to use a static IP address for the bridge if required, but generally, if the Raspberry Pi access point is connected to an ADSL router, the DHCP address will be fine.

 

 

 

Statt zu klagen, dass wir nicht alles haben, was wir wollen, sollten wir lieber dankbar sein, dass wir nicht alles bekommen, was wir verdienen.

Napsal : 14/08/2019 11:12 pm
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