Difference between revisions of "Madwifi"

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=== Status ===
 
=== Status ===
 
in development, usable
 
in development, usable
 +
 +
=== OpenSource HAL ===
 +
The "official" driver consists of an opensource wrapper with binary HAL (Hardware Abstraction Layer). This HAL is not a binary firmware like with the Intel Wireless chips, but a piece of code that needs to runs in the Linux kernel.
 +
The vendors reasoning behind this is, that since the Atheros chip could be tuned to any frequency, and hence interfere with systems operating in those frequencies, that we simply need to accept this binary module.<br>
 +
Obviously this binary HAL is unacceptable to the Linux kernel developers, and the Atheros driver in this state will never become part of the official kernel.<br>
 +
The OpenBSD developers facing the same issue, reverse engineered the binary HAL and have produced an OpenSource version. Hopefully a driver based on this might be included with the Linux kernel at some point in time, and picked up by the mainstream distributions.
  
 
=== Related links ===  
 
=== Related links ===  
 
* [http://www.mattfoster.clara.co.uk/madwifi-faq.htm MadWifi FAQ]
 
* [http://www.mattfoster.clara.co.uk/madwifi-faq.htm MadWifi FAQ]
 
* [http://madwifiwiki.thewebhost.de/wiki/ MadWiFi Wiki]
 
* [http://madwifiwiki.thewebhost.de/wiki/ MadWiFi Wiki]
 +
* [http://team.vantronix.net/ar5k/ OpenSource Atheros HAL]
  
 
[[Category:Drivers]]
 
[[Category:Drivers]]

Revision as of 21:23, 20 March 2005

Multiband Atheros Driver for WiFi

Linux driver for 802.11a/b/g universal NIC cards - Cardbus, PCI, or miniPCI - using Atheros chip sets.

Project Homepage

http://sourceforge.net/projects/madwifi

Packages

CVS

cvs -z3 -d:pserver:anonymous@cvs.sourceforge.net:/cvsroot/madwifi \
co madwifi

Status

in development, usable

OpenSource HAL

The "official" driver consists of an opensource wrapper with binary HAL (Hardware Abstraction Layer). This HAL is not a binary firmware like with the Intel Wireless chips, but a piece of code that needs to runs in the Linux kernel. The vendors reasoning behind this is, that since the Atheros chip could be tuned to any frequency, and hence interfere with systems operating in those frequencies, that we simply need to accept this binary module.
Obviously this binary HAL is unacceptable to the Linux kernel developers, and the Atheros driver in this state will never become part of the official kernel.
The OpenBSD developers facing the same issue, reverse engineered the binary HAL and have produced an OpenSource version. Hopefully a driver based on this might be included with the Linux kernel at some point in time, and picked up by the mainstream distributions.

Related links