802.11N confusion
Dan Ritter
dsr-mzpnVDyJpH4k7aNtvndDlA at public.gmane.org
Mon Mar 8 07:01:23 EST 2010
On Mon, Mar 08, 2010 at 03:42:28AM -0500, Tom Metro wrote:
> I was disappointed to see that the common WiFi scanning tools for Linux
> wouldn't report the channel that a discovered network was on. (I know
> the war driving tools, like Kismet, report this, but it shouldn't be
> necessary to use something that specialized just to look for the least
> crowded channels.)
The standard wireless tools will tell you:
dsr at dryad:~$ /sbin/iwlist ath0 scan
ath0 Scan completed :
Cell 01 - Address: 00:18:01:F5:DF:47
ESSID:"S6534"
Mode:Master
Frequency:2.412 GHz (Channel 1)
Quality=8/70 Signal level=-87 dBm Noise level=-95 dBm
Encryption key:on
Bit Rates:1 Mb/s; 2 Mb/s; 5.5 Mb/s; 11 Mb/s; 6 Mb/s 9 Mb/s; 12 Mb/s; 18 Mb/s; 24 Mb/s; 36 Mb/s 48 Mb/s; 54 Mb/s
Extra:bcn_int=100
Extra:wme_ie=dd180050f2020101020003a4000027a4000042435e0062322f00
Cell 02 - Address: 00:1D:7E:DF:26:E8
ESSID:"linksys"
Mode:Master
Frequency:2.437 GHz (Channel 6)
Quality=14/70 Signal level=-81 dBm Noise level=-95 dBm
Encryption key:off
Bit Rates:1 Mb/s; 2 Mb/s; 5.5 Mb/s; 11 Mb/s; 18 Mb/s 24 Mb/s; 36 Mb/s; 54 Mb/s; 6 Mb/s; 9 Mb/s 12 Mb/s; 48 Mb/s
Extra:bcn_int=100
Look at the line marked Frequency, followed by Channel.
> Similarly there was no apparent way to determine what 802.11 standard
> was being employed by your wireless connection in Ubuntu, other than
> inferring it from the reported connection speed.
You can set this, via 'iwconfig $IFACE modulation $TYPE', but
it's true that most WIC drivers do not make that info available.
dsr at dryad:~$ /sbin/iwlist ath0 modulation
ath0 unknown modulation information.
-dsr-
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