1##### Example wpa_supplicant configuration file ###############################
2#
3# ***** Please check wpa_supplicant.conf(5) for details on these options *****
4#
5# This file describes configuration file format and lists all available option.
6# Please also take a look at simpler configuration examples in 'examples'
7# subdirectory.
8#
9# Empty lines and lines starting with # are ignored
10
11# NOTE! This file may contain password information and should probably be made
12# readable only by root user on multiuser systems.
13
14# Note: All file paths in this configuration file should use full (absolute,
15# not relative to working directory) path in order to allow working directory
16# to be changed. This can happen if wpa_supplicant is run in the background.
17
18# Whether to allow wpa_supplicant to update (overwrite) configuration
19#
20# This option can be used to allow wpa_supplicant to overwrite configuration
21# file whenever configuration is changed (e.g., new network block is added with
22# wpa_cli or wpa_gui, or a password is changed). This is required for
23# wpa_cli/wpa_gui to be able to store the configuration changes permanently.
24# Please note that overwriting configuration file will remove the comments from
25# it.
26#update_config=1
27
28# global configuration (shared by all network blocks)
29#
30# Parameters for the control interface. If this is specified, wpa_supplicant
31# will open a control interface that is available for external programs to
32# manage wpa_supplicant. The meaning of this string depends on which control
33# interface mechanism is used. For all cases, the existance of this parameter
34# in configuration is used to determine whether the control interface is
35# enabled.
36#
37# For UNIX domain sockets (default on Linux and BSD): This is a directory that
38# will be created for UNIX domain sockets for listening to requests from
39# external programs (CLI/GUI, etc.) for status information and configuration.
40# The socket file will be named based on the interface name, so multiple
41# wpa_supplicant processes can be run at the same time if more than one
42# interface is used.
43# /var/run/wpa_supplicant is the recommended directory for sockets and by
44# default, wpa_cli will use it when trying to connect with wpa_supplicant.
45#
46# Access control for the control interface can be configured by setting the
47# directory to allow only members of a group to use sockets. This way, it is
48# possible to run wpa_supplicant as root (since it needs to change network
49# configuration and open raw sockets) and still allow GUI/CLI components to be
50# run as non-root users. However, since the control interface can be used to
51# change the network configuration, this access needs to be protected in many
52# cases. By default, wpa_supplicant is configured to use gid 0 (root). If you
53# want to allow non-root users to use the control interface, add a new group
54# and change this value to match with that group. Add users that should have
55# control interface access to this group. If this variable is commented out or
56# not included in the configuration file, group will not be changed from the
57# value it got by default when the directory or socket was created.
58#
59# When configuring both the directory and group, use following format:
60# DIR=/var/run/wpa_supplicant GROUP=wheel
61# DIR=/var/run/wpa_supplicant GROUP=0
62# (group can be either group name or gid)
63#
64ctrl_interface=/var/run/wpa_supplicant
65
66# IEEE 802.1X/EAPOL version
67# wpa_supplicant is implemented based on IEEE Std 802.1X-2004 which defines
68# EAPOL version 2. However, there are many APs that do not handle the new
69# version number correctly (they seem to drop the frames completely). In order
70# to make wpa_supplicant interoperate with these APs, the version number is set
71# to 1 by default. This configuration value can be used to set it to the new
72# version (2).
73eapol_version=1
74
75# AP scanning/selection
76# By default, wpa_supplicant requests driver to perform AP scanning and then
77# uses the scan results to select a suitable AP. Another alternative is to
78# allow the driver to take care of AP scanning and selection and use
79# wpa_supplicant just to process EAPOL frames based on IEEE 802.11 association
80# information from the driver.
81# 1: wpa_supplicant initiates scanning and AP selection; if no APs matching to
82#    the currently enabled networks are found, a new network (IBSS or AP mode
83#    operation) may be initialized (if configured) (default)
84# 0: driver takes care of scanning, AP selection, and IEEE 802.11 association
85#    parameters (e.g., WPA IE generation); this mode can also be used with
86#    non-WPA drivers when using IEEE 802.1X mode; do not try to associate with
87#    APs (i.e., external program needs to control association). This mode must
88#    also be used when using wired Ethernet drivers.
89# 2: like 0, but associate with APs using security policy and SSID (but not
90#    BSSID); this can be used, e.g., with ndiswrapper and NDIS drivers to
91#    enable operation with hidden SSIDs and optimized roaming; in this mode,
92#    the network blocks in the configuration file are tried one by one until
93#    the driver reports successful association; each network block should have
94#    explicit security policy (i.e., only one option in the lists) for
95#    key_mgmt, pairwise, group, proto variables
96#
97# For use in FreeBSD with the wlan module ap_scan must be set to 1.
98# When using IBSS or AP mode, ap_scan=2 mode can force the new network to be
99# created immediately regardless of scan results. ap_scan=1 mode will first try
100# to scan for existing networks and only if no matches with the enabled
101# networks are found, a new IBSS or AP mode network is created.
102ap_scan=1
103
104# EAP fast re-authentication
105# By default, fast re-authentication is enabled for all EAP methods that
106# support it. This variable can be used to disable fast re-authentication.
107# Normally, there is no need to disable this.
108fast_reauth=1
109
110# OpenSSL Engine support
111# These options can be used to load OpenSSL engines.
112# The two engines that are supported currently are shown below:
113# They are both from the opensc project (http://www.opensc.org/)
114# By default no engines are loaded.
115# make the opensc engine available
116#opensc_engine_path=/usr/lib/opensc/engine_opensc.so
117# make the pkcs11 engine available
118#pkcs11_engine_path=/usr/lib/opensc/engine_pkcs11.so
119# configure the path to the pkcs11 module required by the pkcs11 engine
120#pkcs11_module_path=/usr/lib/pkcs11/opensc-pkcs11.so
121
122# Dynamic EAP methods
123# If EAP methods were built dynamically as shared object files, they need to be
124# loaded here before being used in the network blocks. By default, EAP methods
125# are included statically in the build, so these lines are not needed
126#load_dynamic_eap=/usr/lib/wpa_supplicant/eap_tls.so
127#load_dynamic_eap=/usr/lib/wpa_supplicant/eap_md5.so
128
129# Driver interface parameters
130# This field can be used to configure arbitrary driver interace parameters. The
131# format is specific to the selected driver interface. This field is not used
132# in most cases.
133#driver_param="field=value"
134
135# Country code
136# The ISO/IEC alpha2 country code for the country in which this device is
137# currently operating.
138#country=US
139
140# Maximum lifetime for PMKSA in seconds; default 43200
141#dot11RSNAConfigPMKLifetime=43200
142# Threshold for reauthentication (percentage of PMK lifetime); default 70
143#dot11RSNAConfigPMKReauthThreshold=70
144# Timeout for security association negotiation in seconds; default 60
145#dot11RSNAConfigSATimeout=60
146
147# Wi-Fi Protected Setup (WPS) parameters
148
149# Universally Unique IDentifier (UUID; see RFC 4122) of the device
150# If not configured, UUID will be generated based on the local MAC address.
151#uuid=12345678-9abc-def0-1234-56789abcdef0
152
153# Device Name
154# User-friendly description of device; up to 32 octets encoded in UTF-8
155#device_name=Wireless Client
156
157# Manufacturer
158# The manufacturer of the device (up to 64 ASCII characters)
159#manufacturer=Company
160
161# Model Name
162# Model of the device (up to 32 ASCII characters)
163#model_name=cmodel
164
165# Model Number
166# Additional device description (up to 32 ASCII characters)
167#model_number=123
168
169# Serial Number
170# Serial number of the device (up to 32 characters)
171#serial_number=12345
172
173# Primary Device Type
174# Used format: <categ>-<OUI>-<subcateg>
175# categ = Category as an integer value
176# OUI = OUI and type octet as a 4-octet hex-encoded value; 0050F204 for
177#       default WPS OUI
178# subcateg = OUI-specific Sub Category as an integer value
179# Examples:
180#   1-0050F204-1 (Computer / PC)
181#   1-0050F204-2 (Computer / Server)
182#   5-0050F204-1 (Storage / NAS)
183#   6-0050F204-1 (Network Infrastructure / AP)
184#device_type=1-0050F204-1
185
186# OS Version
187# 4-octet operating system version number (hex string)
188#os_version=01020300
189
190# Config Methods
191# List of the supported configuration methods
192# Available methods: usba ethernet label display ext_nfc_token int_nfc_token
193#	nfc_interface push_button keypad
194#config_methods=label display push_button keypad
195
196# Credential processing
197#   0 = process received credentials internally (default)
198#   1 = do not process received credentials; just pass them over ctrl_iface to
199#	external program(s)
200#   2 = process received credentials internally and pass them over ctrl_iface
201#	to external program(s)
202#wps_cred_processing=0
203
204# Maximum number of BSS entries to keep in memory
205# Default: 200
206# This can be used to limit memory use on the BSS entries (cached scan
207# results). A larger value may be needed in environments that have huge number
208# of APs when using ap_scan=1 mode.
209#bss_max_count=200
210
211
212# filter_ssids - SSID-based scan result filtering
213# 0 = do not filter scan results (default)
214# 1 = only include configured SSIDs in scan results/BSS table
215#filter_ssids=0
216
217
218# network block
219#
220# Each network (usually AP's sharing the same SSID) is configured as a separate
221# block in this configuration file. The network blocks are in preference order
222# (the first match is used).
223#
224# network block fields:
225#
226# disabled:
227#	0 = this network can be used (default)
228#	1 = this network block is disabled (can be enabled through ctrl_iface,
229#	    e.g., with wpa_cli or wpa_gui)
230#
231# id_str: Network identifier string for external scripts. This value is passed
232#	to external action script through wpa_cli as WPA_ID_STR environment
233#	variable to make it easier to do network specific configuration.
234#
235# ssid: SSID (mandatory); either as an ASCII string with double quotation or
236#	as hex string; network name
237#
238# scan_ssid:
239#	0 = do not scan this SSID with specific Probe Request frames (default)
240#	1 = scan with SSID-specific Probe Request frames (this can be used to
241#	    find APs that hide (do not broadcast) SSID or use multiple SSIDs;
242#	    this will add latency to scanning, so enable this only when needed)
243#
244# bssid: BSSID (optional); if set, this network block is used only when
245#	associating with the AP using the configured BSSID
246#
247# priority: priority group (integer)
248# By default, all networks will get same priority group (0). If some of the
249# networks are more desirable, this field can be used to change the order in
250# which wpa_supplicant goes through the networks when selecting a BSS. The
251# priority groups will be iterated in decreasing priority (i.e., the larger the
252# priority value, the sooner the network is matched against the scan results).
253# Within each priority group, networks will be selected based on security
254# policy, signal strength, etc.
255# Please note that AP scanning with scan_ssid=1 and ap_scan=2 mode are not
256# using this priority to select the order for scanning. Instead, they try the
257# networks in the order that they are listed in the configuration file.
258#
259# mode: IEEE 802.11 operation mode
260# 0 = infrastructure (Managed) mode, i.e., associate with an AP (default)
261# 1 = IBSS (ad-hoc, peer-to-peer)
262# 2 = AP (access point)
263# Note: IBSS can only be used with key_mgmt NONE (plaintext and static WEP)
264# and key_mgmt=WPA-NONE (fixed group key TKIP/CCMP). WPA-None requires
265# following network block options:
266# proto=WPA, key_mgmt=WPA-NONE, pairwise=NONE, group=TKIP (or CCMP, but not
267# both), and psk must also be set.
268#
269# frequency: Channel frequency in megahertz (MHz) for IBSS, e.g.,
270# 2412 = IEEE 802.11b/g channel 1. This value is used to configure the initial
271# channel for IBSS (adhoc) networks. It is ignored in the infrastructure mode.
272# In addition, this value is only used by the station that creates the IBSS. If
273# an IBSS network with the configured SSID is already present, the frequency of
274# the network will be used instead of this configured value.
275#
276# scan_freq: List of frequencies to scan
277# Space-separated list of frequencies in MHz to scan when searching for this
278# BSS. If the subset of channels used by the network is known, this option can
279# be used to optimize scanning to not occur on channels that the network does
280# not use. Example: scan_freq=2412 2437 2462
281#
282# freq_list: Array of allowed frequencies
283# Space-separated list of frequencies in MHz to allow for selecting the BSS. If
284# set, scan results that do not match any of the specified frequencies are not
285# considered when selecting a BSS.
286#
287# proto: list of accepted protocols
288# WPA = WPA/IEEE 802.11i/D3.0
289# RSN = WPA2/IEEE 802.11i (also WPA2 can be used as an alias for RSN)
290# If not set, this defaults to: WPA RSN
291#
292# key_mgmt: list of accepted authenticated key management protocols
293# WPA-PSK = WPA pre-shared key (this requires 'psk' field)
294# WPA-EAP = WPA using EAP authentication
295# IEEE8021X = IEEE 802.1X using EAP authentication and (optionally) dynamically
296#	generated WEP keys
297# NONE = WPA is not used; plaintext or static WEP could be used
298# WPA-PSK-SHA256 = Like WPA-PSK but using stronger SHA256-based algorithms
299# WPA-EAP-SHA256 = Like WPA-EAP but using stronger SHA256-based algorithms
300# If not set, this defaults to: WPA-PSK WPA-EAP
301#
302# auth_alg: list of allowed IEEE 802.11 authentication algorithms
303# OPEN = Open System authentication (required for WPA/WPA2)
304# SHARED = Shared Key authentication (requires static WEP keys)
305# LEAP = LEAP/Network EAP (only used with LEAP)
306# If not set, automatic selection is used (Open System with LEAP enabled if
307# LEAP is allowed as one of the EAP methods).
308#
309# pairwise: list of accepted pairwise (unicast) ciphers for WPA
310# CCMP = AES in Counter mode with CBC-MAC [RFC 3610, IEEE 802.11i/D7.0]
311# TKIP = Temporal Key Integrity Protocol [IEEE 802.11i/D7.0]
312# NONE = Use only Group Keys (deprecated, should not be included if APs support
313#	pairwise keys)
314# If not set, this defaults to: CCMP TKIP
315#
316# group: list of accepted group (broadcast/multicast) ciphers for WPA
317# CCMP = AES in Counter mode with CBC-MAC [RFC 3610, IEEE 802.11i/D7.0]
318# TKIP = Temporal Key Integrity Protocol [IEEE 802.11i/D7.0]
319# WEP104 = WEP (Wired Equivalent Privacy) with 104-bit key
320# WEP40 = WEP (Wired Equivalent Privacy) with 40-bit key [IEEE 802.11]
321# If not set, this defaults to: CCMP TKIP WEP104 WEP40
322#
323# psk: WPA preshared key; 256-bit pre-shared key
324# The key used in WPA-PSK mode can be entered either as 64 hex-digits, i.e.,
325# 32 bytes or as an ASCII passphrase (in which case, the real PSK will be
326# generated using the passphrase and SSID). ASCII passphrase must be between
327# 8 and 63 characters (inclusive).
328# This field is not needed, if WPA-EAP is used.
329# Note: Separate tool, wpa_passphrase, can be used to generate 256-bit keys
330# from ASCII passphrase. This process uses lot of CPU and wpa_supplicant
331# startup and reconfiguration time can be optimized by generating the PSK only
332# only when the passphrase or SSID has actually changed.
333#
334# eapol_flags: IEEE 802.1X/EAPOL options (bit field)
335# Dynamic WEP key required for non-WPA mode
336# bit0 (1): require dynamically generated unicast WEP key
337# bit1 (2): require dynamically generated broadcast WEP key
338# 	(3 = require both keys; default)
339# Note: When using wired authentication, eapol_flags must be set to 0 for the
340# authentication to be completed successfully.
341#
342# mixed_cell: This option can be used to configure whether so called mixed
343# cells, i.e., networks that use both plaintext and encryption in the same
344# SSID, are allowed when selecting a BSS form scan results.
345# 0 = disabled (default)
346# 1 = enabled
347#
348# proactive_key_caching:
349# Enable/disable opportunistic PMKSA caching for WPA2.
350# 0 = disabled (default)
351# 1 = enabled
352#
353# wep_key0..3: Static WEP key (ASCII in double quotation, e.g. "abcde" or
354# hex without quotation, e.g., 0102030405)
355# wep_tx_keyidx: Default WEP key index (TX) (0..3)
356#
357# peerkey: Whether PeerKey negotiation for direct links (IEEE 802.11e DLS) is
358# allowed. This is only used with RSN/WPA2.
359# 0 = disabled (default)
360# 1 = enabled
361#peerkey=1
362#
363# wpa_ptk_rekey: Maximum lifetime for PTK in seconds. This can be used to
364# enforce rekeying of PTK to mitigate some attacks against TKIP deficiencies.
365#
366# Following fields are only used with internal EAP implementation.
367# eap: space-separated list of accepted EAP methods
368#	MD5 = EAP-MD5 (unsecure and does not generate keying material ->
369#			cannot be used with WPA; to be used as a Phase 2 method
370#			with EAP-PEAP or EAP-TTLS)
371#       MSCHAPV2 = EAP-MSCHAPv2 (cannot be used separately with WPA; to be used
372#		as a Phase 2 method with EAP-PEAP or EAP-TTLS)
373#       OTP = EAP-OTP (cannot be used separately with WPA; to be used
374#		as a Phase 2 method with EAP-PEAP or EAP-TTLS)
375#       GTC = EAP-GTC (cannot be used separately with WPA; to be used
376#		as a Phase 2 method with EAP-PEAP or EAP-TTLS)
377#	TLS = EAP-TLS (client and server certificate)
378#	PEAP = EAP-PEAP (with tunnelled EAP authentication)
379#	TTLS = EAP-TTLS (with tunnelled EAP or PAP/CHAP/MSCHAP/MSCHAPV2
380#			 authentication)
381#	If not set, all compiled in methods are allowed.
382#
383# identity: Identity string for EAP
384#	This field is also used to configure user NAI for
385#	EAP-PSK/PAX/SAKE/GPSK.
386# anonymous_identity: Anonymous identity string for EAP (to be used as the
387#	unencrypted identity with EAP types that support different tunnelled
388#	identity, e.g., EAP-TTLS)
389# password: Password string for EAP. This field can include either the
390#	plaintext password (using ASCII or hex string) or a NtPasswordHash
391#	(16-byte MD4 hash of password) in hash:<32 hex digits> format.
392#	NtPasswordHash can only be used when the password is for MSCHAPv2 or
393#	MSCHAP (EAP-MSCHAPv2, EAP-TTLS/MSCHAPv2, EAP-TTLS/MSCHAP, LEAP).
394#	EAP-PSK (128-bit PSK), EAP-PAX (128-bit PSK), and EAP-SAKE (256-bit
395#	PSK) is also configured using this field. For EAP-GPSK, this is a
396#	variable length PSK.
397# ca_cert: File path to CA certificate file (PEM/DER). This file can have one
398#	or more trusted CA certificates. If ca_cert and ca_path are not
399#	included, server certificate will not be verified. This is insecure and
400#	a trusted CA certificate should always be configured when using
401#	EAP-TLS/TTLS/PEAP. Full path should be used since working directory may
402#	change when wpa_supplicant is run in the background.
403#
404#	Alternatively, this can be used to only perform matching of the server
405#	certificate (SHA-256 hash of the DER encoded X.509 certificate). In
406#	this case, the possible CA certificates in the server certificate chain
407#	are ignored and only the server certificate is verified. This is
408#	configured with the following format:
409#	hash:://server/sha256/cert_hash_in_hex
410#	For example: "hash://server/sha256/
411#	5a1bc1296205e6fdbe3979728efe3920798885c1c4590b5f90f43222d239ca6a"
412#
413#	On Windows, trusted CA certificates can be loaded from the system
414#	certificate store by setting this to cert_store://<name>, e.g.,
415#	ca_cert="cert_store://CA" or ca_cert="cert_store://ROOT".
416#	Note that when running wpa_supplicant as an application, the user
417#	certificate store (My user account) is used, whereas computer store
418#	(Computer account) is used when running wpasvc as a service.
419# ca_path: Directory path for CA certificate files (PEM). This path may
420#	contain multiple CA certificates in OpenSSL format. Common use for this
421#	is to point to system trusted CA list which is often installed into
422#	directory like /etc/ssl/certs. If configured, these certificates are
423#	added to the list of trusted CAs. ca_cert may also be included in that
424#	case, but it is not required.
425# client_cert: File path to client certificate file (PEM/DER)
426#	Full path should be used since working directory may change when
427#	wpa_supplicant is run in the background.
428#	Alternatively, a named configuration blob can be used by setting this
429#	to blob://<blob name>.
430# private_key: File path to client private key file (PEM/DER/PFX)
431#	When PKCS#12/PFX file (.p12/.pfx) is used, client_cert should be
432#	commented out. Both the private key and certificate will be read from
433#	the PKCS#12 file in this case. Full path should be used since working
434#	directory may change when wpa_supplicant is run in the background.
435#	Windows certificate store can be used by leaving client_cert out and
436#	configuring private_key in one of the following formats:
437#	cert://substring_to_match
438#	hash://certificate_thumbprint_in_hex
439#	for example: private_key="hash://63093aa9c47f56ae88334c7b65a4"
440#	Note that when running wpa_supplicant as an application, the user
441#	certificate store (My user account) is used, whereas computer store
442#	(Computer account) is used when running wpasvc as a service.
443#	Alternatively, a named configuration blob can be used by setting this
444#	to blob://<blob name>.
445# private_key_passwd: Password for private key file (if left out, this will be
446#	asked through control interface)
447# dh_file: File path to DH/DSA parameters file (in PEM format)
448#	This is an optional configuration file for setting parameters for an
449#	ephemeral DH key exchange. In most cases, the default RSA
450#	authentication does not use this configuration. However, it is possible
451#	setup RSA to use ephemeral DH key exchange. In addition, ciphers with
452#	DSA keys always use ephemeral DH keys. This can be used to achieve
453#	forward secrecy. If the file is in DSA parameters format, it will be
454#	automatically converted into DH params.
455# subject_match: Substring to be matched against the subject of the
456#	authentication server certificate. If this string is set, the server
457#	sertificate is only accepted if it contains this string in the subject.
458#	The subject string is in following format:
459#	/C=US/ST=CA/L=San Francisco/CN=Test AS/emailAddress=as@example.com
460# altsubject_match: Semicolon separated string of entries to be matched against
461#	the alternative subject name of the authentication server certificate.
462#	If this string is set, the server sertificate is only accepted if it
463#	contains one of the entries in an alternative subject name extension.
464#	altSubjectName string is in following format: TYPE:VALUE
465#	Example: EMAIL:server@example.com
466#	Example: DNS:server.example.com;DNS:server2.example.com
467#	Following types are supported: EMAIL, DNS, URI
468# phase1: Phase1 (outer authentication, i.e., TLS tunnel) parameters
469#	(string with field-value pairs, e.g., "peapver=0" or
470#	"peapver=1 peaplabel=1")
471#	'peapver' can be used to force which PEAP version (0 or 1) is used.
472#	'peaplabel=1' can be used to force new label, "client PEAP encryption",
473#	to be used during key derivation when PEAPv1 or newer. Most existing
474#	PEAPv1 implementation seem to be using the old label, "client EAP
475#	encryption", and wpa_supplicant is now using that as the default value.
476#	Some servers, e.g., Radiator, may require peaplabel=1 configuration to
477#	interoperate with PEAPv1; see eap_testing.txt for more details.
478#	'peap_outer_success=0' can be used to terminate PEAP authentication on
479#	tunneled EAP-Success. This is required with some RADIUS servers that
480#	implement draft-josefsson-pppext-eap-tls-eap-05.txt (e.g.,
481#	Lucent NavisRadius v4.4.0 with PEAP in "IETF Draft 5" mode)
482#	include_tls_length=1 can be used to force wpa_supplicant to include
483#	TLS Message Length field in all TLS messages even if they are not
484#	fragmented.
485#	sim_min_num_chal=3 can be used to configure EAP-SIM to require three
486#	challenges (by default, it accepts 2 or 3)
487#	result_ind=1 can be used to enable EAP-SIM and EAP-AKA to use
488#	protected result indication.
489#	'crypto_binding' option can be used to control PEAPv0 cryptobinding
490#	behavior:
491#	 * 0 = do not use cryptobinding (default)
492#	 * 1 = use cryptobinding if server supports it
493#	 * 2 = require cryptobinding
494#	EAP-WSC (WPS) uses following options: pin=<Device Password> or
495#	pbc=1.
496# phase2: Phase2 (inner authentication with TLS tunnel) parameters
497#	(string with field-value pairs, e.g., "auth=MSCHAPV2" for EAP-PEAP or
498#	"autheap=MSCHAPV2 autheap=MD5" for EAP-TTLS)
499# Following certificate/private key fields are used in inner Phase2
500# authentication when using EAP-TTLS or EAP-PEAP.
501# ca_cert2: File path to CA certificate file. This file can have one or more
502#	trusted CA certificates. If ca_cert2 and ca_path2 are not included,
503#	server certificate will not be verified. This is insecure and a trusted
504#	CA certificate should always be configured.
505# ca_path2: Directory path for CA certificate files (PEM)
506# client_cert2: File path to client certificate file
507# private_key2: File path to client private key file
508# private_key2_passwd: Password for private key file
509# dh_file2: File path to DH/DSA parameters file (in PEM format)
510# subject_match2: Substring to be matched against the subject of the
511#	authentication server certificate.
512# altsubject_match2: Substring to be matched against the alternative subject
513#	name of the authentication server certificate.
514#
515# fragment_size: Maximum EAP fragment size in bytes (default 1398).
516#	This value limits the fragment size for EAP methods that support
517#	fragmentation (e.g., EAP-TLS and EAP-PEAP). This value should be set
518#	small enough to make the EAP messages fit in MTU of the network
519#	interface used for EAPOL. The default value is suitable for most
520#	cases.
521#
522# EAP-FAST variables:
523# pac_file: File path for the PAC entries. wpa_supplicant will need to be able
524#	to create this file and write updates to it when PAC is being
525#	provisioned or refreshed. Full path to the file should be used since
526#	working directory may change when wpa_supplicant is run in the
527#	background. Alternatively, a named configuration blob can be used by
528#	setting this to blob://<blob name>
529# phase1: fast_provisioning option can be used to enable in-line provisioning
530#         of EAP-FAST credentials (PAC):
531#         0 = disabled,
532#         1 = allow unauthenticated provisioning,
533#         2 = allow authenticated provisioning,
534#         3 = allow both unauthenticated and authenticated provisioning
535#	fast_max_pac_list_len=<num> option can be used to set the maximum
536#		number of PAC entries to store in a PAC list (default: 10)
537#	fast_pac_format=binary option can be used to select binary format for
538#		storing PAC entries in order to save some space (the default
539#		text format uses about 2.5 times the size of minimal binary
540#		format)
541#
542# wpa_supplicant supports number of "EAP workarounds" to work around
543# interoperability issues with incorrectly behaving authentication servers.
544# These are enabled by default because some of the issues are present in large
545# number of authentication servers. Strict EAP conformance mode can be
546# configured by disabling workarounds with eap_workaround=0.
547
548# Example blocks:
549
550# Simple case: WPA-PSK, PSK as an ASCII passphrase, allow all valid ciphers
551network={
552	ssid="simple"
553	psk="very secret passphrase"
554	priority=5
555}
556
557# Same as previous, but request SSID-specific scanning (for APs that reject
558# broadcast SSID)
559network={
560	ssid="second ssid"
561	scan_ssid=1
562	psk="very secret passphrase"
563	priority=2
564}
565
566# Only WPA-PSK is used. Any valid cipher combination is accepted.
567network={
568	ssid="example"
569	proto=WPA
570	key_mgmt=WPA-PSK
571	pairwise=CCMP TKIP
572	group=CCMP TKIP WEP104 WEP40
573	psk=06b4be19da289f475aa46a33cb793029d4ab3db7a23ee92382eb0106c72ac7bb
574	priority=2
575}
576
577# WPA-Personal(PSK) with TKIP and enforcement for frequent PTK rekeying
578network={
579	ssid="example"
580	proto=WPA
581	key_mgmt=WPA-PSK
582	pairwise=TKIP
583	group=TKIP
584	psk="not so secure passphrase"
585	wpa_ptk_rekey=600
586}
587
588# Only WPA-EAP is used. Both CCMP and TKIP is accepted. An AP that used WEP104
589# or WEP40 as the group cipher will not be accepted.
590network={
591	ssid="example"
592	proto=RSN
593	key_mgmt=WPA-EAP
594	pairwise=CCMP TKIP
595	group=CCMP TKIP
596	eap=TLS
597	identity="user@example.com"
598	ca_cert="/etc/cert/ca.pem"
599	client_cert="/etc/cert/user.pem"
600	private_key="/etc/cert/user.prv"
601	private_key_passwd="password"
602	priority=1
603}
604
605# EAP-PEAP/MSCHAPv2 configuration for RADIUS servers that use the new peaplabel
606# (e.g., Radiator)
607network={
608	ssid="example"
609	key_mgmt=WPA-EAP
610	eap=PEAP
611	identity="user@example.com"
612	password="foobar"
613	ca_cert="/etc/cert/ca.pem"
614	phase1="peaplabel=1"
615	phase2="auth=MSCHAPV2"
616	priority=10
617}
618
619# EAP-TTLS/EAP-MD5-Challenge configuration with anonymous identity for the
620# unencrypted use. Real identity is sent only within an encrypted TLS tunnel.
621network={
622	ssid="example"
623	key_mgmt=WPA-EAP
624	eap=TTLS
625	identity="user@example.com"
626	anonymous_identity="anonymous@example.com"
627	password="foobar"
628	ca_cert="/etc/cert/ca.pem"
629	priority=2
630}
631
632# EAP-TTLS/MSCHAPv2 configuration with anonymous identity for the unencrypted
633# use. Real identity is sent only within an encrypted TLS tunnel.
634network={
635	ssid="example"
636	key_mgmt=WPA-EAP
637	eap=TTLS
638	identity="user@example.com"
639	anonymous_identity="anonymous@example.com"
640	password="foobar"
641	ca_cert="/etc/cert/ca.pem"
642	phase2="auth=MSCHAPV2"
643}
644
645# WPA-EAP, EAP-TTLS with different CA certificate used for outer and inner
646# authentication.
647network={
648	ssid="example"
649	key_mgmt=WPA-EAP
650	eap=TTLS
651	# Phase1 / outer authentication
652	anonymous_identity="anonymous@example.com"
653	ca_cert="/etc/cert/ca.pem"
654	# Phase 2 / inner authentication
655	phase2="autheap=TLS"
656	ca_cert2="/etc/cert/ca2.pem"
657	client_cert2="/etc/cer/user.pem"
658	private_key2="/etc/cer/user.prv"
659	private_key2_passwd="password"
660	priority=2
661}
662
663# Both WPA-PSK and WPA-EAP is accepted. Only CCMP is accepted as pairwise and
664# group cipher.
665network={
666	ssid="example"
667	bssid=00:11:22:33:44:55
668	proto=WPA RSN
669	key_mgmt=WPA-PSK WPA-EAP
670	pairwise=CCMP
671	group=CCMP
672	psk=06b4be19da289f475aa46a33cb793029d4ab3db7a23ee92382eb0106c72ac7bb
673}
674
675# Special characters in SSID, so use hex string. Default to WPA-PSK, WPA-EAP
676# and all valid ciphers.
677network={
678	ssid=00010203
679	psk=000102030405060708090a0b0c0d0e0f101112131415161718191a1b1c1d1e1f
680}
681
682
683# EAP-SIM with a GSM SIM or USIM
684network={
685	ssid="eap-sim-test"
686	key_mgmt=WPA-EAP
687	eap=SIM
688	pin="1234"
689	pcsc=""
690}
691
692
693# EAP-PSK
694network={
695	ssid="eap-psk-test"
696	key_mgmt=WPA-EAP
697	eap=PSK
698	anonymous_identity="eap_psk_user"
699	password=06b4be19da289f475aa46a33cb793029
700	identity="eap_psk_user@example.com"
701}
702
703
704# IEEE 802.1X/EAPOL with dynamically generated WEP keys (i.e., no WPA) using
705# EAP-TLS for authentication and key generation; require both unicast and
706# broadcast WEP keys.
707network={
708	ssid="1x-test"
709	key_mgmt=IEEE8021X
710	eap=TLS
711	identity="user@example.com"
712	ca_cert="/etc/cert/ca.pem"
713	client_cert="/etc/cert/user.pem"
714	private_key="/etc/cert/user.prv"
715	private_key_passwd="password"
716	eapol_flags=3
717}
718
719
720# LEAP with dynamic WEP keys
721network={
722	ssid="leap-example"
723	key_mgmt=IEEE8021X
724	eap=LEAP
725	identity="user"
726	password="foobar"
727}
728
729# EAP-IKEv2 using shared secrets for both server and peer authentication
730network={
731	ssid="ikev2-example"
732	key_mgmt=WPA-EAP
733	eap=IKEV2
734	identity="user"
735	password="foobar"
736}
737
738# EAP-FAST with WPA (WPA or WPA2)
739network={
740	ssid="eap-fast-test"
741	key_mgmt=WPA-EAP
742	eap=FAST
743	anonymous_identity="FAST-000102030405"
744	identity="username"
745	password="password"
746	phase1="fast_provisioning=1"
747	pac_file="/etc/wpa_supplicant.eap-fast-pac"
748}
749
750network={
751	ssid="eap-fast-test"
752	key_mgmt=WPA-EAP
753	eap=FAST
754	anonymous_identity="FAST-000102030405"
755	identity="username"
756	password="password"
757	phase1="fast_provisioning=1"
758	pac_file="blob://eap-fast-pac"
759}
760
761# Plaintext connection (no WPA, no IEEE 802.1X)
762network={
763	ssid="plaintext-test"
764	key_mgmt=NONE
765}
766
767
768# Shared WEP key connection (no WPA, no IEEE 802.1X)
769network={
770	ssid="static-wep-test"
771	key_mgmt=NONE
772	wep_key0="abcde"
773	wep_key1=0102030405
774	wep_key2="1234567890123"
775	wep_tx_keyidx=0
776	priority=5
777}
778
779
780# Shared WEP key connection (no WPA, no IEEE 802.1X) using Shared Key
781# IEEE 802.11 authentication
782network={
783	ssid="static-wep-test2"
784	key_mgmt=NONE
785	wep_key0="abcde"
786	wep_key1=0102030405
787	wep_key2="1234567890123"
788	wep_tx_keyidx=0
789	priority=5
790	auth_alg=SHARED
791}
792
793
794# IBSS/ad-hoc network with WPA-None/TKIP.
795network={
796	ssid="test adhoc"
797	mode=1
798	frequency=2412
799	proto=WPA
800	key_mgmt=WPA-NONE
801	pairwise=NONE
802	group=TKIP
803	psk="secret passphrase"
804}
805
806
807# Catch all example that allows more or less all configuration modes
808network={
809	ssid="example"
810	scan_ssid=1
811	key_mgmt=WPA-EAP WPA-PSK IEEE8021X NONE
812	pairwise=CCMP TKIP
813	group=CCMP TKIP WEP104 WEP40
814	psk="very secret passphrase"
815	eap=TTLS PEAP TLS
816	identity="user@example.com"
817	password="foobar"
818	ca_cert="/etc/cert/ca.pem"
819	client_cert="/etc/cert/user.pem"
820	private_key="/etc/cert/user.prv"
821	private_key_passwd="password"
822	phase1="peaplabel=0"
823}
824
825# Example of EAP-TLS with smartcard (openssl engine)
826network={
827	ssid="example"
828	key_mgmt=WPA-EAP
829	eap=TLS
830	proto=RSN
831	pairwise=CCMP TKIP
832	group=CCMP TKIP
833	identity="user@example.com"
834	ca_cert="/etc/cert/ca.pem"
835	client_cert="/etc/cert/user.pem"
836
837	engine=1
838
839	# The engine configured here must be available. Look at
840	# OpenSSL engine support in the global section.
841	# The key available through the engine must be the private key
842	# matching the client certificate configured above.
843
844	# use the opensc engine
845	#engine_id="opensc"
846	#key_id="45"
847
848	# use the pkcs11 engine
849	engine_id="pkcs11"
850	key_id="id_45"
851
852	# Optional PIN configuration; this can be left out and PIN will be
853	# asked through the control interface
854	pin="1234"
855}
856
857# Example configuration showing how to use an inlined blob as a CA certificate
858# data instead of using external file
859network={
860	ssid="example"
861	key_mgmt=WPA-EAP
862	eap=TTLS
863	identity="user@example.com"
864	anonymous_identity="anonymous@example.com"
865	password="foobar"
866	ca_cert="blob://exampleblob"
867	priority=20
868}
869
870blob-base64-exampleblob={
871SGVsbG8gV29ybGQhCg==
872}
873
874
875# Wildcard match for SSID (plaintext APs only). This example select any
876# open AP regardless of its SSID.
877network={
878	key_mgmt=NONE
879}
880