crda (8) - Linux Manuals
crda: send to the kernel a wireless regulatory domain for a given ISO / IEC 3166 alpha2
NAME
crda - send to the kernel a wireless regulatory domain for a given ISO / IEC 3166 alpha2
SYNOPSIS
crda
Description
crda
is the Linux wireless central regulatory domain agent.
crda
is intended to be used by
udev
scripts and should not be run manually unless debugging udev
scripts.
crda
is triggered to run by the kernel by sending a
udev
event upon a new regulatory domain change. Regulatory domain
changes are triggered by the wireless kernel subsystem (upon initialization
and on reception of country IEs), wireless drivers, or
userspace (see
iw
). Upon a regulatory domain change the kernel sends a udev change event
for the regulatory platform. The kernel ignores regulatory domains sent
to it if it does not expect them. The regulatory domain is read by crda
from the
regulatory.bin
file.
RSA Digital Signature
If built with openssl or gcrypt support
crda
will have embedded
into it an RSA digital signature which will prevent it from reading
corrupted or non-authored
regulatory.bin
files. Authorship is respected by the RSA public key packed into
crda.
This
specific
crda
package has been built with RSA public keys from
John Linville (the Linux wireless kernel maintainer)
and
Seth Forshee (the wireless regulatory databse maintainer)
and as such will only read
regulatory.bin
files signed by one of them. For further information see the
regulatory.bin
man page.
UDEV RULE
A udev regulatory rule must be put in place
in order to receive and parse udev events from the kernel in order to get
udev to call crda with the passed ISO / IEC 3166 alpha2 country code.
An example udev rule which can be used (usually in
/lib/udev/rules.d/85-regulatory.rules
):
KERNEL==regulatory*, ACTION==change, SUBSYSTEM==platform, RUN+=/sbin/crda