NAME
iwevent - Display Wireless Events generated by drivers and setting changes
SYNOPSIS
iwevent
DESCRIPTION
iwevent displays Wireless Events received through the RTNetlink
socket. Each line displays the specific Wireless Event which describes what has
happened on the specified wireless interface.
This command doesn't take any arguments.
DISPLAY
There are two classes of Wireless Events.
The first class is events related to a change of wireless settings on the
interface (typically done through iwconfig(8)
or a script calling iwconfig(8)). Only
settings that could result in a disruption of connectivity are reported. The
events currently reported are changing one of the following setting:
- Network ID
- ESSID
- Frequency
- Mode
- Encryption
All those events will be generated on all wireless interfaces by the kernel
wireless subsystem (but only if the driver has been converted to the new driver
API).
The second class of events are events generated by the hardware, when
something happens or a task has been finished. Those events include:
- New Access Point/Cell address
- The interface has joined a new Access Point or Ad-Hoc Cell, or lost its
association with it. This is the same MAC address that is reported by
iwconfig(8).
- Scan request completed
- A scanning request has been completed, results of the scan are available
(see iwlist(8)).
- Tx packet dropped
- A packet directed at this address has been dropped because the interface
believes this node doesn't answer anymore (usually maximum of MAC level retry
exceeded). This is usually an early indication that the node may have left
the cell or gone out of range, but it may be due to fading or excessive
contention.
- Custom driver event
- Event specific to the driver. Please check the driver documentation.
- Registered node
- The interface has successfully registered a new wireless client/peer.
Will be generated mostly when the interface acts as an Access Point (mode
Master).
- Expired node
- The registration of the client/peer on this interface has expired. Will
be generated mostly when the interface acts as an Access Point (mode Master).
- Spy threshold crossed
- The signal strength for one of the addresses in the spy list went under
the low threshold or went above the high threshold.
Most wireless drivers generate only a subset of those events, not all of
them, the exact list depends on the specific hardware/driver combination.
Please refer to driver documentation for details on when they are generated,
and use iwlist(8) to check what the driver
supports.
AUTHOR
Jean Tourrilhes - jt@hpl.hp.com
SEE ALSO