| IWN(4) | Device Drivers Manual | IWN(4) |
iwn — Intel IEEE
802.11n wireless network driver
To compile this driver into the kernel, include the following lines in your kernel configuration file:
device iwn
device pci
device wlan
device firmwareYou also need to select a firmware for your device. Choose one from:
device iwn1000fw
device iwn100fw
device iwn105fw
device iwn135fw
device iwn2000fw
device iwn2030fw
device iwn4965fw
device iwn5000fw
device iwn5150fw
device iwn6000fw
device iwn6000g2afw
device iwn6000g2bfw
device iwn6050fwOr you can use
device iwnfwto include them all.
Alternatively, to load the driver as a module at boot time, place the following lines in loader.conf(5):
if_iwn_load="YES" iwn1000fw_load="YES" iwn100fw_load="YES" iwn105fw_load="YES" iwn135fw_load="YES" iwn2000fw_load="YES" iwn2030fw_load="YES" iwn4965fw_load="YES" iwn5000fw_load="YES" iwn5150fw_load="YES" iwn6000fw_load="YES" iwn6000g2afw_load="YES" iwn6000g2bfw_load="YES" iwn6050fw_load="YES"
The iwn driver provides support for:
iwn supports
station and monitor mode
operation. Only one virtual interface may be configured at any time. For
more information on configuring this device, see
ifconfig(8).
This driver requires the firmware built with the
iwnfw module to work.
Join an existing BSS network (i.e., connect to an access point):
ifconfig wlan create wlandev iwn0 inet 192.168.0.20 \
netmask 0xffffff00
Join a specific BSS network with network name
“my_net”:
ifconfig wlan create wlandev iwn0
ssid my_net upJoin a specific BSS network with 64-bit WEP encryption:
ifconfig wlan create wlandev iwn0 ssid my_net \ wepmode on wepkey 0x1234567890 weptxkey 1 up
Join a specific BSS network with 128-bit WEP encryption:
ifconfig wlan create wlandev iwn0 wlanmode adhoc ssid my_net \
wepmode on wepkey 0x01020304050607080910111213 weptxkey 1
iwnfw(4), pci(4), wlan(4), wlan_ccmp(4), wlan_tkip(4), wlan_wep(4), ifconfig(8), wpa_supplicant(8)
The original iwn driver was written by
Damien Bergamini
<damien.bergamini@free.fr>.
| August 30, 2014 | Debian |