Commit 34f57347 authored by Luis R. Rodriguez's avatar Luis R. Rodriguez Committed by John W. Linville

cfg80211: export freq_reg_info()

This can be used by drivers on the reg_notifier()
Signed-off-by: default avatarLuis R. Rodriguez <lrodriguez@atheros.com>
Signed-off-by: default avatarJohn W. Linville <linville@tuxdriver.com>
parent 1fa25e41
......@@ -418,4 +418,28 @@ extern void wiphy_apply_custom_regulatory(
struct wiphy *wiphy,
const struct ieee80211_regdomain *regd);
/**
* freq_reg_info - get regulatory information for the given frequency
* @wiphy: the wiphy for which we want to process this rule for
* @center_freq: Frequency in KHz for which we want regulatory information for
* @bandwidth: the bandwidth requirement you have in KHz, if you do not have one
* you can set this to 0. If this frequency is allowed we then set
* this value to the maximum allowed bandwidth.
* @reg_rule: the regulatory rule which we have for this frequency
*
* Use this function to get the regulatory rule for a specific frequency on
* a given wireless device. If the device has a specific regulatory domain
* it wants to follow we respect that unless a country IE has been received
* and processed already.
*
* Returns 0 if it was able to find a valid regulatory rule which does
* apply to the given center_freq otherwise it returns non-zero. It will
* also return -ERANGE if we determine the given center_freq does not even have
* a regulatory rule for a frequency range in the center_freq's band. See
* freq_in_rule_band() for our current definition of a band -- this is purely
* subjective and right now its 802.11 specific.
*/
extern int freq_reg_info(struct wiphy *wiphy, u32 center_freq, u32 *bandwidth,
const struct ieee80211_reg_rule **reg_rule);
#endif /* __NET_WIRELESS_H */
......@@ -833,29 +833,9 @@ static int freq_reg_info_regd(struct wiphy *wiphy,
return !max_bandwidth;
}
EXPORT_SYMBOL(freq_reg_info);
/**
* freq_reg_info - get regulatory information for the given frequency
* @wiphy: the wiphy for which we want to process this rule for
* @center_freq: Frequency in KHz for which we want regulatory information for
* @bandwidth: the bandwidth requirement you have in KHz, if you do not have one
* you can set this to 0. If this frequency is allowed we then set
* this value to the maximum allowed bandwidth.
* @reg_rule: the regulatory rule which we have for this frequency
*
* Use this function to get the regulatory rule for a specific frequency on
* a given wireless device. If the device has a specific regulatory domain
* it wants to follow we respect that unless a country IE has been received
* and processed already.
*
* Returns 0 if it was able to find a valid regulatory rule which does
* apply to the given center_freq otherwise it returns non-zero. It will
* also return -ERANGE if we determine the given center_freq does not even have
* a regulatory rule for a frequency range in the center_freq's band. See
* freq_in_rule_band() for our current definition of a band -- this is purely
* subjective and right now its 802.11 specific.
*/
static int freq_reg_info(struct wiphy *wiphy, u32 center_freq, u32 *bandwidth,
int freq_reg_info(struct wiphy *wiphy, u32 center_freq, u32 *bandwidth,
const struct ieee80211_reg_rule **reg_rule)
{
return freq_reg_info_regd(wiphy, center_freq,
......
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