I am trying to enable monitoring mode for a USB wifi dongle with the RTL8188CUS chipset on a raspberry pi model b+ (or any raspberry pi for that matter).
$ lsusb
Bus 001 Device 005: ID 0bda:8176 Realtek Semiconductor Corp. RTL8188CUS 802.11n WLAN Adapter
$ sudo iwconfig wlan0 mode monitor
Error for wireless request "Set Mode" (8B06) :
SET failed on device wlan0 ; Invalid argument.
According to github/raspberrypi/linux/issues/369, you need to enable the rtlwifi/rtl8192cu kernel module that is included with the kernel distribution but not compiled. This requires minor modifications to some files as diff'ed below in 'STEP 2'.
The USB issue mentioned in that thread has been resolved as of 4.1.6+, so the rtlwifi driver should work.
Steps to recreate on a fresh raspberry pi (model B+)...
STEP 0: Update existing modules and kernel to latest
$ sudo apt-get update
$ sudo rpi-update
$ uname -a
Linux raspberrypi 4.1.7+ #815 PREEMPT Thu Sep 17 17:59:24 BST 2015 armv6l GNU/Linux
STEP 1: Get the raspbian kernel source and add missing dependencies
$ git clone --depth=1 https://github.com/raspberrypi/linux
$ sudo apt-get install bc lshw
STEP 2: Enable the rtlwifi (kernel) drivers for RTL8188CUS (RTL8192)
edit linux/drivers/net/wireless/Kconfig
-#source "drivers/net/wireless/rtlwifi/Kconfig"
-source "drivers/net/wireless/rtl8192cu/Kconfig"
+source "drivers/net/wireless/rtlwifi/Kconfig"
+#source "drivers/net/wireless/rtl8192cu/Kconfig"
(Wheezy) edit linux/drivers/net/wireless/Makefile
-#obj-$(CONFIG_RTLWIFI) += rtlwifi/
+obj-$(CONFIG_RTLWIFI) += rtlwifi/
(Jessie) edit linux/drivers/net/wireless/realtek/Makefile
-#obj-$(CONFIG_RTLWIFI) += rtlwifi/
+obj-$(CONFIG_RTLWIFI) += rtlwifi/
STEP 3: Compile and install kernel (took many hours)
Summarized from kernel building documentation .
$ cd linux
$ KERNEL=kernel
$ make bcmrpi_defconfig
$ make zImage modules dtbs
$ sudo make modules_install
$ sudo cp arch/arm/boot/dts/*.dtb /boot/
$ sudo cp arch/arm/boot/dts/overlays/*.dtb* /boot/overlays/
$ sudo cp arch/arm/boot/dts/overlays/README /boot/overlays/
$ sudo scripts/mkknlimg arch/arm/boot/zImage /boot/$KERNEL.img
STEP 4: Reboot
$ sudo reboot
STEP 5: Check that the rtlwifi/rtl8192cu module is loaded
$ lsmod | fgrep rtl8192cu
rtl8192cu 100806 0
rtl_usb 14781 1 rtl8192cu
rtl8192c_common 72091 1 rtl8192cu
rtlwifi 101122 3 rtl_usb,rtl8192c_common,rtl8192cu
mac80211 623281 3 rtl_usb,rtlwifi,rtl8192cu
$
$ lshw
*-network:0
description: Ethernet interface
physical id: 1
bus info: usb@1:1.3
logical name: wlan0
serial: 00:0b:81:94:e9:a3
capabilities: ethernet physical
configuration: broadcast=yes driver=rtl8192cu driverversion=4.1.7+ firmware=N/A link=no multicast=yes
STEP 6: Try to activate monitoring mode
$ sudo iwconfig wlan0 mode monitor
Error for wireless request "Set Mode" (8B06) :
SET failed on device wlan0 ; Operation not supported.
What did i miss?
Issue 369 seems to indicate that it can work with the rtlwifi driver?
For anyone still interested, the rtl8192cu
is now compiled into the raspberry kernel by default. It can be activated by commenting out the blacklist in /etc/modprobe.d/blacklist-rtl8192cu.conf
. Executing sudo iwconfig wlan0 mode monitor
after a reboot will activate monitoring mode without any further problems.
Turns out the steps to recompile and load the rtlwifi module are correct. The problem is iwconfig not working to enable/determine monitoring mode in this situation.
Instead, I used iw as outlined by Steven Gordon - Capturing WiFi in Monitor mode with iw and it worked.
To summarize:
STEP 6b: List the physical network interfaces available
$ iw dev
STEP 7: Determine if the physical interface supports monitoring mode
$ iw phy phy0 info
... lots of stuff ...
Supported interface modes:
* IBSS
* managed
* AP
* AP/VLAN
* monitor
* mesh point
* P2P-client
* P2P-GO
... lots more stuff ...
STEP 8: Add a monitoring interface to that physical card
You need to explicitly add a 'monitoring' interface for the hardware you have.
$ sudo iw phy phy0 interface add mon0 type monitor
STEP 8: Start monitoring
In my case, I'm using tshark to facilitate monitoring, displaying a few useful fields rather than a lot of noise.
$ sudo apt-get install tshark
$ sudo tshark -i mon0 -f 'broadcast' -T fields -e frame.time_epoch -e wlan.sa -e radiotap.dbm_antsignal -e wlan.fc.type -e wlan.fc.subtype
Done.
If you love us? You can donate to us via Paypal or buy me a coffee so we can maintain and grow! Thank you!
Donate Us With