Is there a standard that defines what is a valid SSID and password?

徘徊边缘 提交于 2019-11-27 11:29:26

问题


We are developing a wireless n/w configuration UI and need to check if a SSID is a valid one? Are there any restrictions on the character set? length ? anything more..


回答1:


Section 7.3.2.1 of the 802.11-2007 specification (http://standards.ieee.org/getieee802/download/802.11-2007.pdf) defines SSIDs.

A valid SSID is 0-32 octets with arbitrary contents. A 0-length SSID indicates the wildcard SSID (in probe request frames for instance).

There's no character set associated with the SSID - a 32-byte string of NUL-bytes is a valid SSID.

This implies:

  • you should never use normal string functions when manipulating generic SSIDs (strcpy() and friends).

  • you should not assume that the SSID is printable when, for instance, logging it to disk




回答2:


According to last standard 802.11-2012 (Section 6.3.11.2.2), it can be 0-32 octets with an unspecified or UTF8 encoding.



来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/4919889/is-there-a-standard-that-defines-what-is-a-valid-ssid-and-password

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