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My router broke so I am trying to setup something temporarily to share internet connection from my main pc (internet comes from modem connected directly to ethernet card) to other devices via an ad hoc network, for that I have a wifi adapter that uses the zd1211rw driver (i also have the alfa rtl8187 but that adapter is not working at all on ubuntu 12.04).

The problem that I am having is that I can't connect to the wifi AP I create, it just stays "acquiring network address" and never finish connecting.

My main computer OS is Ubuntu 12.04, this is what I am doing. First I put the wifi adapter on monitor mode with:

airmon-ng start wlan2

This creates a mon0 interface, then I use:

airbase-ng -e MyNetName -c 11 -v mon0

From here I can already see the MyNetName network using my laptop (with windows), but if I try to connect it stays at "acquiring network address". The tutorials I followed continue with these commands:

ifconfig at0 up
ifconfig at0 192.168.1.254 netmask 255.255.255.0
route add -net 192.168.1.0 netmask 255.255.255.0 gw 192.168.1.254

iptables --flush
iptables --table nat --flush
iptables --delete-chain
iptables --table nat --delete-chain
iptables -P FORWARD ACCEPT
iptables -t nat -A POSTROUTING -o eth0 -j MASQUERADE
echo > '/var/lib/dhcp/dhcpd.leases'

Then I start the dhcp server with

dhcpd -d -f -cf /etc/dhcp/dhcpd.conf at0

The dhcpd.conf file looks like this:

ddns-update-style interim; <- also tried ad-hoc instead of interim
default-lease-time 600;
max-lease-time 7200;
authoritative;
subnet 192.168.1.0 netmask 255.255.255.0 {
  option subnet-mask 255.255.255.0;
  option broadcast-address 198.168.1.255;
  option routers 192.168.1.254;
  option domain-name-servers 8.8.8.8;
  range 192.168.1.1 192.168.1.253;
}

The output looks like:

Internet Systems Consortium DHCP Server 4.1-ESV-R4
Copyright 2004-2011 Internet Systems Consortium.
All rights reserved.
For info, please visit https://www.isc.org/software/dhcp/
Not searching LDAP since ldap-server, ldap-port and ldap-base-dn were not specified in the config file
Wrote 0 leases to leases file.
Listening on LPF/at0/00:02:72:69:28:c8/192.168.2.128/25
Sending on   LPF/at0/00:02:72:69:28:c8/192.168.2.128/25
Sending on   Socket/fallback/fallback-net
Can't create PID file /var/run/dhcpd.pid: Permission denied.

The last command:

echo "1" > /proc/sys/net/ipv4/ip_forward

The airbase-ng command output looks like this:

11:34:03  Created tap interface at0
11:34:03  Trying to set MTU on at0 to 1500
11:34:03  Trying to set MTU on mon0 to 1800
11:34:03  Access Point with BSSID 00:02:72:69:28:C8 started.
11:34:10  Client 70:F3:95:B3:27:76 associated (unencrypted) to ESSID: "MyNetName"
11:34:13  Client 70:F3:95:B3:27:76 reassociated (unencrypted) to ESSID: "MyNetName"
11:34:17  Client 70:F3:95:B3:27:76 reassociated (unencrypted) to ESSID: "MyNetName"
11:34:21  Client 70:F3:95:B3:27:76 reassociated (unencrypted) to ESSID: "MyNetName"

So my problem is that I cannot get an internal ip on the laptop that is trying to connect, the windows wifi manager thing just stays at "acquiring network address", airbase reacts by showing more of those reassociated messages while the laptop tries to connect. Another problem is that after running iptables --flush the internet in the main PC stops working, but I want to deal with that once I am able to fully connect to MyNetName.

Does anyone have an idea what am I doing wrong?

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  • You router had a DHCP server that would provide your laptop with a dynamic IP address. Easiest thing to do is assign the laptop a static IP address.
    – sawdust
    Apr 26, 2013 at 15:41

3 Answers 3

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I've never seen this setup using airbase-ng... maybe you could try out hostapd to solve the constant reassociation issue.

Also, this route doesn't make much sense:

route add -net 192.168.1.0 netmask 255.255.255.0 gw 192.168.1.254

Try without it.

Finally, you could try installing tcpdump and monitoring network traffic on at0 while client is supossedly trying to acquire dhcp. Maybe the dhcp request isn't even getting through.

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You could try using isc-dhcp-server. I've currently got a very similar setup to you with that being the only difference.

Install it -> change /etc/default/isc-dhcp-server to serve on at0 interface -> start it using

service isc-dhcp-server start

This will still use your dhcpd.conf file.

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use this command:
sudo dhcpd -d -f -cf /etc/dhcp/dhcpd.conf at0
and then:
sudo /etc/init.d/isc-dhcp-server start

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