Especially if you, like me have installed it without a graphical desktop, so setting up an AP using the Network Manger GUI is now straightforward.
Make sure you have snap:
sudo apt install snapd
Then install wifi-ap:
snap install wifi-ap
Theoretically an automated setup will make it work straight after install, you can check that with:
wifi-ap.status
This did not work on my box, because I do not have a wlan0 interface, instead I had to configure it with:
wifi-ap.config set wifi.interface=wlp1s0
Configuring is very easy as far as you can live with the few options it gives you:
root@XXXXX:~# wifi-ap.config get
debug: false
dhcp.lease-time: 12h
dhcp.range-start: 10.0.60.2
dhcp.range-stop: 10.0.60.199
disabled: false
share.disabled: false
share.network-interface: enp3s0
wifi.address: 10.0.60.1
wifi.channel: 1
wifi.country-code: SG
wifi.hostapd-driver: nl80211
wifi.interface: wlp1s0
wifi.interface-mode: direct
wifi.netmask: 255.255.255.0
wifi.operation-mode: g
wifi.security: wpa2
wifi.security-passphrase: XXXXXXXXXX
wifi.ssid: XXXXXXXXXX
You can turn off the snap and back on with:
wifi-ap.config set disabled=true
wifi-ap.config set disabled=false
And restart with:
wifi-ap.status restart-ap
After these my hostapd was running but the few settings above did not allow me to set the settings to the optimal speed with the tuning options in hostapd.conf I have already experimented with earler:
ht_capab=[HT40+][SHORT-GI-20][SHORT-GI-40][DSSS_CCK-40][TX-STBC][RX-STBC1]
And editing /var/snap/wifi-ap/355/hostapd.conf does not help as the snap regenerates it upon every startup in /snap/wifi-ap/355/bin/ap.sh which is a read-only mounted squashfs:
root@XXXXXX:~# mount |grep snap
/var/lib/snapd/snaps/wireless-tools_7.snap on /snap/wireless-tools/7 type squashfs (ro,nodev,relatime,x-gdu.hide)
/var/lib/snapd/snaps/core_9665.snap on /snap/core/9665 type squashfs (ro,nodev,relatime,x-gdu.hide)
/var/lib/snapd/snaps/wifi-ap_355.snap on /snap/wifi-ap/355 type squashfs (ro,nodev,relatime,x-gdu.hide)
So I have turned to this page on how to unmount and unpack the squashfs, modify the generating script https://askubuntu.com/questions/1046606/cannot-edit-system-file-snap-phpstorm-even-with-root-account-in-ubuntu-18-04/1046677:
cd ~
sudo umount /snap/
wifi-ap/355 sudo unsquashfs /var/lib/snapd/snaps/
wifi-ap_355.snap
This is when you modify anything you want in the
squashfs-root
directory except I could not unmount because the service process was still using the mount point. I figured out the PID for it with:fuser -m
/snap/
wifi-ap/355
And killed it with:
kill -9
Then added the above config line to the config generation part of the script just before the wmm_* section, recreated the squasfs, backed up the old snap image and placed the newly generated there:
sudo mksquashfs squashfs-root
wifi-ap_355.snap
sudo mv /var/lib/snapd/snaps/wifi-ap_355.snap /var/lib/snapd/snaps/wifi-ap_355.snap.backup
mv ~/
wifi-ap_355.snap
/var/lib/snapd/snaps/wifi-ap_355.snap
Not very elegant but then I just restarted my computer instead of figuring out how to restart the service I have killed.
I had everything in order, hostapd running in the wifi-ap snap with the updates options.
So long, and thanks for all the fish!
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