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POSTED ON Mar 16, 2005 - 10:40 AM by Nyx By Thomas J. Hardman Wireless Hacking: Projects for Wi-Fi Enthusiasts by the SoCalFreeNet Wireless Users Group Lee Barken, et al. Syngress, 2004, distributed by O'Reilly Media Inc. "Wireless Hacking" covers a lot of ground. It's intended for someone who has some computer and networking experience. It does give fairly in-depth coverage of networking fundamentals, but it's primarily concerned with wireless networking. It gives fairly deep, if not overly technical, background on all of the wireless networking standards and protocols, such as 802.11a/b/g, as well as covering general Radio Frequency concepts such as antenna radiation patterns, antenna types, and methods to calculate the power required to cover a given area or distance. The chapter on "securing your wireless network" is comprehensive in detail, including tutorials on captive portals, encryption and authentication systems, NAT, DHCP, and PPTP VPN. Several chapters give deep detail on making your own access points out of off-the-shelf systems, including modification of the popular Linksys WRT54G to run a variety of aftermarket access-point operating systems, including coverage of techniques to "re-flash" the EPROM with firmware versions of Linux. A variety of aftermarket OS are contrasted and compared, and the basics of installing each of this is covered, some with more detail than others. M0n0wall and Pebble are together given an entire chapter, covering conversion of PCs of any intel-architecture type to dedicated access-popint controllers. Particular detail is given to the Soekris Single Board Computers ("SBC") as access-point controllers for higher-power higher-usage WiFi access points. This section of the book is profusely illustrated, with step-by-step "how to", accompanied by "how it works" sections. In particular, the "how-to" section is exceptional in discussing adapting a Soekris SBC to use with two wireless cards to create an 802.11b access-point connected to the rest of the network with an 802.11a wireless backhaul. Client devices are well-covered, from PCI adapters to PCMCIA laptop cards, Secure Digital and Compact Flash format adapters and client devices. There is also a chapter covering low-cost commercial options for those who would prefer to deploy "off the shelf" rather than customizing their own systems. The monitoring tools chapter touches "just enough" on everything from SNMP to installing Apache, PHP, RRDTool, and SNMP to build the MRTG multi-router traffic grapher for both Microsoft and other operating systems. The "Cacti" network monitoring system is also covered. A rather brief entry covers WiMax and Mesh Networks, which at the time of publication weren't yet subject to final IEEE or industry standards. This is given mostly as background to cover the basic concepts and to point the readers to online documentation of various competing standards and experimental deployments. Considerable detail is given, again with profuse illustration and per-procedure "how-to" and "how it works" sidebars, to the construction and placement of outdoor enclosures and antenna masts. This chapter gives more detailed coverage of RF concepts and calculations of radiated power and radiation patterns, detailed discussions of antenna types, cabling, and connectors. Construction of "cantennas" is covered in detail. The capstone of the book covers the construction and placement of solar-powered access points and repeaters, giving in-depth overviews of solar power generation and storage, collector panel mounting and orientation, etc. There's a rather brief chapter on organizing neighborhood wireless networks in the FreeNet WiFi model. The book is a little bit "preachy" when espousing FreeNet WiFi, and it's more than a bit politicized throughout the work. This is an excellent little resource book for anyone interested in deploying a neighborhood wireless network, and for anyone who wants to take things apart and put them back together to get new functions and increased value, this book is invaluable. The breadth of coverage of many diverse topics in depth, with a focus on hands-on and practical toolkits, the profuse illustration and the tightly-focussed on-task sidebars makes this book a "must-have". I personally look forward to any updated reprinting which gives more detailed coverage to the topic of mesh-networks and WiMax, once the standards are published and adopted by industry. _______________________________________________ BAWUG's general wireless chat mailing list [unsubscribe] http://lists.bawug.org/mailman/listinfo/wireless