NOTE: this page is for archival only, see the note at the end of the page.

b43 and b43legacy

The b43 drivers (bcm43xx in mainline kernels, b43 and b43legacy in wireless-2.6 and 2.6.24 and later) are drivers for the 802.11 B/G family of wireless chips Broadcom produces. The choice of which driver your card uses depends on the revision level of the 802.11 core. This number is read by driver ssb, and the correct choice for your device is made at that point. Note: If your card is a BCM4306 Rev 2, or only has 802.11b capability, it uses b43legacy. All other models use b43.

FAQ - Frequently asked questions

Please read this whole document and the FAQ before asking any questions to the developers.

caveats

All Broadcom chips require firmware that is loaded onto the wireless chip before it can operate. See below.

If you have an USB device with Broadcom chip, please try the RNDIS driver. The b43/b43legacy driver will never support this device.

Known PCI devices

Whether a PCI device is supported by the b43/b43legacy driver can be found out with the lspci command:

lspci -vnn | grep 14e4

The command will result in a string similiar to this example:

0001:01:01.0 Network controller [0280]: Broadcom Corporation BCM4318 [AirForce One 54g] 802.11g Wireless LAN Controller [14e4:4318] (rev 02)

You should ignore anything, except the last part inside of the [ ] brackets. In the table below you can check whether your device is supported.

PCI-ID

State

Chip

Driver

14e4:4301

supported

BCM4301?

b43legacy

14e4:4306

supported

BCM4306

b43legacy?

14e4:4307

supported

BCM4306

b43

14e4:4311

supported

BCM4309?

b43

14e4:4312

supported (802.11g only)

BCM4309?

b43

14e4:4315

not supported

BCM4312 - low power

b43

14e4:4318

supported

BCM4318

b43

14e4:4319

?

?

b43

14e4:4320

not supported?

?

b43

14e4:4321

not supported

?

b43

14e4:4324

not supported?

?

b43

14e4:4325

not supported

?

b43

14e4:4328

not supported

?

b43

14e4:4329

not supported

?

b43

14e4:432b

not supported?

?

b43

Note that the PCI-ID is _not_ in direct correlation with the Chip-ID. The Chip-ID is printed to the kernel log by the b43 driver on startup (example):

b43-phy0: Broadcom 4318 WLAN found

Often the PCI-ID equals the Chip-ID, but that's not always the case and it's a constant source of confusion.

Supported chip types

  • bcm4303 (802.11b-only chips, uses b43legacy)
  • bcm4306 (Rev. 2 uses b43legacy, Rev. 3 uses b43)
  • bcm4309 (only the 2.4GHz part)
  • bcm4311 rev 1 / bcm4312
  • bcm4311 rev 2 / bcm4312 (needs patches for 2.6.24)
  • bcm4312 (only the 2.4GHz part and no low-power LP-PHY devices)
  • bcm4318

unsupported chips

  • The 802.11a part of the 4309 and 4312 is not supported.
  • BCM 4310 USB - This device has an LP PHY. We think that means low power. In any case, previous code does not work. The reverse engineers have generated specs for the code writers and development is in progress. Note: This card uses the PCI bus, despite its name.
  • BCM 4322 802.11a/b/g/n (Has PCI-ID 0x432B) - This device has an N Phy. There is no support for any Draft 802.11n features. We are working on it.
  • BCM 4321 (Has PCI-IDs 0x4328 and 0x4329) - These devices have N Phys. There is no support for any Draft 802.11n features. We are working on it.

available devices

Please see the device list.

features

working

  • Station mode
  • Mesh networking mode (b43 only)
  • Access Point mode
  • Ad-Hoc (IBSS) mode (b43 only)
  • Monitor and Promisc mode.
  • "Monitor while operating" and multiple monitor interfaces.
  • In-Hardware traffic de/encryption (relieves your CPU).
  • LEDs to signal card state and traffic.
  • In-Hardware MAC address filter (b43 only; impossible on b43legacy hardware)
  • Packet injection (with radiotap; no FCS injection currently though hardware supports it - a radiotap flag is being discussed for this)
  • Bluetooth coexistance protection, if the bluetooth card is physically connected to the wireless chip. (Does not protect against external BT dongles)
  • Probably something we forgot to add here.

not working yet

  • IEEE 802.11n
  • Interference mitigation.
  • Probably something else that's not listed under "Works".

donations

Many people have donated money, hardware or other services to make this driver possible. Thanks! Please see the donations page for details.

support

IRC channel

irc.freenode.net #bcm-users (English please)

Mailing list

http://lists.berlios.de/mailman/listinfo/bcm43xx-dev

device firmware

firmware installation

The Broadcom wireless chip needs software, called "firmware", that runs on the wireless chip itself during operation. This firmware is copyrighted by Broadcom and it must be extracted from Broadcom's proprietary drivers. To get such firmware on your system, you must download the driver from a legal distribution point, as noted below. Then you must extract the firmware from that Broadcom driver by using b43-fwcutter (or bcm43xx-fwcutter) and install it in the special directory for firmware - usually /lib/firmware. Please note that the firmware from the binary drivers is Copyrighted by Broadcom Corporation and must not be redistributed.

Some distributions have special methods for installing the firmware. In general these consist of a special command entered at a terminal. Because the proprietary driver containing the firmware cannot be included in the distribution, you will need a working connection to the Internet. Please post details for distros that are missed at bcm43xx-dev@lists.berlios.de .

  1. openSUSE 11.0 and 11.1 use the following command:
    • sudo /usr/sbin/install_bcm43xx_firmware

  2. in latest versions of Ubuntu (all flavors) and Debian just need to install the b43-fwcutter package:
    • sudo apt-get install b43-fwcutter

      • when you are asked "Fetch and install firmware?" answer "Yes" (just press "Enter)
  3. Gentoo systems supply a pre-compiled binary for b43-fwcutter. You need to "emerge b43-fwcutter", and then follow the instructions below to download the Broadcom driver. The line that invokes b43-fwcutter will need to be changed to execute the program emerged above.
  4. Mandriva's graphical network card configuration tool, drakconnect, will extract the firmware from the Broadcom driver, which must be downloaded before configuring the card. For versions through 2008 Spring, you will need the V3 driver described below. Beginning with 2009, you will need either the V3 or V4 driver depending on whether your device uses b43legacy or b43. Either the wget command below, or a browser download will get the appropriate file.

Note: If you cannot use your distribution's packages, you need to have a compiler and headers for libc installed. The reason for this requirement is that you will have to build fwcutter.

There are different versions of firmware and tools you may need:

Driver

Kernel

Firmware

Firmware extractor

Instructions

b43

Linux-2.6.24, including 2.6.24-rcX and 2.6.24.Y

4.80.53.0

b43-fwcutter v. 011

Go

b43

Linux-2.6.25 and newer, compat-wireless-2.6 package, current GIT trees

4.150.10.5

b43-fwcutter v. 011

Go

b43legacy

Any

3.130.20.0

b43-fwcutter v. 011

Go

bcm43xx (deprecated)

Any

3.130.20.0

bcm43xx-fwcutter v. 6

Go

To accomplish this task, do the following:

You are using the b43 driver from linux-2.6.24

If you are using the b43 driver from linux-2.6.24, follow these instructions.

Use version 011 of b43-fwcutter.
Download, extract the b43-fwcutter tarball and build it:

wget
tar xjf b43-fwcutter-011.tar.bz2
cd b43-fwcutter-011
make
cd ..

Use version 4.80.53.0 of Broadcom's proprietary driver.
Download and extract the firmware from this driver tarball:

export FIRMWARE_INSTALL_DIR="/lib/firmware"
wget
tar xjf broadcom-wl-4.80.53.0.tar.bz2
cd broadcom-wl-
sudo ../../b43-fwcutter-011/b43-fwcutter -w "$FIRMWARE_INSTALL_DIR" wl_apsta.o

Note that you must adjust the FIRMWARE_INSTALL_DIR path to your distribution. The standard place where firmware is installed to is /lib/firmware. However some distributions put firmware in a different place.

You are using the b43 driver from linux-2.6.25 or newer

Follow these instructions if you are using the b43 driver from linux-2.6.25 and newer or compat-wireless-2.6, or from any current GIT tree.

Use version 011 of b43-fwcutter.
Download, extract the b43-fwcutter tarball and build it:

wget
tar xjf b43-fwcutter-011.tar.bz2
cd b43-fwcutter-011
make
cd ..

Use version 4.150.10.5 of Broadcom's proprietary driver.
Download and extract the firmware from this driver tarball:

export FIRMWARE_INSTALL_DIR="/lib/firmware"
wget
tar xjf broadcom-wl-4.150.10.5.tar.bz2
cd broadcom-wl-
sudo ../../b43-fwcutter-011/b43-fwcutter -w "$FIRMWARE_INSTALL_DIR" wl_apsta_mimo.o

Note that you must adjust the FIRMWARE_INSTALL_DIR path to your distribution. The standard place where firmware is installed to is /lib/firmware. However some distributions put firmware in a different place.

You are using the b43-legacy driver

If you are using the b43legacy driver, follow these instructions.

Use version 011 of b43-fwcutter.
Download, extract the b43-fwcutter tarball and build it:

wget
tar xjf b43-fwcutter-011.tar.bz2
cd b43-fwcutter-011
make
cd ..

Use version 3.130.20.0 of Broadcom's proprietary driver.
Download and extract the firmware from this driver:

export FIRMWARE_INSTALL_DIR="/lib/firmware"
wget
sudo ./b43-fwcutter-011/b43-fwcutter -w "$FIRMWARE_INSTALL_DIR" wl_apsta-3.130.20.0.o

Note that you must adjust the FIRMWARE_INSTALL_DIR path to your distribution. The standard place where firmware is installed to is /lib/firmware. However some distributions put firmware in a different place.

You are using the deprecated bcm43xx driver

If you are using the old deprecated bcm43xx driver, follow these instructions.

Use version 006 of bcm43xx-fwcutter.
Download, extract the bcm43xx-fwcutter tarball and build it:

wget
tar xjf bcm43xx-fwcutter-006.tar.bz2
cd bcm43xx-fwcutter-006
make
cd ..

Use version 3.130.20.0 of Broadcom's proprietary driver.
Download and extract the firmware from this driver:

export FIRMWARE_INSTALL_DIR="/lib/firmware"
wget
sudo ./bcm43xx-fwcutter-006/bcm43xx-fwcutter -w "$FIRMWARE_INSTALL_DIR" wl_apsta-3.130.20.0.o

Note that you must adjust the FIRMWARE_INSTALL_DIR path to your distribution. The standard place where firmware is installed to is /lib/firmware. However some distributions put firmware in a different place.

bug reporting

You should send a message to the b43/b43legacy mailing list at bcm43xx-dev@berlios.de containing ALL of the following:

  • A description of the problem at hand
  • When it happens
  • How to reproduce
  • The output of the following commands:

uname -a

lspci -vvn|grep 43 -A7

dmesg
  • wlan configuration, authentication/encryption type

In addition the following may be of interest to developers:

  • If you have built the kernel from git, tell which tree, and the output of "git describe"
  • If the driver worked with earlier kernels, but has since stopped working, a bisection is of great value.

bcm43xx, b43legacy, b43, softmac,... the full story

The bcm43xx is the old deprecated driver. It is using the ieee80211 + softmac libraries of code shared with other drivers. This stack is deprecated and being replaced by the new mac80211 stack. A new stack implies brand new, re-written driver(s): here come b43 and b43legacy.

What's the difference between b43legacy and b43?

b43 offers a newer codebase and hardware crypto support. Broadcom did not release any version 4 firmware files for some older boards, possibly due to memory constraints on the cards themselves. Stuck with firmware version 3, these cards must use b43legacy which doesn't have hardware crypto support because that has not been reverse engineered completly for version 3 firmware.

bcm43xx

b43legacy

b43

needs firmware

version 3

version 4

extracted by

bcm43xx-fwcutter

b43-fwcutter

depends on

softmac

mac80211

b43legacy should be used on all 4301 and 4303 cards. 4306 and 4309 cards with a MAC core revision of 4 or less should also use b43legacy. b43 should be used on all other cards. You can safely have both versions built on the same system. The full MAC core version is printed in the kernel logs when "SSB debugging" is enabled in KConfig and the driver finds a board. Type "dmesg" to see it. If you are unsure and don't know what we are talking about here, always build both b43 and b43legacy (and get firmware for both too). The kernel autoloader will automatically do the right thing and load the correct driver for your device.

related tools

  • ssb-sprom
    • A tool for the modification of the Broadcom Sonics Silicon Backplane SPROM (e.g. you can permanently change the MAC address or the PCI IDs of your wireless card – useful on some (e.g. Compaq/HP) laptops where the BIOS checks these at boot. It's now part of b43-tools:
      git clone
    • To use the sprom tool, it is necessary to get a disk copy of your sprom from the /sys file system. The file path for the sprom contents depends on the bus layout of the specific computer being used and will be something like
      /sys/devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:0d.0/0000:04:00.0/ssb_sprom
    • It is not recommended that you try to type the name. Instead, you should use the following commands to get the working copy:
      SSB_SPROM=$(find /sys/devices -name ssb_sprom)
      echo $SSB_SPROM
    • If the echo command only results in a single instance of "/sys/...", you may proceed. For systems with more than one SSB-based interface, there will be such a string for each, and the command that sets the SSB_SPROM symbol will have to be changed. In the name above, the sequence states that this device is attached to the 0'th PCI bus via bridge 0d.0 and is device 04:00.0 on that bridge. To find which of your SSB devices to select, use the 'lspci -v' command. On my system, the first line of such output for my interface is "04:00.0 Network controller: Broadcom Corporation BCM94311MCG wlan mini-PCI (rev 02)". For this device, one would use
      SSB_SPROM=$(find /sys/devices -name ssb_sprom | grep 04:00.0)
      echo $SSB_SPROM
    • Of course, the "04:00.0" needs to match your system, and check the output value to determine that there is now a single instance of "/sys..." and that the path matches the device whose SPROM is to be changed. If not, adjust the string after 'grep' accordingly.
    • Once the SSB_SPROM variable matches the path to ssb_sprom for your device, get a working copy of the sprom contents with
      sudo cat $SSB_SPROM > ssb_sprom_copy
    • You may now look at the contents of your sprom with the command
      ssb-sprom -i ssb_sprom_copy -P
    • As an example, let us suppose that you have purchased a Dell mini-pci card to use in an HP laptop. The HP BIOS refuses to use the card when the pcivendor is Dell (code 0x1028), not HP (code 0x103C). From the information provided by an "ssb-prom –help" command, we learn that the switch needed to change this vendor code is "–subv". To change that code, we use the command
      ssb-sprom -i ssb_sprom_copy -o new_ssb_sprom_copy --subv 0x103C
    • to write the HP vendor ID to our working copy. I use different input and output files so as not to destroy the original. If further changes are needed, for example the PCI product ID, the command
      ssb-sprom -i new_ssb_sprom_copy -o new_ssb_sprom_copy --subp 0x137C
    • would be used. Note that the input and output files may be the same.
    • Once you think you have updated correctly, use the following to check the contents:
      ssb-sprom -i ssb_sprom_copy -P
    • Once the sprom contents are the way you want them, and presumably correct, you are ready to rewrite the file. First, use
      echo $SSB_SPROM
    • to ensure that this symbol still contains the SPROM path. If not, then it will have to be reloaded as discussed above.
    • You are then ready to rewrite the sprom with
      sudo cp new_ssb_sprom_copy $SSB_SPROM
    • Once again, you are urged to be absolutely certain of the contents of the working copy BEFORE taking this step. If your interface becomes unusable as a result of writing incorrect data into the sprom, the responsibility is YOURS. Once again, you have been warned.
  • A firmware assembler/disassembler can be found in the git repository at
    • git clone
  • There are more development and debugging tools available in the b43-tools git repository. Just clone it and read the shipped documentation files.
    • git clone
  • wpa_supplicant
    • A tool for enabling WPA and full IEEE 802.11i/RSN/WPA2 WPA-PSK and WPA2-PSK (pre-shared key) ("WPA-Personal") WPA with EAP.
    • wpa_supplicant may have a 'broadcom' driver that is used with the proprietary Broadcom driver. The bcm43xx, b43 and b43legacy drivers use the linux wireless extensions properly and so need the wext driver. This is set using the -D option like this:
    • wpa_supplicant -iwlan0 -Dwext -c/etc/wpa_supplement.conf
    • Of course, you don't need this if you're using NetworkManager.

external links


This is a static dump of the old wiki, taken after locking it in January 2015. The new wiki is at https://wireless.wiki.kernel.org/.
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