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evilmonkey19 | 3 months ago

Perhaps a stupid question, but the last release and commit is from 2023. Did something happen to the project?

discuss

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m00x|3 months ago

Likely complete to the point that the author needed it to be.

taminka|3 months ago

that's just called having a complete project in a stable language lol, not everything needs a change every week to function well...

tredre3|3 months ago

The project isn't complete by their own admission: https://libwifi.so/features/

If the scope has changed they should remove the planned features. But until then, it's perfectly logical to assume that something happened and the project is incomplete...

Lammy|3 months ago

Please point to which 802.11 standard has changed since 2023 that you would like to see supported: https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/browse/standards/get-program/pag...

zamadatix|3 months ago

Before listing a bunch of specifics about newer changes I'm guessing you don't actually care about, some of the basic things at https://libwifi.so/features/ would be good to complete first before the newer stuff since the last update was 2023, not the last completed feature level (Wi-Fi is enormous).

There also seem to be some open bug reports despite the low level of usage e.g. https://github.com/libwifi/libwifi/issues/24.

karlgkk|3 months ago

I would point to a few standards on there which have open bugs around following the standard.

That would be a good start.