The upper transport layer is using big endian ordering. The
PreviousAddress field of a Friend Request message should therefore
be converted to native endianess using sys_cpu_to_be16().
If the duration to publish is roughly the same as the period, we might
end up with elapsed == period, which returns 0 and cancel the periodic
publication. Instead 1 should be returned, just like when the elapsed
time is greater than the period.
Previously the FastPeriodDivisor value was introduced to the model
publication struct. Based on the way it was grouped it seems the
intention was to fit it within the same octet as other bit fields,
but it actually makes the octet overflow by one bit. This ends up
creating another u8_t variable which in turn adds 24 bits of padding
after it.
To keep the size of the struct as compact as possible, group the flag
together with the key index, since that only requires 12 bits. Some
care is needed here, since the mesh stack does have special internal
key index values that require more than 12 bits such as
BLE_MESH_KEY_UNUSED and BLE_MESH_KEY_DEV. In this case restricting
ourselves to 12 bits is fine since the value in the model publication
struct follows 1:1 the value received in the Config Model Publication
Set message, and there the parameter is defined to be exactly 12 bits.
For Low Power node and Proxy Server, the two features
depend on BLE_MESH_NODE in Kconfig.in, here in the
stack there is no need to judge if CONFIG_BLE_MESH_NODE
is enabled.
According to Mesh Spec 3.4.5.3, a node shall implement a local
network interface. And here we limit the situation just based
on the spec, and Provisioner directly sending the msg without
passing through the local network interface.
The 16-bit format group addresses will be stored,
but we don't store (or restore) the virtual label UUIDs,
i.e. after a power cycle the 16-bit group addresses
would be meaningless.
Creates macros for determining model message lengths based on opcode,
payload length and MIC size. Also adds macro wrapping
NET_BUF_SIMPLE_DEFINE to serve the most common use case.
Re-encrypts single-segment application messages when the network seqnum
has changed, to avoid encrypting messages with different seqnums in
network and transport. This operation is only required for unsegmented
messages, as segmented messages don't need to use the same seqnum in
network.
Reinstates the special adv data for friend messages to store the app key
index.
Stores friend queue packets unencrypted, removing any out-of-order
issues caused by seqnum allocation. Also moves as much of the metadata
storage as possible into the packet, allowing us to free up some bytes
of net_buf user data for friend packets.