Links between two direct neighbors are not always the best route between
these devices. The flag BATADV_ATTR_FLAG_BEST would not be set for these
originator entries and the respondd module would just ignore this entry.
This causes missing links in meshviewer and similar tools. And when the
link quality is nearly equal and but fluctuates slightly, these links will
from time to time appear and disappear on the map.
Fixes: 2e0e24a992 ("announce neighbours using alfred/gluon-announce")
The amount of local wifi clients is currently counted by two different
ways:
* asking the kernel wifi layer for the number of of clients on 2.4GHz and
5GHz band
* asking batman-adv for the number of non-timed out entries in the local
translation table with WiFi flag
The number of wifi24+wifi5 and the number of TT wifi client counts are
reported via respondd to various consumers. The ffrgb meshviewer is
displaying these values as:
* 2,4 GHz: wifi24
* 5 GHz: wifi5
* other: (TT local wifi+non-wifi clients) - (wifi24 + wifi5)
But the local translation table is holding entries much longer than the
wifi layer. It can therefore easily happen that a wifi client disappears in
the kernel wifi layer and batman-adv still has the entry stored in the
local TT.
The ffrgb meshviewer would then show this count in the category "other".
This often results in confusions because "other" is usually for ethernet
clients. And nodes with a frequently disappearing larger group of clients
(near bus stations or larger intersections) often show most clients under
the group "other" even when this devices doesn't have a LAN ethernet port.
It is better for presentation to calculate the number of total wifi clients
by summing up wifi24 + wifi5. And getting the number of total clients (non
wifi + wifi) by adding the result of the previous calculation to the sum of
non-wifi client in the local batman-adv translation table.
Fixes: 89a9d8138c ("gluon-mesh-batman-adv-core: Announce client count by frequency")
Reported-by: Pascal Wettin <p.wettin@gmx.de>