Linux keeps scan results up to 15 seconds. This can be a problem for fast
moving clients: they get back stale data. But if the kernel reports the age
of the BSS items, then user-space can simply weed out old entries by itself.
Signed-off-by: Holger Schurig <hs4233@mail.mn-solutions.de>
Acked-by: Johannes Berg <johannes@sipsolutions.net>
Signed-off-by: John W. Linville <linville@tuxdriver.com>
  * @NL80211_BSS_SIGNAL_UNSPEC: signal strength of the probe response/beacon
  *     in unspecified units, scaled to 0..100 (u8)
  * @NL80211_BSS_STATUS: status, if this BSS is "used"
+ * @NL80211_BSS_SEEN_MS_AGO: age of this BSS entry in ms
  * @__NL80211_BSS_AFTER_LAST: internal
  * @NL80211_BSS_MAX: highest BSS attribute
  */
        NL80211_BSS_SIGNAL_MBM,
        NL80211_BSS_SIGNAL_UNSPEC,
        NL80211_BSS_STATUS,
+       NL80211_BSS_SEEN_MS_AGO,
 
        /* keep last */
        __NL80211_BSS_AFTER_LAST,
 
                NLA_PUT_U16(msg, NL80211_BSS_BEACON_INTERVAL, res->beacon_interval);
        NLA_PUT_U16(msg, NL80211_BSS_CAPABILITY, res->capability);
        NLA_PUT_U32(msg, NL80211_BSS_FREQUENCY, res->channel->center_freq);
+       NLA_PUT_U32(msg, NL80211_BSS_SEEN_MS_AGO,
+               jiffies_to_msecs(jiffies - intbss->ts));
 
        switch (rdev->wiphy.signal_type) {
        case CFG80211_SIGNAL_TYPE_MBM: