can be put, and a pointer to the string for the column, which might or
might not point to that buffer.
Add a routine "col_set_str()", which sets the string for the column to
the string passed to it as an argument; it should only be handed a
static string (a string constant would be ideal). It doesn't do any
copying, so it's faster than "col_add_str()".
Make the routines that append to columns check whether the pointer to
the string for the column points to the buffer for the column and, if
not, copy the string for the column to the buffer for the column so that
you can append to it (so you can use "col_set_str()" and then use
"col_append_str()" or "col_append_fstr()").
Convert a bunch of "col_add_str()" calls that take a string constant as
an argument to "col_set_str()" calls.
Convert some "col_add_fstr()" calls that take a string constant as the
only argument - i.e., the format string doesn't have any "%" slots into
which to put strings for subsequent arguments to "col_set_str()" calls
(those calls are just like "col_add_str()" calls).
Replace an END_OF_FRAME reference in a tvbuffified dissector with a
"tvb_length(tvb)" call.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=2670
ESIS dissectors.
Register the IP dissector and have dissectors that call it directly
(rather than through a port table) call it through a handle.
Add a routine "tvb_set_reported_length()" which a dissector can use if
it was handed a tvbuff that contains more data than is actually in its
part of the packet - for example, handing a padded Ethernet frame to IP;
the routine sets the reported length of the tvbuff (and also adjusts the
actual length, as appropriate). Then use it in IP.
Given that, "ethertype()" can determine how much of the Ethernet frame
was actually part of an IP datagram (and can do the same for other
protocols under Ethernet that use "tvb_set_reported_length()"; have it
return the actual length, and have "dissect_eth()" and "dissect_vlan()"
use that to mark trailer data in Ethernet II frames as well as in 802.3
frames.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=2658
after a TCP segment, so I can see what stuff some other segment is
ACKing, I'll go crazy. Add a "Next sequence number" field to the TCP
dissection, giving exactly that (well, giving exactly that unless the
TCP segment is in a fragmented IP datagram, but hopefully those are
rare; when we support IP fragment reassembly, we can fix that).
svn path=/trunk/; revision=2453
the following:
It is now possible to enable/disable a particular protocol decoding
(i.e. the protocol dissector is void or not). When a protocol
is disabled, it is displayed as Data and of course, all linked
sub-protocols are disabled as well.
Disabling a protocol could be interesting:
- in case of buggy dissectors
- in case of wrong heuristics
- for performance reasons
- to decode the data as another protocol (TODO)
Currently (if I am not wrong), all dissectors but NFS can be disabled
(and dissectors that do not register protocols :-)
I do not like the way the RPC sub-dissectors are disabled (in the
sub-dissectors) since this could be done in the RPC dissector itself,
knowing the sub-protocol hfinfo entry (this is why, I've not modified
the NFS one yet).
Two functions are added in proto.c :
gboolean proto_is_protocol_enabled(int n);
void proto_set_decoding(int n, gboolean enabled);
and two MACROs which can be used in dissectors:
OLD_CHECK_DISPLAY_AS_DATA(index, pd, offset, fd, tree)
CHECK_DISPLAY_AS_DATA(index, tvb, pinfo, tree)
See also the XXX in proto_dlg.c and proto.c around the new functions.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=2267
- add <stdarg.h> or <varargs.h> in snprintf.h
and remove those inclusions in the other #ifdef NEED_SNPRINTF_H codes
- remove the check of multiple inclusions in source (.c) code
(there is a bit loss of _cpp_ performance, but I prefer the gain of
code reading and maintenance; and nowadays, disk caches and VM are
correctly optimized ;-).
- protect all (well almost) header files against multiple inclusions
- add header (i.e. GPL license) in some include files
- reorganize a bit the way header files are included:
First:
#include <system_include_files>
#include <external_package_include_files (e.g. gtk, glib etc.)>
Then
#include "ethereal_include_files"
with the correct HAVE_XXX or NEED_XXX protections.
- add some HAVE_XXX checks before including some system header files
- add the same HAVE_XXX in wiretap as in ethereal
Please forgive me, if I break something (I've only compiled and regression
tested on Linux).
svn path=/trunk/; revision=2254
dissectors to be registered as dissectors for particular ports,
registered as heuristic dissectors, and registered as dissectors for
conversations, and have routines to be used both by old-style and
new-style dissectors to call registered dissectors.
Have the code that calls those dissectors translate the arguments as
necessary. (For conversation dissectors, replace
"find_conversation_dissector()", which just returns a pointer to the
dissector, with "old_try_conversation_dissector()" and
"try_conversation_dissector()", which actually call the dissector, so
that there's a single place at which we can do that translation. Also
make "dissector_lookup()" static and, instead of calling it and, if it
returns a non-null pointer, calling that dissector, just use
"old_dissector_try_port()" or "dissector_try_port()", for the same
reason.)
This allows some dissectors that took old-style arguments and
immediately translated them to new-style arguments to just take
new-style arguments; make them do so. It also allows some new-style
dissectors not to have to translate arguments before calling routines to
look up and call dissectors; make them not do so.
Get rid of checks for too-short frames in new-style dissectors - the
tvbuff code does those checks for you.
Give the routines to register old-style dissectors, and to call
dissectors from old-style dissectors, names beginning with "old_", with
the routines for new-style dissectors not having the "old_". Update the
dissectors that use those routines appropriately.
Rename "dissect_data()" to "old_dissect_data()", and
"dissect_data_tvb()" to "dissect_data()".
svn path=/trunk/; revision=2218
as a cause for the RST, as per RFC 1122:
4.2.2.12 RST Segment: RFC-793 Section 3.4
A TCP SHOULD allow a received RST segment to include data.
DISCUSSION
It has been suggested that a RST segment could contain
ASCII text that encoded and explained the cause of the
RST. No standard has yet been established for such
data.
Thanks and a tip of the Hatlo hat to Kevin Steves of HP for mentioning
this on the tcpdump-workers list (he contributed a tcpdump patch to do
the same).
svn path=/trunk/; revision=2178
a particular type, rather than taking a varargs list, along the lines of
the "proto_tree_add_XXX_format()" routines.
Replace most calls to "proto_tree_add_item()" and
"proto_tree_add_item_hidden()" with calls to those routines.
Rename "proto_tree_add_item()" and "proto_tree_add_item_hidden()" to
"proto_tree_add_item_old()" and "proto_tree_add_item_hidden_old()", and
add new "proto_tree_add_item()" and "proto_tree_add_item_hidden()"
routines that don't take the item to be added as an argument - instead,
they fetch the argument from the packet whose tvbuff was handed to them,
from the offset handed to them.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=2031
Add exceptions routines.
Convert proto_tree_add_*() routines to require tvbuff_t* argument.
Convert all dissectors to pass NULL argument ("NullTVB" macro == NULL) as
the tvbuff_t* argument to proto_tree_add_*() routines.
dissect_packet() creates a tvbuff_t, wraps the next dissect call in
a TRY block, will print "Short Frame" on the proto_tree if a BoundsError
exception is caught.
The FDDI dissector is converted to use tvbuff's.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=1939
register lists of "heuristic" dissectors, which are handed a
frame that may or may contain a payload for the protocol they
dissect, and that return FALSE if it's not or dissect the packet
and return TRUE if it is;
add a dissector to such a list;
go through such a list, calling each dissector until either a
dissector returns TRUE, in which case the routine returns TRUE,
or it runs out of entries in the list, in which case the routine
returns FALSE.
Have lists of heuristic dissectors for TCP and for COTP when used with
the Inactive Subset of CLNP, and add the GIOP and Yahoo Messenger
dissectors to the first list and the Sinec H1 dissector to the second
list.
Make the dissector name argument to "dissector_add()" and
"dissector_delete()" a "const char *" rarther than just a "char *".
Add "heur_dissector_add()", the routine to add a heuristic dissector to
a list of heuristic dissectors, to the set of routines we can export to
plugins through a table on platforms where dynamically-loaded code can't
call stuff in the main program, and initialize the element in the table
in question for "dissector_add()" (which we'd forgotten to do).
svn path=/trunk/; revision=1909
dissector.
Don't dissect the payload of any fragmented IPv6 packet unless it's the
initial fragment (that's what we do for IPv4).
svn path=/trunk/; revision=1882
protocols that run inside IPv4 register themselves with it using
"dissector_add()".
Make various dissectors static if they can be, and get rid of any header
files that no longer contain any information as a result of that change.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=1870
but will be in the future, and it's easier for me to keep my local branch
in sync with the source with the calls to dfilter_apply() already modified
tothe 4-arg format.
Add a CPP macro to ipv4.h to define ipv4_addr_ne(). Use it in dfilter.c
svn path=/trunk/; revision=1854
sub-dissector table is not stored in the header_field_info struct, but
in a separate namespace. Dissector tables are now registered by name
and not by field ID. For example:
udp_dissector_table = register_dissector_table("udp.port");
Because of this different namespace, dissector tables can have names
that are not field names. This is useful for ethertype, since multiple
fields are "ethertypes".
packet-ethertype.c replaces ethertype.c (the name was changed so that it
would be named in the same fashion as all the filenames passed to make-reg-dotc)
Although it registers no protocol or field, it registers one dissector table:
ethertype_dissector_table = register_dissector_table("ethertype");
All protocols that can be called because of an ethertype field now register
that fact with dissector_add() calls.
In this way, one dissector_table services all ethertype fields
(hf_eth_type, hf_llc_type, hf_null_etype, hf_vlan_etype)
Furthermore, the code allows for names of protocols to exist in the
etype_vals, yet a dissector for that protocol doesn't exist. The name
of the dissector is printed in COL_INFO. You're welcome, Richard. :-)
svn path=/trunk/; revision=1848
with conversations and having TCP and UDP check whether a packet is part
of a conversation with a dissector and, if so, using that dissector on
the conversation, and "ethertype()"-style support for allowing a
dissector to call a sub-dissector via the same path that the TCP and UDP
dissectors use, based on port numbers supplied by that dissector.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=1837
UDP and into the handoff registration routines for the protocols in
question.
Make the dissectors for those protocols static if they're not called
outside the dissector's source file.
Get rid of header files if all they did was declare dissectors that are
now static; remove declarations of now-static dissectors from header
files that do more than just declare the dissector.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=1823
pd/offset/fd/tree arguments, looks up the port number in the dissector
table, and:
if it finds it, call the corresponding dissector routine with
the pd/offset/fd/tree arguments, and return TRUE;
if it doesn't find it, return FALSE.
Use that in the TCP and UDP dissectors.
Don't add arbitrary UDP ports for which a dissector is found in the
table as ports that should be dissected as TFTP; this should only be
done if we find a packet going from port XXX to the official TFTP port.
Don't register TFTP in UDP's dissector table, as it has to be handled
specially (i.e., we have to add the source port as a TFTP port, although
we really should register the source port *and* IP address); eventually,
we should move that registration to the TFTP dissector itself, at which
point we can register TFTP normally.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=1785
the check for plugins after the check for ONC RPC protocols, so that we
do the checks in the same order for TCP and UDP (ONC RPC first, as we
expect the RPC heuristics not to get false hits, and ONC RPC protocols
could well use ports that are nominally assigned to other protocols).
svn path=/trunk/; revision=1780
field, to allow dissectors to register their dissection routine in a
particular field's hash table with a particular "port" value, and to
make the TCP and UDP dissectors support that for their "port" field and
to look up ports in that hash table.
This replaces the hash table that the UDP dissector was using.
There's still more work needed to make this useful - right now, the hash
tables are attached to the protocol field in the register routines for
the TCP and UDP protocols, which means that the register routines for
protocols that run atop TCP and UDP can't use this unless their register
routines happen to be called after those for TCP and/or UDP, and several
other protocols need to attach hash tables to fields, and there's no
single global field for Ethernet types so we can't even attach a hash
table to such a field to allow protocols to register themselves with a
particular Ethertype - but it's a start.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=1779
proto_tree_add_protocol_format()
proto_tree_add_uint_format()
proto_tree_add_ipxnet_format()
proto_tree_add_ipv4_format()
proto_tree_add_ipv6_format()
proto_tree_add_bytes_format()
proto_tree_add_string_format()
proto_tree_add_ether_format()
proto_tree_add_time_format()
proto_tree_add_double_format()
proto_tree_add_boolean_format()
If using GCC 2.x, we can check the print-format against the variable args
passed in. Regardless of compiler, we can now check at run-time that the
field type passed into the function corresponds to what that function
expects (FT_UINT, FT_BOOLEAN, etc.)
Note that proto_tree_add_protocol_format() does not require a value field,
since the value of a protocol is always NULL. It's more intuitive w/o the
vestigial argument.
Fixed a proto_tree_add_item_format-related bug in packet-isis-hello.c
Fixed a variable usage bug in packet-v120.c. (ett_* was used instead of hf_*)
Checked in Guy's fix for the function declearation for proto_tree_add_text()
and proto_tree_add_notext().
svn path=/trunk/; revision=1713
the stuff we write to the temporary file, so don't bother writing it.
Keep track of the two sides of the TCP stream by keeping track of the
source address *and* port, so that we correctly handle connections
between two ports on the same machine.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=1712
This change allows you to add a new packet-*.c file and not cause a
recompilation of everything that #include's packet.h
Add the plugin_api.[ch] files ot the plugins/Makefile.am packaging list.
Add #define YY_NO_UNPUT 1 to the lex source so that the yyunput symbol
is not defined, squelching a compiler complaint when compiling the generated
C file.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=1637
with MSVC 6.0 and 'nmake', the make tool that comes with MSVC.
It compiles, links, and runs. It doesn't run correctly. There's a problem
when reading files. I'm getting short reads. I'm not linking in zlib or
libsnmp because it first needs to be debugged.
I changed the plugin code to use gmodule instead of libltdl, but the
Unix build still links ethereal against libltdl. I'll fix that tonight; sorry
about leaving it in such a sad state, but I wanted to check in this code
before I left work on a Friday night. Ethereal still works, but the
building is less than optimal.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=1479
NetCache's use of it as a proxy port, and dissect port 3132 as HTTP, as
per NetCache's use of it for its HTTP-based administrative UI.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=1266
UNICODE strings in transact SMBs.
Added decode of NetShareEnum transact request. Will have to clean that all
up and use the decode engine when I get it done.
Still more fix ups to be done, but the book is calling, and I have to write
some stuff after an interview with LinuxCare.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=1113
dynamically-assigned "ett_" integer values, assigned by
"proto_register_subtree_array()"; this:
obviates the need to update "packet.h" whenever you add a new
subtree type - you only have to add a call to
"proto_register_subtree_array()" to a "register" routine and an
array of pointers to "ett_", if they're not already there, and
add a pointer to the new "ett_" variable to the array, if they
are there;
would allow run-time-loaded dissectors to allocate subtree types
when they're loaded.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=1043
structure to "dl_src"/"dl_dst", "net_src"/"net_dst", and "src"/"dst"
addresses, where an address is an address type, an address length in
bytes, and a pointer to that many bytes.
"dl_{src,dst}" are the link-layer source/destination; "net_{src,dst}"
are the network-layer source/destination; "{src,dst}" are the
source/destination from the highest of those two layers that we have in
the packet.
Add a port type to "packet_info" as well, specifying whether it's a TCP
or UDP port.
Don't set the address and port columns in the dissector functions; just
set the address and port members of the "packet_info" structure. Set
the columns in "fill_in_columns()"; this means that if we're showing
COL_{DEF,RES,UNRES}_SRC" or "COL_{DEF,RES,UNRES}_DST", we only generate
the string from "src" or "dst", we don't generate a string for the
link-layer address and then overwrite it with a string for the
network-layer address (generating those strings costs CPU).
Add support for "conversations", where a "conversation" is (at present)
a source and destination address and a source and destination port. (In
the future, we may support "conversations" above the transport layer,
e.g. a TFTP conversation, where the first packet goes from the client to
the TFTP server port, but the reply comes back from a different port,
and all subsequent packets go between the client address/port and the
server address/new port, or an NFS conversation, which might include
lock manager, status monitor, and mount packets, as well as NFS
packets.)
Currently, all we support is a call that takes the source and
destination address/port pairs, looks them up in a hash table, and:
if nothing is found, creates a new entry in the hash table, and
assigns it a unique 32-bit conversation ID, and returns that
conversation ID;
if an entry is found, returns its conversation ID.
Use that in the SMB and AFS code to keep track of individual SMB or AFS
conversations. We need to match up requests and replies, as, for
certain replies, the operation code for the request to which it's a
reply doesn't show up in the reply - you have to find the request with a
matching transaction ID. Transaction IDs are per-conversation, so the
hash table for requests should include a conversation ID and transaction
ID as the key.
This allows SMB and AFS decoders to handle IPv4 or IPv6 addresses
transparently (and should allow the SMB decoder to handle NetBIOS atop
other protocols as well, if the source and destination address and port
values in the "packet_info" structure are set appropriately).
In the "Follow TCP Connection" code, check to make sure that the
addresses are IPv4 addressses; ultimately, that code should be changed
to use the conversation code instead, which will let it handle IPv6
transparently.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=909
as BGP is a protocol on top of TCP, it may have trouble parsing
out-of-sync data (in most cases data is aligned on packet, it seems).
svn path=/trunk/; revision=843
the base for numbers to be displayed in, bitmasks for bitfields, and blurbs
(which are one or two sentences describing the field).
proto_tree_add*() routines now automatically handle bitfields. You tell
it which header field you are adding, and just pass it the value of the
entire field, and the proto_tree routines will do the masking and shifting
for you.
This means that bitfields are more naturally filtered via dfilter now.
Added Phil Techau's support for signed integers in dfilters/proto_tree.
Added the beginning of the SNA dissector. It's not complete, but I'm
committing it now because it has example after example of how to use
bitfields with the new header_field_info struct and proto_tree routines.
It was the impetus to change how header_field_info works.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=815
specified number of bytes of captured data in the frame at the specified
offset, and a "IS_DATA_IN_FRAME()" macro, to test whether there are any
bytes of captured data in the frame at the specified offset, and convert
some bounds checks to use them.
Add a dissector for the Internet Printing Protocol.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=685
of option code, one octet of length (which includes the two option code
and length bytes), followed by 0 or more octets of option data, with
some options being fixed-length and some being variable-length. Put
some stuff from the PPP control protocol option parsing code into the
IP-and-TCP option parsing code, and use the latter instead of the
former.
(That code might also be usable for CDP as well, with some stuff added
to it.)
Shuffle the arguments to "dissect_ip_tcp_options()" to resemble those of
various other dissectors (i.e., with the "proto_tree *" at the end).
Add in code to dissect a pile of PPP options documented in various RFCs.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=601
bunch of source files.
Replace the "payload" field of a "packet_info" structure with "len" and
"captured_len" fields, which contain the total packet length and total
captured packet length (including all headers) at the current protocol
layer (i.e., if a given layer has a length field, and that length field
says its shorter than the length we got from the capture, reduce the
"pi.len" and "pi.captured_len" values appropriately). Those fields can
be used in the future if we add checks to make sure a field we're
extracting from a packet doesn't go past the end of the packet, or past
the captured part of the packet.
Get rid of the additional payload argument to some dissection functions;
use "pi.captured_len - offset" instead.
Have the END_OF_FRAME macro use "pi.captured_len" rather than
"fd->cap_len", so that "dissect the rest of the frame" becomes "dissect
the rest of the packet", and doesn't dissect end-of-frame padding such
as padding added to make an Ethernet frame 60 or more octets long. (We
might want to rename it END_OF_PACKET; if we ever want to label the
end-of-frame padding for the benefit of people curious what that extra
gunk is, we could have a separate END_OF_FRAME macro that uses
"fd->cap_len".)
svn path=/trunk/; revision=506
- call reset_tcp_reassembly before build_follow_filter
- modify reassemble_tcp so that packet validity is
checked before processing it.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=410
mechanism that is built into ethereal. Wiretap is now used to read all
file formats. Libpcap is used only for capturing.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=342
source and destination port numbers, check both port numbers against the
specified port, rather than checking the lower of the two port numbers
against the specified port, just in case you happen to either have
1) the port number for that type being high enough that you can
get client sockets using it
or
2) client sockets using it for some other reason.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=301
reference the protocol tree with struct proto_tree and struct proto_item
objects. That way, the packet decoding source code file can be used with
non-gtk packet decoders, like a curses-based ethereal, e.g. I also re-arranged
some of the information in packet.h to more appropriate places (like other
packet-*.[ch] files).
svn path=/trunk/; revision=223
of variable as a bit field container. ANSI specs only allow unsigned ints
to host bit fields; IBM's C compiler is very ANSI-strict.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=183
1883, it should, perhaps with some additions, be able to handle IPv6
options as well).
Make the IPv4 and TCP dissectors use it.
Fix a typo in the IP dissector ("Unknon" for "Unknown").
Show the IP and TCP header lengths as byte counts rather than
4-byte-word counts.
Show the protocol field value of an IP header as a name if it's a
protocol we know about.
List the acknowledgment and urgent pointer values in a TCP header only
if the corresponding flag is set.
Make the ETT_ values members of an enum, so that the compiler
automatically assigns them sequential integer values (at least if said
compiler conforms to the ANSI C standard).
svn path=/trunk/; revision=45
generalizes the column printing code, adds a "frame" tree item to
the tree view, and fixes a bunch of miscellaneous coding bugs.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=31