wireshark/tap-icmpstat.c

270 lines
8.8 KiB
C
Executable File

/* tap-icmpstat.c
* icmpstat 2011 Christopher Maynard
*
* $Id$
*
* Wireshark - Network traffic analyzer
* By Gerald Combs <gerald@wireshark.org>
* Copyright 1998 Gerald Combs
*
* This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
* modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License
* as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2
* of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
*
* This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
* but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
* MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
* GNU General Public License for more details.
*
* You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
* along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
* Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA.
*/
/* This module provides icmp echo request/reply SRT statistics to tshark.
* It is only used by tshark and not wireshark
*
* It was based on tap-rpcstat.c and doc/README.tapping.
*/
#ifdef HAVE_CONFIG_H
# include "config.h"
#endif
#include <stdio.h>
#ifdef HAVE_SYS_TYPES_H
# include <sys/types.h>
#endif
#include <string.h>
#include "epan/packet_info.h"
#include <epan/tap.h>
#include <epan/stat_cmd_args.h>
#include <epan/dissectors/packet-icmp.h>
#include <math.h>
/* used to keep track of the ICMP statistics */
typedef struct _icmpstat_t {
char *filter;
GSList *rt_list;
guint num_rqsts;
guint num_resps;
double min_msecs;
double max_msecs;
double tot_msecs;
} icmpstat_t;
/* This callback is never used by tshark but it is here for completeness. When
* registering below, we could just have left this function as NULL.
*
* When used by wireshark, this function will be called whenever we would need
* to reset all state, such as when wireshark opens a new file, when it starts
* a new capture, when it rescans the packetlist after some prefs have changed,
* etc.
*
* So if your application has some state it needs to clean up in those
* situations, here is a good place to put that code.
*/
static void
icmpstat_reset(void *tapdata)
{
icmpstat_t *icmpstat = tapdata;
g_slist_free(icmpstat->rt_list);
icmpstat->rt_list = NULL;
icmpstat->num_rqsts = 0;
icmpstat->num_resps = 0;
icmpstat->min_msecs = 1.0 * G_MAXUINT;
icmpstat->max_msecs = 0.0;
icmpstat->tot_msecs = 0.0;
}
/* This callback is invoked whenever the tap system has seen a packet we might
* be interested in. The function is to be used to only update internal state
* information in the *tapdata structure, and if there were state changes which
* requires the window to be redrawn, return 1 and (*draw) will be called
* sometime later.
*
* This function should be as lightweight as possible since it executes
* together with the normal wireshark dissectors. Try to push as much
* processing as possible into (*draw) instead since that function executes
* asynchronously and does not affect the main thread's performance.
*
* If it is possible, try to do all "filtering" explicitly since you will get
* MUCH better performance than applying a similar display-filter in the
* register call.
*
* The third parameter is tap dependent. Since we register this one to the
* "icmp" tap, the third parameter type is icmp_transaction_t.
*
* function returns :
* 0: no updates, no need to call (*draw) later
* !0: state has changed, call (*draw) sometime later
*/
static int
icmpstat_packet(void *tapdata, packet_info *pinfo, epan_dissect_t *edt _U_, const void *data)
{
icmpstat_t *icmpstat = tapdata;
const icmp_transaction_t *trans = data;
double *rt;
if (trans == NULL)
return 0;
if (trans->resp_frame) {
rt = g_malloc(sizeof(double));
if (rt == NULL)
return 0;
*rt = trans->resp_time;
icmpstat->rt_list = g_slist_prepend(icmpstat->rt_list, rt);
icmpstat->num_resps++;
if (icmpstat->min_msecs > trans->resp_time)
icmpstat->min_msecs = trans->resp_time;
if (icmpstat->max_msecs < trans->resp_time)
icmpstat->max_msecs = trans->resp_time;
icmpstat->tot_msecs += trans->resp_time;
} else if (trans->rqst_frame)
icmpstat->num_rqsts++;
else
return 0;
return 1;
}
static double compute_sdev(double average, guint num, GSList *slist)
{
double diff;
double sq_diff_sum;
if (num == 0)
return 0.0;
for ( sq_diff_sum = 0.0; slist; slist = g_slist_next(slist)) {
diff = *(double *)slist->data - average;
sq_diff_sum += diff * diff;
}
return sqrt(sq_diff_sum / num);
}
/* This callback is used when tshark wants us to draw/update our data to the
* output device. Since this is tshark, the only output is stdout.
* TShark will only call this callback once, which is when tshark has finished
* reading all packets and exits.
* If used with wireshark this may be called any time, perhaps once every 3
* seconds or so.
* This function may even be called in parallel with (*reset) or (*draw), so
* make sure there are no races. The data in the icmpstat_t can thus change
* beneath us. Beware!
*
* How best to display the data? For now, following other tap statistics
* output, but here are a few other alternatives we might choose from:
*
* -> Windows ping output:
* Ping statistics for <IP>:
* Packets: Sent = <S>, Received = <R>, Lost = <L> (<LP>% loss),
* Approximate round trip times in milli-seconds:
* Minimum = <m>ms, Maximum = <M>ms, Average = <A>ms
*
* -> Cygwin ping output:
* ----<HOST> PING Statistics----
* <S> packets transmitted, <R> packets received, <LP>% packet loss
* round-trip (ms) min/avg/max/med = <m>/<M>/<A>/<D>
*
* -> Linux ping output:
* --- <HOST> ping statistics ---
* <S> packets transmitted, <R> received, <LP>% packet loss, time <T>ms
* rtt min/avg/max/mdev = <m>/<A>/<M>/<D> ms
*/
static void
icmpstat_draw(void *tapdata)
{
icmpstat_t *icmpstat = tapdata;
unsigned int lost;
double average, sdev;
printf("\n");
printf("==========================================================================\n");
printf("ICMP SRT Statistics (all times in ms):\n");
printf("Filter: %s\n", icmpstat->filter ? icmpstat->filter : "");
printf("Requests Replies Lost %% Loss Min SRT Max SRT Avg SRT SDEV\n");
if (icmpstat->num_rqsts) {
lost = icmpstat->num_rqsts - icmpstat->num_resps;
average = icmpstat->tot_msecs / icmpstat->num_resps;
sdev = compute_sdev(average, icmpstat->num_resps, icmpstat->rt_list);
printf("%-10u%-10u%-10u%5.1f%% %-10.3f%-10.3f%-10.3f%-10.3f\n",
icmpstat->num_rqsts, icmpstat->num_resps, lost,
100.0 * lost / icmpstat->num_rqsts,
icmpstat->min_msecs >= G_MAXUINT ? 0.0 : icmpstat->min_msecs,
icmpstat->max_msecs, average, sdev);
} else
printf("0 0 0 0.0%% 0.000 0.000 0.000 0.000\n");
printf("==========================================================================\n");
}
/* When called, this function will create a new instance of icmpstat.
*
* This function is called from tshark when it parses the -z icmp, arguments
* and it creates a new instance to store statistics in and registers this new
* instance for the icmp tap.
*/
static void
icmpstat_init(const char *optarg, void* userdata _U_)
{
icmpstat_t *icmpstat;
const char *filter = NULL;
GString *error_string;
if (strstr(optarg, "icmp,srt,"))
filter = optarg + strlen("icmp,srt,");
icmpstat = g_malloc0(sizeof(icmpstat_t));
icmpstat->min_msecs = 1.0 * G_MAXUINT;
if (icmpstat == NULL) {
fprintf(stderr, "tshark: g_malloc() fatal error.\n");
exit(1);
}
if (filter)
icmpstat->filter = g_strdup(filter);
/* It is possible to create a filter and attach it to the callbacks. Then the
* callbacks would only be invoked if the filter matched.
*
* Evaluating filters is expensive and if we can avoid it and not use them,
* then we gain performance.
*
* In this case we do the filtering for protocol and version inside the
* callback itself but use whatever filter the user provided.
*/
error_string = register_tap_listener("icmp", icmpstat, icmpstat->filter,
TL_REQUIRES_NOTHING, icmpstat_reset, icmpstat_packet, icmpstat_draw);
if (error_string) {
/* error, we failed to attach to the tap. clean up */
if (icmpstat->filter)
g_free(icmpstat->filter);
g_free(icmpstat);
fprintf(stderr, "tshark: Couldn't register icmp,srt tap: %s\n",
error_string->str);
g_string_free(error_string, TRUE);
exit(1);
}
}
void
register_tap_listener_icmpstat(void)
{
register_stat_cmd_arg("icmp,srt", icmpstat_init, NULL);
}