forked from osmocom/wireshark
9e01356f7a
svn path=/trunk/; revision=23105
87 lines
3.7 KiB
Text
87 lines
3.7 KiB
Text
$Id$
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This is a very quick and very dirty guide to adding support for new
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capture file formats. If you see any errors or have any improvements,
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submit patches - free software is a community effort....
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To add the ability to read a new capture file format, you have to:
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add a new WTAP_FILE_ value for the file type to
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"wiretap/wtap.h";
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write an "open" routine that can read the beginning of the
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capture file and figure out if it's in that format or not,
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either by looking at a magic number at the beginning or by using
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some form of heuristic to determine if it's a file of that type
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(if the file format has a magic number, that's what should be
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used);
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write a "read" routine that can read a packet from the file and
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supply the packet length, captured data length, time stamp, and
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packet pseudo-header (if any) and data, and have the "open"
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routine set the "subtype_read" member of the "wtap" structure
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supplied to it to point to that routine;
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write a "seek and read" routine that can seek to a specified
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location in the file for a packet and supply the packet
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pseudo-header (if any) and data, and have the "open" routine set
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the "subtype_seek_read" member of the "wtap" structure to point
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to that routine;
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write a "close" routine, if necessary (if, for example, the
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"open" routine allocates any memory), and set the
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"subtype_close" member of the "wtap" structure to point to it,
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otherwise leave it set to NULL;
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add a pointer to the "open" routine to the "open_routines_base[]"
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table in "wiretap/file_access.c" - if it uses a magic number, put
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it in the first section of that list, and, if it uses a heuristic,
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put it in the second section, preferably putting the heuristic
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routines for binary files before the heuristic routines for text
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files;
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add an entry for that file type in the "dump_open_table_base[]" in
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"wiretap/file_access.c", giving a descriptive name, a short name
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that's convenient to type on a command line (no blanks or capital
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letters, please), common file extensions to open and save, a flag
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if it can be compressed with gzip (currently unused) and pointers
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to the "can_write_encap" and "dump_open" routines if writing that
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file is supported (see below), otherwise just null pointers.
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Wiretap applications typically first perform sequential reads through
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the capture file and may later do "seek and read" for individual frames.
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The "read" routine should set the variable data_offset to the byte
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offset within the capture file from which the "seek and read" routine
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will read. If the capture records consist of:
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capture record header
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pseudo-header (e.g., for ATM)
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frame data
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then data_offset should point to the pseudo-header. The first
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sequential read pass will process and store the capture record header
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data, but it will not store the pseudo-header.
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To add the ability to write a new capture file format, you have to:
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add a "can_write_encap" routine that returns an indication of
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whether a given packet encapsulation format is supported by the
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new capture file format;
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add a "dump_open" routine that starts writing a file (writing
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headers, allocating data structures, etc.);
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add a "dump" routine to write a packet to a file, and have the
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"dump_open" routine set the "subtype_write" member of the
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"wtap_dumper" structure passed to it to point to it;
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add a "dump_close" routine, if necessary (if, for example, the
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"dump_open" routine allocates any memory, or if some of the file
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header can be written only after all the packets have been
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written), and have the "dump_open" routine set the
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"subtype_close" member of the "wtap_dumper" structure to point
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to it;
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put pointers to the "can_write_encap" and "dump_open" routines
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in the "dump_open_table_base[]" entry for that file type.
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