Commit Graph

3 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
João Valverde 4c2d0f16d4 dfilter: Improve representation of raw field references
Instead of using the abstract type "<RAW>", which might be confusing,
show FT_BYTES, but display the representation with the "@" operator,
so it's not even more confusing in error messages why a field might
flip-flop types.

Refactor the field tostr() function and some other clean ups.

Before:
```
Filter: _ws.ftypes.string ==${@frame.len}
dftest: _ws.ftypes.string and frame.len <RAW> are not of compatible types.
	_ws.ftypes.string ==${@frame.len}
	                       ^~~~~~~~~
```

After:
```
Filter: _ws.ftypes.string ==${@frame.len}
dftest: _ws.ftypes.string <FT_STRING> and @frame.len <FT_BYTES> are not of compatible types.
	_ws.ftypes.string ==${@frame.len}
	                       ^~~~~~~~~
```
2022-10-31 21:02:39 +00:00
João Valverde 0853ddd1cb dfilter: Add support for raw (bytes) addressing mode
This adds new syntax to read a field from the tree as bytes, instead
of the actual type. This is a useful extension for example to match
matformed strings that contain unicode replacement characters. In
this case it is not possible to match the raw value of the malformed
string field. This extension fills this need and is generic enough
that it should be useful in many other situations.

The syntax used is to prefix the field name with "@". The following
artificial example tests if the HTTP user agent contains a particular
invalid UTF-8 sequence:

    @http.user_agent == "Mozill\xAA"

Where simply using "http.user_agent" won't work because the invalid byte
sequence will have been replaced with U+FFFD.

Considering the following programs:

    $ dftest '_ws.ftypes.string == "ABC"'
    Filter: _ws.ftypes.string == "ABC"

    Syntax tree:
     0 TEST_ANY_EQ:
       1 FIELD(_ws.ftypes.string <FT_STRING>)
       1 FVALUE("ABC" <FT_STRING>)

    Instructions:
    00000 READ_TREE		_ws.ftypes.string <FT_STRING> -> reg#0
    00001 IF_FALSE_GOTO	3
    00002 ANY_EQ		reg#0 == "ABC" <FT_STRING>
    00003 RETURN

    $ dftest '@_ws.ftypes.string == "ABC"'
    Filter: @_ws.ftypes.string == "ABC"

    Syntax tree:
     0 TEST_ANY_EQ:
       1 FIELD(_ws.ftypes.string <RAW>)
       1 FVALUE(41:42:43 <FT_BYTES>)

    Instructions:
    00000 READ_TREE		@_ws.ftypes.string <FT_BYTES> -> reg#0
    00001 IF_FALSE_GOTO	3
    00002 ANY_EQ		reg#0 == 41:42:43 <FT_BYTES>
    00003 RETURN

In the second case the field has a "raw" type, that equates directly to
FT_BYTES, and the field value is read from the protocol raw data.
2022-10-31 21:02:39 +00:00
João Valverde aaff0d21ae dfilter: Add layer support for references
This adds support for using the layers filter
with field references.

Before:
    $ dftest 'ip.src != ${ip.src#2}'
    dftest: invalid character in macro name

After:
    $ dftest 'ip.src != ${ip.src#2}'
    Filter: ip.src != ${ip.src#2}

    Syntax tree:
     0 TEST_ALL_NE:
       1 FIELD(ip.src <FT_IPv4>)
       1 REFERENCE(ip.src#[2:1] <FT_IPv4>)

    Instructions:
    00000 READ_TREE		ip.src <FT_IPv4> -> reg#0
    00001 IF_FALSE_GOTO	5
    00002 READ_REFERENCE_R	${ip.src <FT_IPv4>} #[2:1] -> reg#1
    00003 IF_FALSE_GOTO	5
    00004 ALL_NE		reg#0 != reg#1
    00005 RETURN

This requires adding another level of complexity to references.
When loading references we need to copy the 'proto_layer_num'
and add the logic to filter on that.

The "layer" sttype is removed and replace by a new
field sttype with support for a range. This is a nice
cleanup for the semantic check and general simplification.
The grammar is better too with this design.

Range sttype is renamed to slice for clarity.
2022-06-25 14:57:40 +01:00