2 * Copyright (c) 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997
3 * The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved.
5 * Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
6 * modification, are permitted provided that: (1) source code distributions
7 * retain the above copyright notice and this paragraph in its entirety, (2)
8 * distributions including binary code include the above copyright notice and
9 * this paragraph in its entirety in the documentation or other materials
10 * provided with the distribution, and (3) all advertising materials mentioning
11 * features or use of this software display the following acknowledgement:
12 * ``This product includes software developed by the University of California,
13 * Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory and its contributors.'' Neither the name of
14 * the University nor the names of its contributors may be used to endorse
15 * or promote products derived from this software without specific prior
17 * THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED ``AS IS'' AND WITHOUT ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED
18 * WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, WITHOUT LIMITATION, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF
19 * MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
21 * sf-pcap.c - libpcap-file-format-specific code from savefile.c
22 * Extraction/creation by Jeffrey Mogul, DECWRL
23 * Modified by Steve McCanne, LBL.
25 * Used to save the received packet headers, after filtering, to
26 * a file, and then read them later.
27 * The first record in the file contains saved values for the machine
28 * dependent values so we can print the dump file on any architecture.
35 #include <pcap-types.h>
49 #include "pcap-common.h"
51 #ifdef HAVE_OS_PROTO_H
58 * Setting O_BINARY on DOS/Windows is a bit tricky
61 #define SET_BINMODE(f) _setmode(_fileno(f), _O_BINARY)
63 #if defined(__HIGHC__)
64 #define SET_BINMODE(f) setmode(f, O_BINARY)
66 #define SET_BINMODE(f) setmode(fileno(f), O_BINARY)
71 * Standard libpcap format.
73 #define TCPDUMP_MAGIC 0xa1b2c3d4
76 * Alexey Kuznetzov's modified libpcap format.
78 #define KUZNETZOV_TCPDUMP_MAGIC 0xa1b2cd34
81 * Reserved for Francisco Mesquita <francisco.mesquita@radiomovel.pt>
82 * for another modified format.
84 #define FMESQUITA_TCPDUMP_MAGIC 0xa1b234cd
87 * Navtel Communcations' format, with nanosecond timestamps,
88 * as per a request from Dumas Hwang <dumas.hwang@navtelcom.com>.
90 #define NAVTEL_TCPDUMP_MAGIC 0xa12b3c4d
93 * Normal libpcap format, except for seconds/nanoseconds timestamps,
94 * as per a request by Ulf Lamping <ulf.lamping@web.de>
96 #define NSEC_TCPDUMP_MAGIC 0xa1b23c4d
99 * Mechanism for storing information about a capture in the upper
100 * 6 bits of a linktype value in a capture file.
102 * LT_LINKTYPE_EXT(x) extracts the additional information.
104 * The rest of the bits are for a value describing the link-layer
105 * value. LT_LINKTYPE(x) extracts that value.
107 #define LT_LINKTYPE(x) ((x) & 0x03FFFFFF)
108 #define LT_LINKTYPE_EXT(x) ((x) & 0xFC000000)
110 static int pcap_next_packet(pcap_t
*p
, struct pcap_pkthdr
*hdr
, u_char
**datap
);
113 * Private data for reading pcap savefiles.
125 } tstamp_scale_type_t
;
129 swapped_type_t lengths_swapped
;
130 tstamp_scale_type_t scale_type
;
134 * Check whether this is a pcap savefile and, if it is, extract the
135 * relevant information from the header.
138 pcap_check_header(bpf_u_int32 magic
, FILE *fp
, u_int precision
, char *errbuf
,
141 struct pcap_file_header hdr
;
148 * Assume no read errors.
153 * Check whether the first 4 bytes of the file are the magic
154 * number for a pcap savefile, or for a byte-swapped pcap
157 if (magic
!= TCPDUMP_MAGIC
&& magic
!= KUZNETZOV_TCPDUMP_MAGIC
&&
158 magic
!= NSEC_TCPDUMP_MAGIC
) {
159 magic
= SWAPLONG(magic
);
160 if (magic
!= TCPDUMP_MAGIC
&& magic
!= KUZNETZOV_TCPDUMP_MAGIC
&&
161 magic
!= NSEC_TCPDUMP_MAGIC
)
162 return (NULL
); /* nope */
167 * They are. Put the magic number in the header, and read
168 * the rest of the header.
171 amt_read
= fread(((char *)&hdr
) + sizeof hdr
.magic
, 1,
172 sizeof(hdr
) - sizeof(hdr
.magic
), fp
);
173 if (amt_read
!= sizeof(hdr
) - sizeof(hdr
.magic
)) {
175 pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(errbuf
, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE
,
176 errno
, "error reading dump file");
178 pcap_snprintf(errbuf
, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE
,
179 "truncated dump file; tried to read %lu file header bytes, only got %lu",
180 (unsigned long)sizeof(hdr
),
181 (unsigned long)amt_read
);
188 * If it's a byte-swapped capture file, byte-swap the header.
191 hdr
.version_major
= SWAPSHORT(hdr
.version_major
);
192 hdr
.version_minor
= SWAPSHORT(hdr
.version_minor
);
193 hdr
.thiszone
= SWAPLONG(hdr
.thiszone
);
194 hdr
.sigfigs
= SWAPLONG(hdr
.sigfigs
);
195 hdr
.snaplen
= SWAPLONG(hdr
.snaplen
);
196 hdr
.linktype
= SWAPLONG(hdr
.linktype
);
199 if (hdr
.version_major
< PCAP_VERSION_MAJOR
) {
200 pcap_snprintf(errbuf
, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE
,
201 "archaic pcap savefile format");
207 * currently only versions 2.[0-4] are supported with
208 * the exception of 543.0 for DG/UX tcpdump.
210 if (! ((hdr
.version_major
== PCAP_VERSION_MAJOR
&&
211 hdr
.version_minor
<= PCAP_VERSION_MINOR
) ||
212 (hdr
.version_major
== 543 &&
213 hdr
.version_minor
== 0))) {
214 pcap_snprintf(errbuf
, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE
,
215 "unsupported pcap savefile version %u.%u",
216 hdr
.version_major
, hdr
.version_minor
);
222 * OK, this is a good pcap file.
223 * Allocate a pcap_t for it.
225 p
= pcap_open_offline_common(errbuf
, sizeof (struct pcap_sf
));
227 /* Allocation failed. */
231 p
->swapped
= swapped
;
232 p
->version_major
= hdr
.version_major
;
233 p
->version_minor
= hdr
.version_minor
;
234 p
->tzoff
= hdr
.thiszone
;
235 p
->snapshot
= hdr
.snaplen
;
236 if (p
->snapshot
<= 0) {
238 * Bogus snapshot length; use the maximum for this
239 * link-layer type as a fallback.
241 * XXX - the only reason why snapshot is signed is
242 * that pcap_snapshot() returns an int, not an
245 p
->snapshot
= max_snaplen_for_dlt(hdr
.linktype
);
247 p
->linktype
= linktype_to_dlt(LT_LINKTYPE(hdr
.linktype
));
248 p
->linktype_ext
= LT_LINKTYPE_EXT(hdr
.linktype
);
250 p
->next_packet_op
= pcap_next_packet
;
254 p
->opt
.tstamp_precision
= precision
;
257 * Will we need to scale the timestamps to match what the
262 case PCAP_TSTAMP_PRECISION_MICRO
:
263 if (magic
== NSEC_TCPDUMP_MAGIC
) {
265 * The file has nanoseconds, the user
266 * wants microseconds; scale the
269 ps
->scale_type
= SCALE_DOWN
;
272 * The file has microseconds, the
273 * user wants microseconds; nothing to do.
275 ps
->scale_type
= PASS_THROUGH
;
279 case PCAP_TSTAMP_PRECISION_NANO
:
280 if (magic
== NSEC_TCPDUMP_MAGIC
) {
282 * The file has nanoseconds, the
283 * user wants nanoseconds; nothing to do.
285 ps
->scale_type
= PASS_THROUGH
;
288 * The file has microoseconds, the user
289 * wants nanoseconds; scale the
292 ps
->scale_type
= SCALE_UP
;
297 pcap_snprintf(errbuf
, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE
,
298 "unknown time stamp resolution %u", precision
);
305 * We interchanged the caplen and len fields at version 2.3,
306 * in order to match the bpf header layout. But unfortunately
307 * some files were written with version 2.3 in their headers
308 * but without the interchanged fields.
310 * In addition, DG/UX tcpdump writes out files with a version
311 * number of 543.0, and with the caplen and len fields in the
314 switch (hdr
.version_major
) {
317 if (hdr
.version_minor
< 3)
318 ps
->lengths_swapped
= SWAPPED
;
319 else if (hdr
.version_minor
== 3)
320 ps
->lengths_swapped
= MAYBE_SWAPPED
;
322 ps
->lengths_swapped
= NOT_SWAPPED
;
326 ps
->lengths_swapped
= SWAPPED
;
330 ps
->lengths_swapped
= NOT_SWAPPED
;
334 if (magic
== KUZNETZOV_TCPDUMP_MAGIC
) {
336 * XXX - the patch that's in some versions of libpcap
337 * changes the packet header but not the magic number,
338 * and some other versions with this magic number have
339 * some extra debugging information in the packet header;
340 * we'd have to use some hacks^H^H^H^H^Hheuristics to
341 * detect those variants.
343 * Ethereal does that, but it does so by trying to read
344 * the first two packets of the file with each of the
345 * record header formats. That currently means it seeks
346 * backwards and retries the reads, which doesn't work
347 * on pipes. We want to be able to read from a pipe, so
348 * that strategy won't work; we'd have to buffer some
349 * data ourselves and read from that buffer in order to
352 ps
->hdrsize
= sizeof(struct pcap_sf_patched_pkthdr
);
354 if (p
->linktype
== DLT_EN10MB
) {
356 * This capture might have been done in raw mode
359 * If it was done in cooked mode, p->snapshot was
360 * passed to recvfrom() as the buffer size, meaning
361 * that the most packet data that would be copied
362 * would be p->snapshot. However, a faked Ethernet
363 * header would then have been added to it, so the
364 * most data that would be in a packet in the file
365 * would be p->snapshot + 14.
367 * We can't easily tell whether the capture was done
368 * in raw mode or cooked mode, so we'll assume it was
369 * cooked mode, and add 14 to the snapshot length.
370 * That means that, for a raw capture, the snapshot
371 * length will be misleading if you use it to figure
372 * out why a capture doesn't have all the packet data,
373 * but there's not much we can do to avoid that.
378 ps
->hdrsize
= sizeof(struct pcap_sf_pkthdr
);
381 * Allocate a buffer for the packet data.
382 * Choose the minimum of the file's snapshot length and 2K bytes;
383 * that should be enough for most network packets - we'll grow it
384 * if necessary. That way, we don't allocate a huge chunk of
385 * memory just because there's a huge snapshot length, as the
386 * snapshot length might be larger than the size of the largest
389 p
->bufsize
= p
->snapshot
;
390 if (p
->bufsize
> 2048)
392 p
->buffer
= malloc(p
->bufsize
);
393 if (p
->buffer
== NULL
) {
394 pcap_snprintf(errbuf
, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE
, "out of memory");
400 p
->cleanup_op
= sf_cleanup
;
406 * Grow the packet buffer to the specified size.
409 grow_buffer(pcap_t
*p
, u_int bufsize
)
413 bigger_buffer
= realloc(p
->buffer
, bufsize
);
414 if (bigger_buffer
== NULL
) {
415 pcap_snprintf(p
->errbuf
, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE
, "out of memory");
418 p
->buffer
= bigger_buffer
;
419 p
->bufsize
= bufsize
;
424 * Read and return the next packet from the savefile. Return the header
425 * in hdr and a pointer to the contents in data. Return 0 on success, 1
426 * if there were no more packets, and -1 on an error.
429 pcap_next_packet(pcap_t
*p
, struct pcap_pkthdr
*hdr
, u_char
**data
)
431 struct pcap_sf
*ps
= p
->priv
;
432 struct pcap_sf_patched_pkthdr sf_hdr
;
438 * Read the packet header; the structure we use as a buffer
439 * is the longer structure for files generated by the patched
440 * libpcap, but if the file has the magic number for an
441 * unpatched libpcap we only read as many bytes as the regular
444 amt_read
= fread(&sf_hdr
, 1, ps
->hdrsize
, fp
);
445 if (amt_read
!= ps
->hdrsize
) {
447 pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(p
->errbuf
, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE
,
448 errno
, "error reading dump file");
452 pcap_snprintf(p
->errbuf
, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE
,
453 "truncated dump file; tried to read %lu header bytes, only got %lu",
454 (unsigned long)ps
->hdrsize
,
455 (unsigned long)amt_read
);
464 /* these were written in opposite byte order */
465 hdr
->caplen
= SWAPLONG(sf_hdr
.caplen
);
466 hdr
->len
= SWAPLONG(sf_hdr
.len
);
467 hdr
->ts
.tv_sec
= SWAPLONG(sf_hdr
.ts
.tv_sec
);
468 hdr
->ts
.tv_usec
= SWAPLONG(sf_hdr
.ts
.tv_usec
);
470 hdr
->caplen
= sf_hdr
.caplen
;
471 hdr
->len
= sf_hdr
.len
;
472 hdr
->ts
.tv_sec
= sf_hdr
.ts
.tv_sec
;
473 hdr
->ts
.tv_usec
= sf_hdr
.ts
.tv_usec
;
476 switch (ps
->scale_type
) {
480 * Just pass the time stamp through.
486 * File has microseconds, user wants nanoseconds; convert
489 hdr
->ts
.tv_usec
= hdr
->ts
.tv_usec
* 1000;
494 * File has nanoseconds, user wants microseconds; convert
497 hdr
->ts
.tv_usec
= hdr
->ts
.tv_usec
/ 1000;
501 /* Swap the caplen and len fields, if necessary. */
502 switch (ps
->lengths_swapped
) {
508 if (hdr
->caplen
<= hdr
->len
) {
510 * The captured length is <= the actual length,
511 * so presumably they weren't swapped.
519 hdr
->caplen
= hdr
->len
;
525 * Is the packet bigger than we consider sane?
527 if (hdr
->caplen
> max_snaplen_for_dlt(p
->linktype
)) {
529 * Yes. This may be a damaged or fuzzed file.
531 * Is it bigger than the snapshot length?
532 * (We don't treat that as an error if it's not
533 * bigger than the maximum we consider sane; see
536 if (hdr
->caplen
> (bpf_u_int32
)p
->snapshot
) {
537 pcap_snprintf(p
->errbuf
, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE
,
538 "invalid packet capture length %u, bigger than "
539 "snaplen of %d", hdr
->caplen
, p
->snapshot
);
541 pcap_snprintf(p
->errbuf
, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE
,
542 "invalid packet capture length %u, bigger than "
543 "maximum of %u", hdr
->caplen
,
544 max_snaplen_for_dlt(p
->linktype
));
549 if (hdr
->caplen
> (bpf_u_int32
)p
->snapshot
) {
551 * The packet is bigger than the snapshot length
554 * This can happen due to Solaris 2.3 systems tripping
555 * over the BUFMOD problem and not setting the snapshot
556 * length correctly in the savefile header.
558 * libpcap 0.4 and later on Solaris 2.3 should set the
559 * snapshot length correctly in the pcap file header,
560 * even though they don't set a snapshot length in bufmod
561 * (the buggy bufmod chops off the *beginning* of the
562 * packet if a snapshot length is specified); they should
563 * also reduce the captured length, as supplied to the
564 * per-packet callback, to the snapshot length if it's
565 * greater than the snapshot length, so the code using
566 * libpcap should see the packet cut off at the snapshot
567 * length, even though the full packet is copied up to
570 * However, perhaps some versions of libpcap failed to
571 * set the snapshot length currectly in the file header
572 * or the per-packet header, or perhaps this is a
573 * corrupted safefile or a savefile built/modified by a
574 * fuzz tester, so we check anyway. We grow the buffer
575 * to be big enough for the snapshot length, read up
576 * to the snapshot length, discard the rest of the
577 * packet, and report the snapshot length as the captured
578 * length; we don't want to hand our caller a packet
579 * bigger than the snapshot length, because they might
580 * be assuming they'll never be handed such a packet,
581 * and might copy the packet into a snapshot-length-
582 * sized buffer, assuming it'll fit.
584 size_t bytes_to_discard
;
585 size_t bytes_to_read
, bytes_read
;
586 char discard_buf
[4096];
588 if (hdr
->caplen
> p
->bufsize
) {
590 * Grow the buffer to the snapshot length.
592 if (!grow_buffer(p
, p
->snapshot
))
597 * Read the first p->snapshot bytes into the buffer.
599 amt_read
= fread(p
->buffer
, 1, p
->snapshot
, fp
);
600 if (amt_read
!= (bpf_u_int32
)p
->snapshot
) {
602 pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(p
->errbuf
,
603 PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE
, errno
,
604 "error reading dump file");
607 * Yes, this uses hdr->caplen; technically,
608 * it's true, because we would try to read
609 * and discard the rest of those bytes, and
610 * that would fail because we got EOF before
613 pcap_snprintf(p
->errbuf
, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE
,
614 "truncated dump file; tried to read %u captured bytes, only got %lu",
615 p
->snapshot
, (unsigned long)amt_read
);
621 * Now read and discard what's left.
623 bytes_to_discard
= hdr
->caplen
- p
->snapshot
;
624 bytes_read
= amt_read
;
625 while (bytes_to_discard
!= 0) {
626 bytes_to_read
= bytes_to_discard
;
627 if (bytes_to_read
> sizeof (discard_buf
))
628 bytes_to_read
= sizeof (discard_buf
);
629 amt_read
= fread(discard_buf
, 1, bytes_to_read
, fp
);
630 bytes_read
+= amt_read
;
631 if (amt_read
!= bytes_to_read
) {
633 pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(p
->errbuf
,
634 PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE
, errno
,
635 "error reading dump file");
637 pcap_snprintf(p
->errbuf
, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE
,
638 "truncated dump file; tried to read %u captured bytes, only got %lu",
639 hdr
->caplen
, (unsigned long)bytes_read
);
643 bytes_to_discard
-= amt_read
;
647 * Adjust caplen accordingly, so we don't get confused later
648 * as to how many bytes we have to play with.
650 hdr
->caplen
= p
->snapshot
;
652 if (hdr
->caplen
> p
->bufsize
) {
654 * Grow the buffer to the next power of 2, or
655 * the snaplen, whichever is lower.
659 new_bufsize
= hdr
->caplen
;
661 * http://graphics.stanford.edu/~seander/bithacks.html#RoundUpPowerOf2
664 new_bufsize
|= new_bufsize
>> 1;
665 new_bufsize
|= new_bufsize
>> 2;
666 new_bufsize
|= new_bufsize
>> 4;
667 new_bufsize
|= new_bufsize
>> 8;
668 new_bufsize
|= new_bufsize
>> 16;
671 if (new_bufsize
> (u_int
)p
->snapshot
)
672 new_bufsize
= p
->snapshot
;
674 if (!grow_buffer(p
, new_bufsize
))
678 /* read the packet itself */
679 amt_read
= fread(p
->buffer
, 1, hdr
->caplen
, fp
);
680 if (amt_read
!= hdr
->caplen
) {
682 pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(p
->errbuf
,
683 PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE
, errno
,
684 "error reading dump file");
686 pcap_snprintf(p
->errbuf
, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE
,
687 "truncated dump file; tried to read %u captured bytes, only got %lu",
688 hdr
->caplen
, (unsigned long)amt_read
);
696 swap_pseudo_headers(p
->linktype
, hdr
, *data
);
702 sf_write_header(pcap_t
*p
, FILE *fp
, int linktype
, int thiszone
, int snaplen
)
704 struct pcap_file_header hdr
;
706 hdr
.magic
= p
->opt
.tstamp_precision
== PCAP_TSTAMP_PRECISION_NANO
? NSEC_TCPDUMP_MAGIC
: TCPDUMP_MAGIC
;
707 hdr
.version_major
= PCAP_VERSION_MAJOR
;
708 hdr
.version_minor
= PCAP_VERSION_MINOR
;
710 hdr
.thiszone
= thiszone
;
711 hdr
.snaplen
= snaplen
;
713 hdr
.linktype
= linktype
;
715 if (fwrite((char *)&hdr
, sizeof(hdr
), 1, fp
) != 1)
722 * Output a packet to the initialized dump file.
725 pcap_dump(u_char
*user
, const struct pcap_pkthdr
*h
, const u_char
*sp
)
728 struct pcap_sf_pkthdr sf_hdr
;
731 sf_hdr
.ts
.tv_sec
= h
->ts
.tv_sec
;
732 sf_hdr
.ts
.tv_usec
= h
->ts
.tv_usec
;
733 sf_hdr
.caplen
= h
->caplen
;
735 /* XXX we should check the return status */
736 (void)fwrite(&sf_hdr
, sizeof(sf_hdr
), 1, f
);
737 (void)fwrite(sp
, h
->caplen
, 1, f
);
740 static pcap_dumper_t
*
741 pcap_setup_dump(pcap_t
*p
, int linktype
, FILE *f
, const char *fname
)
744 #if defined(_WIN32) || defined(MSDOS)
746 * If we're writing to the standard output, put it in binary
747 * mode, as savefiles are binary files.
749 * Otherwise, we turn off buffering.
750 * XXX - why? And why not on the standard output?
755 setvbuf(f
, NULL
, _IONBF
, 0);
757 if (sf_write_header(p
, f
, linktype
, p
->tzoff
, p
->snapshot
) == -1) {
758 pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(p
->errbuf
, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE
,
759 errno
, "Can't write to %s", fname
);
764 return ((pcap_dumper_t
*)f
);
768 * Initialize so that sf_write() will output to the file named 'fname'.
771 pcap_dump_open(pcap_t
*p
, const char *fname
)
777 * If this pcap_t hasn't been activated, it doesn't have a
778 * link-layer type, so we can't use it.
781 pcap_snprintf(p
->errbuf
, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE
,
782 "%s: not-yet-activated pcap_t passed to pcap_dump_open",
786 linktype
= dlt_to_linktype(p
->linktype
);
787 if (linktype
== -1) {
788 pcap_snprintf(p
->errbuf
, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE
,
789 "%s: link-layer type %d isn't supported in savefiles",
793 linktype
|= p
->linktype_ext
;
796 pcap_snprintf(p
->errbuf
, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE
,
797 "A null pointer was supplied as the file name");
800 if (fname
[0] == '-' && fname
[1] == '\0') {
802 fname
= "standard output";
805 * "b" is supported as of C90, so *all* UN*Xes should
806 * support it, even though it does nothing. It's
807 * required on Windows, as the file is a binary file
808 * and must be written in binary mode.
810 f
= fopen(fname
, "wb");
812 pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(p
->errbuf
, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE
,
817 return (pcap_setup_dump(p
, linktype
, f
, fname
));
821 * Initialize so that sf_write() will output to the given stream.
824 pcap_dump_fopen(pcap_t
*p
, FILE *f
)
828 linktype
= dlt_to_linktype(p
->linktype
);
829 if (linktype
== -1) {
830 pcap_snprintf(p
->errbuf
, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE
,
831 "stream: link-layer type %d isn't supported in savefiles",
835 linktype
|= p
->linktype_ext
;
837 return (pcap_setup_dump(p
, linktype
, f
, "stream"));
841 pcap_dump_open_append(pcap_t
*p
, const char *fname
)
846 struct pcap_file_header ph
;
848 linktype
= dlt_to_linktype(p
->linktype
);
849 if (linktype
== -1) {
850 pcap_snprintf(p
->errbuf
, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE
,
851 "%s: link-layer type %d isn't supported in savefiles",
857 pcap_snprintf(p
->errbuf
, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE
,
858 "A null pointer was supplied as the file name");
861 if (fname
[0] == '-' && fname
[1] == '\0')
862 return (pcap_setup_dump(p
, linktype
, stdout
, "standard output"));
865 * "b" is supported as of C90, so *all* UN*Xes should support it,
866 * even though it does nothing. It's required on Windows, as the
867 * file is a binary file and must be read in binary mode.
869 f
= fopen(fname
, "rb+");
871 pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(p
->errbuf
, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE
,
877 * Try to read a pcap header.
879 amt_read
= fread(&ph
, 1, sizeof (ph
), f
);
880 if (amt_read
!= sizeof (ph
)) {
882 pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(p
->errbuf
, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE
,
886 } else if (feof(f
) && amt_read
> 0) {
887 pcap_snprintf(p
->errbuf
, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE
,
888 "%s: truncated pcap file header", fname
);
894 #if defined(_WIN32) || defined(MSDOS)
896 * We turn off buffering.
897 * XXX - why? And why not on the standard output?
899 setvbuf(f
, NULL
, _IONBF
, 0);
903 * If a header is already present and:
905 * it's not for a pcap file of the appropriate resolution
906 * and the right byte order for this machine;
908 * the link-layer header types don't match;
910 * the snapshot lengths don't match;
916 * A header is already present.
922 if (p
->opt
.tstamp_precision
!= PCAP_TSTAMP_PRECISION_MICRO
) {
923 pcap_snprintf(p
->errbuf
, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE
,
924 "%s: different time stamp precision, cannot append to file", fname
);
930 case NSEC_TCPDUMP_MAGIC
:
931 if (p
->opt
.tstamp_precision
!= PCAP_TSTAMP_PRECISION_NANO
) {
932 pcap_snprintf(p
->errbuf
, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE
,
933 "%s: different time stamp precision, cannot append to file", fname
);
939 case SWAPLONG(TCPDUMP_MAGIC
):
940 case SWAPLONG(NSEC_TCPDUMP_MAGIC
):
941 pcap_snprintf(p
->errbuf
, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE
,
942 "%s: different byte order, cannot append to file", fname
);
946 case KUZNETZOV_TCPDUMP_MAGIC
:
947 case SWAPLONG(KUZNETZOV_TCPDUMP_MAGIC
):
948 case NAVTEL_TCPDUMP_MAGIC
:
949 case SWAPLONG(NAVTEL_TCPDUMP_MAGIC
):
950 pcap_snprintf(p
->errbuf
, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE
,
951 "%s: not a pcap file to which we can append", fname
);
956 pcap_snprintf(p
->errbuf
, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE
,
957 "%s: not a pcap file", fname
);
965 if (ph
.version_major
!= PCAP_VERSION_MAJOR
||
966 ph
.version_minor
!= PCAP_VERSION_MINOR
) {
967 pcap_snprintf(p
->errbuf
, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE
,
968 "%s: version is %u.%u, cannot append to file", fname
,
969 ph
.version_major
, ph
.version_minor
);
973 if ((bpf_u_int32
)linktype
!= ph
.linktype
) {
974 pcap_snprintf(p
->errbuf
, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE
,
975 "%s: different linktype, cannot append to file", fname
);
979 if ((bpf_u_int32
)p
->snapshot
!= ph
.snaplen
) {
980 pcap_snprintf(p
->errbuf
, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE
,
981 "%s: different snaplen, cannot append to file", fname
);
987 * A header isn't present; attempt to write it.
989 if (sf_write_header(p
, f
, linktype
, p
->tzoff
, p
->snapshot
) == -1) {
990 pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(p
->errbuf
, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE
,
991 errno
, "Can't write to %s", fname
);
998 * Start writing at the end of the file.
1000 if (fseek(f
, 0, SEEK_END
) == -1) {
1001 pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(p
->errbuf
, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE
,
1002 errno
, "Can't seek to end of %s", fname
);
1006 return ((pcap_dumper_t
*)f
);
1010 pcap_dump_file(pcap_dumper_t
*p
)
1016 pcap_dump_ftell(pcap_dumper_t
*p
)
1018 return (ftell((FILE *)p
));
1021 #if defined(HAVE_FSEEKO)
1023 * We have fseeko(), so we have ftello().
1024 * If we have large file support (files larger than 2^31-1 bytes),
1025 * ftello() will give us a current file position with more than 32
1029 pcap_dump_ftell64(pcap_dumper_t
*p
)
1031 return (ftello((FILE *)p
));
1033 #elif defined(_MSC_VER)
1035 * We have Visual Studio; we support only 2005 and later, so we have
1039 pcap_dump_ftell64(pcap_dumper_t
*p
)
1041 return (_ftelli64((FILE *)p
));
1045 * We don't have ftello() or _ftelli64(), so fall back on ftell().
1046 * Either long is 64 bits, in which case ftell() should suffice,
1047 * or this is probably an older 32-bit UN*X without large file
1048 * support, which means you'll probably get errors trying to
1049 * write files > 2^31-1, so it won't matter anyway.
1051 * XXX - what about MinGW?
1054 pcap_dump_ftell64(pcap_dumper_t
*p
)
1056 return (ftell((FILE *)p
));
1061 pcap_dump_flush(pcap_dumper_t
*p
)
1064 if (fflush((FILE *)p
) == EOF
)
1071 pcap_dump_close(pcap_dumper_t
*p
)
1075 if (ferror((FILE *)p
))
1077 /* XXX should check return from fclose() too */
1079 (void)fclose((FILE *)p
);