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1 /*
2 * Copyright (c) 1990, 1991, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997
3 * The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved.
4 *
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
16 * written permission.
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.
20 */
21
22 /*
23 * txtproto_print() derived from original code by Hannes Gredler
24 * (hannes@gredler.at):
25 *
26 * Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
27 * modification, are permitted provided that: (1) source code
28 * distributions retain the above copyright notice and this paragraph
29 * in its entirety, and (2) distributions including binary code include
30 * the above copyright notice and this paragraph in its entirety in
31 * the documentation or other materials provided with the distribution.
32 * THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED ``AS IS'' AND
33 * WITHOUT ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, WITHOUT
34 * LIMITATION, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS
35 * FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
36 */
37
38 #ifdef HAVE_CONFIG_H
39 #include <config.h>
40 #endif
41
42 #include "netdissect-stdinc.h"
43
44 #include <sys/stat.h>
45
46 #include <stdio.h>
47 #include <stdarg.h>
48 #include <stdlib.h>
49 #include <string.h>
50
51 #include "netdissect-ctype.h"
52
53 #include "netdissect.h"
54 #include "extract.h"
55 #include "ascii_strcasecmp.h"
56 #include "timeval-operations.h"
57
58 #define TOKBUFSIZE 128
59
60 enum date_flag { WITHOUT_DATE = 0, WITH_DATE = 1 };
61 enum time_flag { UTC_TIME = 0, LOCAL_TIME = 1 };
62
63 /*
64 * Print out a character, filtering out the non-printable ones
65 */
66 void
67 fn_print_char(netdissect_options *ndo, u_char c)
68 {
69 if (!ND_ISASCII(c)) {
70 c = ND_TOASCII(c);
71 ND_PRINT("M-");
72 }
73 if (!ND_ASCII_ISPRINT(c)) {
74 c ^= 0x40; /* DEL to ?, others to alpha */
75 ND_PRINT("^");
76 }
77 ND_PRINT("%c", c);
78 }
79
80 /*
81 * Print a null-terminated string, filtering out non-printable characters.
82 * DON'T USE IT with a pointer on the packet buffer because there is no
83 * truncation check. For this use, see the nd_printX() functions below.
84 */
85 void
86 fn_print_str(netdissect_options *ndo, const u_char *s)
87 {
88 while (*s != '\0') {
89 fn_print_char(ndo, *s);
90 s++;
91 }
92 }
93
94 /*
95 * Print out a null-terminated filename (or other ASCII string) from
96 * a fixed-length field in the packet buffer, or from what remains of
97 * the packet.
98 *
99 * n is the length of the fixed-length field, or the number of bytes
100 * remaining in the packet based on its on-the-network length.
101 *
102 * If ep is non-null, it should point just past the last captured byte
103 * of the packet, e.g. ndo->ndo_snapend. If ep is NULL, we assume no
104 * truncation check, other than the checks of the field length/remaining
105 * packet data length, is needed.
106 *
107 * Return the number of bytes of string processed, including the
108 * terminating null, if not truncated; as the terminating null is
109 * included in the count, and as there must be a terminating null,
110 * this will always be non-zero. Return 0 if truncated.
111 */
112 u_int
113 nd_printztn(netdissect_options *ndo,
114 const u_char *s, u_int n, const u_char *ep)
115 {
116 u_int bytes;
117 u_char c;
118
119 bytes = 0;
120 for (;;) {
121 if (n == 0 || (ep != NULL && s >= ep)) {
122 /*
123 * Truncated. This includes "no null before we
124 * got to the end of the fixed-length buffer or
125 * the end of the packet".
126 *
127 * XXX - BOOTP says "null-terminated", which
128 * means the maximum length of the string, in
129 * bytes, is 1 less than the size of the buffer,
130 * as there must always be a terminating null.
131 */
132 bytes = 0;
133 break;
134 }
135
136 c = GET_U_1(s);
137 s++;
138 bytes++;
139 n--;
140 if (c == '\0') {
141 /* End of string */
142 break;
143 }
144 fn_print_char(ndo, c);
145 }
146 return(bytes);
147 }
148
149 /*
150 * Print out a counted filename (or other ASCII string), part of
151 * the packet buffer.
152 * If ep is NULL, assume no truncation check is needed.
153 * Return true if truncated.
154 * Stop at ep (if given) or after n bytes, whichever is first.
155 */
156 int
157 nd_printn(netdissect_options *ndo,
158 const u_char *s, u_int n, const u_char *ep)
159 {
160 u_char c;
161
162 while (n > 0 && (ep == NULL || s < ep)) {
163 n--;
164 c = GET_U_1(s);
165 s++;
166 fn_print_char(ndo, c);
167 }
168 return (n == 0) ? 0 : 1;
169 }
170
171 /*
172 * Print a counted filename (or other ASCII string), part of
173 * the packet buffer, filtering out non-printable characters.
174 * Stop if truncated (via GET_U_1/longjmp) or after n bytes,
175 * whichever is first.
176 * The suffix comes from: j:longJmp, n:after N bytes.
177 */
178 void
179 nd_printjn(netdissect_options *ndo, const u_char *s, u_int n)
180 {
181 while (n > 0) {
182 fn_print_char(ndo, GET_U_1(s));
183 n--;
184 s++;
185 }
186 }
187
188 /*
189 * Print a null-padded filename (or other ASCII string), part of
190 * the packet buffer, filtering out non-printable characters.
191 * Stop if truncated (via GET_U_1/longjmp) or after n bytes or before
192 * the null char, whichever occurs first.
193 * The suffix comes from: j:longJmp, n:after N bytes, p:null-Padded.
194 */
195 void
196 nd_printjnp(netdissect_options *ndo, const u_char *s, u_int n)
197 {
198 u_char c;
199
200 while (n > 0) {
201 c = GET_U_1(s);
202 if (c == '\0')
203 break;
204 fn_print_char(ndo, c);
205 n--;
206 s++;
207 }
208 }
209
210 /*
211 * Print the timestamp .FRAC part (Microseconds/nanoseconds)
212 */
213 static void
214 ts_frac_print(netdissect_options *ndo, const struct timeval *tv)
215 {
216 #ifdef HAVE_PCAP_SET_TSTAMP_PRECISION
217 switch (ndo->ndo_tstamp_precision) {
218
219 case PCAP_TSTAMP_PRECISION_MICRO:
220 ND_PRINT(".%06u", (unsigned)tv->tv_usec);
221 break;
222
223 case PCAP_TSTAMP_PRECISION_NANO:
224 ND_PRINT(".%09u", (unsigned)tv->tv_usec);
225 break;
226
227 default:
228 ND_PRINT(".{unknown}");
229 break;
230 }
231 #else
232 ND_PRINT(".%06u", (unsigned)tv->tv_usec);
233 #endif
234 }
235
236 /*
237 * Print the timestamp as [YY:MM:DD] HH:MM:SS.FRAC.
238 * if time_flag == LOCAL_TIME print local time else UTC/GMT time
239 * if date_flag == WITH_DATE print YY:MM:DD before HH:MM:SS.FRAC
240 */
241 static void
242 ts_date_hmsfrac_print(netdissect_options *ndo, const struct timeval *tv,
243 enum date_flag date_flag, enum time_flag time_flag)
244 {
245 struct tm *tm;
246 char timebuf[32];
247 const char *timestr;
248
249 if (tv->tv_sec < 0) {
250 ND_PRINT("[timestamp < 1970-01-01 00:00:00 UTC]");
251 return;
252 }
253
254 if (time_flag == LOCAL_TIME)
255 tm = localtime(&tv->tv_sec);
256 else
257 tm = gmtime(&tv->tv_sec);
258
259 if (date_flag == WITH_DATE) {
260 timestr = nd_format_time(timebuf, sizeof(timebuf),
261 "%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S", tm);
262 } else {
263 timestr = nd_format_time(timebuf, sizeof(timebuf),
264 "%H:%M:%S", tm);
265 }
266 ND_PRINT("%s", timestr);
267
268 ts_frac_print(ndo, tv);
269 }
270
271 /*
272 * Print the timestamp - Unix timeval style, as SECS.FRAC.
273 */
274 static void
275 ts_unix_print(netdissect_options *ndo, const struct timeval *tv)
276 {
277 if (tv->tv_sec < 0) {
278 ND_PRINT("[timestamp < 1970-01-01 00:00:00 UTC]");
279 return;
280 }
281
282 ND_PRINT("%u", (unsigned)tv->tv_sec);
283 ts_frac_print(ndo, tv);
284 }
285
286 /*
287 * Print the timestamp
288 */
289 void
290 ts_print(netdissect_options *ndo,
291 const struct timeval *tvp)
292 {
293 static struct timeval tv_ref;
294 struct timeval tv_result;
295 int negative_offset;
296 int nano_prec;
297
298 switch (ndo->ndo_tflag) {
299
300 case 0: /* Default */
301 ts_date_hmsfrac_print(ndo, tvp, WITHOUT_DATE, LOCAL_TIME);
302 ND_PRINT(" ");
303 break;
304
305 case 1: /* No time stamp */
306 break;
307
308 case 2: /* Unix timeval style */
309 ts_unix_print(ndo, tvp);
310 ND_PRINT(" ");
311 break;
312
313 case 3: /* Microseconds/nanoseconds since previous packet */
314 case 5: /* Microseconds/nanoseconds since first packet */
315 #ifdef HAVE_PCAP_SET_TSTAMP_PRECISION
316 switch (ndo->ndo_tstamp_precision) {
317 case PCAP_TSTAMP_PRECISION_MICRO:
318 nano_prec = 0;
319 break;
320 case PCAP_TSTAMP_PRECISION_NANO:
321 nano_prec = 1;
322 break;
323 default:
324 nano_prec = 0;
325 break;
326 }
327 #else
328 nano_prec = 0;
329 #endif
330 if (!(netdissect_timevalisset(&tv_ref)))
331 tv_ref = *tvp; /* set timestamp for first packet */
332
333 negative_offset = netdissect_timevalcmp(tvp, &tv_ref, <);
334 if (negative_offset)
335 netdissect_timevalsub(&tv_ref, tvp, &tv_result, nano_prec);
336 else
337 netdissect_timevalsub(tvp, &tv_ref, &tv_result, nano_prec);
338
339 ND_PRINT((negative_offset ? "-" : " "));
340 ts_date_hmsfrac_print(ndo, &tv_result, WITHOUT_DATE, UTC_TIME);
341 ND_PRINT(" ");
342
343 if (ndo->ndo_tflag == 3)
344 tv_ref = *tvp; /* set timestamp for previous packet */
345 break;
346
347 case 4: /* Date + Default */
348 ts_date_hmsfrac_print(ndo, tvp, WITH_DATE, LOCAL_TIME);
349 ND_PRINT(" ");
350 break;
351 }
352 }
353
354 /*
355 * Print an unsigned relative number of seconds (e.g. hold time, prune timer)
356 * in the form 5m1s. This does no truncation, so 32230861 seconds
357 * is represented as 1y1w1d1h1m1s.
358 */
359 void
360 unsigned_relts_print(netdissect_options *ndo,
361 uint32_t secs)
362 {
363 static const char *lengths[] = {"y", "w", "d", "h", "m", "s"};
364 static const u_int seconds[] = {31536000, 604800, 86400, 3600, 60, 1};
365 const char **l = lengths;
366 const u_int *s = seconds;
367
368 if (secs == 0) {
369 ND_PRINT("0s");
370 return;
371 }
372 while (secs > 0) {
373 if (secs >= *s) {
374 ND_PRINT("%u%s", secs / *s, *l);
375 secs -= (secs / *s) * *s;
376 }
377 s++;
378 l++;
379 }
380 }
381
382 /*
383 * Print a signed relative number of seconds (e.g. hold time, prune timer)
384 * in the form 5m1s. This does no truncation, so 32230861 seconds
385 * is represented as 1y1w1d1h1m1s.
386 */
387 void
388 signed_relts_print(netdissect_options *ndo,
389 int32_t secs)
390 {
391 if (secs < 0) {
392 ND_PRINT("-");
393 if (secs == INT32_MIN) {
394 /*
395 * -2^31; you can't fit its absolute value into
396 * a 32-bit signed integer.
397 *
398 * Just directly pass said absolute value to
399 * unsigned_relts_print() directly.
400 *
401 * (XXX - does ISO C guarantee that -(-2^n),
402 * when calculated and cast to an n-bit unsigned
403 * integer type, will have the value 2^n?)
404 */
405 unsigned_relts_print(ndo, 2147483648U);
406 } else {
407 /*
408 * We now know -secs will fit into an int32_t;
409 * negate it and pass that to unsigned_relts_print().
410 */
411 unsigned_relts_print(ndo, -secs);
412 }
413 return;
414 }
415 unsigned_relts_print(ndo, secs);
416 }
417
418 /*
419 * Format a struct tm with strftime().
420 * If the pointer to the struct tm is null, that means that the
421 * routine to convert a time_t to a struct tm failed; the localtime()
422 * and gmtime() in the Microsoft Visual Studio C library will fail,
423 * returning null, if the value is before the UNIX Epoch.
424 */
425 const char *
426 nd_format_time(char *buf, size_t bufsize, const char *format,
427 const struct tm *timeptr)
428 {
429 if (timeptr != NULL) {
430 if (strftime(buf, bufsize, format, timeptr) != 0)
431 return (buf);
432 else
433 return ("[nd_format_time() buffer is too small]");
434 } else
435 return ("[localtime() or gmtime() couldn't convert the date and time]");
436 }
437
438 /* Print the truncated string */
439 void nd_print_trunc(netdissect_options *ndo)
440 {
441 ND_PRINT(" [|%s]", ndo->ndo_protocol);
442 }
443
444 /* Print the protocol name */
445 void nd_print_protocol(netdissect_options *ndo)
446 {
447 ND_PRINT("%s", ndo->ndo_protocol);
448 }
449
450 /* Print the protocol name in caps (uppercases) */
451 void nd_print_protocol_caps(netdissect_options *ndo)
452 {
453 const char *p;
454 for (p = ndo->ndo_protocol; *p != '\0'; p++)
455 ND_PRINT("%c", ND_ASCII_TOUPPER(*p));
456 }
457
458 /* Print the invalid string */
459 void nd_print_invalid(netdissect_options *ndo)
460 {
461 ND_PRINT(" (invalid)");
462 }
463
464 /*
465 * this is a generic routine for printing unknown data;
466 * we pass on the linefeed plus indentation string to
467 * get a proper output - returns 0 on error
468 */
469
470 int
471 print_unknown_data(netdissect_options *ndo, const u_char *cp,
472 const char *ident, u_int len)
473 {
474 u_int len_to_print;
475
476 len_to_print = len;
477 if (!ND_TTEST_LEN(cp, 0)) {
478 ND_PRINT("%sDissector error: print_unknown_data called with pointer past end of packet",
479 ident);
480 return(0);
481 }
482 if (ND_BYTES_AVAILABLE_AFTER(cp) < len_to_print)
483 len_to_print = ND_BYTES_AVAILABLE_AFTER(cp);
484 hex_print(ndo, ident, cp, len_to_print);
485 return(1); /* everything is ok */
486 }
487
488 /*
489 * Convert a token value to a string; use "fmt" if not found.
490 */
491 static const char *
492 tok2strbuf(const struct tok *lp, const char *fmt,
493 u_int v, char *buf, size_t bufsize)
494 {
495 if (lp != NULL) {
496 while (lp->s != NULL) {
497 if (lp->v == v)
498 return (lp->s);
499 ++lp;
500 }
501 }
502 if (fmt == NULL)
503 fmt = "#%d";
504
505 (void)snprintf(buf, bufsize, fmt, v);
506 return (const char *)buf;
507 }
508
509 /*
510 * Convert a token value to a string; use "fmt" if not found.
511 * Uses tok2strbuf() on one of four local static buffers of size TOKBUFSIZE
512 * in round-robin fashion.
513 */
514 const char *
515 tok2str(const struct tok *lp, const char *fmt,
516 u_int v)
517 {
518 static char buf[4][TOKBUFSIZE];
519 static int idx = 0;
520 char *ret;
521
522 ret = buf[idx];
523 idx = (idx+1) & 3;
524 return tok2strbuf(lp, fmt, v, ret, sizeof(buf[0]));
525 }
526
527 /*
528 * Convert a bit token value to a string; use "fmt" if not found.
529 * this is useful for parsing bitfields, the output strings are separated
530 * if the s field is positive.
531 *
532 * A token matches iff it has one or more bits set and every bit that is set
533 * in the token is set in v. Consequently, a 0 token never matches.
534 */
535 static char *
536 bittok2str_internal(const struct tok *lp, const char *fmt,
537 u_int v, const char *sep)
538 {
539 static char buf[1024+1]; /* our string buffer */
540 char *bufp = buf;
541 size_t space_left = sizeof(buf), string_size;
542 const char * sepstr = "";
543
544 while (lp != NULL && lp->s != NULL) {
545 if (lp->v && (v & lp->v) == lp->v) {
546 /* ok we have found something */
547 if (space_left <= 1)
548 return (buf); /* only enough room left for NUL, if that */
549 string_size = strlcpy(bufp, sepstr, space_left);
550 if (string_size >= space_left)
551 return (buf); /* we ran out of room */
552 bufp += string_size;
553 space_left -= string_size;
554 if (space_left <= 1)
555 return (buf); /* only enough room left for NUL, if that */
556 string_size = strlcpy(bufp, lp->s, space_left);
557 if (string_size >= space_left)
558 return (buf); /* we ran out of room */
559 bufp += string_size;
560 space_left -= string_size;
561 sepstr = sep;
562 }
563 lp++;
564 }
565
566 if (bufp == buf)
567 /* bummer - lets print the "unknown" message as advised in the fmt string if we got one */
568 (void)snprintf(buf, sizeof(buf), fmt == NULL ? "#%08x" : fmt, v);
569 return (buf);
570 }
571
572 /*
573 * Convert a bit token value to a string; use "fmt" if not found.
574 * this is useful for parsing bitfields, the output strings are not separated.
575 */
576 char *
577 bittok2str_nosep(const struct tok *lp, const char *fmt,
578 u_int v)
579 {
580 return (bittok2str_internal(lp, fmt, v, ""));
581 }
582
583 /*
584 * Convert a bit token value to a string; use "fmt" if not found.
585 * this is useful for parsing bitfields, the output strings are comma separated.
586 */
587 char *
588 bittok2str(const struct tok *lp, const char *fmt,
589 u_int v)
590 {
591 return (bittok2str_internal(lp, fmt, v, ", "));
592 }
593
594 /*
595 * Convert a value to a string using an array; the macro
596 * tok2strary() in <netdissect.h> is the public interface to
597 * this function and ensures that the second argument is
598 * correct for bounds-checking.
599 */
600 const char *
601 tok2strary_internal(const char **lp, int n, const char *fmt,
602 int v)
603 {
604 static char buf[TOKBUFSIZE];
605
606 if (v >= 0 && v < n && lp[v] != NULL)
607 return lp[v];
608 if (fmt == NULL)
609 fmt = "#%d";
610 (void)snprintf(buf, sizeof(buf), fmt, v);
611 return (buf);
612 }
613
614 const struct tok *
615 uint2tokary_internal(const struct uint_tokary dict[], const size_t size,
616 const u_int val)
617 {
618 size_t i;
619 /* Try a direct lookup before the full scan. */
620 if (val < size && dict[val].uintval == val)
621 return dict[val].tokary; /* OK if NULL */
622 for (i = 0; i < size; i++)
623 if (dict[i].uintval == val)
624 return dict[i].tokary; /* OK if NULL */
625 return NULL;
626 }
627
628 /*
629 * Convert a 32-bit netmask to prefixlen if possible
630 * the function returns the prefix-len; if plen == -1
631 * then conversion was not possible;
632 */
633
634 int
635 mask2plen(uint32_t mask)
636 {
637 const uint32_t bitmasks[33] = {
638 0x00000000,
639 0x80000000, 0xc0000000, 0xe0000000, 0xf0000000,
640 0xf8000000, 0xfc000000, 0xfe000000, 0xff000000,
641 0xff800000, 0xffc00000, 0xffe00000, 0xfff00000,
642 0xfff80000, 0xfffc0000, 0xfffe0000, 0xffff0000,
643 0xffff8000, 0xffffc000, 0xffffe000, 0xfffff000,
644 0xfffff800, 0xfffffc00, 0xfffffe00, 0xffffff00,
645 0xffffff80, 0xffffffc0, 0xffffffe0, 0xfffffff0,
646 0xfffffff8, 0xfffffffc, 0xfffffffe, 0xffffffff
647 };
648 int prefix_len = 32;
649
650 /* let's see if we can transform the mask into a prefixlen */
651 while (prefix_len >= 0) {
652 if (bitmasks[prefix_len] == mask)
653 break;
654 prefix_len--;
655 }
656 return (prefix_len);
657 }
658
659 int
660 mask62plen(const u_char *mask)
661 {
662 u_char bitmasks[9] = {
663 0x00,
664 0x80, 0xc0, 0xe0, 0xf0,
665 0xf8, 0xfc, 0xfe, 0xff
666 };
667 int byte;
668 int cidr_len = 0;
669
670 for (byte = 0; byte < 16; byte++) {
671 u_int bits;
672
673 for (bits = 0; bits < (sizeof (bitmasks) / sizeof (bitmasks[0])); bits++) {
674 if (mask[byte] == bitmasks[bits]) {
675 cidr_len += bits;
676 break;
677 }
678 }
679
680 if (mask[byte] != 0xff)
681 break;
682 }
683 return (cidr_len);
684 }
685
686 /*
687 * Routine to print out information for text-based protocols such as FTP,
688 * HTTP, SMTP, RTSP, SIP, ....
689 */
690 #define MAX_TOKEN 128
691
692 /*
693 * Fetch a token from a packet, starting at the specified index,
694 * and return the length of the token.
695 *
696 * Returns 0 on error; yes, this is indistinguishable from an empty
697 * token, but an "empty token" isn't a valid token - it just means
698 * either a space character at the beginning of the line (this
699 * includes a blank line) or no more tokens remaining on the line.
700 */
701 static int
702 fetch_token(netdissect_options *ndo, const u_char *pptr, u_int idx, u_int len,
703 u_char *tbuf, size_t tbuflen)
704 {
705 size_t toklen = 0;
706 u_char c;
707
708 for (; idx < len; idx++) {
709 if (!ND_TTEST_1(pptr + idx)) {
710 /* ran past end of captured data */
711 return (0);
712 }
713 c = GET_U_1(pptr + idx);
714 if (!ND_ISASCII(c)) {
715 /* not an ASCII character */
716 return (0);
717 }
718 if (c == ' ' || c == '\t' || c == '\r' || c == '\n') {
719 /* end of token */
720 break;
721 }
722 if (!ND_ASCII_ISPRINT(c)) {
723 /* not part of a command token or response code */
724 return (0);
725 }
726 if (toklen + 2 > tbuflen) {
727 /* no room for this character and terminating '\0' */
728 return (0);
729 }
730 tbuf[toklen] = c;
731 toklen++;
732 }
733 if (toklen == 0) {
734 /* no token */
735 return (0);
736 }
737 tbuf[toklen] = '\0';
738
739 /*
740 * Skip past any white space after the token, until we see
741 * an end-of-line (CR or LF).
742 */
743 for (; idx < len; idx++) {
744 if (!ND_TTEST_1(pptr + idx)) {
745 /* ran past end of captured data */
746 break;
747 }
748 c = GET_U_1(pptr + idx);
749 if (c == '\r' || c == '\n') {
750 /* end of line */
751 break;
752 }
753 if (!ND_ASCII_ISPRINT(c)) {
754 /* not a printable ASCII character */
755 break;
756 }
757 if (c != ' ' && c != '\t' && c != '\r' && c != '\n') {
758 /* beginning of next token */
759 break;
760 }
761 }
762 return (idx);
763 }
764
765 /*
766 * Scan a buffer looking for a line ending - LF or CR-LF.
767 * Return the index of the character after the line ending or 0 if
768 * we encounter a non-ASCII or non-printable character or don't find
769 * the line ending.
770 */
771 static u_int
772 print_txt_line(netdissect_options *ndo, const char *prefix,
773 const u_char *pptr, u_int idx, u_int len)
774 {
775 u_int startidx;
776 u_int linelen;
777 u_char c;
778
779 startidx = idx;
780 while (idx < len) {
781 c = GET_U_1(pptr + idx);
782 if (c == '\n') {
783 /*
784 * LF without CR; end of line.
785 * Skip the LF and print the line, with the
786 * exception of the LF.
787 */
788 linelen = idx - startidx;
789 idx++;
790 goto print;
791 } else if (c == '\r') {
792 /* CR - any LF? */
793 if ((idx+1) >= len) {
794 /* not in this packet */
795 return (0);
796 }
797 if (GET_U_1(pptr + idx + 1) == '\n') {
798 /*
799 * CR-LF; end of line.
800 * Skip the CR-LF and print the line, with
801 * the exception of the CR-LF.
802 */
803 linelen = idx - startidx;
804 idx += 2;
805 goto print;
806 }
807
808 /*
809 * CR followed by something else; treat this
810 * as if it were binary data, and don't print
811 * it.
812 */
813 return (0);
814 } else if (!ND_ASCII_ISPRINT(c) && c != '\t') {
815 /*
816 * Not a printable ASCII character and not a tab;
817 * treat this as if it were binary data, and
818 * don't print it.
819 */
820 return (0);
821 }
822 idx++;
823 }
824
825 /*
826 * All printable ASCII, but no line ending after that point
827 * in the buffer.
828 */
829 linelen = idx - startidx;
830 ND_PRINT("%s%.*s", prefix, (int)linelen, pptr + startidx);
831 return (0);
832
833 print:
834 ND_PRINT("%s%.*s", prefix, (int)linelen, pptr + startidx);
835 return (idx);
836 }
837
838 /* Assign needed before calling txtproto_print(): ndo->ndo_protocol = "proto" */
839 void
840 txtproto_print(netdissect_options *ndo, const u_char *pptr, u_int len,
841 const char **cmds, u_int flags)
842 {
843 u_int idx, eol;
844 u_char token[MAX_TOKEN+1];
845 const char *cmd;
846 int print_this = 0;
847
848 if (cmds != NULL) {
849 /*
850 * This protocol has more than just request and
851 * response lines; see whether this looks like a
852 * request or response and, if so, print it and,
853 * in verbose mode, print everything after it.
854 *
855 * This is for HTTP-like protocols, where we
856 * want to print requests and responses, but
857 * don't want to print continuations of request
858 * or response bodies in packets that don't
859 * contain the request or response line.
860 */
861 idx = fetch_token(ndo, pptr, 0, len, token, sizeof(token));
862 if (idx != 0) {
863 /* Is this a valid request name? */
864 while ((cmd = *cmds++) != NULL) {
865 if (ascii_strcasecmp((const char *)token, cmd) == 0) {
866 /* Yes. */
867 print_this = 1;
868 break;
869 }
870 }
871
872 /*
873 * No - is this a valid response code (3 digits)?
874 *
875 * Is this token the response code, or is the next
876 * token the response code?
877 */
878 if (flags & RESP_CODE_SECOND_TOKEN) {
879 /*
880 * Next token - get it.
881 */
882 idx = fetch_token(ndo, pptr, idx, len, token,
883 sizeof(token));
884 }
885 if (idx != 0) {
886 if (ND_ASCII_ISDIGIT(token[0]) && ND_ASCII_ISDIGIT(token[1]) &&
887 ND_ASCII_ISDIGIT(token[2]) && token[3] == '\0') {
888 /* Yes. */
889 print_this = 1;
890 }
891 }
892 }
893 } else {
894 /*
895 * Either:
896 *
897 * 1) This protocol has only request and response lines
898 * (e.g., FTP, where all the data goes over a different
899 * connection); assume the payload is a request or
900 * response.
901 *
902 * or
903 *
904 * 2) This protocol is just text, so that we should
905 * always, at minimum, print the first line and,
906 * in verbose mode, print all lines.
907 */
908 print_this = 1;
909 }
910
911 nd_print_protocol_caps(ndo);
912
913 if (print_this) {
914 /*
915 * In non-verbose mode, just print the protocol, followed
916 * by the first line.
917 *
918 * In verbose mode, print lines as text until we run out
919 * of characters or see something that's not a
920 * printable-ASCII line.
921 */
922 if (ndo->ndo_vflag) {
923 /*
924 * We're going to print all the text lines in the
925 * request or response; just print the length
926 * on the first line of the output.
927 */
928 ND_PRINT(", length: %u", len);
929 for (idx = 0;
930 idx < len && (eol = print_txt_line(ndo, "\n\t", pptr, idx, len)) != 0;
931 idx = eol)
932 ;
933 } else {
934 /*
935 * Just print the first text line.
936 */
937 print_txt_line(ndo, ": ", pptr, 0, len);
938 }
939 }
940 }
941
942 #if (defined(__i386__) || defined(_M_IX86) || defined(__X86__) || defined(__x86_64__) || defined(_M_X64)) || \
943 (defined(__arm__) || defined(_M_ARM) || defined(__aarch64__)) || \
944 (defined(__m68k__) && (!defined(__mc68000__) && !defined(__mc68010__))) || \
945 (defined(__ppc__) || defined(__ppc64__) || defined(_M_PPC) || defined(_ARCH_PPC) || defined(_ARCH_PPC64)) || \
946 (defined(__s390__) || defined(__s390x__) || defined(__zarch__)) || \
947 defined(__vax__)
948 /*
949 * The processor natively handles unaligned loads, so just use memcpy()
950 * and memcmp(), to enable those optimizations.
951 *
952 * XXX - are those all the x86 tests we need?
953 * XXX - do we need to worry about ARMv1 through ARMv5, which didn't
954 * support unaligned loads, and, if so, do we need to worry about all
955 * of them, or just some of them, e.g. ARMv5?
956 * XXX - are those the only 68k tests we need not to generated
957 * unaligned accesses if the target is the 68000 or 68010?
958 * XXX - are there any tests we don't need, because some definitions are for
959 * compilers that also predefine the GCC symbols?
960 * XXX - do we need to test for both 32-bit and 64-bit versions of those
961 * architectures in all cases?
962 */
963 #else
964 /*
965 * The processor doesn't natively handle unaligned loads,
966 * and the compiler might "helpfully" optimize memcpy()
967 * and memcmp(), when handed pointers that would normally
968 * be properly aligned, into sequences that assume proper
969 * alignment.
970 *
971 * Do copies and compares of possibly-unaligned data by
972 * calling routines that wrap memcpy() and memcmp(), to
973 * prevent that optimization.
974 */
975 void
976 unaligned_memcpy(void *p, const void *q, size_t l)
977 {
978 memcpy(p, q, l);
979 }
980
981 /* As with memcpy(), so with memcmp(). */
982 int
983 unaligned_memcmp(const void *p, const void *q, size_t l)
984 {
985 return (memcmp(p, q, l));
986 }
987 #endif
988