1/*
2 *  pcap-linux.c: Packet capture interface to the Linux kernel
3 *
4 *  Copyright (c) 2000 Torsten Landschoff <torsten@debian.org>
5 *  		       Sebastian Krahmer  <krahmer@cs.uni-potsdam.de>
6 *
7 *  License: BSD
8 *
9 *  Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
10 *  modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
11 *  are met:
12 *
13 *  1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
14 *     notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
15 *  2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
16 *     notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in
17 *     the documentation and/or other materials provided with the
18 *     distribution.
19 *  3. The names of the authors may not be used to endorse or promote
20 *     products derived from this software without specific prior
21 *     written permission.
22 *
23 *  THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED ``AS IS'' AND WITHOUT ANY EXPRESS OR
24 *  IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, WITHOUT LIMITATION, THE IMPLIED
25 *  WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
26 *
27 *  Modifications:     Added PACKET_MMAP support
28 *                     Paolo Abeni <paolo.abeni@email.it>
29 *
30 *                     based on previous works of:
31 *                     Simon Patarin <patarin@cs.unibo.it>
32 *                     Phil Wood <cpw@lanl.gov>
33 *
34 * Monitor-mode support for mac80211 includes code taken from the iw
35 * command; the copyright notice for that code is
36 *
37 * Copyright (c) 2007, 2008	Johannes Berg
38 * Copyright (c) 2007		Andy Lutomirski
39 * Copyright (c) 2007		Mike Kershaw
40 * Copyright (c) 2008		G��bor Stefanik
41 *
42 * All rights reserved.
43 *
44 * Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
45 * modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
46 * are met:
47 * 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
48 *    notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
49 * 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
50 *    notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
51 *    documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
52 * 3. The name of the author may not be used to endorse or promote products
53 *    derived from this software without specific prior written permission.
54 *
55 * THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE AUTHOR ``AS IS'' AND ANY EXPRESS OR
56 * IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES
57 * OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED.
58 * IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT,
59 * INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING,
60 * BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES;
61 * LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED
62 * AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY,
63 * OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY
64 * OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF
65 * SUCH DAMAGE.
66 */
67
68#ifndef lint
69static const char rcsid[] _U_ =
70    "@(#) $Header: /tcpdump/master/libpcap/pcap-linux.c,v 1.164 2008-12-14 22:00:57 guy Exp $ (LBL)";
71#endif
72
73/*
74 * Known problems with 2.0[.x] kernels:
75 *
76 *   - The loopback device gives every packet twice; on 2.2[.x] kernels,
77 *     if we use PF_PACKET, we can filter out the transmitted version
78 *     of the packet by using data in the "sockaddr_ll" returned by
79 *     "recvfrom()", but, on 2.0[.x] kernels, we have to use
80 *     PF_INET/SOCK_PACKET, which means "recvfrom()" supplies a
81 *     "sockaddr_pkt" which doesn't give us enough information to let
82 *     us do that.
83 *
84 *   - We have to set the interface's IFF_PROMISC flag ourselves, if
85 *     we're to run in promiscuous mode, which means we have to turn
86 *     it off ourselves when we're done; the kernel doesn't keep track
87 *     of how many sockets are listening promiscuously, which means
88 *     it won't get turned off automatically when no sockets are
89 *     listening promiscuously.  We catch "pcap_close()" and, for
90 *     interfaces we put into promiscuous mode, take them out of
91 *     promiscuous mode - which isn't necessarily the right thing to
92 *     do, if another socket also requested promiscuous mode between
93 *     the time when we opened the socket and the time when we close
94 *     the socket.
95 *
96 *   - MSG_TRUNC isn't supported, so you can't specify that "recvfrom()"
97 *     return the amount of data that you could have read, rather than
98 *     the amount that was returned, so we can't just allocate a buffer
99 *     whose size is the snapshot length and pass the snapshot length
100 *     as the byte count, and also pass MSG_TRUNC, so that the return
101 *     value tells us how long the packet was on the wire.
102 *
103 *     This means that, if we want to get the actual size of the packet,
104 *     so we can return it in the "len" field of the packet header,
105 *     we have to read the entire packet, not just the part that fits
106 *     within the snapshot length, and thus waste CPU time copying data
107 *     from the kernel that our caller won't see.
108 *
109 *     We have to get the actual size, and supply it in "len", because
110 *     otherwise, the IP dissector in tcpdump, for example, will complain
111 *     about "truncated-ip", as the packet will appear to have been
112 *     shorter, on the wire, than the IP header said it should have been.
113 */
114
115
116#define _GNU_SOURCE
117
118#ifdef HAVE_CONFIG_H
119#include "config.h"
120#endif
121
122#include <errno.h>
123#include <stdio.h>
124#include <stdlib.h>
125#include <ctype.h>
126#include <unistd.h>
127#include <fcntl.h>
128#include <string.h>
129#include <limits.h>
130#include <sys/stat.h>
131#include <sys/socket.h>
132#include <sys/ioctl.h>
133#include <sys/utsname.h>
134#include <sys/mman.h>
135#include <linux/if.h>
136#include <linux/if_packet.h>
137#include <netinet/in.h>
138#include <linux/if_ether.h>
139#include <net/if_arp.h>
140#include <poll.h>
141#include <dirent.h>
142
143#include "pcap-int.h"
144#include "pcap/sll.h"
145#include "pcap/vlan.h"
146
147/*
148 * If PF_PACKET is defined, we can use {SOCK_RAW,SOCK_DGRAM}/PF_PACKET
149 * sockets rather than SOCK_PACKET sockets.
150 *
151 * To use them, we include <linux/if_packet.h> rather than
152 * <netpacket/packet.h>; we do so because
153 *
154 *	some Linux distributions (e.g., Slackware 4.0) have 2.2 or
155 *	later kernels and libc5, and don't provide a <netpacket/packet.h>
156 *	file;
157 *
158 *	not all versions of glibc2 have a <netpacket/packet.h> file
159 *	that defines stuff needed for some of the 2.4-or-later-kernel
160 *	features, so if the system has a 2.4 or later kernel, we
161 *	still can't use those features.
162 *
163 * We're already including a number of other <linux/XXX.h> headers, and
164 * this code is Linux-specific (no other OS has PF_PACKET sockets as
165 * a raw packet capture mechanism), so it's not as if you gain any
166 * useful portability by using <netpacket/packet.h>
167 *
168 * XXX - should we just include <linux/if_packet.h> even if PF_PACKET
169 * isn't defined?  It only defines one data structure in 2.0.x, so
170 * it shouldn't cause any problems.
171 */
172#ifdef PF_PACKET
173# include <linux/if_packet.h>
174
175 /*
176  * On at least some Linux distributions (for example, Red Hat 5.2),
177  * there's no <netpacket/packet.h> file, but PF_PACKET is defined if
178  * you include <sys/socket.h>, but <linux/if_packet.h> doesn't define
179  * any of the PF_PACKET stuff such as "struct sockaddr_ll" or any of
180  * the PACKET_xxx stuff.
181  *
182  * So we check whether PACKET_HOST is defined, and assume that we have
183  * PF_PACKET sockets only if it is defined.
184  */
185# ifdef PACKET_HOST
186#  define HAVE_PF_PACKET_SOCKETS
187#  ifdef PACKET_AUXDATA
188#   define HAVE_PACKET_AUXDATA
189#  endif /* PACKET_AUXDATA */
190# endif /* PACKET_HOST */
191
192
193 /* check for memory mapped access avaibility. We assume every needed
194  * struct is defined if the macro TPACKET_HDRLEN is defined, because it
195  * uses many ring related structs and macros */
196# ifdef TPACKET_HDRLEN
197#  define HAVE_PACKET_RING
198#  ifdef TPACKET2_HDRLEN
199#   define HAVE_TPACKET2
200#  else
201#   define TPACKET_V1	0
202#  endif /* TPACKET2_HDRLEN */
203# endif /* TPACKET_HDRLEN */
204#endif /* PF_PACKET */
205
206#ifdef SO_ATTACH_FILTER
207#include <linux/types.h>
208#include <linux/filter.h>
209#endif
210
211/*
212 * We need linux/sockios.h if we have linux/net_tstamp.h (for time stamp
213 * specification) or linux/ethtool.h (for ethtool ioctls to get offloading
214 * information).
215 */
216#if defined(HAVE_LINUX_NET_TSTAMP_H) || defined(HAVE_LINUX_ETHTOOL_H)
217#include <linux/sockios.h>
218#endif
219
220#ifdef HAVE_LINUX_NET_TSTAMP_H
221#include <linux/net_tstamp.h>
222#endif
223
224/*
225 * Got Wireless Extensions?
226 */
227#ifdef HAVE_LINUX_WIRELESS_H
228#include <linux/wireless.h>
229#endif /* HAVE_LINUX_WIRELESS_H */
230
231/*
232 * Got libnl?
233 */
234#ifdef HAVE_LIBNL
235#include <linux/nl80211.h>
236
237#include <netlink/genl/genl.h>
238#include <netlink/genl/family.h>
239#include <netlink/genl/ctrl.h>
240#include <netlink/msg.h>
241#include <netlink/attr.h>
242#endif /* HAVE_LIBNL */
243
244/*
245 * Got ethtool support?
246 */
247#ifdef HAVE_LINUX_ETHTOOL_H
248#include <linux/ethtool.h>
249#endif
250
251#ifndef HAVE_SOCKLEN_T
252typedef int		socklen_t;
253#endif
254
255#ifndef MSG_TRUNC
256/*
257 * This is being compiled on a system that lacks MSG_TRUNC; define it
258 * with the value it has in the 2.2 and later kernels, so that, on
259 * those kernels, when we pass it in the flags argument to "recvfrom()"
260 * we're passing the right value and thus get the MSG_TRUNC behavior
261 * we want.  (We don't get that behavior on 2.0[.x] kernels, because
262 * they didn't support MSG_TRUNC.)
263 */
264#define MSG_TRUNC	0x20
265#endif
266
267#ifndef SOL_PACKET
268/*
269 * This is being compiled on a system that lacks SOL_PACKET; define it
270 * with the value it has in the 2.2 and later kernels, so that we can
271 * set promiscuous mode in the good modern way rather than the old
272 * 2.0-kernel crappy way.
273 */
274#define SOL_PACKET	263
275#endif
276
277#define MAX_LINKHEADER_SIZE	256
278
279/*
280 * When capturing on all interfaces we use this as the buffer size.
281 * Should be bigger then all MTUs that occur in real life.
282 * 64kB should be enough for now.
283 */
284#define BIGGER_THAN_ALL_MTUS	(64*1024)
285
286/*
287 * Prototypes for internal functions and methods.
288 */
289static void map_arphrd_to_dlt(pcap_t *, int, int);
290#ifdef HAVE_PF_PACKET_SOCKETS
291static short int map_packet_type_to_sll_type(short int);
292#endif
293static int pcap_activate_linux(pcap_t *);
294static int activate_old(pcap_t *);
295static int activate_new(pcap_t *);
296static int activate_mmap(pcap_t *, int *);
297static int pcap_can_set_rfmon_linux(pcap_t *);
298static int pcap_read_linux(pcap_t *, int, pcap_handler, u_char *);
299static int pcap_read_packet(pcap_t *, pcap_handler, u_char *);
300static int pcap_inject_linux(pcap_t *, const void *, size_t);
301static int pcap_stats_linux(pcap_t *, struct pcap_stat *);
302static int pcap_setfilter_linux(pcap_t *, struct bpf_program *);
303static int pcap_setdirection_linux(pcap_t *, pcap_direction_t);
304static void pcap_cleanup_linux(pcap_t *);
305
306union thdr {
307	struct tpacket_hdr	*h1;
308	struct tpacket2_hdr	*h2;
309	void			*raw;
310};
311
312#ifdef HAVE_PACKET_RING
313#define RING_GET_FRAME(h) (((union thdr **)h->buffer)[h->offset])
314
315static void destroy_ring(pcap_t *handle);
316static int create_ring(pcap_t *handle, int *status);
317static int prepare_tpacket_socket(pcap_t *handle);
318static void pcap_cleanup_linux_mmap(pcap_t *);
319static int pcap_read_linux_mmap(pcap_t *, int, pcap_handler , u_char *);
320static int pcap_setfilter_linux_mmap(pcap_t *, struct bpf_program *);
321static int pcap_setnonblock_mmap(pcap_t *p, int nonblock, char *errbuf);
322static int pcap_getnonblock_mmap(pcap_t *p, char *errbuf);
323static void pcap_oneshot_mmap(u_char *user, const struct pcap_pkthdr *h,
324    const u_char *bytes);
325#endif
326
327/*
328 * Wrap some ioctl calls
329 */
330#ifdef HAVE_PF_PACKET_SOCKETS
331static int	iface_get_id(int fd, const char *device, char *ebuf);
332#endif /* HAVE_PF_PACKET_SOCKETS */
333static int	iface_get_mtu(int fd, const char *device, char *ebuf);
334static int 	iface_get_arptype(int fd, const char *device, char *ebuf);
335#ifdef HAVE_PF_PACKET_SOCKETS
336static int 	iface_bind(int fd, int ifindex, char *ebuf);
337#ifdef IW_MODE_MONITOR
338static int	has_wext(int sock_fd, const char *device, char *ebuf);
339#endif /* IW_MODE_MONITOR */
340static int	enter_rfmon_mode(pcap_t *handle, int sock_fd,
341    const char *device);
342#endif /* HAVE_PF_PACKET_SOCKETS */
343static int	iface_get_offload(pcap_t *handle);
344static int 	iface_bind_old(int fd, const char *device, char *ebuf);
345
346#ifdef SO_ATTACH_FILTER
347static int	fix_program(pcap_t *handle, struct sock_fprog *fcode,
348    int is_mapped);
349static int	fix_offset(struct bpf_insn *p);
350static int	set_kernel_filter(pcap_t *handle, struct sock_fprog *fcode);
351static int	reset_kernel_filter(pcap_t *handle);
352
353static struct sock_filter	total_insn
354	= BPF_STMT(BPF_RET | BPF_K, 0);
355static struct sock_fprog	total_fcode
356	= { 1, &total_insn };
357#endif /* SO_ATTACH_FILTER */
358
359pcap_t *
360pcap_create_interface(const char *device, char *ebuf)
361{
362	pcap_t *handle;
363
364	handle = pcap_create_common(device, ebuf);
365	if (handle == NULL)
366		return NULL;
367
368	handle->activate_op = pcap_activate_linux;
369	handle->can_set_rfmon_op = pcap_can_set_rfmon_linux;
370#if defined(HAVE_LINUX_NET_TSTAMP_H) && defined(PACKET_TIMESTAMP)
371	/*
372	 * We claim that we support:
373	 *
374	 *	software time stamps, with no details about their precision;
375	 *	hardware time stamps, synced to the host time;
376	 *	hardware time stamps, not synced to the host time.
377	 *
378	 * XXX - we can't ask a device whether it supports
379	 * hardware time stamps, so we just claim all devices do.
380	 */
381	handle->tstamp_type_count = 3;
382	handle->tstamp_type_list = malloc(3 * sizeof(u_int));
383	if (handle->tstamp_type_list == NULL) {
384		free(handle);
385		return NULL;
386	}
387	handle->tstamp_type_list[0] = PCAP_TSTAMP_HOST;
388	handle->tstamp_type_list[1] = PCAP_TSTAMP_ADAPTER;
389	handle->tstamp_type_list[2] = PCAP_TSTAMP_ADAPTER_UNSYNCED;
390#endif
391
392	return handle;
393}
394
395#ifdef HAVE_LIBNL
396/*
397 * If interface {if} is a mac80211 driver, the file
398 * /sys/class/net/{if}/phy80211 is a symlink to
399 * /sys/class/ieee80211/{phydev}, for some {phydev}.
400 *
401 * On Fedora 9, with a 2.6.26.3-29 kernel, my Zydas stick, at
402 * least, has a "wmaster0" device and a "wlan0" device; the
403 * latter is the one with the IP address.  Both show up in
404 * "tcpdump -D" output.  Capturing on the wmaster0 device
405 * captures with 802.11 headers.
406 *
407 * airmon-ng searches through /sys/class/net for devices named
408 * monN, starting with mon0; as soon as one *doesn't* exist,
409 * it chooses that as the monitor device name.  If the "iw"
410 * command exists, it does "iw dev {if} interface add {monif}
411 * type monitor", where {monif} is the monitor device.  It
412 * then (sigh) sleeps .1 second, and then configures the
413 * device up.  Otherwise, if /sys/class/ieee80211/{phydev}/add_iface
414 * is a file, it writes {mondev}, without a newline, to that file,
415 * and again (sigh) sleeps .1 second, and then iwconfig's that
416 * device into monitor mode and configures it up.  Otherwise,
417 * you can't do monitor mode.
418 *
419 * All these devices are "glued" together by having the
420 * /sys/class/net/{device}/phy80211 links pointing to the same
421 * place, so, given a wmaster, wlan, or mon device, you can
422 * find the other devices by looking for devices with
423 * the same phy80211 link.
424 *
425 * To turn monitor mode off, delete the monitor interface,
426 * either with "iw dev {monif} interface del" or by sending
427 * {monif}, with no NL, down /sys/class/ieee80211/{phydev}/remove_iface
428 *
429 * Note: if you try to create a monitor device named "monN", and
430 * there's already a "monN" device, it fails, as least with
431 * the netlink interface (which is what iw uses), with a return
432 * value of -ENFILE.  (Return values are negative errnos.)  We
433 * could probably use that to find an unused device.
434 *
435 * Yes, you can have multiple monitor devices for a given
436 * physical device.
437*/
438
439/*
440 * Is this a mac80211 device?  If so, fill in the physical device path and
441 * return 1; if not, return 0.  On an error, fill in handle->errbuf and
442 * return PCAP_ERROR.
443 */
444static int
445get_mac80211_phydev(pcap_t *handle, const char *device, char *phydev_path,
446    size_t phydev_max_pathlen)
447{
448	char *pathstr;
449	ssize_t bytes_read;
450
451	/*
452	 * Generate the path string for the symlink to the physical device.
453	 */
454	if (asprintf(&pathstr, "/sys/class/net/%s/phy80211", device) == -1) {
455		snprintf(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
456		    "%s: Can't generate path name string for /sys/class/net device",
457		    device);
458		return PCAP_ERROR;
459	}
460	bytes_read = readlink(pathstr, phydev_path, phydev_max_pathlen);
461	if (bytes_read == -1) {
462		if (errno == ENOENT || errno == EINVAL) {
463			/*
464			 * Doesn't exist, or not a symlink; assume that
465			 * means it's not a mac80211 device.
466			 */
467			free(pathstr);
468			return 0;
469		}
470		snprintf(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
471		    "%s: Can't readlink %s: %s", device, pathstr,
472		    strerror(errno));
473		free(pathstr);
474		return PCAP_ERROR;
475	}
476	free(pathstr);
477	phydev_path[bytes_read] = '\0';
478	return 1;
479}
480
481#ifdef HAVE_LIBNL_SOCKETS
482#define get_nl_errmsg	nl_geterror
483#else
484/* libnl 2.x compatibility code */
485
486#define nl_sock nl_handle
487
488static inline struct nl_handle *
489nl_socket_alloc(void)
490{
491	return nl_handle_alloc();
492}
493
494static inline void
495nl_socket_free(struct nl_handle *h)
496{
497	nl_handle_destroy(h);
498}
499
500#define get_nl_errmsg	strerror
501
502static inline int
503__genl_ctrl_alloc_cache(struct nl_handle *h, struct nl_cache **cache)
504{
505	struct nl_cache *tmp = genl_ctrl_alloc_cache(h);
506	if (!tmp)
507		return -ENOMEM;
508	*cache = tmp;
509	return 0;
510}
511#define genl_ctrl_alloc_cache __genl_ctrl_alloc_cache
512#endif /* !HAVE_LIBNL_SOCKETS */
513
514struct nl80211_state {
515	struct nl_sock *nl_sock;
516	struct nl_cache *nl_cache;
517	struct genl_family *nl80211;
518};
519
520static int
521nl80211_init(pcap_t *handle, struct nl80211_state *state, const char *device)
522{
523	int err;
524
525	state->nl_sock = nl_socket_alloc();
526	if (!state->nl_sock) {
527		snprintf(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
528		    "%s: failed to allocate netlink handle", device);
529		return PCAP_ERROR;
530	}
531
532	if (genl_connect(state->nl_sock)) {
533		snprintf(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
534		    "%s: failed to connect to generic netlink", device);
535		goto out_handle_destroy;
536	}
537
538	err = genl_ctrl_alloc_cache(state->nl_sock, &state->nl_cache);
539	if (err < 0) {
540		snprintf(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
541		    "%s: failed to allocate generic netlink cache: %s",
542		    device, get_nl_errmsg(-err));
543		goto out_handle_destroy;
544	}
545
546	state->nl80211 = genl_ctrl_search_by_name(state->nl_cache, "nl80211");
547	if (!state->nl80211) {
548		snprintf(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
549		    "%s: nl80211 not found", device);
550		goto out_cache_free;
551	}
552
553	return 0;
554
555out_cache_free:
556	nl_cache_free(state->nl_cache);
557out_handle_destroy:
558	nl_socket_free(state->nl_sock);
559	return PCAP_ERROR;
560}
561
562static void
563nl80211_cleanup(struct nl80211_state *state)
564{
565	genl_family_put(state->nl80211);
566	nl_cache_free(state->nl_cache);
567	nl_socket_free(state->nl_sock);
568}
569
570static int
571add_mon_if(pcap_t *handle, int sock_fd, struct nl80211_state *state,
572    const char *device, const char *mondevice)
573{
574	int ifindex;
575	struct nl_msg *msg;
576	int err;
577
578	ifindex = iface_get_id(sock_fd, device, handle->errbuf);
579	if (ifindex == -1)
580		return PCAP_ERROR;
581
582	msg = nlmsg_alloc();
583	if (!msg) {
584		snprintf(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
585		    "%s: failed to allocate netlink msg", device);
586		return PCAP_ERROR;
587	}
588
589	genlmsg_put(msg, 0, 0, genl_family_get_id(state->nl80211), 0,
590		    0, NL80211_CMD_NEW_INTERFACE, 0);
591	NLA_PUT_U32(msg, NL80211_ATTR_IFINDEX, ifindex);
592	NLA_PUT_STRING(msg, NL80211_ATTR_IFNAME, mondevice);
593	NLA_PUT_U32(msg, NL80211_ATTR_IFTYPE, NL80211_IFTYPE_MONITOR);
594
595	err = nl_send_auto_complete(state->nl_sock, msg);
596	if (err < 0) {
597#if defined HAVE_LIBNL_NLE
598		if (err == -NLE_FAILURE) {
599#else
600		if (err == -ENFILE) {
601#endif
602			/*
603			 * Device not available; our caller should just
604			 * keep trying.  (libnl 2.x maps ENFILE to
605			 * NLE_FAILURE; it can also map other errors
606			 * to that, but there's not much we can do
607			 * about that.)
608			 */
609			nlmsg_free(msg);
610			return 0;
611		} else {
612			/*
613			 * Real failure, not just "that device is not
614			 * available.
615			 */
616			snprintf(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
617			    "%s: nl_send_auto_complete failed adding %s interface: %s",
618			    device, mondevice, get_nl_errmsg(-err));
619			nlmsg_free(msg);
620			return PCAP_ERROR;
621		}
622	}
623	err = nl_wait_for_ack(state->nl_sock);
624	if (err < 0) {
625#if defined HAVE_LIBNL_NLE
626		if (err == -NLE_FAILURE) {
627#else
628		if (err == -ENFILE) {
629#endif
630			/*
631			 * Device not available; our caller should just
632			 * keep trying.  (libnl 2.x maps ENFILE to
633			 * NLE_FAILURE; it can also map other errors
634			 * to that, but there's not much we can do
635			 * about that.)
636			 */
637			nlmsg_free(msg);
638			return 0;
639		} else {
640			/*
641			 * Real failure, not just "that device is not
642			 * available.
643			 */
644			snprintf(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
645			    "%s: nl_wait_for_ack failed adding %s interface: %s",
646			    device, mondevice, get_nl_errmsg(-err));
647			nlmsg_free(msg);
648			return PCAP_ERROR;
649		}
650	}
651
652	/*
653	 * Success.
654	 */
655	nlmsg_free(msg);
656	return 1;
657
658nla_put_failure:
659	snprintf(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
660	    "%s: nl_put failed adding %s interface",
661	    device, mondevice);
662	nlmsg_free(msg);
663	return PCAP_ERROR;
664}
665
666static int
667del_mon_if(pcap_t *handle, int sock_fd, struct nl80211_state *state,
668    const char *device, const char *mondevice)
669{
670	int ifindex;
671	struct nl_msg *msg;
672	int err;
673
674	ifindex = iface_get_id(sock_fd, mondevice, handle->errbuf);
675	if (ifindex == -1)
676		return PCAP_ERROR;
677
678	msg = nlmsg_alloc();
679	if (!msg) {
680		snprintf(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
681		    "%s: failed to allocate netlink msg", device);
682		return PCAP_ERROR;
683	}
684
685	genlmsg_put(msg, 0, 0, genl_family_get_id(state->nl80211), 0,
686		    0, NL80211_CMD_DEL_INTERFACE, 0);
687	NLA_PUT_U32(msg, NL80211_ATTR_IFINDEX, ifindex);
688
689	err = nl_send_auto_complete(state->nl_sock, msg);
690	if (err < 0) {
691		snprintf(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
692		    "%s: nl_send_auto_complete failed deleting %s interface: %s",
693		    device, mondevice, get_nl_errmsg(-err));
694		nlmsg_free(msg);
695		return PCAP_ERROR;
696	}
697	err = nl_wait_for_ack(state->nl_sock);
698	if (err < 0) {
699		snprintf(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
700		    "%s: nl_wait_for_ack failed adding %s interface: %s",
701		    device, mondevice, get_nl_errmsg(-err));
702		nlmsg_free(msg);
703		return PCAP_ERROR;
704	}
705
706	/*
707	 * Success.
708	 */
709	nlmsg_free(msg);
710	return 1;
711
712nla_put_failure:
713	snprintf(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
714	    "%s: nl_put failed deleting %s interface",
715	    device, mondevice);
716	nlmsg_free(msg);
717	return PCAP_ERROR;
718}
719
720static int
721enter_rfmon_mode_mac80211(pcap_t *handle, int sock_fd, const char *device)
722{
723	int ret;
724	char phydev_path[PATH_MAX+1];
725	struct nl80211_state nlstate;
726	struct ifreq ifr;
727	u_int n;
728
729	/*
730	 * Is this a mac80211 device?
731	 */
732	ret = get_mac80211_phydev(handle, device, phydev_path, PATH_MAX);
733	if (ret < 0)
734		return ret;	/* error */
735	if (ret == 0)
736		return 0;	/* no error, but not mac80211 device */
737
738	/*
739	 * XXX - is this already a monN device?
740	 * If so, we're done.
741	 * Is that determined by old Wireless Extensions ioctls?
742	 */
743
744	/*
745	 * OK, it's apparently a mac80211 device.
746	 * Try to find an unused monN device for it.
747	 */
748	ret = nl80211_init(handle, &nlstate, device);
749	if (ret != 0)
750		return ret;
751	for (n = 0; n < UINT_MAX; n++) {
752		/*
753		 * Try mon{n}.
754		 */
755		char mondevice[3+10+1];	/* mon{UINT_MAX}\0 */
756
757		snprintf(mondevice, sizeof mondevice, "mon%u", n);
758		ret = add_mon_if(handle, sock_fd, &nlstate, device, mondevice);
759		if (ret == 1) {
760			handle->md.mondevice = strdup(mondevice);
761			goto added;
762		}
763		if (ret < 0) {
764			/*
765			 * Hard failure.  Just return ret; handle->errbuf
766			 * has already been set.
767			 */
768			nl80211_cleanup(&nlstate);
769			return ret;
770		}
771	}
772
773	snprintf(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
774	    "%s: No free monN interfaces", device);
775	nl80211_cleanup(&nlstate);
776	return PCAP_ERROR;
777
778added:
779
780#if 0
781	/*
782	 * Sleep for .1 seconds.
783	 */
784	delay.tv_sec = 0;
785	delay.tv_nsec = 500000000;
786	nanosleep(&delay, NULL);
787#endif
788
789	/*
790	 * If we haven't already done so, arrange to have
791	 * "pcap_close_all()" called when we exit.
792	 */
793	if (!pcap_do_addexit(handle)) {
794		/*
795		 * "atexit()" failed; don't put the interface
796		 * in rfmon mode, just give up.
797		 */
798		return PCAP_ERROR_RFMON_NOTSUP;
799	}
800
801	/*
802	 * Now configure the monitor interface up.
803	 */
804	memset(&ifr, 0, sizeof(ifr));
805	strncpy(ifr.ifr_name, handle->md.mondevice, sizeof(ifr.ifr_name));
806	if (ioctl(sock_fd, SIOCGIFFLAGS, &ifr) == -1) {
807		snprintf(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
808		    "%s: Can't get flags for %s: %s", device,
809		    handle->md.mondevice, strerror(errno));
810		del_mon_if(handle, sock_fd, &nlstate, device,
811		    handle->md.mondevice);
812		nl80211_cleanup(&nlstate);
813		return PCAP_ERROR;
814	}
815	ifr.ifr_flags |= IFF_UP|IFF_RUNNING;
816	if (ioctl(sock_fd, SIOCSIFFLAGS, &ifr) == -1) {
817		snprintf(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
818		    "%s: Can't set flags for %s: %s", device,
819		    handle->md.mondevice, strerror(errno));
820		del_mon_if(handle, sock_fd, &nlstate, device,
821		    handle->md.mondevice);
822		nl80211_cleanup(&nlstate);
823		return PCAP_ERROR;
824	}
825
826	/*
827	 * Success.  Clean up the libnl state.
828	 */
829	nl80211_cleanup(&nlstate);
830
831	/*
832	 * Note that we have to delete the monitor device when we close
833	 * the handle.
834	 */
835	handle->md.must_do_on_close |= MUST_DELETE_MONIF;
836
837	/*
838	 * Add this to the list of pcaps to close when we exit.
839	 */
840	pcap_add_to_pcaps_to_close(handle);
841
842	return 1;
843}
844#endif /* HAVE_LIBNL */
845
846static int
847pcap_can_set_rfmon_linux(pcap_t *handle)
848{
849#ifdef HAVE_LIBNL
850	char phydev_path[PATH_MAX+1];
851	int ret;
852#endif
853#ifdef IW_MODE_MONITOR
854	int sock_fd;
855	struct iwreq ireq;
856#endif
857
858	if (strcmp(handle->opt.source, "any") == 0) {
859		/*
860		 * Monitor mode makes no sense on the "any" device.
861		 */
862		return 0;
863	}
864
865#ifdef HAVE_LIBNL
866	/*
867	 * Bleah.  There doesn't seem to be a way to ask a mac80211
868	 * device, through libnl, whether it supports monitor mode;
869	 * we'll just check whether the device appears to be a
870	 * mac80211 device and, if so, assume the device supports
871	 * monitor mode.
872	 *
873	 * wmaster devices don't appear to support the Wireless
874	 * Extensions, but we can create a mon device for a
875	 * wmaster device, so we don't bother checking whether
876	 * a mac80211 device supports the Wireless Extensions.
877	 */
878	ret = get_mac80211_phydev(handle, handle->opt.source, phydev_path,
879	    PATH_MAX);
880	if (ret < 0)
881		return ret;	/* error */
882	if (ret == 1)
883		return 1;	/* mac80211 device */
884#endif
885
886#ifdef IW_MODE_MONITOR
887	/*
888	 * Bleah.  There doesn't appear to be an ioctl to use to ask
889	 * whether a device supports monitor mode; we'll just do
890	 * SIOCGIWMODE and, if it succeeds, assume the device supports
891	 * monitor mode.
892	 *
893	 * Open a socket on which to attempt to get the mode.
894	 * (We assume that if we have Wireless Extensions support
895	 * we also have PF_PACKET support.)
896	 */
897	sock_fd = socket(PF_PACKET, SOCK_RAW, htons(ETH_P_ALL));
898	if (sock_fd == -1) {
899		(void)snprintf(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
900		    "socket: %s", pcap_strerror(errno));
901		return PCAP_ERROR;
902	}
903
904	/*
905	 * Attempt to get the current mode.
906	 */
907	strncpy(ireq.ifr_ifrn.ifrn_name, handle->opt.source,
908	    sizeof ireq.ifr_ifrn.ifrn_name);
909	ireq.ifr_ifrn.ifrn_name[sizeof ireq.ifr_ifrn.ifrn_name - 1] = 0;
910	if (ioctl(sock_fd, SIOCGIWMODE, &ireq) != -1) {
911		/*
912		 * Well, we got the mode; assume we can set it.
913		 */
914		close(sock_fd);
915		return 1;
916	}
917	if (errno == ENODEV) {
918		/* The device doesn't even exist. */
919		(void)snprintf(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
920		    "SIOCGIWMODE failed: %s", pcap_strerror(errno));
921		close(sock_fd);
922		return PCAP_ERROR_NO_SUCH_DEVICE;
923	}
924	close(sock_fd);
925#endif
926	return 0;
927}
928
929/*
930 * Grabs the number of dropped packets by the interface from /proc/net/dev.
931 *
932 * XXX - what about /sys/class/net/{interface name}/rx_*?  There are
933 * individual devices giving, in ASCII, various rx_ and tx_ statistics.
934 *
935 * Or can we get them in binary form from netlink?
936 */
937static long int
938linux_if_drops(const char * if_name)
939{
940	char buffer[512];
941	char * bufptr;
942	FILE * file;
943	int field_to_convert = 3, if_name_sz = strlen(if_name);
944	long int dropped_pkts = 0;
945
946	file = fopen("/proc/net/dev", "r");
947	if (!file)
948		return 0;
949
950	while (!dropped_pkts && fgets( buffer, sizeof(buffer), file ))
951	{
952		/* 	search for 'bytes' -- if its in there, then
953			that means we need to grab the fourth field. otherwise
954			grab the third field. */
955		if (field_to_convert != 4 && strstr(buffer, "bytes"))
956		{
957			field_to_convert = 4;
958			continue;
959		}
960
961		/* find iface and make sure it actually matches -- space before the name and : after it */
962		if ((bufptr = strstr(buffer, if_name)) &&
963			(bufptr == buffer || *(bufptr-1) == ' ') &&
964			*(bufptr + if_name_sz) == ':')
965		{
966			bufptr = bufptr + if_name_sz + 1;
967
968			/* grab the nth field from it */
969			while( --field_to_convert && *bufptr != '\0')
970			{
971				while (*bufptr != '\0' && *(bufptr++) == ' ');
972				while (*bufptr != '\0' && *(bufptr++) != ' ');
973			}
974
975			/* get rid of any final spaces */
976			while (*bufptr != '\0' && *bufptr == ' ') bufptr++;
977
978			if (*bufptr != '\0')
979				dropped_pkts = strtol(bufptr, NULL, 10);
980
981			break;
982		}
983	}
984
985	fclose(file);
986	return dropped_pkts;
987}
988
989
990/*
991 * With older kernels promiscuous mode is kind of interesting because we
992 * have to reset the interface before exiting. The problem can't really
993 * be solved without some daemon taking care of managing usage counts.
994 * If we put the interface into promiscuous mode, we set a flag indicating
995 * that we must take it out of that mode when the interface is closed,
996 * and, when closing the interface, if that flag is set we take it out
997 * of promiscuous mode.
998 *
999 * Even with newer kernels, we have the same issue with rfmon mode.
1000 */
1001
1002static void	pcap_cleanup_linux( pcap_t *handle )
1003{
1004	struct ifreq	ifr;
1005#ifdef HAVE_LIBNL
1006	struct nl80211_state nlstate;
1007	int ret;
1008#endif /* HAVE_LIBNL */
1009#ifdef IW_MODE_MONITOR
1010	int oldflags;
1011	struct iwreq ireq;
1012#endif /* IW_MODE_MONITOR */
1013
1014	if (handle->md.must_do_on_close != 0) {
1015		/*
1016		 * There's something we have to do when closing this
1017		 * pcap_t.
1018		 */
1019		if (handle->md.must_do_on_close & MUST_CLEAR_PROMISC) {
1020			/*
1021			 * We put the interface into promiscuous mode;
1022			 * take it out of promiscuous mode.
1023			 *
1024			 * XXX - if somebody else wants it in promiscuous
1025			 * mode, this code cannot know that, so it'll take
1026			 * it out of promiscuous mode.  That's not fixable
1027			 * in 2.0[.x] kernels.
1028			 */
1029			memset(&ifr, 0, sizeof(ifr));
1030			strncpy(ifr.ifr_name, handle->md.device,
1031			    sizeof(ifr.ifr_name));
1032			if (ioctl(handle->fd, SIOCGIFFLAGS, &ifr) == -1) {
1033				fprintf(stderr,
1034				    "Can't restore interface %s flags (SIOCGIFFLAGS failed: %s).\n"
1035				    "Please adjust manually.\n"
1036				    "Hint: This can't happen with Linux >= 2.2.0.\n",
1037				    handle->md.device, strerror(errno));
1038			} else {
1039				if (ifr.ifr_flags & IFF_PROMISC) {
1040					/*
1041					 * Promiscuous mode is currently on;
1042					 * turn it off.
1043					 */
1044					ifr.ifr_flags &= ~IFF_PROMISC;
1045					if (ioctl(handle->fd, SIOCSIFFLAGS,
1046					    &ifr) == -1) {
1047						fprintf(stderr,
1048						    "Can't restore interface %s flags (SIOCSIFFLAGS failed: %s).\n"
1049						    "Please adjust manually.\n"
1050						    "Hint: This can't happen with Linux >= 2.2.0.\n",
1051						    handle->md.device,
1052						    strerror(errno));
1053					}
1054				}
1055			}
1056		}
1057
1058#ifdef HAVE_LIBNL
1059		if (handle->md.must_do_on_close & MUST_DELETE_MONIF) {
1060			ret = nl80211_init(handle, &nlstate, handle->md.device);
1061			if (ret >= 0) {
1062				ret = del_mon_if(handle, handle->fd, &nlstate,
1063				    handle->md.device, handle->md.mondevice);
1064				nl80211_cleanup(&nlstate);
1065			}
1066			if (ret < 0) {
1067				fprintf(stderr,
1068				    "Can't delete monitor interface %s (%s).\n"
1069				    "Please delete manually.\n",
1070				    handle->md.mondevice, handle->errbuf);
1071			}
1072		}
1073#endif /* HAVE_LIBNL */
1074
1075#ifdef IW_MODE_MONITOR
1076		if (handle->md.must_do_on_close & MUST_CLEAR_RFMON) {
1077			/*
1078			 * We put the interface into rfmon mode;
1079			 * take it out of rfmon mode.
1080			 *
1081			 * XXX - if somebody else wants it in rfmon
1082			 * mode, this code cannot know that, so it'll take
1083			 * it out of rfmon mode.
1084			 */
1085
1086			/*
1087			 * First, take the interface down if it's up;
1088			 * otherwise, we might get EBUSY.
1089			 * If we get errors, just drive on and print
1090			 * a warning if we can't restore the mode.
1091			 */
1092			oldflags = 0;
1093			memset(&ifr, 0, sizeof(ifr));
1094			strncpy(ifr.ifr_name, handle->md.device,
1095			    sizeof(ifr.ifr_name));
1096			if (ioctl(handle->fd, SIOCGIFFLAGS, &ifr) != -1) {
1097				if (ifr.ifr_flags & IFF_UP) {
1098					oldflags = ifr.ifr_flags;
1099					ifr.ifr_flags &= ~IFF_UP;
1100					if (ioctl(handle->fd, SIOCSIFFLAGS, &ifr) == -1)
1101						oldflags = 0;	/* didn't set, don't restore */
1102				}
1103			}
1104
1105			/*
1106			 * Now restore the mode.
1107			 */
1108			strncpy(ireq.ifr_ifrn.ifrn_name, handle->md.device,
1109			    sizeof ireq.ifr_ifrn.ifrn_name);
1110			ireq.ifr_ifrn.ifrn_name[sizeof ireq.ifr_ifrn.ifrn_name - 1]
1111			    = 0;
1112			ireq.u.mode = handle->md.oldmode;
1113			if (ioctl(handle->fd, SIOCSIWMODE, &ireq) == -1) {
1114				/*
1115				 * Scientist, you've failed.
1116				 */
1117				fprintf(stderr,
1118				    "Can't restore interface %s wireless mode (SIOCSIWMODE failed: %s).\n"
1119				    "Please adjust manually.\n",
1120				    handle->md.device, strerror(errno));
1121			}
1122
1123			/*
1124			 * Now bring the interface back up if we brought
1125			 * it down.
1126			 */
1127			if (oldflags != 0) {
1128				ifr.ifr_flags = oldflags;
1129				if (ioctl(handle->fd, SIOCSIFFLAGS, &ifr) == -1) {
1130					fprintf(stderr,
1131					    "Can't bring interface %s back up (SIOCSIFFLAGS failed: %s).\n"
1132					    "Please adjust manually.\n",
1133					    handle->md.device, strerror(errno));
1134				}
1135			}
1136		}
1137#endif /* IW_MODE_MONITOR */
1138
1139		/*
1140		 * Take this pcap out of the list of pcaps for which we
1141		 * have to take the interface out of some mode.
1142		 */
1143		pcap_remove_from_pcaps_to_close(handle);
1144	}
1145
1146	if (handle->md.mondevice != NULL) {
1147		free(handle->md.mondevice);
1148		handle->md.mondevice = NULL;
1149	}
1150	if (handle->md.device != NULL) {
1151		free(handle->md.device);
1152		handle->md.device = NULL;
1153	}
1154	pcap_cleanup_live_common(handle);
1155}
1156
1157/*
1158 *  Get a handle for a live capture from the given device. You can
1159 *  pass NULL as device to get all packages (without link level
1160 *  information of course). If you pass 1 as promisc the interface
1161 *  will be set to promiscous mode (XXX: I think this usage should
1162 *  be deprecated and functions be added to select that later allow
1163 *  modification of that values -- Torsten).
1164 */
1165static int
1166pcap_activate_linux(pcap_t *handle)
1167{
1168	const char	*device;
1169	int		status = 0;
1170
1171	device = handle->opt.source;
1172
1173	handle->inject_op = pcap_inject_linux;
1174	handle->setfilter_op = pcap_setfilter_linux;
1175	handle->setdirection_op = pcap_setdirection_linux;
1176	handle->set_datalink_op = NULL;	/* can't change data link type */
1177	handle->getnonblock_op = pcap_getnonblock_fd;
1178	handle->setnonblock_op = pcap_setnonblock_fd;
1179	handle->cleanup_op = pcap_cleanup_linux;
1180	handle->read_op = pcap_read_linux;
1181	handle->stats_op = pcap_stats_linux;
1182
1183	/*
1184	 * The "any" device is a special device which causes us not
1185	 * to bind to a particular device and thus to look at all
1186	 * devices.
1187	 */
1188	if (strcmp(device, "any") == 0) {
1189		if (handle->opt.promisc) {
1190			handle->opt.promisc = 0;
1191			/* Just a warning. */
1192			snprintf(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
1193			    "Promiscuous mode not supported on the \"any\" device");
1194			status = PCAP_WARNING_PROMISC_NOTSUP;
1195		}
1196	}
1197
1198	handle->md.device	= strdup(device);
1199	if (handle->md.device == NULL) {
1200		snprintf(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE, "strdup: %s",
1201			 pcap_strerror(errno) );
1202		return PCAP_ERROR;
1203	}
1204
1205	/*
1206	 * If we're in promiscuous mode, then we probably want
1207	 * to see when the interface drops packets too, so get an
1208	 * initial count from /proc/net/dev
1209	 */
1210	if (handle->opt.promisc)
1211		handle->md.proc_dropped = linux_if_drops(handle->md.device);
1212
1213	/*
1214	 * Current Linux kernels use the protocol family PF_PACKET to
1215	 * allow direct access to all packets on the network while
1216	 * older kernels had a special socket type SOCK_PACKET to
1217	 * implement this feature.
1218	 * While this old implementation is kind of obsolete we need
1219	 * to be compatible with older kernels for a while so we are
1220	 * trying both methods with the newer method preferred.
1221	 */
1222	status = activate_new(handle);
1223	if (status < 0) {
1224		/*
1225		 * Fatal error with the new way; just fail.
1226		 * status has the error return; if it's PCAP_ERROR,
1227		 * handle->errbuf has been set appropriately.
1228		 */
1229		goto fail;
1230	}
1231	if (status == 1) {
1232		/*
1233		 * Success.
1234		 * Try to use memory-mapped access.
1235		 */
1236		switch (activate_mmap(handle, &status)) {
1237
1238		case 1:
1239			/*
1240			 * We succeeded.  status has been
1241			 * set to the status to return,
1242			 * which might be 0, or might be
1243			 * a PCAP_WARNING_ value.
1244			 */
1245			return status;
1246
1247		case 0:
1248			/*
1249			 * Kernel doesn't support it - just continue
1250			 * with non-memory-mapped access.
1251			 */
1252			break;
1253
1254		case -1:
1255			/*
1256			 * We failed to set up to use it, or the kernel
1257			 * supports it, but we failed to enable it.
1258			 * status has been set to the error status to
1259			 * return and, if it's PCAP_ERROR, handle->errbuf
1260			 * contains the error message.
1261			 */
1262			goto fail;
1263		}
1264	}
1265	else if (status == 0) {
1266		/* Non-fatal error; try old way */
1267		if ((status = activate_old(handle)) != 1) {
1268			/*
1269			 * Both methods to open the packet socket failed.
1270			 * Tidy up and report our failure (handle->errbuf
1271			 * is expected to be set by the functions above).
1272			 */
1273			goto fail;
1274		}
1275	}
1276
1277	/*
1278	 * We set up the socket, but not with memory-mapped access.
1279	 */
1280	status = 0;
1281	if (handle->opt.buffer_size != 0) {
1282		/*
1283		 * Set the socket buffer size to the specified value.
1284		 */
1285		if (setsockopt(handle->fd, SOL_SOCKET, SO_RCVBUF,
1286		    &handle->opt.buffer_size,
1287		    sizeof(handle->opt.buffer_size)) == -1) {
1288			snprintf(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
1289				 "SO_RCVBUF: %s", pcap_strerror(errno));
1290			status = PCAP_ERROR;
1291			goto fail;
1292		}
1293	}
1294
1295	/* Allocate the buffer */
1296
1297	handle->buffer	 = malloc(handle->bufsize + handle->offset);
1298	if (!handle->buffer) {
1299		snprintf(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
1300			 "malloc: %s", pcap_strerror(errno));
1301		status = PCAP_ERROR;
1302		goto fail;
1303	}
1304
1305	/*
1306	 * "handle->fd" is a socket, so "select()" and "poll()"
1307	 * should work on it.
1308	 */
1309	handle->selectable_fd = handle->fd;
1310
1311	return status;
1312
1313fail:
1314	pcap_cleanup_linux(handle);
1315	return status;
1316}
1317
1318/*
1319 *  Read at most max_packets from the capture stream and call the callback
1320 *  for each of them. Returns the number of packets handled or -1 if an
1321 *  error occured.
1322 */
1323static int
1324pcap_read_linux(pcap_t *handle, int max_packets, pcap_handler callback, u_char *user)
1325{
1326	/*
1327	 * Currently, on Linux only one packet is delivered per read,
1328	 * so we don't loop.
1329	 */
1330	return pcap_read_packet(handle, callback, user);
1331}
1332
1333/*
1334 *  Read a packet from the socket calling the handler provided by
1335 *  the user. Returns the number of packets received or -1 if an
1336 *  error occured.
1337 */
1338static int
1339pcap_read_packet(pcap_t *handle, pcap_handler callback, u_char *userdata)
1340{
1341	u_char			*bp;
1342	int			offset;
1343#ifdef HAVE_PF_PACKET_SOCKETS
1344	struct sockaddr_ll	from;
1345	struct sll_header	*hdrp;
1346#else
1347	struct sockaddr		from;
1348#endif
1349#if defined(HAVE_PACKET_AUXDATA) && defined(HAVE_LINUX_TPACKET_AUXDATA_TP_VLAN_TCI)
1350	struct iovec		iov;
1351	struct msghdr		msg;
1352	struct cmsghdr		*cmsg;
1353	union {
1354		struct cmsghdr	cmsg;
1355		char		buf[CMSG_SPACE(sizeof(struct tpacket_auxdata))];
1356	} cmsg_buf;
1357#else /* defined(HAVE_PACKET_AUXDATA) && defined(HAVE_LINUX_TPACKET_AUXDATA_TP_VLAN_TCI) */
1358	socklen_t		fromlen;
1359#endif /* defined(HAVE_PACKET_AUXDATA) && defined(HAVE_LINUX_TPACKET_AUXDATA_TP_VLAN_TCI) */
1360	int			packet_len, caplen;
1361	struct pcap_pkthdr	pcap_header;
1362
1363#ifdef HAVE_PF_PACKET_SOCKETS
1364	/*
1365	 * If this is a cooked device, leave extra room for a
1366	 * fake packet header.
1367	 */
1368	if (handle->md.cooked)
1369		offset = SLL_HDR_LEN;
1370	else
1371		offset = 0;
1372#else
1373	/*
1374	 * This system doesn't have PF_PACKET sockets, so it doesn't
1375	 * support cooked devices.
1376	 */
1377	offset = 0;
1378#endif
1379
1380	/*
1381	 * Receive a single packet from the kernel.
1382	 * We ignore EINTR, as that might just be due to a signal
1383	 * being delivered - if the signal should interrupt the
1384	 * loop, the signal handler should call pcap_breakloop()
1385	 * to set handle->break_loop (we ignore it on other
1386	 * platforms as well).
1387	 * We also ignore ENETDOWN, so that we can continue to
1388	 * capture traffic if the interface goes down and comes
1389	 * back up again; comments in the kernel indicate that
1390	 * we'll just block waiting for packets if we try to
1391	 * receive from a socket that delivered ENETDOWN, and,
1392	 * if we're using a memory-mapped buffer, we won't even
1393	 * get notified of "network down" events.
1394	 */
1395	bp = handle->buffer + handle->offset;
1396
1397#if defined(HAVE_PACKET_AUXDATA) && defined(HAVE_LINUX_TPACKET_AUXDATA_TP_VLAN_TCI)
1398	msg.msg_name		= &from;
1399	msg.msg_namelen		= sizeof(from);
1400	msg.msg_iov		= &iov;
1401	msg.msg_iovlen		= 1;
1402	msg.msg_control		= &cmsg_buf;
1403	msg.msg_controllen	= sizeof(cmsg_buf);
1404	msg.msg_flags		= 0;
1405
1406	iov.iov_len		= handle->bufsize - offset;
1407	iov.iov_base		= bp + offset;
1408#endif /* defined(HAVE_PACKET_AUXDATA) && defined(HAVE_LINUX_TPACKET_AUXDATA_TP_VLAN_TCI) */
1409
1410	do {
1411		/*
1412		 * Has "pcap_breakloop()" been called?
1413		 */
1414		if (handle->break_loop) {
1415			/*
1416			 * Yes - clear the flag that indicates that it has,
1417			 * and return PCAP_ERROR_BREAK as an indication that
1418			 * we were told to break out of the loop.
1419			 */
1420			handle->break_loop = 0;
1421			return PCAP_ERROR_BREAK;
1422		}
1423
1424#if defined(HAVE_PACKET_AUXDATA) && defined(HAVE_LINUX_TPACKET_AUXDATA_TP_VLAN_TCI)
1425		packet_len = recvmsg(handle->fd, &msg, MSG_TRUNC);
1426#else /* defined(HAVE_PACKET_AUXDATA) && defined(HAVE_LINUX_TPACKET_AUXDATA_TP_VLAN_TCI) */
1427		fromlen = sizeof(from);
1428		packet_len = recvfrom(
1429			handle->fd, bp + offset,
1430			handle->bufsize - offset, MSG_TRUNC,
1431			(struct sockaddr *) &from, &fromlen);
1432#endif /* defined(HAVE_PACKET_AUXDATA) && defined(HAVE_LINUX_TPACKET_AUXDATA_TP_VLAN_TCI) */
1433	} while (packet_len == -1 && errno == EINTR);
1434
1435	/* Check if an error occured */
1436
1437	if (packet_len == -1) {
1438		switch (errno) {
1439
1440		case EAGAIN:
1441			return 0;	/* no packet there */
1442
1443		case ENETDOWN:
1444			/*
1445			 * The device on which we're capturing went away.
1446			 *
1447			 * XXX - we should really return
1448			 * PCAP_ERROR_IFACE_NOT_UP, but pcap_dispatch()
1449			 * etc. aren't defined to return that.
1450			 */
1451			snprintf(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
1452				"The interface went down");
1453			return PCAP_ERROR;
1454
1455		default:
1456			snprintf(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
1457				 "recvfrom: %s", pcap_strerror(errno));
1458			return PCAP_ERROR;
1459		}
1460	}
1461
1462#ifdef HAVE_PF_PACKET_SOCKETS
1463	if (!handle->md.sock_packet) {
1464		/*
1465		 * Unfortunately, there is a window between socket() and
1466		 * bind() where the kernel may queue packets from any
1467		 * interface.  If we're bound to a particular interface,
1468		 * discard packets not from that interface.
1469		 *
1470		 * (If socket filters are supported, we could do the
1471		 * same thing we do when changing the filter; however,
1472		 * that won't handle packet sockets without socket
1473		 * filter support, and it's a bit more complicated.
1474		 * It would save some instructions per packet, however.)
1475		 */
1476		if (handle->md.ifindex != -1 &&
1477		    from.sll_ifindex != handle->md.ifindex)
1478			return 0;
1479
1480		/*
1481		 * Do checks based on packet direction.
1482		 * We can only do this if we're using PF_PACKET; the
1483		 * address returned for SOCK_PACKET is a "sockaddr_pkt"
1484		 * which lacks the relevant packet type information.
1485		 */
1486		if (from.sll_pkttype == PACKET_OUTGOING) {
1487			/*
1488			 * Outgoing packet.
1489			 * If this is from the loopback device, reject it;
1490			 * we'll see the packet as an incoming packet as well,
1491			 * and we don't want to see it twice.
1492			 */
1493			if (from.sll_ifindex == handle->md.lo_ifindex)
1494				return 0;
1495
1496			/*
1497			 * If the user only wants incoming packets, reject it.
1498			 */
1499			if (handle->direction == PCAP_D_IN)
1500				return 0;
1501		} else {
1502			/*
1503			 * Incoming packet.
1504			 * If the user only wants outgoing packets, reject it.
1505			 */
1506			if (handle->direction == PCAP_D_OUT)
1507				return 0;
1508		}
1509	}
1510#endif
1511
1512#ifdef HAVE_PF_PACKET_SOCKETS
1513	/*
1514	 * If this is a cooked device, fill in the fake packet header.
1515	 */
1516	if (handle->md.cooked) {
1517		/*
1518		 * Add the length of the fake header to the length
1519		 * of packet data we read.
1520		 */
1521		packet_len += SLL_HDR_LEN;
1522
1523		hdrp = (struct sll_header *)bp;
1524		hdrp->sll_pkttype = map_packet_type_to_sll_type(from.sll_pkttype);
1525		hdrp->sll_hatype = htons(from.sll_hatype);
1526		hdrp->sll_halen = htons(from.sll_halen);
1527		memcpy(hdrp->sll_addr, from.sll_addr,
1528		    (from.sll_halen > SLL_ADDRLEN) ?
1529		      SLL_ADDRLEN :
1530		      from.sll_halen);
1531		hdrp->sll_protocol = from.sll_protocol;
1532	}
1533
1534#if defined(HAVE_PACKET_AUXDATA) && defined(HAVE_LINUX_TPACKET_AUXDATA_TP_VLAN_TCI)
1535	if (handle->md.vlan_offset != -1) {
1536		for (cmsg = CMSG_FIRSTHDR(&msg); cmsg; cmsg = CMSG_NXTHDR(&msg, cmsg)) {
1537			struct tpacket_auxdata *aux;
1538			unsigned int len;
1539			struct vlan_tag *tag;
1540
1541			if (cmsg->cmsg_len < CMSG_LEN(sizeof(struct tpacket_auxdata)) ||
1542			    cmsg->cmsg_level != SOL_PACKET ||
1543			    cmsg->cmsg_type != PACKET_AUXDATA)
1544				continue;
1545
1546			aux = (struct tpacket_auxdata *)CMSG_DATA(cmsg);
1547#if defined(TP_STATUS_VLAN_VALID)
1548			if ((aux->tp_vlan_tci == 0) && !(aux->tp_status & TP_STATUS_VLAN_VALID))
1549#else
1550			if (aux->tp_vlan_tci == 0) /* this is ambigious but without the
1551						TP_STATUS_VLAN_VALID flag, there is
1552						nothing that we can do */
1553#endif
1554				continue;
1555
1556			len = packet_len > iov.iov_len ? iov.iov_len : packet_len;
1557			if (len < (unsigned int) handle->md.vlan_offset)
1558				break;
1559
1560			bp -= VLAN_TAG_LEN;
1561			memmove(bp, bp + VLAN_TAG_LEN, handle->md.vlan_offset);
1562
1563			tag = (struct vlan_tag *)(bp + handle->md.vlan_offset);
1564			tag->vlan_tpid = htons(ETH_P_8021Q);
1565			tag->vlan_tci = htons(aux->tp_vlan_tci);
1566
1567			packet_len += VLAN_TAG_LEN;
1568		}
1569	}
1570#endif /* defined(HAVE_PACKET_AUXDATA) && defined(HAVE_LINUX_TPACKET_AUXDATA_TP_VLAN_TCI) */
1571#endif /* HAVE_PF_PACKET_SOCKETS */
1572
1573	/*
1574	 * XXX: According to the kernel source we should get the real
1575	 * packet len if calling recvfrom with MSG_TRUNC set. It does
1576	 * not seem to work here :(, but it is supported by this code
1577	 * anyway.
1578	 * To be honest the code RELIES on that feature so this is really
1579	 * broken with 2.2.x kernels.
1580	 * I spend a day to figure out what's going on and I found out
1581	 * that the following is happening:
1582	 *
1583	 * The packet comes from a random interface and the packet_rcv
1584	 * hook is called with a clone of the packet. That code inserts
1585	 * the packet into the receive queue of the packet socket.
1586	 * If a filter is attached to that socket that filter is run
1587	 * first - and there lies the problem. The default filter always
1588	 * cuts the packet at the snaplen:
1589	 *
1590	 * # tcpdump -d
1591	 * (000) ret      #68
1592	 *
1593	 * So the packet filter cuts down the packet. The recvfrom call
1594	 * says "hey, it's only 68 bytes, it fits into the buffer" with
1595	 * the result that we don't get the real packet length. This
1596	 * is valid at least until kernel 2.2.17pre6.
1597	 *
1598	 * We currently handle this by making a copy of the filter
1599	 * program, fixing all "ret" instructions with non-zero
1600	 * operands to have an operand of 65535 so that the filter
1601	 * doesn't truncate the packet, and supplying that modified
1602	 * filter to the kernel.
1603	 */
1604
1605	caplen = packet_len;
1606	if (caplen > handle->snapshot)
1607		caplen = handle->snapshot;
1608
1609	/* Run the packet filter if not using kernel filter */
1610	if (!handle->md.use_bpf && handle->fcode.bf_insns) {
1611		if (bpf_filter(handle->fcode.bf_insns, bp,
1612		                packet_len, caplen) == 0)
1613		{
1614			/* rejected by filter */
1615			return 0;
1616		}
1617	}
1618
1619	/* Fill in our own header data */
1620
1621	if (ioctl(handle->fd, SIOCGSTAMP, &pcap_header.ts) == -1) {
1622		snprintf(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
1623			 "SIOCGSTAMP: %s", pcap_strerror(errno));
1624		return PCAP_ERROR;
1625	}
1626	pcap_header.caplen	= caplen;
1627	pcap_header.len		= packet_len;
1628
1629	/*
1630	 * Count the packet.
1631	 *
1632	 * Arguably, we should count them before we check the filter,
1633	 * as on many other platforms "ps_recv" counts packets
1634	 * handed to the filter rather than packets that passed
1635	 * the filter, but if filtering is done in the kernel, we
1636	 * can't get a count of packets that passed the filter,
1637	 * and that would mean the meaning of "ps_recv" wouldn't
1638	 * be the same on all Linux systems.
1639	 *
1640	 * XXX - it's not the same on all systems in any case;
1641	 * ideally, we should have a "get the statistics" call
1642	 * that supplies more counts and indicates which of them
1643	 * it supplies, so that we supply a count of packets
1644	 * handed to the filter only on platforms where that
1645	 * information is available.
1646	 *
1647	 * We count them here even if we can get the packet count
1648	 * from the kernel, as we can only determine at run time
1649	 * whether we'll be able to get it from the kernel (if
1650	 * HAVE_TPACKET_STATS isn't defined, we can't get it from
1651	 * the kernel, but if it is defined, the library might
1652	 * have been built with a 2.4 or later kernel, but we
1653	 * might be running on a 2.2[.x] kernel without Alexey
1654	 * Kuznetzov's turbopacket patches, and thus the kernel
1655	 * might not be able to supply those statistics).  We
1656	 * could, I guess, try, when opening the socket, to get
1657	 * the statistics, and if we can not increment the count
1658	 * here, but it's not clear that always incrementing
1659	 * the count is more expensive than always testing a flag
1660	 * in memory.
1661	 *
1662	 * We keep the count in "md.packets_read", and use that for
1663	 * "ps_recv" if we can't get the statistics from the kernel.
1664	 * We do that because, if we *can* get the statistics from
1665	 * the kernel, we use "md.stat.ps_recv" and "md.stat.ps_drop"
1666	 * as running counts, as reading the statistics from the
1667	 * kernel resets the kernel statistics, and if we directly
1668	 * increment "md.stat.ps_recv" here, that means it will
1669	 * count packets *twice* on systems where we can get kernel
1670	 * statistics - once here, and once in pcap_stats_linux().
1671	 */
1672	handle->md.packets_read++;
1673
1674	/* Call the user supplied callback function */
1675	callback(userdata, &pcap_header, bp);
1676
1677	return 1;
1678}
1679
1680static int
1681pcap_inject_linux(pcap_t *handle, const void *buf, size_t size)
1682{
1683	int ret;
1684
1685#ifdef HAVE_PF_PACKET_SOCKETS
1686	if (!handle->md.sock_packet) {
1687		/* PF_PACKET socket */
1688		if (handle->md.ifindex == -1) {
1689			/*
1690			 * We don't support sending on the "any" device.
1691			 */
1692			strlcpy(handle->errbuf,
1693			    "Sending packets isn't supported on the \"any\" device",
1694			    PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE);
1695			return (-1);
1696		}
1697
1698		if (handle->md.cooked) {
1699			/*
1700			 * We don't support sending on the "any" device.
1701			 *
1702			 * XXX - how do you send on a bound cooked-mode
1703			 * socket?
1704			 * Is a "sendto()" required there?
1705			 */
1706			strlcpy(handle->errbuf,
1707			    "Sending packets isn't supported in cooked mode",
1708			    PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE);
1709			return (-1);
1710		}
1711	}
1712#endif
1713
1714	ret = send(handle->fd, buf, size, 0);
1715	if (ret == -1) {
1716		snprintf(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE, "send: %s",
1717		    pcap_strerror(errno));
1718		return (-1);
1719	}
1720	return (ret);
1721}
1722
1723/*
1724 *  Get the statistics for the given packet capture handle.
1725 *  Reports the number of dropped packets iff the kernel supports
1726 *  the PACKET_STATISTICS "getsockopt()" argument (2.4 and later
1727 *  kernels, and 2.2[.x] kernels with Alexey Kuznetzov's turbopacket
1728 *  patches); otherwise, that information isn't available, and we lie
1729 *  and report 0 as the count of dropped packets.
1730 */
1731static int
1732pcap_stats_linux(pcap_t *handle, struct pcap_stat *stats)
1733{
1734#ifdef HAVE_TPACKET_STATS
1735	struct tpacket_stats kstats;
1736	socklen_t len = sizeof (struct tpacket_stats);
1737#endif
1738
1739	long if_dropped = 0;
1740
1741	/*
1742	 *	To fill in ps_ifdrop, we parse /proc/net/dev for the number
1743	 */
1744	if (handle->opt.promisc)
1745	{
1746		if_dropped = handle->md.proc_dropped;
1747		handle->md.proc_dropped = linux_if_drops(handle->md.device);
1748		handle->md.stat.ps_ifdrop += (handle->md.proc_dropped - if_dropped);
1749	}
1750
1751#ifdef HAVE_TPACKET_STATS
1752	/*
1753	 * Try to get the packet counts from the kernel.
1754	 */
1755	if (getsockopt(handle->fd, SOL_PACKET, PACKET_STATISTICS,
1756			&kstats, &len) > -1) {
1757		/*
1758		 * On systems where the PACKET_STATISTICS "getsockopt()"
1759		 * argument is supported on PF_PACKET sockets:
1760		 *
1761		 *	"ps_recv" counts only packets that *passed* the
1762		 *	filter, not packets that didn't pass the filter.
1763		 *	This includes packets later dropped because we
1764		 *	ran out of buffer space.
1765		 *
1766		 *	"ps_drop" counts packets dropped because we ran
1767		 *	out of buffer space.  It doesn't count packets
1768		 *	dropped by the interface driver.  It counts only
1769		 *	packets that passed the filter.
1770		 *
1771		 *	See above for ps_ifdrop.
1772		 *
1773		 *	Both statistics include packets not yet read from
1774		 *	the kernel by libpcap, and thus not yet seen by
1775		 *	the application.
1776		 *
1777		 * In "linux/net/packet/af_packet.c", at least in the
1778		 * 2.4.9 kernel, "tp_packets" is incremented for every
1779		 * packet that passes the packet filter *and* is
1780		 * successfully queued on the socket; "tp_drops" is
1781		 * incremented for every packet dropped because there's
1782		 * not enough free space in the socket buffer.
1783		 *
1784		 * When the statistics are returned for a PACKET_STATISTICS
1785		 * "getsockopt()" call, "tp_drops" is added to "tp_packets",
1786		 * so that "tp_packets" counts all packets handed to
1787		 * the PF_PACKET socket, including packets dropped because
1788		 * there wasn't room on the socket buffer - but not
1789		 * including packets that didn't pass the filter.
1790		 *
1791		 * In the BSD BPF, the count of received packets is
1792		 * incremented for every packet handed to BPF, regardless
1793		 * of whether it passed the filter.
1794		 *
1795		 * We can't make "pcap_stats()" work the same on both
1796		 * platforms, but the best approximation is to return
1797		 * "tp_packets" as the count of packets and "tp_drops"
1798		 * as the count of drops.
1799		 *
1800		 * Keep a running total because each call to
1801		 *    getsockopt(handle->fd, SOL_PACKET, PACKET_STATISTICS, ....
1802		 * resets the counters to zero.
1803		 */
1804		handle->md.stat.ps_recv += kstats.tp_packets;
1805		handle->md.stat.ps_drop += kstats.tp_drops;
1806		*stats = handle->md.stat;
1807		return 0;
1808	}
1809	else
1810	{
1811		/*
1812		 * If the error was EOPNOTSUPP, fall through, so that
1813		 * if you build the library on a system with
1814		 * "struct tpacket_stats" and run it on a system
1815		 * that doesn't, it works as it does if the library
1816		 * is built on a system without "struct tpacket_stats".
1817		 */
1818		if (errno != EOPNOTSUPP) {
1819			snprintf(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
1820			    "pcap_stats: %s", pcap_strerror(errno));
1821			return -1;
1822		}
1823	}
1824#endif
1825	/*
1826	 * On systems where the PACKET_STATISTICS "getsockopt()" argument
1827	 * is not supported on PF_PACKET sockets:
1828	 *
1829	 *	"ps_recv" counts only packets that *passed* the filter,
1830	 *	not packets that didn't pass the filter.  It does not
1831	 *	count packets dropped because we ran out of buffer
1832	 *	space.
1833	 *
1834	 *	"ps_drop" is not supported.
1835	 *
1836	 *	"ps_ifdrop" is supported. It will return the number
1837	 *	of drops the interface reports in /proc/net/dev,
1838	 *	if that is available.
1839	 *
1840	 *	"ps_recv" doesn't include packets not yet read from
1841	 *	the kernel by libpcap.
1842	 *
1843	 * We maintain the count of packets processed by libpcap in
1844	 * "md.packets_read", for reasons described in the comment
1845	 * at the end of pcap_read_packet().  We have no idea how many
1846	 * packets were dropped by the kernel buffers -- but we know
1847	 * how many the interface dropped, so we can return that.
1848	 */
1849
1850	stats->ps_recv = handle->md.packets_read;
1851	stats->ps_drop = 0;
1852	stats->ps_ifdrop = handle->md.stat.ps_ifdrop;
1853	return 0;
1854}
1855
1856/*
1857 * Get from "/sys/class/net" all interfaces listed there; if they're
1858 * already in the list of interfaces we have, that won't add another
1859 * instance, but if they're not, that'll add them.
1860 *
1861 * We don't bother getting any addresses for them; it appears you can't
1862 * use SIOCGIFADDR on Linux to get IPv6 addresses for interfaces, and,
1863 * although some other types of addresses can be fetched with SIOCGIFADDR,
1864 * we don't bother with them for now.
1865 *
1866 * We also don't fail if we couldn't open "/sys/class/net"; we just leave
1867 * the list of interfaces as is, and return 0, so that we can try
1868 * scanning /proc/net/dev.
1869 */
1870static int
1871scan_sys_class_net(pcap_if_t **devlistp, char *errbuf)
1872{
1873	DIR *sys_class_net_d;
1874	int fd;
1875	struct dirent *ent;
1876	char subsystem_path[PATH_MAX+1];
1877	struct stat statb;
1878	char *p;
1879	char name[512];	/* XXX - pick a size */
1880	char *q, *saveq;
1881	struct ifreq ifrflags;
1882	int ret = 1;
1883
1884	sys_class_net_d = opendir("/sys/class/net");
1885	if (sys_class_net_d == NULL) {
1886		/*
1887		 * Don't fail if it doesn't exist at all.
1888		 */
1889		if (errno == ENOENT)
1890			return (0);
1891
1892		/*
1893		 * Fail if we got some other error.
1894		 */
1895		(void)snprintf(errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
1896		    "Can't open /sys/class/net: %s", pcap_strerror(errno));
1897		return (-1);
1898	}
1899
1900	/*
1901	 * Create a socket from which to fetch interface information.
1902	 */
1903	fd = socket(AF_INET, SOCK_DGRAM, 0);
1904	if (fd < 0) {
1905		(void)snprintf(errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
1906		    "socket: %s", pcap_strerror(errno));
1907		(void)closedir(sys_class_net_d);
1908		return (-1);
1909	}
1910
1911	for (;;) {
1912		errno = 0;
1913		ent = readdir(sys_class_net_d);
1914		if (ent == NULL) {
1915			/*
1916			 * Error or EOF; if errno != 0, it's an error.
1917			 */
1918			break;
1919		}
1920
1921		/*
1922		 * Ignore "." and "..".
1923		 */
1924		if (strcmp(ent->d_name, ".") == 0 ||
1925		    strcmp(ent->d_name, "..") == 0)
1926			continue;
1927
1928		/*
1929		 * Ignore plain files; they do not have subdirectories
1930		 * and thus have no attributes.
1931		 */
1932		if (ent->d_type == DT_REG)
1933			continue;
1934
1935		/*
1936		 * Is there an "ifindex" file under that name?
1937		 * (We don't care whether it's a directory or
1938		 * a symlink; older kernels have directories
1939		 * for devices, newer kernels have symlinks to
1940		 * directories.)
1941		 */
1942		snprintf(subsystem_path, sizeof subsystem_path,
1943		    "/sys/class/net/%s/ifindex", ent->d_name);
1944		if (lstat(subsystem_path, &statb) != 0) {
1945			/*
1946			 * Stat failed.  Either there was an error
1947			 * other than ENOENT, and we don't know if
1948			 * this is an interface, or it's ENOENT,
1949			 * and either some part of "/sys/class/net/{if}"
1950			 * disappeared, in which case it probably means
1951			 * the interface disappeared, or there's no
1952			 * "ifindex" file, which means it's not a
1953			 * network interface.
1954			 */
1955			continue;
1956		}
1957
1958		/*
1959		 * Get the interface name.
1960		 */
1961		p = &ent->d_name[0];
1962		q = &name[0];
1963		while (*p != '\0' && isascii(*p) && !isspace(*p)) {
1964			if (*p == ':') {
1965				/*
1966				 * This could be the separator between a
1967				 * name and an alias number, or it could be
1968				 * the separator between a name with no
1969				 * alias number and the next field.
1970				 *
1971				 * If there's a colon after digits, it
1972				 * separates the name and the alias number,
1973				 * otherwise it separates the name and the
1974				 * next field.
1975				 */
1976				saveq = q;
1977				while (isascii(*p) && isdigit(*p))
1978					*q++ = *p++;
1979				if (*p != ':') {
1980					/*
1981					 * That was the next field,
1982					 * not the alias number.
1983					 */
1984					q = saveq;
1985				}
1986				break;
1987			} else
1988				*q++ = *p++;
1989		}
1990		*q = '\0';
1991
1992		/*
1993		 * Get the flags for this interface, and skip it if
1994		 * it's not up.
1995		 */
1996		strncpy(ifrflags.ifr_name, name, sizeof(ifrflags.ifr_name));
1997		if (ioctl(fd, SIOCGIFFLAGS, (char *)&ifrflags) < 0) {
1998			if (errno == ENXIO || errno == ENODEV)
1999				continue;
2000			(void)snprintf(errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
2001			    "SIOCGIFFLAGS: %.*s: %s",
2002			    (int)sizeof(ifrflags.ifr_name),
2003			    ifrflags.ifr_name,
2004			    pcap_strerror(errno));
2005			ret = -1;
2006			break;
2007		}
2008		if (!(ifrflags.ifr_flags & IFF_UP))
2009			continue;
2010
2011		/*
2012		 * Add an entry for this interface, with no addresses.
2013		 */
2014		if (pcap_add_if(devlistp, name, ifrflags.ifr_flags, NULL,
2015		    errbuf) == -1) {
2016			/*
2017			 * Failure.
2018			 */
2019			ret = -1;
2020			break;
2021		}
2022	}
2023	if (ret != -1) {
2024		/*
2025		 * Well, we didn't fail for any other reason; did we
2026		 * fail due to an error reading the directory?
2027		 */
2028		if (errno != 0) {
2029			(void)snprintf(errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
2030			    "Error reading /sys/class/net: %s",
2031			    pcap_strerror(errno));
2032			ret = -1;
2033		}
2034	}
2035
2036	(void)close(fd);
2037	(void)closedir(sys_class_net_d);
2038	return (ret);
2039}
2040
2041/*
2042 * Get from "/proc/net/dev" all interfaces listed there; if they're
2043 * already in the list of interfaces we have, that won't add another
2044 * instance, but if they're not, that'll add them.
2045 *
2046 * See comments from scan_sys_class_net().
2047 */
2048static int
2049scan_proc_net_dev(pcap_if_t **devlistp, char *errbuf)
2050{
2051	FILE *proc_net_f;
2052	int fd;
2053	char linebuf[512];
2054	int linenum;
2055	char *p;
2056	char name[512];	/* XXX - pick a size */
2057	char *q, *saveq;
2058	struct ifreq ifrflags;
2059	int ret = 0;
2060
2061	proc_net_f = fopen("/proc/net/dev", "r");
2062	if (proc_net_f == NULL) {
2063		/*
2064		 * Don't fail if it doesn't exist at all.
2065		 */
2066		if (errno == ENOENT)
2067			return (0);
2068
2069		/*
2070		 * Fail if we got some other error.
2071		 */
2072		(void)snprintf(errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
2073		    "Can't open /proc/net/dev: %s", pcap_strerror(errno));
2074		return (-1);
2075	}
2076
2077	/*
2078	 * Create a socket from which to fetch interface information.
2079	 */
2080	fd = socket(AF_INET, SOCK_DGRAM, 0);
2081	if (fd < 0) {
2082		(void)snprintf(errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
2083		    "socket: %s", pcap_strerror(errno));
2084		(void)fclose(proc_net_f);
2085		return (-1);
2086	}
2087
2088	for (linenum = 1;
2089	    fgets(linebuf, sizeof linebuf, proc_net_f) != NULL; linenum++) {
2090		/*
2091		 * Skip the first two lines - they're headers.
2092		 */
2093		if (linenum <= 2)
2094			continue;
2095
2096		p = &linebuf[0];
2097
2098		/*
2099		 * Skip leading white space.
2100		 */
2101		while (*p != '\0' && isascii(*p) && isspace(*p))
2102			p++;
2103		if (*p == '\0' || *p == '\n')
2104			continue;	/* blank line */
2105
2106		/*
2107		 * Get the interface name.
2108		 */
2109		q = &name[0];
2110		while (*p != '\0' && isascii(*p) && !isspace(*p)) {
2111			if (*p == ':') {
2112				/*
2113				 * This could be the separator between a
2114				 * name and an alias number, or it could be
2115				 * the separator between a name with no
2116				 * alias number and the next field.
2117				 *
2118				 * If there's a colon after digits, it
2119				 * separates the name and the alias number,
2120				 * otherwise it separates the name and the
2121				 * next field.
2122				 */
2123				saveq = q;
2124				while (isascii(*p) && isdigit(*p))
2125					*q++ = *p++;
2126				if (*p != ':') {
2127					/*
2128					 * That was the next field,
2129					 * not the alias number.
2130					 */
2131					q = saveq;
2132				}
2133				break;
2134			} else
2135				*q++ = *p++;
2136		}
2137		*q = '\0';
2138
2139		/*
2140		 * Get the flags for this interface, and skip it if
2141		 * it's not up.
2142		 */
2143		strncpy(ifrflags.ifr_name, name, sizeof(ifrflags.ifr_name));
2144		if (ioctl(fd, SIOCGIFFLAGS, (char *)&ifrflags) < 0) {
2145			if (errno == ENXIO)
2146				continue;
2147			(void)snprintf(errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
2148			    "SIOCGIFFLAGS: %.*s: %s",
2149			    (int)sizeof(ifrflags.ifr_name),
2150			    ifrflags.ifr_name,
2151			    pcap_strerror(errno));
2152			ret = -1;
2153			break;
2154		}
2155		if (!(ifrflags.ifr_flags & IFF_UP))
2156			continue;
2157
2158		/*
2159		 * Add an entry for this interface, with no addresses.
2160		 */
2161		if (pcap_add_if(devlistp, name, ifrflags.ifr_flags, NULL,
2162		    errbuf) == -1) {
2163			/*
2164			 * Failure.
2165			 */
2166			ret = -1;
2167			break;
2168		}
2169	}
2170	if (ret != -1) {
2171		/*
2172		 * Well, we didn't fail for any other reason; did we
2173		 * fail due to an error reading the file?
2174		 */
2175		if (ferror(proc_net_f)) {
2176			(void)snprintf(errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
2177			    "Error reading /proc/net/dev: %s",
2178			    pcap_strerror(errno));
2179			ret = -1;
2180		}
2181	}
2182
2183	(void)close(fd);
2184	(void)fclose(proc_net_f);
2185	return (ret);
2186}
2187
2188/*
2189 * Description string for the "any" device.
2190 */
2191static const char any_descr[] = "Pseudo-device that captures on all interfaces";
2192
2193int
2194pcap_platform_finddevs(pcap_if_t **alldevsp, char *errbuf)
2195{
2196	int ret;
2197
2198	/*
2199	 * Read "/sys/class/net", and add to the list of interfaces all
2200	 * interfaces listed there that we don't already have, because,
2201	 * on Linux, SIOCGIFCONF reports only interfaces with IPv4 addresses,
2202	 * and even getifaddrs() won't return information about
2203	 * interfaces with no addresses, so you need to read "/sys/class/net"
2204	 * to get the names of the rest of the interfaces.
2205	 */
2206	ret = scan_sys_class_net(alldevsp, errbuf);
2207	if (ret == -1)
2208		return (-1);	/* failed */
2209	if (ret == 0) {
2210		/*
2211		 * No /sys/class/net; try reading /proc/net/dev instead.
2212		 */
2213		if (scan_proc_net_dev(alldevsp, errbuf) == -1)
2214			return (-1);
2215	}
2216
2217	/*
2218	 * Add the "any" device.
2219	 */
2220	if (pcap_add_if(alldevsp, "any", 0, any_descr, errbuf) < 0)
2221		return (-1);
2222
2223	return (0);
2224}
2225
2226/*
2227 *  Attach the given BPF code to the packet capture device.
2228 */
2229static int
2230pcap_setfilter_linux_common(pcap_t *handle, struct bpf_program *filter,
2231    int is_mmapped)
2232{
2233#ifdef SO_ATTACH_FILTER
2234	struct sock_fprog	fcode;
2235	int			can_filter_in_kernel;
2236	int			err = 0;
2237#endif
2238
2239	if (!handle)
2240		return -1;
2241	if (!filter) {
2242	        strncpy(handle->errbuf, "setfilter: No filter specified",
2243			PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE);
2244		return -1;
2245	}
2246
2247	/* Make our private copy of the filter */
2248
2249	if (install_bpf_program(handle, filter) < 0)
2250		/* install_bpf_program() filled in errbuf */
2251		return -1;
2252
2253	/*
2254	 * Run user level packet filter by default. Will be overriden if
2255	 * installing a kernel filter succeeds.
2256	 */
2257	handle->md.use_bpf = 0;
2258
2259	/* Install kernel level filter if possible */
2260
2261#ifdef SO_ATTACH_FILTER
2262#ifdef USHRT_MAX
2263	if (handle->fcode.bf_len > USHRT_MAX) {
2264		/*
2265		 * fcode.len is an unsigned short for current kernel.
2266		 * I have yet to see BPF-Code with that much
2267		 * instructions but still it is possible. So for the
2268		 * sake of correctness I added this check.
2269		 */
2270		fprintf(stderr, "Warning: Filter too complex for kernel\n");
2271		fcode.len = 0;
2272		fcode.filter = NULL;
2273		can_filter_in_kernel = 0;
2274	} else
2275#endif /* USHRT_MAX */
2276	{
2277		/*
2278		 * Oh joy, the Linux kernel uses struct sock_fprog instead
2279		 * of struct bpf_program and of course the length field is
2280		 * of different size. Pointed out by Sebastian
2281		 *
2282		 * Oh, and we also need to fix it up so that all "ret"
2283		 * instructions with non-zero operands have 65535 as the
2284		 * operand if we're not capturing in memory-mapped modee,
2285		 * and so that, if we're in cooked mode, all memory-reference
2286		 * instructions use special magic offsets in references to
2287		 * the link-layer header and assume that the link-layer
2288		 * payload begins at 0; "fix_program()" will do that.
2289		 */
2290		switch (fix_program(handle, &fcode, is_mmapped)) {
2291
2292		case -1:
2293		default:
2294			/*
2295			 * Fatal error; just quit.
2296			 * (The "default" case shouldn't happen; we
2297			 * return -1 for that reason.)
2298			 */
2299			return -1;
2300
2301		case 0:
2302			/*
2303			 * The program performed checks that we can't make
2304			 * work in the kernel.
2305			 */
2306			can_filter_in_kernel = 0;
2307			break;
2308
2309		case 1:
2310			/*
2311			 * We have a filter that'll work in the kernel.
2312			 */
2313			can_filter_in_kernel = 1;
2314			break;
2315		}
2316	}
2317
2318	/*
2319	 * NOTE: at this point, we've set both the "len" and "filter"
2320	 * fields of "fcode".  As of the 2.6.32.4 kernel, at least,
2321	 * those are the only members of the "sock_fprog" structure,
2322	 * so we initialize every member of that structure.
2323	 *
2324	 * If there is anything in "fcode" that is not initialized,
2325	 * it is either a field added in a later kernel, or it's
2326	 * padding.
2327	 *
2328	 * If a new field is added, this code needs to be updated
2329	 * to set it correctly.
2330	 *
2331	 * If there are no other fields, then:
2332	 *
2333	 *	if the Linux kernel looks at the padding, it's
2334	 *	buggy;
2335	 *
2336	 *	if the Linux kernel doesn't look at the padding,
2337	 *	then if some tool complains that we're passing
2338	 *	uninitialized data to the kernel, then the tool
2339	 *	is buggy and needs to understand that it's just
2340	 *	padding.
2341	 */
2342	if (can_filter_in_kernel) {
2343		if ((err = set_kernel_filter(handle, &fcode)) == 0)
2344		{
2345			/* Installation succeded - using kernel filter. */
2346			handle->md.use_bpf = 1;
2347		}
2348		else if (err == -1)	/* Non-fatal error */
2349		{
2350			/*
2351			 * Print a warning if we weren't able to install
2352			 * the filter for a reason other than "this kernel
2353			 * isn't configured to support socket filters.
2354			 */
2355			if (errno != ENOPROTOOPT && errno != EOPNOTSUPP) {
2356				fprintf(stderr,
2357				    "Warning: Kernel filter failed: %s\n",
2358					pcap_strerror(errno));
2359			}
2360		}
2361	}
2362
2363	/*
2364	 * If we're not using the kernel filter, get rid of any kernel
2365	 * filter that might've been there before, e.g. because the
2366	 * previous filter could work in the kernel, or because some other
2367	 * code attached a filter to the socket by some means other than
2368	 * calling "pcap_setfilter()".  Otherwise, the kernel filter may
2369	 * filter out packets that would pass the new userland filter.
2370	 */
2371	if (!handle->md.use_bpf)
2372		reset_kernel_filter(handle);
2373
2374	/*
2375	 * Free up the copy of the filter that was made by "fix_program()".
2376	 */
2377	if (fcode.filter != NULL)
2378		free(fcode.filter);
2379
2380	if (err == -2)
2381		/* Fatal error */
2382		return -1;
2383#endif /* SO_ATTACH_FILTER */
2384
2385	return 0;
2386}
2387
2388static int
2389pcap_setfilter_linux(pcap_t *handle, struct bpf_program *filter)
2390{
2391	return pcap_setfilter_linux_common(handle, filter, 0);
2392}
2393
2394
2395/*
2396 * Set direction flag: Which packets do we accept on a forwarding
2397 * single device? IN, OUT or both?
2398 */
2399static int
2400pcap_setdirection_linux(pcap_t *handle, pcap_direction_t d)
2401{
2402#ifdef HAVE_PF_PACKET_SOCKETS
2403	if (!handle->md.sock_packet) {
2404		handle->direction = d;
2405		return 0;
2406	}
2407#endif
2408	/*
2409	 * We're not using PF_PACKET sockets, so we can't determine
2410	 * the direction of the packet.
2411	 */
2412	snprintf(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
2413	    "Setting direction is not supported on SOCK_PACKET sockets");
2414	return -1;
2415}
2416
2417#ifdef HAVE_PF_PACKET_SOCKETS
2418/*
2419 * Map the PACKET_ value to a LINUX_SLL_ value; we
2420 * want the same numerical value to be used in
2421 * the link-layer header even if the numerical values
2422 * for the PACKET_ #defines change, so that programs
2423 * that look at the packet type field will always be
2424 * able to handle DLT_LINUX_SLL captures.
2425 */
2426static short int
2427map_packet_type_to_sll_type(short int sll_pkttype)
2428{
2429	switch (sll_pkttype) {
2430
2431	case PACKET_HOST:
2432		return htons(LINUX_SLL_HOST);
2433
2434	case PACKET_BROADCAST:
2435		return htons(LINUX_SLL_BROADCAST);
2436
2437	case PACKET_MULTICAST:
2438		return  htons(LINUX_SLL_MULTICAST);
2439
2440	case PACKET_OTHERHOST:
2441		return htons(LINUX_SLL_OTHERHOST);
2442
2443	case PACKET_OUTGOING:
2444		return htons(LINUX_SLL_OUTGOING);
2445
2446	default:
2447		return -1;
2448	}
2449}
2450#endif
2451
2452/*
2453 *  Linux uses the ARP hardware type to identify the type of an
2454 *  interface. pcap uses the DLT_xxx constants for this. This
2455 *  function takes a pointer to a "pcap_t", and an ARPHRD_xxx
2456 *  constant, as arguments, and sets "handle->linktype" to the
2457 *  appropriate DLT_XXX constant and sets "handle->offset" to
2458 *  the appropriate value (to make "handle->offset" plus link-layer
2459 *  header length be a multiple of 4, so that the link-layer payload
2460 *  will be aligned on a 4-byte boundary when capturing packets).
2461 *  (If the offset isn't set here, it'll be 0; add code as appropriate
2462 *  for cases where it shouldn't be 0.)
2463 *
2464 *  If "cooked_ok" is non-zero, we can use DLT_LINUX_SLL and capture
2465 *  in cooked mode; otherwise, we can't use cooked mode, so we have
2466 *  to pick some type that works in raw mode, or fail.
2467 *
2468 *  Sets the link type to -1 if unable to map the type.
2469 */
2470static void map_arphrd_to_dlt(pcap_t *handle, int arptype, int cooked_ok)
2471{
2472	switch (arptype) {
2473
2474	case ARPHRD_ETHER:
2475		/*
2476		 * This is (presumably) a real Ethernet capture; give it a
2477		 * link-layer-type list with DLT_EN10MB and DLT_DOCSIS, so
2478		 * that an application can let you choose it, in case you're
2479		 * capturing DOCSIS traffic that a Cisco Cable Modem
2480		 * Termination System is putting out onto an Ethernet (it
2481		 * doesn't put an Ethernet header onto the wire, it puts raw
2482		 * DOCSIS frames out on the wire inside the low-level
2483		 * Ethernet framing).
2484		 *
2485		 * XXX - are there any sorts of "fake Ethernet" that have
2486		 * ARPHRD_ETHER but that *shouldn't offer DLT_DOCSIS as
2487		 * a Cisco CMTS won't put traffic onto it or get traffic
2488		 * bridged onto it?  ISDN is handled in "activate_new()",
2489		 * as we fall back on cooked mode there; are there any
2490		 * others?
2491		 */
2492		handle->dlt_list = (u_int *) malloc(sizeof(u_int) * 2);
2493		/*
2494		 * If that fails, just leave the list empty.
2495		 */
2496		if (handle->dlt_list != NULL) {
2497			handle->dlt_list[0] = DLT_EN10MB;
2498			handle->dlt_list[1] = DLT_DOCSIS;
2499			handle->dlt_count = 2;
2500		}
2501		/* FALLTHROUGH */
2502
2503	case ARPHRD_METRICOM:
2504	case ARPHRD_LOOPBACK:
2505		handle->linktype = DLT_EN10MB;
2506		handle->offset = 2;
2507		break;
2508
2509	case ARPHRD_EETHER:
2510		handle->linktype = DLT_EN3MB;
2511		break;
2512
2513	case ARPHRD_AX25:
2514		handle->linktype = DLT_AX25_KISS;
2515		break;
2516
2517	case ARPHRD_PRONET:
2518		handle->linktype = DLT_PRONET;
2519		break;
2520
2521	case ARPHRD_CHAOS:
2522		handle->linktype = DLT_CHAOS;
2523		break;
2524#ifndef ARPHRD_CAN
2525#define ARPHRD_CAN 280
2526#endif
2527	case ARPHRD_CAN:
2528		handle->linktype = DLT_CAN_SOCKETCAN;
2529		break;
2530
2531#ifndef ARPHRD_IEEE802_TR
2532#define ARPHRD_IEEE802_TR 800	/* From Linux 2.4 */
2533#endif
2534	case ARPHRD_IEEE802_TR:
2535	case ARPHRD_IEEE802:
2536		handle->linktype = DLT_IEEE802;
2537		handle->offset = 2;
2538		break;
2539
2540	case ARPHRD_ARCNET:
2541		handle->linktype = DLT_ARCNET_LINUX;
2542		break;
2543
2544#ifndef ARPHRD_FDDI	/* From Linux 2.2.13 */
2545#define ARPHRD_FDDI	774
2546#endif
2547	case ARPHRD_FDDI:
2548		handle->linktype = DLT_FDDI;
2549		handle->offset = 3;
2550		break;
2551
2552#ifndef ARPHRD_ATM  /* FIXME: How to #include this? */
2553#define ARPHRD_ATM 19
2554#endif
2555	case ARPHRD_ATM:
2556		/*
2557		 * The Classical IP implementation in ATM for Linux
2558		 * supports both what RFC 1483 calls "LLC Encapsulation",
2559		 * in which each packet has an LLC header, possibly
2560		 * with a SNAP header as well, prepended to it, and
2561		 * what RFC 1483 calls "VC Based Multiplexing", in which
2562		 * different virtual circuits carry different network
2563		 * layer protocols, and no header is prepended to packets.
2564		 *
2565		 * They both have an ARPHRD_ type of ARPHRD_ATM, so
2566		 * you can't use the ARPHRD_ type to find out whether
2567		 * captured packets will have an LLC header, and,
2568		 * while there's a socket ioctl to *set* the encapsulation
2569		 * type, there's no ioctl to *get* the encapsulation type.
2570		 *
2571		 * This means that
2572		 *
2573		 *	programs that dissect Linux Classical IP frames
2574		 *	would have to check for an LLC header and,
2575		 *	depending on whether they see one or not, dissect
2576		 *	the frame as LLC-encapsulated or as raw IP (I
2577		 *	don't know whether there's any traffic other than
2578		 *	IP that would show up on the socket, or whether
2579		 *	there's any support for IPv6 in the Linux
2580		 *	Classical IP code);
2581		 *
2582		 *	filter expressions would have to compile into
2583		 *	code that checks for an LLC header and does
2584		 *	the right thing.
2585		 *
2586		 * Both of those are a nuisance - and, at least on systems
2587		 * that support PF_PACKET sockets, we don't have to put
2588		 * up with those nuisances; instead, we can just capture
2589		 * in cooked mode.  That's what we'll do, if we can.
2590		 * Otherwise, we'll just fail.
2591		 */
2592		if (cooked_ok)
2593			handle->linktype = DLT_LINUX_SLL;
2594		else
2595			handle->linktype = -1;
2596		break;
2597
2598#ifndef ARPHRD_IEEE80211  /* From Linux 2.4.6 */
2599#define ARPHRD_IEEE80211 801
2600#endif
2601	case ARPHRD_IEEE80211:
2602		handle->linktype = DLT_IEEE802_11;
2603		break;
2604
2605#ifndef ARPHRD_IEEE80211_PRISM  /* From Linux 2.4.18 */
2606#define ARPHRD_IEEE80211_PRISM 802
2607#endif
2608	case ARPHRD_IEEE80211_PRISM:
2609		handle->linktype = DLT_PRISM_HEADER;
2610		break;
2611
2612#ifndef ARPHRD_IEEE80211_RADIOTAP /* new */
2613#define ARPHRD_IEEE80211_RADIOTAP 803
2614#endif
2615	case ARPHRD_IEEE80211_RADIOTAP:
2616		handle->linktype = DLT_IEEE802_11_RADIO;
2617		break;
2618
2619	case ARPHRD_PPP:
2620		/*
2621		 * Some PPP code in the kernel supplies no link-layer
2622		 * header whatsoever to PF_PACKET sockets; other PPP
2623		 * code supplies PPP link-layer headers ("syncppp.c");
2624		 * some PPP code might supply random link-layer
2625		 * headers (PPP over ISDN - there's code in Ethereal,
2626		 * for example, to cope with PPP-over-ISDN captures
2627		 * with which the Ethereal developers have had to cope,
2628		 * heuristically trying to determine which of the
2629		 * oddball link-layer headers particular packets have).
2630		 *
2631		 * As such, we just punt, and run all PPP interfaces
2632		 * in cooked mode, if we can; otherwise, we just treat
2633		 * it as DLT_RAW, for now - if somebody needs to capture,
2634		 * on a 2.0[.x] kernel, on PPP devices that supply a
2635		 * link-layer header, they'll have to add code here to
2636		 * map to the appropriate DLT_ type (possibly adding a
2637		 * new DLT_ type, if necessary).
2638		 */
2639		if (cooked_ok)
2640			handle->linktype = DLT_LINUX_SLL;
2641		else {
2642			/*
2643			 * XXX - handle ISDN types here?  We can't fall
2644			 * back on cooked sockets, so we'd have to
2645			 * figure out from the device name what type of
2646			 * link-layer encapsulation it's using, and map
2647			 * that to an appropriate DLT_ value, meaning
2648			 * we'd map "isdnN" devices to DLT_RAW (they
2649			 * supply raw IP packets with no link-layer
2650			 * header) and "isdY" devices to a new DLT_I4L_IP
2651			 * type that has only an Ethernet packet type as
2652			 * a link-layer header.
2653			 *
2654			 * But sometimes we seem to get random crap
2655			 * in the link-layer header when capturing on
2656			 * ISDN devices....
2657			 */
2658			handle->linktype = DLT_RAW;
2659		}
2660		break;
2661
2662#ifndef ARPHRD_CISCO
2663#define ARPHRD_CISCO 513 /* previously ARPHRD_HDLC */
2664#endif
2665	case ARPHRD_CISCO:
2666		handle->linktype = DLT_C_HDLC;
2667		break;
2668
2669	/* Not sure if this is correct for all tunnels, but it
2670	 * works for CIPE */
2671	case ARPHRD_TUNNEL:
2672#ifndef ARPHRD_SIT
2673#define ARPHRD_SIT 776	/* From Linux 2.2.13 */
2674#endif
2675	case ARPHRD_SIT:
2676	case ARPHRD_CSLIP:
2677	case ARPHRD_SLIP6:
2678	case ARPHRD_CSLIP6:
2679	case ARPHRD_ADAPT:
2680	case ARPHRD_SLIP:
2681#ifndef ARPHRD_RAWHDLC
2682#define ARPHRD_RAWHDLC 518
2683#endif
2684	case ARPHRD_RAWHDLC:
2685#ifndef ARPHRD_DLCI
2686#define ARPHRD_DLCI 15
2687#endif
2688	case ARPHRD_DLCI:
2689		/*
2690		 * XXX - should some of those be mapped to DLT_LINUX_SLL
2691		 * instead?  Should we just map all of them to DLT_LINUX_SLL?
2692		 */
2693		handle->linktype = DLT_RAW;
2694		break;
2695
2696#ifndef ARPHRD_FRAD
2697#define ARPHRD_FRAD 770
2698#endif
2699	case ARPHRD_FRAD:
2700		handle->linktype = DLT_FRELAY;
2701		break;
2702
2703	case ARPHRD_LOCALTLK:
2704		handle->linktype = DLT_LTALK;
2705		break;
2706
2707#ifndef ARPHRD_FCPP
2708#define ARPHRD_FCPP	784
2709#endif
2710	case ARPHRD_FCPP:
2711#ifndef ARPHRD_FCAL
2712#define ARPHRD_FCAL	785
2713#endif
2714	case ARPHRD_FCAL:
2715#ifndef ARPHRD_FCPL
2716#define ARPHRD_FCPL	786
2717#endif
2718	case ARPHRD_FCPL:
2719#ifndef ARPHRD_FCFABRIC
2720#define ARPHRD_FCFABRIC	787
2721#endif
2722	case ARPHRD_FCFABRIC:
2723		/*
2724		 * We assume that those all mean RFC 2625 IP-over-
2725		 * Fibre Channel, with the RFC 2625 header at
2726		 * the beginning of the packet.
2727		 */
2728		handle->linktype = DLT_IP_OVER_FC;
2729		break;
2730
2731#ifndef ARPHRD_IRDA
2732#define ARPHRD_IRDA	783
2733#endif
2734	case ARPHRD_IRDA:
2735		/* Don't expect IP packet out of this interfaces... */
2736		handle->linktype = DLT_LINUX_IRDA;
2737		/* We need to save packet direction for IrDA decoding,
2738		 * so let's use "Linux-cooked" mode. Jean II */
2739		//handle->md.cooked = 1;
2740		break;
2741
2742	/* ARPHRD_LAPD is unofficial and randomly allocated, if reallocation
2743	 * is needed, please report it to <daniele@orlandi.com> */
2744#ifndef ARPHRD_LAPD
2745#define ARPHRD_LAPD	8445
2746#endif
2747	case ARPHRD_LAPD:
2748		/* Don't expect IP packet out of this interfaces... */
2749		handle->linktype = DLT_LINUX_LAPD;
2750		break;
2751
2752#ifndef ARPHRD_NONE
2753#define ARPHRD_NONE	0xFFFE
2754#endif
2755	case ARPHRD_NONE:
2756		/*
2757		 * No link-layer header; packets are just IP
2758		 * packets, so use DLT_RAW.
2759		 */
2760		handle->linktype = DLT_RAW;
2761		break;
2762
2763#ifndef ARPHRD_IEEE802154
2764#define ARPHRD_IEEE802154      804
2765#endif
2766       case ARPHRD_IEEE802154:
2767               handle->linktype =  DLT_IEEE802_15_4_NOFCS;
2768               break;
2769
2770	default:
2771		handle->linktype = -1;
2772		break;
2773	}
2774}
2775
2776/* ===== Functions to interface to the newer kernels ================== */
2777
2778/*
2779 * Try to open a packet socket using the new kernel PF_PACKET interface.
2780 * Returns 1 on success, 0 on an error that means the new interface isn't
2781 * present (so the old SOCK_PACKET interface should be tried), and a
2782 * PCAP_ERROR_ value on an error that means that the old mechanism won't
2783 * work either (so it shouldn't be tried).
2784 */
2785static int
2786activate_new(pcap_t *handle)
2787{
2788#ifdef HAVE_PF_PACKET_SOCKETS
2789	const char		*device = handle->opt.source;
2790	int			is_any_device = (strcmp(device, "any") == 0);
2791	int			sock_fd = -1, arptype;
2792#ifdef HAVE_PACKET_AUXDATA
2793	int			val;
2794#endif
2795	int			err = 0;
2796	struct packet_mreq	mr;
2797
2798	/*
2799	 * Open a socket with protocol family packet. If the
2800	 * "any" device was specified, we open a SOCK_DGRAM
2801	 * socket for the cooked interface, otherwise we first
2802	 * try a SOCK_RAW socket for the raw interface.
2803	 */
2804	sock_fd = is_any_device ?
2805		socket(PF_PACKET, SOCK_DGRAM, htons(ETH_P_ALL)) :
2806		socket(PF_PACKET, SOCK_RAW, htons(ETH_P_ALL));
2807
2808	if (sock_fd == -1) {
2809		if (errno == EINVAL || errno == EAFNOSUPPORT) {
2810			/*
2811			 * We don't support PF_PACKET/SOCK_whatever
2812			 * sockets; try the old mechanism.
2813			 */
2814			return 0;
2815		}
2816
2817		snprintf(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE, "socket: %s",
2818			 pcap_strerror(errno) );
2819		if (errno == EPERM || errno == EACCES) {
2820			/*
2821			 * You don't have permission to open the
2822			 * socket.
2823			 */
2824			return PCAP_ERROR_PERM_DENIED;
2825		} else {
2826			/*
2827			 * Other error.
2828			 */
2829			return PCAP_ERROR;
2830		}
2831	}
2832
2833	/* It seems the kernel supports the new interface. */
2834	handle->md.sock_packet = 0;
2835
2836	/*
2837	 * Get the interface index of the loopback device.
2838	 * If the attempt fails, don't fail, just set the
2839	 * "md.lo_ifindex" to -1.
2840	 *
2841	 * XXX - can there be more than one device that loops
2842	 * packets back, i.e. devices other than "lo"?  If so,
2843	 * we'd need to find them all, and have an array of
2844	 * indices for them, and check all of them in
2845	 * "pcap_read_packet()".
2846	 */
2847	handle->md.lo_ifindex = iface_get_id(sock_fd, "lo", handle->errbuf);
2848
2849	/*
2850	 * Default value for offset to align link-layer payload
2851	 * on a 4-byte boundary.
2852	 */
2853	handle->offset	 = 0;
2854
2855	/*
2856	 * What kind of frames do we have to deal with? Fall back
2857	 * to cooked mode if we have an unknown interface type
2858	 * or a type we know doesn't work well in raw mode.
2859	 */
2860	if (!is_any_device) {
2861		/* Assume for now we don't need cooked mode. */
2862		handle->md.cooked = 0;
2863
2864		if (handle->opt.rfmon) {
2865			/*
2866			 * We were asked to turn on monitor mode.
2867			 * Do so before we get the link-layer type,
2868			 * because entering monitor mode could change
2869			 * the link-layer type.
2870			 */
2871			err = enter_rfmon_mode(handle, sock_fd, device);
2872			if (err < 0) {
2873				/* Hard failure */
2874				close(sock_fd);
2875				return err;
2876			}
2877			if (err == 0) {
2878				/*
2879				 * Nothing worked for turning monitor mode
2880				 * on.
2881				 */
2882				close(sock_fd);
2883				return PCAP_ERROR_RFMON_NOTSUP;
2884			}
2885
2886			/*
2887			 * Either monitor mode has been turned on for
2888			 * the device, or we've been given a different
2889			 * device to open for monitor mode.  If we've
2890			 * been given a different device, use it.
2891			 */
2892			if (handle->md.mondevice != NULL)
2893				device = handle->md.mondevice;
2894		}
2895		arptype	= iface_get_arptype(sock_fd, device, handle->errbuf);
2896		if (arptype < 0) {
2897			close(sock_fd);
2898			return arptype;
2899		}
2900		map_arphrd_to_dlt(handle, arptype, 1);
2901		if (handle->linktype == -1 ||
2902		    handle->linktype == DLT_LINUX_SLL ||
2903		    handle->linktype == DLT_LINUX_IRDA ||
2904		    handle->linktype == DLT_LINUX_LAPD ||
2905		    (handle->linktype == DLT_EN10MB &&
2906		     (strncmp("isdn", device, 4) == 0 ||
2907		      strncmp("isdY", device, 4) == 0))) {
2908			/*
2909			 * Unknown interface type (-1), or a
2910			 * device we explicitly chose to run
2911			 * in cooked mode (e.g., PPP devices),
2912			 * or an ISDN device (whose link-layer
2913			 * type we can only determine by using
2914			 * APIs that may be different on different
2915			 * kernels) - reopen in cooked mode.
2916			 */
2917			if (close(sock_fd) == -1) {
2918				snprintf(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
2919					 "close: %s", pcap_strerror(errno));
2920				return PCAP_ERROR;
2921			}
2922			sock_fd = socket(PF_PACKET, SOCK_DGRAM,
2923			    htons(ETH_P_ALL));
2924			if (sock_fd == -1) {
2925				snprintf(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
2926				    "socket: %s", pcap_strerror(errno));
2927				if (errno == EPERM || errno == EACCES) {
2928					/*
2929					 * You don't have permission to
2930					 * open the socket.
2931					 */
2932					return PCAP_ERROR_PERM_DENIED;
2933				} else {
2934					/*
2935					 * Other error.
2936					 */
2937					return PCAP_ERROR;
2938				}
2939			}
2940			handle->md.cooked = 1;
2941
2942			/*
2943			 * Get rid of any link-layer type list
2944			 * we allocated - this only supports cooked
2945			 * capture.
2946			 */
2947			if (handle->dlt_list != NULL) {
2948				free(handle->dlt_list);
2949				handle->dlt_list = NULL;
2950				handle->dlt_count = 0;
2951			}
2952
2953			if (handle->linktype == -1) {
2954				/*
2955				 * Warn that we're falling back on
2956				 * cooked mode; we may want to
2957				 * update "map_arphrd_to_dlt()"
2958				 * to handle the new type.
2959				 */
2960				snprintf(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
2961					"arptype %d not "
2962					"supported by libpcap - "
2963					"falling back to cooked "
2964					"socket",
2965					arptype);
2966			}
2967
2968			/*
2969			 * IrDA capture is not a real "cooked" capture,
2970			 * it's IrLAP frames, not IP packets.  The
2971			 * same applies to LAPD capture.
2972			 */
2973			if (handle->linktype != DLT_LINUX_IRDA &&
2974			    handle->linktype != DLT_LINUX_LAPD)
2975				handle->linktype = DLT_LINUX_SLL;
2976		}
2977
2978		handle->md.ifindex = iface_get_id(sock_fd, device,
2979		    handle->errbuf);
2980		if (handle->md.ifindex == -1) {
2981			close(sock_fd);
2982			return PCAP_ERROR;
2983		}
2984
2985		if ((err = iface_bind(sock_fd, handle->md.ifindex,
2986		    handle->errbuf)) != 1) {
2987		    	close(sock_fd);
2988			if (err < 0)
2989				return err;
2990			else
2991				return 0;	/* try old mechanism */
2992		}
2993	} else {
2994		/*
2995		 * The "any" device.
2996		 */
2997		if (handle->opt.rfmon) {
2998			/*
2999			 * It doesn't support monitor mode.
3000			 */
3001			return PCAP_ERROR_RFMON_NOTSUP;
3002		}
3003
3004		/*
3005		 * It uses cooked mode.
3006		 */
3007		handle->md.cooked = 1;
3008		handle->linktype = DLT_LINUX_SLL;
3009
3010		/*
3011		 * We're not bound to a device.
3012		 * For now, we're using this as an indication
3013		 * that we can't transmit; stop doing that only
3014		 * if we figure out how to transmit in cooked
3015		 * mode.
3016		 */
3017		handle->md.ifindex = -1;
3018	}
3019
3020	/*
3021	 * Select promiscuous mode on if "promisc" is set.
3022	 *
3023	 * Do not turn allmulti mode on if we don't select
3024	 * promiscuous mode - on some devices (e.g., Orinoco
3025	 * wireless interfaces), allmulti mode isn't supported
3026	 * and the driver implements it by turning promiscuous
3027	 * mode on, and that screws up the operation of the
3028	 * card as a normal networking interface, and on no
3029	 * other platform I know of does starting a non-
3030	 * promiscuous capture affect which multicast packets
3031	 * are received by the interface.
3032	 */
3033
3034	/*
3035	 * Hmm, how can we set promiscuous mode on all interfaces?
3036	 * I am not sure if that is possible at all.  For now, we
3037	 * silently ignore attempts to turn promiscuous mode on
3038	 * for the "any" device (so you don't have to explicitly
3039	 * disable it in programs such as tcpdump).
3040	 */
3041
3042	if (!is_any_device && handle->opt.promisc) {
3043		memset(&mr, 0, sizeof(mr));
3044		mr.mr_ifindex = handle->md.ifindex;
3045		mr.mr_type    = PACKET_MR_PROMISC;
3046		if (setsockopt(sock_fd, SOL_PACKET, PACKET_ADD_MEMBERSHIP,
3047		    &mr, sizeof(mr)) == -1) {
3048			snprintf(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
3049				"setsockopt: %s", pcap_strerror(errno));
3050			close(sock_fd);
3051			return PCAP_ERROR;
3052		}
3053	}
3054
3055	/* Enable auxillary data if supported and reserve room for
3056	 * reconstructing VLAN headers. */
3057#ifdef HAVE_PACKET_AUXDATA
3058	val = 1;
3059	if (setsockopt(sock_fd, SOL_PACKET, PACKET_AUXDATA, &val,
3060		       sizeof(val)) == -1 && errno != ENOPROTOOPT) {
3061		snprintf(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
3062			 "setsockopt: %s", pcap_strerror(errno));
3063		close(sock_fd);
3064		return PCAP_ERROR;
3065	}
3066	handle->offset += VLAN_TAG_LEN;
3067#endif /* HAVE_PACKET_AUXDATA */
3068
3069	/*
3070	 * This is a 2.2[.x] or later kernel (we know that
3071	 * because we're not using a SOCK_PACKET socket -
3072	 * PF_PACKET is supported only in 2.2 and later
3073	 * kernels).
3074	 *
3075	 * We can safely pass "recvfrom()" a byte count
3076	 * based on the snapshot length.
3077	 *
3078	 * If we're in cooked mode, make the snapshot length
3079	 * large enough to hold a "cooked mode" header plus
3080	 * 1 byte of packet data (so we don't pass a byte
3081	 * count of 0 to "recvfrom()").
3082	 */
3083	if (handle->md.cooked) {
3084		if (handle->snapshot < SLL_HDR_LEN + 1)
3085			handle->snapshot = SLL_HDR_LEN + 1;
3086	}
3087	handle->bufsize = handle->snapshot;
3088
3089	/*
3090	 * Set the offset at which to insert VLAN tags.
3091	 */
3092	switch (handle->linktype) {
3093
3094	case DLT_EN10MB:
3095		handle->md.vlan_offset = 2 * ETH_ALEN;
3096		break;
3097
3098	case DLT_LINUX_SLL:
3099		handle->md.vlan_offset = 14;
3100		break;
3101
3102	default:
3103		handle->md.vlan_offset = -1; /* unknown */
3104		break;
3105	}
3106
3107	/* Save the socket FD in the pcap structure */
3108	handle->fd = sock_fd;
3109
3110	return 1;
3111#else
3112	strncpy(ebuf,
3113		"New packet capturing interface not supported by build "
3114		"environment", PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE);
3115	return 0;
3116#endif
3117}
3118
3119#ifdef HAVE_PACKET_RING
3120/*
3121 * Attempt to activate with memory-mapped access.
3122 *
3123 * On success, returns 1, and sets *status to 0 if there are no warnings
3124 * or to a PCAP_WARNING_ code if there is a warning.
3125 *
3126 * On failure due to lack of support for memory-mapped capture, returns
3127 * 0.
3128 *
3129 * On error, returns -1, and sets *status to the appropriate error code;
3130 * if that is PCAP_ERROR, sets handle->errbuf to the appropriate message.
3131 */
3132static int
3133activate_mmap(pcap_t *handle, int *status)
3134{
3135	int ret;
3136
3137	/*
3138	 * Attempt to allocate a buffer to hold the contents of one
3139	 * packet, for use by the oneshot callback.
3140	 */
3141	handle->md.oneshot_buffer = malloc(handle->snapshot);
3142	if (handle->md.oneshot_buffer == NULL) {
3143		snprintf(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
3144			 "can't allocate oneshot buffer: %s",
3145			 pcap_strerror(errno));
3146		*status = PCAP_ERROR;
3147		return -1;
3148	}
3149
3150	if (handle->opt.buffer_size == 0) {
3151		/* by default request 2M for the ring buffer */
3152		handle->opt.buffer_size = 2*1024*1024;
3153	}
3154	ret = prepare_tpacket_socket(handle);
3155	if (ret == -1) {
3156		free(handle->md.oneshot_buffer);
3157		*status = PCAP_ERROR;
3158		return ret;
3159	}
3160	ret = create_ring(handle, status);
3161	if (ret == 0) {
3162		/*
3163		 * We don't support memory-mapped capture; our caller
3164		 * will fall back on reading from the socket.
3165		 */
3166		free(handle->md.oneshot_buffer);
3167		return 0;
3168	}
3169	if (ret == -1) {
3170		/*
3171		 * Error attempting to enable memory-mapped capture;
3172		 * fail.  create_ring() has set *status.
3173		 */
3174		free(handle->md.oneshot_buffer);
3175		return -1;
3176	}
3177
3178	/*
3179	 * Success.  *status has been set either to 0 if there are no
3180	 * warnings or to a PCAP_WARNING_ value if there is a warning.
3181	 *
3182	 * Override some defaults and inherit the other fields from
3183	 * activate_new.
3184	 * handle->offset is used to get the current position into the rx ring.
3185	 * handle->cc is used to store the ring size.
3186	 */
3187	handle->read_op = pcap_read_linux_mmap;
3188	handle->cleanup_op = pcap_cleanup_linux_mmap;
3189	handle->setfilter_op = pcap_setfilter_linux_mmap;
3190	handle->setnonblock_op = pcap_setnonblock_mmap;
3191	handle->getnonblock_op = pcap_getnonblock_mmap;
3192	handle->oneshot_callback = pcap_oneshot_mmap;
3193	handle->selectable_fd = handle->fd;
3194	return 1;
3195}
3196#else /* HAVE_PACKET_RING */
3197static int
3198activate_mmap(pcap_t *handle _U_, int *status _U_)
3199{
3200	return 0;
3201}
3202#endif /* HAVE_PACKET_RING */
3203
3204#ifdef HAVE_PACKET_RING
3205/*
3206 * Attempt to set the socket to version 2 of the memory-mapped header.
3207 * Return 1 if we succeed or if we fail because version 2 isn't
3208 * supported; return -1 on any other error, and set handle->errbuf.
3209 */
3210static int
3211prepare_tpacket_socket(pcap_t *handle)
3212{
3213#ifdef HAVE_TPACKET2
3214	socklen_t len;
3215	int val;
3216#endif
3217
3218	handle->md.tp_version = TPACKET_V1;
3219	handle->md.tp_hdrlen = sizeof(struct tpacket_hdr);
3220
3221#ifdef HAVE_TPACKET2
3222	/* Probe whether kernel supports TPACKET_V2 */
3223	val = TPACKET_V2;
3224	len = sizeof(val);
3225	if (getsockopt(handle->fd, SOL_PACKET, PACKET_HDRLEN, &val, &len) < 0) {
3226		if (errno == ENOPROTOOPT)
3227			return 1;	/* no - just drive on */
3228
3229		/* Yes - treat as a failure. */
3230		snprintf(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
3231		    "can't get TPACKET_V2 header len on packet socket: %s",
3232		    pcap_strerror(errno));
3233		return -1;
3234	}
3235	handle->md.tp_hdrlen = val;
3236
3237	val = TPACKET_V2;
3238	if (setsockopt(handle->fd, SOL_PACKET, PACKET_VERSION, &val,
3239		       sizeof(val)) < 0) {
3240		snprintf(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
3241		    "can't activate TPACKET_V2 on packet socket: %s",
3242		    pcap_strerror(errno));
3243		return -1;
3244	}
3245	handle->md.tp_version = TPACKET_V2;
3246
3247	/* Reserve space for VLAN tag reconstruction */
3248	val = VLAN_TAG_LEN;
3249	if (setsockopt(handle->fd, SOL_PACKET, PACKET_RESERVE, &val,
3250		       sizeof(val)) < 0) {
3251		snprintf(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
3252		    "can't set up reserve on packet socket: %s",
3253		    pcap_strerror(errno));
3254		return -1;
3255	}
3256
3257#endif /* HAVE_TPACKET2 */
3258	return 1;
3259}
3260
3261/*
3262 * Attempt to set up memory-mapped access.
3263 *
3264 * On success, returns 1, and sets *status to 0 if there are no warnings
3265 * or to a PCAP_WARNING_ code if there is a warning.
3266 *
3267 * On failure due to lack of support for memory-mapped capture, returns
3268 * 0.
3269 *
3270 * On error, returns -1, and sets *status to the appropriate error code;
3271 * if that is PCAP_ERROR, sets handle->errbuf to the appropriate message.
3272 */
3273static int
3274create_ring(pcap_t *handle, int *status)
3275{
3276	unsigned i, j, frames_per_block;
3277	struct tpacket_req req;
3278	socklen_t len;
3279	unsigned int sk_type, tp_reserve, maclen, tp_hdrlen, netoff, macoff;
3280	unsigned int frame_size;
3281
3282	/*
3283	 * Start out assuming no warnings or errors.
3284	 */
3285	*status = 0;
3286
3287	/* Note that with large snapshot length (say 64K, which is the default
3288	 * for recent versions of tcpdump, the value that "-s 0" has given
3289	 * for a long time with tcpdump, and the default in Wireshark/TShark),
3290	 * if we use the snapshot length to calculate the frame length,
3291	 * only a few frames will be available in the ring even with pretty
3292	 * large ring size (and a lot of memory will be unused).
3293	 *
3294	 * Ideally, we should choose a frame length based on the
3295	 * minimum of the specified snapshot length and the maximum
3296	 * packet size.  That's not as easy as it sounds; consider, for
3297	 * example, an 802.11 interface in monitor mode, where the
3298	 * frame would include a radiotap header, where the maximum
3299	 * radiotap header length is device-dependent.
3300	 *
3301	 * So, for now, we just do this for Ethernet devices, where
3302	 * there's no metadata header, and the link-layer header is
3303	 * fixed length.  We can get the maximum packet size by
3304	 * adding 18, the Ethernet header length plus the CRC length
3305	 * (just in case we happen to get the CRC in the packet), to
3306	 * the MTU of the interface; we fetch the MTU in the hopes
3307	 * that it reflects support for jumbo frames.  (Even if the
3308	 * interface is just being used for passive snooping, the driver
3309	 * might set the size of buffers in the receive ring based on
3310	 * the MTU, so that the MTU limits the maximum size of packets
3311	 * that we can receive.)
3312	 *
3313	 * We don't do that if segmentation/fragmentation or receive
3314	 * offload are enabled, so we don't get rudely surprised by
3315	 * "packets" bigger than the MTU. */
3316	frame_size = handle->snapshot;
3317	if (handle->linktype == DLT_EN10MB) {
3318		int mtu;
3319		int offload;
3320
3321		offload = iface_get_offload(handle);
3322		if (offload == -1) {
3323			*status = PCAP_ERROR;
3324			return -1;
3325		}
3326		if (!offload) {
3327			mtu = iface_get_mtu(handle->fd, handle->opt.source,
3328			    handle->errbuf);
3329			if (mtu == -1) {
3330				*status = PCAP_ERROR;
3331				return -1;
3332			}
3333			if (frame_size > mtu + 18)
3334				frame_size = mtu + 18;
3335		}
3336	}
3337
3338	/* NOTE: calculus matching those in tpacket_rcv()
3339	 * in linux-2.6/net/packet/af_packet.c
3340	 */
3341	len = sizeof(sk_type);
3342	if (getsockopt(handle->fd, SOL_SOCKET, SO_TYPE, &sk_type, &len) < 0) {
3343		snprintf(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE, "getsockopt: %s", pcap_strerror(errno));
3344		*status = PCAP_ERROR;
3345		return -1;
3346	}
3347#ifdef PACKET_RESERVE
3348	len = sizeof(tp_reserve);
3349	if (getsockopt(handle->fd, SOL_PACKET, PACKET_RESERVE, &tp_reserve, &len) < 0) {
3350		if (errno != ENOPROTOOPT) {
3351			/*
3352			 * ENOPROTOOPT means "kernel doesn't support
3353			 * PACKET_RESERVE", in which case we fall back
3354			 * as best we can.
3355			 */
3356			snprintf(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE, "getsockopt: %s", pcap_strerror(errno));
3357			*status = PCAP_ERROR;
3358			return -1;
3359		}
3360		tp_reserve = 0;	/* older kernel, reserve not supported */
3361	}
3362#else
3363	tp_reserve = 0;	/* older kernel, reserve not supported */
3364#endif
3365	maclen = (sk_type == SOCK_DGRAM) ? 0 : MAX_LINKHEADER_SIZE;
3366		/* XXX: in the kernel maclen is calculated from
3367		 * LL_ALLOCATED_SPACE(dev) and vnet_hdr.hdr_len
3368		 * in:  packet_snd()           in linux-2.6/net/packet/af_packet.c
3369		 * then packet_alloc_skb()     in linux-2.6/net/packet/af_packet.c
3370		 * then sock_alloc_send_pskb() in linux-2.6/net/core/sock.c
3371		 * but I see no way to get those sizes in userspace,
3372		 * like for instance with an ifreq ioctl();
3373		 * the best thing I've found so far is MAX_HEADER in the kernel
3374		 * part of linux-2.6/include/linux/netdevice.h
3375		 * which goes up to 128+48=176; since pcap-linux.c defines
3376		 * a MAX_LINKHEADER_SIZE of 256 which is greater than that,
3377		 * let's use it.. maybe is it even large enough to directly
3378		 * replace macoff..
3379		 */
3380	tp_hdrlen = TPACKET_ALIGN(handle->md.tp_hdrlen) + sizeof(struct sockaddr_ll) ;
3381	netoff = TPACKET_ALIGN(tp_hdrlen + (maclen < 16 ? 16 : maclen)) + tp_reserve;
3382		/* NOTE: AFAICS tp_reserve may break the TPACKET_ALIGN of
3383		 * netoff, which contradicts
3384		 * linux-2.6/Documentation/networking/packet_mmap.txt
3385		 * documenting that:
3386		 * "- Gap, chosen so that packet data (Start+tp_net)
3387		 * aligns to TPACKET_ALIGNMENT=16"
3388		 */
3389		/* NOTE: in linux-2.6/include/linux/skbuff.h:
3390		 * "CPUs often take a performance hit
3391		 *  when accessing unaligned memory locations"
3392		 */
3393	macoff = netoff - maclen;
3394	req.tp_frame_size = TPACKET_ALIGN(macoff + frame_size);
3395	req.tp_frame_nr = handle->opt.buffer_size/req.tp_frame_size;
3396
3397	/* compute the minumum block size that will handle this frame.
3398	 * The block has to be page size aligned.
3399	 * The max block size allowed by the kernel is arch-dependent and
3400	 * it's not explicitly checked here. */
3401	req.tp_block_size = getpagesize();
3402	while (req.tp_block_size < req.tp_frame_size)
3403		req.tp_block_size <<= 1;
3404
3405	frames_per_block = req.tp_block_size/req.tp_frame_size;
3406
3407	/*
3408	 * PACKET_TIMESTAMP was added after linux/net_tstamp.h was,
3409	 * so we check for PACKET_TIMESTAMP.  We check for
3410	 * linux/net_tstamp.h just in case a system somehow has
3411	 * PACKET_TIMESTAMP but not linux/net_tstamp.h; that might
3412	 * be unnecessary.
3413	 *
3414	 * SIOCSHWTSTAMP was introduced in the patch that introduced
3415	 * linux/net_tstamp.h, so we don't bother checking whether
3416	 * SIOCSHWTSTAMP is defined (if your Linux system has
3417	 * linux/net_tstamp.h but doesn't define SIOCSHWTSTAMP, your
3418	 * Linux system is badly broken).
3419	 */
3420#if defined(HAVE_LINUX_NET_TSTAMP_H) && defined(PACKET_TIMESTAMP)
3421	/*
3422	 * If we were told to do so, ask the kernel and the driver
3423	 * to use hardware timestamps.
3424	 *
3425	 * Hardware timestamps are only supported with mmapped
3426	 * captures.
3427	 */
3428	if (handle->opt.tstamp_type == PCAP_TSTAMP_ADAPTER ||
3429	    handle->opt.tstamp_type == PCAP_TSTAMP_ADAPTER_UNSYNCED) {
3430		struct hwtstamp_config hwconfig;
3431		struct ifreq ifr;
3432		int timesource;
3433
3434		/*
3435		 * Ask for hardware time stamps on all packets,
3436		 * including transmitted packets.
3437		 */
3438		memset(&hwconfig, 0, sizeof(hwconfig));
3439		hwconfig.tx_type = HWTSTAMP_TX_ON;
3440		hwconfig.rx_filter = HWTSTAMP_FILTER_ALL;
3441
3442		memset(&ifr, 0, sizeof(ifr));
3443		strcpy(ifr.ifr_name, handle->opt.source);
3444		ifr.ifr_data = (void *)&hwconfig;
3445
3446		if (ioctl(handle->fd, SIOCSHWTSTAMP, &ifr) < 0) {
3447			switch (errno) {
3448
3449			case EPERM:
3450				/*
3451				 * Treat this as an error, as the
3452				 * user should try to run this
3453				 * with the appropriate privileges -
3454				 * and, if they can't, shouldn't
3455				 * try requesting hardware time stamps.
3456				 */
3457				*status = PCAP_ERROR_PERM_DENIED;
3458				return -1;
3459
3460			case EOPNOTSUPP:
3461				/*
3462				 * Treat this as a warning, as the
3463				 * only way to fix the warning is to
3464				 * get an adapter that supports hardware
3465				 * time stamps.  We'll just fall back
3466				 * on the standard host time stamps.
3467				 */
3468				*status = PCAP_WARNING_TSTAMP_TYPE_NOTSUP;
3469				break;
3470
3471			default:
3472				snprintf(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
3473					"SIOCSHWTSTAMP failed: %s",
3474					pcap_strerror(errno));
3475				*status = PCAP_ERROR;
3476				return -1;
3477			}
3478		} else {
3479			/*
3480			 * Well, that worked.  Now specify the type of
3481			 * hardware time stamp we want for this
3482			 * socket.
3483			 */
3484			if (handle->opt.tstamp_type == PCAP_TSTAMP_ADAPTER) {
3485				/*
3486				 * Hardware timestamp, synchronized
3487				 * with the system clock.
3488				 */
3489				timesource = SOF_TIMESTAMPING_SYS_HARDWARE;
3490			} else {
3491				/*
3492				 * PCAP_TSTAMP_ADAPTER_UNSYNCED - hardware
3493				 * timestamp, not synchronized with the
3494				 * system clock.
3495				 */
3496				timesource = SOF_TIMESTAMPING_RAW_HARDWARE;
3497			}
3498			if (setsockopt(handle->fd, SOL_PACKET, PACKET_TIMESTAMP,
3499				(void *)&timesource, sizeof(timesource))) {
3500				snprintf(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
3501					"can't set PACKET_TIMESTAMP: %s",
3502					pcap_strerror(errno));
3503				*status = PCAP_ERROR;
3504				return -1;
3505			}
3506		}
3507	}
3508#endif /* HAVE_LINUX_NET_TSTAMP_H && PACKET_TIMESTAMP */
3509
3510	/* ask the kernel to create the ring */
3511retry:
3512	req.tp_block_nr = req.tp_frame_nr / frames_per_block;
3513
3514	/* req.tp_frame_nr is requested to match frames_per_block*req.tp_block_nr */
3515	req.tp_frame_nr = req.tp_block_nr * frames_per_block;
3516
3517	if (setsockopt(handle->fd, SOL_PACKET, PACKET_RX_RING,
3518					(void *) &req, sizeof(req))) {
3519		if ((errno == ENOMEM) && (req.tp_block_nr > 1)) {
3520			/*
3521			 * Memory failure; try to reduce the requested ring
3522			 * size.
3523			 *
3524			 * We used to reduce this by half -- do 5% instead.
3525			 * That may result in more iterations and a longer
3526			 * startup, but the user will be much happier with
3527			 * the resulting buffer size.
3528			 */
3529			if (req.tp_frame_nr < 20)
3530				req.tp_frame_nr -= 1;
3531			else
3532				req.tp_frame_nr -= req.tp_frame_nr/20;
3533			goto retry;
3534		}
3535		if (errno == ENOPROTOOPT) {
3536			/*
3537			 * We don't have ring buffer support in this kernel.
3538			 */
3539			return 0;
3540		}
3541		snprintf(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
3542		    "can't create rx ring on packet socket: %s",
3543		    pcap_strerror(errno));
3544		*status = PCAP_ERROR;
3545		return -1;
3546	}
3547
3548	/* memory map the rx ring */
3549	handle->md.mmapbuflen = req.tp_block_nr * req.tp_block_size;
3550	handle->md.mmapbuf = mmap(0, handle->md.mmapbuflen,
3551	    PROT_READ|PROT_WRITE, MAP_SHARED, handle->fd, 0);
3552	if (handle->md.mmapbuf == MAP_FAILED) {
3553		snprintf(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
3554		    "can't mmap rx ring: %s", pcap_strerror(errno));
3555
3556		/* clear the allocated ring on error*/
3557		destroy_ring(handle);
3558		*status = PCAP_ERROR;
3559		return -1;
3560	}
3561
3562	/* allocate a ring for each frame header pointer*/
3563	handle->cc = req.tp_frame_nr;
3564	handle->buffer = malloc(handle->cc * sizeof(union thdr *));
3565	if (!handle->buffer) {
3566		snprintf(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
3567		    "can't allocate ring of frame headers: %s",
3568		    pcap_strerror(errno));
3569
3570		destroy_ring(handle);
3571		*status = PCAP_ERROR;
3572		return -1;
3573	}
3574
3575	/* fill the header ring with proper frame ptr*/
3576	handle->offset = 0;
3577	for (i=0; i<req.tp_block_nr; ++i) {
3578		void *base = &handle->md.mmapbuf[i*req.tp_block_size];
3579		for (j=0; j<frames_per_block; ++j, ++handle->offset) {
3580			RING_GET_FRAME(handle) = base;
3581			base += req.tp_frame_size;
3582		}
3583	}
3584
3585	handle->bufsize = req.tp_frame_size;
3586	handle->offset = 0;
3587	return 1;
3588}
3589
3590/* free all ring related resources*/
3591static void
3592destroy_ring(pcap_t *handle)
3593{
3594	/* tell the kernel to destroy the ring*/
3595	struct tpacket_req req;
3596	memset(&req, 0, sizeof(req));
3597	setsockopt(handle->fd, SOL_PACKET, PACKET_RX_RING,
3598				(void *) &req, sizeof(req));
3599
3600	/* if ring is mapped, unmap it*/
3601	if (handle->md.mmapbuf) {
3602		/* do not test for mmap failure, as we can't recover from any error */
3603		munmap(handle->md.mmapbuf, handle->md.mmapbuflen);
3604		handle->md.mmapbuf = NULL;
3605	}
3606}
3607
3608/*
3609 * Special one-shot callback, used for pcap_next() and pcap_next_ex(),
3610 * for Linux mmapped capture.
3611 *
3612 * The problem is that pcap_next() and pcap_next_ex() expect the packet
3613 * data handed to the callback to be valid after the callback returns,
3614 * but pcap_read_linux_mmap() has to release that packet as soon as
3615 * the callback returns (otherwise, the kernel thinks there's still
3616 * at least one unprocessed packet available in the ring, so a select()
3617 * will immediately return indicating that there's data to process), so,
3618 * in the callback, we have to make a copy of the packet.
3619 *
3620 * Yes, this means that, if the capture is using the ring buffer, using
3621 * pcap_next() or pcap_next_ex() requires more copies than using
3622 * pcap_loop() or pcap_dispatch().  If that bothers you, don't use
3623 * pcap_next() or pcap_next_ex().
3624 */
3625static void
3626pcap_oneshot_mmap(u_char *user, const struct pcap_pkthdr *h,
3627    const u_char *bytes)
3628{
3629	struct oneshot_userdata *sp = (struct oneshot_userdata *)user;
3630
3631	*sp->hdr = *h;
3632	memcpy(sp->pd->md.oneshot_buffer, bytes, h->caplen);
3633	*sp->pkt = sp->pd->md.oneshot_buffer;
3634}
3635
3636static void
3637pcap_cleanup_linux_mmap( pcap_t *handle )
3638{
3639	destroy_ring(handle);
3640	if (handle->md.oneshot_buffer != NULL) {
3641		free(handle->md.oneshot_buffer);
3642		handle->md.oneshot_buffer = NULL;
3643	}
3644	pcap_cleanup_linux(handle);
3645}
3646
3647
3648static int
3649pcap_getnonblock_mmap(pcap_t *p, char *errbuf)
3650{
3651	/* use negative value of timeout to indicate non blocking ops */
3652	return (p->md.timeout<0);
3653}
3654
3655static int
3656pcap_setnonblock_mmap(pcap_t *p, int nonblock, char *errbuf)
3657{
3658	/*
3659	 * Map each value to their corresponding negation to
3660	 * preserve the timeout value provided with pcap_set_timeout.
3661	 */
3662	if (nonblock) {
3663		if (p->md.timeout >= 0) {
3664			/*
3665			 * Indicate that we're switching to
3666			 * non-blocking mode.
3667			 */
3668			p->md.timeout = ~p->md.timeout;
3669		}
3670	} else {
3671		if (p->md.timeout < 0) {
3672			p->md.timeout = ~p->md.timeout;
3673		}
3674	}
3675	return 0;
3676}
3677
3678static inline union thdr *
3679pcap_get_ring_frame(pcap_t *handle, int status)
3680{
3681	union thdr h;
3682
3683	h.raw = RING_GET_FRAME(handle);
3684	switch (handle->md.tp_version) {
3685	case TPACKET_V1:
3686		if (status != (h.h1->tp_status ? TP_STATUS_USER :
3687						TP_STATUS_KERNEL))
3688			return NULL;
3689		break;
3690#ifdef HAVE_TPACKET2
3691	case TPACKET_V2:
3692		if (status != (h.h2->tp_status ? TP_STATUS_USER :
3693						TP_STATUS_KERNEL))
3694			return NULL;
3695		break;
3696#endif
3697	}
3698	return h.raw;
3699}
3700
3701#ifndef POLLRDHUP
3702#define POLLRDHUP 0
3703#endif
3704
3705static int
3706pcap_read_linux_mmap(pcap_t *handle, int max_packets, pcap_handler callback,
3707		u_char *user)
3708{
3709	int timeout;
3710	int pkts = 0;
3711	char c;
3712
3713	/* wait for frames availability.*/
3714	if (!pcap_get_ring_frame(handle, TP_STATUS_USER)) {
3715		struct pollfd pollinfo;
3716		int ret;
3717
3718		pollinfo.fd = handle->fd;
3719		pollinfo.events = POLLIN;
3720
3721		if (handle->md.timeout == 0)
3722			timeout = -1;	/* block forever */
3723		else if (handle->md.timeout > 0)
3724			timeout = handle->md.timeout;	/* block for that amount of time */
3725		else
3726			timeout = 0;	/* non-blocking mode - poll to pick up errors */
3727		do {
3728			ret = poll(&pollinfo, 1, timeout);
3729			if (ret < 0 && errno != EINTR) {
3730				snprintf(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
3731					"can't poll on packet socket: %s",
3732					pcap_strerror(errno));
3733				return PCAP_ERROR;
3734			} else if (ret > 0 &&
3735			    (pollinfo.revents & (POLLHUP|POLLRDHUP|POLLERR|POLLNVAL))) {
3736				/*
3737				 * There's some indication other than
3738				 * "you can read on this descriptor" on
3739				 * the descriptor.
3740				 */
3741				if (pollinfo.revents & (POLLHUP | POLLRDHUP)) {
3742					snprintf(handle->errbuf,
3743						PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
3744						"Hangup on packet socket");
3745					return PCAP_ERROR;
3746				}
3747				if (pollinfo.revents & POLLERR) {
3748					/*
3749					 * A recv() will give us the
3750					 * actual error code.
3751					 *
3752					 * XXX - make the socket non-blocking?
3753					 */
3754					if (recv(handle->fd, &c, sizeof c,
3755					    MSG_PEEK) != -1)
3756						continue;	/* what, no error? */
3757					if (errno == ENETDOWN) {
3758						/*
3759						 * The device on which we're
3760						 * capturing went away.
3761						 *
3762						 * XXX - we should really return
3763						 * PCAP_ERROR_IFACE_NOT_UP,
3764						 * but pcap_dispatch() etc.
3765						 * aren't defined to return
3766						 * that.
3767						 */
3768						snprintf(handle->errbuf,
3769							PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
3770							"The interface went down");
3771					} else {
3772						snprintf(handle->errbuf,
3773							PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
3774							"Error condition on packet socket: %s",
3775							strerror(errno));
3776					}
3777					return PCAP_ERROR;
3778				}
3779				if (pollinfo.revents & POLLNVAL) {
3780					snprintf(handle->errbuf,
3781						PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
3782						"Invalid polling request on packet socket");
3783					return PCAP_ERROR;
3784				}
3785  			}
3786			/* check for break loop condition on interrupted syscall*/
3787			if (handle->break_loop) {
3788				handle->break_loop = 0;
3789				return PCAP_ERROR_BREAK;
3790			}
3791		} while (ret < 0);
3792	}
3793
3794	/* non-positive values of max_packets are used to require all
3795	 * packets currently available in the ring */
3796	while ((pkts < max_packets) || (max_packets <= 0)) {
3797		int run_bpf;
3798		struct sockaddr_ll *sll;
3799		struct pcap_pkthdr pcaphdr;
3800		unsigned char *bp;
3801		union thdr h;
3802		unsigned int tp_len;
3803		unsigned int tp_mac;
3804		unsigned int tp_snaplen;
3805		unsigned int tp_sec;
3806		unsigned int tp_usec;
3807
3808		h.raw = pcap_get_ring_frame(handle, TP_STATUS_USER);
3809		if (!h.raw)
3810			break;
3811
3812		switch (handle->md.tp_version) {
3813		case TPACKET_V1:
3814			tp_len	   = h.h1->tp_len;
3815			tp_mac	   = h.h1->tp_mac;
3816			tp_snaplen = h.h1->tp_snaplen;
3817			tp_sec	   = h.h1->tp_sec;
3818			tp_usec	   = h.h1->tp_usec;
3819			break;
3820#ifdef HAVE_TPACKET2
3821		case TPACKET_V2:
3822			tp_len	   = h.h2->tp_len;
3823			tp_mac	   = h.h2->tp_mac;
3824			tp_snaplen = h.h2->tp_snaplen;
3825			tp_sec	   = h.h2->tp_sec;
3826			tp_usec	   = h.h2->tp_nsec / 1000;
3827			break;
3828#endif
3829		default:
3830			snprintf(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
3831				"unsupported tpacket version %d",
3832				handle->md.tp_version);
3833			return -1;
3834		}
3835		/* perform sanity check on internal offset. */
3836		if (tp_mac + tp_snaplen > handle->bufsize) {
3837			snprintf(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
3838				"corrupted frame on kernel ring mac "
3839				"offset %d + caplen %d > frame len %d",
3840				tp_mac, tp_snaplen, handle->bufsize);
3841			return -1;
3842		}
3843
3844		/* run filter on received packet
3845		 * If the kernel filtering is enabled we need to run the
3846		 * filter until all the frames present into the ring
3847		 * at filter creation time are processed.
3848		 * In such case md.use_bpf is used as a counter for the
3849		 * packet we need to filter.
3850		 * Note: alternatively it could be possible to stop applying
3851		 * the filter when the ring became empty, but it can possibly
3852		 * happen a lot later... */
3853		bp = (unsigned char*)h.raw + tp_mac;
3854		run_bpf = (!handle->md.use_bpf) ||
3855			((handle->md.use_bpf>1) && handle->md.use_bpf--);
3856		if (run_bpf && handle->fcode.bf_insns &&
3857				(bpf_filter(handle->fcode.bf_insns, bp,
3858					tp_len, tp_snaplen) == 0))
3859			goto skip;
3860
3861		/*
3862		 * Do checks based on packet direction.
3863		 */
3864		sll = (void *)h.raw + TPACKET_ALIGN(handle->md.tp_hdrlen);
3865		if (sll->sll_pkttype == PACKET_OUTGOING) {
3866			/*
3867			 * Outgoing packet.
3868			 * If this is from the loopback device, reject it;
3869			 * we'll see the packet as an incoming packet as well,
3870			 * and we don't want to see it twice.
3871			 */
3872			if (sll->sll_ifindex == handle->md.lo_ifindex)
3873				goto skip;
3874
3875			/*
3876			 * If the user only wants incoming packets, reject it.
3877			 */
3878			if (handle->direction == PCAP_D_IN)
3879				goto skip;
3880		} else {
3881			/*
3882			 * Incoming packet.
3883			 * If the user only wants outgoing packets, reject it.
3884			 */
3885			if (handle->direction == PCAP_D_OUT)
3886				goto skip;
3887		}
3888
3889		/* get required packet info from ring header */
3890		pcaphdr.ts.tv_sec = tp_sec;
3891		pcaphdr.ts.tv_usec = tp_usec;
3892		pcaphdr.caplen = tp_snaplen;
3893		pcaphdr.len = tp_len;
3894
3895		/* if required build in place the sll header*/
3896		if (handle->md.cooked) {
3897			struct sll_header *hdrp;
3898
3899			/*
3900			 * The kernel should have left us with enough
3901			 * space for an sll header; back up the packet
3902			 * data pointer into that space, as that'll be
3903			 * the beginning of the packet we pass to the
3904			 * callback.
3905			 */
3906			bp -= SLL_HDR_LEN;
3907
3908			/*
3909			 * Let's make sure that's past the end of
3910			 * the tpacket header, i.e. >=
3911			 * ((u_char *)thdr + TPACKET_HDRLEN), so we
3912			 * don't step on the header when we construct
3913			 * the sll header.
3914			 */
3915			if (bp < (u_char *)h.raw +
3916					   TPACKET_ALIGN(handle->md.tp_hdrlen) +
3917					   sizeof(struct sockaddr_ll)) {
3918				snprintf(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
3919					"cooked-mode frame doesn't have room for sll header");
3920				return -1;
3921			}
3922
3923			/*
3924			 * OK, that worked; construct the sll header.
3925			 */
3926			hdrp = (struct sll_header *)bp;
3927			hdrp->sll_pkttype = map_packet_type_to_sll_type(
3928							sll->sll_pkttype);
3929			hdrp->sll_hatype = htons(sll->sll_hatype);
3930			hdrp->sll_halen = htons(sll->sll_halen);
3931			memcpy(hdrp->sll_addr, sll->sll_addr, SLL_ADDRLEN);
3932			hdrp->sll_protocol = sll->sll_protocol;
3933
3934			/* update packet len */
3935			pcaphdr.caplen += SLL_HDR_LEN;
3936			pcaphdr.len += SLL_HDR_LEN;
3937		}
3938
3939#ifdef HAVE_TPACKET2
3940		if ((handle->md.tp_version == TPACKET_V2) &&
3941#if defined(TP_STATUS_VLAN_VALID)
3942		(h.h2->tp_vlan_tci || (h.h2->tp_status & TP_STATUS_VLAN_VALID)) &&
3943#else
3944		h.h2->tp_vlan_tci &&
3945#endif
3946		    handle->md.vlan_offset != -1 &&
3947		    tp_snaplen >= (unsigned int) handle->md.vlan_offset) {
3948			struct vlan_tag *tag;
3949
3950			bp -= VLAN_TAG_LEN;
3951			memmove(bp, bp + VLAN_TAG_LEN, handle->md.vlan_offset);
3952
3953			tag = (struct vlan_tag *)(bp + handle->md.vlan_offset);
3954			tag->vlan_tpid = htons(ETH_P_8021Q);
3955			tag->vlan_tci = htons(h.h2->tp_vlan_tci);
3956
3957			pcaphdr.caplen += VLAN_TAG_LEN;
3958			pcaphdr.len += VLAN_TAG_LEN;
3959		}
3960#endif
3961
3962		/*
3963		 * The only way to tell the kernel to cut off the
3964		 * packet at a snapshot length is with a filter program;
3965		 * if there's no filter program, the kernel won't cut
3966		 * the packet off.
3967		 *
3968		 * Trim the snapshot length to be no longer than the
3969		 * specified snapshot length.
3970		 */
3971		if (pcaphdr.caplen > handle->snapshot)
3972			pcaphdr.caplen = handle->snapshot;
3973
3974		/* pass the packet to the user */
3975		pkts++;
3976		callback(user, &pcaphdr, bp);
3977		handle->md.packets_read++;
3978
3979skip:
3980		/* next packet */
3981		switch (handle->md.tp_version) {
3982		case TPACKET_V1:
3983			h.h1->tp_status = TP_STATUS_KERNEL;
3984			break;
3985#ifdef HAVE_TPACKET2
3986		case TPACKET_V2:
3987			h.h2->tp_status = TP_STATUS_KERNEL;
3988			break;
3989#endif
3990		}
3991		if (++handle->offset >= handle->cc)
3992			handle->offset = 0;
3993
3994		/* check for break loop condition*/
3995		if (handle->break_loop) {
3996			handle->break_loop = 0;
3997			return PCAP_ERROR_BREAK;
3998		}
3999	}
4000	return pkts;
4001}
4002
4003static int
4004pcap_setfilter_linux_mmap(pcap_t *handle, struct bpf_program *filter)
4005{
4006	int n, offset;
4007	int ret;
4008
4009	/*
4010	 * Don't rewrite "ret" instructions; we don't need to, as
4011	 * we're not reading packets with recvmsg(), and we don't
4012	 * want to, as, by not rewriting them, the kernel can avoid
4013	 * copying extra data.
4014	 */
4015	ret = pcap_setfilter_linux_common(handle, filter, 1);
4016	if (ret < 0)
4017		return ret;
4018
4019	/* if the kernel filter is enabled, we need to apply the filter on
4020	 * all packets present into the ring. Get an upper bound of their number
4021	 */
4022	if (!handle->md.use_bpf)
4023		return ret;
4024
4025	/* walk the ring backward and count the free slot */
4026	offset = handle->offset;
4027	if (--handle->offset < 0)
4028		handle->offset = handle->cc - 1;
4029	for (n=0; n < handle->cc; ++n) {
4030		if (--handle->offset < 0)
4031			handle->offset = handle->cc - 1;
4032		if (!pcap_get_ring_frame(handle, TP_STATUS_KERNEL))
4033			break;
4034	}
4035
4036	/* be careful to not change current ring position */
4037	handle->offset = offset;
4038
4039	/* store the number of packets currently present in the ring */
4040	handle->md.use_bpf = 1 + (handle->cc - n);
4041	return ret;
4042}
4043
4044#endif /* HAVE_PACKET_RING */
4045
4046
4047#ifdef HAVE_PF_PACKET_SOCKETS
4048/*
4049 *  Return the index of the given device name. Fill ebuf and return
4050 *  -1 on failure.
4051 */
4052static int
4053iface_get_id(int fd, const char *device, char *ebuf)
4054{
4055	struct ifreq	ifr;
4056
4057	memset(&ifr, 0, sizeof(ifr));
4058	strncpy(ifr.ifr_name, device, sizeof(ifr.ifr_name));
4059
4060	if (ioctl(fd, SIOCGIFINDEX, &ifr) == -1) {
4061		snprintf(ebuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
4062			 "SIOCGIFINDEX: %s", pcap_strerror(errno));
4063		return -1;
4064	}
4065
4066	return ifr.ifr_ifindex;
4067}
4068
4069/*
4070 *  Bind the socket associated with FD to the given device.
4071 *  Return 1 on success, 0 if we should try a SOCK_PACKET socket,
4072 *  or a PCAP_ERROR_ value on a hard error.
4073 */
4074static int
4075iface_bind(int fd, int ifindex, char *ebuf)
4076{
4077	struct sockaddr_ll	sll;
4078	int			err;
4079	socklen_t		errlen = sizeof(err);
4080
4081	memset(&sll, 0, sizeof(sll));
4082	sll.sll_family		= AF_PACKET;
4083	sll.sll_ifindex		= ifindex;
4084	sll.sll_protocol	= htons(ETH_P_ALL);
4085
4086	if (bind(fd, (struct sockaddr *) &sll, sizeof(sll)) == -1) {
4087		if (errno == ENETDOWN) {
4088			/*
4089			 * Return a "network down" indication, so that
4090			 * the application can report that rather than
4091			 * saying we had a mysterious failure and
4092			 * suggest that they report a problem to the
4093			 * libpcap developers.
4094			 */
4095			return PCAP_ERROR_IFACE_NOT_UP;
4096		} else {
4097			snprintf(ebuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
4098				 "bind: %s", pcap_strerror(errno));
4099			return PCAP_ERROR;
4100		}
4101	}
4102
4103	/* Any pending errors, e.g., network is down? */
4104
4105	if (getsockopt(fd, SOL_SOCKET, SO_ERROR, &err, &errlen) == -1) {
4106		snprintf(ebuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
4107			"getsockopt: %s", pcap_strerror(errno));
4108		return 0;
4109	}
4110
4111	if (err == ENETDOWN) {
4112		/*
4113		 * Return a "network down" indication, so that
4114		 * the application can report that rather than
4115		 * saying we had a mysterious failure and
4116		 * suggest that they report a problem to the
4117		 * libpcap developers.
4118		 */
4119		return PCAP_ERROR_IFACE_NOT_UP;
4120	} else if (err > 0) {
4121		snprintf(ebuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
4122			"bind: %s", pcap_strerror(err));
4123		return 0;
4124	}
4125
4126	return 1;
4127}
4128
4129#ifdef IW_MODE_MONITOR
4130/*
4131 * Check whether the device supports the Wireless Extensions.
4132 * Returns 1 if it does, 0 if it doesn't, PCAP_ERROR_NO_SUCH_DEVICE
4133 * if the device doesn't even exist.
4134 */
4135static int
4136has_wext(int sock_fd, const char *device, char *ebuf)
4137{
4138	struct iwreq ireq;
4139
4140	strncpy(ireq.ifr_ifrn.ifrn_name, device,
4141	    sizeof ireq.ifr_ifrn.ifrn_name);
4142	ireq.ifr_ifrn.ifrn_name[sizeof ireq.ifr_ifrn.ifrn_name - 1] = 0;
4143	if (ioctl(sock_fd, SIOCGIWNAME, &ireq) >= 0)
4144		return 1;	/* yes */
4145	snprintf(ebuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
4146	    "%s: SIOCGIWPRIV: %s", device, pcap_strerror(errno));
4147	if (errno == ENODEV)
4148		return PCAP_ERROR_NO_SUCH_DEVICE;
4149	return 0;
4150}
4151
4152/*
4153 * Per me si va ne la citta dolente,
4154 * Per me si va ne l'etterno dolore,
4155 *	...
4156 * Lasciate ogne speranza, voi ch'intrate.
4157 *
4158 * XXX - airmon-ng does special stuff with the Orinoco driver and the
4159 * wlan-ng driver.
4160 */
4161typedef enum {
4162	MONITOR_WEXT,
4163	MONITOR_HOSTAP,
4164	MONITOR_PRISM,
4165	MONITOR_PRISM54,
4166	MONITOR_ACX100,
4167	MONITOR_RT2500,
4168	MONITOR_RT2570,
4169	MONITOR_RT73,
4170	MONITOR_RTL8XXX
4171} monitor_type;
4172
4173/*
4174 * Use the Wireless Extensions, if we have them, to try to turn monitor mode
4175 * on if it's not already on.
4176 *
4177 * Returns 1 on success, 0 if we don't support the Wireless Extensions
4178 * on this device, or a PCAP_ERROR_ value if we do support them but
4179 * we weren't able to turn monitor mode on.
4180 */
4181static int
4182enter_rfmon_mode_wext(pcap_t *handle, int sock_fd, const char *device)
4183{
4184	/*
4185	 * XXX - at least some adapters require non-Wireless Extensions
4186	 * mechanisms to turn monitor mode on.
4187	 *
4188	 * Atheros cards might require that a separate "monitor virtual access
4189	 * point" be created, with later versions of the madwifi driver.
4190	 * airmon-ng does "wlanconfig ath create wlandev {if} wlanmode
4191	 * monitor -bssid", which apparently spits out a line "athN"
4192	 * where "athN" is the monitor mode device.  To leave monitor
4193	 * mode, it destroys the monitor mode device.
4194	 *
4195	 * Some Intel Centrino adapters might require private ioctls to get
4196	 * radio headers; the ipw2200 and ipw3945 drivers allow you to
4197	 * configure a separate "rtapN" interface to capture in monitor
4198	 * mode without preventing the adapter from operating normally.
4199	 * (airmon-ng doesn't appear to use that, though.)
4200	 *
4201	 * It would be Truly Wonderful if mac80211 and nl80211 cleaned this
4202	 * up, and if all drivers were converted to mac80211 drivers.
4203	 *
4204	 * If interface {if} is a mac80211 driver, the file
4205	 * /sys/class/net/{if}/phy80211 is a symlink to
4206	 * /sys/class/ieee80211/{phydev}, for some {phydev}.
4207	 *
4208	 * On Fedora 9, with a 2.6.26.3-29 kernel, my Zydas stick, at
4209	 * least, has a "wmaster0" device and a "wlan0" device; the
4210	 * latter is the one with the IP address.  Both show up in
4211	 * "tcpdump -D" output.  Capturing on the wmaster0 device
4212	 * captures with 802.11 headers.
4213	 *
4214	 * airmon-ng searches through /sys/class/net for devices named
4215	 * monN, starting with mon0; as soon as one *doesn't* exist,
4216	 * it chooses that as the monitor device name.  If the "iw"
4217	 * command exists, it does "iw dev {if} interface add {monif}
4218	 * type monitor", where {monif} is the monitor device.  It
4219	 * then (sigh) sleeps .1 second, and then configures the
4220	 * device up.  Otherwise, if /sys/class/ieee80211/{phydev}/add_iface
4221	 * is a file, it writes {mondev}, without a newline, to that file,
4222	 * and again (sigh) sleeps .1 second, and then iwconfig's that
4223	 * device into monitor mode and configures it up.  Otherwise,
4224	 * you can't do monitor mode.
4225	 *
4226	 * All these devices are "glued" together by having the
4227	 * /sys/class/net/{device}/phy80211 links pointing to the same
4228	 * place, so, given a wmaster, wlan, or mon device, you can
4229	 * find the other devices by looking for devices with
4230	 * the same phy80211 link.
4231	 *
4232	 * To turn monitor mode off, delete the monitor interface,
4233	 * either with "iw dev {monif} interface del" or by sending
4234	 * {monif}, with no NL, down /sys/class/ieee80211/{phydev}/remove_iface
4235	 *
4236	 * Note: if you try to create a monitor device named "monN", and
4237	 * there's already a "monN" device, it fails, as least with
4238	 * the netlink interface (which is what iw uses), with a return
4239	 * value of -ENFILE.  (Return values are negative errnos.)  We
4240	 * could probably use that to find an unused device.
4241	 */
4242	int err;
4243	struct iwreq ireq;
4244	struct iw_priv_args *priv;
4245	monitor_type montype;
4246	int i;
4247	__u32 cmd;
4248	struct ifreq ifr;
4249	int oldflags;
4250	int args[2];
4251	int channel;
4252
4253	/*
4254	 * Does this device *support* the Wireless Extensions?
4255	 */
4256	err = has_wext(sock_fd, device, handle->errbuf);
4257	if (err <= 0)
4258		return err;	/* either it doesn't or the device doesn't even exist */
4259	/*
4260	 * Start out assuming we have no private extensions to control
4261	 * radio metadata.
4262	 */
4263	montype = MONITOR_WEXT;
4264	cmd = 0;
4265
4266	/*
4267	 * Try to get all the Wireless Extensions private ioctls
4268	 * supported by this device.
4269	 *
4270	 * First, get the size of the buffer we need, by supplying no
4271	 * buffer and a length of 0.  If the device supports private
4272	 * ioctls, it should return E2BIG, with ireq.u.data.length set
4273	 * to the length we need.  If it doesn't support them, it should
4274	 * return EOPNOTSUPP.
4275	 */
4276	memset(&ireq, 0, sizeof ireq);
4277	strncpy(ireq.ifr_ifrn.ifrn_name, device,
4278	    sizeof ireq.ifr_ifrn.ifrn_name);
4279	ireq.ifr_ifrn.ifrn_name[sizeof ireq.ifr_ifrn.ifrn_name - 1] = 0;
4280	ireq.u.data.pointer = (void *)args;
4281	ireq.u.data.length = 0;
4282	ireq.u.data.flags = 0;
4283	if (ioctl(sock_fd, SIOCGIWPRIV, &ireq) != -1) {
4284		snprintf(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
4285		    "%s: SIOCGIWPRIV with a zero-length buffer didn't fail!",
4286		    device);
4287		return PCAP_ERROR;
4288	}
4289	if (errno != EOPNOTSUPP) {
4290		/*
4291		 * OK, it's not as if there are no private ioctls.
4292		 */
4293		if (errno != E2BIG) {
4294			/*
4295			 * Failed.
4296			 */
4297			snprintf(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
4298			    "%s: SIOCGIWPRIV: %s", device,
4299			    pcap_strerror(errno));
4300			return PCAP_ERROR;
4301		}
4302
4303		/*
4304		 * OK, try to get the list of private ioctls.
4305		 */
4306		priv = malloc(ireq.u.data.length * sizeof (struct iw_priv_args));
4307		if (priv == NULL) {
4308			snprintf(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
4309			    "malloc: %s", pcap_strerror(errno));
4310			return PCAP_ERROR;
4311		}
4312		ireq.u.data.pointer = (void *)priv;
4313		if (ioctl(sock_fd, SIOCGIWPRIV, &ireq) == -1) {
4314			snprintf(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
4315			    "%s: SIOCGIWPRIV: %s", device,
4316			    pcap_strerror(errno));
4317			free(priv);
4318			return PCAP_ERROR;
4319		}
4320
4321		/*
4322		 * Look for private ioctls to turn monitor mode on or, if
4323		 * monitor mode is on, to set the header type.
4324		 */
4325		for (i = 0; i < ireq.u.data.length; i++) {
4326			if (strcmp(priv[i].name, "monitor_type") == 0) {
4327				/*
4328				 * Hostap driver, use this one.
4329				 * Set monitor mode first.
4330				 * You can set it to 0 to get DLT_IEEE80211,
4331				 * 1 to get DLT_PRISM, 2 to get
4332				 * DLT_IEEE80211_RADIO_AVS, and, with more
4333				 * recent versions of the driver, 3 to get
4334				 * DLT_IEEE80211_RADIO.
4335				 */
4336				if ((priv[i].set_args & IW_PRIV_TYPE_MASK) != IW_PRIV_TYPE_INT)
4337					break;
4338				if (!(priv[i].set_args & IW_PRIV_SIZE_FIXED))
4339					break;
4340				if ((priv[i].set_args & IW_PRIV_SIZE_MASK) != 1)
4341					break;
4342				montype = MONITOR_HOSTAP;
4343				cmd = priv[i].cmd;
4344				break;
4345			}
4346			if (strcmp(priv[i].name, "set_prismhdr") == 0) {
4347				/*
4348				 * Prism54 driver, use this one.
4349				 * Set monitor mode first.
4350				 * You can set it to 2 to get DLT_IEEE80211
4351				 * or 3 or get DLT_PRISM.
4352				 */
4353				if ((priv[i].set_args & IW_PRIV_TYPE_MASK) != IW_PRIV_TYPE_INT)
4354					break;
4355				if (!(priv[i].set_args & IW_PRIV_SIZE_FIXED))
4356					break;
4357				if ((priv[i].set_args & IW_PRIV_SIZE_MASK) != 1)
4358					break;
4359				montype = MONITOR_PRISM54;
4360				cmd = priv[i].cmd;
4361				break;
4362			}
4363			if (strcmp(priv[i].name, "forceprismheader") == 0) {
4364				/*
4365				 * RT2570 driver, use this one.
4366				 * Do this after turning monitor mode on.
4367				 * You can set it to 1 to get DLT_PRISM or 2
4368				 * to get DLT_IEEE80211.
4369				 */
4370				if ((priv[i].set_args & IW_PRIV_TYPE_MASK) != IW_PRIV_TYPE_INT)
4371					break;
4372				if (!(priv[i].set_args & IW_PRIV_SIZE_FIXED))
4373					break;
4374				if ((priv[i].set_args & IW_PRIV_SIZE_MASK) != 1)
4375					break;
4376				montype = MONITOR_RT2570;
4377				cmd = priv[i].cmd;
4378				break;
4379			}
4380			if (strcmp(priv[i].name, "forceprism") == 0) {
4381				/*
4382				 * RT73 driver, use this one.
4383				 * Do this after turning monitor mode on.
4384				 * Its argument is a *string*; you can
4385				 * set it to "1" to get DLT_PRISM or "2"
4386				 * to get DLT_IEEE80211.
4387				 */
4388				if ((priv[i].set_args & IW_PRIV_TYPE_MASK) != IW_PRIV_TYPE_CHAR)
4389					break;
4390				if (priv[i].set_args & IW_PRIV_SIZE_FIXED)
4391					break;
4392				montype = MONITOR_RT73;
4393				cmd = priv[i].cmd;
4394				break;
4395			}
4396			if (strcmp(priv[i].name, "prismhdr") == 0) {
4397				/*
4398				 * One of the RTL8xxx drivers, use this one.
4399				 * It can only be done after monitor mode
4400				 * has been turned on.  You can set it to 1
4401				 * to get DLT_PRISM or 0 to get DLT_IEEE80211.
4402				 */
4403				if ((priv[i].set_args & IW_PRIV_TYPE_MASK) != IW_PRIV_TYPE_INT)
4404					break;
4405				if (!(priv[i].set_args & IW_PRIV_SIZE_FIXED))
4406					break;
4407				if ((priv[i].set_args & IW_PRIV_SIZE_MASK) != 1)
4408					break;
4409				montype = MONITOR_RTL8XXX;
4410				cmd = priv[i].cmd;
4411				break;
4412			}
4413			if (strcmp(priv[i].name, "rfmontx") == 0) {
4414				/*
4415				 * RT2500 or RT61 driver, use this one.
4416				 * It has one one-byte parameter; set
4417				 * u.data.length to 1 and u.data.pointer to
4418				 * point to the parameter.
4419				 * It doesn't itself turn monitor mode on.
4420				 * You can set it to 1 to allow transmitting
4421				 * in monitor mode(?) and get DLT_IEEE80211,
4422				 * or set it to 0 to disallow transmitting in
4423				 * monitor mode(?) and get DLT_PRISM.
4424				 */
4425				if ((priv[i].set_args & IW_PRIV_TYPE_MASK) != IW_PRIV_TYPE_INT)
4426					break;
4427				if ((priv[i].set_args & IW_PRIV_SIZE_MASK) != 2)
4428					break;
4429				montype = MONITOR_RT2500;
4430				cmd = priv[i].cmd;
4431				break;
4432			}
4433			if (strcmp(priv[i].name, "monitor") == 0) {
4434				/*
4435				 * Either ACX100 or hostap, use this one.
4436				 * It turns monitor mode on.
4437				 * If it takes two arguments, it's ACX100;
4438				 * the first argument is 1 for DLT_PRISM
4439				 * or 2 for DLT_IEEE80211, and the second
4440				 * argument is the channel on which to
4441				 * run.  If it takes one argument, it's
4442				 * HostAP, and the argument is 2 for
4443				 * DLT_IEEE80211 and 3 for DLT_PRISM.
4444				 *
4445				 * If we see this, we don't quit, as this
4446				 * might be a version of the hostap driver
4447				 * that also supports "monitor_type".
4448				 */
4449				if ((priv[i].set_args & IW_PRIV_TYPE_MASK) != IW_PRIV_TYPE_INT)
4450					break;
4451				if (!(priv[i].set_args & IW_PRIV_SIZE_FIXED))
4452					break;
4453				switch (priv[i].set_args & IW_PRIV_SIZE_MASK) {
4454
4455				case 1:
4456					montype = MONITOR_PRISM;
4457					cmd = priv[i].cmd;
4458					break;
4459
4460				case 2:
4461					montype = MONITOR_ACX100;
4462					cmd = priv[i].cmd;
4463					break;
4464
4465				default:
4466					break;
4467				}
4468			}
4469		}
4470		free(priv);
4471	}
4472
4473	/*
4474	 * XXX - ipw3945?  islism?
4475	 */
4476
4477	/*
4478	 * Get the old mode.
4479	 */
4480	strncpy(ireq.ifr_ifrn.ifrn_name, device,
4481	    sizeof ireq.ifr_ifrn.ifrn_name);
4482	ireq.ifr_ifrn.ifrn_name[sizeof ireq.ifr_ifrn.ifrn_name - 1] = 0;
4483	if (ioctl(sock_fd, SIOCGIWMODE, &ireq) == -1) {
4484		/*
4485		 * We probably won't be able to set the mode, either.
4486		 */
4487		return PCAP_ERROR_RFMON_NOTSUP;
4488	}
4489
4490	/*
4491	 * Is it currently in monitor mode?
4492	 */
4493	if (ireq.u.mode == IW_MODE_MONITOR) {
4494		/*
4495		 * Yes.  Just leave things as they are.
4496		 * We don't offer multiple link-layer types, as
4497		 * changing the link-layer type out from under
4498		 * somebody else capturing in monitor mode would
4499		 * be considered rude.
4500		 */
4501		return 1;
4502	}
4503	/*
4504	 * No.  We have to put the adapter into rfmon mode.
4505	 */
4506
4507	/*
4508	 * If we haven't already done so, arrange to have
4509	 * "pcap_close_all()" called when we exit.
4510	 */
4511	if (!pcap_do_addexit(handle)) {
4512		/*
4513		 * "atexit()" failed; don't put the interface
4514		 * in rfmon mode, just give up.
4515		 */
4516		return PCAP_ERROR_RFMON_NOTSUP;
4517	}
4518
4519	/*
4520	 * Save the old mode.
4521	 */
4522	handle->md.oldmode = ireq.u.mode;
4523
4524	/*
4525	 * Put the adapter in rfmon mode.  How we do this depends
4526	 * on whether we have a special private ioctl or not.
4527	 */
4528	if (montype == MONITOR_PRISM) {
4529		/*
4530		 * We have the "monitor" private ioctl, but none of
4531		 * the other private ioctls.  Use this, and select
4532		 * the Prism header.
4533		 *
4534		 * If it fails, just fall back on SIOCSIWMODE.
4535		 */
4536		memset(&ireq, 0, sizeof ireq);
4537		strncpy(ireq.ifr_ifrn.ifrn_name, device,
4538		    sizeof ireq.ifr_ifrn.ifrn_name);
4539		ireq.ifr_ifrn.ifrn_name[sizeof ireq.ifr_ifrn.ifrn_name - 1] = 0;
4540		ireq.u.data.length = 1;	/* 1 argument */
4541		args[0] = 3;	/* request Prism header */
4542		memcpy(ireq.u.name, args, IFNAMSIZ);
4543		if (ioctl(sock_fd, cmd, &ireq) != -1) {
4544			/*
4545			 * Success.
4546			 * Note that we have to put the old mode back
4547			 * when we close the device.
4548			 */
4549			handle->md.must_do_on_close |= MUST_CLEAR_RFMON;
4550
4551			/*
4552			 * Add this to the list of pcaps to close
4553			 * when we exit.
4554			 */
4555			pcap_add_to_pcaps_to_close(handle);
4556
4557			return 1;
4558		}
4559
4560		/*
4561		 * Failure.  Fall back on SIOCSIWMODE.
4562		 */
4563	}
4564
4565	/*
4566	 * First, take the interface down if it's up; otherwise, we
4567	 * might get EBUSY.
4568	 */
4569	memset(&ifr, 0, sizeof(ifr));
4570	strncpy(ifr.ifr_name, device, sizeof(ifr.ifr_name));
4571	if (ioctl(sock_fd, SIOCGIFFLAGS, &ifr) == -1) {
4572		snprintf(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
4573		    "%s: Can't get flags: %s", device, strerror(errno));
4574		return PCAP_ERROR;
4575	}
4576	oldflags = 0;
4577	if (ifr.ifr_flags & IFF_UP) {
4578		oldflags = ifr.ifr_flags;
4579		ifr.ifr_flags &= ~IFF_UP;
4580		if (ioctl(sock_fd, SIOCSIFFLAGS, &ifr) == -1) {
4581			snprintf(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
4582			    "%s: Can't set flags: %s", device, strerror(errno));
4583			return PCAP_ERROR;
4584		}
4585	}
4586
4587	/*
4588	 * Then turn monitor mode on.
4589	 */
4590	strncpy(ireq.ifr_ifrn.ifrn_name, device,
4591	    sizeof ireq.ifr_ifrn.ifrn_name);
4592	ireq.ifr_ifrn.ifrn_name[sizeof ireq.ifr_ifrn.ifrn_name - 1] = 0;
4593	ireq.u.mode = IW_MODE_MONITOR;
4594	if (ioctl(sock_fd, SIOCSIWMODE, &ireq) == -1) {
4595		/*
4596		 * Scientist, you've failed.
4597		 * Bring the interface back up if we shut it down.
4598		 */
4599		ifr.ifr_flags = oldflags;
4600		if (ioctl(sock_fd, SIOCSIFFLAGS, &ifr) == -1) {
4601			snprintf(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
4602			    "%s: Can't set flags: %s", device, strerror(errno));
4603			return PCAP_ERROR;
4604		}
4605		return PCAP_ERROR_RFMON_NOTSUP;
4606	}
4607
4608	/*
4609	 * XXX - airmon-ng does "iwconfig {if} key off" after setting
4610	 * monitor mode and setting the channel, and then does
4611	 * "iwconfig up".
4612	 */
4613
4614	/*
4615	 * Now select the appropriate radio header.
4616	 */
4617	switch (montype) {
4618
4619	case MONITOR_WEXT:
4620		/*
4621		 * We don't have any private ioctl to set the header.
4622		 */
4623		break;
4624
4625	case MONITOR_HOSTAP:
4626		/*
4627		 * Try to select the radiotap header.
4628		 */
4629		memset(&ireq, 0, sizeof ireq);
4630		strncpy(ireq.ifr_ifrn.ifrn_name, device,
4631		    sizeof ireq.ifr_ifrn.ifrn_name);
4632		ireq.ifr_ifrn.ifrn_name[sizeof ireq.ifr_ifrn.ifrn_name - 1] = 0;
4633		args[0] = 3;	/* request radiotap header */
4634		memcpy(ireq.u.name, args, sizeof (int));
4635		if (ioctl(sock_fd, cmd, &ireq) != -1)
4636			break;	/* success */
4637
4638		/*
4639		 * That failed.  Try to select the AVS header.
4640		 */
4641		memset(&ireq, 0, sizeof ireq);
4642		strncpy(ireq.ifr_ifrn.ifrn_name, device,
4643		    sizeof ireq.ifr_ifrn.ifrn_name);
4644		ireq.ifr_ifrn.ifrn_name[sizeof ireq.ifr_ifrn.ifrn_name - 1] = 0;
4645		args[0] = 2;	/* request AVS header */
4646		memcpy(ireq.u.name, args, sizeof (int));
4647		if (ioctl(sock_fd, cmd, &ireq) != -1)
4648			break;	/* success */
4649
4650		/*
4651		 * That failed.  Try to select the Prism header.
4652		 */
4653		memset(&ireq, 0, sizeof ireq);
4654		strncpy(ireq.ifr_ifrn.ifrn_name, device,
4655		    sizeof ireq.ifr_ifrn.ifrn_name);
4656		ireq.ifr_ifrn.ifrn_name[sizeof ireq.ifr_ifrn.ifrn_name - 1] = 0;
4657		args[0] = 1;	/* request Prism header */
4658		memcpy(ireq.u.name, args, sizeof (int));
4659		ioctl(sock_fd, cmd, &ireq);
4660		break;
4661
4662	case MONITOR_PRISM:
4663		/*
4664		 * The private ioctl failed.
4665		 */
4666		break;
4667
4668	case MONITOR_PRISM54:
4669		/*
4670		 * Select the Prism header.
4671		 */
4672		memset(&ireq, 0, sizeof ireq);
4673		strncpy(ireq.ifr_ifrn.ifrn_name, device,
4674		    sizeof ireq.ifr_ifrn.ifrn_name);
4675		ireq.ifr_ifrn.ifrn_name[sizeof ireq.ifr_ifrn.ifrn_name - 1] = 0;
4676		args[0] = 3;	/* request Prism header */
4677		memcpy(ireq.u.name, args, sizeof (int));
4678		ioctl(sock_fd, cmd, &ireq);
4679		break;
4680
4681	case MONITOR_ACX100:
4682		/*
4683		 * Get the current channel.
4684		 */
4685		memset(&ireq, 0, sizeof ireq);
4686		strncpy(ireq.ifr_ifrn.ifrn_name, device,
4687		    sizeof ireq.ifr_ifrn.ifrn_name);
4688		ireq.ifr_ifrn.ifrn_name[sizeof ireq.ifr_ifrn.ifrn_name - 1] = 0;
4689		if (ioctl(sock_fd, SIOCGIWFREQ, &ireq) == -1) {
4690			snprintf(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
4691			    "%s: SIOCGIWFREQ: %s", device,
4692			    pcap_strerror(errno));
4693			return PCAP_ERROR;
4694		}
4695		channel = ireq.u.freq.m;
4696
4697		/*
4698		 * Select the Prism header, and set the channel to the
4699		 * current value.
4700		 */
4701		memset(&ireq, 0, sizeof ireq);
4702		strncpy(ireq.ifr_ifrn.ifrn_name, device,
4703		    sizeof ireq.ifr_ifrn.ifrn_name);
4704		ireq.ifr_ifrn.ifrn_name[sizeof ireq.ifr_ifrn.ifrn_name - 1] = 0;
4705		args[0] = 1;		/* request Prism header */
4706		args[1] = channel;	/* set channel */
4707		memcpy(ireq.u.name, args, 2*sizeof (int));
4708		ioctl(sock_fd, cmd, &ireq);
4709		break;
4710
4711	case MONITOR_RT2500:
4712		/*
4713		 * Disallow transmission - that turns on the
4714		 * Prism header.
4715		 */
4716		memset(&ireq, 0, sizeof ireq);
4717		strncpy(ireq.ifr_ifrn.ifrn_name, device,
4718		    sizeof ireq.ifr_ifrn.ifrn_name);
4719		ireq.ifr_ifrn.ifrn_name[sizeof ireq.ifr_ifrn.ifrn_name - 1] = 0;
4720		args[0] = 0;	/* disallow transmitting */
4721		memcpy(ireq.u.name, args, sizeof (int));
4722		ioctl(sock_fd, cmd, &ireq);
4723		break;
4724
4725	case MONITOR_RT2570:
4726		/*
4727		 * Force the Prism header.
4728		 */
4729		memset(&ireq, 0, sizeof ireq);
4730		strncpy(ireq.ifr_ifrn.ifrn_name, device,
4731		    sizeof ireq.ifr_ifrn.ifrn_name);
4732		ireq.ifr_ifrn.ifrn_name[sizeof ireq.ifr_ifrn.ifrn_name - 1] = 0;
4733		args[0] = 1;	/* request Prism header */
4734		memcpy(ireq.u.name, args, sizeof (int));
4735		ioctl(sock_fd, cmd, &ireq);
4736		break;
4737
4738	case MONITOR_RT73:
4739		/*
4740		 * Force the Prism header.
4741		 */
4742		memset(&ireq, 0, sizeof ireq);
4743		strncpy(ireq.ifr_ifrn.ifrn_name, device,
4744		    sizeof ireq.ifr_ifrn.ifrn_name);
4745		ireq.ifr_ifrn.ifrn_name[sizeof ireq.ifr_ifrn.ifrn_name - 1] = 0;
4746		ireq.u.data.length = 1;	/* 1 argument */
4747		ireq.u.data.pointer = "1";
4748		ireq.u.data.flags = 0;
4749		ioctl(sock_fd, cmd, &ireq);
4750		break;
4751
4752	case MONITOR_RTL8XXX:
4753		/*
4754		 * Force the Prism header.
4755		 */
4756		memset(&ireq, 0, sizeof ireq);
4757		strncpy(ireq.ifr_ifrn.ifrn_name, device,
4758		    sizeof ireq.ifr_ifrn.ifrn_name);
4759		ireq.ifr_ifrn.ifrn_name[sizeof ireq.ifr_ifrn.ifrn_name - 1] = 0;
4760		args[0] = 1;	/* request Prism header */
4761		memcpy(ireq.u.name, args, sizeof (int));
4762		ioctl(sock_fd, cmd, &ireq);
4763		break;
4764	}
4765
4766	/*
4767	 * Now bring the interface back up if we brought it down.
4768	 */
4769	if (oldflags != 0) {
4770		ifr.ifr_flags = oldflags;
4771		if (ioctl(sock_fd, SIOCSIFFLAGS, &ifr) == -1) {
4772			snprintf(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
4773			    "%s: Can't set flags: %s", device, strerror(errno));
4774
4775			/*
4776			 * At least try to restore the old mode on the
4777			 * interface.
4778			 */
4779			if (ioctl(handle->fd, SIOCSIWMODE, &ireq) == -1) {
4780				/*
4781				 * Scientist, you've failed.
4782				 */
4783				fprintf(stderr,
4784				    "Can't restore interface wireless mode (SIOCSIWMODE failed: %s).\n"
4785				    "Please adjust manually.\n",
4786				    strerror(errno));
4787			}
4788			return PCAP_ERROR;
4789		}
4790	}
4791
4792	/*
4793	 * Note that we have to put the old mode back when we
4794	 * close the device.
4795	 */
4796	handle->md.must_do_on_close |= MUST_CLEAR_RFMON;
4797
4798	/*
4799	 * Add this to the list of pcaps to close when we exit.
4800	 */
4801	pcap_add_to_pcaps_to_close(handle);
4802
4803	return 1;
4804}
4805#endif /* IW_MODE_MONITOR */
4806
4807/*
4808 * Try various mechanisms to enter monitor mode.
4809 */
4810static int
4811enter_rfmon_mode(pcap_t *handle, int sock_fd, const char *device)
4812{
4813#if defined(HAVE_LIBNL) || defined(IW_MODE_MONITOR)
4814	int ret;
4815#endif
4816
4817#ifdef HAVE_LIBNL
4818	ret = enter_rfmon_mode_mac80211(handle, sock_fd, device);
4819	if (ret < 0)
4820		return ret;	/* error attempting to do so */
4821	if (ret == 1)
4822		return 1;	/* success */
4823#endif /* HAVE_LIBNL */
4824
4825#ifdef IW_MODE_MONITOR
4826	ret = enter_rfmon_mode_wext(handle, sock_fd, device);
4827	if (ret < 0)
4828		return ret;	/* error attempting to do so */
4829	if (ret == 1)
4830		return 1;	/* success */
4831#endif /* IW_MODE_MONITOR */
4832
4833	/*
4834	 * Either none of the mechanisms we know about work or none
4835	 * of those mechanisms are available, so we can't do monitor
4836	 * mode.
4837	 */
4838	return 0;
4839}
4840
4841/*
4842 * Find out if we have any form of fragmentation/reassembly offloading.
4843 *
4844 * We do so using SIOCETHTOOL checking for various types of offloading;
4845 * if SIOCETHTOOL isn't defined, or we don't have any #defines for any
4846 * of the types of offloading, there's nothing we can do to check, so
4847 * we just say "no, we don't".
4848 */
4849#if defined(SIOCETHTOOL) && (defined(ETHTOOL_GTSO) || defined(ETHTOOL_GUFO) || defined(ETHTOOL_GGSO) || defined(ETHTOOL_GFLAGS) || defined(ETHTOOL_GGRO))
4850static int
4851iface_ethtool_ioctl(pcap_t *handle, int cmd, const char *cmdname)
4852{
4853	struct ifreq	ifr;
4854	struct ethtool_value eval;
4855
4856	memset(&ifr, 0, sizeof(ifr));
4857	strncpy(ifr.ifr_name, handle->opt.source, sizeof(ifr.ifr_name));
4858	eval.cmd = cmd;
4859	ifr.ifr_data = (caddr_t)&eval;
4860	if (ioctl(handle->fd, SIOCETHTOOL, &ifr) == -1) {
4861		if (errno == EOPNOTSUPP || errno == EINVAL) {
4862			/*
4863			 * OK, let's just return 0, which, in our
4864			 * case, either means "no, what we're asking
4865			 * about is not enabled" or "all the flags
4866			 * are clear (i.e., nothing is enabled)".
4867			 */
4868			return 0;
4869		}
4870		snprintf(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
4871		    "%s: SIOETHTOOL(%s) ioctl failed: %s", handle->opt.source,
4872		    cmdname, strerror(errno));
4873		return -1;
4874	}
4875	return eval.data;
4876}
4877
4878static int
4879iface_get_offload(pcap_t *handle)
4880{
4881	int ret;
4882
4883#ifdef ETHTOOL_GTSO
4884	ret = iface_ethtool_ioctl(handle, ETHTOOL_GTSO, "ETHTOOL_GTSO");
4885	if (ret == -1)
4886		return -1;
4887	if (ret)
4888		return 1;	/* TCP segmentation offloading on */
4889#endif
4890
4891#ifdef ETHTOOL_GUFO
4892	ret = iface_ethtool_ioctl(handle, ETHTOOL_GUFO, "ETHTOOL_GUFO");
4893	if (ret == -1)
4894		return -1;
4895	if (ret)
4896		return 1;	/* UDP fragmentation offloading on */
4897#endif
4898
4899#ifdef ETHTOOL_GGSO
4900	/*
4901	 * XXX - will this cause large unsegmented packets to be
4902	 * handed to PF_PACKET sockets on transmission?  If not,
4903	 * this need not be checked.
4904	 */
4905	ret = iface_ethtool_ioctl(handle, ETHTOOL_GGSO, "ETHTOOL_GGSO");
4906	if (ret == -1)
4907		return -1;
4908	if (ret)
4909		return 1;	/* generic segmentation offloading on */
4910#endif
4911
4912#ifdef ETHTOOL_GFLAGS
4913	ret = iface_ethtool_ioctl(handle, ETHTOOL_GFLAGS, "ETHTOOL_GFLAGS");
4914	if (ret == -1)
4915		return -1;
4916	if (ret & ETH_FLAG_LRO)
4917		return 1;	/* large receive offloading on */
4918#endif
4919
4920#ifdef ETHTOOL_GGRO
4921	/*
4922	 * XXX - will this cause large reassembled packets to be
4923	 * handed to PF_PACKET sockets on receipt?  If not,
4924	 * this need not be checked.
4925	 */
4926	ret = iface_ethtool_ioctl(handle, ETHTOOL_GGRO, "ETHTOOL_GGRO");
4927	if (ret == -1)
4928		return -1;
4929	if (ret)
4930		return 1;	/* generic (large) receive offloading on */
4931#endif
4932
4933	return 0;
4934}
4935#else /* SIOCETHTOOL */
4936static int
4937iface_get_offload(pcap_t *handle _U_)
4938{
4939	/*
4940	 * XXX - do we need to get this information if we don't
4941	 * have the ethtool ioctls?  If so, how do we do that?
4942	 */
4943	return 0;
4944}
4945#endif /* SIOCETHTOOL */
4946
4947#endif /* HAVE_PF_PACKET_SOCKETS */
4948
4949/* ===== Functions to interface to the older kernels ================== */
4950
4951/*
4952 * Try to open a packet socket using the old kernel interface.
4953 * Returns 1 on success and a PCAP_ERROR_ value on an error.
4954 */
4955static int
4956activate_old(pcap_t *handle)
4957{
4958	int		arptype;
4959	struct ifreq	ifr;
4960	const char	*device = handle->opt.source;
4961	struct utsname	utsname;
4962	int		mtu;
4963
4964	/* Open the socket */
4965
4966	handle->fd = socket(PF_INET, SOCK_PACKET, htons(ETH_P_ALL));
4967	if (handle->fd == -1) {
4968		snprintf(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
4969			 "socket: %s", pcap_strerror(errno));
4970		if (errno == EPERM || errno == EACCES) {
4971			/*
4972			 * You don't have permission to open the
4973			 * socket.
4974			 */
4975			return PCAP_ERROR_PERM_DENIED;
4976		} else {
4977			/*
4978			 * Other error.
4979			 */
4980			return PCAP_ERROR;
4981		}
4982	}
4983
4984	/* It worked - we are using the old interface */
4985	handle->md.sock_packet = 1;
4986
4987	/* ...which means we get the link-layer header. */
4988	handle->md.cooked = 0;
4989
4990	/* Bind to the given device */
4991
4992	if (strcmp(device, "any") == 0) {
4993		strncpy(handle->errbuf, "pcap_activate: The \"any\" device isn't supported on 2.0[.x]-kernel systems",
4994			PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE);
4995		return PCAP_ERROR;
4996	}
4997	if (iface_bind_old(handle->fd, device, handle->errbuf) == -1)
4998		return PCAP_ERROR;
4999
5000	/*
5001	 * Try to get the link-layer type.
5002	 */
5003	arptype = iface_get_arptype(handle->fd, device, handle->errbuf);
5004	if (arptype < 0)
5005		return PCAP_ERROR;
5006
5007	/*
5008	 * Try to find the DLT_ type corresponding to that
5009	 * link-layer type.
5010	 */
5011	map_arphrd_to_dlt(handle, arptype, 0);
5012	if (handle->linktype == -1) {
5013		snprintf(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
5014			 "unknown arptype %d", arptype);
5015		return PCAP_ERROR;
5016	}
5017
5018	/* Go to promisc mode if requested */
5019
5020	if (handle->opt.promisc) {
5021		memset(&ifr, 0, sizeof(ifr));
5022		strncpy(ifr.ifr_name, device, sizeof(ifr.ifr_name));
5023		if (ioctl(handle->fd, SIOCGIFFLAGS, &ifr) == -1) {
5024			snprintf(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
5025				 "SIOCGIFFLAGS: %s", pcap_strerror(errno));
5026			return PCAP_ERROR;
5027		}
5028		if ((ifr.ifr_flags & IFF_PROMISC) == 0) {
5029			/*
5030			 * Promiscuous mode isn't currently on,
5031			 * so turn it on, and remember that
5032			 * we should turn it off when the
5033			 * pcap_t is closed.
5034			 */
5035
5036			/*
5037			 * If we haven't already done so, arrange
5038			 * to have "pcap_close_all()" called when
5039			 * we exit.
5040			 */
5041			if (!pcap_do_addexit(handle)) {
5042				/*
5043				 * "atexit()" failed; don't put
5044				 * the interface in promiscuous
5045				 * mode, just give up.
5046				 */
5047				return PCAP_ERROR;
5048			}
5049
5050			ifr.ifr_flags |= IFF_PROMISC;
5051			if (ioctl(handle->fd, SIOCSIFFLAGS, &ifr) == -1) {
5052			        snprintf(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
5053					 "SIOCSIFFLAGS: %s",
5054					 pcap_strerror(errno));
5055				return PCAP_ERROR;
5056			}
5057			handle->md.must_do_on_close |= MUST_CLEAR_PROMISC;
5058
5059			/*
5060			 * Add this to the list of pcaps
5061			 * to close when we exit.
5062			 */
5063			pcap_add_to_pcaps_to_close(handle);
5064		}
5065	}
5066
5067	/*
5068	 * Compute the buffer size.
5069	 *
5070	 * We're using SOCK_PACKET, so this might be a 2.0[.x]
5071	 * kernel, and might require special handling - check.
5072	 */
5073	if (uname(&utsname) < 0 ||
5074	    strncmp(utsname.release, "2.0", 3) == 0) {
5075		/*
5076		 * Either we couldn't find out what kernel release
5077		 * this is, or it's a 2.0[.x] kernel.
5078		 *
5079		 * In the 2.0[.x] kernel, a "recvfrom()" on
5080		 * a SOCK_PACKET socket, with MSG_TRUNC set, will
5081		 * return the number of bytes read, so if we pass
5082		 * a length based on the snapshot length, it'll
5083		 * return the number of bytes from the packet
5084		 * copied to userland, not the actual length
5085		 * of the packet.
5086		 *
5087		 * This means that, for example, the IP dissector
5088		 * in tcpdump will get handed a packet length less
5089		 * than the length in the IP header, and will
5090		 * complain about "truncated-ip".
5091		 *
5092		 * So we don't bother trying to copy from the
5093		 * kernel only the bytes in which we're interested,
5094		 * but instead copy them all, just as the older
5095		 * versions of libpcap for Linux did.
5096		 *
5097		 * The buffer therefore needs to be big enough to
5098		 * hold the largest packet we can get from this
5099		 * device.  Unfortunately, we can't get the MRU
5100		 * of the network; we can only get the MTU.  The
5101		 * MTU may be too small, in which case a packet larger
5102		 * than the buffer size will be truncated *and* we
5103		 * won't get the actual packet size.
5104		 *
5105		 * However, if the snapshot length is larger than
5106		 * the buffer size based on the MTU, we use the
5107		 * snapshot length as the buffer size, instead;
5108		 * this means that with a sufficiently large snapshot
5109		 * length we won't artificially truncate packets
5110		 * to the MTU-based size.
5111		 *
5112		 * This mess just one of many problems with packet
5113		 * capture on 2.0[.x] kernels; you really want a
5114		 * 2.2[.x] or later kernel if you want packet capture
5115		 * to work well.
5116		 */
5117		mtu = iface_get_mtu(handle->fd, device, handle->errbuf);
5118		if (mtu == -1)
5119			return PCAP_ERROR;
5120		handle->bufsize = MAX_LINKHEADER_SIZE + mtu;
5121		if (handle->bufsize < handle->snapshot)
5122			handle->bufsize = handle->snapshot;
5123	} else {
5124		/*
5125		 * This is a 2.2[.x] or later kernel.
5126		 *
5127		 * We can safely pass "recvfrom()" a byte count
5128		 * based on the snapshot length.
5129		 */
5130		handle->bufsize = handle->snapshot;
5131	}
5132
5133	/*
5134	 * Default value for offset to align link-layer payload
5135	 * on a 4-byte boundary.
5136	 */
5137	handle->offset	 = 0;
5138
5139	/*
5140	 * SOCK_PACKET sockets don't supply information from
5141	 * stripped VLAN tags.
5142	 */
5143	handle->md.vlan_offset = -1; /* unknown */
5144
5145	return 1;
5146}
5147
5148/*
5149 *  Bind the socket associated with FD to the given device using the
5150 *  interface of the old kernels.
5151 */
5152static int
5153iface_bind_old(int fd, const char *device, char *ebuf)
5154{
5155	struct sockaddr	saddr;
5156	int		err;
5157	socklen_t	errlen = sizeof(err);
5158
5159	memset(&saddr, 0, sizeof(saddr));
5160	strncpy(saddr.sa_data, device, sizeof(saddr.sa_data));
5161	if (bind(fd, &saddr, sizeof(saddr)) == -1) {
5162		snprintf(ebuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
5163			 "bind: %s", pcap_strerror(errno));
5164		return -1;
5165	}
5166
5167	/* Any pending errors, e.g., network is down? */
5168
5169	if (getsockopt(fd, SOL_SOCKET, SO_ERROR, &err, &errlen) == -1) {
5170		snprintf(ebuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
5171			"getsockopt: %s", pcap_strerror(errno));
5172		return -1;
5173	}
5174
5175	if (err > 0) {
5176		snprintf(ebuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
5177			"bind: %s", pcap_strerror(err));
5178		return -1;
5179	}
5180
5181	return 0;
5182}
5183
5184
5185/* ===== System calls available on all supported kernels ============== */
5186
5187/*
5188 *  Query the kernel for the MTU of the given interface.
5189 */
5190static int
5191iface_get_mtu(int fd, const char *device, char *ebuf)
5192{
5193	struct ifreq	ifr;
5194
5195	if (!device)
5196		return BIGGER_THAN_ALL_MTUS;
5197
5198	memset(&ifr, 0, sizeof(ifr));
5199	strncpy(ifr.ifr_name, device, sizeof(ifr.ifr_name));
5200
5201	if (ioctl(fd, SIOCGIFMTU, &ifr) == -1) {
5202		snprintf(ebuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
5203			 "SIOCGIFMTU: %s", pcap_strerror(errno));
5204		return -1;
5205	}
5206
5207	return ifr.ifr_mtu;
5208}
5209
5210/*
5211 *  Get the hardware type of the given interface as ARPHRD_xxx constant.
5212 */
5213static int
5214iface_get_arptype(int fd, const char *device, char *ebuf)
5215{
5216	struct ifreq	ifr;
5217
5218	memset(&ifr, 0, sizeof(ifr));
5219	strncpy(ifr.ifr_name, device, sizeof(ifr.ifr_name));
5220
5221	if (ioctl(fd, SIOCGIFHWADDR, &ifr) == -1) {
5222		snprintf(ebuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
5223			 "SIOCGIFHWADDR: %s", pcap_strerror(errno));
5224		if (errno == ENODEV) {
5225			/*
5226			 * No such device.
5227			 */
5228			return PCAP_ERROR_NO_SUCH_DEVICE;
5229		}
5230		return PCAP_ERROR;
5231	}
5232
5233	return ifr.ifr_hwaddr.sa_family;
5234}
5235
5236#ifdef SO_ATTACH_FILTER
5237static int
5238fix_program(pcap_t *handle, struct sock_fprog *fcode, int is_mmapped)
5239{
5240	size_t prog_size;
5241	register int i;
5242	register struct bpf_insn *p;
5243	struct bpf_insn *f;
5244	int len;
5245
5246	/*
5247	 * Make a copy of the filter, and modify that copy if
5248	 * necessary.
5249	 */
5250	prog_size = sizeof(*handle->fcode.bf_insns) * handle->fcode.bf_len;
5251	len = handle->fcode.bf_len;
5252	f = (struct bpf_insn *)malloc(prog_size);
5253	if (f == NULL) {
5254		snprintf(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
5255			 "malloc: %s", pcap_strerror(errno));
5256		return -1;
5257	}
5258	memcpy(f, handle->fcode.bf_insns, prog_size);
5259	fcode->len = len;
5260	fcode->filter = (struct sock_filter *) f;
5261
5262	for (i = 0; i < len; ++i) {
5263		p = &f[i];
5264		/*
5265		 * What type of instruction is this?
5266		 */
5267		switch (BPF_CLASS(p->code)) {
5268
5269		case BPF_RET:
5270			/*
5271			 * It's a return instruction; are we capturing
5272			 * in memory-mapped mode?
5273			 */
5274			if (!is_mmapped) {
5275				/*
5276				 * No; is the snapshot length a constant,
5277				 * rather than the contents of the
5278				 * accumulator?
5279				 */
5280				if (BPF_MODE(p->code) == BPF_K) {
5281					/*
5282					 * Yes - if the value to be returned,
5283					 * i.e. the snapshot length, is
5284					 * anything other than 0, make it
5285					 * 65535, so that the packet is
5286					 * truncated by "recvfrom()",
5287					 * not by the filter.
5288					 *
5289					 * XXX - there's nothing we can
5290					 * easily do if it's getting the
5291					 * value from the accumulator; we'd
5292					 * have to insert code to force
5293					 * non-zero values to be 65535.
5294					 */
5295					if (p->k != 0)
5296						p->k = 65535;
5297				}
5298			}
5299			break;
5300
5301		case BPF_LD:
5302		case BPF_LDX:
5303			/*
5304			 * It's a load instruction; is it loading
5305			 * from the packet?
5306			 */
5307			switch (BPF_MODE(p->code)) {
5308
5309			case BPF_ABS:
5310			case BPF_IND:
5311			case BPF_MSH:
5312				/*
5313				 * Yes; are we in cooked mode?
5314				 */
5315				if (handle->md.cooked) {
5316					/*
5317					 * Yes, so we need to fix this
5318					 * instruction.
5319					 */
5320					if (fix_offset(p) < 0) {
5321						/*
5322						 * We failed to do so.
5323						 * Return 0, so our caller
5324						 * knows to punt to userland.
5325						 */
5326						return 0;
5327					}
5328				}
5329				break;
5330			}
5331			break;
5332		}
5333	}
5334	return 1;	/* we succeeded */
5335}
5336
5337static int
5338fix_offset(struct bpf_insn *p)
5339{
5340	/*
5341	 * What's the offset?
5342	 */
5343	if (p->k >= SLL_HDR_LEN) {
5344		/*
5345		 * It's within the link-layer payload; that starts at an
5346		 * offset of 0, as far as the kernel packet filter is
5347		 * concerned, so subtract the length of the link-layer
5348		 * header.
5349		 */
5350		p->k -= SLL_HDR_LEN;
5351	} else if (p->k == 0) {
5352		/*
5353		 * It's the packet type field; map it to the special magic
5354		 * kernel offset for that field.
5355		 */
5356		p->k = SKF_AD_OFF + SKF_AD_PKTTYPE;
5357	} else if (p->k == 14) {
5358		/*
5359		 * It's the protocol field; map it to the special magic
5360		 * kernel offset for that field.
5361		 */
5362		p->k = SKF_AD_OFF + SKF_AD_PROTOCOL;
5363	} else if ((bpf_int32)(p->k) > 0) {
5364		/*
5365		 * It's within the header, but it's not one of those
5366		 * fields; we can't do that in the kernel, so punt
5367		 * to userland.
5368		 */
5369		return -1;
5370	}
5371	return 0;
5372}
5373
5374static int
5375set_kernel_filter(pcap_t *handle, struct sock_fprog *fcode)
5376{
5377	int total_filter_on = 0;
5378	int save_mode;
5379	int ret;
5380	int save_errno;
5381
5382	/*
5383	 * The socket filter code doesn't discard all packets queued
5384	 * up on the socket when the filter is changed; this means
5385	 * that packets that don't match the new filter may show up
5386	 * after the new filter is put onto the socket, if those
5387	 * packets haven't yet been read.
5388	 *
5389	 * This means, for example, that if you do a tcpdump capture
5390	 * with a filter, the first few packets in the capture might
5391	 * be packets that wouldn't have passed the filter.
5392	 *
5393	 * We therefore discard all packets queued up on the socket
5394	 * when setting a kernel filter.  (This isn't an issue for
5395	 * userland filters, as the userland filtering is done after
5396	 * packets are queued up.)
5397	 *
5398	 * To flush those packets, we put the socket in read-only mode,
5399	 * and read packets from the socket until there are no more to
5400	 * read.
5401	 *
5402	 * In order to keep that from being an infinite loop - i.e.,
5403	 * to keep more packets from arriving while we're draining
5404	 * the queue - we put the "total filter", which is a filter
5405	 * that rejects all packets, onto the socket before draining
5406	 * the queue.
5407	 *
5408	 * This code deliberately ignores any errors, so that you may
5409	 * get bogus packets if an error occurs, rather than having
5410	 * the filtering done in userland even if it could have been
5411	 * done in the kernel.
5412	 */
5413	if (setsockopt(handle->fd, SOL_SOCKET, SO_ATTACH_FILTER,
5414		       &total_fcode, sizeof(total_fcode)) == 0) {
5415		char drain[1];
5416
5417		/*
5418		 * Note that we've put the total filter onto the socket.
5419		 */
5420		total_filter_on = 1;
5421
5422		/*
5423		 * Save the socket's current mode, and put it in
5424		 * non-blocking mode; we drain it by reading packets
5425		 * until we get an error (which is normally a
5426		 * "nothing more to be read" error).
5427		 */
5428		save_mode = fcntl(handle->fd, F_GETFL, 0);
5429		if (save_mode != -1 &&
5430		    fcntl(handle->fd, F_SETFL, save_mode | O_NONBLOCK) >= 0) {
5431			while (recv(handle->fd, &drain, sizeof drain,
5432			       MSG_TRUNC) >= 0)
5433				;
5434			save_errno = errno;
5435			fcntl(handle->fd, F_SETFL, save_mode);
5436			if (save_errno != EAGAIN) {
5437				/* Fatal error */
5438				reset_kernel_filter(handle);
5439				snprintf(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
5440				 "recv: %s", pcap_strerror(save_errno));
5441				return -2;
5442			}
5443		}
5444	}
5445
5446	/*
5447	 * Now attach the new filter.
5448	 */
5449	ret = setsockopt(handle->fd, SOL_SOCKET, SO_ATTACH_FILTER,
5450			 fcode, sizeof(*fcode));
5451	if (ret == -1 && total_filter_on) {
5452		/*
5453		 * Well, we couldn't set that filter on the socket,
5454		 * but we could set the total filter on the socket.
5455		 *
5456		 * This could, for example, mean that the filter was
5457		 * too big to put into the kernel, so we'll have to
5458		 * filter in userland; in any case, we'll be doing
5459		 * filtering in userland, so we need to remove the
5460		 * total filter so we see packets.
5461		 */
5462		save_errno = errno;
5463
5464		/*
5465		 * XXX - if this fails, we're really screwed;
5466		 * we have the total filter on the socket,
5467		 * and it won't come off.  What do we do then?
5468		 */
5469		reset_kernel_filter(handle);
5470
5471		errno = save_errno;
5472	}
5473	return ret;
5474}
5475
5476static int
5477reset_kernel_filter(pcap_t *handle)
5478{
5479	/*
5480	 * setsockopt() barfs unless it get a dummy parameter.
5481	 * valgrind whines unless the value is initialized,
5482	 * as it has no idea that setsockopt() ignores its
5483	 * parameter.
5484	 */
5485	int dummy = 0;
5486
5487	return setsockopt(handle->fd, SOL_SOCKET, SO_DETACH_FILTER,
5488				   &dummy, sizeof(dummy));
5489}
5490#endif
5491