pcap-linux.c revision 356341
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 *                     Added TPACKET_V3 support
30 *                     Gabor Tatarka <gabor.tatarka@ericsson.com>
31 *
32 *                     based on previous works of:
33 *                     Simon Patarin <patarin@cs.unibo.it>
34 *                     Phil Wood <cpw@lanl.gov>
35 *
36 * Monitor-mode support for mac80211 includes code taken from the iw
37 * command; the copyright notice for that code is
38 *
39 * Copyright (c) 2007, 2008	Johannes Berg
40 * Copyright (c) 2007		Andy Lutomirski
41 * Copyright (c) 2007		Mike Kershaw
42 * Copyright (c) 2008		G��bor Stefanik
43 *
44 * All rights reserved.
45 *
46 * Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
47 * modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
48 * are met:
49 * 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
50 *    notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
51 * 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
52 *    notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
53 *    documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
54 * 3. The name of the author may not be used to endorse or promote products
55 *    derived from this software without specific prior written permission.
56 *
57 * THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE AUTHOR ``AS IS'' AND ANY EXPRESS OR
58 * IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES
59 * OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED.
60 * IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT,
61 * INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING,
62 * BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES;
63 * LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED
64 * AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY,
65 * OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY
66 * OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF
67 * SUCH DAMAGE.
68 */
69
70/*
71 * Known problems with 2.0[.x] kernels:
72 *
73 *   - The loopback device gives every packet twice; on 2.2[.x] kernels,
74 *     if we use PF_PACKET, we can filter out the transmitted version
75 *     of the packet by using data in the "sockaddr_ll" returned by
76 *     "recvfrom()", but, on 2.0[.x] kernels, we have to use
77 *     PF_INET/SOCK_PACKET, which means "recvfrom()" supplies a
78 *     "sockaddr_pkt" which doesn't give us enough information to let
79 *     us do that.
80 *
81 *   - We have to set the interface's IFF_PROMISC flag ourselves, if
82 *     we're to run in promiscuous mode, which means we have to turn
83 *     it off ourselves when we're done; the kernel doesn't keep track
84 *     of how many sockets are listening promiscuously, which means
85 *     it won't get turned off automatically when no sockets are
86 *     listening promiscuously.  We catch "pcap_close()" and, for
87 *     interfaces we put into promiscuous mode, take them out of
88 *     promiscuous mode - which isn't necessarily the right thing to
89 *     do, if another socket also requested promiscuous mode between
90 *     the time when we opened the socket and the time when we close
91 *     the socket.
92 *
93 *   - MSG_TRUNC isn't supported, so you can't specify that "recvfrom()"
94 *     return the amount of data that you could have read, rather than
95 *     the amount that was returned, so we can't just allocate a buffer
96 *     whose size is the snapshot length and pass the snapshot length
97 *     as the byte count, and also pass MSG_TRUNC, so that the return
98 *     value tells us how long the packet was on the wire.
99 *
100 *     This means that, if we want to get the actual size of the packet,
101 *     so we can return it in the "len" field of the packet header,
102 *     we have to read the entire packet, not just the part that fits
103 *     within the snapshot length, and thus waste CPU time copying data
104 *     from the kernel that our caller won't see.
105 *
106 *     We have to get the actual size, and supply it in "len", because
107 *     otherwise, the IP dissector in tcpdump, for example, will complain
108 *     about "truncated-ip", as the packet will appear to have been
109 *     shorter, on the wire, than the IP header said it should have been.
110 */
111
112
113#define _GNU_SOURCE
114
115#ifdef HAVE_CONFIG_H
116#include <config.h>
117#endif
118
119#include <errno.h>
120#include <stdio.h>
121#include <stdlib.h>
122#include <ctype.h>
123#include <unistd.h>
124#include <fcntl.h>
125#include <string.h>
126#include <limits.h>
127#include <sys/stat.h>
128#include <sys/socket.h>
129#include <sys/ioctl.h>
130#include <sys/utsname.h>
131#include <sys/mman.h>
132#include <linux/if.h>
133#include <linux/if_packet.h>
134#include <linux/sockios.h>
135#include <netinet/in.h>
136#include <linux/if_ether.h>
137#include <net/if_arp.h>
138#include <poll.h>
139#include <dirent.h>
140
141#include "pcap-int.h"
142#include "pcap/sll.h"
143#include "pcap/vlan.h"
144
145/*
146 * If PF_PACKET is defined, we can use {SOCK_RAW,SOCK_DGRAM}/PF_PACKET
147 * sockets rather than SOCK_PACKET sockets.
148 *
149 * To use them, we include <linux/if_packet.h> rather than
150 * <netpacket/packet.h>; we do so because
151 *
152 *	some Linux distributions (e.g., Slackware 4.0) have 2.2 or
153 *	later kernels and libc5, and don't provide a <netpacket/packet.h>
154 *	file;
155 *
156 *	not all versions of glibc2 have a <netpacket/packet.h> file
157 *	that defines stuff needed for some of the 2.4-or-later-kernel
158 *	features, so if the system has a 2.4 or later kernel, we
159 *	still can't use those features.
160 *
161 * We're already including a number of other <linux/XXX.h> headers, and
162 * this code is Linux-specific (no other OS has PF_PACKET sockets as
163 * a raw packet capture mechanism), so it's not as if you gain any
164 * useful portability by using <netpacket/packet.h>
165 *
166 * XXX - should we just include <linux/if_packet.h> even if PF_PACKET
167 * isn't defined?  It only defines one data structure in 2.0.x, so
168 * it shouldn't cause any problems.
169 */
170#ifdef PF_PACKET
171# include <linux/if_packet.h>
172
173 /*
174  * On at least some Linux distributions (for example, Red Hat 5.2),
175  * there's no <netpacket/packet.h> file, but PF_PACKET is defined if
176  * you include <sys/socket.h>, but <linux/if_packet.h> doesn't define
177  * any of the PF_PACKET stuff such as "struct sockaddr_ll" or any of
178  * the PACKET_xxx stuff.
179  *
180  * So we check whether PACKET_HOST is defined, and assume that we have
181  * PF_PACKET sockets only if it is defined.
182  */
183# ifdef PACKET_HOST
184#  define HAVE_PF_PACKET_SOCKETS
185#  ifdef PACKET_AUXDATA
186#   define HAVE_PACKET_AUXDATA
187#  endif /* PACKET_AUXDATA */
188# endif /* PACKET_HOST */
189
190
191 /* check for memory mapped access avaibility. We assume every needed
192  * struct is defined if the macro TPACKET_HDRLEN is defined, because it
193  * uses many ring related structs and macros */
194# ifdef PCAP_SUPPORT_PACKET_RING
195# ifdef TPACKET_HDRLEN
196#  define HAVE_PACKET_RING
197#  ifdef TPACKET3_HDRLEN
198#   define HAVE_TPACKET3
199#  endif /* TPACKET3_HDRLEN */
200#  ifdef TPACKET2_HDRLEN
201#   define HAVE_TPACKET2
202#  else  /* TPACKET2_HDRLEN */
203#   define TPACKET_V1	0    /* Old kernel with only V1, so no TPACKET_Vn defined */
204#  endif /* TPACKET2_HDRLEN */
205# endif /* TPACKET_HDRLEN */
206# endif /* PCAP_SUPPORT_PACKET_RING */
207#endif /* PF_PACKET */
208
209#ifdef SO_ATTACH_FILTER
210#include <linux/types.h>
211#include <linux/filter.h>
212#endif
213
214#ifdef HAVE_LINUX_NET_TSTAMP_H
215#include <linux/net_tstamp.h>
216#endif
217
218#ifdef HAVE_LINUX_SOCKIOS_H
219#include <linux/sockios.h>
220#endif
221
222#ifdef HAVE_LINUX_IF_BONDING_H
223#include <linux/if_bonding.h>
224
225/*
226 * The ioctl code to use to check whether a device is a bonding device.
227 */
228#if defined(SIOCBONDINFOQUERY)
229	#define BOND_INFO_QUERY_IOCTL SIOCBONDINFOQUERY
230#elif defined(BOND_INFO_QUERY_OLD)
231	#define BOND_INFO_QUERY_IOCTL BOND_INFO_QUERY_OLD
232#endif
233#endif /* HAVE_LINUX_IF_BONDING_H */
234
235/*
236 * Got Wireless Extensions?
237 */
238#ifdef HAVE_LINUX_WIRELESS_H
239#include <linux/wireless.h>
240#endif /* HAVE_LINUX_WIRELESS_H */
241
242/*
243 * Got libnl?
244 */
245#ifdef HAVE_LIBNL
246#include <linux/nl80211.h>
247
248#include <netlink/genl/genl.h>
249#include <netlink/genl/family.h>
250#include <netlink/genl/ctrl.h>
251#include <netlink/msg.h>
252#include <netlink/attr.h>
253#endif /* HAVE_LIBNL */
254
255/*
256 * Got ethtool support?
257 */
258#ifdef HAVE_LINUX_ETHTOOL_H
259#include <linux/ethtool.h>
260#endif
261
262#ifndef HAVE_SOCKLEN_T
263typedef int		socklen_t;
264#endif
265
266#ifndef MSG_TRUNC
267/*
268 * This is being compiled on a system that lacks MSG_TRUNC; define it
269 * with the value it has in the 2.2 and later kernels, so that, on
270 * those kernels, when we pass it in the flags argument to "recvfrom()"
271 * we're passing the right value and thus get the MSG_TRUNC behavior
272 * we want.  (We don't get that behavior on 2.0[.x] kernels, because
273 * they didn't support MSG_TRUNC.)
274 */
275#define MSG_TRUNC	0x20
276#endif
277
278#ifndef SOL_PACKET
279/*
280 * This is being compiled on a system that lacks SOL_PACKET; define it
281 * with the value it has in the 2.2 and later kernels, so that we can
282 * set promiscuous mode in the good modern way rather than the old
283 * 2.0-kernel crappy way.
284 */
285#define SOL_PACKET	263
286#endif
287
288#define MAX_LINKHEADER_SIZE	256
289
290/*
291 * When capturing on all interfaces we use this as the buffer size.
292 * Should be bigger then all MTUs that occur in real life.
293 * 64kB should be enough for now.
294 */
295#define BIGGER_THAN_ALL_MTUS	(64*1024)
296
297/*
298 * Private data for capturing on Linux SOCK_PACKET or PF_PACKET sockets.
299 */
300struct pcap_linux {
301	u_int	packets_read;	/* count of packets read with recvfrom() */
302	long	proc_dropped;	/* packets reported dropped by /proc/net/dev */
303	struct pcap_stat stat;
304
305	char	*device;	/* device name */
306	int	filter_in_userland; /* must filter in userland */
307	int	blocks_to_filter_in_userland;
308	int	must_do_on_close; /* stuff we must do when we close */
309	int	timeout;	/* timeout for buffering */
310	int	sock_packet;	/* using Linux 2.0 compatible interface */
311	int	cooked;		/* using SOCK_DGRAM rather than SOCK_RAW */
312	int	ifindex;	/* interface index of device we're bound to */
313	int	lo_ifindex;	/* interface index of the loopback device */
314	bpf_u_int32 oldmode;	/* mode to restore when turning monitor mode off */
315	char	*mondevice;	/* mac80211 monitor device we created */
316	u_char	*mmapbuf;	/* memory-mapped region pointer */
317	size_t	mmapbuflen;	/* size of region */
318	int	vlan_offset;	/* offset at which to insert vlan tags; if -1, don't insert */
319	u_int	tp_version;	/* version of tpacket_hdr for mmaped ring */
320	u_int	tp_hdrlen;	/* hdrlen of tpacket_hdr for mmaped ring */
321	u_char	*oneshot_buffer; /* buffer for copy of packet */
322	int	poll_timeout;	/* timeout to use in poll() */
323#ifdef HAVE_TPACKET3
324	unsigned char *current_packet; /* Current packet within the TPACKET_V3 block. Move to next block if NULL. */
325	int packets_left; /* Unhandled packets left within the block from previous call to pcap_read_linux_mmap_v3 in case of TPACKET_V3. */
326#endif
327};
328
329/*
330 * Stuff to do when we close.
331 */
332#define MUST_CLEAR_PROMISC	0x00000001	/* clear promiscuous mode */
333#define MUST_CLEAR_RFMON	0x00000002	/* clear rfmon (monitor) mode */
334#define MUST_DELETE_MONIF	0x00000004	/* delete monitor-mode interface */
335
336/*
337 * Prototypes for internal functions and methods.
338 */
339static int get_if_flags(const char *, bpf_u_int32 *, char *);
340static int is_wifi(int, const char *);
341static void map_arphrd_to_dlt(pcap_t *, int, int, const char *, int);
342static int pcap_activate_linux(pcap_t *);
343static int activate_old(pcap_t *);
344static int activate_new(pcap_t *);
345static int activate_mmap(pcap_t *, int *);
346static int pcap_can_set_rfmon_linux(pcap_t *);
347static int pcap_read_linux(pcap_t *, int, pcap_handler, u_char *);
348static int pcap_read_packet(pcap_t *, pcap_handler, u_char *);
349static int pcap_inject_linux(pcap_t *, const void *, size_t);
350static int pcap_stats_linux(pcap_t *, struct pcap_stat *);
351static int pcap_setfilter_linux(pcap_t *, struct bpf_program *);
352static int pcap_setdirection_linux(pcap_t *, pcap_direction_t);
353static int pcap_set_datalink_linux(pcap_t *, int);
354static void pcap_cleanup_linux(pcap_t *);
355
356/*
357 * This is what the header structure looks like in a 64-bit kernel;
358 * we use this, rather than struct tpacket_hdr, if we're using
359 * TPACKET_V1 in 32-bit code running on a 64-bit kernel.
360 */
361struct tpacket_hdr_64 {
362	uint64_t	tp_status;
363	unsigned int	tp_len;
364	unsigned int	tp_snaplen;
365	unsigned short	tp_mac;
366	unsigned short	tp_net;
367	unsigned int	tp_sec;
368	unsigned int	tp_usec;
369};
370
371/*
372 * We use this internally as the tpacket version for TPACKET_V1 in
373 * 32-bit code on a 64-bit kernel.
374 */
375#define TPACKET_V1_64 99
376
377union thdr {
378	struct tpacket_hdr		*h1;
379	struct tpacket_hdr_64		*h1_64;
380#ifdef HAVE_TPACKET2
381	struct tpacket2_hdr		*h2;
382#endif
383#ifdef HAVE_TPACKET3
384	struct tpacket_block_desc	*h3;
385#endif
386	void				*raw;
387};
388
389#ifdef HAVE_PACKET_RING
390#define RING_GET_FRAME_AT(h, offset) (((union thdr **)h->buffer)[(offset)])
391#define RING_GET_CURRENT_FRAME(h) RING_GET_FRAME_AT(h, h->offset)
392
393static void destroy_ring(pcap_t *handle);
394static int create_ring(pcap_t *handle, int *status);
395static int prepare_tpacket_socket(pcap_t *handle);
396static void pcap_cleanup_linux_mmap(pcap_t *);
397static int pcap_read_linux_mmap_v1(pcap_t *, int, pcap_handler , u_char *);
398static int pcap_read_linux_mmap_v1_64(pcap_t *, int, pcap_handler , u_char *);
399#ifdef HAVE_TPACKET2
400static int pcap_read_linux_mmap_v2(pcap_t *, int, pcap_handler , u_char *);
401#endif
402#ifdef HAVE_TPACKET3
403static int pcap_read_linux_mmap_v3(pcap_t *, int, pcap_handler , u_char *);
404#endif
405static int pcap_setfilter_linux_mmap(pcap_t *, struct bpf_program *);
406static int pcap_setnonblock_mmap(pcap_t *p, int nonblock);
407static int pcap_getnonblock_mmap(pcap_t *p);
408static void pcap_oneshot_mmap(u_char *user, const struct pcap_pkthdr *h,
409    const u_char *bytes);
410#endif
411
412/*
413 * In pre-3.0 kernels, the tp_vlan_tci field is set to whatever the
414 * vlan_tci field in the skbuff is.  0 can either mean "not on a VLAN"
415 * or "on VLAN 0".  There is no flag set in the tp_status field to
416 * distinguish between them.
417 *
418 * In 3.0 and later kernels, if there's a VLAN tag present, the tp_vlan_tci
419 * field is set to the VLAN tag, and the TP_STATUS_VLAN_VALID flag is set
420 * in the tp_status field, otherwise the tp_vlan_tci field is set to 0 and
421 * the TP_STATUS_VLAN_VALID flag isn't set in the tp_status field.
422 *
423 * With a pre-3.0 kernel, we cannot distinguish between packets with no
424 * VLAN tag and packets on VLAN 0, so we will mishandle some packets, and
425 * there's nothing we can do about that.
426 *
427 * So, on those systems, which never set the TP_STATUS_VLAN_VALID flag, we
428 * continue the behavior of earlier libpcaps, wherein we treated packets
429 * with a VLAN tag of 0 as being packets without a VLAN tag rather than packets
430 * on VLAN 0.  We do this by treating packets with a tp_vlan_tci of 0 and
431 * with the TP_STATUS_VLAN_VALID flag not set in tp_status as not having
432 * VLAN tags.  This does the right thing on 3.0 and later kernels, and
433 * continues the old unfixably-imperfect behavior on pre-3.0 kernels.
434 *
435 * If TP_STATUS_VLAN_VALID isn't defined, we test it as the 0x10 bit; it
436 * has that value in 3.0 and later kernels.
437 */
438#ifdef TP_STATUS_VLAN_VALID
439  #define VLAN_VALID(hdr, hv)	((hv)->tp_vlan_tci != 0 || ((hdr)->tp_status & TP_STATUS_VLAN_VALID))
440#else
441  /*
442   * This is being compiled on a system that lacks TP_STATUS_VLAN_VALID,
443   * so we testwith the value it has in the 3.0 and later kernels, so
444   * we can test it if we're running on a system that has it.  (If we're
445   * running on a system that doesn't have it, it won't be set in the
446   * tp_status field, so the tests of it will always fail; that means
447   * we behave the way we did before we introduced this macro.)
448   */
449  #define VLAN_VALID(hdr, hv)	((hv)->tp_vlan_tci != 0 || ((hdr)->tp_status & 0x10))
450#endif
451
452#ifdef TP_STATUS_VLAN_TPID_VALID
453# define VLAN_TPID(hdr, hv)	(((hv)->tp_vlan_tpid || ((hdr)->tp_status & TP_STATUS_VLAN_TPID_VALID)) ? (hv)->tp_vlan_tpid : ETH_P_8021Q)
454#else
455# define VLAN_TPID(hdr, hv)	ETH_P_8021Q
456#endif
457
458/*
459 * Wrap some ioctl calls
460 */
461#ifdef HAVE_PF_PACKET_SOCKETS
462static int	iface_get_id(int fd, const char *device, char *ebuf);
463#endif /* HAVE_PF_PACKET_SOCKETS */
464static int	iface_get_mtu(int fd, const char *device, char *ebuf);
465static int 	iface_get_arptype(int fd, const char *device, char *ebuf);
466#ifdef HAVE_PF_PACKET_SOCKETS
467static int 	iface_bind(int fd, int ifindex, char *ebuf, int protocol);
468#ifdef IW_MODE_MONITOR
469static int	has_wext(int sock_fd, const char *device, char *ebuf);
470#endif /* IW_MODE_MONITOR */
471static int	enter_rfmon_mode(pcap_t *handle, int sock_fd,
472    const char *device);
473#endif /* HAVE_PF_PACKET_SOCKETS */
474#if defined(HAVE_LINUX_NET_TSTAMP_H) && defined(PACKET_TIMESTAMP)
475static int	iface_ethtool_get_ts_info(const char *device, pcap_t *handle,
476    char *ebuf);
477#endif
478#ifdef HAVE_PACKET_RING
479static int	iface_get_offload(pcap_t *handle);
480#endif
481static int 	iface_bind_old(int fd, const char *device, char *ebuf);
482
483#ifdef SO_ATTACH_FILTER
484static int	fix_program(pcap_t *handle, struct sock_fprog *fcode,
485    int is_mapped);
486static int	fix_offset(pcap_t *handle, struct bpf_insn *p);
487static int	set_kernel_filter(pcap_t *handle, struct sock_fprog *fcode);
488static int	reset_kernel_filter(pcap_t *handle);
489
490static struct sock_filter	total_insn
491	= BPF_STMT(BPF_RET | BPF_K, 0);
492static struct sock_fprog	total_fcode
493	= { 1, &total_insn };
494#endif /* SO_ATTACH_FILTER */
495
496pcap_t *
497pcap_create_interface(const char *device, char *ebuf)
498{
499	pcap_t *handle;
500
501	handle = pcap_create_common(ebuf, sizeof (struct pcap_linux));
502	if (handle == NULL)
503		return NULL;
504
505	handle->activate_op = pcap_activate_linux;
506	handle->can_set_rfmon_op = pcap_can_set_rfmon_linux;
507
508#if defined(HAVE_LINUX_NET_TSTAMP_H) && defined(PACKET_TIMESTAMP)
509	/*
510	 * See what time stamp types we support.
511	 */
512	if (iface_ethtool_get_ts_info(device, handle, ebuf) == -1) {
513		pcap_close(handle);
514		return NULL;
515	}
516#endif
517
518#if defined(SIOCGSTAMPNS) && defined(SO_TIMESTAMPNS)
519	/*
520	 * We claim that we support microsecond and nanosecond time
521	 * stamps.
522	 *
523	 * XXX - with adapter-supplied time stamps, can we choose
524	 * microsecond or nanosecond time stamps on arbitrary
525	 * adapters?
526	 */
527	handle->tstamp_precision_count = 2;
528	handle->tstamp_precision_list = malloc(2 * sizeof(u_int));
529	if (handle->tstamp_precision_list == NULL) {
530		pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(ebuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
531		    errno, "malloc");
532		pcap_close(handle);
533		return NULL;
534	}
535	handle->tstamp_precision_list[0] = PCAP_TSTAMP_PRECISION_MICRO;
536	handle->tstamp_precision_list[1] = PCAP_TSTAMP_PRECISION_NANO;
537#endif /* defined(SIOCGSTAMPNS) && defined(SO_TIMESTAMPNS) */
538
539	return handle;
540}
541
542#ifdef HAVE_LIBNL
543/*
544 * If interface {if} is a mac80211 driver, the file
545 * /sys/class/net/{if}/phy80211 is a symlink to
546 * /sys/class/ieee80211/{phydev}, for some {phydev}.
547 *
548 * On Fedora 9, with a 2.6.26.3-29 kernel, my Zydas stick, at
549 * least, has a "wmaster0" device and a "wlan0" device; the
550 * latter is the one with the IP address.  Both show up in
551 * "tcpdump -D" output.  Capturing on the wmaster0 device
552 * captures with 802.11 headers.
553 *
554 * airmon-ng searches through /sys/class/net for devices named
555 * monN, starting with mon0; as soon as one *doesn't* exist,
556 * it chooses that as the monitor device name.  If the "iw"
557 * command exists, it does "iw dev {if} interface add {monif}
558 * type monitor", where {monif} is the monitor device.  It
559 * then (sigh) sleeps .1 second, and then configures the
560 * device up.  Otherwise, if /sys/class/ieee80211/{phydev}/add_iface
561 * is a file, it writes {mondev}, without a newline, to that file,
562 * and again (sigh) sleeps .1 second, and then iwconfig's that
563 * device into monitor mode and configures it up.  Otherwise,
564 * you can't do monitor mode.
565 *
566 * All these devices are "glued" together by having the
567 * /sys/class/net/{device}/phy80211 links pointing to the same
568 * place, so, given a wmaster, wlan, or mon device, you can
569 * find the other devices by looking for devices with
570 * the same phy80211 link.
571 *
572 * To turn monitor mode off, delete the monitor interface,
573 * either with "iw dev {monif} interface del" or by sending
574 * {monif}, with no NL, down /sys/class/ieee80211/{phydev}/remove_iface
575 *
576 * Note: if you try to create a monitor device named "monN", and
577 * there's already a "monN" device, it fails, as least with
578 * the netlink interface (which is what iw uses), with a return
579 * value of -ENFILE.  (Return values are negative errnos.)  We
580 * could probably use that to find an unused device.
581 *
582 * Yes, you can have multiple monitor devices for a given
583 * physical device.
584 */
585
586/*
587 * Is this a mac80211 device?  If so, fill in the physical device path and
588 * return 1; if not, return 0.  On an error, fill in handle->errbuf and
589 * return PCAP_ERROR.
590 */
591static int
592get_mac80211_phydev(pcap_t *handle, const char *device, char *phydev_path,
593    size_t phydev_max_pathlen)
594{
595	char *pathstr;
596	ssize_t bytes_read;
597
598	/*
599	 * Generate the path string for the symlink to the physical device.
600	 */
601	if (asprintf(&pathstr, "/sys/class/net/%s/phy80211", device) == -1) {
602		pcap_snprintf(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
603		    "%s: Can't generate path name string for /sys/class/net device",
604		    device);
605		return PCAP_ERROR;
606	}
607	bytes_read = readlink(pathstr, phydev_path, phydev_max_pathlen);
608	if (bytes_read == -1) {
609		if (errno == ENOENT || errno == EINVAL) {
610			/*
611			 * Doesn't exist, or not a symlink; assume that
612			 * means it's not a mac80211 device.
613			 */
614			free(pathstr);
615			return 0;
616		}
617		pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
618		    errno, "%s: Can't readlink %s", device, pathstr);
619		free(pathstr);
620		return PCAP_ERROR;
621	}
622	free(pathstr);
623	phydev_path[bytes_read] = '\0';
624	return 1;
625}
626
627#ifdef HAVE_LIBNL_SOCKETS
628#define get_nl_errmsg	nl_geterror
629#else
630/* libnl 2.x compatibility code */
631
632#define nl_sock nl_handle
633
634static inline struct nl_handle *
635nl_socket_alloc(void)
636{
637	return nl_handle_alloc();
638}
639
640static inline void
641nl_socket_free(struct nl_handle *h)
642{
643	nl_handle_destroy(h);
644}
645
646#define get_nl_errmsg	strerror
647
648static inline int
649__genl_ctrl_alloc_cache(struct nl_handle *h, struct nl_cache **cache)
650{
651	struct nl_cache *tmp = genl_ctrl_alloc_cache(h);
652	if (!tmp)
653		return -ENOMEM;
654	*cache = tmp;
655	return 0;
656}
657#define genl_ctrl_alloc_cache __genl_ctrl_alloc_cache
658#endif /* !HAVE_LIBNL_SOCKETS */
659
660struct nl80211_state {
661	struct nl_sock *nl_sock;
662	struct nl_cache *nl_cache;
663	struct genl_family *nl80211;
664};
665
666static int
667nl80211_init(pcap_t *handle, struct nl80211_state *state, const char *device)
668{
669	int err;
670
671	state->nl_sock = nl_socket_alloc();
672	if (!state->nl_sock) {
673		pcap_snprintf(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
674		    "%s: failed to allocate netlink handle", device);
675		return PCAP_ERROR;
676	}
677
678	if (genl_connect(state->nl_sock)) {
679		pcap_snprintf(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
680		    "%s: failed to connect to generic netlink", device);
681		goto out_handle_destroy;
682	}
683
684	err = genl_ctrl_alloc_cache(state->nl_sock, &state->nl_cache);
685	if (err < 0) {
686		pcap_snprintf(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
687		    "%s: failed to allocate generic netlink cache: %s",
688		    device, get_nl_errmsg(-err));
689		goto out_handle_destroy;
690	}
691
692	state->nl80211 = genl_ctrl_search_by_name(state->nl_cache, "nl80211");
693	if (!state->nl80211) {
694		pcap_snprintf(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
695		    "%s: nl80211 not found", device);
696		goto out_cache_free;
697	}
698
699	return 0;
700
701out_cache_free:
702	nl_cache_free(state->nl_cache);
703out_handle_destroy:
704	nl_socket_free(state->nl_sock);
705	return PCAP_ERROR;
706}
707
708static void
709nl80211_cleanup(struct nl80211_state *state)
710{
711	genl_family_put(state->nl80211);
712	nl_cache_free(state->nl_cache);
713	nl_socket_free(state->nl_sock);
714}
715
716static int
717del_mon_if(pcap_t *handle, int sock_fd, struct nl80211_state *state,
718    const char *device, const char *mondevice);
719
720static int
721add_mon_if(pcap_t *handle, int sock_fd, struct nl80211_state *state,
722    const char *device, const char *mondevice)
723{
724	struct pcap_linux *handlep = handle->priv;
725	int ifindex;
726	struct nl_msg *msg;
727	int err;
728
729	ifindex = iface_get_id(sock_fd, device, handle->errbuf);
730	if (ifindex == -1)
731		return PCAP_ERROR;
732
733	msg = nlmsg_alloc();
734	if (!msg) {
735		pcap_snprintf(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
736		    "%s: failed to allocate netlink msg", device);
737		return PCAP_ERROR;
738	}
739
740	genlmsg_put(msg, 0, 0, genl_family_get_id(state->nl80211), 0,
741		    0, NL80211_CMD_NEW_INTERFACE, 0);
742	NLA_PUT_U32(msg, NL80211_ATTR_IFINDEX, ifindex);
743	NLA_PUT_STRING(msg, NL80211_ATTR_IFNAME, mondevice);
744	NLA_PUT_U32(msg, NL80211_ATTR_IFTYPE, NL80211_IFTYPE_MONITOR);
745
746	err = nl_send_auto_complete(state->nl_sock, msg);
747	if (err < 0) {
748#if defined HAVE_LIBNL_NLE
749		if (err == -NLE_FAILURE) {
750#else
751		if (err == -ENFILE) {
752#endif
753			/*
754			 * Device not available; our caller should just
755			 * keep trying.  (libnl 2.x maps ENFILE to
756			 * NLE_FAILURE; it can also map other errors
757			 * to that, but there's not much we can do
758			 * about that.)
759			 */
760			nlmsg_free(msg);
761			return 0;
762		} else {
763			/*
764			 * Real failure, not just "that device is not
765			 * available.
766			 */
767			pcap_snprintf(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
768			    "%s: nl_send_auto_complete failed adding %s interface: %s",
769			    device, mondevice, get_nl_errmsg(-err));
770			nlmsg_free(msg);
771			return PCAP_ERROR;
772		}
773	}
774	err = nl_wait_for_ack(state->nl_sock);
775	if (err < 0) {
776#if defined HAVE_LIBNL_NLE
777		if (err == -NLE_FAILURE) {
778#else
779		if (err == -ENFILE) {
780#endif
781			/*
782			 * Device not available; our caller should just
783			 * keep trying.  (libnl 2.x maps ENFILE to
784			 * NLE_FAILURE; it can also map other errors
785			 * to that, but there's not much we can do
786			 * about that.)
787			 */
788			nlmsg_free(msg);
789			return 0;
790		} else {
791			/*
792			 * Real failure, not just "that device is not
793			 * available.
794			 */
795			pcap_snprintf(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
796			    "%s: nl_wait_for_ack failed adding %s interface: %s",
797			    device, mondevice, get_nl_errmsg(-err));
798			nlmsg_free(msg);
799			return PCAP_ERROR;
800		}
801	}
802
803	/*
804	 * Success.
805	 */
806	nlmsg_free(msg);
807
808	/*
809	 * Try to remember the monitor device.
810	 */
811	handlep->mondevice = strdup(mondevice);
812	if (handlep->mondevice == NULL) {
813		pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
814		    errno, "strdup");
815		/*
816		 * Get rid of the monitor device.
817		 */
818		del_mon_if(handle, sock_fd, state, device, mondevice);
819		return PCAP_ERROR;
820	}
821	return 1;
822
823nla_put_failure:
824	pcap_snprintf(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
825	    "%s: nl_put failed adding %s interface",
826	    device, mondevice);
827	nlmsg_free(msg);
828	return PCAP_ERROR;
829}
830
831static int
832del_mon_if(pcap_t *handle, int sock_fd, struct nl80211_state *state,
833    const char *device, const char *mondevice)
834{
835	int ifindex;
836	struct nl_msg *msg;
837	int err;
838
839	ifindex = iface_get_id(sock_fd, mondevice, handle->errbuf);
840	if (ifindex == -1)
841		return PCAP_ERROR;
842
843	msg = nlmsg_alloc();
844	if (!msg) {
845		pcap_snprintf(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
846		    "%s: failed to allocate netlink msg", device);
847		return PCAP_ERROR;
848	}
849
850	genlmsg_put(msg, 0, 0, genl_family_get_id(state->nl80211), 0,
851		    0, NL80211_CMD_DEL_INTERFACE, 0);
852	NLA_PUT_U32(msg, NL80211_ATTR_IFINDEX, ifindex);
853
854	err = nl_send_auto_complete(state->nl_sock, msg);
855	if (err < 0) {
856		pcap_snprintf(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
857		    "%s: nl_send_auto_complete failed deleting %s interface: %s",
858		    device, mondevice, get_nl_errmsg(-err));
859		nlmsg_free(msg);
860		return PCAP_ERROR;
861	}
862	err = nl_wait_for_ack(state->nl_sock);
863	if (err < 0) {
864		pcap_snprintf(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
865		    "%s: nl_wait_for_ack failed adding %s interface: %s",
866		    device, mondevice, get_nl_errmsg(-err));
867		nlmsg_free(msg);
868		return PCAP_ERROR;
869	}
870
871	/*
872	 * Success.
873	 */
874	nlmsg_free(msg);
875	return 1;
876
877nla_put_failure:
878	pcap_snprintf(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
879	    "%s: nl_put failed deleting %s interface",
880	    device, mondevice);
881	nlmsg_free(msg);
882	return PCAP_ERROR;
883}
884
885static int
886enter_rfmon_mode_mac80211(pcap_t *handle, int sock_fd, const char *device)
887{
888	struct pcap_linux *handlep = handle->priv;
889	int ret;
890	char phydev_path[PATH_MAX+1];
891	struct nl80211_state nlstate;
892	struct ifreq ifr;
893	u_int n;
894
895	/*
896	 * Is this a mac80211 device?
897	 */
898	ret = get_mac80211_phydev(handle, device, phydev_path, PATH_MAX);
899	if (ret < 0)
900		return ret;	/* error */
901	if (ret == 0)
902		return 0;	/* no error, but not mac80211 device */
903
904	/*
905	 * XXX - is this already a monN device?
906	 * If so, we're done.
907	 * Is that determined by old Wireless Extensions ioctls?
908	 */
909
910	/*
911	 * OK, it's apparently a mac80211 device.
912	 * Try to find an unused monN device for it.
913	 */
914	ret = nl80211_init(handle, &nlstate, device);
915	if (ret != 0)
916		return ret;
917	for (n = 0; n < UINT_MAX; n++) {
918		/*
919		 * Try mon{n}.
920		 */
921		char mondevice[3+10+1];	/* mon{UINT_MAX}\0 */
922
923		pcap_snprintf(mondevice, sizeof mondevice, "mon%u", n);
924		ret = add_mon_if(handle, sock_fd, &nlstate, device, mondevice);
925		if (ret == 1) {
926			/*
927			 * Success.  We don't clean up the libnl state
928			 * yet, as we'll be using it later.
929			 */
930			goto added;
931		}
932		if (ret < 0) {
933			/*
934			 * Hard failure.  Just return ret; handle->errbuf
935			 * has already been set.
936			 */
937			nl80211_cleanup(&nlstate);
938			return ret;
939		}
940	}
941
942	pcap_snprintf(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
943	    "%s: No free monN interfaces", device);
944	nl80211_cleanup(&nlstate);
945	return PCAP_ERROR;
946
947added:
948
949#if 0
950	/*
951	 * Sleep for .1 seconds.
952	 */
953	delay.tv_sec = 0;
954	delay.tv_nsec = 500000000;
955	nanosleep(&delay, NULL);
956#endif
957
958	/*
959	 * If we haven't already done so, arrange to have
960	 * "pcap_close_all()" called when we exit.
961	 */
962	if (!pcap_do_addexit(handle)) {
963		/*
964		 * "atexit()" failed; don't put the interface
965		 * in rfmon mode, just give up.
966		 */
967		del_mon_if(handle, sock_fd, &nlstate, device,
968		    handlep->mondevice);
969		nl80211_cleanup(&nlstate);
970		return PCAP_ERROR;
971	}
972
973	/*
974	 * Now configure the monitor interface up.
975	 */
976	memset(&ifr, 0, sizeof(ifr));
977	pcap_strlcpy(ifr.ifr_name, handlep->mondevice, sizeof(ifr.ifr_name));
978	if (ioctl(sock_fd, SIOCGIFFLAGS, &ifr) == -1) {
979		pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
980		    errno, "%s: Can't get flags for %s", device,
981		    handlep->mondevice);
982		del_mon_if(handle, sock_fd, &nlstate, device,
983		    handlep->mondevice);
984		nl80211_cleanup(&nlstate);
985		return PCAP_ERROR;
986	}
987	ifr.ifr_flags |= IFF_UP|IFF_RUNNING;
988	if (ioctl(sock_fd, SIOCSIFFLAGS, &ifr) == -1) {
989		pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
990		    errno, "%s: Can't set flags for %s", device,
991		    handlep->mondevice);
992		del_mon_if(handle, sock_fd, &nlstate, device,
993		    handlep->mondevice);
994		nl80211_cleanup(&nlstate);
995		return PCAP_ERROR;
996	}
997
998	/*
999	 * Success.  Clean up the libnl state.
1000	 */
1001	nl80211_cleanup(&nlstate);
1002
1003	/*
1004	 * Note that we have to delete the monitor device when we close
1005	 * the handle.
1006	 */
1007	handlep->must_do_on_close |= MUST_DELETE_MONIF;
1008
1009	/*
1010	 * Add this to the list of pcaps to close when we exit.
1011	 */
1012	pcap_add_to_pcaps_to_close(handle);
1013
1014	return 1;
1015}
1016#endif /* HAVE_LIBNL */
1017
1018#ifdef IW_MODE_MONITOR
1019/*
1020 * Bonding devices mishandle unknown ioctls; they fail with ENODEV
1021 * rather than ENOTSUP, EOPNOTSUPP, or ENOTTY, so Wireless Extensions
1022 * will fail with ENODEV if we try to do them on a bonding device,
1023 * making us return a "no such device" indication rather than just
1024 * saying "no Wireless Extensions".
1025 *
1026 * So we check for bonding devices, if we can, before trying those
1027 * ioctls, by trying a bonding device information query ioctl to see
1028 * whether it succeeds.
1029 */
1030static int
1031is_bonding_device(int fd, const char *device)
1032{
1033#ifdef BOND_INFO_QUERY_IOCTL
1034	struct ifreq ifr;
1035	ifbond ifb;
1036
1037	memset(&ifr, 0, sizeof ifr);
1038	pcap_strlcpy(ifr.ifr_name, device, sizeof ifr.ifr_name);
1039	memset(&ifb, 0, sizeof ifb);
1040	ifr.ifr_data = (caddr_t)&ifb;
1041	if (ioctl(fd, BOND_INFO_QUERY_IOCTL, &ifr) == 0)
1042		return 1;	/* success, so it's a bonding device */
1043#endif /* BOND_INFO_QUERY_IOCTL */
1044
1045	return 0;	/* no, it's not a bonding device */
1046}
1047#endif /* IW_MODE_MONITOR */
1048
1049static int pcap_protocol(pcap_t *handle)
1050{
1051	int protocol;
1052
1053	protocol = handle->opt.protocol;
1054	if (protocol == 0)
1055		protocol = ETH_P_ALL;
1056
1057	return htons(protocol);
1058}
1059
1060static int
1061pcap_can_set_rfmon_linux(pcap_t *handle)
1062{
1063#ifdef HAVE_LIBNL
1064	char phydev_path[PATH_MAX+1];
1065	int ret;
1066#endif
1067#ifdef IW_MODE_MONITOR
1068	int sock_fd;
1069	struct iwreq ireq;
1070#endif
1071
1072	if (strcmp(handle->opt.device, "any") == 0) {
1073		/*
1074		 * Monitor mode makes no sense on the "any" device.
1075		 */
1076		return 0;
1077	}
1078
1079#ifdef HAVE_LIBNL
1080	/*
1081	 * Bleah.  There doesn't seem to be a way to ask a mac80211
1082	 * device, through libnl, whether it supports monitor mode;
1083	 * we'll just check whether the device appears to be a
1084	 * mac80211 device and, if so, assume the device supports
1085	 * monitor mode.
1086	 *
1087	 * wmaster devices don't appear to support the Wireless
1088	 * Extensions, but we can create a mon device for a
1089	 * wmaster device, so we don't bother checking whether
1090	 * a mac80211 device supports the Wireless Extensions.
1091	 */
1092	ret = get_mac80211_phydev(handle, handle->opt.device, phydev_path,
1093	    PATH_MAX);
1094	if (ret < 0)
1095		return ret;	/* error */
1096	if (ret == 1)
1097		return 1;	/* mac80211 device */
1098#endif
1099
1100#ifdef IW_MODE_MONITOR
1101	/*
1102	 * Bleah.  There doesn't appear to be an ioctl to use to ask
1103	 * whether a device supports monitor mode; we'll just do
1104	 * SIOCGIWMODE and, if it succeeds, assume the device supports
1105	 * monitor mode.
1106	 *
1107	 * Open a socket on which to attempt to get the mode.
1108	 * (We assume that if we have Wireless Extensions support
1109	 * we also have PF_PACKET support.)
1110	 */
1111	sock_fd = socket(PF_PACKET, SOCK_RAW, pcap_protocol(handle));
1112	if (sock_fd == -1) {
1113		pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
1114		    errno, "socket");
1115		return PCAP_ERROR;
1116	}
1117
1118	if (is_bonding_device(sock_fd, handle->opt.device)) {
1119		/* It's a bonding device, so don't even try. */
1120		close(sock_fd);
1121		return 0;
1122	}
1123
1124	/*
1125	 * Attempt to get the current mode.
1126	 */
1127	pcap_strlcpy(ireq.ifr_ifrn.ifrn_name, handle->opt.device,
1128	    sizeof ireq.ifr_ifrn.ifrn_name);
1129	if (ioctl(sock_fd, SIOCGIWMODE, &ireq) != -1) {
1130		/*
1131		 * Well, we got the mode; assume we can set it.
1132		 */
1133		close(sock_fd);
1134		return 1;
1135	}
1136	if (errno == ENODEV) {
1137		/* The device doesn't even exist. */
1138		pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
1139		    errno, "SIOCGIWMODE failed");
1140		close(sock_fd);
1141		return PCAP_ERROR_NO_SUCH_DEVICE;
1142	}
1143	close(sock_fd);
1144#endif
1145	return 0;
1146}
1147
1148/*
1149 * Grabs the number of dropped packets by the interface from /proc/net/dev.
1150 *
1151 * XXX - what about /sys/class/net/{interface name}/rx_*?  There are
1152 * individual devices giving, in ASCII, various rx_ and tx_ statistics.
1153 *
1154 * Or can we get them in binary form from netlink?
1155 */
1156static long int
1157linux_if_drops(const char * if_name)
1158{
1159	char buffer[512];
1160	FILE *file;
1161	char *bufptr, *nameptr, *colonptr;
1162	int field_to_convert = 3;
1163	long int dropped_pkts = 0;
1164
1165	file = fopen("/proc/net/dev", "r");
1166	if (!file)
1167		return 0;
1168
1169	while (fgets(buffer, sizeof(buffer), file) != NULL)
1170	{
1171		/* 	search for 'bytes' -- if its in there, then
1172			that means we need to grab the fourth field. otherwise
1173			grab the third field. */
1174		if (field_to_convert != 4 && strstr(buffer, "bytes"))
1175		{
1176			field_to_convert = 4;
1177			continue;
1178		}
1179
1180		/*
1181		 * See whether this line corresponds to this device.
1182		 * The line should have zero or more leading blanks,
1183		 * followed by a device name, followed by a colon,
1184		 * followed by the statistics.
1185		 */
1186		bufptr = buffer;
1187		/* Skip leading blanks */
1188		while (*bufptr == ' ')
1189			bufptr++;
1190		nameptr = bufptr;
1191		/* Look for the colon */
1192		colonptr = strchr(nameptr, ':');
1193		if (colonptr == NULL)
1194		{
1195			/*
1196			 * Not found; this could, for example, be the
1197			 * header line.
1198			 */
1199			continue;
1200		}
1201		/* Null-terminate the interface name. */
1202		*colonptr = '\0';
1203		if (strcmp(if_name, nameptr) == 0)
1204		{
1205			/*
1206			 * OK, this line has the statistics for the interface.
1207			 * Skip past the interface name.
1208			 */
1209			bufptr = colonptr + 1;
1210
1211			/* grab the nth field from it */
1212			while (--field_to_convert && *bufptr != '\0')
1213			{
1214				/*
1215				 * This isn't the field we want.
1216				 * First, skip any leading blanks before
1217				 * the field.
1218				 */
1219				while (*bufptr == ' ')
1220					bufptr++;
1221
1222				/*
1223				 * Now skip the non-blank characters of
1224				 * the field.
1225				 */
1226				while (*bufptr != '\0' && *bufptr != ' ')
1227					bufptr++;
1228			}
1229
1230			if (field_to_convert == 0)
1231			{
1232				/*
1233				 * We've found the field we want.
1234				 * Skip any leading blanks before it.
1235				 */
1236				while (*bufptr == ' ')
1237					bufptr++;
1238
1239				/*
1240				 * Now extract the value, if we have one.
1241				 */
1242				if (*bufptr != '\0')
1243					dropped_pkts = strtol(bufptr, NULL, 10);
1244			}
1245			break;
1246		}
1247	}
1248
1249	fclose(file);
1250	return dropped_pkts;
1251}
1252
1253
1254/*
1255 * With older kernels promiscuous mode is kind of interesting because we
1256 * have to reset the interface before exiting. The problem can't really
1257 * be solved without some daemon taking care of managing usage counts.
1258 * If we put the interface into promiscuous mode, we set a flag indicating
1259 * that we must take it out of that mode when the interface is closed,
1260 * and, when closing the interface, if that flag is set we take it out
1261 * of promiscuous mode.
1262 *
1263 * Even with newer kernels, we have the same issue with rfmon mode.
1264 */
1265
1266static void	pcap_cleanup_linux( pcap_t *handle )
1267{
1268	struct pcap_linux *handlep = handle->priv;
1269	struct ifreq	ifr;
1270#ifdef HAVE_LIBNL
1271	struct nl80211_state nlstate;
1272	int ret;
1273#endif /* HAVE_LIBNL */
1274#ifdef IW_MODE_MONITOR
1275	int oldflags;
1276	struct iwreq ireq;
1277#endif /* IW_MODE_MONITOR */
1278
1279	if (handlep->must_do_on_close != 0) {
1280		/*
1281		 * There's something we have to do when closing this
1282		 * pcap_t.
1283		 */
1284		if (handlep->must_do_on_close & MUST_CLEAR_PROMISC) {
1285			/*
1286			 * We put the interface into promiscuous mode;
1287			 * take it out of promiscuous mode.
1288			 *
1289			 * XXX - if somebody else wants it in promiscuous
1290			 * mode, this code cannot know that, so it'll take
1291			 * it out of promiscuous mode.  That's not fixable
1292			 * in 2.0[.x] kernels.
1293			 */
1294			memset(&ifr, 0, sizeof(ifr));
1295			pcap_strlcpy(ifr.ifr_name, handlep->device,
1296			    sizeof(ifr.ifr_name));
1297			if (ioctl(handle->fd, SIOCGIFFLAGS, &ifr) == -1) {
1298				fprintf(stderr,
1299				    "Can't restore interface %s flags (SIOCGIFFLAGS failed: %s).\n"
1300				    "Please adjust manually.\n"
1301				    "Hint: This can't happen with Linux >= 2.2.0.\n",
1302				    handlep->device, strerror(errno));
1303			} else {
1304				if (ifr.ifr_flags & IFF_PROMISC) {
1305					/*
1306					 * Promiscuous mode is currently on;
1307					 * turn it off.
1308					 */
1309					ifr.ifr_flags &= ~IFF_PROMISC;
1310					if (ioctl(handle->fd, SIOCSIFFLAGS,
1311					    &ifr) == -1) {
1312						fprintf(stderr,
1313						    "Can't restore interface %s flags (SIOCSIFFLAGS failed: %s).\n"
1314						    "Please adjust manually.\n"
1315						    "Hint: This can't happen with Linux >= 2.2.0.\n",
1316						    handlep->device,
1317						    strerror(errno));
1318					}
1319				}
1320			}
1321		}
1322
1323#ifdef HAVE_LIBNL
1324		if (handlep->must_do_on_close & MUST_DELETE_MONIF) {
1325			ret = nl80211_init(handle, &nlstate, handlep->device);
1326			if (ret >= 0) {
1327				ret = del_mon_if(handle, handle->fd, &nlstate,
1328				    handlep->device, handlep->mondevice);
1329				nl80211_cleanup(&nlstate);
1330			}
1331			if (ret < 0) {
1332				fprintf(stderr,
1333				    "Can't delete monitor interface %s (%s).\n"
1334				    "Please delete manually.\n",
1335				    handlep->mondevice, handle->errbuf);
1336			}
1337		}
1338#endif /* HAVE_LIBNL */
1339
1340#ifdef IW_MODE_MONITOR
1341		if (handlep->must_do_on_close & MUST_CLEAR_RFMON) {
1342			/*
1343			 * We put the interface into rfmon mode;
1344			 * take it out of rfmon mode.
1345			 *
1346			 * XXX - if somebody else wants it in rfmon
1347			 * mode, this code cannot know that, so it'll take
1348			 * it out of rfmon mode.
1349			 */
1350
1351			/*
1352			 * First, take the interface down if it's up;
1353			 * otherwise, we might get EBUSY.
1354			 * If we get errors, just drive on and print
1355			 * a warning if we can't restore the mode.
1356			 */
1357			oldflags = 0;
1358			memset(&ifr, 0, sizeof(ifr));
1359			pcap_strlcpy(ifr.ifr_name, handlep->device,
1360			    sizeof(ifr.ifr_name));
1361			if (ioctl(handle->fd, SIOCGIFFLAGS, &ifr) != -1) {
1362				if (ifr.ifr_flags & IFF_UP) {
1363					oldflags = ifr.ifr_flags;
1364					ifr.ifr_flags &= ~IFF_UP;
1365					if (ioctl(handle->fd, SIOCSIFFLAGS, &ifr) == -1)
1366						oldflags = 0;	/* didn't set, don't restore */
1367				}
1368			}
1369
1370			/*
1371			 * Now restore the mode.
1372			 */
1373			pcap_strlcpy(ireq.ifr_ifrn.ifrn_name, handlep->device,
1374			    sizeof ireq.ifr_ifrn.ifrn_name);
1375			ireq.u.mode = handlep->oldmode;
1376			if (ioctl(handle->fd, SIOCSIWMODE, &ireq) == -1) {
1377				/*
1378				 * Scientist, you've failed.
1379				 */
1380				fprintf(stderr,
1381				    "Can't restore interface %s wireless mode (SIOCSIWMODE failed: %s).\n"
1382				    "Please adjust manually.\n",
1383				    handlep->device, strerror(errno));
1384			}
1385
1386			/*
1387			 * Now bring the interface back up if we brought
1388			 * it down.
1389			 */
1390			if (oldflags != 0) {
1391				ifr.ifr_flags = oldflags;
1392				if (ioctl(handle->fd, SIOCSIFFLAGS, &ifr) == -1) {
1393					fprintf(stderr,
1394					    "Can't bring interface %s back up (SIOCSIFFLAGS failed: %s).\n"
1395					    "Please adjust manually.\n",
1396					    handlep->device, strerror(errno));
1397				}
1398			}
1399		}
1400#endif /* IW_MODE_MONITOR */
1401
1402		/*
1403		 * Take this pcap out of the list of pcaps for which we
1404		 * have to take the interface out of some mode.
1405		 */
1406		pcap_remove_from_pcaps_to_close(handle);
1407	}
1408
1409	if (handlep->mondevice != NULL) {
1410		free(handlep->mondevice);
1411		handlep->mondevice = NULL;
1412	}
1413	if (handlep->device != NULL) {
1414		free(handlep->device);
1415		handlep->device = NULL;
1416	}
1417	pcap_cleanup_live_common(handle);
1418}
1419
1420/*
1421 * Set the timeout to be used in poll() with memory-mapped packet capture.
1422 */
1423static void
1424set_poll_timeout(struct pcap_linux *handlep)
1425{
1426#ifdef HAVE_TPACKET3
1427	struct utsname utsname;
1428	char *version_component, *endp;
1429	int major, minor;
1430	int broken_tpacket_v3 = 1;
1431
1432	/*
1433	 * Some versions of TPACKET_V3 have annoying bugs/misfeatures
1434	 * around which we have to work.  Determine if we have those
1435	 * problems or not.
1436	 */
1437	if (uname(&utsname) == 0) {
1438		/*
1439		 * 3.19 is the first release with a fixed version of
1440		 * TPACKET_V3.  We treat anything before that as
1441		 * not haveing a fixed version; that may really mean
1442		 * it has *no* version.
1443		 */
1444		version_component = utsname.release;
1445		major = strtol(version_component, &endp, 10);
1446		if (endp != version_component && *endp == '.') {
1447			/*
1448			 * OK, that was a valid major version.
1449			 * Get the minor version.
1450			 */
1451			version_component = endp + 1;
1452			minor = strtol(version_component, &endp, 10);
1453			if (endp != version_component &&
1454			    (*endp == '.' || *endp == '\0')) {
1455				/*
1456				 * OK, that was a valid minor version.
1457				 * Is this 3.19 or newer?
1458				 */
1459				if (major >= 4 || (major == 3 && minor >= 19)) {
1460					/* Yes. TPACKET_V3 works correctly. */
1461					broken_tpacket_v3 = 0;
1462				}
1463			}
1464		}
1465	}
1466#endif
1467	if (handlep->timeout == 0) {
1468#ifdef HAVE_TPACKET3
1469		/*
1470		 * XXX - due to a set of (mis)features in the TPACKET_V3
1471		 * kernel code prior to the 3.19 kernel, blocking forever
1472		 * with a TPACKET_V3 socket can, if few packets are
1473		 * arriving and passing the socket filter, cause most
1474		 * packets to be dropped.  See libpcap issue #335 for the
1475		 * full painful story.
1476		 *
1477		 * The workaround is to have poll() time out very quickly,
1478		 * so we grab the frames handed to us, and return them to
1479		 * the kernel, ASAP.
1480		 */
1481		if (handlep->tp_version == TPACKET_V3 && broken_tpacket_v3)
1482			handlep->poll_timeout = 1;	/* don't block for very long */
1483		else
1484#endif
1485			handlep->poll_timeout = -1;	/* block forever */
1486	} else if (handlep->timeout > 0) {
1487#ifdef HAVE_TPACKET3
1488		/*
1489		 * For TPACKET_V3, the timeout is handled by the kernel,
1490		 * so block forever; that way, we don't get extra timeouts.
1491		 * Don't do that if we have a broken TPACKET_V3, though.
1492		 */
1493		if (handlep->tp_version == TPACKET_V3 && !broken_tpacket_v3)
1494			handlep->poll_timeout = -1;	/* block forever, let TPACKET_V3 wake us up */
1495		else
1496#endif
1497			handlep->poll_timeout = handlep->timeout;	/* block for that amount of time */
1498	} else {
1499		/*
1500		 * Non-blocking mode; we call poll() to pick up error
1501		 * indications, but we don't want it to wait for
1502		 * anything.
1503		 */
1504		handlep->poll_timeout = 0;
1505	}
1506}
1507
1508/*
1509 *  Get a handle for a live capture from the given device. You can
1510 *  pass NULL as device to get all packages (without link level
1511 *  information of course). If you pass 1 as promisc the interface
1512 *  will be set to promiscous mode (XXX: I think this usage should
1513 *  be deprecated and functions be added to select that later allow
1514 *  modification of that values -- Torsten).
1515 */
1516static int
1517pcap_activate_linux(pcap_t *handle)
1518{
1519	struct pcap_linux *handlep = handle->priv;
1520	const char	*device;
1521	struct ifreq	ifr;
1522	int		status = 0;
1523	int		ret;
1524
1525	device = handle->opt.device;
1526
1527	/*
1528	 * Make sure the name we were handed will fit into the ioctls we
1529	 * might perform on the device; if not, return a "No such device"
1530	 * indication, as the Linux kernel shouldn't support creating
1531	 * a device whose name won't fit into those ioctls.
1532	 *
1533	 * "Will fit" means "will fit, complete with a null terminator",
1534	 * so if the length, which does *not* include the null terminator,
1535	 * is greater than *or equal to* the size of the field into which
1536	 * we'll be copying it, that won't fit.
1537	 */
1538	if (strlen(device) >= sizeof(ifr.ifr_name)) {
1539		status = PCAP_ERROR_NO_SUCH_DEVICE;
1540		goto fail;
1541	}
1542
1543	/*
1544	 * Turn a negative snapshot value (invalid), a snapshot value of
1545	 * 0 (unspecified), or a value bigger than the normal maximum
1546	 * value, into the maximum allowed value.
1547	 *
1548	 * If some application really *needs* a bigger snapshot
1549	 * length, we should just increase MAXIMUM_SNAPLEN.
1550	 */
1551	if (handle->snapshot <= 0 || handle->snapshot > MAXIMUM_SNAPLEN)
1552		handle->snapshot = MAXIMUM_SNAPLEN;
1553
1554	handle->inject_op = pcap_inject_linux;
1555	handle->setfilter_op = pcap_setfilter_linux;
1556	handle->setdirection_op = pcap_setdirection_linux;
1557	handle->set_datalink_op = pcap_set_datalink_linux;
1558	handle->getnonblock_op = pcap_getnonblock_fd;
1559	handle->setnonblock_op = pcap_setnonblock_fd;
1560	handle->cleanup_op = pcap_cleanup_linux;
1561	handle->read_op = pcap_read_linux;
1562	handle->stats_op = pcap_stats_linux;
1563
1564	/*
1565	 * The "any" device is a special device which causes us not
1566	 * to bind to a particular device and thus to look at all
1567	 * devices.
1568	 */
1569	if (strcmp(device, "any") == 0) {
1570		if (handle->opt.promisc) {
1571			handle->opt.promisc = 0;
1572			/* Just a warning. */
1573			pcap_snprintf(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
1574			    "Promiscuous mode not supported on the \"any\" device");
1575			status = PCAP_WARNING_PROMISC_NOTSUP;
1576		}
1577	}
1578
1579	handlep->device	= strdup(device);
1580	if (handlep->device == NULL) {
1581		pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
1582		    errno, "strdup");
1583		status = PCAP_ERROR;
1584		goto fail;
1585	}
1586
1587	/* copy timeout value */
1588	handlep->timeout = handle->opt.timeout;
1589
1590	/*
1591	 * If we're in promiscuous mode, then we probably want
1592	 * to see when the interface drops packets too, so get an
1593	 * initial count from /proc/net/dev
1594	 */
1595	if (handle->opt.promisc)
1596		handlep->proc_dropped = linux_if_drops(handlep->device);
1597
1598	/*
1599	 * Current Linux kernels use the protocol family PF_PACKET to
1600	 * allow direct access to all packets on the network while
1601	 * older kernels had a special socket type SOCK_PACKET to
1602	 * implement this feature.
1603	 * While this old implementation is kind of obsolete we need
1604	 * to be compatible with older kernels for a while so we are
1605	 * trying both methods with the newer method preferred.
1606	 */
1607	ret = activate_new(handle);
1608	if (ret < 0) {
1609		/*
1610		 * Fatal error with the new way; just fail.
1611		 * ret has the error return; if it's PCAP_ERROR,
1612		 * handle->errbuf has been set appropriately.
1613		 */
1614		status = ret;
1615		goto fail;
1616	}
1617	if (ret == 1) {
1618		/*
1619		 * Success.
1620		 * Try to use memory-mapped access.
1621		 */
1622		switch (activate_mmap(handle, &status)) {
1623
1624		case 1:
1625			/*
1626			 * We succeeded.  status has been
1627			 * set to the status to return,
1628			 * which might be 0, or might be
1629			 * a PCAP_WARNING_ value.
1630			 *
1631			 * Set the timeout to use in poll() before
1632			 * returning.
1633			 */
1634			set_poll_timeout(handlep);
1635			return status;
1636
1637		case 0:
1638			/*
1639			 * Kernel doesn't support it - just continue
1640			 * with non-memory-mapped access.
1641			 */
1642			break;
1643
1644		case -1:
1645			/*
1646			 * We failed to set up to use it, or the kernel
1647			 * supports it, but we failed to enable it.
1648			 * status has been set to the error status to
1649			 * return and, if it's PCAP_ERROR, handle->errbuf
1650			 * contains the error message.
1651			 */
1652			goto fail;
1653		}
1654	}
1655	else if (ret == 0) {
1656		/* Non-fatal error; try old way */
1657		if ((ret = activate_old(handle)) != 1) {
1658			/*
1659			 * Both methods to open the packet socket failed.
1660			 * Tidy up and report our failure (handle->errbuf
1661			 * is expected to be set by the functions above).
1662			 */
1663			status = ret;
1664			goto fail;
1665		}
1666	}
1667
1668	/*
1669	 * We set up the socket, but not with memory-mapped access.
1670	 */
1671	if (handle->opt.buffer_size != 0) {
1672		/*
1673		 * Set the socket buffer size to the specified value.
1674		 */
1675		if (setsockopt(handle->fd, SOL_SOCKET, SO_RCVBUF,
1676		    &handle->opt.buffer_size,
1677		    sizeof(handle->opt.buffer_size)) == -1) {
1678			pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(handle->errbuf,
1679			    PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE, errno, "SO_RCVBUF");
1680			status = PCAP_ERROR;
1681			goto fail;
1682		}
1683	}
1684
1685	/* Allocate the buffer */
1686
1687	handle->buffer	 = malloc(handle->bufsize + handle->offset);
1688	if (!handle->buffer) {
1689		pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
1690		    errno, "malloc");
1691		status = PCAP_ERROR;
1692		goto fail;
1693	}
1694
1695	/*
1696	 * "handle->fd" is a socket, so "select()" and "poll()"
1697	 * should work on it.
1698	 */
1699	handle->selectable_fd = handle->fd;
1700
1701	return status;
1702
1703fail:
1704	pcap_cleanup_linux(handle);
1705	return status;
1706}
1707
1708/*
1709 *  Read at most max_packets from the capture stream and call the callback
1710 *  for each of them. Returns the number of packets handled or -1 if an
1711 *  error occured.
1712 */
1713static int
1714pcap_read_linux(pcap_t *handle, int max_packets _U_, pcap_handler callback, u_char *user)
1715{
1716	/*
1717	 * Currently, on Linux only one packet is delivered per read,
1718	 * so we don't loop.
1719	 */
1720	return pcap_read_packet(handle, callback, user);
1721}
1722
1723static int
1724pcap_set_datalink_linux(pcap_t *handle, int dlt)
1725{
1726	handle->linktype = dlt;
1727	return 0;
1728}
1729
1730/*
1731 * linux_check_direction()
1732 *
1733 * Do checks based on packet direction.
1734 */
1735static inline int
1736linux_check_direction(const pcap_t *handle, const struct sockaddr_ll *sll)
1737{
1738	struct pcap_linux	*handlep = handle->priv;
1739
1740	if (sll->sll_pkttype == PACKET_OUTGOING) {
1741		/*
1742		 * Outgoing packet.
1743		 * If this is from the loopback device, reject it;
1744		 * we'll see the packet as an incoming packet as well,
1745		 * and we don't want to see it twice.
1746		 */
1747		if (sll->sll_ifindex == handlep->lo_ifindex)
1748			return 0;
1749
1750		/*
1751		 * If this is an outgoing CAN or CAN FD frame, and
1752		 * the user doesn't only want outgoing packets,
1753		 * reject it; CAN devices and drivers, and the CAN
1754		 * stack, always arrange to loop back transmitted
1755		 * packets, so they also appear as incoming packets.
1756		 * We don't want duplicate packets, and we can't
1757		 * easily distinguish packets looped back by the CAN
1758		 * layer than those received by the CAN layer, so we
1759		 * eliminate this packet instead.
1760		 */
1761		if ((sll->sll_protocol == LINUX_SLL_P_CAN ||
1762		     sll->sll_protocol == LINUX_SLL_P_CANFD) &&
1763		     handle->direction != PCAP_D_OUT)
1764			return 0;
1765
1766		/*
1767		 * If the user only wants incoming packets, reject it.
1768		 */
1769		if (handle->direction == PCAP_D_IN)
1770			return 0;
1771	} else {
1772		/*
1773		 * Incoming packet.
1774		 * If the user only wants outgoing packets, reject it.
1775		 */
1776		if (handle->direction == PCAP_D_OUT)
1777			return 0;
1778	}
1779	return 1;
1780}
1781
1782/*
1783 *  Read a packet from the socket calling the handler provided by
1784 *  the user. Returns the number of packets received or -1 if an
1785 *  error occured.
1786 */
1787static int
1788pcap_read_packet(pcap_t *handle, pcap_handler callback, u_char *userdata)
1789{
1790	struct pcap_linux	*handlep = handle->priv;
1791	u_char			*bp;
1792	int			offset;
1793#ifdef HAVE_PF_PACKET_SOCKETS
1794	struct sockaddr_ll	from;
1795#else
1796	struct sockaddr		from;
1797#endif
1798#if defined(HAVE_PACKET_AUXDATA) && defined(HAVE_STRUCT_TPACKET_AUXDATA_TP_VLAN_TCI)
1799	struct iovec		iov;
1800	struct msghdr		msg;
1801	struct cmsghdr		*cmsg;
1802	union {
1803		struct cmsghdr	cmsg;
1804		char		buf[CMSG_SPACE(sizeof(struct tpacket_auxdata))];
1805	} cmsg_buf;
1806#else /* defined(HAVE_PACKET_AUXDATA) && defined(HAVE_STRUCT_TPACKET_AUXDATA_TP_VLAN_TCI) */
1807	socklen_t		fromlen;
1808#endif /* defined(HAVE_PACKET_AUXDATA) && defined(HAVE_STRUCT_TPACKET_AUXDATA_TP_VLAN_TCI) */
1809	int			packet_len, caplen;
1810	struct pcap_pkthdr	pcap_header;
1811
1812        struct bpf_aux_data     aux_data;
1813#ifdef HAVE_PF_PACKET_SOCKETS
1814	/*
1815	 * If this is a cooked device, leave extra room for a
1816	 * fake packet header.
1817	 */
1818	if (handlep->cooked) {
1819		if (handle->linktype == DLT_LINUX_SLL2)
1820			offset = SLL2_HDR_LEN;
1821		else
1822			offset = SLL_HDR_LEN;
1823	} else
1824		offset = 0;
1825#else
1826	/*
1827	 * This system doesn't have PF_PACKET sockets, so it doesn't
1828	 * support cooked devices.
1829	 */
1830	offset = 0;
1831#endif
1832
1833	/*
1834	 * Receive a single packet from the kernel.
1835	 * We ignore EINTR, as that might just be due to a signal
1836	 * being delivered - if the signal should interrupt the
1837	 * loop, the signal handler should call pcap_breakloop()
1838	 * to set handle->break_loop (we ignore it on other
1839	 * platforms as well).
1840	 * We also ignore ENETDOWN, so that we can continue to
1841	 * capture traffic if the interface goes down and comes
1842	 * back up again; comments in the kernel indicate that
1843	 * we'll just block waiting for packets if we try to
1844	 * receive from a socket that delivered ENETDOWN, and,
1845	 * if we're using a memory-mapped buffer, we won't even
1846	 * get notified of "network down" events.
1847	 */
1848	bp = (u_char *)handle->buffer + handle->offset;
1849
1850#if defined(HAVE_PACKET_AUXDATA) && defined(HAVE_STRUCT_TPACKET_AUXDATA_TP_VLAN_TCI)
1851	msg.msg_name		= &from;
1852	msg.msg_namelen		= sizeof(from);
1853	msg.msg_iov		= &iov;
1854	msg.msg_iovlen		= 1;
1855	msg.msg_control		= &cmsg_buf;
1856	msg.msg_controllen	= sizeof(cmsg_buf);
1857	msg.msg_flags		= 0;
1858
1859	iov.iov_len		= handle->bufsize - offset;
1860	iov.iov_base		= bp + offset;
1861#endif /* defined(HAVE_PACKET_AUXDATA) && defined(HAVE_STRUCT_TPACKET_AUXDATA_TP_VLAN_TCI) */
1862
1863	do {
1864		/*
1865		 * Has "pcap_breakloop()" been called?
1866		 */
1867		if (handle->break_loop) {
1868			/*
1869			 * Yes - clear the flag that indicates that it has,
1870			 * and return PCAP_ERROR_BREAK as an indication that
1871			 * we were told to break out of the loop.
1872			 */
1873			handle->break_loop = 0;
1874			return PCAP_ERROR_BREAK;
1875		}
1876
1877#if defined(HAVE_PACKET_AUXDATA) && defined(HAVE_STRUCT_TPACKET_AUXDATA_TP_VLAN_TCI)
1878		packet_len = recvmsg(handle->fd, &msg, MSG_TRUNC);
1879#else /* defined(HAVE_PACKET_AUXDATA) && defined(HAVE_STRUCT_TPACKET_AUXDATA_TP_VLAN_TCI) */
1880		fromlen = sizeof(from);
1881		packet_len = recvfrom(
1882			handle->fd, bp + offset,
1883			handle->bufsize - offset, MSG_TRUNC,
1884			(struct sockaddr *) &from, &fromlen);
1885#endif /* defined(HAVE_PACKET_AUXDATA) && defined(HAVE_STRUCT_TPACKET_AUXDATA_TP_VLAN_TCI) */
1886	} while (packet_len == -1 && errno == EINTR);
1887
1888	/* Check if an error occured */
1889
1890	if (packet_len == -1) {
1891		switch (errno) {
1892
1893		case EAGAIN:
1894			return 0;	/* no packet there */
1895
1896		case ENETDOWN:
1897			/*
1898			 * The device on which we're capturing went away.
1899			 *
1900			 * XXX - we should really return
1901			 * PCAP_ERROR_IFACE_NOT_UP, but pcap_dispatch()
1902			 * etc. aren't defined to return that.
1903			 */
1904			pcap_snprintf(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
1905				"The interface went down");
1906			return PCAP_ERROR;
1907
1908		default:
1909			pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(handle->errbuf,
1910			    PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE, errno, "recvfrom");
1911			return PCAP_ERROR;
1912		}
1913	}
1914
1915#ifdef HAVE_PF_PACKET_SOCKETS
1916	if (!handlep->sock_packet) {
1917		/*
1918		 * Unfortunately, there is a window between socket() and
1919		 * bind() where the kernel may queue packets from any
1920		 * interface.  If we're bound to a particular interface,
1921		 * discard packets not from that interface.
1922		 *
1923		 * (If socket filters are supported, we could do the
1924		 * same thing we do when changing the filter; however,
1925		 * that won't handle packet sockets without socket
1926		 * filter support, and it's a bit more complicated.
1927		 * It would save some instructions per packet, however.)
1928		 */
1929		if (handlep->ifindex != -1 &&
1930		    from.sll_ifindex != handlep->ifindex)
1931			return 0;
1932
1933		/*
1934		 * Do checks based on packet direction.
1935		 * We can only do this if we're using PF_PACKET; the
1936		 * address returned for SOCK_PACKET is a "sockaddr_pkt"
1937		 * which lacks the relevant packet type information.
1938		 */
1939		if (!linux_check_direction(handle, &from))
1940			return 0;
1941	}
1942#endif
1943
1944#ifdef HAVE_PF_PACKET_SOCKETS
1945	/*
1946	 * If this is a cooked device, fill in the fake packet header.
1947	 */
1948	if (handlep->cooked) {
1949		/*
1950		 * Add the length of the fake header to the length
1951		 * of packet data we read.
1952		 */
1953		if (handle->linktype == DLT_LINUX_SLL2) {
1954			struct sll2_header	*hdrp;
1955
1956			packet_len += SLL2_HDR_LEN;
1957
1958			hdrp = (struct sll2_header *)bp;
1959			hdrp->sll2_protocol = from.sll_protocol;
1960			hdrp->sll2_reserved_mbz = 0;
1961			hdrp->sll2_if_index = htonl(from.sll_ifindex);
1962			hdrp->sll2_hatype = htons(from.sll_hatype);
1963			hdrp->sll2_pkttype = from.sll_pkttype;
1964			hdrp->sll2_halen = from.sll_halen;
1965			memcpy(hdrp->sll2_addr, from.sll_addr,
1966			    (from.sll_halen > SLL_ADDRLEN) ?
1967			      SLL_ADDRLEN :
1968			      from.sll_halen);
1969		} else {
1970			struct sll_header	*hdrp;
1971
1972			packet_len += SLL_HDR_LEN;
1973
1974			hdrp = (struct sll_header *)bp;
1975			hdrp->sll_pkttype = htons(from.sll_pkttype);
1976			hdrp->sll_hatype = htons(from.sll_hatype);
1977			hdrp->sll_halen = htons(from.sll_halen);
1978			memcpy(hdrp->sll_addr, from.sll_addr,
1979			    (from.sll_halen > SLL_ADDRLEN) ?
1980			      SLL_ADDRLEN :
1981			      from.sll_halen);
1982			hdrp->sll_protocol = from.sll_protocol;
1983		}
1984	}
1985
1986	/*
1987	 * Start out with no VLAN information.
1988	 */
1989	aux_data.vlan_tag_present = 0;
1990	aux_data.vlan_tag = 0;
1991#if defined(HAVE_PACKET_AUXDATA) && defined(HAVE_STRUCT_TPACKET_AUXDATA_TP_VLAN_TCI)
1992	if (handlep->vlan_offset != -1) {
1993		for (cmsg = CMSG_FIRSTHDR(&msg); cmsg; cmsg = CMSG_NXTHDR(&msg, cmsg)) {
1994			struct tpacket_auxdata *aux;
1995			unsigned int len;
1996			struct vlan_tag *tag;
1997
1998			if (cmsg->cmsg_len < CMSG_LEN(sizeof(struct tpacket_auxdata)) ||
1999			    cmsg->cmsg_level != SOL_PACKET ||
2000			    cmsg->cmsg_type != PACKET_AUXDATA) {
2001				/*
2002				 * This isn't a PACKET_AUXDATA auxiliary
2003				 * data item.
2004				 */
2005				continue;
2006			}
2007
2008			aux = (struct tpacket_auxdata *)CMSG_DATA(cmsg);
2009			if (!VLAN_VALID(aux, aux)) {
2010				/*
2011				 * There is no VLAN information in the
2012				 * auxiliary data.
2013				 */
2014				continue;
2015			}
2016
2017			len = (u_int)packet_len > iov.iov_len ? iov.iov_len : (u_int)packet_len;
2018			if (len < (u_int)handlep->vlan_offset)
2019				break;
2020
2021			/*
2022			 * Move everything in the header, except the
2023			 * type field, down VLAN_TAG_LEN bytes, to
2024			 * allow us to insert the VLAN tag between
2025			 * that stuff and the type field.
2026			 */
2027			bp -= VLAN_TAG_LEN;
2028			memmove(bp, bp + VLAN_TAG_LEN, handlep->vlan_offset);
2029
2030			/*
2031			 * Now insert the tag.
2032			 */
2033			tag = (struct vlan_tag *)(bp + handlep->vlan_offset);
2034			tag->vlan_tpid = htons(VLAN_TPID(aux, aux));
2035			tag->vlan_tci = htons(aux->tp_vlan_tci);
2036
2037			/*
2038			 * Save a flag indicating that we have a VLAN tag,
2039			 * and the VLAN TCI, to bpf_aux_data struct for
2040			 * use by the BPF filter if we're doing the
2041			 * filtering in userland.
2042			 */
2043			aux_data.vlan_tag_present = 1;
2044			aux_data.vlan_tag = htons(aux->tp_vlan_tci) & 0x0fff;
2045
2046			/*
2047			 * Add the tag to the packet lengths.
2048			 */
2049			packet_len += VLAN_TAG_LEN;
2050		}
2051	}
2052#endif /* defined(HAVE_PACKET_AUXDATA) && defined(HAVE_STRUCT_TPACKET_AUXDATA_TP_VLAN_TCI) */
2053#endif /* HAVE_PF_PACKET_SOCKETS */
2054
2055	/*
2056	 * XXX: According to the kernel source we should get the real
2057	 * packet len if calling recvfrom with MSG_TRUNC set. It does
2058	 * not seem to work here :(, but it is supported by this code
2059	 * anyway.
2060	 * To be honest the code RELIES on that feature so this is really
2061	 * broken with 2.2.x kernels.
2062	 * I spend a day to figure out what's going on and I found out
2063	 * that the following is happening:
2064	 *
2065	 * The packet comes from a random interface and the packet_rcv
2066	 * hook is called with a clone of the packet. That code inserts
2067	 * the packet into the receive queue of the packet socket.
2068	 * If a filter is attached to that socket that filter is run
2069	 * first - and there lies the problem. The default filter always
2070	 * cuts the packet at the snaplen:
2071	 *
2072	 * # tcpdump -d
2073	 * (000) ret      #68
2074	 *
2075	 * So the packet filter cuts down the packet. The recvfrom call
2076	 * says "hey, it's only 68 bytes, it fits into the buffer" with
2077	 * the result that we don't get the real packet length. This
2078	 * is valid at least until kernel 2.2.17pre6.
2079	 *
2080	 * We currently handle this by making a copy of the filter
2081	 * program, fixing all "ret" instructions with non-zero
2082	 * operands to have an operand of MAXIMUM_SNAPLEN so that the
2083	 * filter doesn't truncate the packet, and supplying that modified
2084	 * filter to the kernel.
2085	 */
2086
2087	caplen = packet_len;
2088	if (caplen > handle->snapshot)
2089		caplen = handle->snapshot;
2090
2091	/* Run the packet filter if not using kernel filter */
2092	if (handlep->filter_in_userland && handle->fcode.bf_insns) {
2093		if (bpf_filter_with_aux_data(handle->fcode.bf_insns, bp,
2094		    packet_len, caplen, &aux_data) == 0) {
2095			/* rejected by filter */
2096			return 0;
2097		}
2098	}
2099
2100	/* Fill in our own header data */
2101
2102	/* get timestamp for this packet */
2103#if defined(SIOCGSTAMPNS) && defined(SO_TIMESTAMPNS)
2104	if (handle->opt.tstamp_precision == PCAP_TSTAMP_PRECISION_NANO) {
2105		if (ioctl(handle->fd, SIOCGSTAMPNS, &pcap_header.ts) == -1) {
2106			pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(handle->errbuf,
2107			    PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE, errno, "SIOCGSTAMPNS");
2108			return PCAP_ERROR;
2109		}
2110        } else
2111#endif
2112	{
2113		if (ioctl(handle->fd, SIOCGSTAMP, &pcap_header.ts) == -1) {
2114			pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(handle->errbuf,
2115			    PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE, errno, "SIOCGSTAMP");
2116			return PCAP_ERROR;
2117		}
2118        }
2119
2120	pcap_header.caplen	= caplen;
2121	pcap_header.len		= packet_len;
2122
2123	/*
2124	 * Count the packet.
2125	 *
2126	 * Arguably, we should count them before we check the filter,
2127	 * as on many other platforms "ps_recv" counts packets
2128	 * handed to the filter rather than packets that passed
2129	 * the filter, but if filtering is done in the kernel, we
2130	 * can't get a count of packets that passed the filter,
2131	 * and that would mean the meaning of "ps_recv" wouldn't
2132	 * be the same on all Linux systems.
2133	 *
2134	 * XXX - it's not the same on all systems in any case;
2135	 * ideally, we should have a "get the statistics" call
2136	 * that supplies more counts and indicates which of them
2137	 * it supplies, so that we supply a count of packets
2138	 * handed to the filter only on platforms where that
2139	 * information is available.
2140	 *
2141	 * We count them here even if we can get the packet count
2142	 * from the kernel, as we can only determine at run time
2143	 * whether we'll be able to get it from the kernel (if
2144	 * HAVE_STRUCT_TPACKET_STATS isn't defined, we can't get it from
2145	 * the kernel, but if it is defined, the library might
2146	 * have been built with a 2.4 or later kernel, but we
2147	 * might be running on a 2.2[.x] kernel without Alexey
2148	 * Kuznetzov's turbopacket patches, and thus the kernel
2149	 * might not be able to supply those statistics).  We
2150	 * could, I guess, try, when opening the socket, to get
2151	 * the statistics, and if we can not increment the count
2152	 * here, but it's not clear that always incrementing
2153	 * the count is more expensive than always testing a flag
2154	 * in memory.
2155	 *
2156	 * We keep the count in "handlep->packets_read", and use that
2157	 * for "ps_recv" if we can't get the statistics from the kernel.
2158	 * We do that because, if we *can* get the statistics from
2159	 * the kernel, we use "handlep->stat.ps_recv" and
2160	 * "handlep->stat.ps_drop" as running counts, as reading the
2161	 * statistics from the kernel resets the kernel statistics,
2162	 * and if we directly increment "handlep->stat.ps_recv" here,
2163	 * that means it will count packets *twice* on systems where
2164	 * we can get kernel statistics - once here, and once in
2165	 * pcap_stats_linux().
2166	 */
2167	handlep->packets_read++;
2168
2169	/* Call the user supplied callback function */
2170	callback(userdata, &pcap_header, bp);
2171
2172	return 1;
2173}
2174
2175static int
2176pcap_inject_linux(pcap_t *handle, const void *buf, size_t size)
2177{
2178	struct pcap_linux *handlep = handle->priv;
2179	int ret;
2180
2181#ifdef HAVE_PF_PACKET_SOCKETS
2182	if (!handlep->sock_packet) {
2183		/* PF_PACKET socket */
2184		if (handlep->ifindex == -1) {
2185			/*
2186			 * We don't support sending on the "any" device.
2187			 */
2188			pcap_strlcpy(handle->errbuf,
2189			    "Sending packets isn't supported on the \"any\" device",
2190			    PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE);
2191			return (-1);
2192		}
2193
2194		if (handlep->cooked) {
2195			/*
2196			 * We don't support sending on cooked-mode sockets.
2197			 *
2198			 * XXX - how do you send on a bound cooked-mode
2199			 * socket?
2200			 * Is a "sendto()" required there?
2201			 */
2202			pcap_strlcpy(handle->errbuf,
2203			    "Sending packets isn't supported in cooked mode",
2204			    PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE);
2205			return (-1);
2206		}
2207	}
2208#endif
2209
2210	ret = send(handle->fd, buf, size, 0);
2211	if (ret == -1) {
2212		pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
2213		    errno, "send");
2214		return (-1);
2215	}
2216	return (ret);
2217}
2218
2219/*
2220 *  Get the statistics for the given packet capture handle.
2221 *  Reports the number of dropped packets iff the kernel supports
2222 *  the PACKET_STATISTICS "getsockopt()" argument (2.4 and later
2223 *  kernels, and 2.2[.x] kernels with Alexey Kuznetzov's turbopacket
2224 *  patches); otherwise, that information isn't available, and we lie
2225 *  and report 0 as the count of dropped packets.
2226 */
2227static int
2228pcap_stats_linux(pcap_t *handle, struct pcap_stat *stats)
2229{
2230	struct pcap_linux *handlep = handle->priv;
2231#ifdef HAVE_STRUCT_TPACKET_STATS
2232#ifdef HAVE_TPACKET3
2233	/*
2234	 * For sockets using TPACKET_V1 or TPACKET_V2, the extra
2235	 * stuff at the end of a struct tpacket_stats_v3 will not
2236	 * be filled in, and we don't look at it so this is OK even
2237	 * for those sockets.  In addition, the PF_PACKET socket
2238	 * code in the kernel only uses the length parameter to
2239	 * compute how much data to copy out and to indicate how
2240	 * much data was copied out, so it's OK to base it on the
2241	 * size of a struct tpacket_stats.
2242	 *
2243	 * XXX - it's probably OK, in fact, to just use a
2244	 * struct tpacket_stats for V3 sockets, as we don't
2245	 * care about the tp_freeze_q_cnt stat.
2246	 */
2247	struct tpacket_stats_v3 kstats;
2248#else /* HAVE_TPACKET3 */
2249	struct tpacket_stats kstats;
2250#endif /* HAVE_TPACKET3 */
2251	socklen_t len = sizeof (struct tpacket_stats);
2252#endif /* HAVE_STRUCT_TPACKET_STATS */
2253
2254	long if_dropped = 0;
2255
2256	/*
2257	 *	To fill in ps_ifdrop, we parse /proc/net/dev for the number
2258	 */
2259	if (handle->opt.promisc)
2260	{
2261		if_dropped = handlep->proc_dropped;
2262		handlep->proc_dropped = linux_if_drops(handlep->device);
2263		handlep->stat.ps_ifdrop += (handlep->proc_dropped - if_dropped);
2264	}
2265
2266#ifdef HAVE_STRUCT_TPACKET_STATS
2267	/*
2268	 * Try to get the packet counts from the kernel.
2269	 */
2270	if (getsockopt(handle->fd, SOL_PACKET, PACKET_STATISTICS,
2271			&kstats, &len) > -1) {
2272		/*
2273		 * On systems where the PACKET_STATISTICS "getsockopt()"
2274		 * argument is supported on PF_PACKET sockets:
2275		 *
2276		 *	"ps_recv" counts only packets that *passed* the
2277		 *	filter, not packets that didn't pass the filter.
2278		 *	This includes packets later dropped because we
2279		 *	ran out of buffer space.
2280		 *
2281		 *	"ps_drop" counts packets dropped because we ran
2282		 *	out of buffer space.  It doesn't count packets
2283		 *	dropped by the interface driver.  It counts only
2284		 *	packets that passed the filter.
2285		 *
2286		 *	See above for ps_ifdrop.
2287		 *
2288		 *	Both statistics include packets not yet read from
2289		 *	the kernel by libpcap, and thus not yet seen by
2290		 *	the application.
2291		 *
2292		 * In "linux/net/packet/af_packet.c", at least in the
2293		 * 2.4.9 kernel, "tp_packets" is incremented for every
2294		 * packet that passes the packet filter *and* is
2295		 * successfully queued on the socket; "tp_drops" is
2296		 * incremented for every packet dropped because there's
2297		 * not enough free space in the socket buffer.
2298		 *
2299		 * When the statistics are returned for a PACKET_STATISTICS
2300		 * "getsockopt()" call, "tp_drops" is added to "tp_packets",
2301		 * so that "tp_packets" counts all packets handed to
2302		 * the PF_PACKET socket, including packets dropped because
2303		 * there wasn't room on the socket buffer - but not
2304		 * including packets that didn't pass the filter.
2305		 *
2306		 * In the BSD BPF, the count of received packets is
2307		 * incremented for every packet handed to BPF, regardless
2308		 * of whether it passed the filter.
2309		 *
2310		 * We can't make "pcap_stats()" work the same on both
2311		 * platforms, but the best approximation is to return
2312		 * "tp_packets" as the count of packets and "tp_drops"
2313		 * as the count of drops.
2314		 *
2315		 * Keep a running total because each call to
2316		 *    getsockopt(handle->fd, SOL_PACKET, PACKET_STATISTICS, ....
2317		 * resets the counters to zero.
2318		 */
2319		handlep->stat.ps_recv += kstats.tp_packets;
2320		handlep->stat.ps_drop += kstats.tp_drops;
2321		*stats = handlep->stat;
2322		return 0;
2323	}
2324	else
2325	{
2326		/*
2327		 * If the error was EOPNOTSUPP, fall through, so that
2328		 * if you build the library on a system with
2329		 * "struct tpacket_stats" and run it on a system
2330		 * that doesn't, it works as it does if the library
2331		 * is built on a system without "struct tpacket_stats".
2332		 */
2333		if (errno != EOPNOTSUPP) {
2334			pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(handle->errbuf,
2335			    PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE, errno, "pcap_stats");
2336			return -1;
2337		}
2338	}
2339#endif
2340	/*
2341	 * On systems where the PACKET_STATISTICS "getsockopt()" argument
2342	 * is not supported on PF_PACKET sockets:
2343	 *
2344	 *	"ps_recv" counts only packets that *passed* the filter,
2345	 *	not packets that didn't pass the filter.  It does not
2346	 *	count packets dropped because we ran out of buffer
2347	 *	space.
2348	 *
2349	 *	"ps_drop" is not supported.
2350	 *
2351	 *	"ps_ifdrop" is supported. It will return the number
2352	 *	of drops the interface reports in /proc/net/dev,
2353	 *	if that is available.
2354	 *
2355	 *	"ps_recv" doesn't include packets not yet read from
2356	 *	the kernel by libpcap.
2357	 *
2358	 * We maintain the count of packets processed by libpcap in
2359	 * "handlep->packets_read", for reasons described in the comment
2360	 * at the end of pcap_read_packet().  We have no idea how many
2361	 * packets were dropped by the kernel buffers -- but we know
2362	 * how many the interface dropped, so we can return that.
2363	 */
2364
2365	stats->ps_recv = handlep->packets_read;
2366	stats->ps_drop = 0;
2367	stats->ps_ifdrop = handlep->stat.ps_ifdrop;
2368	return 0;
2369}
2370
2371static int
2372add_linux_if(pcap_if_list_t *devlistp, const char *ifname, int fd, char *errbuf)
2373{
2374	const char *p;
2375	char name[512];	/* XXX - pick a size */
2376	char *q, *saveq;
2377	struct ifreq ifrflags;
2378
2379	/*
2380	 * Get the interface name.
2381	 */
2382	p = ifname;
2383	q = &name[0];
2384	while (*p != '\0' && isascii(*p) && !isspace(*p)) {
2385		if (*p == ':') {
2386			/*
2387			 * This could be the separator between a
2388			 * name and an alias number, or it could be
2389			 * the separator between a name with no
2390			 * alias number and the next field.
2391			 *
2392			 * If there's a colon after digits, it
2393			 * separates the name and the alias number,
2394			 * otherwise it separates the name and the
2395			 * next field.
2396			 */
2397			saveq = q;
2398			while (isascii(*p) && isdigit(*p))
2399				*q++ = *p++;
2400			if (*p != ':') {
2401				/*
2402				 * That was the next field,
2403				 * not the alias number.
2404				 */
2405				q = saveq;
2406			}
2407			break;
2408		} else
2409			*q++ = *p++;
2410	}
2411	*q = '\0';
2412
2413	/*
2414	 * Get the flags for this interface.
2415	 */
2416	pcap_strlcpy(ifrflags.ifr_name, name, sizeof(ifrflags.ifr_name));
2417	if (ioctl(fd, SIOCGIFFLAGS, (char *)&ifrflags) < 0) {
2418		if (errno == ENXIO || errno == ENODEV)
2419			return (0);	/* device doesn't actually exist - ignore it */
2420		pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
2421		    errno, "SIOCGIFFLAGS: %.*s",
2422		    (int)sizeof(ifrflags.ifr_name),
2423		    ifrflags.ifr_name);
2424		return (-1);
2425	}
2426
2427	/*
2428	 * Add an entry for this interface, with no addresses, if it's
2429	 * not already in the list.
2430	 */
2431	if (find_or_add_if(devlistp, name, ifrflags.ifr_flags,
2432	    get_if_flags, errbuf) == NULL) {
2433		/*
2434		 * Failure.
2435		 */
2436		return (-1);
2437	}
2438
2439	return (0);
2440}
2441
2442/*
2443 * Get from "/sys/class/net" all interfaces listed there; if they're
2444 * already in the list of interfaces we have, that won't add another
2445 * instance, but if they're not, that'll add them.
2446 *
2447 * We don't bother getting any addresses for them; it appears you can't
2448 * use SIOCGIFADDR on Linux to get IPv6 addresses for interfaces, and,
2449 * although some other types of addresses can be fetched with SIOCGIFADDR,
2450 * we don't bother with them for now.
2451 *
2452 * We also don't fail if we couldn't open "/sys/class/net"; we just leave
2453 * the list of interfaces as is, and return 0, so that we can try
2454 * scanning /proc/net/dev.
2455 *
2456 * Otherwise, we return 1 if we don't get an error and -1 if we do.
2457 */
2458static int
2459scan_sys_class_net(pcap_if_list_t *devlistp, char *errbuf)
2460{
2461	DIR *sys_class_net_d;
2462	int fd;
2463	struct dirent *ent;
2464	char subsystem_path[PATH_MAX+1];
2465	struct stat statb;
2466	int ret = 1;
2467
2468	sys_class_net_d = opendir("/sys/class/net");
2469	if (sys_class_net_d == NULL) {
2470		/*
2471		 * Don't fail if it doesn't exist at all.
2472		 */
2473		if (errno == ENOENT)
2474			return (0);
2475
2476		/*
2477		 * Fail if we got some other error.
2478		 */
2479		pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
2480		    errno, "Can't open /sys/class/net");
2481		return (-1);
2482	}
2483
2484	/*
2485	 * Create a socket from which to fetch interface information.
2486	 */
2487	fd = socket(PF_UNIX, SOCK_RAW, 0);
2488	if (fd < 0) {
2489		pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
2490		    errno, "socket");
2491		(void)closedir(sys_class_net_d);
2492		return (-1);
2493	}
2494
2495	for (;;) {
2496		errno = 0;
2497		ent = readdir(sys_class_net_d);
2498		if (ent == NULL) {
2499			/*
2500			 * Error or EOF; if errno != 0, it's an error.
2501			 */
2502			break;
2503		}
2504
2505		/*
2506		 * Ignore "." and "..".
2507		 */
2508		if (strcmp(ent->d_name, ".") == 0 ||
2509		    strcmp(ent->d_name, "..") == 0)
2510			continue;
2511
2512		/*
2513		 * Ignore plain files; they do not have subdirectories
2514		 * and thus have no attributes.
2515		 */
2516		if (ent->d_type == DT_REG)
2517			continue;
2518
2519		/*
2520		 * Is there an "ifindex" file under that name?
2521		 * (We don't care whether it's a directory or
2522		 * a symlink; older kernels have directories
2523		 * for devices, newer kernels have symlinks to
2524		 * directories.)
2525		 */
2526		pcap_snprintf(subsystem_path, sizeof subsystem_path,
2527		    "/sys/class/net/%s/ifindex", ent->d_name);
2528		if (lstat(subsystem_path, &statb) != 0) {
2529			/*
2530			 * Stat failed.  Either there was an error
2531			 * other than ENOENT, and we don't know if
2532			 * this is an interface, or it's ENOENT,
2533			 * and either some part of "/sys/class/net/{if}"
2534			 * disappeared, in which case it probably means
2535			 * the interface disappeared, or there's no
2536			 * "ifindex" file, which means it's not a
2537			 * network interface.
2538			 */
2539			continue;
2540		}
2541
2542		/*
2543		 * Attempt to add the interface.
2544		 */
2545		if (add_linux_if(devlistp, &ent->d_name[0], fd, errbuf) == -1) {
2546			/* Fail. */
2547			ret = -1;
2548			break;
2549		}
2550	}
2551	if (ret != -1) {
2552		/*
2553		 * Well, we didn't fail for any other reason; did we
2554		 * fail due to an error reading the directory?
2555		 */
2556		if (errno != 0) {
2557			pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
2558			    errno, "Error reading /sys/class/net");
2559			ret = -1;
2560		}
2561	}
2562
2563	(void)close(fd);
2564	(void)closedir(sys_class_net_d);
2565	return (ret);
2566}
2567
2568/*
2569 * Get from "/proc/net/dev" all interfaces listed there; if they're
2570 * already in the list of interfaces we have, that won't add another
2571 * instance, but if they're not, that'll add them.
2572 *
2573 * See comments from scan_sys_class_net().
2574 */
2575static int
2576scan_proc_net_dev(pcap_if_list_t *devlistp, char *errbuf)
2577{
2578	FILE *proc_net_f;
2579	int fd;
2580	char linebuf[512];
2581	int linenum;
2582	char *p;
2583	int ret = 0;
2584
2585	proc_net_f = fopen("/proc/net/dev", "r");
2586	if (proc_net_f == NULL) {
2587		/*
2588		 * Don't fail if it doesn't exist at all.
2589		 */
2590		if (errno == ENOENT)
2591			return (0);
2592
2593		/*
2594		 * Fail if we got some other error.
2595		 */
2596		pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
2597		    errno, "Can't open /proc/net/dev");
2598		return (-1);
2599	}
2600
2601	/*
2602	 * Create a socket from which to fetch interface information.
2603	 */
2604	fd = socket(PF_UNIX, SOCK_RAW, 0);
2605	if (fd < 0) {
2606		pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
2607		    errno, "socket");
2608		(void)fclose(proc_net_f);
2609		return (-1);
2610	}
2611
2612	for (linenum = 1;
2613	    fgets(linebuf, sizeof linebuf, proc_net_f) != NULL; linenum++) {
2614		/*
2615		 * Skip the first two lines - they're headers.
2616		 */
2617		if (linenum <= 2)
2618			continue;
2619
2620		p = &linebuf[0];
2621
2622		/*
2623		 * Skip leading white space.
2624		 */
2625		while (*p != '\0' && isascii(*p) && isspace(*p))
2626			p++;
2627		if (*p == '\0' || *p == '\n')
2628			continue;	/* blank line */
2629
2630		/*
2631		 * Attempt to add the interface.
2632		 */
2633		if (add_linux_if(devlistp, p, fd, errbuf) == -1) {
2634			/* Fail. */
2635			ret = -1;
2636			break;
2637		}
2638	}
2639	if (ret != -1) {
2640		/*
2641		 * Well, we didn't fail for any other reason; did we
2642		 * fail due to an error reading the file?
2643		 */
2644		if (ferror(proc_net_f)) {
2645			pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
2646			    errno, "Error reading /proc/net/dev");
2647			ret = -1;
2648		}
2649	}
2650
2651	(void)close(fd);
2652	(void)fclose(proc_net_f);
2653	return (ret);
2654}
2655
2656/*
2657 * Description string for the "any" device.
2658 */
2659static const char any_descr[] = "Pseudo-device that captures on all interfaces";
2660
2661/*
2662 * A SOCK_PACKET or PF_PACKET socket can be bound to any network interface.
2663 */
2664static int
2665can_be_bound(const char *name _U_)
2666{
2667	return (1);
2668}
2669
2670/*
2671 * Get additional flags for a device, using SIOCGIFMEDIA.
2672 */
2673static int
2674get_if_flags(const char *name, bpf_u_int32 *flags, char *errbuf)
2675{
2676	int sock;
2677	FILE *fh;
2678	unsigned int arptype;
2679	struct ifreq ifr;
2680	struct ethtool_value info;
2681
2682	if (*flags & PCAP_IF_LOOPBACK) {
2683		/*
2684		 * Loopback devices aren't wireless, and "connected"/
2685		 * "disconnected" doesn't apply to them.
2686		 */
2687		*flags |= PCAP_IF_CONNECTION_STATUS_NOT_APPLICABLE;
2688		return 0;
2689	}
2690
2691	sock = socket(AF_INET, SOCK_DGRAM, 0);
2692	if (sock == -1) {
2693		pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE, errno,
2694		    "Can't create socket to get ethtool information for %s",
2695		    name);
2696		return -1;
2697	}
2698
2699	/*
2700	 * OK, what type of network is this?
2701	 * In particular, is it wired or wireless?
2702	 */
2703	if (is_wifi(sock, name)) {
2704		/*
2705		 * Wi-Fi, hence wireless.
2706		 */
2707		*flags |= PCAP_IF_WIRELESS;
2708	} else {
2709		/*
2710		 * OK, what does /sys/class/net/{if}/type contain?
2711		 * (We don't use that for Wi-Fi, as it'll report
2712		 * "Ethernet", i.e. ARPHRD_ETHER, for non-monitor-
2713		 * mode devices.)
2714		 */
2715		char *pathstr;
2716
2717		if (asprintf(&pathstr, "/sys/class/net/%s/type", name) == -1) {
2718			pcap_snprintf(errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
2719			    "%s: Can't generate path name string for /sys/class/net device",
2720			    name);
2721			close(sock);
2722			return -1;
2723		}
2724		fh = fopen(pathstr, "r");
2725		if (fh != NULL) {
2726			if (fscanf(fh, "%u", &arptype) == 1) {
2727				/*
2728				 * OK, we got an ARPHRD_ type; what is it?
2729				 */
2730				switch (arptype) {
2731
2732#ifdef ARPHRD_LOOPBACK
2733				case ARPHRD_LOOPBACK:
2734					/*
2735					 * These are types to which
2736					 * "connected" and "disconnected"
2737					 * don't apply, so don't bother
2738					 * asking about it.
2739					 *
2740					 * XXX - add other types?
2741					 */
2742					close(sock);
2743					fclose(fh);
2744					free(pathstr);
2745					return 0;
2746#endif
2747
2748				case ARPHRD_IRDA:
2749				case ARPHRD_IEEE80211:
2750				case ARPHRD_IEEE80211_PRISM:
2751				case ARPHRD_IEEE80211_RADIOTAP:
2752#ifdef ARPHRD_IEEE802154
2753				case ARPHRD_IEEE802154:
2754#endif
2755#ifdef ARPHRD_IEEE802154_MONITOR
2756				case ARPHRD_IEEE802154_MONITOR:
2757#endif
2758#ifdef ARPHRD_6LOWPAN
2759				case ARPHRD_6LOWPAN:
2760#endif
2761					/*
2762					 * Various wireless types.
2763					 */
2764					*flags |= PCAP_IF_WIRELESS;
2765					break;
2766				}
2767			}
2768			fclose(fh);
2769			free(pathstr);
2770		}
2771	}
2772
2773#ifdef ETHTOOL_GLINK
2774	memset(&ifr, 0, sizeof(ifr));
2775	pcap_strlcpy(ifr.ifr_name, name, sizeof(ifr.ifr_name));
2776	info.cmd = ETHTOOL_GLINK;
2777	ifr.ifr_data = (caddr_t)&info;
2778	if (ioctl(sock, SIOCETHTOOL, &ifr) == -1) {
2779		int save_errno = errno;
2780
2781		switch (save_errno) {
2782
2783		case EOPNOTSUPP:
2784		case EINVAL:
2785			/*
2786			 * OK, this OS version or driver doesn't support
2787			 * asking for this information.
2788			 * XXX - distinguish between "this doesn't
2789			 * support ethtool at all because it's not
2790			 * that type of device" vs. "this doesn't
2791			 * support ethtool even though it's that
2792			 * type of device", and return "unknown".
2793			 */
2794			*flags |= PCAP_IF_CONNECTION_STATUS_NOT_APPLICABLE;
2795			close(sock);
2796			return 0;
2797
2798		case ENODEV:
2799			/*
2800			 * OK, no such device.
2801			 * The user will find that out when they try to
2802			 * activate the device; just say "OK" and
2803			 * don't set anything.
2804			 */
2805			close(sock);
2806			return 0;
2807
2808		default:
2809			/*
2810			 * Other error.
2811			 */
2812			pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
2813			    save_errno,
2814			    "%s: SIOCETHTOOL(ETHTOOL_GLINK) ioctl failed",
2815			    name);
2816			close(sock);
2817			return -1;
2818		}
2819	}
2820
2821	/*
2822	 * Is it connected?
2823	 */
2824	if (info.data) {
2825		/*
2826		 * It's connected.
2827		 */
2828		*flags |= PCAP_IF_CONNECTION_STATUS_CONNECTED;
2829	} else {
2830		/*
2831		 * It's disconnected.
2832		 */
2833		*flags |= PCAP_IF_CONNECTION_STATUS_DISCONNECTED;
2834	}
2835#endif
2836
2837	close(sock);
2838	return 0;
2839}
2840
2841int
2842pcap_platform_finddevs(pcap_if_list_t *devlistp, char *errbuf)
2843{
2844	int ret;
2845
2846	/*
2847	 * Get the list of regular interfaces first.
2848	 */
2849	if (pcap_findalldevs_interfaces(devlistp, errbuf, can_be_bound,
2850	    get_if_flags) == -1)
2851		return (-1);	/* failure */
2852
2853	/*
2854	 * Read "/sys/class/net", and add to the list of interfaces all
2855	 * interfaces listed there that we don't already have, because,
2856	 * on Linux, SIOCGIFCONF reports only interfaces with IPv4 addresses,
2857	 * and even getifaddrs() won't return information about
2858	 * interfaces with no addresses, so you need to read "/sys/class/net"
2859	 * to get the names of the rest of the interfaces.
2860	 */
2861	ret = scan_sys_class_net(devlistp, errbuf);
2862	if (ret == -1)
2863		return (-1);	/* failed */
2864	if (ret == 0) {
2865		/*
2866		 * No /sys/class/net; try reading /proc/net/dev instead.
2867		 */
2868		if (scan_proc_net_dev(devlistp, errbuf) == -1)
2869			return (-1);
2870	}
2871
2872	/*
2873	 * Add the "any" device.
2874	 * As it refers to all network devices, not to any particular
2875	 * network device, the notion of "connected" vs. "disconnected"
2876	 * doesn't apply.
2877	 */
2878	if (add_dev(devlistp, "any",
2879	    PCAP_IF_UP|PCAP_IF_RUNNING|PCAP_IF_CONNECTION_STATUS_NOT_APPLICABLE,
2880	    any_descr, errbuf) == NULL)
2881		return (-1);
2882
2883	return (0);
2884}
2885
2886/*
2887 *  Attach the given BPF code to the packet capture device.
2888 */
2889static int
2890pcap_setfilter_linux_common(pcap_t *handle, struct bpf_program *filter,
2891    int is_mmapped)
2892{
2893	struct pcap_linux *handlep;
2894#ifdef SO_ATTACH_FILTER
2895	struct sock_fprog	fcode;
2896	int			can_filter_in_kernel;
2897	int			err = 0;
2898#endif
2899
2900	if (!handle)
2901		return -1;
2902	if (!filter) {
2903	        pcap_strlcpy(handle->errbuf, "setfilter: No filter specified",
2904			PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE);
2905		return -1;
2906	}
2907
2908	handlep = handle->priv;
2909
2910	/* Make our private copy of the filter */
2911
2912	if (install_bpf_program(handle, filter) < 0)
2913		/* install_bpf_program() filled in errbuf */
2914		return -1;
2915
2916	/*
2917	 * Run user level packet filter by default. Will be overriden if
2918	 * installing a kernel filter succeeds.
2919	 */
2920	handlep->filter_in_userland = 1;
2921
2922	/* Install kernel level filter if possible */
2923
2924#ifdef SO_ATTACH_FILTER
2925#ifdef USHRT_MAX
2926	if (handle->fcode.bf_len > USHRT_MAX) {
2927		/*
2928		 * fcode.len is an unsigned short for current kernel.
2929		 * I have yet to see BPF-Code with that much
2930		 * instructions but still it is possible. So for the
2931		 * sake of correctness I added this check.
2932		 */
2933		fprintf(stderr, "Warning: Filter too complex for kernel\n");
2934		fcode.len = 0;
2935		fcode.filter = NULL;
2936		can_filter_in_kernel = 0;
2937	} else
2938#endif /* USHRT_MAX */
2939	{
2940		/*
2941		 * Oh joy, the Linux kernel uses struct sock_fprog instead
2942		 * of struct bpf_program and of course the length field is
2943		 * of different size. Pointed out by Sebastian
2944		 *
2945		 * Oh, and we also need to fix it up so that all "ret"
2946		 * instructions with non-zero operands have MAXIMUM_SNAPLEN
2947		 * as the operand if we're not capturing in memory-mapped
2948		 * mode, and so that, if we're in cooked mode, all memory-
2949		 * reference instructions use special magic offsets in
2950		 * references to the link-layer header and assume that the
2951		 * link-layer payload begins at 0; "fix_program()" will do
2952		 * that.
2953		 */
2954		switch (fix_program(handle, &fcode, is_mmapped)) {
2955
2956		case -1:
2957		default:
2958			/*
2959			 * Fatal error; just quit.
2960			 * (The "default" case shouldn't happen; we
2961			 * return -1 for that reason.)
2962			 */
2963			return -1;
2964
2965		case 0:
2966			/*
2967			 * The program performed checks that we can't make
2968			 * work in the kernel.
2969			 */
2970			can_filter_in_kernel = 0;
2971			break;
2972
2973		case 1:
2974			/*
2975			 * We have a filter that'll work in the kernel.
2976			 */
2977			can_filter_in_kernel = 1;
2978			break;
2979		}
2980	}
2981
2982	/*
2983	 * NOTE: at this point, we've set both the "len" and "filter"
2984	 * fields of "fcode".  As of the 2.6.32.4 kernel, at least,
2985	 * those are the only members of the "sock_fprog" structure,
2986	 * so we initialize every member of that structure.
2987	 *
2988	 * If there is anything in "fcode" that is not initialized,
2989	 * it is either a field added in a later kernel, or it's
2990	 * padding.
2991	 *
2992	 * If a new field is added, this code needs to be updated
2993	 * to set it correctly.
2994	 *
2995	 * If there are no other fields, then:
2996	 *
2997	 *	if the Linux kernel looks at the padding, it's
2998	 *	buggy;
2999	 *
3000	 *	if the Linux kernel doesn't look at the padding,
3001	 *	then if some tool complains that we're passing
3002	 *	uninitialized data to the kernel, then the tool
3003	 *	is buggy and needs to understand that it's just
3004	 *	padding.
3005	 */
3006	if (can_filter_in_kernel) {
3007		if ((err = set_kernel_filter(handle, &fcode)) == 0)
3008		{
3009			/*
3010			 * Installation succeded - using kernel filter,
3011			 * so userland filtering not needed.
3012			 */
3013			handlep->filter_in_userland = 0;
3014		}
3015		else if (err == -1)	/* Non-fatal error */
3016		{
3017			/*
3018			 * Print a warning if we weren't able to install
3019			 * the filter for a reason other than "this kernel
3020			 * isn't configured to support socket filters.
3021			 */
3022			if (errno != ENOPROTOOPT && errno != EOPNOTSUPP) {
3023				fprintf(stderr,
3024				    "Warning: Kernel filter failed: %s\n",
3025					pcap_strerror(errno));
3026			}
3027		}
3028	}
3029
3030	/*
3031	 * If we're not using the kernel filter, get rid of any kernel
3032	 * filter that might've been there before, e.g. because the
3033	 * previous filter could work in the kernel, or because some other
3034	 * code attached a filter to the socket by some means other than
3035	 * calling "pcap_setfilter()".  Otherwise, the kernel filter may
3036	 * filter out packets that would pass the new userland filter.
3037	 */
3038	if (handlep->filter_in_userland) {
3039		if (reset_kernel_filter(handle) == -1) {
3040			pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(handle->errbuf,
3041			    PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE, errno,
3042			    "can't remove kernel filter");
3043			err = -2;	/* fatal error */
3044		}
3045	}
3046
3047	/*
3048	 * Free up the copy of the filter that was made by "fix_program()".
3049	 */
3050	if (fcode.filter != NULL)
3051		free(fcode.filter);
3052
3053	if (err == -2)
3054		/* Fatal error */
3055		return -1;
3056#endif /* SO_ATTACH_FILTER */
3057
3058	return 0;
3059}
3060
3061static int
3062pcap_setfilter_linux(pcap_t *handle, struct bpf_program *filter)
3063{
3064	return pcap_setfilter_linux_common(handle, filter, 0);
3065}
3066
3067
3068/*
3069 * Set direction flag: Which packets do we accept on a forwarding
3070 * single device? IN, OUT or both?
3071 */
3072static int
3073pcap_setdirection_linux(pcap_t *handle, pcap_direction_t d)
3074{
3075#ifdef HAVE_PF_PACKET_SOCKETS
3076	struct pcap_linux *handlep = handle->priv;
3077
3078	if (!handlep->sock_packet) {
3079		handle->direction = d;
3080		return 0;
3081	}
3082#endif
3083	/*
3084	 * We're not using PF_PACKET sockets, so we can't determine
3085	 * the direction of the packet.
3086	 */
3087	pcap_snprintf(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
3088	    "Setting direction is not supported on SOCK_PACKET sockets");
3089	return -1;
3090}
3091
3092static int
3093is_wifi(int sock_fd
3094#ifndef IW_MODE_MONITOR
3095_U_
3096#endif
3097, const char *device)
3098{
3099	char *pathstr;
3100	struct stat statb;
3101#ifdef IW_MODE_MONITOR
3102	char errbuf[PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE];
3103#endif
3104
3105	/*
3106	 * See if there's a sysfs wireless directory for it.
3107	 * If so, it's a wireless interface.
3108	 */
3109	if (asprintf(&pathstr, "/sys/class/net/%s/wireless", device) == -1) {
3110		/*
3111		 * Just give up here.
3112		 */
3113		return 0;
3114	}
3115	if (stat(pathstr, &statb) == 0) {
3116		free(pathstr);
3117		return 1;
3118	}
3119	free(pathstr);
3120
3121#ifdef IW_MODE_MONITOR
3122	/*
3123	 * OK, maybe it's not wireless, or maybe this kernel doesn't
3124	 * support sysfs.  Try the wireless extensions.
3125	 */
3126	if (has_wext(sock_fd, device, errbuf) == 1) {
3127		/*
3128		 * It supports the wireless extensions, so it's a Wi-Fi
3129		 * device.
3130		 */
3131		return 1;
3132	}
3133#endif
3134	return 0;
3135}
3136
3137/*
3138 *  Linux uses the ARP hardware type to identify the type of an
3139 *  interface. pcap uses the DLT_xxx constants for this. This
3140 *  function takes a pointer to a "pcap_t", and an ARPHRD_xxx
3141 *  constant, as arguments, and sets "handle->linktype" to the
3142 *  appropriate DLT_XXX constant and sets "handle->offset" to
3143 *  the appropriate value (to make "handle->offset" plus link-layer
3144 *  header length be a multiple of 4, so that the link-layer payload
3145 *  will be aligned on a 4-byte boundary when capturing packets).
3146 *  (If the offset isn't set here, it'll be 0; add code as appropriate
3147 *  for cases where it shouldn't be 0.)
3148 *
3149 *  If "cooked_ok" is non-zero, we can use DLT_LINUX_SLL and capture
3150 *  in cooked mode; otherwise, we can't use cooked mode, so we have
3151 *  to pick some type that works in raw mode, or fail.
3152 *
3153 *  Sets the link type to -1 if unable to map the type.
3154 */
3155static void map_arphrd_to_dlt(pcap_t *handle, int sock_fd, int arptype,
3156			      const char *device, int cooked_ok)
3157{
3158	static const char cdma_rmnet[] = "cdma_rmnet";
3159
3160	switch (arptype) {
3161
3162	case ARPHRD_ETHER:
3163		/*
3164		 * For various annoying reasons having to do with DHCP
3165		 * software, some versions of Android give the mobile-
3166		 * phone-network interface an ARPHRD_ value of
3167		 * ARPHRD_ETHER, even though the packets supplied by
3168		 * that interface have no link-layer header, and begin
3169		 * with an IP header, so that the ARPHRD_ value should
3170		 * be ARPHRD_NONE.
3171		 *
3172		 * Detect those devices by checking the device name, and
3173		 * use DLT_RAW for them.
3174		 */
3175		if (strncmp(device, cdma_rmnet, sizeof cdma_rmnet - 1) == 0) {
3176			handle->linktype = DLT_RAW;
3177			return;
3178		}
3179
3180		/*
3181		 * Is this a real Ethernet device?  If so, give it a
3182		 * link-layer-type list with DLT_EN10MB and DLT_DOCSIS, so
3183		 * that an application can let you choose it, in case you're
3184		 * capturing DOCSIS traffic that a Cisco Cable Modem
3185		 * Termination System is putting out onto an Ethernet (it
3186		 * doesn't put an Ethernet header onto the wire, it puts raw
3187		 * DOCSIS frames out on the wire inside the low-level
3188		 * Ethernet framing).
3189		 *
3190		 * XXX - are there any other sorts of "fake Ethernet" that
3191		 * have ARPHRD_ETHER but that shouldn't offer DLT_DOCSIS as
3192		 * a Cisco CMTS won't put traffic onto it or get traffic
3193		 * bridged onto it?  ISDN is handled in "activate_new()",
3194		 * as we fall back on cooked mode there, and we use
3195		 * is_wifi() to check for 802.11 devices; are there any
3196		 * others?
3197		 */
3198		if (!is_wifi(sock_fd, device)) {
3199			/*
3200			 * It's not a Wi-Fi device; offer DOCSIS.
3201			 */
3202			handle->dlt_list = (u_int *) malloc(sizeof(u_int) * 2);
3203			/*
3204			 * If that fails, just leave the list empty.
3205			 */
3206			if (handle->dlt_list != NULL) {
3207				handle->dlt_list[0] = DLT_EN10MB;
3208				handle->dlt_list[1] = DLT_DOCSIS;
3209				handle->dlt_count = 2;
3210			}
3211		}
3212		/* FALLTHROUGH */
3213
3214	case ARPHRD_METRICOM:
3215	case ARPHRD_LOOPBACK:
3216		handle->linktype = DLT_EN10MB;
3217		handle->offset = 2;
3218		break;
3219
3220	case ARPHRD_EETHER:
3221		handle->linktype = DLT_EN3MB;
3222		break;
3223
3224	case ARPHRD_AX25:
3225		handle->linktype = DLT_AX25_KISS;
3226		break;
3227
3228	case ARPHRD_PRONET:
3229		handle->linktype = DLT_PRONET;
3230		break;
3231
3232	case ARPHRD_CHAOS:
3233		handle->linktype = DLT_CHAOS;
3234		break;
3235#ifndef ARPHRD_CAN
3236#define ARPHRD_CAN 280
3237#endif
3238	case ARPHRD_CAN:
3239		/*
3240		 * Map this to DLT_LINUX_SLL; that way, CAN frames will
3241		 * have ETH_P_CAN/LINUX_SLL_P_CAN as the protocol and
3242		 * CAN FD frames will have ETH_P_CANFD/LINUX_SLL_P_CANFD
3243		 * as the protocol, so they can be distinguished by the
3244		 * protocol in the SLL header.
3245		 */
3246		handle->linktype = DLT_LINUX_SLL;
3247		break;
3248
3249#ifndef ARPHRD_IEEE802_TR
3250#define ARPHRD_IEEE802_TR 800	/* From Linux 2.4 */
3251#endif
3252	case ARPHRD_IEEE802_TR:
3253	case ARPHRD_IEEE802:
3254		handle->linktype = DLT_IEEE802;
3255		handle->offset = 2;
3256		break;
3257
3258	case ARPHRD_ARCNET:
3259		handle->linktype = DLT_ARCNET_LINUX;
3260		break;
3261
3262#ifndef ARPHRD_FDDI	/* From Linux 2.2.13 */
3263#define ARPHRD_FDDI	774
3264#endif
3265	case ARPHRD_FDDI:
3266		handle->linktype = DLT_FDDI;
3267		handle->offset = 3;
3268		break;
3269
3270#ifndef ARPHRD_ATM  /* FIXME: How to #include this? */
3271#define ARPHRD_ATM 19
3272#endif
3273	case ARPHRD_ATM:
3274		/*
3275		 * The Classical IP implementation in ATM for Linux
3276		 * supports both what RFC 1483 calls "LLC Encapsulation",
3277		 * in which each packet has an LLC header, possibly
3278		 * with a SNAP header as well, prepended to it, and
3279		 * what RFC 1483 calls "VC Based Multiplexing", in which
3280		 * different virtual circuits carry different network
3281		 * layer protocols, and no header is prepended to packets.
3282		 *
3283		 * They both have an ARPHRD_ type of ARPHRD_ATM, so
3284		 * you can't use the ARPHRD_ type to find out whether
3285		 * captured packets will have an LLC header, and,
3286		 * while there's a socket ioctl to *set* the encapsulation
3287		 * type, there's no ioctl to *get* the encapsulation type.
3288		 *
3289		 * This means that
3290		 *
3291		 *	programs that dissect Linux Classical IP frames
3292		 *	would have to check for an LLC header and,
3293		 *	depending on whether they see one or not, dissect
3294		 *	the frame as LLC-encapsulated or as raw IP (I
3295		 *	don't know whether there's any traffic other than
3296		 *	IP that would show up on the socket, or whether
3297		 *	there's any support for IPv6 in the Linux
3298		 *	Classical IP code);
3299		 *
3300		 *	filter expressions would have to compile into
3301		 *	code that checks for an LLC header and does
3302		 *	the right thing.
3303		 *
3304		 * Both of those are a nuisance - and, at least on systems
3305		 * that support PF_PACKET sockets, we don't have to put
3306		 * up with those nuisances; instead, we can just capture
3307		 * in cooked mode.  That's what we'll do, if we can.
3308		 * Otherwise, we'll just fail.
3309		 */
3310		if (cooked_ok)
3311			handle->linktype = DLT_LINUX_SLL;
3312		else
3313			handle->linktype = -1;
3314		break;
3315
3316#ifndef ARPHRD_IEEE80211  /* From Linux 2.4.6 */
3317#define ARPHRD_IEEE80211 801
3318#endif
3319	case ARPHRD_IEEE80211:
3320		handle->linktype = DLT_IEEE802_11;
3321		break;
3322
3323#ifndef ARPHRD_IEEE80211_PRISM  /* From Linux 2.4.18 */
3324#define ARPHRD_IEEE80211_PRISM 802
3325#endif
3326	case ARPHRD_IEEE80211_PRISM:
3327		handle->linktype = DLT_PRISM_HEADER;
3328		break;
3329
3330#ifndef ARPHRD_IEEE80211_RADIOTAP /* new */
3331#define ARPHRD_IEEE80211_RADIOTAP 803
3332#endif
3333	case ARPHRD_IEEE80211_RADIOTAP:
3334		handle->linktype = DLT_IEEE802_11_RADIO;
3335		break;
3336
3337	case ARPHRD_PPP:
3338		/*
3339		 * Some PPP code in the kernel supplies no link-layer
3340		 * header whatsoever to PF_PACKET sockets; other PPP
3341		 * code supplies PPP link-layer headers ("syncppp.c");
3342		 * some PPP code might supply random link-layer
3343		 * headers (PPP over ISDN - there's code in Ethereal,
3344		 * for example, to cope with PPP-over-ISDN captures
3345		 * with which the Ethereal developers have had to cope,
3346		 * heuristically trying to determine which of the
3347		 * oddball link-layer headers particular packets have).
3348		 *
3349		 * As such, we just punt, and run all PPP interfaces
3350		 * in cooked mode, if we can; otherwise, we just treat
3351		 * it as DLT_RAW, for now - if somebody needs to capture,
3352		 * on a 2.0[.x] kernel, on PPP devices that supply a
3353		 * link-layer header, they'll have to add code here to
3354		 * map to the appropriate DLT_ type (possibly adding a
3355		 * new DLT_ type, if necessary).
3356		 */
3357		if (cooked_ok)
3358			handle->linktype = DLT_LINUX_SLL;
3359		else {
3360			/*
3361			 * XXX - handle ISDN types here?  We can't fall
3362			 * back on cooked sockets, so we'd have to
3363			 * figure out from the device name what type of
3364			 * link-layer encapsulation it's using, and map
3365			 * that to an appropriate DLT_ value, meaning
3366			 * we'd map "isdnN" devices to DLT_RAW (they
3367			 * supply raw IP packets with no link-layer
3368			 * header) and "isdY" devices to a new DLT_I4L_IP
3369			 * type that has only an Ethernet packet type as
3370			 * a link-layer header.
3371			 *
3372			 * But sometimes we seem to get random crap
3373			 * in the link-layer header when capturing on
3374			 * ISDN devices....
3375			 */
3376			handle->linktype = DLT_RAW;
3377		}
3378		break;
3379
3380#ifndef ARPHRD_CISCO
3381#define ARPHRD_CISCO 513 /* previously ARPHRD_HDLC */
3382#endif
3383	case ARPHRD_CISCO:
3384		handle->linktype = DLT_C_HDLC;
3385		break;
3386
3387	/* Not sure if this is correct for all tunnels, but it
3388	 * works for CIPE */
3389	case ARPHRD_TUNNEL:
3390#ifndef ARPHRD_SIT
3391#define ARPHRD_SIT 776	/* From Linux 2.2.13 */
3392#endif
3393	case ARPHRD_SIT:
3394	case ARPHRD_CSLIP:
3395	case ARPHRD_SLIP6:
3396	case ARPHRD_CSLIP6:
3397	case ARPHRD_ADAPT:
3398	case ARPHRD_SLIP:
3399#ifndef ARPHRD_RAWHDLC
3400#define ARPHRD_RAWHDLC 518
3401#endif
3402	case ARPHRD_RAWHDLC:
3403#ifndef ARPHRD_DLCI
3404#define ARPHRD_DLCI 15
3405#endif
3406	case ARPHRD_DLCI:
3407		/*
3408		 * XXX - should some of those be mapped to DLT_LINUX_SLL
3409		 * instead?  Should we just map all of them to DLT_LINUX_SLL?
3410		 */
3411		handle->linktype = DLT_RAW;
3412		break;
3413
3414#ifndef ARPHRD_FRAD
3415#define ARPHRD_FRAD 770
3416#endif
3417	case ARPHRD_FRAD:
3418		handle->linktype = DLT_FRELAY;
3419		break;
3420
3421	case ARPHRD_LOCALTLK:
3422		handle->linktype = DLT_LTALK;
3423		break;
3424
3425	case 18:
3426		/*
3427		 * RFC 4338 defines an encapsulation for IP and ARP
3428		 * packets that's compatible with the RFC 2625
3429		 * encapsulation, but that uses a different ARP
3430		 * hardware type and hardware addresses.  That
3431		 * ARP hardware type is 18; Linux doesn't define
3432		 * any ARPHRD_ value as 18, but if it ever officially
3433		 * supports RFC 4338-style IP-over-FC, it should define
3434		 * one.
3435		 *
3436		 * For now, we map it to DLT_IP_OVER_FC, in the hopes
3437		 * that this will encourage its use in the future,
3438		 * should Linux ever officially support RFC 4338-style
3439		 * IP-over-FC.
3440		 */
3441		handle->linktype = DLT_IP_OVER_FC;
3442		break;
3443
3444#ifndef ARPHRD_FCPP
3445#define ARPHRD_FCPP	784
3446#endif
3447	case ARPHRD_FCPP:
3448#ifndef ARPHRD_FCAL
3449#define ARPHRD_FCAL	785
3450#endif
3451	case ARPHRD_FCAL:
3452#ifndef ARPHRD_FCPL
3453#define ARPHRD_FCPL	786
3454#endif
3455	case ARPHRD_FCPL:
3456#ifndef ARPHRD_FCFABRIC
3457#define ARPHRD_FCFABRIC	787
3458#endif
3459	case ARPHRD_FCFABRIC:
3460		/*
3461		 * Back in 2002, Donald Lee at Cray wanted a DLT_ for
3462		 * IP-over-FC:
3463		 *
3464		 *	http://www.mail-archive.com/tcpdump-workers@sandelman.ottawa.on.ca/msg01043.html
3465		 *
3466		 * and one was assigned.
3467		 *
3468		 * In a later private discussion (spun off from a message
3469		 * on the ethereal-users list) on how to get that DLT_
3470		 * value in libpcap on Linux, I ended up deciding that
3471		 * the best thing to do would be to have him tweak the
3472		 * driver to set the ARPHRD_ value to some ARPHRD_FCxx
3473		 * type, and map all those types to DLT_IP_OVER_FC:
3474		 *
3475		 *	I've checked into the libpcap and tcpdump CVS tree
3476		 *	support for DLT_IP_OVER_FC.  In order to use that,
3477		 *	you'd have to modify your modified driver to return
3478		 *	one of the ARPHRD_FCxxx types, in "fcLINUXfcp.c" -
3479		 *	change it to set "dev->type" to ARPHRD_FCFABRIC, for
3480		 *	example (the exact value doesn't matter, it can be
3481		 *	any of ARPHRD_FCPP, ARPHRD_FCAL, ARPHRD_FCPL, or
3482		 *	ARPHRD_FCFABRIC).
3483		 *
3484		 * 11 years later, Christian Svensson wanted to map
3485		 * various ARPHRD_ values to DLT_FC_2 and
3486		 * DLT_FC_2_WITH_FRAME_DELIMS for raw Fibre Channel
3487		 * frames:
3488		 *
3489		 *	https://github.com/mcr/libpcap/pull/29
3490		 *
3491		 * There doesn't seem to be any network drivers that uses
3492		 * any of the ARPHRD_FC* values for IP-over-FC, and
3493		 * it's not exactly clear what the "Dummy types for non
3494		 * ARP hardware" are supposed to mean (link-layer
3495		 * header type?  Physical network type?), so it's
3496		 * not exactly clear why the ARPHRD_FC* types exist
3497		 * in the first place.
3498		 *
3499		 * For now, we map them to DLT_FC_2, and provide an
3500		 * option of DLT_FC_2_WITH_FRAME_DELIMS, as well as
3501		 * DLT_IP_OVER_FC just in case there's some old
3502		 * driver out there that uses one of those types for
3503		 * IP-over-FC on which somebody wants to capture
3504		 * packets.
3505		 */
3506		handle->dlt_list = (u_int *) malloc(sizeof(u_int) * 3);
3507		/*
3508		 * If that fails, just leave the list empty.
3509		 */
3510		if (handle->dlt_list != NULL) {
3511			handle->dlt_list[0] = DLT_FC_2;
3512			handle->dlt_list[1] = DLT_FC_2_WITH_FRAME_DELIMS;
3513			handle->dlt_list[2] = DLT_IP_OVER_FC;
3514			handle->dlt_count = 3;
3515		}
3516		handle->linktype = DLT_FC_2;
3517		break;
3518
3519#ifndef ARPHRD_IRDA
3520#define ARPHRD_IRDA	783
3521#endif
3522	case ARPHRD_IRDA:
3523		/* Don't expect IP packet out of this interfaces... */
3524		handle->linktype = DLT_LINUX_IRDA;
3525		/* We need to save packet direction for IrDA decoding,
3526		 * so let's use "Linux-cooked" mode. Jean II
3527		 *
3528		 * XXX - this is handled in activate_new(). */
3529		/* handlep->cooked = 1; */
3530		break;
3531
3532	/* ARPHRD_LAPD is unofficial and randomly allocated, if reallocation
3533	 * is needed, please report it to <daniele@orlandi.com> */
3534#ifndef ARPHRD_LAPD
3535#define ARPHRD_LAPD	8445
3536#endif
3537	case ARPHRD_LAPD:
3538		/* Don't expect IP packet out of this interfaces... */
3539		handle->linktype = DLT_LINUX_LAPD;
3540		break;
3541
3542#ifndef ARPHRD_NONE
3543#define ARPHRD_NONE	0xFFFE
3544#endif
3545	case ARPHRD_NONE:
3546		/*
3547		 * No link-layer header; packets are just IP
3548		 * packets, so use DLT_RAW.
3549		 */
3550		handle->linktype = DLT_RAW;
3551		break;
3552
3553#ifndef ARPHRD_IEEE802154
3554#define ARPHRD_IEEE802154      804
3555#endif
3556       case ARPHRD_IEEE802154:
3557               handle->linktype =  DLT_IEEE802_15_4_NOFCS;
3558               break;
3559
3560#ifndef ARPHRD_NETLINK
3561#define ARPHRD_NETLINK	824
3562#endif
3563	case ARPHRD_NETLINK:
3564		handle->linktype = DLT_NETLINK;
3565		/*
3566		 * We need to use cooked mode, so that in sll_protocol we
3567		 * pick up the netlink protocol type such as NETLINK_ROUTE,
3568		 * NETLINK_GENERIC, NETLINK_FIB_LOOKUP, etc.
3569		 *
3570		 * XXX - this is handled in activate_new().
3571		 */
3572		/* handlep->cooked = 1; */
3573		break;
3574
3575#ifndef ARPHRD_VSOCKMON
3576#define ARPHRD_VSOCKMON	826
3577#endif
3578	case ARPHRD_VSOCKMON:
3579		handle->linktype = DLT_VSOCK;
3580		break;
3581
3582	default:
3583		handle->linktype = -1;
3584		break;
3585	}
3586}
3587
3588/* ===== Functions to interface to the newer kernels ================== */
3589
3590#ifdef PACKET_RESERVE
3591static void
3592set_dlt_list_cooked(pcap_t *handle, int sock_fd)
3593{
3594	socklen_t		len;
3595	unsigned int		tp_reserve;
3596
3597	/*
3598	 * If we can't do PACKET_RESERVE, we can't reserve extra space
3599	 * for a DLL_LINUX_SLL2 header, so we can't support DLT_LINUX_SLL2.
3600	 */
3601	len = sizeof(tp_reserve);
3602	if (getsockopt(sock_fd, SOL_PACKET, PACKET_RESERVE, &tp_reserve,
3603	    &len) == 0) {
3604	    	/*
3605	    	 * Yes, we can do DLL_LINUX_SLL2.
3606	    	 */
3607		handle->dlt_list = (u_int *) malloc(sizeof(u_int) * 2);
3608		/*
3609		 * If that fails, just leave the list empty.
3610		 */
3611		if (handle->dlt_list != NULL) {
3612			handle->dlt_list[0] = DLT_LINUX_SLL;
3613			handle->dlt_list[1] = DLT_LINUX_SLL2;
3614			handle->dlt_count = 2;
3615		}
3616	}
3617}
3618#else
3619/*
3620 * The build environment doesn't define PACKET_RESERVE, so we can't reserve
3621 * extra space for a DLL_LINUX_SLL2 header, so we can't support DLT_LINUX_SLL2.
3622 */
3623static void
3624set_dlt_list_cooked(pcap_t *handle _U_, int sock_fd _U_)
3625{
3626}
3627#endif
3628
3629/*
3630 * Try to open a packet socket using the new kernel PF_PACKET interface.
3631 * Returns 1 on success, 0 on an error that means the new interface isn't
3632 * present (so the old SOCK_PACKET interface should be tried), and a
3633 * PCAP_ERROR_ value on an error that means that the old mechanism won't
3634 * work either (so it shouldn't be tried).
3635 */
3636static int
3637activate_new(pcap_t *handle)
3638{
3639#ifdef HAVE_PF_PACKET_SOCKETS
3640	struct pcap_linux *handlep = handle->priv;
3641	const char		*device = handle->opt.device;
3642	int			is_any_device = (strcmp(device, "any") == 0);
3643	int			protocol = pcap_protocol(handle);
3644	int			sock_fd = -1, arptype, ret;
3645#ifdef HAVE_PACKET_AUXDATA
3646	int			val;
3647#endif
3648	int			err = 0;
3649	struct packet_mreq	mr;
3650#if defined(SO_BPF_EXTENSIONS) && defined(SKF_AD_VLAN_TAG_PRESENT)
3651	int			bpf_extensions;
3652	socklen_t		len = sizeof(bpf_extensions);
3653#endif
3654
3655	/*
3656	 * Open a socket with protocol family packet. If the
3657	 * "any" device was specified, we open a SOCK_DGRAM
3658	 * socket for the cooked interface, otherwise we first
3659	 * try a SOCK_RAW socket for the raw interface.
3660	 */
3661	sock_fd = is_any_device ?
3662		socket(PF_PACKET, SOCK_DGRAM, protocol) :
3663		socket(PF_PACKET, SOCK_RAW, protocol);
3664
3665	if (sock_fd == -1) {
3666		if (errno == EINVAL || errno == EAFNOSUPPORT) {
3667			/*
3668			 * We don't support PF_PACKET/SOCK_whatever
3669			 * sockets; try the old mechanism.
3670			 */
3671			return 0;
3672		}
3673		if (errno == EPERM || errno == EACCES) {
3674			/*
3675			 * You don't have permission to open the
3676			 * socket.
3677			 */
3678			ret = PCAP_ERROR_PERM_DENIED;
3679		} else {
3680			/*
3681			 * Other error.
3682			 */
3683			ret = PCAP_ERROR;
3684		}
3685		pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
3686		    errno, "socket");
3687		return ret;
3688	}
3689
3690	/* It seems the kernel supports the new interface. */
3691	handlep->sock_packet = 0;
3692
3693	/*
3694	 * Get the interface index of the loopback device.
3695	 * If the attempt fails, don't fail, just set the
3696	 * "handlep->lo_ifindex" to -1.
3697	 *
3698	 * XXX - can there be more than one device that loops
3699	 * packets back, i.e. devices other than "lo"?  If so,
3700	 * we'd need to find them all, and have an array of
3701	 * indices for them, and check all of them in
3702	 * "pcap_read_packet()".
3703	 */
3704	handlep->lo_ifindex = iface_get_id(sock_fd, "lo", handle->errbuf);
3705
3706	/*
3707	 * Default value for offset to align link-layer payload
3708	 * on a 4-byte boundary.
3709	 */
3710	handle->offset	 = 0;
3711
3712	/*
3713	 * What kind of frames do we have to deal with? Fall back
3714	 * to cooked mode if we have an unknown interface type
3715	 * or a type we know doesn't work well in raw mode.
3716	 */
3717	if (!is_any_device) {
3718		/* Assume for now we don't need cooked mode. */
3719		handlep->cooked = 0;
3720
3721		if (handle->opt.rfmon) {
3722			/*
3723			 * We were asked to turn on monitor mode.
3724			 * Do so before we get the link-layer type,
3725			 * because entering monitor mode could change
3726			 * the link-layer type.
3727			 */
3728			err = enter_rfmon_mode(handle, sock_fd, device);
3729			if (err < 0) {
3730				/* Hard failure */
3731				close(sock_fd);
3732				return err;
3733			}
3734			if (err == 0) {
3735				/*
3736				 * Nothing worked for turning monitor mode
3737				 * on.
3738				 */
3739				close(sock_fd);
3740				return PCAP_ERROR_RFMON_NOTSUP;
3741			}
3742
3743			/*
3744			 * Either monitor mode has been turned on for
3745			 * the device, or we've been given a different
3746			 * device to open for monitor mode.  If we've
3747			 * been given a different device, use it.
3748			 */
3749			if (handlep->mondevice != NULL)
3750				device = handlep->mondevice;
3751		}
3752		arptype	= iface_get_arptype(sock_fd, device, handle->errbuf);
3753		if (arptype < 0) {
3754			close(sock_fd);
3755			return arptype;
3756		}
3757		map_arphrd_to_dlt(handle, sock_fd, arptype, device, 1);
3758		if (handle->linktype == -1 ||
3759		    handle->linktype == DLT_LINUX_SLL ||
3760		    handle->linktype == DLT_LINUX_IRDA ||
3761		    handle->linktype == DLT_LINUX_LAPD ||
3762		    handle->linktype == DLT_NETLINK ||
3763		    (handle->linktype == DLT_EN10MB &&
3764		     (strncmp("isdn", device, 4) == 0 ||
3765		      strncmp("isdY", device, 4) == 0))) {
3766			/*
3767			 * Unknown interface type (-1), or a
3768			 * device we explicitly chose to run
3769			 * in cooked mode (e.g., PPP devices),
3770			 * or an ISDN device (whose link-layer
3771			 * type we can only determine by using
3772			 * APIs that may be different on different
3773			 * kernels) - reopen in cooked mode.
3774			 */
3775			if (close(sock_fd) == -1) {
3776				pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(handle->errbuf,
3777				    PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE, errno, "close");
3778				return PCAP_ERROR;
3779			}
3780			sock_fd = socket(PF_PACKET, SOCK_DGRAM, protocol);
3781			if (sock_fd == -1) {
3782				if (errno == EPERM || errno == EACCES) {
3783					/*
3784					 * You don't have permission to
3785					 * open the socket.
3786					 */
3787					ret = PCAP_ERROR_PERM_DENIED;
3788				} else {
3789					/*
3790					 * Other error.
3791					 */
3792					ret = PCAP_ERROR;
3793				}
3794				pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(handle->errbuf,
3795				    PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE, errno, "socket");
3796				return ret;
3797			}
3798			handlep->cooked = 1;
3799
3800			/*
3801			 * Get rid of any link-layer type list
3802			 * we allocated - this only supports cooked
3803			 * capture.
3804			 */
3805			if (handle->dlt_list != NULL) {
3806				free(handle->dlt_list);
3807				handle->dlt_list = NULL;
3808				handle->dlt_count = 0;
3809				set_dlt_list_cooked(handle, sock_fd);
3810			}
3811
3812			if (handle->linktype == -1) {
3813				/*
3814				 * Warn that we're falling back on
3815				 * cooked mode; we may want to
3816				 * update "map_arphrd_to_dlt()"
3817				 * to handle the new type.
3818				 */
3819				pcap_snprintf(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
3820					"arptype %d not "
3821					"supported by libpcap - "
3822					"falling back to cooked "
3823					"socket",
3824					arptype);
3825			}
3826
3827			/*
3828			 * IrDA capture is not a real "cooked" capture,
3829			 * it's IrLAP frames, not IP packets.  The
3830			 * same applies to LAPD capture.
3831			 */
3832			if (handle->linktype != DLT_LINUX_IRDA &&
3833			    handle->linktype != DLT_LINUX_LAPD &&
3834			    handle->linktype != DLT_NETLINK)
3835				handle->linktype = DLT_LINUX_SLL;
3836		}
3837
3838		handlep->ifindex = iface_get_id(sock_fd, device,
3839		    handle->errbuf);
3840		if (handlep->ifindex == -1) {
3841			close(sock_fd);
3842			return PCAP_ERROR;
3843		}
3844
3845		if ((err = iface_bind(sock_fd, handlep->ifindex,
3846		    handle->errbuf, protocol)) != 1) {
3847		    	close(sock_fd);
3848			if (err < 0)
3849				return err;
3850			else
3851				return 0;	/* try old mechanism */
3852		}
3853	} else {
3854		/*
3855		 * The "any" device.
3856		 */
3857		if (handle->opt.rfmon) {
3858			/*
3859			 * It doesn't support monitor mode.
3860			 */
3861			close(sock_fd);
3862			return PCAP_ERROR_RFMON_NOTSUP;
3863		}
3864
3865		/*
3866		 * It uses cooked mode.
3867		 */
3868		handlep->cooked = 1;
3869		handle->linktype = DLT_LINUX_SLL;
3870		handle->dlt_list = NULL;
3871		handle->dlt_count = 0;
3872		set_dlt_list_cooked(handle, sock_fd);
3873
3874		/*
3875		 * We're not bound to a device.
3876		 * For now, we're using this as an indication
3877		 * that we can't transmit; stop doing that only
3878		 * if we figure out how to transmit in cooked
3879		 * mode.
3880		 */
3881		handlep->ifindex = -1;
3882	}
3883
3884	/*
3885	 * Select promiscuous mode on if "promisc" is set.
3886	 *
3887	 * Do not turn allmulti mode on if we don't select
3888	 * promiscuous mode - on some devices (e.g., Orinoco
3889	 * wireless interfaces), allmulti mode isn't supported
3890	 * and the driver implements it by turning promiscuous
3891	 * mode on, and that screws up the operation of the
3892	 * card as a normal networking interface, and on no
3893	 * other platform I know of does starting a non-
3894	 * promiscuous capture affect which multicast packets
3895	 * are received by the interface.
3896	 */
3897
3898	/*
3899	 * Hmm, how can we set promiscuous mode on all interfaces?
3900	 * I am not sure if that is possible at all.  For now, we
3901	 * silently ignore attempts to turn promiscuous mode on
3902	 * for the "any" device (so you don't have to explicitly
3903	 * disable it in programs such as tcpdump).
3904	 */
3905
3906	if (!is_any_device && handle->opt.promisc) {
3907		memset(&mr, 0, sizeof(mr));
3908		mr.mr_ifindex = handlep->ifindex;
3909		mr.mr_type    = PACKET_MR_PROMISC;
3910		if (setsockopt(sock_fd, SOL_PACKET, PACKET_ADD_MEMBERSHIP,
3911		    &mr, sizeof(mr)) == -1) {
3912			pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(handle->errbuf,
3913			    PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE, errno, "setsockopt (PACKET_ADD_MEMBERSHIP)");
3914			close(sock_fd);
3915			return PCAP_ERROR;
3916		}
3917	}
3918
3919	/* Enable auxillary data if supported and reserve room for
3920	 * reconstructing VLAN headers. */
3921#ifdef HAVE_PACKET_AUXDATA
3922	val = 1;
3923	if (setsockopt(sock_fd, SOL_PACKET, PACKET_AUXDATA, &val,
3924		       sizeof(val)) == -1 && errno != ENOPROTOOPT) {
3925		pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
3926		    errno, "setsockopt (PACKET_AUXDATA)");
3927		close(sock_fd);
3928		return PCAP_ERROR;
3929	}
3930	handle->offset += VLAN_TAG_LEN;
3931#endif /* HAVE_PACKET_AUXDATA */
3932
3933	/*
3934	 * This is a 2.2[.x] or later kernel (we know that
3935	 * because we're not using a SOCK_PACKET socket -
3936	 * PF_PACKET is supported only in 2.2 and later
3937	 * kernels).
3938	 *
3939	 * We can safely pass "recvfrom()" a byte count
3940	 * based on the snapshot length.
3941	 *
3942	 * If we're in cooked mode, make the snapshot length
3943	 * large enough to hold a "cooked mode" header plus
3944	 * 1 byte of packet data (so we don't pass a byte
3945	 * count of 0 to "recvfrom()").
3946	 * XXX - we don't know whether this will be DLT_LINUX_SLL
3947	 * or DLT_LINUX_SLL2, so make sure it's big enough for
3948	 * a DLT_LINUX_SLL2 "cooked mode" header; a snapshot length
3949	 * that small is silly anyway.
3950	 */
3951	if (handlep->cooked) {
3952		if (handle->snapshot < SLL2_HDR_LEN + 1)
3953			handle->snapshot = SLL2_HDR_LEN + 1;
3954	}
3955	handle->bufsize = handle->snapshot;
3956
3957	/*
3958	 * Set the offset at which to insert VLAN tags.
3959	 * That should be the offset of the type field.
3960	 */
3961	switch (handle->linktype) {
3962
3963	case DLT_EN10MB:
3964		/*
3965		 * The type field is after the destination and source
3966		 * MAC address.
3967		 */
3968		handlep->vlan_offset = 2 * ETH_ALEN;
3969		break;
3970
3971	case DLT_LINUX_SLL:
3972		/*
3973		 * The type field is in the last 2 bytes of the
3974		 * DLT_LINUX_SLL header.
3975		 */
3976		handlep->vlan_offset = SLL_HDR_LEN - 2;
3977		break;
3978
3979	default:
3980		handlep->vlan_offset = -1; /* unknown */
3981		break;
3982	}
3983
3984#if defined(SIOCGSTAMPNS) && defined(SO_TIMESTAMPNS)
3985	if (handle->opt.tstamp_precision == PCAP_TSTAMP_PRECISION_NANO) {
3986		int nsec_tstamps = 1;
3987
3988		if (setsockopt(sock_fd, SOL_SOCKET, SO_TIMESTAMPNS, &nsec_tstamps, sizeof(nsec_tstamps)) < 0) {
3989			pcap_snprintf(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE, "setsockopt: unable to set SO_TIMESTAMPNS");
3990			close(sock_fd);
3991			return PCAP_ERROR;
3992		}
3993	}
3994#endif /* defined(SIOCGSTAMPNS) && defined(SO_TIMESTAMPNS) */
3995
3996	/*
3997	 * We've succeeded. Save the socket FD in the pcap structure.
3998	 */
3999	handle->fd = sock_fd;
4000
4001#if defined(SO_BPF_EXTENSIONS) && defined(SKF_AD_VLAN_TAG_PRESENT)
4002	/*
4003	 * Can we generate special code for VLAN checks?
4004	 * (XXX - what if we need the special code but it's not supported
4005	 * by the OS?  Is that possible?)
4006	 */
4007	if (getsockopt(sock_fd, SOL_SOCKET, SO_BPF_EXTENSIONS,
4008	    &bpf_extensions, &len) == 0) {
4009		if (bpf_extensions >= SKF_AD_VLAN_TAG_PRESENT) {
4010			/*
4011			 * Yes, we can.  Request that we do so.
4012			 */
4013			handle->bpf_codegen_flags |= BPF_SPECIAL_VLAN_HANDLING;
4014		}
4015	}
4016#endif /* defined(SO_BPF_EXTENSIONS) && defined(SKF_AD_VLAN_TAG_PRESENT) */
4017
4018	return 1;
4019#else /* HAVE_PF_PACKET_SOCKETS */
4020	pcap_strlcpy(ebuf,
4021		"New packet capturing interface not supported by build "
4022		"environment", PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE);
4023	return 0;
4024#endif /* HAVE_PF_PACKET_SOCKETS */
4025}
4026
4027#ifdef HAVE_PACKET_RING
4028/*
4029 * Attempt to activate with memory-mapped access.
4030 *
4031 * On success, returns 1, and sets *status to 0 if there are no warnings
4032 * or to a PCAP_WARNING_ code if there is a warning.
4033 *
4034 * On failure due to lack of support for memory-mapped capture, returns
4035 * 0.
4036 *
4037 * On error, returns -1, and sets *status to the appropriate error code;
4038 * if that is PCAP_ERROR, sets handle->errbuf to the appropriate message.
4039 */
4040static int
4041activate_mmap(pcap_t *handle, int *status)
4042{
4043	struct pcap_linux *handlep = handle->priv;
4044	int ret;
4045
4046	/*
4047	 * Attempt to allocate a buffer to hold the contents of one
4048	 * packet, for use by the oneshot callback.
4049	 */
4050	handlep->oneshot_buffer = malloc(handle->snapshot);
4051	if (handlep->oneshot_buffer == NULL) {
4052		pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
4053		    errno, "can't allocate oneshot buffer");
4054		*status = PCAP_ERROR;
4055		return -1;
4056	}
4057
4058	if (handle->opt.buffer_size == 0) {
4059		/* by default request 2M for the ring buffer */
4060		handle->opt.buffer_size = 2*1024*1024;
4061	}
4062	ret = prepare_tpacket_socket(handle);
4063	if (ret == -1) {
4064		free(handlep->oneshot_buffer);
4065		*status = PCAP_ERROR;
4066		return ret;
4067	}
4068	ret = create_ring(handle, status);
4069	if (ret == 0) {
4070		/*
4071		 * We don't support memory-mapped capture; our caller
4072		 * will fall back on reading from the socket.
4073		 */
4074		free(handlep->oneshot_buffer);
4075		return 0;
4076	}
4077	if (ret == -1) {
4078		/*
4079		 * Error attempting to enable memory-mapped capture;
4080		 * fail.  create_ring() has set *status.
4081		 */
4082		free(handlep->oneshot_buffer);
4083		return -1;
4084	}
4085
4086	/*
4087	 * Success.  *status has been set either to 0 if there are no
4088	 * warnings or to a PCAP_WARNING_ value if there is a warning.
4089	 *
4090	 * Override some defaults and inherit the other fields from
4091	 * activate_new.
4092	 * handle->offset is used to get the current position into the rx ring.
4093	 * handle->cc is used to store the ring size.
4094	 */
4095
4096	switch (handlep->tp_version) {
4097	case TPACKET_V1:
4098		handle->read_op = pcap_read_linux_mmap_v1;
4099		break;
4100	case TPACKET_V1_64:
4101		handle->read_op = pcap_read_linux_mmap_v1_64;
4102		break;
4103#ifdef HAVE_TPACKET2
4104	case TPACKET_V2:
4105		handle->read_op = pcap_read_linux_mmap_v2;
4106		break;
4107#endif
4108#ifdef HAVE_TPACKET3
4109	case TPACKET_V3:
4110		handle->read_op = pcap_read_linux_mmap_v3;
4111		break;
4112#endif
4113	}
4114	handle->cleanup_op = pcap_cleanup_linux_mmap;
4115	handle->setfilter_op = pcap_setfilter_linux_mmap;
4116	handle->setnonblock_op = pcap_setnonblock_mmap;
4117	handle->getnonblock_op = pcap_getnonblock_mmap;
4118	handle->oneshot_callback = pcap_oneshot_mmap;
4119	handle->selectable_fd = handle->fd;
4120	return 1;
4121}
4122#else /* HAVE_PACKET_RING */
4123static int
4124activate_mmap(pcap_t *handle _U_, int *status _U_)
4125{
4126	return 0;
4127}
4128#endif /* HAVE_PACKET_RING */
4129
4130#ifdef HAVE_PACKET_RING
4131
4132#if defined(HAVE_TPACKET2) || defined(HAVE_TPACKET3)
4133/*
4134 * Attempt to set the socket to the specified version of the memory-mapped
4135 * header.
4136 *
4137 * Return 0 if we succeed; return 1 if we fail because that version isn't
4138 * supported; return -1 on any other error, and set handle->errbuf.
4139 */
4140static int
4141init_tpacket(pcap_t *handle, int version, const char *version_str)
4142{
4143	struct pcap_linux *handlep = handle->priv;
4144	int val = version;
4145	socklen_t len = sizeof(val);
4146
4147	/*
4148	 * Probe whether kernel supports the specified TPACKET version;
4149	 * this also gets the length of the header for that version.
4150	 *
4151	 * This socket option was introduced in 2.6.27, which was
4152	 * also the first release with TPACKET_V2 support.
4153	 */
4154	if (getsockopt(handle->fd, SOL_PACKET, PACKET_HDRLEN, &val, &len) < 0) {
4155		if (errno == ENOPROTOOPT || errno == EINVAL) {
4156			/*
4157			 * ENOPROTOOPT means the kernel is too old to
4158			 * support PACKET_HDRLEN at all, which means
4159			 * it either doesn't support TPACKET at all
4160			 * or supports  only TPACKET_V1.
4161			 */
4162			return 1;	/* no */
4163		}
4164
4165		/* Failed to even find out; this is a fatal error. */
4166		pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
4167		    errno, "can't get %s header len on packet socket",
4168		    version_str);
4169		return -1;
4170	}
4171	handlep->tp_hdrlen = val;
4172
4173	val = version;
4174	if (setsockopt(handle->fd, SOL_PACKET, PACKET_VERSION, &val,
4175			   sizeof(val)) < 0) {
4176		pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
4177		    errno, "can't activate %s on packet socket", version_str);
4178		return -1;
4179	}
4180	handlep->tp_version = version;
4181
4182	/*
4183	 * Reserve space for VLAN tag reconstruction.
4184	 * This option was also introduced in 2.6.27.
4185	 */
4186	val = VLAN_TAG_LEN;
4187	if (setsockopt(handle->fd, SOL_PACKET, PACKET_RESERVE, &val,
4188			   sizeof(val)) < 0) {
4189		pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
4190		    errno, "can't set up reserve on packet socket");
4191		return -1;
4192	}
4193
4194	return 0;
4195}
4196#endif /* defined HAVE_TPACKET2 || defined HAVE_TPACKET3 */
4197
4198/*
4199 * If the instruction set for which we're compiling has both 32-bit
4200 * and 64-bit versions, and Linux support for the 64-bit version
4201 * predates TPACKET_V2, define ISA_64_BIT as the .machine value
4202 * you get from uname() for the 64-bit version.  Otherwise, leave
4203 * it undefined.  (This includes ARM, which has a 64-bit version,
4204 * but Linux support for it appeared well after TPACKET_V2 support
4205 * did, so there should never be a case where 32-bit ARM code is
4206 * running o a 64-bit kernel that only supports TPACKET_V1.)
4207 *
4208 * If we've omitted your favorite such architecture, please contribute
4209 * a patch.  (No patch is needed for architectures that are 32-bit-only
4210 * or for which Linux has no support for 32-bit userland - or for which,
4211 * as noted, 64-bit support appeared in Linux after TPACKET_V2 support
4212 * did.)
4213 */
4214#if defined(__i386__)
4215#define ISA_64_BIT	"x86_64"
4216#elif defined(__ppc__)
4217#define ISA_64_BIT	"ppc64"
4218#elif defined(__sparc__)
4219#define ISA_64_BIT	"sparc64"
4220#elif defined(__s390__)
4221#define ISA_64_BIT	"s390x"
4222#elif defined(__mips__)
4223#define ISA_64_BIT	"mips64"
4224#elif defined(__hppa__)
4225#define ISA_64_BIT	"parisc64"
4226#endif
4227
4228/*
4229 * Attempt to set the socket to version 3 of the memory-mapped header and,
4230 * if that fails because version 3 isn't supported, attempt to fall
4231 * back to version 2.  If version 2 isn't supported, just leave it at
4232 * version 1.
4233 *
4234 * Return 1 if we succeed or if we fail because neither version 2 nor 3 is
4235 * supported; return -1 on any other error, and set handle->errbuf.
4236 */
4237static int
4238prepare_tpacket_socket(pcap_t *handle)
4239{
4240	struct pcap_linux *handlep = handle->priv;
4241#if defined(HAVE_TPACKET2) || defined(HAVE_TPACKET3)
4242	int ret;
4243#endif
4244
4245#ifdef HAVE_TPACKET3
4246	/*
4247	 * Try setting the version to TPACKET_V3.
4248	 *
4249	 * The only mode in which buffering is done on PF_PACKET
4250	 * sockets, so that packets might not be delivered
4251	 * immediately, is TPACKET_V3 mode.
4252	 *
4253	 * The buffering cannot be disabled in that mode, so
4254	 * if the user has requested immediate mode, we don't
4255	 * use TPACKET_V3.
4256	 */
4257	if (!handle->opt.immediate) {
4258		ret = init_tpacket(handle, TPACKET_V3, "TPACKET_V3");
4259		if (ret == 0) {
4260			/*
4261			 * Success.
4262			 */
4263			return 1;
4264		}
4265		if (ret == -1) {
4266			/*
4267			 * We failed for some reason other than "the
4268			 * kernel doesn't support TPACKET_V3".
4269			 */
4270			return -1;
4271		}
4272	}
4273#endif /* HAVE_TPACKET3 */
4274
4275#ifdef HAVE_TPACKET2
4276	/*
4277	 * Try setting the version to TPACKET_V2.
4278	 */
4279	ret = init_tpacket(handle, TPACKET_V2, "TPACKET_V2");
4280	if (ret == 0) {
4281		/*
4282		 * Success.
4283		 */
4284		return 1;
4285	}
4286	if (ret == -1) {
4287		/*
4288		 * We failed for some reason other than "the
4289		 * kernel doesn't support TPACKET_V2".
4290		 */
4291		return -1;
4292	}
4293#endif /* HAVE_TPACKET2 */
4294
4295	/*
4296	 * OK, we're using TPACKET_V1, as either that's all the kernel
4297	 * supports or it doesn't support TPACKET at all.  In the latter
4298	 * case, create_ring() will fail, and we'll fall back on non-
4299	 * memory-mapped capture.
4300	 */
4301	handlep->tp_version = TPACKET_V1;
4302	handlep->tp_hdrlen = sizeof(struct tpacket_hdr);
4303
4304#ifdef ISA_64_BIT
4305	/*
4306	 * 32-bit userspace + 64-bit kernel + TPACKET_V1 are not compatible with
4307	 * each other due to platform-dependent data type size differences.
4308	 *
4309	 * If we have a 32-bit userland and a 64-bit kernel, use an
4310	 * internally-defined TPACKET_V1_64, with which we use a 64-bit
4311	 * version of the data structures.
4312	 */
4313	if (sizeof(long) == 4) {
4314		/*
4315		 * This is 32-bit code.
4316		 */
4317		struct utsname utsname;
4318
4319		if (uname(&utsname) == -1) {
4320			/*
4321			 * Failed.
4322			 */
4323			pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(handle->errbuf,
4324			    PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE, errno, "uname failed");
4325			return -1;
4326		}
4327		if (strcmp(utsname.machine, ISA_64_BIT) == 0) {
4328			/*
4329			 * uname() tells us the machine is 64-bit,
4330			 * so we presumably have a 64-bit kernel.
4331			 *
4332			 * XXX - this presumes that uname() won't lie
4333			 * in 32-bit code and claim that the machine
4334			 * has the 32-bit version of the ISA.
4335			 */
4336			handlep->tp_version = TPACKET_V1_64;
4337			handlep->tp_hdrlen = sizeof(struct tpacket_hdr_64);
4338		}
4339	}
4340#endif
4341
4342	return 1;
4343}
4344
4345#define MAX(a,b) ((a)>(b)?(a):(b))
4346
4347/*
4348 * Attempt to set up memory-mapped access.
4349 *
4350 * On success, returns 1, and sets *status to 0 if there are no warnings
4351 * or to a PCAP_WARNING_ code if there is a warning.
4352 *
4353 * On failure due to lack of support for memory-mapped capture, returns
4354 * 0.
4355 *
4356 * On error, returns -1, and sets *status to the appropriate error code;
4357 * if that is PCAP_ERROR, sets handle->errbuf to the appropriate message.
4358 */
4359static int
4360create_ring(pcap_t *handle, int *status)
4361{
4362	struct pcap_linux *handlep = handle->priv;
4363	unsigned i, j, frames_per_block;
4364#ifdef HAVE_TPACKET3
4365	/*
4366	 * For sockets using TPACKET_V1 or TPACKET_V2, the extra
4367	 * stuff at the end of a struct tpacket_req3 will be
4368	 * ignored, so this is OK even for those sockets.
4369	 */
4370	struct tpacket_req3 req;
4371#else
4372	struct tpacket_req req;
4373#endif
4374	socklen_t len;
4375	unsigned int sk_type, tp_reserve, maclen, tp_hdrlen, netoff, macoff;
4376	unsigned int frame_size;
4377
4378	/*
4379	 * Start out assuming no warnings or errors.
4380	 */
4381	*status = 0;
4382
4383	switch (handlep->tp_version) {
4384
4385	case TPACKET_V1:
4386	case TPACKET_V1_64:
4387#ifdef HAVE_TPACKET2
4388	case TPACKET_V2:
4389#endif
4390		/* Note that with large snapshot length (say 256K, which is
4391		 * the default for recent versions of tcpdump, Wireshark,
4392		 * TShark, dumpcap or 64K, the value that "-s 0" has given for
4393		 * a long time with tcpdump), if we use the snapshot
4394		 * length to calculate the frame length, only a few frames
4395		 * will be available in the ring even with pretty
4396		 * large ring size (and a lot of memory will be unused).
4397		 *
4398		 * Ideally, we should choose a frame length based on the
4399		 * minimum of the specified snapshot length and the maximum
4400		 * packet size.  That's not as easy as it sounds; consider,
4401		 * for example, an 802.11 interface in monitor mode, where
4402		 * the frame would include a radiotap header, where the
4403		 * maximum radiotap header length is device-dependent.
4404		 *
4405		 * So, for now, we just do this for Ethernet devices, where
4406		 * there's no metadata header, and the link-layer header is
4407		 * fixed length.  We can get the maximum packet size by
4408		 * adding 18, the Ethernet header length plus the CRC length
4409		 * (just in case we happen to get the CRC in the packet), to
4410		 * the MTU of the interface; we fetch the MTU in the hopes
4411		 * that it reflects support for jumbo frames.  (Even if the
4412		 * interface is just being used for passive snooping, the
4413		 * driver might set the size of buffers in the receive ring
4414		 * based on the MTU, so that the MTU limits the maximum size
4415		 * of packets that we can receive.)
4416		 *
4417		 * If segmentation/fragmentation or receive offload are
4418		 * enabled, we can get reassembled/aggregated packets larger
4419		 * than MTU, but bounded to 65535 plus the Ethernet overhead,
4420		 * due to kernel and protocol constraints */
4421		frame_size = handle->snapshot;
4422		if (handle->linktype == DLT_EN10MB) {
4423			unsigned int max_frame_len;
4424			int mtu;
4425			int offload;
4426
4427			mtu = iface_get_mtu(handle->fd, handle->opt.device,
4428			    handle->errbuf);
4429			if (mtu == -1) {
4430				*status = PCAP_ERROR;
4431				return -1;
4432			}
4433			offload = iface_get_offload(handle);
4434			if (offload == -1) {
4435				*status = PCAP_ERROR;
4436				return -1;
4437			}
4438			if (offload)
4439				max_frame_len = MAX(mtu, 65535);
4440			else
4441				max_frame_len = mtu;
4442			max_frame_len += 18;
4443
4444			if (frame_size > max_frame_len)
4445				frame_size = max_frame_len;
4446		}
4447
4448		/* NOTE: calculus matching those in tpacket_rcv()
4449		 * in linux-2.6/net/packet/af_packet.c
4450		 */
4451		len = sizeof(sk_type);
4452		if (getsockopt(handle->fd, SOL_SOCKET, SO_TYPE, &sk_type,
4453		    &len) < 0) {
4454			pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(handle->errbuf,
4455			    PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE, errno, "getsockopt (SO_TYPE)");
4456			*status = PCAP_ERROR;
4457			return -1;
4458		}
4459#ifdef PACKET_RESERVE
4460		len = sizeof(tp_reserve);
4461		if (getsockopt(handle->fd, SOL_PACKET, PACKET_RESERVE,
4462		    &tp_reserve, &len) < 0) {
4463			if (errno != ENOPROTOOPT) {
4464				/*
4465				 * ENOPROTOOPT means "kernel doesn't support
4466				 * PACKET_RESERVE", in which case we fall back
4467				 * as best we can.
4468				 */
4469				pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(handle->errbuf,
4470				    PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE, errno,
4471				    "getsockopt (PACKET_RESERVE)");
4472				*status = PCAP_ERROR;
4473				return -1;
4474			}
4475			/*
4476			 * Older kernel, so we can't use PACKET_RESERVE;
4477			 * this means we can't reserver extra space
4478			 * for a DLT_LINUX_SLL2 header.
4479			 */
4480			tp_reserve = 0;
4481		} else {
4482			/*
4483			 * We can reserve extra space for a DLT_LINUX_SLL2
4484			 * header.  Do so.
4485			 *
4486			 * XXX - we assume that the kernel is still adding
4487			 * 16 bytes of extra space; that happens to
4488			 * correspond to SLL_HDR_LEN (whether intentionally
4489			 * or not - the kernel code has a raw "16" in
4490			 * the expression), so we subtract SLL_HDR_LEN
4491			 * from SLL2_HDR_LEN to get the additional space
4492			 * needed.
4493			 *
4494			 * XXX - should we use TPACKET_ALIGN(SLL2_HDR_LEN - SLL_HDR_LEN)?
4495			 */
4496			tp_reserve += SLL2_HDR_LEN - SLL_HDR_LEN;
4497			len = sizeof(tp_reserve);
4498			if (setsockopt(handle->fd, SOL_PACKET, PACKET_RESERVE,
4499			    &tp_reserve, len) < 0) {
4500				pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(handle->errbuf,
4501				    PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE, errno,
4502				    "setsockopt (PACKET_RESERVE)");
4503				*status = PCAP_ERROR;
4504				return -1;
4505			}
4506		}
4507#else
4508		/*
4509		 * Build environment for an older kernel, so we can't
4510		 * use PACKET_RESERVE; this means we can't reserve
4511		 * extra space for a DLT_LINUX_SLL2 header.
4512		 */
4513		tp_reserve = 0;
4514#endif
4515		maclen = (sk_type == SOCK_DGRAM) ? 0 : MAX_LINKHEADER_SIZE;
4516			/* XXX: in the kernel maclen is calculated from
4517			 * LL_ALLOCATED_SPACE(dev) and vnet_hdr.hdr_len
4518			 * in:  packet_snd()           in linux-2.6/net/packet/af_packet.c
4519			 * then packet_alloc_skb()     in linux-2.6/net/packet/af_packet.c
4520			 * then sock_alloc_send_pskb() in linux-2.6/net/core/sock.c
4521			 * but I see no way to get those sizes in userspace,
4522			 * like for instance with an ifreq ioctl();
4523			 * the best thing I've found so far is MAX_HEADER in
4524			 * the kernel part of linux-2.6/include/linux/netdevice.h
4525			 * which goes up to 128+48=176; since pcap-linux.c
4526			 * defines a MAX_LINKHEADER_SIZE of 256 which is
4527			 * greater than that, let's use it.. maybe is it even
4528			 * large enough to directly replace macoff..
4529			 */
4530		tp_hdrlen = TPACKET_ALIGN(handlep->tp_hdrlen) + sizeof(struct sockaddr_ll) ;
4531		netoff = TPACKET_ALIGN(tp_hdrlen + (maclen < 16 ? 16 : maclen)) + tp_reserve;
4532			/* NOTE: AFAICS tp_reserve may break the TPACKET_ALIGN
4533			 * of netoff, which contradicts
4534			 * linux-2.6/Documentation/networking/packet_mmap.txt
4535			 * documenting that:
4536			 * "- Gap, chosen so that packet data (Start+tp_net)
4537			 * aligns to TPACKET_ALIGNMENT=16"
4538			 */
4539			/* NOTE: in linux-2.6/include/linux/skbuff.h:
4540			 * "CPUs often take a performance hit
4541			 *  when accessing unaligned memory locations"
4542			 */
4543		macoff = netoff - maclen;
4544		req.tp_frame_size = TPACKET_ALIGN(macoff + frame_size);
4545		/*
4546		 * Round the buffer size up to a multiple of the
4547		 * frame size (rather than rounding down, which
4548		 * would give a buffer smaller than our caller asked
4549		 * for, and possibly give zero frames if the requested
4550		 * buffer size is too small for one frame).
4551		 */
4552		req.tp_frame_nr = (handle->opt.buffer_size + req.tp_frame_size - 1)/req.tp_frame_size;
4553		break;
4554
4555#ifdef HAVE_TPACKET3
4556	case TPACKET_V3:
4557		/*
4558		 * If we have TPACKET_V3, we have PACKET_RESERVE.
4559		 */
4560		len = sizeof(tp_reserve);
4561		if (getsockopt(handle->fd, SOL_PACKET, PACKET_RESERVE,
4562		    &tp_reserve, &len) < 0) {
4563			/*
4564			 * Even ENOPROTOOPT is an error - we wouldn't
4565			 * be here if the kernel didn't support
4566			 * TPACKET_V3, which means it supports
4567			 * PACKET_RESERVE.
4568			 */
4569			pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(handle->errbuf,
4570			    PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE, errno,
4571			    "getsockopt (PACKET_RESERVE)");
4572			*status = PCAP_ERROR;
4573			return -1;
4574		}
4575		/*
4576		 * We can reserve extra space for a DLT_LINUX_SLL2
4577		 * header.  Do so.
4578		 *
4579		 * XXX - we assume that the kernel is still adding
4580		 * 16 bytes of extra space; that happens to
4581		 * correspond to SLL_HDR_LEN (whether intentionally
4582		 * or not - the kernel code has a raw "16" in
4583		 * the expression), so we subtract SLL_HDR_LEN
4584		 * from SLL2_HDR_LEN to get the additional space
4585		 * needed.
4586		 *
4587		 * XXX - should we use TPACKET_ALIGN(SLL2_HDR_LEN - SLL_HDR_LEN)?
4588		 */
4589		tp_reserve += SLL2_HDR_LEN - SLL_HDR_LEN;
4590		len = sizeof(tp_reserve);
4591		if (setsockopt(handle->fd, SOL_PACKET, PACKET_RESERVE,
4592                    &tp_reserve, len) < 0) {
4593			pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(handle->errbuf,
4594			    PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE, errno,
4595			    "setsockopt (PACKET_RESERVE)");
4596			*status = PCAP_ERROR;
4597			return -1;
4598		}
4599
4600		/* The "frames" for this are actually buffers that
4601		 * contain multiple variable-sized frames.
4602		 *
4603		 * We pick a "frame" size of MAXIMUM_SNAPLEN to leave
4604		 * enough room for at least one reasonably-sized packet
4605		 * in the "frame". */
4606		req.tp_frame_size = MAXIMUM_SNAPLEN;
4607		/*
4608		 * Round the buffer size up to a multiple of the
4609		 * "frame" size (rather than rounding down, which
4610		 * would give a buffer smaller than our caller asked
4611		 * for, and possibly give zero "frames" if the requested
4612		 * buffer size is too small for one "frame").
4613		 */
4614		req.tp_frame_nr = (handle->opt.buffer_size + req.tp_frame_size - 1)/req.tp_frame_size;
4615		break;
4616#endif
4617	default:
4618		pcap_snprintf(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
4619		    "Internal error: unknown TPACKET_ value %u",
4620		    handlep->tp_version);
4621		*status = PCAP_ERROR;
4622		return -1;
4623	}
4624
4625	/* compute the minumum block size that will handle this frame.
4626	 * The block has to be page size aligned.
4627	 * The max block size allowed by the kernel is arch-dependent and
4628	 * it's not explicitly checked here. */
4629	req.tp_block_size = getpagesize();
4630	while (req.tp_block_size < req.tp_frame_size)
4631		req.tp_block_size <<= 1;
4632
4633	frames_per_block = req.tp_block_size/req.tp_frame_size;
4634
4635	/*
4636	 * PACKET_TIMESTAMP was added after linux/net_tstamp.h was,
4637	 * so we check for PACKET_TIMESTAMP.  We check for
4638	 * linux/net_tstamp.h just in case a system somehow has
4639	 * PACKET_TIMESTAMP but not linux/net_tstamp.h; that might
4640	 * be unnecessary.
4641	 *
4642	 * SIOCSHWTSTAMP was introduced in the patch that introduced
4643	 * linux/net_tstamp.h, so we don't bother checking whether
4644	 * SIOCSHWTSTAMP is defined (if your Linux system has
4645	 * linux/net_tstamp.h but doesn't define SIOCSHWTSTAMP, your
4646	 * Linux system is badly broken).
4647	 */
4648#if defined(HAVE_LINUX_NET_TSTAMP_H) && defined(PACKET_TIMESTAMP)
4649	/*
4650	 * If we were told to do so, ask the kernel and the driver
4651	 * to use hardware timestamps.
4652	 *
4653	 * Hardware timestamps are only supported with mmapped
4654	 * captures.
4655	 */
4656	if (handle->opt.tstamp_type == PCAP_TSTAMP_ADAPTER ||
4657	    handle->opt.tstamp_type == PCAP_TSTAMP_ADAPTER_UNSYNCED) {
4658		struct hwtstamp_config hwconfig;
4659		struct ifreq ifr;
4660		int timesource;
4661
4662		/*
4663		 * Ask for hardware time stamps on all packets,
4664		 * including transmitted packets.
4665		 */
4666		memset(&hwconfig, 0, sizeof(hwconfig));
4667		hwconfig.tx_type = HWTSTAMP_TX_ON;
4668		hwconfig.rx_filter = HWTSTAMP_FILTER_ALL;
4669
4670		memset(&ifr, 0, sizeof(ifr));
4671		pcap_strlcpy(ifr.ifr_name, handle->opt.device, sizeof(ifr.ifr_name));
4672		ifr.ifr_data = (void *)&hwconfig;
4673
4674		if (ioctl(handle->fd, SIOCSHWTSTAMP, &ifr) < 0) {
4675			switch (errno) {
4676
4677			case EPERM:
4678				/*
4679				 * Treat this as an error, as the
4680				 * user should try to run this
4681				 * with the appropriate privileges -
4682				 * and, if they can't, shouldn't
4683				 * try requesting hardware time stamps.
4684				 */
4685				*status = PCAP_ERROR_PERM_DENIED;
4686				return -1;
4687
4688			case EOPNOTSUPP:
4689			case ERANGE:
4690				/*
4691				 * Treat this as a warning, as the
4692				 * only way to fix the warning is to
4693				 * get an adapter that supports hardware
4694				 * time stamps for *all* packets.
4695				 * (ERANGE means "we support hardware
4696				 * time stamps, but for packets matching
4697				 * that particular filter", so it means
4698				 * "we don't support hardware time stamps
4699				 * for all incoming packets" here.)
4700				 *
4701				 * We'll just fall back on the standard
4702				 * host time stamps.
4703				 */
4704				*status = PCAP_WARNING_TSTAMP_TYPE_NOTSUP;
4705				break;
4706
4707			default:
4708				pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(handle->errbuf,
4709				    PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE, errno,
4710				    "SIOCSHWTSTAMP failed");
4711				*status = PCAP_ERROR;
4712				return -1;
4713			}
4714		} else {
4715			/*
4716			 * Well, that worked.  Now specify the type of
4717			 * hardware time stamp we want for this
4718			 * socket.
4719			 */
4720			if (handle->opt.tstamp_type == PCAP_TSTAMP_ADAPTER) {
4721				/*
4722				 * Hardware timestamp, synchronized
4723				 * with the system clock.
4724				 */
4725				timesource = SOF_TIMESTAMPING_SYS_HARDWARE;
4726			} else {
4727				/*
4728				 * PCAP_TSTAMP_ADAPTER_UNSYNCED - hardware
4729				 * timestamp, not synchronized with the
4730				 * system clock.
4731				 */
4732				timesource = SOF_TIMESTAMPING_RAW_HARDWARE;
4733			}
4734			if (setsockopt(handle->fd, SOL_PACKET, PACKET_TIMESTAMP,
4735				(void *)&timesource, sizeof(timesource))) {
4736				pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(handle->errbuf,
4737				    PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE, errno,
4738				    "can't set PACKET_TIMESTAMP");
4739				*status = PCAP_ERROR;
4740				return -1;
4741			}
4742		}
4743	}
4744#endif /* HAVE_LINUX_NET_TSTAMP_H && PACKET_TIMESTAMP */
4745
4746	/* ask the kernel to create the ring */
4747retry:
4748	req.tp_block_nr = req.tp_frame_nr / frames_per_block;
4749
4750	/* req.tp_frame_nr is requested to match frames_per_block*req.tp_block_nr */
4751	req.tp_frame_nr = req.tp_block_nr * frames_per_block;
4752
4753#ifdef HAVE_TPACKET3
4754	/* timeout value to retire block - use the configured buffering timeout, or default if <0. */
4755	if (handlep->timeout > 0) {
4756		/* Use the user specified timeout as the block timeout */
4757		req.tp_retire_blk_tov = handlep->timeout;
4758	} else if (handlep->timeout == 0) {
4759		/*
4760		 * In pcap, this means "infinite timeout"; TPACKET_V3
4761		 * doesn't support that, so just set it to UINT_MAX
4762		 * milliseconds.  In the TPACKET_V3 loop, if the
4763		 * timeout is 0, and we haven't yet seen any packets,
4764		 * and we block and still don't have any packets, we
4765		 * keep blocking until we do.
4766		 */
4767		req.tp_retire_blk_tov = UINT_MAX;
4768	} else {
4769		/*
4770		 * XXX - this is not valid; use 0, meaning "have the
4771		 * kernel pick a default", for now.
4772		 */
4773		req.tp_retire_blk_tov = 0;
4774	}
4775	/* private data not used */
4776	req.tp_sizeof_priv = 0;
4777	/* Rx ring - feature request bits - none (rxhash will not be filled) */
4778	req.tp_feature_req_word = 0;
4779#endif
4780
4781	if (setsockopt(handle->fd, SOL_PACKET, PACKET_RX_RING,
4782					(void *) &req, sizeof(req))) {
4783		if ((errno == ENOMEM) && (req.tp_block_nr > 1)) {
4784			/*
4785			 * Memory failure; try to reduce the requested ring
4786			 * size.
4787			 *
4788			 * We used to reduce this by half -- do 5% instead.
4789			 * That may result in more iterations and a longer
4790			 * startup, but the user will be much happier with
4791			 * the resulting buffer size.
4792			 */
4793			if (req.tp_frame_nr < 20)
4794				req.tp_frame_nr -= 1;
4795			else
4796				req.tp_frame_nr -= req.tp_frame_nr/20;
4797			goto retry;
4798		}
4799		if (errno == ENOPROTOOPT) {
4800			/*
4801			 * We don't have ring buffer support in this kernel.
4802			 */
4803			return 0;
4804		}
4805		pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
4806		    errno, "can't create rx ring on packet socket");
4807		*status = PCAP_ERROR;
4808		return -1;
4809	}
4810
4811	/* memory map the rx ring */
4812	handlep->mmapbuflen = req.tp_block_nr * req.tp_block_size;
4813	handlep->mmapbuf = mmap(0, handlep->mmapbuflen,
4814	    PROT_READ|PROT_WRITE, MAP_SHARED, handle->fd, 0);
4815	if (handlep->mmapbuf == MAP_FAILED) {
4816		pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
4817		    errno, "can't mmap rx ring");
4818
4819		/* clear the allocated ring on error*/
4820		destroy_ring(handle);
4821		*status = PCAP_ERROR;
4822		return -1;
4823	}
4824
4825	/* allocate a ring for each frame header pointer*/
4826	handle->cc = req.tp_frame_nr;
4827	handle->buffer = malloc(handle->cc * sizeof(union thdr *));
4828	if (!handle->buffer) {
4829		pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
4830		    errno, "can't allocate ring of frame headers");
4831
4832		destroy_ring(handle);
4833		*status = PCAP_ERROR;
4834		return -1;
4835	}
4836
4837	/* fill the header ring with proper frame ptr*/
4838	handle->offset = 0;
4839	for (i=0; i<req.tp_block_nr; ++i) {
4840		void *base = &handlep->mmapbuf[i*req.tp_block_size];
4841		for (j=0; j<frames_per_block; ++j, ++handle->offset) {
4842			RING_GET_CURRENT_FRAME(handle) = base;
4843			base += req.tp_frame_size;
4844		}
4845	}
4846
4847	handle->bufsize = req.tp_frame_size;
4848	handle->offset = 0;
4849	return 1;
4850}
4851
4852/* free all ring related resources*/
4853static void
4854destroy_ring(pcap_t *handle)
4855{
4856	struct pcap_linux *handlep = handle->priv;
4857
4858	/* tell the kernel to destroy the ring*/
4859	struct tpacket_req req;
4860	memset(&req, 0, sizeof(req));
4861	/* do not test for setsockopt failure, as we can't recover from any error */
4862	(void)setsockopt(handle->fd, SOL_PACKET, PACKET_RX_RING,
4863				(void *) &req, sizeof(req));
4864
4865	/* if ring is mapped, unmap it*/
4866	if (handlep->mmapbuf) {
4867		/* do not test for mmap failure, as we can't recover from any error */
4868		(void)munmap(handlep->mmapbuf, handlep->mmapbuflen);
4869		handlep->mmapbuf = NULL;
4870	}
4871}
4872
4873/*
4874 * Special one-shot callback, used for pcap_next() and pcap_next_ex(),
4875 * for Linux mmapped capture.
4876 *
4877 * The problem is that pcap_next() and pcap_next_ex() expect the packet
4878 * data handed to the callback to be valid after the callback returns,
4879 * but pcap_read_linux_mmap() has to release that packet as soon as
4880 * the callback returns (otherwise, the kernel thinks there's still
4881 * at least one unprocessed packet available in the ring, so a select()
4882 * will immediately return indicating that there's data to process), so,
4883 * in the callback, we have to make a copy of the packet.
4884 *
4885 * Yes, this means that, if the capture is using the ring buffer, using
4886 * pcap_next() or pcap_next_ex() requires more copies than using
4887 * pcap_loop() or pcap_dispatch().  If that bothers you, don't use
4888 * pcap_next() or pcap_next_ex().
4889 */
4890static void
4891pcap_oneshot_mmap(u_char *user, const struct pcap_pkthdr *h,
4892    const u_char *bytes)
4893{
4894	struct oneshot_userdata *sp = (struct oneshot_userdata *)user;
4895	pcap_t *handle = sp->pd;
4896	struct pcap_linux *handlep = handle->priv;
4897
4898	*sp->hdr = *h;
4899	memcpy(handlep->oneshot_buffer, bytes, h->caplen);
4900	*sp->pkt = handlep->oneshot_buffer;
4901}
4902
4903static void
4904pcap_cleanup_linux_mmap( pcap_t *handle )
4905{
4906	struct pcap_linux *handlep = handle->priv;
4907
4908	destroy_ring(handle);
4909	if (handlep->oneshot_buffer != NULL) {
4910		free(handlep->oneshot_buffer);
4911		handlep->oneshot_buffer = NULL;
4912	}
4913	pcap_cleanup_linux(handle);
4914}
4915
4916
4917static int
4918pcap_getnonblock_mmap(pcap_t *handle)
4919{
4920	struct pcap_linux *handlep = handle->priv;
4921
4922	/* use negative value of timeout to indicate non blocking ops */
4923	return (handlep->timeout<0);
4924}
4925
4926static int
4927pcap_setnonblock_mmap(pcap_t *handle, int nonblock)
4928{
4929	struct pcap_linux *handlep = handle->priv;
4930
4931	/*
4932	 * Set the file descriptor to non-blocking mode, as we use
4933	 * it for sending packets.
4934	 */
4935	if (pcap_setnonblock_fd(handle, nonblock) == -1)
4936		return -1;
4937
4938	/*
4939	 * Map each value to their corresponding negation to
4940	 * preserve the timeout value provided with pcap_set_timeout.
4941	 */
4942	if (nonblock) {
4943		if (handlep->timeout >= 0) {
4944			/*
4945			 * Indicate that we're switching to
4946			 * non-blocking mode.
4947			 */
4948			handlep->timeout = ~handlep->timeout;
4949		}
4950	} else {
4951		if (handlep->timeout < 0) {
4952			handlep->timeout = ~handlep->timeout;
4953		}
4954	}
4955	/* Update the timeout to use in poll(). */
4956	set_poll_timeout(handlep);
4957	return 0;
4958}
4959
4960/*
4961 * Get the status field of the ring buffer frame at a specified offset.
4962 */
4963static inline int
4964pcap_get_ring_frame_status(pcap_t *handle, int offset)
4965{
4966	struct pcap_linux *handlep = handle->priv;
4967	union thdr h;
4968
4969	h.raw = RING_GET_FRAME_AT(handle, offset);
4970	switch (handlep->tp_version) {
4971	case TPACKET_V1:
4972		return (h.h1->tp_status);
4973		break;
4974	case TPACKET_V1_64:
4975		return (h.h1_64->tp_status);
4976		break;
4977#ifdef HAVE_TPACKET2
4978	case TPACKET_V2:
4979		return (h.h2->tp_status);
4980		break;
4981#endif
4982#ifdef HAVE_TPACKET3
4983	case TPACKET_V3:
4984		return (h.h3->hdr.bh1.block_status);
4985		break;
4986#endif
4987	}
4988	/* This should not happen. */
4989	return 0;
4990}
4991
4992#ifndef POLLRDHUP
4993#define POLLRDHUP 0
4994#endif
4995
4996/*
4997 * Block waiting for frames to be available.
4998 */
4999static int pcap_wait_for_frames_mmap(pcap_t *handle)
5000{
5001	struct pcap_linux *handlep = handle->priv;
5002	char c;
5003	struct pollfd pollinfo;
5004	int ret;
5005
5006	pollinfo.fd = handle->fd;
5007	pollinfo.events = POLLIN;
5008
5009	do {
5010		/*
5011		 * Yes, we do this even in non-blocking mode, as it's
5012		 * the only way to get error indications from a
5013		 * tpacket socket.
5014		 *
5015		 * The timeout is 0 in non-blocking mode, so poll()
5016		 * returns immediately.
5017		 */
5018		ret = poll(&pollinfo, 1, handlep->poll_timeout);
5019		if (ret < 0 && errno != EINTR) {
5020			pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(handle->errbuf,
5021			    PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE, errno,
5022			    "can't poll on packet socket");
5023			return PCAP_ERROR;
5024		} else if (ret > 0 &&
5025			(pollinfo.revents & (POLLHUP|POLLRDHUP|POLLERR|POLLNVAL))) {
5026			/*
5027			 * There's some indication other than
5028			 * "you can read on this descriptor" on
5029			 * the descriptor.
5030			 */
5031			if (pollinfo.revents & (POLLHUP | POLLRDHUP)) {
5032				pcap_snprintf(handle->errbuf,
5033					PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
5034					"Hangup on packet socket");
5035				return PCAP_ERROR;
5036			}
5037			if (pollinfo.revents & POLLERR) {
5038				/*
5039				 * A recv() will give us the actual error code.
5040				 *
5041				 * XXX - make the socket non-blocking?
5042				 */
5043				if (recv(handle->fd, &c, sizeof c,
5044					MSG_PEEK) != -1)
5045					continue;	/* what, no error? */
5046				if (errno == ENETDOWN) {
5047					/*
5048					 * The device on which we're
5049					 * capturing went away.
5050					 *
5051					 * XXX - we should really return
5052					 * PCAP_ERROR_IFACE_NOT_UP, but
5053					 * pcap_dispatch() etc. aren't
5054					 * defined to return that.
5055					 */
5056					pcap_snprintf(handle->errbuf,
5057						PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
5058						"The interface went down");
5059				} else {
5060					pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(handle->errbuf,
5061					    PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE, errno,
5062					    "Error condition on packet socket");
5063				}
5064				return PCAP_ERROR;
5065			}
5066			if (pollinfo.revents & POLLNVAL) {
5067				pcap_snprintf(handle->errbuf,
5068					PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
5069					"Invalid polling request on packet socket");
5070				return PCAP_ERROR;
5071			}
5072		}
5073		/* check for break loop condition on interrupted syscall*/
5074		if (handle->break_loop) {
5075			handle->break_loop = 0;
5076			return PCAP_ERROR_BREAK;
5077		}
5078	} while (ret < 0);
5079	return 0;
5080}
5081
5082/* handle a single memory mapped packet */
5083static int pcap_handle_packet_mmap(
5084		pcap_t *handle,
5085		pcap_handler callback,
5086		u_char *user,
5087		unsigned char *frame,
5088		unsigned int tp_len,
5089		unsigned int tp_mac,
5090		unsigned int tp_snaplen,
5091		unsigned int tp_sec,
5092		unsigned int tp_usec,
5093		int tp_vlan_tci_valid,
5094		__u16 tp_vlan_tci,
5095		__u16 tp_vlan_tpid)
5096{
5097	struct pcap_linux *handlep = handle->priv;
5098	unsigned char *bp;
5099	struct sockaddr_ll *sll;
5100	struct pcap_pkthdr pcaphdr;
5101	unsigned int snaplen = tp_snaplen;
5102	struct utsname utsname;
5103
5104	/* perform sanity check on internal offset. */
5105	if (tp_mac + tp_snaplen > handle->bufsize) {
5106		/*
5107		 * Report some system information as a debugging aid.
5108		 */
5109		if (uname(&utsname) != -1) {
5110			pcap_snprintf(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
5111				"corrupted frame on kernel ring mac "
5112				"offset %u + caplen %u > frame len %d "
5113				"(kernel %.32s version %s, machine %.16s)",
5114				tp_mac, tp_snaplen, handle->bufsize,
5115				utsname.release, utsname.version,
5116				utsname.machine);
5117		} else {
5118			pcap_snprintf(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
5119				"corrupted frame on kernel ring mac "
5120				"offset %u + caplen %u > frame len %d",
5121				tp_mac, tp_snaplen, handle->bufsize);
5122		}
5123		return -1;
5124	}
5125
5126	/* run filter on received packet
5127	 * If the kernel filtering is enabled we need to run the
5128	 * filter until all the frames present into the ring
5129	 * at filter creation time are processed.
5130	 * In this case, blocks_to_filter_in_userland is used
5131	 * as a counter for the packet we need to filter.
5132	 * Note: alternatively it could be possible to stop applying
5133	 * the filter when the ring became empty, but it can possibly
5134	 * happen a lot later... */
5135	bp = frame + tp_mac;
5136
5137	/* if required build in place the sll header*/
5138	sll = (void *)frame + TPACKET_ALIGN(handlep->tp_hdrlen);
5139	if (handlep->cooked) {
5140		if (handle->linktype == DLT_LINUX_SLL2) {
5141			struct sll2_header *hdrp;
5142
5143			/*
5144			 * The kernel should have left us with enough
5145			 * space for an sll header; back up the packet
5146			 * data pointer into that space, as that'll be
5147			 * the beginning of the packet we pass to the
5148			 * callback.
5149			 */
5150			bp -= SLL2_HDR_LEN;
5151
5152			/*
5153			 * Let's make sure that's past the end of
5154			 * the tpacket header, i.e. >=
5155			 * ((u_char *)thdr + TPACKET_HDRLEN), so we
5156			 * don't step on the header when we construct
5157			 * the sll header.
5158			 */
5159			if (bp < (u_char *)frame +
5160					   TPACKET_ALIGN(handlep->tp_hdrlen) +
5161					   sizeof(struct sockaddr_ll)) {
5162				pcap_snprintf(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
5163					"cooked-mode frame doesn't have room for sll header");
5164				return -1;
5165			}
5166
5167			/*
5168			 * OK, that worked; construct the sll header.
5169			 */
5170			hdrp = (struct sll2_header *)bp;
5171			hdrp->sll2_protocol = sll->sll_protocol;
5172			hdrp->sll2_reserved_mbz = 0;
5173			hdrp->sll2_if_index = htonl(sll->sll_ifindex);
5174			hdrp->sll2_hatype = htons(sll->sll_hatype);
5175			hdrp->sll2_pkttype = sll->sll_pkttype;
5176			hdrp->sll2_halen = sll->sll_halen;
5177			memcpy(hdrp->sll2_addr, sll->sll_addr, SLL_ADDRLEN);
5178
5179			snaplen += sizeof(struct sll2_header);
5180		} else {
5181			struct sll_header *hdrp;
5182
5183			/*
5184			 * The kernel should have left us with enough
5185			 * space for an sll header; back up the packet
5186			 * data pointer into that space, as that'll be
5187			 * the beginning of the packet we pass to the
5188			 * callback.
5189			 */
5190			bp -= SLL_HDR_LEN;
5191
5192			/*
5193			 * Let's make sure that's past the end of
5194			 * the tpacket header, i.e. >=
5195			 * ((u_char *)thdr + TPACKET_HDRLEN), so we
5196			 * don't step on the header when we construct
5197			 * the sll header.
5198			 */
5199			if (bp < (u_char *)frame +
5200					   TPACKET_ALIGN(handlep->tp_hdrlen) +
5201					   sizeof(struct sockaddr_ll)) {
5202				pcap_snprintf(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
5203					"cooked-mode frame doesn't have room for sll header");
5204				return -1;
5205			}
5206
5207			/*
5208			 * OK, that worked; construct the sll header.
5209			 */
5210			hdrp = (struct sll_header *)bp;
5211			hdrp->sll_pkttype = htons(sll->sll_pkttype);
5212			hdrp->sll_hatype = htons(sll->sll_hatype);
5213			hdrp->sll_halen = htons(sll->sll_halen);
5214			memcpy(hdrp->sll_addr, sll->sll_addr, SLL_ADDRLEN);
5215			hdrp->sll_protocol = sll->sll_protocol;
5216
5217			snaplen += sizeof(struct sll_header);
5218		}
5219	}
5220
5221	if (handlep->filter_in_userland && handle->fcode.bf_insns) {
5222		struct bpf_aux_data aux_data;
5223
5224		aux_data.vlan_tag_present = tp_vlan_tci_valid;
5225		aux_data.vlan_tag = tp_vlan_tci & 0x0fff;
5226
5227		if (bpf_filter_with_aux_data(handle->fcode.bf_insns,
5228					     bp,
5229					     tp_len,
5230					     snaplen,
5231					     &aux_data) == 0)
5232			return 0;
5233	}
5234
5235	if (!linux_check_direction(handle, sll))
5236		return 0;
5237
5238	/* get required packet info from ring header */
5239	pcaphdr.ts.tv_sec = tp_sec;
5240	pcaphdr.ts.tv_usec = tp_usec;
5241	pcaphdr.caplen = tp_snaplen;
5242	pcaphdr.len = tp_len;
5243
5244	/* if required build in place the sll header*/
5245	if (handlep->cooked) {
5246		/* update packet len */
5247		if (handle->linktype == DLT_LINUX_SLL2) {
5248			pcaphdr.caplen += SLL2_HDR_LEN;
5249			pcaphdr.len += SLL2_HDR_LEN;
5250		} else {
5251			pcaphdr.caplen += SLL_HDR_LEN;
5252			pcaphdr.len += SLL_HDR_LEN;
5253		}
5254	}
5255
5256#if defined(HAVE_TPACKET2) || defined(HAVE_TPACKET3)
5257	if (tp_vlan_tci_valid &&
5258		handlep->vlan_offset != -1 &&
5259		tp_snaplen >= (unsigned int) handlep->vlan_offset)
5260	{
5261		struct vlan_tag *tag;
5262
5263		/*
5264		 * Move everything in the header, except the type field,
5265		 * down VLAN_TAG_LEN bytes, to allow us to insert the
5266		 * VLAN tag between that stuff and the type field.
5267		 */
5268		bp -= VLAN_TAG_LEN;
5269		memmove(bp, bp + VLAN_TAG_LEN, handlep->vlan_offset);
5270
5271		/*
5272		 * Now insert the tag.
5273		 */
5274		tag = (struct vlan_tag *)(bp + handlep->vlan_offset);
5275		tag->vlan_tpid = htons(tp_vlan_tpid);
5276		tag->vlan_tci = htons(tp_vlan_tci);
5277
5278		/*
5279		 * Add the tag to the packet lengths.
5280		 */
5281		pcaphdr.caplen += VLAN_TAG_LEN;
5282		pcaphdr.len += VLAN_TAG_LEN;
5283	}
5284#endif
5285
5286	/*
5287	 * The only way to tell the kernel to cut off the
5288	 * packet at a snapshot length is with a filter program;
5289	 * if there's no filter program, the kernel won't cut
5290	 * the packet off.
5291	 *
5292	 * Trim the snapshot length to be no longer than the
5293	 * specified snapshot length.
5294	 */
5295	if (pcaphdr.caplen > (bpf_u_int32)handle->snapshot)
5296		pcaphdr.caplen = handle->snapshot;
5297
5298	/* pass the packet to the user */
5299	callback(user, &pcaphdr, bp);
5300
5301	return 1;
5302}
5303
5304static int
5305pcap_read_linux_mmap_v1(pcap_t *handle, int max_packets, pcap_handler callback,
5306		u_char *user)
5307{
5308	struct pcap_linux *handlep = handle->priv;
5309	union thdr h;
5310	int pkts = 0;
5311	int ret;
5312
5313	/* wait for frames availability.*/
5314	h.raw = RING_GET_CURRENT_FRAME(handle);
5315	if (h.h1->tp_status == TP_STATUS_KERNEL) {
5316		/*
5317		 * The current frame is owned by the kernel; wait for
5318		 * a frame to be handed to us.
5319		 */
5320		ret = pcap_wait_for_frames_mmap(handle);
5321		if (ret) {
5322			return ret;
5323		}
5324	}
5325
5326	/* non-positive values of max_packets are used to require all
5327	 * packets currently available in the ring */
5328	while ((pkts < max_packets) || PACKET_COUNT_IS_UNLIMITED(max_packets)) {
5329		/*
5330		 * Get the current ring buffer frame, and break if
5331		 * it's still owned by the kernel.
5332		 */
5333		h.raw = RING_GET_CURRENT_FRAME(handle);
5334		if (h.h1->tp_status == TP_STATUS_KERNEL)
5335			break;
5336
5337		ret = pcap_handle_packet_mmap(
5338				handle,
5339				callback,
5340				user,
5341				h.raw,
5342				h.h1->tp_len,
5343				h.h1->tp_mac,
5344				h.h1->tp_snaplen,
5345				h.h1->tp_sec,
5346				h.h1->tp_usec,
5347				0,
5348				0,
5349				0);
5350		if (ret == 1) {
5351			pkts++;
5352			handlep->packets_read++;
5353		} else if (ret < 0) {
5354			return ret;
5355		}
5356
5357		/*
5358		 * Hand this block back to the kernel, and, if we're
5359		 * counting blocks that need to be filtered in userland
5360		 * after having been filtered by the kernel, count
5361		 * the one we've just processed.
5362		 */
5363		h.h1->tp_status = TP_STATUS_KERNEL;
5364		if (handlep->blocks_to_filter_in_userland > 0) {
5365			handlep->blocks_to_filter_in_userland--;
5366			if (handlep->blocks_to_filter_in_userland == 0) {
5367				/*
5368				 * No more blocks need to be filtered
5369				 * in userland.
5370				 */
5371				handlep->filter_in_userland = 0;
5372			}
5373		}
5374
5375		/* next block */
5376		if (++handle->offset >= handle->cc)
5377			handle->offset = 0;
5378
5379		/* check for break loop condition*/
5380		if (handle->break_loop) {
5381			handle->break_loop = 0;
5382			return PCAP_ERROR_BREAK;
5383		}
5384	}
5385	return pkts;
5386}
5387
5388static int
5389pcap_read_linux_mmap_v1_64(pcap_t *handle, int max_packets, pcap_handler callback,
5390		u_char *user)
5391{
5392	struct pcap_linux *handlep = handle->priv;
5393	union thdr h;
5394	int pkts = 0;
5395	int ret;
5396
5397	/* wait for frames availability.*/
5398	h.raw = RING_GET_CURRENT_FRAME(handle);
5399	if (h.h1_64->tp_status == TP_STATUS_KERNEL) {
5400		/*
5401		 * The current frame is owned by the kernel; wait for
5402		 * a frame to be handed to us.
5403		 */
5404		ret = pcap_wait_for_frames_mmap(handle);
5405		if (ret) {
5406			return ret;
5407		}
5408	}
5409
5410	/* non-positive values of max_packets are used to require all
5411	 * packets currently available in the ring */
5412	while ((pkts < max_packets) || PACKET_COUNT_IS_UNLIMITED(max_packets)) {
5413		/*
5414		 * Get the current ring buffer frame, and break if
5415		 * it's still owned by the kernel.
5416		 */
5417		h.raw = RING_GET_CURRENT_FRAME(handle);
5418		if (h.h1_64->tp_status == TP_STATUS_KERNEL)
5419			break;
5420
5421		ret = pcap_handle_packet_mmap(
5422				handle,
5423				callback,
5424				user,
5425				h.raw,
5426				h.h1_64->tp_len,
5427				h.h1_64->tp_mac,
5428				h.h1_64->tp_snaplen,
5429				h.h1_64->tp_sec,
5430				h.h1_64->tp_usec,
5431				0,
5432				0,
5433				0);
5434		if (ret == 1) {
5435			pkts++;
5436			handlep->packets_read++;
5437		} else if (ret < 0) {
5438			return ret;
5439		}
5440
5441		/*
5442		 * Hand this block back to the kernel, and, if we're
5443		 * counting blocks that need to be filtered in userland
5444		 * after having been filtered by the kernel, count
5445		 * the one we've just processed.
5446		 */
5447		h.h1_64->tp_status = TP_STATUS_KERNEL;
5448		if (handlep->blocks_to_filter_in_userland > 0) {
5449			handlep->blocks_to_filter_in_userland--;
5450			if (handlep->blocks_to_filter_in_userland == 0) {
5451				/*
5452				 * No more blocks need to be filtered
5453				 * in userland.
5454				 */
5455				handlep->filter_in_userland = 0;
5456			}
5457		}
5458
5459		/* next block */
5460		if (++handle->offset >= handle->cc)
5461			handle->offset = 0;
5462
5463		/* check for break loop condition*/
5464		if (handle->break_loop) {
5465			handle->break_loop = 0;
5466			return PCAP_ERROR_BREAK;
5467		}
5468	}
5469	return pkts;
5470}
5471
5472#ifdef HAVE_TPACKET2
5473static int
5474pcap_read_linux_mmap_v2(pcap_t *handle, int max_packets, pcap_handler callback,
5475		u_char *user)
5476{
5477	struct pcap_linux *handlep = handle->priv;
5478	union thdr h;
5479	int pkts = 0;
5480	int ret;
5481
5482	/* wait for frames availability.*/
5483	h.raw = RING_GET_CURRENT_FRAME(handle);
5484	if (h.h2->tp_status == TP_STATUS_KERNEL) {
5485		/*
5486		 * The current frame is owned by the kernel; wait for
5487		 * a frame to be handed to us.
5488		 */
5489		ret = pcap_wait_for_frames_mmap(handle);
5490		if (ret) {
5491			return ret;
5492		}
5493	}
5494
5495	/* non-positive values of max_packets are used to require all
5496	 * packets currently available in the ring */
5497	while ((pkts < max_packets) || PACKET_COUNT_IS_UNLIMITED(max_packets)) {
5498		/*
5499		 * Get the current ring buffer frame, and break if
5500		 * it's still owned by the kernel.
5501		 */
5502		h.raw = RING_GET_CURRENT_FRAME(handle);
5503		if (h.h2->tp_status == TP_STATUS_KERNEL)
5504			break;
5505
5506		ret = pcap_handle_packet_mmap(
5507				handle,
5508				callback,
5509				user,
5510				h.raw,
5511				h.h2->tp_len,
5512				h.h2->tp_mac,
5513				h.h2->tp_snaplen,
5514				h.h2->tp_sec,
5515				handle->opt.tstamp_precision == PCAP_TSTAMP_PRECISION_NANO ? h.h2->tp_nsec : h.h2->tp_nsec / 1000,
5516				VLAN_VALID(h.h2, h.h2),
5517				h.h2->tp_vlan_tci,
5518				VLAN_TPID(h.h2, h.h2));
5519		if (ret == 1) {
5520			pkts++;
5521			handlep->packets_read++;
5522		} else if (ret < 0) {
5523			return ret;
5524		}
5525
5526		/*
5527		 * Hand this block back to the kernel, and, if we're
5528		 * counting blocks that need to be filtered in userland
5529		 * after having been filtered by the kernel, count
5530		 * the one we've just processed.
5531		 */
5532		h.h2->tp_status = TP_STATUS_KERNEL;
5533		if (handlep->blocks_to_filter_in_userland > 0) {
5534			handlep->blocks_to_filter_in_userland--;
5535			if (handlep->blocks_to_filter_in_userland == 0) {
5536				/*
5537				 * No more blocks need to be filtered
5538				 * in userland.
5539				 */
5540				handlep->filter_in_userland = 0;
5541			}
5542		}
5543
5544		/* next block */
5545		if (++handle->offset >= handle->cc)
5546			handle->offset = 0;
5547
5548		/* check for break loop condition*/
5549		if (handle->break_loop) {
5550			handle->break_loop = 0;
5551			return PCAP_ERROR_BREAK;
5552		}
5553	}
5554	return pkts;
5555}
5556#endif /* HAVE_TPACKET2 */
5557
5558#ifdef HAVE_TPACKET3
5559static int
5560pcap_read_linux_mmap_v3(pcap_t *handle, int max_packets, pcap_handler callback,
5561		u_char *user)
5562{
5563	struct pcap_linux *handlep = handle->priv;
5564	union thdr h;
5565	int pkts = 0;
5566	int ret;
5567
5568again:
5569	if (handlep->current_packet == NULL) {
5570		/* wait for frames availability.*/
5571		h.raw = RING_GET_CURRENT_FRAME(handle);
5572		if (h.h3->hdr.bh1.block_status == TP_STATUS_KERNEL) {
5573			/*
5574			 * The current frame is owned by the kernel; wait
5575			 * for a frame to be handed to us.
5576			 */
5577			ret = pcap_wait_for_frames_mmap(handle);
5578			if (ret) {
5579				return ret;
5580			}
5581		}
5582	}
5583	h.raw = RING_GET_CURRENT_FRAME(handle);
5584	if (h.h3->hdr.bh1.block_status == TP_STATUS_KERNEL) {
5585		if (pkts == 0 && handlep->timeout == 0) {
5586			/* Block until we see a packet. */
5587			goto again;
5588		}
5589		return pkts;
5590	}
5591
5592	/* non-positive values of max_packets are used to require all
5593	 * packets currently available in the ring */
5594	while ((pkts < max_packets) || PACKET_COUNT_IS_UNLIMITED(max_packets)) {
5595		int packets_to_read;
5596
5597		if (handlep->current_packet == NULL) {
5598			h.raw = RING_GET_CURRENT_FRAME(handle);
5599			if (h.h3->hdr.bh1.block_status == TP_STATUS_KERNEL)
5600				break;
5601
5602			handlep->current_packet = h.raw + h.h3->hdr.bh1.offset_to_first_pkt;
5603			handlep->packets_left = h.h3->hdr.bh1.num_pkts;
5604		}
5605		packets_to_read = handlep->packets_left;
5606
5607		if (!PACKET_COUNT_IS_UNLIMITED(max_packets) &&
5608		    packets_to_read > (max_packets - pkts)) {
5609			/*
5610			 * We've been given a maximum number of packets
5611			 * to process, and there are more packets in
5612			 * this buffer than that.  Only process enough
5613			 * of them to get us up to that maximum.
5614			 */
5615			packets_to_read = max_packets - pkts;
5616		}
5617
5618		while (packets_to_read-- && !handle->break_loop) {
5619			struct tpacket3_hdr* tp3_hdr = (struct tpacket3_hdr*) handlep->current_packet;
5620			ret = pcap_handle_packet_mmap(
5621					handle,
5622					callback,
5623					user,
5624					handlep->current_packet,
5625					tp3_hdr->tp_len,
5626					tp3_hdr->tp_mac,
5627					tp3_hdr->tp_snaplen,
5628					tp3_hdr->tp_sec,
5629					handle->opt.tstamp_precision == PCAP_TSTAMP_PRECISION_NANO ? tp3_hdr->tp_nsec : tp3_hdr->tp_nsec / 1000,
5630					VLAN_VALID(tp3_hdr, &tp3_hdr->hv1),
5631					tp3_hdr->hv1.tp_vlan_tci,
5632					VLAN_TPID(tp3_hdr, &tp3_hdr->hv1));
5633			if (ret == 1) {
5634				pkts++;
5635				handlep->packets_read++;
5636			} else if (ret < 0) {
5637				handlep->current_packet = NULL;
5638				return ret;
5639			}
5640			handlep->current_packet += tp3_hdr->tp_next_offset;
5641			handlep->packets_left--;
5642		}
5643
5644		if (handlep->packets_left <= 0) {
5645			/*
5646			 * Hand this block back to the kernel, and, if
5647			 * we're counting blocks that need to be
5648			 * filtered in userland after having been
5649			 * filtered by the kernel, count the one we've
5650			 * just processed.
5651			 */
5652			h.h3->hdr.bh1.block_status = TP_STATUS_KERNEL;
5653			if (handlep->blocks_to_filter_in_userland > 0) {
5654				handlep->blocks_to_filter_in_userland--;
5655				if (handlep->blocks_to_filter_in_userland == 0) {
5656					/*
5657					 * No more blocks need to be filtered
5658					 * in userland.
5659					 */
5660					handlep->filter_in_userland = 0;
5661				}
5662			}
5663
5664			/* next block */
5665			if (++handle->offset >= handle->cc)
5666				handle->offset = 0;
5667
5668			handlep->current_packet = NULL;
5669		}
5670
5671		/* check for break loop condition*/
5672		if (handle->break_loop) {
5673			handle->break_loop = 0;
5674			return PCAP_ERROR_BREAK;
5675		}
5676	}
5677	if (pkts == 0 && handlep->timeout == 0) {
5678		/* Block until we see a packet. */
5679		goto again;
5680	}
5681	return pkts;
5682}
5683#endif /* HAVE_TPACKET3 */
5684
5685static int
5686pcap_setfilter_linux_mmap(pcap_t *handle, struct bpf_program *filter)
5687{
5688	struct pcap_linux *handlep = handle->priv;
5689	int n, offset;
5690	int ret;
5691
5692	/*
5693	 * Don't rewrite "ret" instructions; we don't need to, as
5694	 * we're not reading packets with recvmsg(), and we don't
5695	 * want to, as, by not rewriting them, the kernel can avoid
5696	 * copying extra data.
5697	 */
5698	ret = pcap_setfilter_linux_common(handle, filter, 1);
5699	if (ret < 0)
5700		return ret;
5701
5702	/*
5703	 * If we're filtering in userland, there's nothing to do;
5704	 * the new filter will be used for the next packet.
5705	 */
5706	if (handlep->filter_in_userland)
5707		return ret;
5708
5709	/*
5710	 * We're filtering in the kernel; the packets present in
5711	 * all blocks currently in the ring were already filtered
5712	 * by the old filter, and so will need to be filtered in
5713	 * userland by the new filter.
5714	 *
5715	 * Get an upper bound for the number of such blocks; first,
5716	 * walk the ring backward and count the free blocks.
5717	 */
5718	offset = handle->offset;
5719	if (--offset < 0)
5720		offset = handle->cc - 1;
5721	for (n=0; n < handle->cc; ++n) {
5722		if (--offset < 0)
5723			offset = handle->cc - 1;
5724		if (pcap_get_ring_frame_status(handle, offset) != TP_STATUS_KERNEL)
5725			break;
5726	}
5727
5728	/*
5729	 * If we found free blocks, decrement the count of free
5730	 * blocks by 1, just in case we lost a race with another
5731	 * thread of control that was adding a packet while
5732	 * we were counting and that had run the filter before
5733	 * we changed it.
5734	 *
5735	 * XXX - could there be more than one block added in
5736	 * this fashion?
5737	 *
5738	 * XXX - is there a way to avoid that race, e.g. somehow
5739	 * wait for all packets that passed the old filter to
5740	 * be added to the ring?
5741	 */
5742	if (n != 0)
5743		n--;
5744
5745	/*
5746	 * Set the count of blocks worth of packets to filter
5747	 * in userland to the total number of blocks in the
5748	 * ring minus the number of free blocks we found, and
5749	 * turn on userland filtering.  (The count of blocks
5750	 * worth of packets to filter in userland is guaranteed
5751	 * not to be zero - n, above, couldn't be set to a
5752	 * value > handle->cc, and if it were equal to
5753	 * handle->cc, it wouldn't be zero, and thus would
5754	 * be decremented to handle->cc - 1.)
5755	 */
5756	handlep->blocks_to_filter_in_userland = handle->cc - n;
5757	handlep->filter_in_userland = 1;
5758	return ret;
5759}
5760
5761#endif /* HAVE_PACKET_RING */
5762
5763
5764#ifdef HAVE_PF_PACKET_SOCKETS
5765/*
5766 *  Return the index of the given device name. Fill ebuf and return
5767 *  -1 on failure.
5768 */
5769static int
5770iface_get_id(int fd, const char *device, char *ebuf)
5771{
5772	struct ifreq	ifr;
5773
5774	memset(&ifr, 0, sizeof(ifr));
5775	pcap_strlcpy(ifr.ifr_name, device, sizeof(ifr.ifr_name));
5776
5777	if (ioctl(fd, SIOCGIFINDEX, &ifr) == -1) {
5778		pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(ebuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
5779		    errno, "SIOCGIFINDEX");
5780		return -1;
5781	}
5782
5783	return ifr.ifr_ifindex;
5784}
5785
5786/*
5787 *  Bind the socket associated with FD to the given device.
5788 *  Return 1 on success, 0 if we should try a SOCK_PACKET socket,
5789 *  or a PCAP_ERROR_ value on a hard error.
5790 */
5791static int
5792iface_bind(int fd, int ifindex, char *ebuf, int protocol)
5793{
5794	struct sockaddr_ll	sll;
5795	int			err;
5796	socklen_t		errlen = sizeof(err);
5797
5798	memset(&sll, 0, sizeof(sll));
5799	sll.sll_family		= AF_PACKET;
5800	sll.sll_ifindex		= ifindex;
5801	sll.sll_protocol	= protocol;
5802
5803	if (bind(fd, (struct sockaddr *) &sll, sizeof(sll)) == -1) {
5804		if (errno == ENETDOWN) {
5805			/*
5806			 * Return a "network down" indication, so that
5807			 * the application can report that rather than
5808			 * saying we had a mysterious failure and
5809			 * suggest that they report a problem to the
5810			 * libpcap developers.
5811			 */
5812			return PCAP_ERROR_IFACE_NOT_UP;
5813		} else {
5814			pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(ebuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
5815			    errno, "bind");
5816			return PCAP_ERROR;
5817		}
5818	}
5819
5820	/* Any pending errors, e.g., network is down? */
5821
5822	if (getsockopt(fd, SOL_SOCKET, SO_ERROR, &err, &errlen) == -1) {
5823		pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(ebuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
5824		    errno, "getsockopt (SO_ERROR)");
5825		return 0;
5826	}
5827
5828	if (err == ENETDOWN) {
5829		/*
5830		 * Return a "network down" indication, so that
5831		 * the application can report that rather than
5832		 * saying we had a mysterious failure and
5833		 * suggest that they report a problem to the
5834		 * libpcap developers.
5835		 */
5836		return PCAP_ERROR_IFACE_NOT_UP;
5837	} else if (err > 0) {
5838		pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(ebuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
5839		    err, "bind");
5840		return 0;
5841	}
5842
5843	return 1;
5844}
5845
5846#ifdef IW_MODE_MONITOR
5847/*
5848 * Check whether the device supports the Wireless Extensions.
5849 * Returns 1 if it does, 0 if it doesn't, PCAP_ERROR_NO_SUCH_DEVICE
5850 * if the device doesn't even exist.
5851 */
5852static int
5853has_wext(int sock_fd, const char *device, char *ebuf)
5854{
5855	struct iwreq ireq;
5856	int ret;
5857
5858	if (is_bonding_device(sock_fd, device))
5859		return 0;	/* bonding device, so don't even try */
5860
5861	pcap_strlcpy(ireq.ifr_ifrn.ifrn_name, device,
5862	    sizeof ireq.ifr_ifrn.ifrn_name);
5863	if (ioctl(sock_fd, SIOCGIWNAME, &ireq) >= 0)
5864		return 1;	/* yes */
5865	if (errno == ENODEV)
5866		ret = PCAP_ERROR_NO_SUCH_DEVICE;
5867	else
5868		ret = 0;
5869	pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(ebuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE, errno,
5870	    "%s: SIOCGIWNAME", device);
5871	return ret;
5872}
5873
5874/*
5875 * Per me si va ne la citta dolente,
5876 * Per me si va ne l'etterno dolore,
5877 *	...
5878 * Lasciate ogne speranza, voi ch'intrate.
5879 *
5880 * XXX - airmon-ng does special stuff with the Orinoco driver and the
5881 * wlan-ng driver.
5882 */
5883typedef enum {
5884	MONITOR_WEXT,
5885	MONITOR_HOSTAP,
5886	MONITOR_PRISM,
5887	MONITOR_PRISM54,
5888	MONITOR_ACX100,
5889	MONITOR_RT2500,
5890	MONITOR_RT2570,
5891	MONITOR_RT73,
5892	MONITOR_RTL8XXX
5893} monitor_type;
5894
5895/*
5896 * Use the Wireless Extensions, if we have them, to try to turn monitor mode
5897 * on if it's not already on.
5898 *
5899 * Returns 1 on success, 0 if we don't support the Wireless Extensions
5900 * on this device, or a PCAP_ERROR_ value if we do support them but
5901 * we weren't able to turn monitor mode on.
5902 */
5903static int
5904enter_rfmon_mode_wext(pcap_t *handle, int sock_fd, const char *device)
5905{
5906	/*
5907	 * XXX - at least some adapters require non-Wireless Extensions
5908	 * mechanisms to turn monitor mode on.
5909	 *
5910	 * Atheros cards might require that a separate "monitor virtual access
5911	 * point" be created, with later versions of the madwifi driver.
5912	 * airmon-ng does "wlanconfig ath create wlandev {if} wlanmode
5913	 * monitor -bssid", which apparently spits out a line "athN"
5914	 * where "athN" is the monitor mode device.  To leave monitor
5915	 * mode, it destroys the monitor mode device.
5916	 *
5917	 * Some Intel Centrino adapters might require private ioctls to get
5918	 * radio headers; the ipw2200 and ipw3945 drivers allow you to
5919	 * configure a separate "rtapN" interface to capture in monitor
5920	 * mode without preventing the adapter from operating normally.
5921	 * (airmon-ng doesn't appear to use that, though.)
5922	 *
5923	 * It would be Truly Wonderful if mac80211 and nl80211 cleaned this
5924	 * up, and if all drivers were converted to mac80211 drivers.
5925	 *
5926	 * If interface {if} is a mac80211 driver, the file
5927	 * /sys/class/net/{if}/phy80211 is a symlink to
5928	 * /sys/class/ieee80211/{phydev}, for some {phydev}.
5929	 *
5930	 * On Fedora 9, with a 2.6.26.3-29 kernel, my Zydas stick, at
5931	 * least, has a "wmaster0" device and a "wlan0" device; the
5932	 * latter is the one with the IP address.  Both show up in
5933	 * "tcpdump -D" output.  Capturing on the wmaster0 device
5934	 * captures with 802.11 headers.
5935	 *
5936	 * airmon-ng searches through /sys/class/net for devices named
5937	 * monN, starting with mon0; as soon as one *doesn't* exist,
5938	 * it chooses that as the monitor device name.  If the "iw"
5939	 * command exists, it does "iw dev {if} interface add {monif}
5940	 * type monitor", where {monif} is the monitor device.  It
5941	 * then (sigh) sleeps .1 second, and then configures the
5942	 * device up.  Otherwise, if /sys/class/ieee80211/{phydev}/add_iface
5943	 * is a file, it writes {mondev}, without a newline, to that file,
5944	 * and again (sigh) sleeps .1 second, and then iwconfig's that
5945	 * device into monitor mode and configures it up.  Otherwise,
5946	 * you can't do monitor mode.
5947	 *
5948	 * All these devices are "glued" together by having the
5949	 * /sys/class/net/{device}/phy80211 links pointing to the same
5950	 * place, so, given a wmaster, wlan, or mon device, you can
5951	 * find the other devices by looking for devices with
5952	 * the same phy80211 link.
5953	 *
5954	 * To turn monitor mode off, delete the monitor interface,
5955	 * either with "iw dev {monif} interface del" or by sending
5956	 * {monif}, with no NL, down /sys/class/ieee80211/{phydev}/remove_iface
5957	 *
5958	 * Note: if you try to create a monitor device named "monN", and
5959	 * there's already a "monN" device, it fails, as least with
5960	 * the netlink interface (which is what iw uses), with a return
5961	 * value of -ENFILE.  (Return values are negative errnos.)  We
5962	 * could probably use that to find an unused device.
5963	 */
5964	struct pcap_linux *handlep = handle->priv;
5965	int err;
5966	struct iwreq ireq;
5967	struct iw_priv_args *priv;
5968	monitor_type montype;
5969	int i;
5970	__u32 cmd;
5971	struct ifreq ifr;
5972	int oldflags;
5973	int args[2];
5974	int channel;
5975
5976	/*
5977	 * Does this device *support* the Wireless Extensions?
5978	 */
5979	err = has_wext(sock_fd, device, handle->errbuf);
5980	if (err <= 0)
5981		return err;	/* either it doesn't or the device doesn't even exist */
5982	/*
5983	 * Start out assuming we have no private extensions to control
5984	 * radio metadata.
5985	 */
5986	montype = MONITOR_WEXT;
5987	cmd = 0;
5988
5989	/*
5990	 * Try to get all the Wireless Extensions private ioctls
5991	 * supported by this device.
5992	 *
5993	 * First, get the size of the buffer we need, by supplying no
5994	 * buffer and a length of 0.  If the device supports private
5995	 * ioctls, it should return E2BIG, with ireq.u.data.length set
5996	 * to the length we need.  If it doesn't support them, it should
5997	 * return EOPNOTSUPP.
5998	 */
5999	memset(&ireq, 0, sizeof ireq);
6000	pcap_strlcpy(ireq.ifr_ifrn.ifrn_name, device,
6001	    sizeof ireq.ifr_ifrn.ifrn_name);
6002	ireq.u.data.pointer = (void *)args;
6003	ireq.u.data.length = 0;
6004	ireq.u.data.flags = 0;
6005	if (ioctl(sock_fd, SIOCGIWPRIV, &ireq) != -1) {
6006		pcap_snprintf(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
6007		    "%s: SIOCGIWPRIV with a zero-length buffer didn't fail!",
6008		    device);
6009		return PCAP_ERROR;
6010	}
6011	if (errno != EOPNOTSUPP) {
6012		/*
6013		 * OK, it's not as if there are no private ioctls.
6014		 */
6015		if (errno != E2BIG) {
6016			/*
6017			 * Failed.
6018			 */
6019			pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(handle->errbuf,
6020			    PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE, errno, "%s: SIOCGIWPRIV", device);
6021			return PCAP_ERROR;
6022		}
6023
6024		/*
6025		 * OK, try to get the list of private ioctls.
6026		 */
6027		priv = malloc(ireq.u.data.length * sizeof (struct iw_priv_args));
6028		if (priv == NULL) {
6029			pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(handle->errbuf,
6030			    PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE, errno, "malloc");
6031			return PCAP_ERROR;
6032		}
6033		ireq.u.data.pointer = (void *)priv;
6034		if (ioctl(sock_fd, SIOCGIWPRIV, &ireq) == -1) {
6035			pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(handle->errbuf,
6036			    PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE, errno, "%s: SIOCGIWPRIV", device);
6037			free(priv);
6038			return PCAP_ERROR;
6039		}
6040
6041		/*
6042		 * Look for private ioctls to turn monitor mode on or, if
6043		 * monitor mode is on, to set the header type.
6044		 */
6045		for (i = 0; i < ireq.u.data.length; i++) {
6046			if (strcmp(priv[i].name, "monitor_type") == 0) {
6047				/*
6048				 * Hostap driver, use this one.
6049				 * Set monitor mode first.
6050				 * You can set it to 0 to get DLT_IEEE80211,
6051				 * 1 to get DLT_PRISM, 2 to get
6052				 * DLT_IEEE80211_RADIO_AVS, and, with more
6053				 * recent versions of the driver, 3 to get
6054				 * DLT_IEEE80211_RADIO.
6055				 */
6056				if ((priv[i].set_args & IW_PRIV_TYPE_MASK) != IW_PRIV_TYPE_INT)
6057					break;
6058				if (!(priv[i].set_args & IW_PRIV_SIZE_FIXED))
6059					break;
6060				if ((priv[i].set_args & IW_PRIV_SIZE_MASK) != 1)
6061					break;
6062				montype = MONITOR_HOSTAP;
6063				cmd = priv[i].cmd;
6064				break;
6065			}
6066			if (strcmp(priv[i].name, "set_prismhdr") == 0) {
6067				/*
6068				 * Prism54 driver, use this one.
6069				 * Set monitor mode first.
6070				 * You can set it to 2 to get DLT_IEEE80211
6071				 * or 3 or get DLT_PRISM.
6072				 */
6073				if ((priv[i].set_args & IW_PRIV_TYPE_MASK) != IW_PRIV_TYPE_INT)
6074					break;
6075				if (!(priv[i].set_args & IW_PRIV_SIZE_FIXED))
6076					break;
6077				if ((priv[i].set_args & IW_PRIV_SIZE_MASK) != 1)
6078					break;
6079				montype = MONITOR_PRISM54;
6080				cmd = priv[i].cmd;
6081				break;
6082			}
6083			if (strcmp(priv[i].name, "forceprismheader") == 0) {
6084				/*
6085				 * RT2570 driver, use this one.
6086				 * Do this after turning monitor mode on.
6087				 * You can set it to 1 to get DLT_PRISM or 2
6088				 * to get DLT_IEEE80211.
6089				 */
6090				if ((priv[i].set_args & IW_PRIV_TYPE_MASK) != IW_PRIV_TYPE_INT)
6091					break;
6092				if (!(priv[i].set_args & IW_PRIV_SIZE_FIXED))
6093					break;
6094				if ((priv[i].set_args & IW_PRIV_SIZE_MASK) != 1)
6095					break;
6096				montype = MONITOR_RT2570;
6097				cmd = priv[i].cmd;
6098				break;
6099			}
6100			if (strcmp(priv[i].name, "forceprism") == 0) {
6101				/*
6102				 * RT73 driver, use this one.
6103				 * Do this after turning monitor mode on.
6104				 * Its argument is a *string*; you can
6105				 * set it to "1" to get DLT_PRISM or "2"
6106				 * to get DLT_IEEE80211.
6107				 */
6108				if ((priv[i].set_args & IW_PRIV_TYPE_MASK) != IW_PRIV_TYPE_CHAR)
6109					break;
6110				if (priv[i].set_args & IW_PRIV_SIZE_FIXED)
6111					break;
6112				montype = MONITOR_RT73;
6113				cmd = priv[i].cmd;
6114				break;
6115			}
6116			if (strcmp(priv[i].name, "prismhdr") == 0) {
6117				/*
6118				 * One of the RTL8xxx drivers, use this one.
6119				 * It can only be done after monitor mode
6120				 * has been turned on.  You can set it to 1
6121				 * to get DLT_PRISM or 0 to get DLT_IEEE80211.
6122				 */
6123				if ((priv[i].set_args & IW_PRIV_TYPE_MASK) != IW_PRIV_TYPE_INT)
6124					break;
6125				if (!(priv[i].set_args & IW_PRIV_SIZE_FIXED))
6126					break;
6127				if ((priv[i].set_args & IW_PRIV_SIZE_MASK) != 1)
6128					break;
6129				montype = MONITOR_RTL8XXX;
6130				cmd = priv[i].cmd;
6131				break;
6132			}
6133			if (strcmp(priv[i].name, "rfmontx") == 0) {
6134				/*
6135				 * RT2500 or RT61 driver, use this one.
6136				 * It has one one-byte parameter; set
6137				 * u.data.length to 1 and u.data.pointer to
6138				 * point to the parameter.
6139				 * It doesn't itself turn monitor mode on.
6140				 * You can set it to 1 to allow transmitting
6141				 * in monitor mode(?) and get DLT_IEEE80211,
6142				 * or set it to 0 to disallow transmitting in
6143				 * monitor mode(?) and get DLT_PRISM.
6144				 */
6145				if ((priv[i].set_args & IW_PRIV_TYPE_MASK) != IW_PRIV_TYPE_INT)
6146					break;
6147				if ((priv[i].set_args & IW_PRIV_SIZE_MASK) != 2)
6148					break;
6149				montype = MONITOR_RT2500;
6150				cmd = priv[i].cmd;
6151				break;
6152			}
6153			if (strcmp(priv[i].name, "monitor") == 0) {
6154				/*
6155				 * Either ACX100 or hostap, use this one.
6156				 * It turns monitor mode on.
6157				 * If it takes two arguments, it's ACX100;
6158				 * the first argument is 1 for DLT_PRISM
6159				 * or 2 for DLT_IEEE80211, and the second
6160				 * argument is the channel on which to
6161				 * run.  If it takes one argument, it's
6162				 * HostAP, and the argument is 2 for
6163				 * DLT_IEEE80211 and 3 for DLT_PRISM.
6164				 *
6165				 * If we see this, we don't quit, as this
6166				 * might be a version of the hostap driver
6167				 * that also supports "monitor_type".
6168				 */
6169				if ((priv[i].set_args & IW_PRIV_TYPE_MASK) != IW_PRIV_TYPE_INT)
6170					break;
6171				if (!(priv[i].set_args & IW_PRIV_SIZE_FIXED))
6172					break;
6173				switch (priv[i].set_args & IW_PRIV_SIZE_MASK) {
6174
6175				case 1:
6176					montype = MONITOR_PRISM;
6177					cmd = priv[i].cmd;
6178					break;
6179
6180				case 2:
6181					montype = MONITOR_ACX100;
6182					cmd = priv[i].cmd;
6183					break;
6184
6185				default:
6186					break;
6187				}
6188			}
6189		}
6190		free(priv);
6191	}
6192
6193	/*
6194	 * XXX - ipw3945?  islism?
6195	 */
6196
6197	/*
6198	 * Get the old mode.
6199	 */
6200	pcap_strlcpy(ireq.ifr_ifrn.ifrn_name, device,
6201	    sizeof ireq.ifr_ifrn.ifrn_name);
6202	if (ioctl(sock_fd, SIOCGIWMODE, &ireq) == -1) {
6203		/*
6204		 * We probably won't be able to set the mode, either.
6205		 */
6206		return PCAP_ERROR_RFMON_NOTSUP;
6207	}
6208
6209	/*
6210	 * Is it currently in monitor mode?
6211	 */
6212	if (ireq.u.mode == IW_MODE_MONITOR) {
6213		/*
6214		 * Yes.  Just leave things as they are.
6215		 * We don't offer multiple link-layer types, as
6216		 * changing the link-layer type out from under
6217		 * somebody else capturing in monitor mode would
6218		 * be considered rude.
6219		 */
6220		return 1;
6221	}
6222	/*
6223	 * No.  We have to put the adapter into rfmon mode.
6224	 */
6225
6226	/*
6227	 * If we haven't already done so, arrange to have
6228	 * "pcap_close_all()" called when we exit.
6229	 */
6230	if (!pcap_do_addexit(handle)) {
6231		/*
6232		 * "atexit()" failed; don't put the interface
6233		 * in rfmon mode, just give up.
6234		 */
6235		return PCAP_ERROR_RFMON_NOTSUP;
6236	}
6237
6238	/*
6239	 * Save the old mode.
6240	 */
6241	handlep->oldmode = ireq.u.mode;
6242
6243	/*
6244	 * Put the adapter in rfmon mode.  How we do this depends
6245	 * on whether we have a special private ioctl or not.
6246	 */
6247	if (montype == MONITOR_PRISM) {
6248		/*
6249		 * We have the "monitor" private ioctl, but none of
6250		 * the other private ioctls.  Use this, and select
6251		 * the Prism header.
6252		 *
6253		 * If it fails, just fall back on SIOCSIWMODE.
6254		 */
6255		memset(&ireq, 0, sizeof ireq);
6256		pcap_strlcpy(ireq.ifr_ifrn.ifrn_name, device,
6257		    sizeof ireq.ifr_ifrn.ifrn_name);
6258		ireq.u.data.length = 1;	/* 1 argument */
6259		args[0] = 3;	/* request Prism header */
6260		memcpy(ireq.u.name, args, sizeof (int));
6261		if (ioctl(sock_fd, cmd, &ireq) != -1) {
6262			/*
6263			 * Success.
6264			 * Note that we have to put the old mode back
6265			 * when we close the device.
6266			 */
6267			handlep->must_do_on_close |= MUST_CLEAR_RFMON;
6268
6269			/*
6270			 * Add this to the list of pcaps to close
6271			 * when we exit.
6272			 */
6273			pcap_add_to_pcaps_to_close(handle);
6274
6275			return 1;
6276		}
6277
6278		/*
6279		 * Failure.  Fall back on SIOCSIWMODE.
6280		 */
6281	}
6282
6283	/*
6284	 * First, take the interface down if it's up; otherwise, we
6285	 * might get EBUSY.
6286	 */
6287	memset(&ifr, 0, sizeof(ifr));
6288	pcap_strlcpy(ifr.ifr_name, device, sizeof(ifr.ifr_name));
6289	if (ioctl(sock_fd, SIOCGIFFLAGS, &ifr) == -1) {
6290		pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
6291		    errno, "%s: Can't get flags", device);
6292		return PCAP_ERROR;
6293	}
6294	oldflags = 0;
6295	if (ifr.ifr_flags & IFF_UP) {
6296		oldflags = ifr.ifr_flags;
6297		ifr.ifr_flags &= ~IFF_UP;
6298		if (ioctl(sock_fd, SIOCSIFFLAGS, &ifr) == -1) {
6299			pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(handle->errbuf,
6300			    PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE, errno, "%s: Can't set flags",
6301			    device);
6302			return PCAP_ERROR;
6303		}
6304	}
6305
6306	/*
6307	 * Then turn monitor mode on.
6308	 */
6309	pcap_strlcpy(ireq.ifr_ifrn.ifrn_name, device,
6310	    sizeof ireq.ifr_ifrn.ifrn_name);
6311	ireq.u.mode = IW_MODE_MONITOR;
6312	if (ioctl(sock_fd, SIOCSIWMODE, &ireq) == -1) {
6313		/*
6314		 * Scientist, you've failed.
6315		 * Bring the interface back up if we shut it down.
6316		 */
6317		ifr.ifr_flags = oldflags;
6318		if (ioctl(sock_fd, SIOCSIFFLAGS, &ifr) == -1) {
6319			pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(handle->errbuf,
6320			    PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE, errno, "%s: Can't set flags",
6321			    device);
6322			return PCAP_ERROR;
6323		}
6324		return PCAP_ERROR_RFMON_NOTSUP;
6325	}
6326
6327	/*
6328	 * XXX - airmon-ng does "iwconfig {if} key off" after setting
6329	 * monitor mode and setting the channel, and then does
6330	 * "iwconfig up".
6331	 */
6332
6333	/*
6334	 * Now select the appropriate radio header.
6335	 */
6336	switch (montype) {
6337
6338	case MONITOR_WEXT:
6339		/*
6340		 * We don't have any private ioctl to set the header.
6341		 */
6342		break;
6343
6344	case MONITOR_HOSTAP:
6345		/*
6346		 * Try to select the radiotap header.
6347		 */
6348		memset(&ireq, 0, sizeof ireq);
6349		pcap_strlcpy(ireq.ifr_ifrn.ifrn_name, device,
6350		    sizeof ireq.ifr_ifrn.ifrn_name);
6351		args[0] = 3;	/* request radiotap header */
6352		memcpy(ireq.u.name, args, sizeof (int));
6353		if (ioctl(sock_fd, cmd, &ireq) != -1)
6354			break;	/* success */
6355
6356		/*
6357		 * That failed.  Try to select the AVS header.
6358		 */
6359		memset(&ireq, 0, sizeof ireq);
6360		pcap_strlcpy(ireq.ifr_ifrn.ifrn_name, device,
6361		    sizeof ireq.ifr_ifrn.ifrn_name);
6362		args[0] = 2;	/* request AVS header */
6363		memcpy(ireq.u.name, args, sizeof (int));
6364		if (ioctl(sock_fd, cmd, &ireq) != -1)
6365			break;	/* success */
6366
6367		/*
6368		 * That failed.  Try to select the Prism header.
6369		 */
6370		memset(&ireq, 0, sizeof ireq);
6371		pcap_strlcpy(ireq.ifr_ifrn.ifrn_name, device,
6372		    sizeof ireq.ifr_ifrn.ifrn_name);
6373		args[0] = 1;	/* request Prism header */
6374		memcpy(ireq.u.name, args, sizeof (int));
6375		ioctl(sock_fd, cmd, &ireq);
6376		break;
6377
6378	case MONITOR_PRISM:
6379		/*
6380		 * The private ioctl failed.
6381		 */
6382		break;
6383
6384	case MONITOR_PRISM54:
6385		/*
6386		 * Select the Prism header.
6387		 */
6388		memset(&ireq, 0, sizeof ireq);
6389		pcap_strlcpy(ireq.ifr_ifrn.ifrn_name, device,
6390		    sizeof ireq.ifr_ifrn.ifrn_name);
6391		args[0] = 3;	/* request Prism header */
6392		memcpy(ireq.u.name, args, sizeof (int));
6393		ioctl(sock_fd, cmd, &ireq);
6394		break;
6395
6396	case MONITOR_ACX100:
6397		/*
6398		 * Get the current channel.
6399		 */
6400		memset(&ireq, 0, sizeof ireq);
6401		pcap_strlcpy(ireq.ifr_ifrn.ifrn_name, device,
6402		    sizeof ireq.ifr_ifrn.ifrn_name);
6403		if (ioctl(sock_fd, SIOCGIWFREQ, &ireq) == -1) {
6404			pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(handle->errbuf,
6405			    PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE, errno, "%s: SIOCGIWFREQ", device);
6406			return PCAP_ERROR;
6407		}
6408		channel = ireq.u.freq.m;
6409
6410		/*
6411		 * Select the Prism header, and set the channel to the
6412		 * current value.
6413		 */
6414		memset(&ireq, 0, sizeof ireq);
6415		pcap_strlcpy(ireq.ifr_ifrn.ifrn_name, device,
6416		    sizeof ireq.ifr_ifrn.ifrn_name);
6417		args[0] = 1;		/* request Prism header */
6418		args[1] = channel;	/* set channel */
6419		memcpy(ireq.u.name, args, 2*sizeof (int));
6420		ioctl(sock_fd, cmd, &ireq);
6421		break;
6422
6423	case MONITOR_RT2500:
6424		/*
6425		 * Disallow transmission - that turns on the
6426		 * Prism header.
6427		 */
6428		memset(&ireq, 0, sizeof ireq);
6429		pcap_strlcpy(ireq.ifr_ifrn.ifrn_name, device,
6430		    sizeof ireq.ifr_ifrn.ifrn_name);
6431		args[0] = 0;	/* disallow transmitting */
6432		memcpy(ireq.u.name, args, sizeof (int));
6433		ioctl(sock_fd, cmd, &ireq);
6434		break;
6435
6436	case MONITOR_RT2570:
6437		/*
6438		 * Force the Prism header.
6439		 */
6440		memset(&ireq, 0, sizeof ireq);
6441		pcap_strlcpy(ireq.ifr_ifrn.ifrn_name, device,
6442		    sizeof ireq.ifr_ifrn.ifrn_name);
6443		args[0] = 1;	/* request Prism header */
6444		memcpy(ireq.u.name, args, sizeof (int));
6445		ioctl(sock_fd, cmd, &ireq);
6446		break;
6447
6448	case MONITOR_RT73:
6449		/*
6450		 * Force the Prism header.
6451		 */
6452		memset(&ireq, 0, sizeof ireq);
6453		pcap_strlcpy(ireq.ifr_ifrn.ifrn_name, device,
6454		    sizeof ireq.ifr_ifrn.ifrn_name);
6455		ireq.u.data.length = 1;	/* 1 argument */
6456		ireq.u.data.pointer = "1";
6457		ireq.u.data.flags = 0;
6458		ioctl(sock_fd, cmd, &ireq);
6459		break;
6460
6461	case MONITOR_RTL8XXX:
6462		/*
6463		 * Force the Prism header.
6464		 */
6465		memset(&ireq, 0, sizeof ireq);
6466		pcap_strlcpy(ireq.ifr_ifrn.ifrn_name, device,
6467		    sizeof ireq.ifr_ifrn.ifrn_name);
6468		args[0] = 1;	/* request Prism header */
6469		memcpy(ireq.u.name, args, sizeof (int));
6470		ioctl(sock_fd, cmd, &ireq);
6471		break;
6472	}
6473
6474	/*
6475	 * Now bring the interface back up if we brought it down.
6476	 */
6477	if (oldflags != 0) {
6478		ifr.ifr_flags = oldflags;
6479		if (ioctl(sock_fd, SIOCSIFFLAGS, &ifr) == -1) {
6480			pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(handle->errbuf,
6481			    PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE, errno, "%s: Can't set flags",
6482			    device);
6483
6484			/*
6485			 * At least try to restore the old mode on the
6486			 * interface.
6487			 */
6488			if (ioctl(handle->fd, SIOCSIWMODE, &ireq) == -1) {
6489				/*
6490				 * Scientist, you've failed.
6491				 */
6492				fprintf(stderr,
6493				    "Can't restore interface wireless mode (SIOCSIWMODE failed: %s).\n"
6494				    "Please adjust manually.\n",
6495				    strerror(errno));
6496			}
6497			return PCAP_ERROR;
6498		}
6499	}
6500
6501	/*
6502	 * Note that we have to put the old mode back when we
6503	 * close the device.
6504	 */
6505	handlep->must_do_on_close |= MUST_CLEAR_RFMON;
6506
6507	/*
6508	 * Add this to the list of pcaps to close when we exit.
6509	 */
6510	pcap_add_to_pcaps_to_close(handle);
6511
6512	return 1;
6513}
6514#endif /* IW_MODE_MONITOR */
6515
6516/*
6517 * Try various mechanisms to enter monitor mode.
6518 */
6519static int
6520enter_rfmon_mode(pcap_t *handle, int sock_fd, const char *device)
6521{
6522#if defined(HAVE_LIBNL) || defined(IW_MODE_MONITOR)
6523	int ret;
6524#endif
6525
6526#ifdef HAVE_LIBNL
6527	ret = enter_rfmon_mode_mac80211(handle, sock_fd, device);
6528	if (ret < 0)
6529		return ret;	/* error attempting to do so */
6530	if (ret == 1)
6531		return 1;	/* success */
6532#endif /* HAVE_LIBNL */
6533
6534#ifdef IW_MODE_MONITOR
6535	ret = enter_rfmon_mode_wext(handle, sock_fd, device);
6536	if (ret < 0)
6537		return ret;	/* error attempting to do so */
6538	if (ret == 1)
6539		return 1;	/* success */
6540#endif /* IW_MODE_MONITOR */
6541
6542	/*
6543	 * Either none of the mechanisms we know about work or none
6544	 * of those mechanisms are available, so we can't do monitor
6545	 * mode.
6546	 */
6547	return 0;
6548}
6549
6550#if defined(HAVE_LINUX_NET_TSTAMP_H) && defined(PACKET_TIMESTAMP)
6551/*
6552 * Map SOF_TIMESTAMPING_ values to PCAP_TSTAMP_ values.
6553 */
6554static const struct {
6555	int soft_timestamping_val;
6556	int pcap_tstamp_val;
6557} sof_ts_type_map[3] = {
6558	{ SOF_TIMESTAMPING_SOFTWARE, PCAP_TSTAMP_HOST },
6559	{ SOF_TIMESTAMPING_SYS_HARDWARE, PCAP_TSTAMP_ADAPTER },
6560	{ SOF_TIMESTAMPING_RAW_HARDWARE, PCAP_TSTAMP_ADAPTER_UNSYNCED }
6561};
6562#define NUM_SOF_TIMESTAMPING_TYPES	(sizeof sof_ts_type_map / sizeof sof_ts_type_map[0])
6563
6564/*
6565 * Set the list of time stamping types to include all types.
6566 */
6567static void
6568iface_set_all_ts_types(pcap_t *handle)
6569{
6570	u_int i;
6571
6572	handle->tstamp_type_count = NUM_SOF_TIMESTAMPING_TYPES;
6573	handle->tstamp_type_list = malloc(NUM_SOF_TIMESTAMPING_TYPES * sizeof(u_int));
6574	for (i = 0; i < NUM_SOF_TIMESTAMPING_TYPES; i++)
6575		handle->tstamp_type_list[i] = sof_ts_type_map[i].pcap_tstamp_val;
6576}
6577
6578#ifdef ETHTOOL_GET_TS_INFO
6579/*
6580 * Get a list of time stamping capabilities.
6581 */
6582static int
6583iface_ethtool_get_ts_info(const char *device, pcap_t *handle, char *ebuf)
6584{
6585	int fd;
6586	struct ifreq ifr;
6587	struct ethtool_ts_info info;
6588	int num_ts_types;
6589	u_int i, j;
6590
6591	/*
6592	 * This doesn't apply to the "any" device; you can't say "turn on
6593	 * hardware time stamping for all devices that exist now and arrange
6594	 * that it be turned on for any device that appears in the future",
6595	 * and not all devices even necessarily *support* hardware time
6596	 * stamping, so don't report any time stamp types.
6597	 */
6598	if (strcmp(device, "any") == 0) {
6599		handle->tstamp_type_list = NULL;
6600		return 0;
6601	}
6602
6603	/*
6604	 * Create a socket from which to fetch time stamping capabilities.
6605	 */
6606	fd = socket(PF_UNIX, SOCK_RAW, 0);
6607	if (fd < 0) {
6608		pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(ebuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
6609		    errno, "socket for SIOCETHTOOL(ETHTOOL_GET_TS_INFO)");
6610		return -1;
6611	}
6612
6613	memset(&ifr, 0, sizeof(ifr));
6614	pcap_strlcpy(ifr.ifr_name, device, sizeof(ifr.ifr_name));
6615	memset(&info, 0, sizeof(info));
6616	info.cmd = ETHTOOL_GET_TS_INFO;
6617	ifr.ifr_data = (caddr_t)&info;
6618	if (ioctl(fd, SIOCETHTOOL, &ifr) == -1) {
6619		int save_errno = errno;
6620
6621		close(fd);
6622		switch (save_errno) {
6623
6624		case EOPNOTSUPP:
6625		case EINVAL:
6626			/*
6627			 * OK, this OS version or driver doesn't support
6628			 * asking for the time stamping types, so let's
6629			 * just return all the possible types.
6630			 */
6631			iface_set_all_ts_types(handle);
6632			return 0;
6633
6634		case ENODEV:
6635			/*
6636			 * OK, no such device.
6637			 * The user will find that out when they try to
6638			 * activate the device; just return an empty
6639			 * list of time stamp types.
6640			 */
6641			handle->tstamp_type_list = NULL;
6642			return 0;
6643
6644		default:
6645			/*
6646			 * Other error.
6647			 */
6648			pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(ebuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
6649			    save_errno,
6650			    "%s: SIOCETHTOOL(ETHTOOL_GET_TS_INFO) ioctl failed",
6651			    device);
6652			return -1;
6653		}
6654	}
6655	close(fd);
6656
6657	/*
6658	 * Do we support hardware time stamping of *all* packets?
6659	 */
6660	if (!(info.rx_filters & (1 << HWTSTAMP_FILTER_ALL))) {
6661		/*
6662		 * No, so don't report any time stamp types.
6663		 *
6664		 * XXX - some devices either don't report
6665		 * HWTSTAMP_FILTER_ALL when they do support it, or
6666		 * report HWTSTAMP_FILTER_ALL but map it to only
6667		 * time stamping a few PTP packets.  See
6668		 * http://marc.info/?l=linux-netdev&m=146318183529571&w=2
6669		 */
6670		handle->tstamp_type_list = NULL;
6671		return 0;
6672	}
6673
6674	num_ts_types = 0;
6675	for (i = 0; i < NUM_SOF_TIMESTAMPING_TYPES; i++) {
6676		if (info.so_timestamping & sof_ts_type_map[i].soft_timestamping_val)
6677			num_ts_types++;
6678	}
6679	handle->tstamp_type_count = num_ts_types;
6680	if (num_ts_types != 0) {
6681		handle->tstamp_type_list = malloc(num_ts_types * sizeof(u_int));
6682		for (i = 0, j = 0; i < NUM_SOF_TIMESTAMPING_TYPES; i++) {
6683			if (info.so_timestamping & sof_ts_type_map[i].soft_timestamping_val) {
6684				handle->tstamp_type_list[j] = sof_ts_type_map[i].pcap_tstamp_val;
6685				j++;
6686			}
6687		}
6688	} else
6689		handle->tstamp_type_list = NULL;
6690
6691	return 0;
6692}
6693#else /* ETHTOOL_GET_TS_INFO */
6694static int
6695iface_ethtool_get_ts_info(const char *device, pcap_t *handle, char *ebuf _U_)
6696{
6697	/*
6698	 * This doesn't apply to the "any" device; you can't say "turn on
6699	 * hardware time stamping for all devices that exist now and arrange
6700	 * that it be turned on for any device that appears in the future",
6701	 * and not all devices even necessarily *support* hardware time
6702	 * stamping, so don't report any time stamp types.
6703	 */
6704	if (strcmp(device, "any") == 0) {
6705		handle->tstamp_type_list = NULL;
6706		return 0;
6707	}
6708
6709	/*
6710	 * We don't have an ioctl to use to ask what's supported,
6711	 * so say we support everything.
6712	 */
6713	iface_set_all_ts_types(handle);
6714	return 0;
6715}
6716#endif /* ETHTOOL_GET_TS_INFO */
6717
6718#endif /* defined(HAVE_LINUX_NET_TSTAMP_H) && defined(PACKET_TIMESTAMP) */
6719
6720#ifdef HAVE_PACKET_RING
6721/*
6722 * Find out if we have any form of fragmentation/reassembly offloading.
6723 *
6724 * We do so using SIOCETHTOOL checking for various types of offloading;
6725 * if SIOCETHTOOL isn't defined, or we don't have any #defines for any
6726 * of the types of offloading, there's nothing we can do to check, so
6727 * we just say "no, we don't".
6728 *
6729 * We treat EOPNOTSUPP, EINVAL and, if eperm_ok is true, EPERM as
6730 * indications that the operation isn't supported.  We do EPERM
6731 * weirdly because the SIOCETHTOOL code in later kernels 1) doesn't
6732 * support ETHTOOL_GUFO, 2) also doesn't include it in the list
6733 * of ethtool operations that don't require CAP_NET_ADMIN privileges,
6734 * and 3) does the "is this permitted" check before doing the "is
6735 * this even supported" check, so it fails with "this is not permitted"
6736 * rather than "this is not even supported".  To work around this
6737 * annoyance, we only treat EPERM as an error for the first feature,
6738 * and assume that they all do the same permission checks, so if the
6739 * first one is allowed all the others are allowed if supported.
6740 */
6741#if defined(SIOCETHTOOL) && (defined(ETHTOOL_GTSO) || defined(ETHTOOL_GUFO) || defined(ETHTOOL_GGSO) || defined(ETHTOOL_GFLAGS) || defined(ETHTOOL_GGRO))
6742static int
6743iface_ethtool_flag_ioctl(pcap_t *handle, int cmd, const char *cmdname,
6744    int eperm_ok)
6745{
6746	struct ifreq	ifr;
6747	struct ethtool_value eval;
6748
6749	memset(&ifr, 0, sizeof(ifr));
6750	pcap_strlcpy(ifr.ifr_name, handle->opt.device, sizeof(ifr.ifr_name));
6751	eval.cmd = cmd;
6752	eval.data = 0;
6753	ifr.ifr_data = (caddr_t)&eval;
6754	if (ioctl(handle->fd, SIOCETHTOOL, &ifr) == -1) {
6755		if (errno == EOPNOTSUPP || errno == EINVAL ||
6756		    (errno == EPERM && eperm_ok)) {
6757			/*
6758			 * OK, let's just return 0, which, in our
6759			 * case, either means "no, what we're asking
6760			 * about is not enabled" or "all the flags
6761			 * are clear (i.e., nothing is enabled)".
6762			 */
6763			return 0;
6764		}
6765		pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
6766		    errno, "%s: SIOCETHTOOL(%s) ioctl failed",
6767		    handle->opt.device, cmdname);
6768		return -1;
6769	}
6770	return eval.data;
6771}
6772
6773/*
6774 * XXX - it's annoying that we have to check for offloading at all, but,
6775 * given that we have to, it's still annoying that we have to check for
6776 * particular types of offloading, especially that shiny new types of
6777 * offloading may be added - and, worse, may not be checkable with
6778 * a particular ETHTOOL_ operation; ETHTOOL_GFEATURES would, in
6779 * theory, give those to you, but the actual flags being used are
6780 * opaque (defined in a non-uapi header), and there doesn't seem to
6781 * be any obvious way to ask the kernel what all the offloading flags
6782 * are - at best, you can ask for a set of strings(!) to get *names*
6783 * for various flags.  (That whole mechanism appears to have been
6784 * designed for the sole purpose of letting ethtool report flags
6785 * by name and set flags by name, with the names having no semantics
6786 * ethtool understands.)
6787 */
6788static int
6789iface_get_offload(pcap_t *handle)
6790{
6791	int ret;
6792
6793#ifdef ETHTOOL_GTSO
6794	ret = iface_ethtool_flag_ioctl(handle, ETHTOOL_GTSO, "ETHTOOL_GTSO", 0);
6795	if (ret == -1)
6796		return -1;
6797	if (ret)
6798		return 1;	/* TCP segmentation offloading on */
6799#endif
6800
6801#ifdef ETHTOOL_GGSO
6802	/*
6803	 * XXX - will this cause large unsegmented packets to be
6804	 * handed to PF_PACKET sockets on transmission?  If not,
6805	 * this need not be checked.
6806	 */
6807	ret = iface_ethtool_flag_ioctl(handle, ETHTOOL_GGSO, "ETHTOOL_GGSO", 0);
6808	if (ret == -1)
6809		return -1;
6810	if (ret)
6811		return 1;	/* generic segmentation offloading on */
6812#endif
6813
6814#ifdef ETHTOOL_GFLAGS
6815	ret = iface_ethtool_flag_ioctl(handle, ETHTOOL_GFLAGS, "ETHTOOL_GFLAGS", 0);
6816	if (ret == -1)
6817		return -1;
6818	if (ret & ETH_FLAG_LRO)
6819		return 1;	/* large receive offloading on */
6820#endif
6821
6822#ifdef ETHTOOL_GGRO
6823	/*
6824	 * XXX - will this cause large reassembled packets to be
6825	 * handed to PF_PACKET sockets on receipt?  If not,
6826	 * this need not be checked.
6827	 */
6828	ret = iface_ethtool_flag_ioctl(handle, ETHTOOL_GGRO, "ETHTOOL_GGRO", 0);
6829	if (ret == -1)
6830		return -1;
6831	if (ret)
6832		return 1;	/* generic (large) receive offloading on */
6833#endif
6834
6835#ifdef ETHTOOL_GUFO
6836	/*
6837	 * Do this one last, as support for it was removed in later
6838	 * kernels, and it fails with EPERM on those kernels rather
6839	 * than with EOPNOTSUPP (see explanation in comment for
6840	 * iface_ethtool_flag_ioctl()).
6841	 */
6842	ret = iface_ethtool_flag_ioctl(handle, ETHTOOL_GUFO, "ETHTOOL_GUFO", 1);
6843	if (ret == -1)
6844		return -1;
6845	if (ret)
6846		return 1;	/* UDP fragmentation offloading on */
6847#endif
6848
6849	return 0;
6850}
6851#else /* SIOCETHTOOL */
6852static int
6853iface_get_offload(pcap_t *handle _U_)
6854{
6855	/*
6856	 * XXX - do we need to get this information if we don't
6857	 * have the ethtool ioctls?  If so, how do we do that?
6858	 */
6859	return 0;
6860}
6861#endif /* SIOCETHTOOL */
6862
6863#endif /* HAVE_PACKET_RING */
6864
6865#endif /* HAVE_PF_PACKET_SOCKETS */
6866
6867/* ===== Functions to interface to the older kernels ================== */
6868
6869/*
6870 * Try to open a packet socket using the old kernel interface.
6871 * Returns 1 on success and a PCAP_ERROR_ value on an error.
6872 */
6873static int
6874activate_old(pcap_t *handle)
6875{
6876	struct pcap_linux *handlep = handle->priv;
6877	int		err;
6878	int		arptype;
6879	struct ifreq	ifr;
6880	const char	*device = handle->opt.device;
6881	struct utsname	utsname;
6882	int		mtu;
6883
6884	/*
6885	 * PF_INET/SOCK_PACKET sockets must be bound to a device, so we
6886	 * can't support the "any" device.
6887	 */
6888	if (strcmp(device, "any") == 0) {
6889		pcap_strlcpy(handle->errbuf, "pcap_activate: The \"any\" device isn't supported on 2.0[.x]-kernel systems",
6890			PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE);
6891		return PCAP_ERROR;
6892	}
6893
6894	/* Open the socket */
6895	handle->fd = socket(PF_INET, SOCK_PACKET, htons(ETH_P_ALL));
6896	if (handle->fd == -1) {
6897		err = errno;
6898		pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
6899		    err, "socket");
6900		if (err == EPERM || err == EACCES) {
6901			/*
6902			 * You don't have permission to open the
6903			 * socket.
6904			 */
6905			return PCAP_ERROR_PERM_DENIED;
6906		} else {
6907			/*
6908			 * Other error.
6909			 */
6910			return PCAP_ERROR;
6911		}
6912	}
6913
6914	/* It worked - we are using the old interface */
6915	handlep->sock_packet = 1;
6916
6917	/* ...which means we get the link-layer header. */
6918	handlep->cooked = 0;
6919
6920	/* Bind to the given device */
6921	if (iface_bind_old(handle->fd, device, handle->errbuf) == -1)
6922		return PCAP_ERROR;
6923
6924	/*
6925	 * Try to get the link-layer type.
6926	 */
6927	arptype = iface_get_arptype(handle->fd, device, handle->errbuf);
6928	if (arptype < 0)
6929		return PCAP_ERROR;
6930
6931	/*
6932	 * Try to find the DLT_ type corresponding to that
6933	 * link-layer type.
6934	 */
6935	map_arphrd_to_dlt(handle, handle->fd, arptype, device, 0);
6936	if (handle->linktype == -1) {
6937		pcap_snprintf(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
6938			 "unknown arptype %d", arptype);
6939		return PCAP_ERROR;
6940	}
6941
6942	/* Go to promisc mode if requested */
6943
6944	if (handle->opt.promisc) {
6945		memset(&ifr, 0, sizeof(ifr));
6946		pcap_strlcpy(ifr.ifr_name, device, sizeof(ifr.ifr_name));
6947		if (ioctl(handle->fd, SIOCGIFFLAGS, &ifr) == -1) {
6948			pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(handle->errbuf,
6949			    PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE, errno, "SIOCGIFFLAGS");
6950			return PCAP_ERROR;
6951		}
6952		if ((ifr.ifr_flags & IFF_PROMISC) == 0) {
6953			/*
6954			 * Promiscuous mode isn't currently on,
6955			 * so turn it on, and remember that
6956			 * we should turn it off when the
6957			 * pcap_t is closed.
6958			 */
6959
6960			/*
6961			 * If we haven't already done so, arrange
6962			 * to have "pcap_close_all()" called when
6963			 * we exit.
6964			 */
6965			if (!pcap_do_addexit(handle)) {
6966				/*
6967				 * "atexit()" failed; don't put
6968				 * the interface in promiscuous
6969				 * mode, just give up.
6970				 */
6971				return PCAP_ERROR;
6972			}
6973
6974			ifr.ifr_flags |= IFF_PROMISC;
6975			if (ioctl(handle->fd, SIOCSIFFLAGS, &ifr) == -1) {
6976				pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(handle->errbuf,
6977				    PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE, errno, "SIOCSIFFLAGS");
6978				return PCAP_ERROR;
6979			}
6980			handlep->must_do_on_close |= MUST_CLEAR_PROMISC;
6981
6982			/*
6983			 * Add this to the list of pcaps
6984			 * to close when we exit.
6985			 */
6986			pcap_add_to_pcaps_to_close(handle);
6987		}
6988	}
6989
6990	/*
6991	 * Compute the buffer size.
6992	 *
6993	 * We're using SOCK_PACKET, so this might be a 2.0[.x]
6994	 * kernel, and might require special handling - check.
6995	 */
6996	if (uname(&utsname) < 0 ||
6997	    strncmp(utsname.release, "2.0", 3) == 0) {
6998		/*
6999		 * Either we couldn't find out what kernel release
7000		 * this is, or it's a 2.0[.x] kernel.
7001		 *
7002		 * In the 2.0[.x] kernel, a "recvfrom()" on
7003		 * a SOCK_PACKET socket, with MSG_TRUNC set, will
7004		 * return the number of bytes read, so if we pass
7005		 * a length based on the snapshot length, it'll
7006		 * return the number of bytes from the packet
7007		 * copied to userland, not the actual length
7008		 * of the packet.
7009		 *
7010		 * This means that, for example, the IP dissector
7011		 * in tcpdump will get handed a packet length less
7012		 * than the length in the IP header, and will
7013		 * complain about "truncated-ip".
7014		 *
7015		 * So we don't bother trying to copy from the
7016		 * kernel only the bytes in which we're interested,
7017		 * but instead copy them all, just as the older
7018		 * versions of libpcap for Linux did.
7019		 *
7020		 * The buffer therefore needs to be big enough to
7021		 * hold the largest packet we can get from this
7022		 * device.  Unfortunately, we can't get the MRU
7023		 * of the network; we can only get the MTU.  The
7024		 * MTU may be too small, in which case a packet larger
7025		 * than the buffer size will be truncated *and* we
7026		 * won't get the actual packet size.
7027		 *
7028		 * However, if the snapshot length is larger than
7029		 * the buffer size based on the MTU, we use the
7030		 * snapshot length as the buffer size, instead;
7031		 * this means that with a sufficiently large snapshot
7032		 * length we won't artificially truncate packets
7033		 * to the MTU-based size.
7034		 *
7035		 * This mess just one of many problems with packet
7036		 * capture on 2.0[.x] kernels; you really want a
7037		 * 2.2[.x] or later kernel if you want packet capture
7038		 * to work well.
7039		 */
7040		mtu = iface_get_mtu(handle->fd, device, handle->errbuf);
7041		if (mtu == -1)
7042			return PCAP_ERROR;
7043		handle->bufsize = MAX_LINKHEADER_SIZE + mtu;
7044		if (handle->bufsize < (u_int)handle->snapshot)
7045			handle->bufsize = (u_int)handle->snapshot;
7046	} else {
7047		/*
7048		 * This is a 2.2[.x] or later kernel.
7049		 *
7050		 * We can safely pass "recvfrom()" a byte count
7051		 * based on the snapshot length.
7052		 *
7053		 * XXX - this "should not happen", as 2.2[.x]
7054		 * kernels all have PF_PACKET sockets, and there's
7055		 * no configuration option to disable them without
7056		 * disabling SOCK_PACKET sockets, because
7057		 * SOCK_PACKET sockets are implemented in the same
7058		 * source file, net/packet/af_packet.c.  There *is*
7059		 * an option to disable SOCK_PACKET sockets so that
7060		 * you only have PF_PACKET sockets, and the kernel
7061		 * will log warning messages for code that uses
7062		 * "obsolete (PF_INET,SOCK_PACKET)".
7063		 */
7064		handle->bufsize = (u_int)handle->snapshot;
7065	}
7066
7067	/*
7068	 * Default value for offset to align link-layer payload
7069	 * on a 4-byte boundary.
7070	 */
7071	handle->offset	 = 0;
7072
7073	/*
7074	 * SOCK_PACKET sockets don't supply information from
7075	 * stripped VLAN tags.
7076	 */
7077	handlep->vlan_offset = -1; /* unknown */
7078
7079	return 1;
7080}
7081
7082/*
7083 *  Bind the socket associated with FD to the given device using the
7084 *  interface of the old kernels.
7085 */
7086static int
7087iface_bind_old(int fd, const char *device, char *ebuf)
7088{
7089	struct sockaddr	saddr;
7090	int		err;
7091	socklen_t	errlen = sizeof(err);
7092
7093	memset(&saddr, 0, sizeof(saddr));
7094	pcap_strlcpy(saddr.sa_data, device, sizeof(saddr.sa_data));
7095	if (bind(fd, &saddr, sizeof(saddr)) == -1) {
7096		pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(ebuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
7097		    errno, "bind");
7098		return -1;
7099	}
7100
7101	/* Any pending errors, e.g., network is down? */
7102
7103	if (getsockopt(fd, SOL_SOCKET, SO_ERROR, &err, &errlen) == -1) {
7104		pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(ebuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
7105		    errno, "getsockopt (SO_ERROR)");
7106		return -1;
7107	}
7108
7109	if (err > 0) {
7110		pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(ebuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
7111		    err, "bind");
7112		return -1;
7113	}
7114
7115	return 0;
7116}
7117
7118
7119/* ===== System calls available on all supported kernels ============== */
7120
7121/*
7122 *  Query the kernel for the MTU of the given interface.
7123 */
7124static int
7125iface_get_mtu(int fd, const char *device, char *ebuf)
7126{
7127	struct ifreq	ifr;
7128
7129	if (!device)
7130		return BIGGER_THAN_ALL_MTUS;
7131
7132	memset(&ifr, 0, sizeof(ifr));
7133	pcap_strlcpy(ifr.ifr_name, device, sizeof(ifr.ifr_name));
7134
7135	if (ioctl(fd, SIOCGIFMTU, &ifr) == -1) {
7136		pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(ebuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
7137		    errno, "SIOCGIFMTU");
7138		return -1;
7139	}
7140
7141	return ifr.ifr_mtu;
7142}
7143
7144/*
7145 *  Get the hardware type of the given interface as ARPHRD_xxx constant.
7146 */
7147static int
7148iface_get_arptype(int fd, const char *device, char *ebuf)
7149{
7150	struct ifreq	ifr;
7151	int		ret;
7152
7153	memset(&ifr, 0, sizeof(ifr));
7154	pcap_strlcpy(ifr.ifr_name, device, sizeof(ifr.ifr_name));
7155
7156	if (ioctl(fd, SIOCGIFHWADDR, &ifr) == -1) {
7157		if (errno == ENODEV) {
7158			/*
7159			 * No such device.
7160			 */
7161			ret = PCAP_ERROR_NO_SUCH_DEVICE;
7162		} else
7163			ret = PCAP_ERROR;
7164		pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(ebuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
7165		    errno, "SIOCGIFHWADDR");
7166		return ret;
7167	}
7168
7169	return ifr.ifr_hwaddr.sa_family;
7170}
7171
7172#ifdef SO_ATTACH_FILTER
7173static int
7174fix_program(pcap_t *handle, struct sock_fprog *fcode, int is_mmapped)
7175{
7176	struct pcap_linux *handlep = handle->priv;
7177	size_t prog_size;
7178	register int i;
7179	register struct bpf_insn *p;
7180	struct bpf_insn *f;
7181	int len;
7182
7183	/*
7184	 * Make a copy of the filter, and modify that copy if
7185	 * necessary.
7186	 */
7187	prog_size = sizeof(*handle->fcode.bf_insns) * handle->fcode.bf_len;
7188	len = handle->fcode.bf_len;
7189	f = (struct bpf_insn *)malloc(prog_size);
7190	if (f == NULL) {
7191		pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
7192		    errno, "malloc");
7193		return -1;
7194	}
7195	memcpy(f, handle->fcode.bf_insns, prog_size);
7196	fcode->len = len;
7197	fcode->filter = (struct sock_filter *) f;
7198
7199	for (i = 0; i < len; ++i) {
7200		p = &f[i];
7201		/*
7202		 * What type of instruction is this?
7203		 */
7204		switch (BPF_CLASS(p->code)) {
7205
7206		case BPF_RET:
7207			/*
7208			 * It's a return instruction; are we capturing
7209			 * in memory-mapped mode?
7210			 */
7211			if (!is_mmapped) {
7212				/*
7213				 * No; is the snapshot length a constant,
7214				 * rather than the contents of the
7215				 * accumulator?
7216				 */
7217				if (BPF_MODE(p->code) == BPF_K) {
7218					/*
7219					 * Yes - if the value to be returned,
7220					 * i.e. the snapshot length, is
7221					 * anything other than 0, make it
7222					 * MAXIMUM_SNAPLEN, so that the packet
7223					 * is truncated by "recvfrom()",
7224					 * not by the filter.
7225					 *
7226					 * XXX - there's nothing we can
7227					 * easily do if it's getting the
7228					 * value from the accumulator; we'd
7229					 * have to insert code to force
7230					 * non-zero values to be
7231					 * MAXIMUM_SNAPLEN.
7232					 */
7233					if (p->k != 0)
7234						p->k = MAXIMUM_SNAPLEN;
7235				}
7236			}
7237			break;
7238
7239		case BPF_LD:
7240		case BPF_LDX:
7241			/*
7242			 * It's a load instruction; is it loading
7243			 * from the packet?
7244			 */
7245			switch (BPF_MODE(p->code)) {
7246
7247			case BPF_ABS:
7248			case BPF_IND:
7249			case BPF_MSH:
7250				/*
7251				 * Yes; are we in cooked mode?
7252				 */
7253				if (handlep->cooked) {
7254					/*
7255					 * Yes, so we need to fix this
7256					 * instruction.
7257					 */
7258					if (fix_offset(handle, p) < 0) {
7259						/*
7260						 * We failed to do so.
7261						 * Return 0, so our caller
7262						 * knows to punt to userland.
7263						 */
7264						return 0;
7265					}
7266				}
7267				break;
7268			}
7269			break;
7270		}
7271	}
7272	return 1;	/* we succeeded */
7273}
7274
7275static int
7276fix_offset(pcap_t *handle, struct bpf_insn *p)
7277{
7278	/*
7279	 * Existing references to auxiliary data shouldn't be adjusted.
7280	 *
7281	 * Note that SKF_AD_OFF is negative, but p->k is unsigned, so
7282	 * we use >= and cast SKF_AD_OFF to unsigned.
7283	 */
7284	if (p->k >= (bpf_u_int32)SKF_AD_OFF)
7285		return 0;
7286	if (handle->linktype == DLT_LINUX_SLL2) {
7287		/*
7288		 * What's the offset?
7289		 */
7290		if (p->k >= SLL2_HDR_LEN) {
7291			/*
7292			 * It's within the link-layer payload; that starts
7293			 * at an offset of 0, as far as the kernel packet
7294			 * filter is concerned, so subtract the length of
7295			 * the link-layer header.
7296			 */
7297			p->k -= SLL2_HDR_LEN;
7298		} else if (p->k == 0) {
7299			/*
7300			 * It's the protocol field; map it to the
7301			 * special magic kernel offset for that field.
7302			 */
7303			p->k = SKF_AD_OFF + SKF_AD_PROTOCOL;
7304		} else if (p->k == 10) {
7305			/*
7306			 * It's the packet type field; map it to the
7307			 * special magic kernel offset for that field.
7308			 */
7309			p->k = SKF_AD_OFF + SKF_AD_PKTTYPE;
7310		} else if ((bpf_int32)(p->k) > 0) {
7311			/*
7312			 * It's within the header, but it's not one of
7313			 * those fields; we can't do that in the kernel,
7314			 * so punt to userland.
7315			 */
7316			return -1;
7317		}
7318	} else {
7319		/*
7320		 * What's the offset?
7321		 */
7322		if (p->k >= SLL_HDR_LEN) {
7323			/*
7324			 * It's within the link-layer payload; that starts
7325			 * at an offset of 0, as far as the kernel packet
7326			 * filter is concerned, so subtract the length of
7327			 * the link-layer header.
7328			 */
7329			p->k -= SLL_HDR_LEN;
7330		} else if (p->k == 0) {
7331			/*
7332			 * It's the packet type field; map it to the
7333			 * special magic kernel offset for that field.
7334			 */
7335			p->k = SKF_AD_OFF + SKF_AD_PKTTYPE;
7336		} else if (p->k == 14) {
7337			/*
7338			 * It's the protocol field; map it to the
7339			 * special magic kernel offset for that field.
7340			 */
7341			p->k = SKF_AD_OFF + SKF_AD_PROTOCOL;
7342		} else if ((bpf_int32)(p->k) > 0) {
7343			/*
7344			 * It's within the header, but it's not one of
7345			 * those fields; we can't do that in the kernel,
7346			 * so punt to userland.
7347			 */
7348			return -1;
7349		}
7350	}
7351	return 0;
7352}
7353
7354static int
7355set_kernel_filter(pcap_t *handle, struct sock_fprog *fcode)
7356{
7357	int total_filter_on = 0;
7358	int save_mode;
7359	int ret;
7360	int save_errno;
7361
7362	/*
7363	 * The socket filter code doesn't discard all packets queued
7364	 * up on the socket when the filter is changed; this means
7365	 * that packets that don't match the new filter may show up
7366	 * after the new filter is put onto the socket, if those
7367	 * packets haven't yet been read.
7368	 *
7369	 * This means, for example, that if you do a tcpdump capture
7370	 * with a filter, the first few packets in the capture might
7371	 * be packets that wouldn't have passed the filter.
7372	 *
7373	 * We therefore discard all packets queued up on the socket
7374	 * when setting a kernel filter.  (This isn't an issue for
7375	 * userland filters, as the userland filtering is done after
7376	 * packets are queued up.)
7377	 *
7378	 * To flush those packets, we put the socket in read-only mode,
7379	 * and read packets from the socket until there are no more to
7380	 * read.
7381	 *
7382	 * In order to keep that from being an infinite loop - i.e.,
7383	 * to keep more packets from arriving while we're draining
7384	 * the queue - we put the "total filter", which is a filter
7385	 * that rejects all packets, onto the socket before draining
7386	 * the queue.
7387	 *
7388	 * This code deliberately ignores any errors, so that you may
7389	 * get bogus packets if an error occurs, rather than having
7390	 * the filtering done in userland even if it could have been
7391	 * done in the kernel.
7392	 */
7393	if (setsockopt(handle->fd, SOL_SOCKET, SO_ATTACH_FILTER,
7394		       &total_fcode, sizeof(total_fcode)) == 0) {
7395		char drain[1];
7396
7397		/*
7398		 * Note that we've put the total filter onto the socket.
7399		 */
7400		total_filter_on = 1;
7401
7402		/*
7403		 * Save the socket's current mode, and put it in
7404		 * non-blocking mode; we drain it by reading packets
7405		 * until we get an error (which is normally a
7406		 * "nothing more to be read" error).
7407		 */
7408		save_mode = fcntl(handle->fd, F_GETFL, 0);
7409		if (save_mode == -1) {
7410			pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(handle->errbuf,
7411			    PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE, errno,
7412			    "can't get FD flags when changing filter");
7413			return -2;
7414		}
7415		if (fcntl(handle->fd, F_SETFL, save_mode | O_NONBLOCK) < 0) {
7416			pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(handle->errbuf,
7417			    PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE, errno,
7418			    "can't set nonblocking mode when changing filter");
7419			return -2;
7420		}
7421		while (recv(handle->fd, &drain, sizeof drain, MSG_TRUNC) >= 0)
7422			;
7423		save_errno = errno;
7424		if (save_errno != EAGAIN) {
7425			/*
7426			 * Fatal error.
7427			 *
7428			 * If we can't restore the mode or reset the
7429			 * kernel filter, there's nothing we can do.
7430			 */
7431			(void)fcntl(handle->fd, F_SETFL, save_mode);
7432			(void)reset_kernel_filter(handle);
7433			pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(handle->errbuf,
7434			    PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE, save_errno,
7435			    "recv failed when changing filter");
7436			return -2;
7437		}
7438		if (fcntl(handle->fd, F_SETFL, save_mode) == -1) {
7439			pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(handle->errbuf,
7440			    PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE, errno,
7441			    "can't restore FD flags when changing filter");
7442			return -2;
7443		}
7444	}
7445
7446	/*
7447	 * Now attach the new filter.
7448	 */
7449	ret = setsockopt(handle->fd, SOL_SOCKET, SO_ATTACH_FILTER,
7450			 fcode, sizeof(*fcode));
7451	if (ret == -1 && total_filter_on) {
7452		/*
7453		 * Well, we couldn't set that filter on the socket,
7454		 * but we could set the total filter on the socket.
7455		 *
7456		 * This could, for example, mean that the filter was
7457		 * too big to put into the kernel, so we'll have to
7458		 * filter in userland; in any case, we'll be doing
7459		 * filtering in userland, so we need to remove the
7460		 * total filter so we see packets.
7461		 */
7462		save_errno = errno;
7463
7464		/*
7465		 * If this fails, we're really screwed; we have the
7466		 * total filter on the socket, and it won't come off.
7467		 * Report it as a fatal error.
7468		 */
7469		if (reset_kernel_filter(handle) == -1) {
7470			pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(handle->errbuf,
7471			    PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE, errno,
7472			    "can't remove kernel total filter");
7473			return -2;	/* fatal error */
7474		}
7475
7476		errno = save_errno;
7477	}
7478	return ret;
7479}
7480
7481static int
7482reset_kernel_filter(pcap_t *handle)
7483{
7484	int ret;
7485	/*
7486	 * setsockopt() barfs unless it get a dummy parameter.
7487	 * valgrind whines unless the value is initialized,
7488	 * as it has no idea that setsockopt() ignores its
7489	 * parameter.
7490	 */
7491	int dummy = 0;
7492
7493	ret = setsockopt(handle->fd, SOL_SOCKET, SO_DETACH_FILTER,
7494				   &dummy, sizeof(dummy));
7495	/*
7496	 * Ignore ENOENT - it means "we don't have a filter", so there
7497	 * was no filter to remove, and there's still no filter.
7498	 *
7499	 * Also ignore ENONET, as a lot of kernel versions had a
7500	 * typo where ENONET, rather than ENOENT, was returned.
7501	 */
7502	if (ret == -1 && errno != ENOENT && errno != ENONET)
7503		return -1;
7504	return 0;
7505}
7506#endif
7507
7508int
7509pcap_set_protocol_linux(pcap_t *p, int protocol)
7510{
7511	if (pcap_check_activated(p))
7512		return (PCAP_ERROR_ACTIVATED);
7513	p->opt.protocol = protocol;
7514	return (0);
7515}
7516
7517/*
7518 * Libpcap version string.
7519 */
7520const char *
7521pcap_lib_version(void)
7522{
7523#ifdef HAVE_PACKET_RING
7524 #if defined(HAVE_TPACKET3)
7525	return (PCAP_VERSION_STRING " (with TPACKET_V3)");
7526 #elif defined(HAVE_TPACKET2)
7527	return (PCAP_VERSION_STRING " (with TPACKET_V2)");
7528 #else
7529	return (PCAP_VERSION_STRING " (with TPACKET_V1)");
7530 #endif
7531#else
7532	return (PCAP_VERSION_STRING " (without TPACKET)");
7533#endif
7534}
7535