rpcap-protocol.h revision 335640
1/*
2 * Copyright (c) 2002 - 2005 NetGroup, Politecnico di Torino (Italy)
3 * Copyright (c) 2005 - 2008 CACE Technologies, Davis (California)
4 * All rights reserved.
5 *
6 * Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
7 * modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
8 * are met:
9 *
10 * 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
11 * notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
12 * 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
13 * notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
14 * documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
15 * 3. Neither the name of the Politecnico di Torino, CACE Technologies
16 * nor the names of its contributors may be used to endorse or promote
17 * products derived from this software without specific prior written
18 * permission.
19 *
20 * THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS
21 * "AS IS" AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT
22 * LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR
23 * A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT
24 * OWNER OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL,
25 * SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT
26 * LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE,
27 * DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY
28 * THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT
29 * (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE
30 * OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
31 *
32 */
33
34#ifndef __RPCAP_PROTOCOL_H__
35#define __RPCAP_PROTOCOL_H__
36
37#define RPCAP_DEFAULT_NETPORT "2002" /* Default port on which the RPCAP daemon is waiting for connections. */
38/* Default port on which the client workstation is waiting for connections in case of active mode. */
39#define RPCAP_DEFAULT_NETPORT_ACTIVE "2003"
40#define RPCAP_DEFAULT_NETADDR ""	/* Default network address on which the RPCAP daemon binds to. */
41
42/*
43 * Minimum and maximum supported versions of the protocol.
44 *
45 * If new message types are added, the protocol version MUST be changed,
46 * so that a client knows, from the negotiated protocol version, what
47 * messages can be sent to the server.
48 *
49 * If the format of an existing message type is changed, the protocol
50 * version MUST be changed, so that each side knows, from the negotiated
51 * protocol version, what format should be used.
52 *
53 * The RPCAP_MSG_ERROR format MUST not change, as it's used to, among
54 * other things, report "incorrect version number" errors, where, if
55 * the format changed, the sender of the message might not know what
56 * versions the recipient would understand, or might know a version
57 * they support (the version number they sent) but might not know
58 * the format of the message in that version.
59 *
60 * Other message versions SHOULD not change, as that would complicate
61 * the process of interpreting the message, making it version-dependent.
62 * Introducing a new message with a new format is preferable.
63 *
64 * Version negotiation is done as part of the authentication process:
65 *
66 * The client sends an authentication request, with the version number
67 * in the request being the maximum version it supports.
68 *
69 * If the server supports that version, it attempts to authenticate the
70 * client, and replies as appropriate, with the version number in the
71 * reply being that version.
72 *
73 * If the server doesn't support that version because it's too large,
74 * it replies with a RPCAP_MSG_ERROR message, with the maximum version
75 * they support as the version number in the reply, and with the error
76 * code being PCAP_ERR_WRONGVER.
77 *
78 * If the server doesn't support that version because it's too small,
79 * it replies with a RPCAP_MSG_ERROR message, with that version as
80 * the version number in the reply, and with the error code being
81 * PCAP_ERR_WRONGVER.
82 *
83 * If the client supports that version, it retries the authentication
84 * with that version and, if that fails for any reason, including
85 * PCAP_ERR_WRONGVER, fails.  Otherwise, it fails, telling its caller
86 * that there's no version that both support.
87 *
88 * This requires that the set of versions supported by a client or
89 * server be a range of integers, with no gaps.  Thus:
90 *
91 * the client's version set is [Cmin, Cmax], with Cmin <= Cmax;
92 *
93 * the server's version set is [Smin, Smax], with Smin <= Smax;
94 *
95 * the client sends Cmax as the version number in the initial
96 * authentication request;
97 *
98 * if the server doesn't support the version sent by the client,
99 * either Smax < Cmax or Smin > Cmax (because the client sent Cmax
100 * to the server, and the server doesn't support it);
101 *
102 * if Smax < Cmax:
103 *
104 *    the server sends Smax as the version number in the RPCAP_MSG_ERROR/
105 *    PCAP_ERR_WRONGVER message - the client will accept this because
106 *    Cmax != 0, as these numbers are unsigned, and this means that
107 *    this isn't an old client that rejects all messages with a non-zero
108 *    version number, it's a new client that accepts RPCAP_MSG_ERROR
109 *    messages no matter what the version is;
110 *
111 *    if Smax >= Cmin, both the client and the server can use it, and
112 *    the client retries with Smax;
113 *
114 *    if Smax < Cmin, there is no version the client and server can
115 *    both support.
116 *
117 * if Smin > Cmax:
118 *
119 *    the server sends Cmax as the version number in the RPCAP_MSG_ERROR/
120 *    PCAP_ERR_WRONGVER message - the client will accept this because
121 *    Cmax is a valid client version number.
122 *
123 *    the client will retry with Cmax, get the same version failure,
124 *    and report that there is no version the client and server can
125 *    both support (as the version sets are disjoint).
126 *
127 * Old negotiation-unaware clients just send version 0 and, if they
128 * get back PCAP_ERR_WRONGVER, treat it as a fatal error.  This
129 * means they'll fail to talk to any server that can't handle
130 * version 0, which is the appropriate thing to do, as they can
131 * only use version 0.
132 *
133 * Old negotiation-unaware servers fail if they get a version other
134 * than 0, sending back PCAP_ERR_WRONGVER with version 0, which is
135 * the only version, and thus both the minimum and maximum version,
136 * they support.  The client will either fail if it doesn't support
137 * version 0, or will retry with version 0 and succeed, so it will
138 * fail with servers that can't handle version 0 or will negotiate
139 * version 0 with servers that can handle version 0.
140 */
141#define RPCAP_MIN_VERSION 0
142#define RPCAP_MAX_VERSION 0
143
144/*
145 * Version numbers are unsigned, so if RPCAP_MIN_VERSION is 0, they
146 * are >= the minimum version, by definition; don't check against
147 * RPCAP_MIN_VERSION, as you may get compiler warnings that the
148 * comparison will always succeed.
149 */
150#if RPCAP_MIN_VERSION == 0
151#define RPCAP_VERSION_IS_SUPPORTED(v)	((v) <= RPCAP_MAX_VERSION)
152#else
153#define RPCAP_VERSION_IS_SUPPORTED(v)	\
154	((v) >= RPCAP_MIN_VERSION && (v) <= RPCAP_MAX_VERSION)
155#endif
156
157/*
158 * Separators used for the host list.
159 *
160 * It is used:
161 * - by the rpcapd daemon, when you types a list of allowed connecting hosts
162 * - by the rpcap client in active mode, when the client waits for incoming
163 * connections from other hosts
164 */
165#define RPCAP_HOSTLIST_SEP " ,;\n\r"
166
167/*********************************************************
168 *                                                       *
169 * Protocol messages formats                             *
170 *                                                       *
171 *********************************************************/
172/*
173 * WARNING: This file defines some structures that are used to transfer
174 * data on the network.
175 * Note that your compiler MUST not insert padding into these structures
176 * for better alignment.
177 * These structures have been created in order to be correctly aligned to
178 * a 32-bit boundary, but be careful in any case.
179 */
180
181/*
182 * WARNING: These typedefs MUST be of a specific size.
183 * You might have to change them on your platform.
184 *
185 * XXX - use the C99 types?  Microsoft's newer versions of Visual Studio
186 * support them.
187 */
188typedef unsigned char uint8;	/* 8-bit unsigned integer */
189typedef unsigned short uint16;	/* 16-bit unsigned integer */
190typedef unsigned int uint32;	/* 32-bit unsigned integer */
191typedef int int32;		/* 32-bit signed integer */
192
193/* Common header for all the RPCAP messages */
194struct rpcap_header
195{
196	uint8 ver;	/* RPCAP version number */
197	uint8 type;	/* RPCAP message type (error, findalldevs, ...) */
198	uint16 value;	/* Message-dependent value (not always used) */
199	uint32 plen;	/* Length of the payload of this RPCAP message */
200};
201
202/* Format of the message for the interface description (findalldevs command) */
203struct rpcap_findalldevs_if
204{
205	uint16 namelen;	/* Length of the interface name */
206	uint16 desclen;	/* Length of the interface description */
207	uint32 flags;	/* Interface flags */
208	uint16 naddr;	/* Number of addresses */
209	uint16 dummy;	/* Must be zero */
210};
211
212/*
213 * Format of an address as sent over the wire.
214 *
215 * Do *NOT* use struct sockaddr_storage, as the layout for that is
216 * machine-dependent.
217 *
218 * RFC 2553 gives two sample layouts, both of which are 128 bytes long,
219 * both of which are aligned on an 8-byte boundary, and both of which
220 * have 2 bytes before the address data.
221 *
222 * However, one has a 2-byte address family value at the beginning
223 * and the other has a 1-byte address length value and a 1-byte
224 * address family value; this reflects the fact that the original
225 * BSD sockaddr structure had a 2-byte address family value, which
226 * was later changed to a 1-byte address length value and a 1-byte
227 * address family value, when support for variable-length OSI
228 * network-layer addresses was added.
229 *
230 * Furthermore, Solaris's struct sockaddr_storage is 256 bytes
231 * long.
232 *
233 * This structure is supposed to be aligned on an 8-byte boundary;
234 * the message header is 8 bytes long, so we don't have to do
235 * anything to ensure it's aligned on that boundary within a packet,
236 * so we just define it as 128 bytes long, with a 2-byte address
237 * family.  (We only support IPv4 and IPv6 addresses, which are fixed-
238 * length.)  That way, it's the same size as sockaddr_storage on
239 * Windows, and it'll look like what an older Windows client will
240 * expect.
241 *
242 * In addition, do *NOT* use the host's AF_ value for an address,
243 * as the value for AF_INET6 is machine-dependent.  We use the
244 * Windows value, so it'll look like what an older Windows client
245 * will expect.
246 *
247 * (The Windows client is the only one that has been distributed
248 * as a standard part of *pcap; UN*X clients are probably built
249 * from source by the user or administrator, so they're in a
250 * better position to upgrade an old client.  Therefore, we
251 * try to make what goes over the wire look like what comes
252 * from a Windows server.)
253 */
254struct rpcap_sockaddr
255{
256	uint16	family;			/* Address family */
257	char	data[128-2];		/* Data */
258};
259
260/*
261 * Format of an IPv4 address as sent over the wire.
262 */
263#define RPCAP_AF_INET	2		/* Value on all OSes */
264struct rpcap_sockaddr_in
265{
266	uint16	family;			/* Address family */
267	uint16	port;			/* Port number */
268	uint32	addr;			/* IPv4 address */
269	uint8	zero[8];		/* Padding */
270};
271
272/*
273 * Format of an IPv6 address as sent over the wire.
274 */
275#define RPCAP_AF_INET6	23		/* Value on Windows */
276struct rpcap_sockaddr_in6
277{
278	uint16	family;			/* Address family */
279	uint16	port;			/* Port number */
280	uint32	flowinfo;		/* IPv6 flow information */
281	uint8	addr[16];		/* IPv6 address */
282	uint32	scope_id;		/* Scope zone index */
283};
284
285/* Format of the message for the address listing (findalldevs command) */
286struct rpcap_findalldevs_ifaddr
287{
288	struct rpcap_sockaddr addr;		/* Network address */
289	struct rpcap_sockaddr netmask;		/* Netmask for that address */
290	struct rpcap_sockaddr broadaddr;	/* Broadcast address for that address */
291	struct rpcap_sockaddr dstaddr;		/* P2P destination address for that address */
292};
293
294/*
295 * \brief Format of the message of the connection opening reply (open command).
296 *
297 * This structure transfers over the network some of the values useful on the client side.
298 */
299struct rpcap_openreply
300{
301	int32 linktype;	/* Link type */
302	int32 tzoff;	/* Timezone offset */
303};
304
305/* Format of the message that starts a remote capture (startcap command) */
306struct rpcap_startcapreq
307{
308	uint32 snaplen;		/* Length of the snapshot (number of bytes to capture for each packet) */
309	uint32 read_timeout;	/* Read timeout in milliseconds */
310	uint16 flags;		/* Flags (see RPCAP_STARTCAPREQ_FLAG_xxx) */
311	uint16 portdata;	/* Network port on which the client is waiting at (if 'serveropen') */
312};
313
314/* Format of the reply message that devoted to start a remote capture (startcap reply command) */
315struct rpcap_startcapreply
316{
317	int32 bufsize;		/* Size of the user buffer allocated by WinPcap; it can be different from the one we chose */
318	uint16 portdata;	/* Network port on which the server is waiting at (passive mode only) */
319	uint16 dummy;		/* Must be zero */
320};
321
322/*
323 * \brief Format of the header which encapsulates captured packets when transmitted on the network.
324 *
325 * This message requires the general header as well, since we want to be able to exchange
326 * more information across the network in the future (for example statistics, and kind like that).
327 */
328struct rpcap_pkthdr
329{
330	uint32 timestamp_sec;	/* 'struct timeval' compatible, it represents the 'tv_sec' field */
331	uint32 timestamp_usec;	/* 'struct timeval' compatible, it represents the 'tv_usec' field */
332	uint32 caplen;		/* Length of portion present in the capture */
333	uint32 len;		/* Real length this packet (off wire) */
334	uint32 npkt;		/* Ordinal number of the packet (i.e. the first one captured has '1', the second one '2', etc) */
335};
336
337/* General header used for the pcap_setfilter() command; keeps just the number of BPF instructions */
338struct rpcap_filter
339{
340	uint16 filtertype;	/* type of the filter transferred (BPF instructions, ...) */
341	uint16 dummy;		/* Must be zero */
342	uint32 nitems;		/* Number of items contained into the filter (e.g. BPF instructions for BPF filters) */
343};
344
345/* Structure that keeps a single BPF instuction; it is repeated 'ninsn' times according to the 'rpcap_filterbpf' header */
346struct rpcap_filterbpf_insn
347{
348	uint16 code;	/* opcode of the instruction */
349	uint8 jt;	/* relative offset to jump to in case of 'true' */
350	uint8 jf;	/* relative offset to jump to in case of 'false' */
351	int32 k;	/* instruction-dependent value */
352};
353
354/* Structure that keeps the data required for the authentication on the remote host */
355struct rpcap_auth
356{
357	uint16 type;	/* Authentication type */
358	uint16 dummy;	/* Must be zero */
359	uint16 slen1;	/* Length of the first authentication item (e.g. username) */
360	uint16 slen2;	/* Length of the second authentication item (e.g. password) */
361};
362
363/* Structure that keeps the statistics about the number of packets captured, dropped, etc. */
364struct rpcap_stats
365{
366	uint32 ifrecv;		/* Packets received by the kernel filter (i.e. pcap_stats.ps_recv) */
367	uint32 ifdrop;		/* Packets dropped by the network interface (e.g. not enough buffers) (i.e. pcap_stats.ps_ifdrop) */
368	uint32 krnldrop;	/* Packets dropped by the kernel filter (i.e. pcap_stats.ps_drop) */
369	uint32 svrcapt;		/* Packets captured by the RPCAP daemon and sent on the network */
370};
371
372/* Structure that is needed to set sampling parameters */
373struct rpcap_sampling
374{
375	uint8 method;	/* Sampling method */
376	uint8 dummy1;	/* Must be zero */
377	uint16 dummy2;	/* Must be zero */
378	uint32 value;	/* Parameter related to the sampling method */
379};
380
381/* Messages field coding */
382#define RPCAP_MSG_IS_REPLY		0x080	/* Flag indicating a reply */
383
384#define RPCAP_MSG_ERROR			1	/* Message that keeps an error notification */
385#define RPCAP_MSG_FINDALLIF_REQ		2	/* Request to list all the remote interfaces */
386#define RPCAP_MSG_OPEN_REQ		3	/* Request to open a remote device */
387#define RPCAP_MSG_STARTCAP_REQ		4	/* Request to start a capture on a remote device */
388#define RPCAP_MSG_UPDATEFILTER_REQ	5	/* Send a compiled filter into the remote device */
389#define RPCAP_MSG_CLOSE			6	/* Close the connection with the remote peer */
390#define RPCAP_MSG_PACKET		7	/* This is a 'data' message, which carries a network packet */
391#define RPCAP_MSG_AUTH_REQ		8	/* Message that keeps the authentication parameters */
392#define RPCAP_MSG_STATS_REQ		9	/* It requires to have network statistics */
393#define RPCAP_MSG_ENDCAP_REQ		10	/* Stops the current capture, keeping the device open */
394#define RPCAP_MSG_SETSAMPLING_REQ	11	/* Set sampling parameters */
395
396#define RPCAP_MSG_FINDALLIF_REPLY	(RPCAP_MSG_FINDALLIF_REQ | RPCAP_MSG_IS_REPLY)		/* Keeps the list of all the remote interfaces */
397#define RPCAP_MSG_OPEN_REPLY		(RPCAP_MSG_OPEN_REQ | RPCAP_MSG_IS_REPLY)		/* The remote device has been opened correctly */
398#define RPCAP_MSG_STARTCAP_REPLY	(RPCAP_MSG_STARTCAP_REQ | RPCAP_MSG_IS_REPLY)		/* The capture is starting correctly */
399#define RPCAP_MSG_UPDATEFILTER_REPLY	(RPCAP_MSG_UPDATEFILTER_REQ | RPCAP_MSG_IS_REPLY)	/* The filter has been applied correctly on the remote device */
400#define RPCAP_MSG_AUTH_REPLY		(RPCAP_MSG_AUTH_REQ | RPCAP_MSG_IS_REPLY)		/* Sends a message that says 'ok, authorization successful' */
401#define RPCAP_MSG_STATS_REPLY		(RPCAP_MSG_STATS_REQ | RPCAP_MSG_IS_REPLY)		/* Message that keeps the network statistics */
402#define RPCAP_MSG_ENDCAP_REPLY		(RPCAP_MSG_ENDCAP_REQ | RPCAP_MSG_IS_REPLY)		/* Confirms that the capture stopped successfully */
403#define RPCAP_MSG_SETSAMPLING_REPLY	(RPCAP_MSG_SETSAMPLING_REQ | RPCAP_MSG_IS_REPLY)		/* Confirms that the capture stopped successfully */
404
405#define RPCAP_STARTCAPREQ_FLAG_PROMISC		0x00000001	/* Enables promiscuous mode (default: disabled) */
406#define RPCAP_STARTCAPREQ_FLAG_DGRAM		0x00000002	/* Use a datagram (i.e. UDP) connection for the data stream (default: use TCP)*/
407#define RPCAP_STARTCAPREQ_FLAG_SERVEROPEN	0x00000004	/* The server has to open the data connection toward the client */
408#define RPCAP_STARTCAPREQ_FLAG_INBOUND		0x00000008	/* Capture only inbound packets (take care: the flag has no effect with promiscuous enabled) */
409#define RPCAP_STARTCAPREQ_FLAG_OUTBOUND		0x00000010	/* Capture only outbound packets (take care: the flag has no effect with promiscuous enabled) */
410
411#define RPCAP_UPDATEFILTER_BPF 1			/* This code tells us that the filter is encoded with the BPF/NPF syntax */
412
413/* Network error codes */
414#define PCAP_ERR_NETW		1	/* Network error */
415#define PCAP_ERR_INITTIMEOUT	2	/* The RPCAP initial timeout has expired */
416#define PCAP_ERR_AUTH		3	/* Generic authentication error */
417#define PCAP_ERR_FINDALLIF	4	/* Generic findalldevs error */
418#define PCAP_ERR_NOREMOTEIF	5	/* The findalldevs was ok, but the remote end had no interfaces to list */
419#define PCAP_ERR_OPEN		6	/* Generic pcap_open error */
420#define PCAP_ERR_UPDATEFILTER	7	/* Generic updatefilter error */
421#define PCAP_ERR_GETSTATS	8	/* Generic pcap_stats error */
422#define PCAP_ERR_READEX		9	/* Generic pcap_next_ex error */
423#define PCAP_ERR_HOSTNOAUTH	10	/* The host is not authorized to connect to this server */
424#define PCAP_ERR_REMOTEACCEPT	11	/* Generic pcap_remoteaccept error */
425#define PCAP_ERR_STARTCAPTURE	12	/* Generic pcap_startcapture error */
426#define PCAP_ERR_ENDCAPTURE	13	/* Generic pcap_endcapture error */
427#define PCAP_ERR_RUNTIMETIMEOUT	14	/* The RPCAP run-time timeout has expired */
428#define PCAP_ERR_SETSAMPLING	15	/* Error during the settings of sampling parameters */
429#define PCAP_ERR_WRONGMSG	16	/* The other end endpoint sent a message which has not been recognized */
430#define PCAP_ERR_WRONGVER	17	/* The other end endpoint has a version number that is not compatible with our */
431
432/*
433 * \brief Buffer used by socket functions to send-receive packets.
434 * In case you plan to have messages larger than this value, you have to increase it.
435 */
436#define RPCAP_NETBUF_SIZE 64000
437
438/*********************************************************
439 *                                                       *
440 * Routines used by the rpcap client and rpcap daemon    *
441 *                                                       *
442 *********************************************************/
443
444#include "sockutils.h"
445
446extern void rpcap_createhdr(struct rpcap_header *header, uint8 ver, uint8 type, uint16 value, uint32 length);
447extern const char *rpcap_msg_type_string(uint8 type);
448extern int rpcap_senderror(SOCKET sock, uint8 ver, uint16 errcode, const char *error, char *errbuf);
449
450#endif
451