xref: /freebsd/contrib/libpcap/pcap-int.h (revision 02e9120893770924227138ba49df1edb3896112a)
1 /*
2  * Copyright (c) 1994, 1995, 1996
3  *	The Regents of the University of California.  All rights reserved.
4  *
5  * Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
6  * modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
7  * are met:
8  * 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
9  *    notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
10  * 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
11  *    notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
12  *    documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
13  * 3. All advertising materials mentioning features or use of this software
14  *    must display the following acknowledgement:
15  *	This product includes software developed by the Computer Systems
16  *	Engineering Group at Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory.
17  * 4. Neither the name of the University nor of the Laboratory may be used
18  *    to endorse or promote products derived from this software without
19  *    specific prior written permission.
20  *
21  * THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE REGENTS AND CONTRIBUTORS ``AS IS'' AND
22  * ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE
23  * IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE
24  * ARE DISCLAIMED.  IN NO EVENT SHALL THE REGENTS OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE
25  * FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL
26  * DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS
27  * OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION)
28  * HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT
29  * LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY
30  * OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF
31  * SUCH DAMAGE.
32  */
33 
34 #ifndef pcap_int_h
35 #define	pcap_int_h
36 
37 #include <stddef.h>
38 
39 #include <signal.h>
40 
41 #include <pcap/pcap.h>
42 
43 #ifdef MSDOS
44   #include <fcntl.h>
45   #include <io.h>
46 #endif
47 
48 #include "varattrs.h"
49 #include "fmtutils.h"
50 
51 #include <stdarg.h>
52 
53 #include "portability.h"
54 
55 /*
56  * If we're compiling with Visual Studio, make sure we have at least
57  * VS 2015 or later, so we have sufficient C99 support.
58  *
59  * XXX - verify that we have at least C99 support on UN*Xes?
60  *
61  * What about MinGW or various DOS toolchains?  We're currently assuming
62  * sufficient C99 support there.
63  */
64 #if defined(_MSC_VER)
65   /*
66    * Compiler is MSVC.  Make sure we have VS 2015 or later.
67    */
68   #if _MSC_VER < 1900
69     #error "Building libpcap requires VS 2015 or later"
70   #endif
71 #endif
72 
73 /*
74  * Version string.
75  * Uses PACKAGE_VERSION from config.h.
76  */
77 #define PCAP_VERSION_STRING "libpcap version " PACKAGE_VERSION
78 
79 #ifdef __cplusplus
80 extern "C" {
81 #endif
82 
83 /*
84  * If pcap_new_api is set, we disable pcap_lookupdev(), because:
85  *
86  *    it's not thread-safe, and is marked as deprecated, on all
87  *    platforms;
88  *
89  *    on Windows, it may return UTF-16LE strings, which the program
90  *    might then pass to pcap_create() (or to pcap_open_live(), which
91  *    then passes them to pcap_create()), requiring pcap_create() to
92  *    check for UTF-16LE strings using a hack, and that hack 1)
93  *    *cannot* be 100% reliable and 2) runs the risk of going past the
94  *    end of the string.
95  *
96  * We keep it around in legacy mode for compatibility.
97  *
98  * We also disable the aforementioned hack in pcap_create().
99  */
100 extern int pcap_new_api;
101 
102 /*
103  * If pcap_utf_8_mode is set, on Windows we treat strings as UTF-8.
104  *
105  * On UN*Xes, we assume all strings are and should be in UTF-8, regardless
106  * of the setting of this flag.
107  */
108 extern int pcap_utf_8_mode;
109 
110 /*
111  * Swap byte ordering of unsigned long long timestamp on a big endian
112  * machine.
113  */
114 #define SWAPLL(ull)  ((ull & 0xff00000000000000ULL) >> 56) | \
115                       ((ull & 0x00ff000000000000ULL) >> 40) | \
116                       ((ull & 0x0000ff0000000000ULL) >> 24) | \
117                       ((ull & 0x000000ff00000000ULL) >> 8)  | \
118                       ((ull & 0x00000000ff000000ULL) << 8)  | \
119                       ((ull & 0x0000000000ff0000ULL) << 24) | \
120                       ((ull & 0x000000000000ff00ULL) << 40) | \
121                       ((ull & 0x00000000000000ffULL) << 56)
122 
123 /*
124  * Maximum snapshot length.
125  *
126  * Somewhat arbitrary, but chosen to be:
127  *
128  *    1) big enough for maximum-size Linux loopback packets (65549)
129  *       and some USB packets captured with USBPcap:
130  *
131  *           https://desowin.org/usbpcap/
132  *
133  *       (> 131072, < 262144)
134  *
135  * and
136  *
137  *    2) small enough not to cause attempts to allocate huge amounts of
138  *       memory; some applications might use the snapshot length in a
139  *       savefile header to control the size of the buffer they allocate,
140  *       so a size of, say, 2^31-1 might not work well.  (libpcap uses it
141  *       as a hint, but doesn't start out allocating a buffer bigger than
142  *       2 KiB, and grows the buffer as necessary, but not beyond the
143  *       per-linktype maximum snapshot length.  Other code might naively
144  *       use it; we want to avoid writing a too-large snapshot length,
145  *       in order not to cause that code problems.)
146  *
147  * We don't enforce this in pcap_set_snaplen(), but we use it internally.
148  */
149 #define MAXIMUM_SNAPLEN		262144
150 
151 /*
152  * Locale-independent macros for testing character types.
153  * These can be passed any integral value, without worrying about, for
154  * example, sign-extending char values, unlike the C macros.
155  */
156 #define PCAP_ISDIGIT(c) \
157 	((c) >= '0' && (c) <= '9')
158 #define PCAP_ISXDIGIT(c) \
159 	(((c) >= '0' && (c) <= '9') || \
160 	 ((c) >= 'A' && (c) <= 'F') || \
161 	 ((c) >= 'a' && (c) <= 'f'))
162 
163 struct pcap_opt {
164 	char	*device;
165 	int	timeout;	/* timeout for buffering */
166 	u_int	buffer_size;
167 	int	promisc;
168 	int	rfmon;		/* monitor mode */
169 	int	immediate;	/* immediate mode - deliver packets as soon as they arrive */
170 	int	nonblock;	/* non-blocking mode - don't wait for packets to be delivered, return "no packets available" */
171 	int	tstamp_type;
172 	int	tstamp_precision;
173 
174 	/*
175 	 * Platform-dependent options.
176 	 */
177 #ifdef __linux__
178 	int	protocol;	/* protocol to use when creating PF_PACKET socket */
179 #endif
180 #ifdef _WIN32
181 	int	nocapture_local;/* disable NPF loopback */
182 #endif
183 };
184 
185 typedef int	(*activate_op_t)(pcap_t *);
186 typedef int	(*can_set_rfmon_op_t)(pcap_t *);
187 typedef int	(*read_op_t)(pcap_t *, int cnt, pcap_handler, u_char *);
188 typedef int	(*next_packet_op_t)(pcap_t *, struct pcap_pkthdr *, u_char **);
189 typedef int	(*inject_op_t)(pcap_t *, const void *, int);
190 typedef void	(*save_current_filter_op_t)(pcap_t *, const char *);
191 typedef int	(*setfilter_op_t)(pcap_t *, struct bpf_program *);
192 typedef int	(*setdirection_op_t)(pcap_t *, pcap_direction_t);
193 typedef int	(*set_datalink_op_t)(pcap_t *, int);
194 typedef int	(*getnonblock_op_t)(pcap_t *);
195 typedef int	(*setnonblock_op_t)(pcap_t *, int);
196 typedef int	(*stats_op_t)(pcap_t *, struct pcap_stat *);
197 typedef void	(*breakloop_op_t)(pcap_t *);
198 #ifdef _WIN32
199 typedef struct pcap_stat *(*stats_ex_op_t)(pcap_t *, int *);
200 typedef int	(*setbuff_op_t)(pcap_t *, int);
201 typedef int	(*setmode_op_t)(pcap_t *, int);
202 typedef int	(*setmintocopy_op_t)(pcap_t *, int);
203 typedef HANDLE	(*getevent_op_t)(pcap_t *);
204 typedef int	(*oid_get_request_op_t)(pcap_t *, bpf_u_int32, void *, size_t *);
205 typedef int	(*oid_set_request_op_t)(pcap_t *, bpf_u_int32, const void *, size_t *);
206 typedef u_int	(*sendqueue_transmit_op_t)(pcap_t *, pcap_send_queue *, int);
207 typedef int	(*setuserbuffer_op_t)(pcap_t *, int);
208 typedef int	(*live_dump_op_t)(pcap_t *, char *, int, int);
209 typedef int	(*live_dump_ended_op_t)(pcap_t *, int);
210 typedef PAirpcapHandle	(*get_airpcap_handle_op_t)(pcap_t *);
211 #endif
212 typedef void	(*cleanup_op_t)(pcap_t *);
213 
214 /*
215  * We put all the stuff used in the read code path at the beginning,
216  * to try to keep it together in the same cache line or lines.
217  */
218 struct pcap {
219 	/*
220 	 * Method to call to read packets on a live capture.
221 	 */
222 	read_op_t read_op;
223 
224 	/*
225 	 * Method to call to read the next packet from a savefile.
226 	 */
227 	next_packet_op_t next_packet_op;
228 
229 #ifdef _WIN32
230 	HANDLE handle;
231 #else
232 	int fd;
233 #endif /* _WIN32 */
234 
235 	/*
236 	 * Read buffer.
237 	 */
238 	u_int bufsize;
239 	void *buffer;
240 	u_char *bp;
241 	int cc;
242 
243 	sig_atomic_t break_loop; /* flag set to force break from packet-reading loop */
244 
245 	void *priv;		/* private data for methods */
246 
247 #ifdef ENABLE_REMOTE
248 	struct pcap_samp rmt_samp;	/* parameters related to the sampling process. */
249 #endif
250 
251 	int swapped;
252 	FILE *rfile;		/* null if live capture, non-null if savefile */
253 	u_int fddipad;
254 	struct pcap *next;	/* list of open pcaps that need stuff cleared on close */
255 
256 	/*
257 	 * File version number; meaningful only for a savefile, but we
258 	 * keep it here so that apps that (mistakenly) ask for the
259 	 * version numbers will get the same zero values that they
260 	 * always did.
261 	 */
262 	int version_major;
263 	int version_minor;
264 
265 	int snapshot;
266 	int linktype;		/* Network linktype */
267 	int linktype_ext;	/* Extended information stored in the linktype field of a file */
268 	int offset;		/* offset for proper alignment */
269 	int activated;		/* true if the capture is really started */
270 	int oldstyle;		/* if we're opening with pcap_open_live() */
271 
272 	struct pcap_opt opt;
273 
274 	/*
275 	 * Place holder for pcap_next().
276 	 */
277 	u_char *pkt;
278 
279 #ifdef _WIN32
280 	struct pcap_stat stat;	/* used for pcap_stats_ex() */
281 #endif
282 
283 	/* We're accepting only packets in this direction/these directions. */
284 	pcap_direction_t direction;
285 
286 	/*
287 	 * Flags to affect BPF code generation.
288 	 */
289 	int bpf_codegen_flags;
290 
291 #if !defined(_WIN32) && !defined(MSDOS)
292 	int selectable_fd;	/* FD on which select()/poll()/epoll_wait()/kevent()/etc. can be done */
293 
294 	/*
295 	 * In case there either is no selectable FD, or there is but
296 	 * it doesn't necessarily work (e.g., if it doesn't get notified
297 	 * if the packet capture timeout expires before the buffer
298 	 * fills up), this points to a timeout that should be used
299 	 * in select()/poll()/epoll_wait()/kevent() call.  The pcap_t should
300 	 * be put into non-blocking mode, and, if the timeout expires on
301 	 * the call, an attempt should be made to read packets from all
302 	 * pcap_t's with a required timeout, and the code must be
303 	 * prepared not to see any packets from the attempt.
304 	 */
305 	const struct timeval *required_select_timeout;
306 #endif
307 
308 	/*
309 	 * Placeholder for filter code if bpf not in kernel.
310 	 */
311 	struct bpf_program fcode;
312 
313 	char errbuf[PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE + 1];
314 #ifdef _WIN32
315 	char acp_errbuf[PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE + 1];	/* buffer for local code page error strings */
316 #endif
317 	int dlt_count;
318 	u_int *dlt_list;
319 	int tstamp_type_count;
320 	u_int *tstamp_type_list;
321 	int tstamp_precision_count;
322 	u_int *tstamp_precision_list;
323 
324 	struct pcap_pkthdr pcap_header;	/* This is needed for the pcap_next_ex() to work */
325 
326 	/*
327 	 * More methods.
328 	 */
329 	activate_op_t activate_op;
330 	can_set_rfmon_op_t can_set_rfmon_op;
331 	inject_op_t inject_op;
332 	save_current_filter_op_t save_current_filter_op;
333 	setfilter_op_t setfilter_op;
334 	setdirection_op_t setdirection_op;
335 	set_datalink_op_t set_datalink_op;
336 	getnonblock_op_t getnonblock_op;
337 	setnonblock_op_t setnonblock_op;
338 	stats_op_t stats_op;
339 	breakloop_op_t breakloop_op;
340 
341 	/*
342 	 * Routine to use as callback for pcap_next()/pcap_next_ex().
343 	 */
344 	pcap_handler oneshot_callback;
345 
346 #ifdef _WIN32
347 	/*
348 	 * These are, at least currently, specific to the Win32 NPF
349 	 * driver.
350 	 */
351 	stats_ex_op_t stats_ex_op;
352 	setbuff_op_t setbuff_op;
353 	setmode_op_t setmode_op;
354 	setmintocopy_op_t setmintocopy_op;
355 	getevent_op_t getevent_op;
356 	oid_get_request_op_t oid_get_request_op;
357 	oid_set_request_op_t oid_set_request_op;
358 	sendqueue_transmit_op_t sendqueue_transmit_op;
359 	setuserbuffer_op_t setuserbuffer_op;
360 	live_dump_op_t live_dump_op;
361 	live_dump_ended_op_t live_dump_ended_op;
362 	get_airpcap_handle_op_t get_airpcap_handle_op;
363 #endif
364 	cleanup_op_t cleanup_op;
365 };
366 
367 /*
368  * BPF code generation flags.
369  */
370 #define BPF_SPECIAL_VLAN_HANDLING	0x00000001	/* special VLAN handling for Linux */
371 
372 /*
373  * This is a timeval as stored in a savefile.
374  * It has to use the same types everywhere, independent of the actual
375  * `struct timeval'; `struct timeval' has 32-bit tv_sec values on some
376  * platforms and 64-bit tv_sec values on other platforms, and writing
377  * out native `struct timeval' values would mean files could only be
378  * read on systems with the same tv_sec size as the system on which
379  * the file was written.
380  */
381 
382 struct pcap_timeval {
383     bpf_int32 tv_sec;		/* seconds */
384     bpf_int32 tv_usec;		/* microseconds */
385 };
386 
387 /*
388  * This is a `pcap_pkthdr' as actually stored in a savefile.
389  *
390  * Do not change the format of this structure, in any way (this includes
391  * changes that only affect the length of fields in this structure),
392  * and do not make the time stamp anything other than seconds and
393  * microseconds (e.g., seconds and nanoseconds).  Instead:
394  *
395  *	introduce a new structure for the new format;
396  *
397  *	send mail to "tcpdump-workers@lists.tcpdump.org", requesting
398  *	a new magic number for your new capture file format, and, when
399  *	you get the new magic number, put it in "savefile.c";
400  *
401  *	use that magic number for save files with the changed record
402  *	header;
403  *
404  *	make the code in "savefile.c" capable of reading files with
405  *	the old record header as well as files with the new record header
406  *	(using the magic number to determine the header format).
407  *
408  * Then supply the changes by forking the branch at
409  *
410  *	https://github.com/the-tcpdump-group/libpcap/tree/master
411  *
412  * and issuing a pull request, so that future versions of libpcap and
413  * programs that use it (such as tcpdump) will be able to read your new
414  * capture file format.
415  */
416 
417 struct pcap_sf_pkthdr {
418     struct pcap_timeval ts;	/* time stamp */
419     bpf_u_int32 caplen;		/* length of portion present */
420     bpf_u_int32 len;		/* length of this packet (off wire) */
421 };
422 
423 /*
424  * How a `pcap_pkthdr' is actually stored in savefiles written
425  * by some patched versions of libpcap (e.g. the ones in Red
426  * Hat Linux 6.1 and 6.2).
427  *
428  * Do not change the format of this structure, in any way (this includes
429  * changes that only affect the length of fields in this structure).
430  * Instead, introduce a new structure, as per the above.
431  */
432 
433 struct pcap_sf_patched_pkthdr {
434     struct pcap_timeval ts;	/* time stamp */
435     bpf_u_int32 caplen;		/* length of portion present */
436     bpf_u_int32 len;		/* length of this packet (off wire) */
437     int		index;
438     unsigned short protocol;
439     unsigned char pkt_type;
440 };
441 
442 /*
443  * User data structure for the one-shot callback used for pcap_next()
444  * and pcap_next_ex().
445  */
446 struct oneshot_userdata {
447 	struct pcap_pkthdr *hdr;
448 	const u_char **pkt;
449 	pcap_t *pd;
450 };
451 
452 #ifndef min
453 #define min(a, b) ((a) > (b) ? (b) : (a))
454 #endif
455 
456 int	pcap_offline_read(pcap_t *, int, pcap_handler, u_char *);
457 
458 /*
459  * Does the packet count argument to a module's read routine say
460  * "supply packets until you run out of packets"?
461  */
462 #define PACKET_COUNT_IS_UNLIMITED(count)	((count) <= 0)
463 
464 /*
465  * Routines that most pcap implementations can use for non-blocking mode.
466  */
467 #if !defined(_WIN32) && !defined(MSDOS)
468 int	pcap_getnonblock_fd(pcap_t *);
469 int	pcap_setnonblock_fd(pcap_t *p, int);
470 #endif
471 
472 /*
473  * Internal interfaces for "pcap_create()".
474  *
475  * "pcap_create_interface()" is the routine to do a pcap_create on
476  * a regular network interface.  There are multiple implementations
477  * of this, one for each platform type (Linux, BPF, DLPI, etc.),
478  * with the one used chosen by the configure script.
479  *
480  * "pcap_create_common()" allocates and fills in a pcap_t, for use
481  * by pcap_create routines.
482  */
483 pcap_t	*pcap_create_interface(const char *, char *);
484 
485 /*
486  * This wrapper takes an error buffer pointer and a type to use for the
487  * private data, and calls pcap_create_common(), passing it the error
488  * buffer pointer, the size for the private data type, in bytes, and the
489  * offset of the private data from the beginning of the structure, in
490  * bytes.
491  */
492 #define PCAP_CREATE_COMMON(ebuf, type) \
493 	pcap_create_common(ebuf, \
494 	    sizeof (struct { pcap_t __common; type __private; }), \
495 	    offsetof (struct { pcap_t __common; type __private; }, __private))
496 pcap_t	*pcap_create_common(char *, size_t, size_t);
497 int	pcap_do_addexit(pcap_t *);
498 void	pcap_add_to_pcaps_to_close(pcap_t *);
499 void	pcap_remove_from_pcaps_to_close(pcap_t *);
500 void	pcap_cleanup_live_common(pcap_t *);
501 int	pcap_check_activated(pcap_t *);
502 void	pcap_breakloop_common(pcap_t *);
503 
504 /*
505  * Internal interfaces for "pcap_findalldevs()".
506  *
507  * A pcap_if_list_t * is a reference to a list of devices.
508  *
509  * A get_if_flags_func is a platform-dependent function called to get
510  * additional interface flags.
511  *
512  * "pcap_platform_finddevs()" is the platform-dependent routine to
513  * find local network interfaces.
514  *
515  * "pcap_findalldevs_interfaces()" is a helper to find those interfaces
516  * using the "standard" mechanisms (SIOCGIFCONF, "getifaddrs()", etc.).
517  *
518  * "add_dev()" adds an entry to a pcap_if_list_t.
519  *
520  * "find_dev()" tries to find a device, by name, in a pcap_if_list_t.
521  *
522  * "find_or_add_dev()" checks whether a device is already in a pcap_if_list_t
523  * and, if not, adds an entry for it.
524  */
525 struct pcap_if_list;
526 typedef struct pcap_if_list pcap_if_list_t;
527 typedef int (*get_if_flags_func)(const char *, bpf_u_int32 *, char *);
528 int	pcap_platform_finddevs(pcap_if_list_t *, char *);
529 #if !defined(_WIN32) && !defined(MSDOS)
530 int	pcap_findalldevs_interfaces(pcap_if_list_t *, char *,
531 	    int (*)(const char *), get_if_flags_func);
532 #endif
533 pcap_if_t *find_or_add_dev(pcap_if_list_t *, const char *, bpf_u_int32,
534 	    get_if_flags_func, const char *, char *);
535 pcap_if_t *find_dev(pcap_if_list_t *, const char *);
536 pcap_if_t *add_dev(pcap_if_list_t *, const char *, bpf_u_int32, const char *,
537 	    char *);
538 int	add_addr_to_dev(pcap_if_t *, struct sockaddr *, size_t,
539 	    struct sockaddr *, size_t, struct sockaddr *, size_t,
540 	    struct sockaddr *dstaddr, size_t, char *errbuf);
541 #ifndef _WIN32
542 pcap_if_t *find_or_add_if(pcap_if_list_t *, const char *, bpf_u_int32,
543 	    get_if_flags_func, char *);
544 int	add_addr_to_if(pcap_if_list_t *, const char *, bpf_u_int32,
545 	    get_if_flags_func,
546 	    struct sockaddr *, size_t, struct sockaddr *, size_t,
547 	    struct sockaddr *, size_t, struct sockaddr *, size_t, char *);
548 #endif
549 
550 /*
551  * Internal interfaces for "pcap_open_offline()" and other savefile
552  * I/O routines.
553  *
554  * "pcap_open_offline_common()" allocates and fills in a pcap_t, for use
555  * by pcap_open_offline routines.
556  *
557  * "pcap_adjust_snapshot()" adjusts the snapshot to be non-zero and
558  * fit within an int.
559  *
560  * "sf_cleanup()" closes the file handle associated with a pcap_t, if
561  * appropriate, and frees all data common to all modules for handling
562  * savefile types.
563  *
564  * "charset_fopen()", in UTF-8 mode on Windows, does an fopen() that
565  * treats the pathname as being in UTF-8, rather than the local
566  * code page, on Windows.
567  */
568 
569 /*
570  * This wrapper takes an error buffer pointer and a type to use for the
571  * private data, and calls pcap_create_common(), passing it the error
572  * buffer pointer, the size for the private data type, in bytes, and the
573  * offset of the private data from the beginning of the structure, in
574  * bytes.
575  */
576 #define PCAP_OPEN_OFFLINE_COMMON(ebuf, type) \
577 	pcap_open_offline_common(ebuf, \
578 	    sizeof (struct { pcap_t __common; type __private; }), \
579 	    offsetof (struct { pcap_t __common; type __private; }, __private))
580 pcap_t	*pcap_open_offline_common(char *ebuf, size_t total_size,
581     size_t private_data);
582 bpf_u_int32 pcap_adjust_snapshot(bpf_u_int32 linktype, bpf_u_int32 snaplen);
583 void	sf_cleanup(pcap_t *p);
584 #ifdef _WIN32
585 FILE	*charset_fopen(const char *path, const char *mode);
586 #else
587 /*
588  * On other OSes, just use Boring Old fopen().
589  */
590 #define charset_fopen(path, mode)	fopen((path), (mode))
591 #endif
592 
593 /*
594  * Internal interfaces for loading code at run time.
595  */
596 #ifdef _WIN32
597 #define pcap_code_handle_t	HMODULE
598 #define pcap_funcptr_t		FARPROC
599 
600 pcap_code_handle_t	pcap_load_code(const char *);
601 pcap_funcptr_t		pcap_find_function(pcap_code_handle_t, const char *);
602 #endif
603 
604 /*
605  * Internal interfaces for doing user-mode filtering of packets and
606  * validating filter programs.
607  */
608 /*
609  * Auxiliary data, for use when interpreting a filter intended for the
610  * Linux kernel when the kernel rejects the filter (requiring us to
611  * run it in userland).  It contains VLAN tag information.
612  */
613 struct pcap_bpf_aux_data {
614 	u_short vlan_tag_present;
615 	u_short vlan_tag;
616 };
617 
618 /*
619  * Filtering routine that takes the auxiliary data as an additional
620  * argument.
621  */
622 u_int	pcap_filter_with_aux_data(const struct bpf_insn *,
623     const u_char *, u_int, u_int, const struct pcap_bpf_aux_data *);
624 
625 /*
626  * Filtering routine that doesn't.
627  */
628 u_int	pcap_filter(const struct bpf_insn *, const u_char *, u_int, u_int);
629 
630 /*
631  * Routine to validate a BPF program.
632  */
633 int	pcap_validate_filter(const struct bpf_insn *, int);
634 
635 /*
636  * Internal interfaces for both "pcap_create()" and routines that
637  * open savefiles.
638  *
639  * "pcap_oneshot()" is the standard one-shot callback for "pcap_next()"
640  * and "pcap_next_ex()".
641  */
642 void	pcap_oneshot(u_char *, const struct pcap_pkthdr *, const u_char *);
643 
644 int	install_bpf_program(pcap_t *, struct bpf_program *);
645 
646 int	pcap_strcasecmp(const char *, const char *);
647 
648 /*
649  * Internal interfaces for pcap_createsrcstr and pcap_parsesrcstr with
650  * the additional bit of information regarding SSL support (rpcap:// vs.
651  * rpcaps://).
652  */
653 int	pcap_createsrcstr_ex(char *, int, const char *, const char *,
654     const char *, unsigned char, char *);
655 int	pcap_parsesrcstr_ex(const char *, int *, char *, char *,
656     char *, unsigned char *, char *);
657 
658 #ifdef YYDEBUG
659 extern int pcap_debug;
660 #endif
661 
662 #ifdef __cplusplus
663 }
664 #endif
665 
666 #endif
667