xref: /freebsd/contrib/libpcap/pcap-linux.c (revision 716dfa4cb85cd32e18ed3a8b01404f7c540bbf6d)
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 
28 #ifndef lint
29 static const char rcsid[] _U_ =
30     "@(#) $Header: /tcpdump/master/libpcap/pcap-linux.c,v 1.110 2004/10/19 07:06:12 guy Exp $ (LBL)";
31 #endif
32 
33 /*
34  * Known problems with 2.0[.x] kernels:
35  *
36  *   - The loopback device gives every packet twice; on 2.2[.x] kernels,
37  *     if we use PF_PACKET, we can filter out the transmitted version
38  *     of the packet by using data in the "sockaddr_ll" returned by
39  *     "recvfrom()", but, on 2.0[.x] kernels, we have to use
40  *     PF_INET/SOCK_PACKET, which means "recvfrom()" supplies a
41  *     "sockaddr_pkt" which doesn't give us enough information to let
42  *     us do that.
43  *
44  *   - We have to set the interface's IFF_PROMISC flag ourselves, if
45  *     we're to run in promiscuous mode, which means we have to turn
46  *     it off ourselves when we're done; the kernel doesn't keep track
47  *     of how many sockets are listening promiscuously, which means
48  *     it won't get turned off automatically when no sockets are
49  *     listening promiscuously.  We catch "pcap_close()" and, for
50  *     interfaces we put into promiscuous mode, take them out of
51  *     promiscuous mode - which isn't necessarily the right thing to
52  *     do, if another socket also requested promiscuous mode between
53  *     the time when we opened the socket and the time when we close
54  *     the socket.
55  *
56  *   - MSG_TRUNC isn't supported, so you can't specify that "recvfrom()"
57  *     return the amount of data that you could have read, rather than
58  *     the amount that was returned, so we can't just allocate a buffer
59  *     whose size is the snapshot length and pass the snapshot length
60  *     as the byte count, and also pass MSG_TRUNC, so that the return
61  *     value tells us how long the packet was on the wire.
62  *
63  *     This means that, if we want to get the actual size of the packet,
64  *     so we can return it in the "len" field of the packet header,
65  *     we have to read the entire packet, not just the part that fits
66  *     within the snapshot length, and thus waste CPU time copying data
67  *     from the kernel that our caller won't see.
68  *
69  *     We have to get the actual size, and supply it in "len", because
70  *     otherwise, the IP dissector in tcpdump, for example, will complain
71  *     about "truncated-ip", as the packet will appear to have been
72  *     shorter, on the wire, than the IP header said it should have been.
73  */
74 
75 
76 #ifdef HAVE_CONFIG_H
77 #include "config.h"
78 #endif
79 
80 #include "pcap-int.h"
81 #include "sll.h"
82 
83 #ifdef HAVE_DAG_API
84 #include "pcap-dag.h"
85 #endif /* HAVE_DAG_API */
86 
87 #include <errno.h>
88 #include <stdlib.h>
89 #include <unistd.h>
90 #include <fcntl.h>
91 #include <string.h>
92 #include <sys/socket.h>
93 #include <sys/ioctl.h>
94 #include <sys/utsname.h>
95 #include <net/if.h>
96 #include <netinet/in.h>
97 #include <linux/if_ether.h>
98 #include <net/if_arp.h>
99 
100 /*
101  * If PF_PACKET is defined, we can use {SOCK_RAW,SOCK_DGRAM}/PF_PACKET
102  * sockets rather than SOCK_PACKET sockets.
103  *
104  * To use them, we include <linux/if_packet.h> rather than
105  * <netpacket/packet.h>; we do so because
106  *
107  *	some Linux distributions (e.g., Slackware 4.0) have 2.2 or
108  *	later kernels and libc5, and don't provide a <netpacket/packet.h>
109  *	file;
110  *
111  *	not all versions of glibc2 have a <netpacket/packet.h> file
112  *	that defines stuff needed for some of the 2.4-or-later-kernel
113  *	features, so if the system has a 2.4 or later kernel, we
114  *	still can't use those features.
115  *
116  * We're already including a number of other <linux/XXX.h> headers, and
117  * this code is Linux-specific (no other OS has PF_PACKET sockets as
118  * a raw packet capture mechanism), so it's not as if you gain any
119  * useful portability by using <netpacket/packet.h>
120  *
121  * XXX - should we just include <linux/if_packet.h> even if PF_PACKET
122  * isn't defined?  It only defines one data structure in 2.0.x, so
123  * it shouldn't cause any problems.
124  */
125 #ifdef PF_PACKET
126 # include <linux/if_packet.h>
127 
128  /*
129   * On at least some Linux distributions (for example, Red Hat 5.2),
130   * there's no <netpacket/packet.h> file, but PF_PACKET is defined if
131   * you include <sys/socket.h>, but <linux/if_packet.h> doesn't define
132   * any of the PF_PACKET stuff such as "struct sockaddr_ll" or any of
133   * the PACKET_xxx stuff.
134   *
135   * So we check whether PACKET_HOST is defined, and assume that we have
136   * PF_PACKET sockets only if it is defined.
137   */
138 # ifdef PACKET_HOST
139 #  define HAVE_PF_PACKET_SOCKETS
140 # endif /* PACKET_HOST */
141 #endif /* PF_PACKET */
142 
143 #ifdef SO_ATTACH_FILTER
144 #include <linux/types.h>
145 #include <linux/filter.h>
146 #endif
147 
148 #ifndef __GLIBC__
149 typedef int		socklen_t;
150 #endif
151 
152 #ifndef MSG_TRUNC
153 /*
154  * This is being compiled on a system that lacks MSG_TRUNC; define it
155  * with the value it has in the 2.2 and later kernels, so that, on
156  * those kernels, when we pass it in the flags argument to "recvfrom()"
157  * we're passing the right value and thus get the MSG_TRUNC behavior
158  * we want.  (We don't get that behavior on 2.0[.x] kernels, because
159  * they didn't support MSG_TRUNC.)
160  */
161 #define MSG_TRUNC	0x20
162 #endif
163 
164 #ifndef SOL_PACKET
165 /*
166  * This is being compiled on a system that lacks SOL_PACKET; define it
167  * with the value it has in the 2.2 and later kernels, so that we can
168  * set promiscuous mode in the good modern way rather than the old
169  * 2.0-kernel crappy way.
170  */
171 #define SOL_PACKET	263
172 #endif
173 
174 #define MAX_LINKHEADER_SIZE	256
175 
176 /*
177  * When capturing on all interfaces we use this as the buffer size.
178  * Should be bigger then all MTUs that occur in real life.
179  * 64kB should be enough for now.
180  */
181 #define BIGGER_THAN_ALL_MTUS	(64*1024)
182 
183 /*
184  * Prototypes for internal functions
185  */
186 static void map_arphrd_to_dlt(pcap_t *, int, int);
187 static int live_open_old(pcap_t *, const char *, int, int, char *);
188 static int live_open_new(pcap_t *, const char *, int, int, char *);
189 static int pcap_read_linux(pcap_t *, int, pcap_handler, u_char *);
190 static int pcap_read_packet(pcap_t *, pcap_handler, u_char *);
191 static int pcap_inject_linux(pcap_t *, const void *, size_t);
192 static int pcap_stats_linux(pcap_t *, struct pcap_stat *);
193 static int pcap_setfilter_linux(pcap_t *, struct bpf_program *);
194 static void pcap_close_linux(pcap_t *);
195 
196 /*
197  * Wrap some ioctl calls
198  */
199 #ifdef HAVE_PF_PACKET_SOCKETS
200 static int	iface_get_id(int fd, const char *device, char *ebuf);
201 #endif
202 static int	iface_get_mtu(int fd, const char *device, char *ebuf);
203 static int 	iface_get_arptype(int fd, const char *device, char *ebuf);
204 #ifdef HAVE_PF_PACKET_SOCKETS
205 static int 	iface_bind(int fd, int ifindex, char *ebuf);
206 #endif
207 static int 	iface_bind_old(int fd, const char *device, char *ebuf);
208 
209 #ifdef SO_ATTACH_FILTER
210 static int	fix_program(pcap_t *handle, struct sock_fprog *fcode);
211 static int	fix_offset(struct bpf_insn *p);
212 static int	set_kernel_filter(pcap_t *handle, struct sock_fprog *fcode);
213 static int	reset_kernel_filter(pcap_t *handle);
214 
215 static struct sock_filter	total_insn
216 	= BPF_STMT(BPF_RET | BPF_K, 0);
217 static struct sock_fprog	total_fcode
218 	= { 1, &total_insn };
219 #endif
220 
221 /*
222  *  Get a handle for a live capture from the given device. You can
223  *  pass NULL as device to get all packages (without link level
224  *  information of course). If you pass 1 as promisc the interface
225  *  will be set to promiscous mode (XXX: I think this usage should
226  *  be deprecated and functions be added to select that later allow
227  *  modification of that values -- Torsten).
228  *
229  *  See also pcap(3).
230  */
231 pcap_t *
232 pcap_open_live(const char *device, int snaplen, int promisc, int to_ms,
233     char *ebuf)
234 {
235 	pcap_t		*handle;
236 	int		mtu;
237 	int		err;
238 	int		live_open_ok = 0;
239 	struct utsname	utsname;
240 
241 #ifdef HAVE_DAG_API
242 	if (strstr(device, "dag")) {
243 		return dag_open_live(device, snaplen, promisc, to_ms, ebuf);
244 	}
245 #endif /* HAVE_DAG_API */
246 
247         /* Allocate a handle for this session. */
248 
249 	handle = malloc(sizeof(*handle));
250 	if (handle == NULL) {
251 		snprintf(ebuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE, "malloc: %s",
252 			 pcap_strerror(errno));
253 		return NULL;
254 	}
255 
256 	/* Initialize some components of the pcap structure. */
257 
258 	memset(handle, 0, sizeof(*handle));
259 	handle->snapshot	= snaplen;
260 	handle->md.timeout	= to_ms;
261 
262 	/*
263 	 * NULL and "any" are special devices which give us the hint to
264 	 * monitor all devices.
265 	 */
266 	if (!device || strcmp(device, "any") == 0) {
267 		device			= NULL;
268 		handle->md.device	= strdup("any");
269 		if (promisc) {
270 			promisc = 0;
271 			/* Just a warning. */
272 			snprintf(ebuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
273 			    "Promiscuous mode not supported on the \"any\" device");
274 		}
275 
276 	} else
277 		handle->md.device	= strdup(device);
278 
279 	if (handle->md.device == NULL) {
280 		snprintf(ebuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE, "strdup: %s",
281 			 pcap_strerror(errno) );
282 		free(handle);
283 		return NULL;
284 	}
285 
286 	/*
287 	 * Current Linux kernels use the protocol family PF_PACKET to
288 	 * allow direct access to all packets on the network while
289 	 * older kernels had a special socket type SOCK_PACKET to
290 	 * implement this feature.
291 	 * While this old implementation is kind of obsolete we need
292 	 * to be compatible with older kernels for a while so we are
293 	 * trying both methods with the newer method preferred.
294 	 */
295 
296 	if ((err = live_open_new(handle, device, promisc, to_ms, ebuf)) == 1)
297 		live_open_ok = 1;
298 	else if (err == 0) {
299 		/* Non-fatal error; try old way */
300 		if (live_open_old(handle, device, promisc, to_ms, ebuf))
301 			live_open_ok = 1;
302 	}
303 	if (!live_open_ok) {
304 		/*
305 		 * Both methods to open the packet socket failed. Tidy
306 		 * up and report our failure (ebuf is expected to be
307 		 * set by the functions above).
308 		 */
309 
310 		if (handle->md.device != NULL)
311 			free(handle->md.device);
312 		free(handle);
313 		return NULL;
314 	}
315 
316 	/*
317 	 * Compute the buffer size.
318 	 *
319 	 * If we're using SOCK_PACKET, this might be a 2.0[.x] kernel,
320 	 * and might require special handling - check.
321 	 */
322 	if (handle->md.sock_packet && (uname(&utsname) < 0 ||
323 	    strncmp(utsname.release, "2.0", 3) == 0)) {
324 		/*
325 		 * We're using a SOCK_PACKET structure, and either
326 		 * we couldn't find out what kernel release this is,
327 		 * or it's a 2.0[.x] kernel.
328 		 *
329 		 * In the 2.0[.x] kernel, a "recvfrom()" on
330 		 * a SOCK_PACKET socket, with MSG_TRUNC set, will
331 		 * return the number of bytes read, so if we pass
332 		 * a length based on the snapshot length, it'll
333 		 * return the number of bytes from the packet
334 		 * copied to userland, not the actual length
335 		 * of the packet.
336 		 *
337 		 * This means that, for example, the IP dissector
338 		 * in tcpdump will get handed a packet length less
339 		 * than the length in the IP header, and will
340 		 * complain about "truncated-ip".
341 		 *
342 		 * So we don't bother trying to copy from the
343 		 * kernel only the bytes in which we're interested,
344 		 * but instead copy them all, just as the older
345 		 * versions of libpcap for Linux did.
346 		 *
347 		 * The buffer therefore needs to be big enough to
348 		 * hold the largest packet we can get from this
349 		 * device.  Unfortunately, we can't get the MRU
350 		 * of the network; we can only get the MTU.  The
351 		 * MTU may be too small, in which case a packet larger
352 		 * than the buffer size will be truncated *and* we
353 		 * won't get the actual packet size.
354 		 *
355 		 * However, if the snapshot length is larger than
356 		 * the buffer size based on the MTU, we use the
357 		 * snapshot length as the buffer size, instead;
358 		 * this means that with a sufficiently large snapshot
359 		 * length we won't artificially truncate packets
360 		 * to the MTU-based size.
361 		 *
362 		 * This mess just one of many problems with packet
363 		 * capture on 2.0[.x] kernels; you really want a
364 		 * 2.2[.x] or later kernel if you want packet capture
365 		 * to work well.
366 		 */
367 		mtu = iface_get_mtu(handle->fd, device, ebuf);
368 		if (mtu == -1) {
369 			pcap_close_linux(handle);
370 			free(handle);
371 			return NULL;
372 		}
373 		handle->bufsize = MAX_LINKHEADER_SIZE + mtu;
374 		if (handle->bufsize < handle->snapshot)
375 			handle->bufsize = handle->snapshot;
376 	} else {
377 		/*
378 		 * This is a 2.2[.x] or later kernel (we know that
379 		 * either because we're not using a SOCK_PACKET
380 		 * socket - PF_PACKET is supported only in 2.2
381 		 * and later kernels - or because we checked the
382 		 * kernel version).
383 		 *
384 		 * We can safely pass "recvfrom()" a byte count
385 		 * based on the snapshot length.
386 		 */
387 		handle->bufsize = handle->snapshot;
388 	}
389 
390 	/* Allocate the buffer */
391 
392 	handle->buffer	 = malloc(handle->bufsize + handle->offset);
393 	if (!handle->buffer) {
394 	        snprintf(ebuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
395 			 "malloc: %s", pcap_strerror(errno));
396 		pcap_close_linux(handle);
397 		free(handle);
398 		return NULL;
399 	}
400 
401 	/*
402 	 * "handle->fd" is a socket, so "select()" and "poll()"
403 	 * should work on it.
404 	 */
405 	handle->selectable_fd = handle->fd;
406 
407 	handle->read_op = pcap_read_linux;
408 	handle->inject_op = pcap_inject_linux;
409 	handle->setfilter_op = pcap_setfilter_linux;
410 	handle->set_datalink_op = NULL;	/* can't change data link type */
411 	handle->getnonblock_op = pcap_getnonblock_fd;
412 	handle->setnonblock_op = pcap_setnonblock_fd;
413 	handle->stats_op = pcap_stats_linux;
414 	handle->close_op = pcap_close_linux;
415 
416 	return handle;
417 }
418 
419 /*
420  *  Read at most max_packets from the capture stream and call the callback
421  *  for each of them. Returns the number of packets handled or -1 if an
422  *  error occured.
423  */
424 static int
425 pcap_read_linux(pcap_t *handle, int max_packets, pcap_handler callback, u_char *user)
426 {
427 	/*
428 	 * Currently, on Linux only one packet is delivered per read,
429 	 * so we don't loop.
430 	 */
431 	return pcap_read_packet(handle, callback, user);
432 }
433 
434 /*
435  *  Read a packet from the socket calling the handler provided by
436  *  the user. Returns the number of packets received or -1 if an
437  *  error occured.
438  */
439 static int
440 pcap_read_packet(pcap_t *handle, pcap_handler callback, u_char *userdata)
441 {
442 	u_char			*bp;
443 	int			offset;
444 #ifdef HAVE_PF_PACKET_SOCKETS
445 	struct sockaddr_ll	from;
446 	struct sll_header	*hdrp;
447 #else
448 	struct sockaddr		from;
449 #endif
450 	socklen_t		fromlen;
451 	int			packet_len, caplen;
452 	struct pcap_pkthdr	pcap_header;
453 
454 #ifdef HAVE_PF_PACKET_SOCKETS
455 	/*
456 	 * If this is a cooked device, leave extra room for a
457 	 * fake packet header.
458 	 */
459 	if (handle->md.cooked)
460 		offset = SLL_HDR_LEN;
461 	else
462 		offset = 0;
463 #else
464 	/*
465 	 * This system doesn't have PF_PACKET sockets, so it doesn't
466 	 * support cooked devices.
467 	 */
468 	offset = 0;
469 #endif
470 
471 	/* Receive a single packet from the kernel */
472 
473 	bp = handle->buffer + handle->offset;
474 	do {
475 		/*
476 		 * Has "pcap_breakloop()" been called?
477 		 */
478 		if (handle->break_loop) {
479 			/*
480 			 * Yes - clear the flag that indicates that it
481 			 * has, and return -2 as an indication that we
482 			 * were told to break out of the loop.
483 			 */
484 			handle->break_loop = 0;
485 			return -2;
486 		}
487 		fromlen = sizeof(from);
488 		packet_len = recvfrom(
489 			handle->fd, bp + offset,
490 			handle->bufsize - offset, MSG_TRUNC,
491 			(struct sockaddr *) &from, &fromlen);
492 	} while (packet_len == -1 && errno == EINTR);
493 
494 	/* Check if an error occured */
495 
496 	if (packet_len == -1) {
497 		if (errno == EAGAIN)
498 			return 0;	/* no packet there */
499 		else {
500 			snprintf(handle->errbuf, sizeof(handle->errbuf),
501 				 "recvfrom: %s", pcap_strerror(errno));
502 			return -1;
503 		}
504 	}
505 
506 #ifdef HAVE_PF_PACKET_SOCKETS
507 	/*
508 	 * If this is from the loopback device, reject outgoing packets;
509 	 * we'll see the packet as an incoming packet as well, and
510 	 * we don't want to see it twice.
511 	 *
512 	 * We can only do this if we're using PF_PACKET; the address
513 	 * returned for SOCK_PACKET is a "sockaddr_pkt" which lacks
514 	 * the relevant packet type information.
515 	 */
516 	if (!handle->md.sock_packet &&
517 	    from.sll_ifindex == handle->md.lo_ifindex &&
518 	    from.sll_pkttype == PACKET_OUTGOING)
519 		return 0;
520 #endif
521 
522 #ifdef HAVE_PF_PACKET_SOCKETS
523 	/*
524 	 * If this is a cooked device, fill in the fake packet header.
525 	 */
526 	if (handle->md.cooked) {
527 		/*
528 		 * Add the length of the fake header to the length
529 		 * of packet data we read.
530 		 */
531 		packet_len += SLL_HDR_LEN;
532 
533 		hdrp = (struct sll_header *)bp;
534 
535 		/*
536 		 * Map the PACKET_ value to a LINUX_SLL_ value; we
537 		 * want the same numerical value to be used in
538 		 * the link-layer header even if the numerical values
539 		 * for the PACKET_ #defines change, so that programs
540 		 * that look at the packet type field will always be
541 		 * able to handle DLT_LINUX_SLL captures.
542 		 */
543 		switch (from.sll_pkttype) {
544 
545 		case PACKET_HOST:
546 			hdrp->sll_pkttype = htons(LINUX_SLL_HOST);
547 			break;
548 
549 		case PACKET_BROADCAST:
550 			hdrp->sll_pkttype = htons(LINUX_SLL_BROADCAST);
551 			break;
552 
553 		case PACKET_MULTICAST:
554 			hdrp->sll_pkttype = htons(LINUX_SLL_MULTICAST);
555 			break;
556 
557 		case PACKET_OTHERHOST:
558 			hdrp->sll_pkttype = htons(LINUX_SLL_OTHERHOST);
559 			break;
560 
561 		case PACKET_OUTGOING:
562 			hdrp->sll_pkttype = htons(LINUX_SLL_OUTGOING);
563 			break;
564 
565 		default:
566 			hdrp->sll_pkttype = -1;
567 			break;
568 		}
569 
570 		hdrp->sll_hatype = htons(from.sll_hatype);
571 		hdrp->sll_halen = htons(from.sll_halen);
572 		memcpy(hdrp->sll_addr, from.sll_addr,
573 		    (from.sll_halen > SLL_ADDRLEN) ?
574 		      SLL_ADDRLEN :
575 		      from.sll_halen);
576 		hdrp->sll_protocol = from.sll_protocol;
577 	}
578 #endif
579 
580 	/*
581 	 * XXX: According to the kernel source we should get the real
582 	 * packet len if calling recvfrom with MSG_TRUNC set. It does
583 	 * not seem to work here :(, but it is supported by this code
584 	 * anyway.
585 	 * To be honest the code RELIES on that feature so this is really
586 	 * broken with 2.2.x kernels.
587 	 * I spend a day to figure out what's going on and I found out
588 	 * that the following is happening:
589 	 *
590 	 * The packet comes from a random interface and the packet_rcv
591 	 * hook is called with a clone of the packet. That code inserts
592 	 * the packet into the receive queue of the packet socket.
593 	 * If a filter is attached to that socket that filter is run
594 	 * first - and there lies the problem. The default filter always
595 	 * cuts the packet at the snaplen:
596 	 *
597 	 * # tcpdump -d
598 	 * (000) ret      #68
599 	 *
600 	 * So the packet filter cuts down the packet. The recvfrom call
601 	 * says "hey, it's only 68 bytes, it fits into the buffer" with
602 	 * the result that we don't get the real packet length. This
603 	 * is valid at least until kernel 2.2.17pre6.
604 	 *
605 	 * We currently handle this by making a copy of the filter
606 	 * program, fixing all "ret" instructions with non-zero
607 	 * operands to have an operand of 65535 so that the filter
608 	 * doesn't truncate the packet, and supplying that modified
609 	 * filter to the kernel.
610 	 */
611 
612 	caplen = packet_len;
613 	if (caplen > handle->snapshot)
614 		caplen = handle->snapshot;
615 
616 	/* Run the packet filter if not using kernel filter */
617 	if (!handle->md.use_bpf && handle->fcode.bf_insns) {
618 		if (bpf_filter(handle->fcode.bf_insns, bp,
619 		                packet_len, caplen) == 0)
620 		{
621 			/* rejected by filter */
622 			return 0;
623 		}
624 	}
625 
626 	/* Fill in our own header data */
627 
628 	if (ioctl(handle->fd, SIOCGSTAMP, &pcap_header.ts) == -1) {
629 		snprintf(handle->errbuf, sizeof(handle->errbuf),
630 			 "ioctl: %s", pcap_strerror(errno));
631 		return -1;
632 	}
633 	pcap_header.caplen	= caplen;
634 	pcap_header.len		= packet_len;
635 
636 	/*
637 	 * Count the packet.
638 	 *
639 	 * Arguably, we should count them before we check the filter,
640 	 * as on many other platforms "ps_recv" counts packets
641 	 * handed to the filter rather than packets that passed
642 	 * the filter, but if filtering is done in the kernel, we
643 	 * can't get a count of packets that passed the filter,
644 	 * and that would mean the meaning of "ps_recv" wouldn't
645 	 * be the same on all Linux systems.
646 	 *
647 	 * XXX - it's not the same on all systems in any case;
648 	 * ideally, we should have a "get the statistics" call
649 	 * that supplies more counts and indicates which of them
650 	 * it supplies, so that we supply a count of packets
651 	 * handed to the filter only on platforms where that
652 	 * information is available.
653 	 *
654 	 * We count them here even if we can get the packet count
655 	 * from the kernel, as we can only determine at run time
656 	 * whether we'll be able to get it from the kernel (if
657 	 * HAVE_TPACKET_STATS isn't defined, we can't get it from
658 	 * the kernel, but if it is defined, the library might
659 	 * have been built with a 2.4 or later kernel, but we
660 	 * might be running on a 2.2[.x] kernel without Alexey
661 	 * Kuznetzov's turbopacket patches, and thus the kernel
662 	 * might not be able to supply those statistics).  We
663 	 * could, I guess, try, when opening the socket, to get
664 	 * the statistics, and if we can not increment the count
665 	 * here, but it's not clear that always incrementing
666 	 * the count is more expensive than always testing a flag
667 	 * in memory.
668 	 */
669 	handle->md.stat.ps_recv++;
670 
671 	/* Call the user supplied callback function */
672 	callback(userdata, &pcap_header, bp);
673 
674 	return 1;
675 }
676 
677 static int
678 pcap_inject_linux(pcap_t *handle, const void *buf, size_t size)
679 {
680 	int ret;
681 
682 #ifdef HAVE_PF_PACKET_SOCKETS
683 	if (!handle->md.sock_packet) {
684 		/* PF_PACKET socket */
685 		if (handle->md.ifindex == -1) {
686 			/*
687 			 * We don't support sending on the "any" device.
688 			 */
689 			strlcpy(handle->errbuf,
690 			    "Sending packets isn't supported on the \"any\" device",
691 			    PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE);
692 			return (-1);
693 		}
694 
695 		if (handle->md.cooked) {
696 			/*
697 			 * We don't support sending on the "any" device.
698 			 *
699 			 * XXX - how do you send on a bound cooked-mode
700 			 * socket?
701 			 * Is a "sendto()" required there?
702 			 */
703 			strlcpy(handle->errbuf,
704 			    "Sending packets isn't supported in cooked mode",
705 			    PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE);
706 			return (-1);
707 		}
708 	}
709 #endif
710 
711 	ret = send(handle->fd, buf, size, 0);
712 	if (ret == -1) {
713 		snprintf(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE, "send: %s",
714 		    pcap_strerror(errno));
715 		return (-1);
716 	}
717 	return (ret);
718 }
719 
720 /*
721  *  Get the statistics for the given packet capture handle.
722  *  Reports the number of dropped packets iff the kernel supports
723  *  the PACKET_STATISTICS "getsockopt()" argument (2.4 and later
724  *  kernels, and 2.2[.x] kernels with Alexey Kuznetzov's turbopacket
725  *  patches); otherwise, that information isn't available, and we lie
726  *  and report 0 as the count of dropped packets.
727  */
728 static int
729 pcap_stats_linux(pcap_t *handle, struct pcap_stat *stats)
730 {
731 #ifdef HAVE_TPACKET_STATS
732 	struct tpacket_stats kstats;
733 	socklen_t len = sizeof (struct tpacket_stats);
734 #endif
735 
736 #ifdef HAVE_TPACKET_STATS
737 	/*
738 	 * Try to get the packet counts from the kernel.
739 	 */
740 	if (getsockopt(handle->fd, SOL_PACKET, PACKET_STATISTICS,
741 			&kstats, &len) > -1) {
742 		/*
743 		 * In "linux/net/packet/af_packet.c", at least in the
744 		 * 2.4.9 kernel, "tp_packets" is incremented for every
745 		 * packet that passes the packet filter *and* is
746 		 * successfully queued on the socket; "tp_drops" is
747 		 * incremented for every packet dropped because there's
748 		 * not enough free space in the socket buffer.
749 		 *
750 		 * When the statistics are returned for a PACKET_STATISTICS
751 		 * "getsockopt()" call, "tp_drops" is added to "tp_packets",
752 		 * so that "tp_packets" counts all packets handed to
753 		 * the PF_PACKET socket, including packets dropped because
754 		 * there wasn't room on the socket buffer - but not
755 		 * including packets that didn't pass the filter.
756 		 *
757 		 * In the BSD BPF, the count of received packets is
758 		 * incremented for every packet handed to BPF, regardless
759 		 * of whether it passed the filter.
760 		 *
761 		 * We can't make "pcap_stats()" work the same on both
762 		 * platforms, but the best approximation is to return
763 		 * "tp_packets" as the count of packets and "tp_drops"
764 		 * as the count of drops.
765 		 *
766 		 * Keep a running total because each call to
767 		 *    getsockopt(handle->fd, SOL_PACKET, PACKET_STATISTICS, ....
768 		 * resets the counters to zero.
769 		 */
770 		handle->md.stat.ps_recv += kstats.tp_packets;
771 		handle->md.stat.ps_drop += kstats.tp_drops;
772 	}
773 	else
774 	{
775 		/*
776 		 * If the error was EOPNOTSUPP, fall through, so that
777 		 * if you build the library on a system with
778 		 * "struct tpacket_stats" and run it on a system
779 		 * that doesn't, it works as it does if the library
780 		 * is built on a system without "struct tpacket_stats".
781 		 */
782 		if (errno != EOPNOTSUPP) {
783 			snprintf(handle->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
784 			    "pcap_stats: %s", pcap_strerror(errno));
785 			return -1;
786 		}
787 	}
788 #endif
789 	/*
790 	 * On systems where the PACKET_STATISTICS "getsockopt()" argument
791 	 * is supported on PF_PACKET sockets:
792 	 *
793 	 *	"ps_recv" counts only packets that *passed* the filter,
794 	 *	not packets that didn't pass the filter.  This includes
795 	 *	packets later dropped because we ran out of buffer space.
796 	 *
797 	 *	"ps_drop" counts packets dropped because we ran out of
798 	 *	buffer space.  It doesn't count packets dropped by the
799 	 *	interface driver.  It counts only packets that passed
800 	 *	the filter.
801 	 *
802 	 *	Both statistics include packets not yet read from the
803 	 *	kernel by libpcap, and thus not yet seen by the application.
804 	 *
805 	 * On systems where the PACKET_STATISTICS "getsockopt()" argument
806 	 * is not supported on PF_PACKET sockets:
807 	 *
808 	 *	"ps_recv" counts only packets that *passed* the filter,
809 	 *	not packets that didn't pass the filter.  It does not
810 	 *	count packets dropped because we ran out of buffer
811 	 *	space.
812 	 *
813 	 *	"ps_drop" is not supported.
814 	 *
815 	 *	"ps_recv" doesn't include packets not yet read from
816 	 *	the kernel by libpcap.
817 	 */
818 	*stats = handle->md.stat;
819 	return 0;
820 }
821 
822 /*
823  * Description string for the "any" device.
824  */
825 static const char any_descr[] = "Pseudo-device that captures on all interfaces";
826 
827 int
828 pcap_platform_finddevs(pcap_if_t **alldevsp, char *errbuf)
829 {
830 	if (pcap_add_if(alldevsp, "any", 0, any_descr, errbuf) < 0)
831 		return (-1);
832 
833 #ifdef HAVE_DAG_API
834 	if (dag_platform_finddevs(alldevsp, errbuf) < 0)
835 		return (-1);
836 #endif /* HAVE_DAG_API */
837 
838 	return (0);
839 }
840 
841 /*
842  *  Attach the given BPF code to the packet capture device.
843  */
844 static int
845 pcap_setfilter_linux(pcap_t *handle, struct bpf_program *filter)
846 {
847 #ifdef SO_ATTACH_FILTER
848 	struct sock_fprog	fcode;
849 	int			can_filter_in_kernel;
850 	int			err = 0;
851 #endif
852 
853 	if (!handle)
854 		return -1;
855 	if (!filter) {
856 	        strncpy(handle->errbuf, "setfilter: No filter specified",
857 			sizeof(handle->errbuf));
858 		return -1;
859 	}
860 
861 	/* Make our private copy of the filter */
862 
863 	if (install_bpf_program(handle, filter) < 0)
864 		/* install_bpf_program() filled in errbuf */
865 		return -1;
866 
867 	/*
868 	 * Run user level packet filter by default. Will be overriden if
869 	 * installing a kernel filter succeeds.
870 	 */
871 	handle->md.use_bpf = 0;
872 
873 	/* Install kernel level filter if possible */
874 
875 #ifdef SO_ATTACH_FILTER
876 #ifdef USHRT_MAX
877 	if (handle->fcode.bf_len > USHRT_MAX) {
878 		/*
879 		 * fcode.len is an unsigned short for current kernel.
880 		 * I have yet to see BPF-Code with that much
881 		 * instructions but still it is possible. So for the
882 		 * sake of correctness I added this check.
883 		 */
884 		fprintf(stderr, "Warning: Filter too complex for kernel\n");
885 		fcode.filter = NULL;
886 		can_filter_in_kernel = 0;
887 	} else
888 #endif /* USHRT_MAX */
889 	{
890 		/*
891 		 * Oh joy, the Linux kernel uses struct sock_fprog instead
892 		 * of struct bpf_program and of course the length field is
893 		 * of different size. Pointed out by Sebastian
894 		 *
895 		 * Oh, and we also need to fix it up so that all "ret"
896 		 * instructions with non-zero operands have 65535 as the
897 		 * operand, and so that, if we're in cooked mode, all
898 		 * memory-reference instructions use special magic offsets
899 		 * in references to the link-layer header and assume that
900 		 * the link-layer payload begins at 0; "fix_program()"
901 		 * will do that.
902 		 */
903 		switch (fix_program(handle, &fcode)) {
904 
905 		case -1:
906 		default:
907 			/*
908 			 * Fatal error; just quit.
909 			 * (The "default" case shouldn't happen; we
910 			 * return -1 for that reason.)
911 			 */
912 			return -1;
913 
914 		case 0:
915 			/*
916 			 * The program performed checks that we can't make
917 			 * work in the kernel.
918 			 */
919 			can_filter_in_kernel = 0;
920 			break;
921 
922 		case 1:
923 			/*
924 			 * We have a filter that'll work in the kernel.
925 			 */
926 			can_filter_in_kernel = 1;
927 			break;
928 		}
929 	}
930 
931 	if (can_filter_in_kernel) {
932 		if ((err = set_kernel_filter(handle, &fcode)) == 0)
933 		{
934 			/* Installation succeded - using kernel filter. */
935 			handle->md.use_bpf = 1;
936 		}
937 		else if (err == -1)	/* Non-fatal error */
938 		{
939 			/*
940 			 * Print a warning if we weren't able to install
941 			 * the filter for a reason other than "this kernel
942 			 * isn't configured to support socket filters.
943 			 */
944 			if (errno != ENOPROTOOPT && errno != EOPNOTSUPP) {
945 				fprintf(stderr,
946 				    "Warning: Kernel filter failed: %s\n",
947 					pcap_strerror(errno));
948 			}
949 		}
950 	}
951 
952 	/*
953 	 * If we're not using the kernel filter, get rid of any kernel
954 	 * filter that might've been there before, e.g. because the
955 	 * previous filter could work in the kernel, or because some other
956 	 * code attached a filter to the socket by some means other than
957 	 * calling "pcap_setfilter()".  Otherwise, the kernel filter may
958 	 * filter out packets that would pass the new userland filter.
959 	 */
960 	if (!handle->md.use_bpf)
961 		reset_kernel_filter(handle);
962 
963 	/*
964 	 * Free up the copy of the filter that was made by "fix_program()".
965 	 */
966 	if (fcode.filter != NULL)
967 		free(fcode.filter);
968 
969 	if (err == -2)
970 		/* Fatal error */
971 		return -1;
972 #endif /* SO_ATTACH_FILTER */
973 
974 	return 0;
975 }
976 
977 /*
978  *  Linux uses the ARP hardware type to identify the type of an
979  *  interface. pcap uses the DLT_xxx constants for this. This
980  *  function takes a pointer to a "pcap_t", and an ARPHRD_xxx
981  *  constant, as arguments, and sets "handle->linktype" to the
982  *  appropriate DLT_XXX constant and sets "handle->offset" to
983  *  the appropriate value (to make "handle->offset" plus link-layer
984  *  header length be a multiple of 4, so that the link-layer payload
985  *  will be aligned on a 4-byte boundary when capturing packets).
986  *  (If the offset isn't set here, it'll be 0; add code as appropriate
987  *  for cases where it shouldn't be 0.)
988  *
989  *  If "cooked_ok" is non-zero, we can use DLT_LINUX_SLL and capture
990  *  in cooked mode; otherwise, we can't use cooked mode, so we have
991  *  to pick some type that works in raw mode, or fail.
992  *
993  *  Sets the link type to -1 if unable to map the type.
994  */
995 static void map_arphrd_to_dlt(pcap_t *handle, int arptype, int cooked_ok)
996 {
997 	switch (arptype) {
998 
999 	case ARPHRD_ETHER:
1000 		/*
1001 		 * This is (presumably) a real Ethernet capture; give it a
1002 		 * link-layer-type list with DLT_EN10MB and DLT_DOCSIS, so
1003 		 * that an application can let you choose it, in case you're
1004 		 * capturing DOCSIS traffic that a Cisco Cable Modem
1005 		 * Termination System is putting out onto an Ethernet (it
1006 		 * doesn't put an Ethernet header onto the wire, it puts raw
1007 		 * DOCSIS frames out on the wire inside the low-level
1008 		 * Ethernet framing).
1009 		 *
1010 		 * XXX - are there any sorts of "fake Ethernet" that have
1011 		 * ARPHRD_ETHER but that *shouldn't offer DLT_DOCSIS as
1012 		 * a Cisco CMTS won't put traffic onto it or get traffic
1013 		 * bridged onto it?  ISDN is handled in "live_open_new()",
1014 		 * as we fall back on cooked mode there; are there any
1015 		 * others?
1016 		 */
1017 		handle->dlt_list = (u_int *) malloc(sizeof(u_int) * 2);
1018 		/*
1019 		 * If that fails, just leave the list empty.
1020 		 */
1021 		if (handle->dlt_list != NULL) {
1022 			handle->dlt_list[0] = DLT_EN10MB;
1023 			handle->dlt_list[1] = DLT_DOCSIS;
1024 			handle->dlt_count = 2;
1025 		}
1026 		/* FALLTHROUGH */
1027 
1028 	case ARPHRD_METRICOM:
1029 	case ARPHRD_LOOPBACK:
1030 		handle->linktype = DLT_EN10MB;
1031 		handle->offset = 2;
1032 		break;
1033 
1034 	case ARPHRD_EETHER:
1035 		handle->linktype = DLT_EN3MB;
1036 		break;
1037 
1038 	case ARPHRD_AX25:
1039 		handle->linktype = DLT_AX25;
1040 		break;
1041 
1042 	case ARPHRD_PRONET:
1043 		handle->linktype = DLT_PRONET;
1044 		break;
1045 
1046 	case ARPHRD_CHAOS:
1047 		handle->linktype = DLT_CHAOS;
1048 		break;
1049 
1050 #ifndef ARPHRD_IEEE802_TR
1051 #define ARPHRD_IEEE802_TR 800	/* From Linux 2.4 */
1052 #endif
1053 	case ARPHRD_IEEE802_TR:
1054 	case ARPHRD_IEEE802:
1055 		handle->linktype = DLT_IEEE802;
1056 		handle->offset = 2;
1057 		break;
1058 
1059 	case ARPHRD_ARCNET:
1060 		handle->linktype = DLT_ARCNET_LINUX;
1061 		break;
1062 
1063 #ifndef ARPHRD_FDDI	/* From Linux 2.2.13 */
1064 #define ARPHRD_FDDI	774
1065 #endif
1066 	case ARPHRD_FDDI:
1067 		handle->linktype = DLT_FDDI;
1068 		handle->offset = 3;
1069 		break;
1070 
1071 #ifndef ARPHRD_ATM  /* FIXME: How to #include this? */
1072 #define ARPHRD_ATM 19
1073 #endif
1074 	case ARPHRD_ATM:
1075 		/*
1076 		 * The Classical IP implementation in ATM for Linux
1077 		 * supports both what RFC 1483 calls "LLC Encapsulation",
1078 		 * in which each packet has an LLC header, possibly
1079 		 * with a SNAP header as well, prepended to it, and
1080 		 * what RFC 1483 calls "VC Based Multiplexing", in which
1081 		 * different virtual circuits carry different network
1082 		 * layer protocols, and no header is prepended to packets.
1083 		 *
1084 		 * They both have an ARPHRD_ type of ARPHRD_ATM, so
1085 		 * you can't use the ARPHRD_ type to find out whether
1086 		 * captured packets will have an LLC header, and,
1087 		 * while there's a socket ioctl to *set* the encapsulation
1088 		 * type, there's no ioctl to *get* the encapsulation type.
1089 		 *
1090 		 * This means that
1091 		 *
1092 		 *	programs that dissect Linux Classical IP frames
1093 		 *	would have to check for an LLC header and,
1094 		 *	depending on whether they see one or not, dissect
1095 		 *	the frame as LLC-encapsulated or as raw IP (I
1096 		 *	don't know whether there's any traffic other than
1097 		 *	IP that would show up on the socket, or whether
1098 		 *	there's any support for IPv6 in the Linux
1099 		 *	Classical IP code);
1100 		 *
1101 		 *	filter expressions would have to compile into
1102 		 *	code that checks for an LLC header and does
1103 		 *	the right thing.
1104 		 *
1105 		 * Both of those are a nuisance - and, at least on systems
1106 		 * that support PF_PACKET sockets, we don't have to put
1107 		 * up with those nuisances; instead, we can just capture
1108 		 * in cooked mode.  That's what we'll do, if we can.
1109 		 * Otherwise, we'll just fail.
1110 		 */
1111 		if (cooked_ok)
1112 			handle->linktype = DLT_LINUX_SLL;
1113 		else
1114 			handle->linktype = -1;
1115 		break;
1116 
1117 #ifndef ARPHRD_IEEE80211  /* From Linux 2.4.6 */
1118 #define ARPHRD_IEEE80211 801
1119 #endif
1120 	case ARPHRD_IEEE80211:
1121 		handle->linktype = DLT_IEEE802_11;
1122 		break;
1123 
1124 #ifndef ARPHRD_IEEE80211_PRISM  /* From Linux 2.4.18 */
1125 #define ARPHRD_IEEE80211_PRISM 802
1126 #endif
1127 	case ARPHRD_IEEE80211_PRISM:
1128 		handle->linktype = DLT_PRISM_HEADER;
1129 		break;
1130 
1131 	case ARPHRD_PPP:
1132 		/*
1133 		 * Some PPP code in the kernel supplies no link-layer
1134 		 * header whatsoever to PF_PACKET sockets; other PPP
1135 		 * code supplies PPP link-layer headers ("syncppp.c");
1136 		 * some PPP code might supply random link-layer
1137 		 * headers (PPP over ISDN - there's code in Ethereal,
1138 		 * for example, to cope with PPP-over-ISDN captures
1139 		 * with which the Ethereal developers have had to cope,
1140 		 * heuristically trying to determine which of the
1141 		 * oddball link-layer headers particular packets have).
1142 		 *
1143 		 * As such, we just punt, and run all PPP interfaces
1144 		 * in cooked mode, if we can; otherwise, we just treat
1145 		 * it as DLT_RAW, for now - if somebody needs to capture,
1146 		 * on a 2.0[.x] kernel, on PPP devices that supply a
1147 		 * link-layer header, they'll have to add code here to
1148 		 * map to the appropriate DLT_ type (possibly adding a
1149 		 * new DLT_ type, if necessary).
1150 		 */
1151 		if (cooked_ok)
1152 			handle->linktype = DLT_LINUX_SLL;
1153 		else {
1154 			/*
1155 			 * XXX - handle ISDN types here?  We can't fall
1156 			 * back on cooked sockets, so we'd have to
1157 			 * figure out from the device name what type of
1158 			 * link-layer encapsulation it's using, and map
1159 			 * that to an appropriate DLT_ value, meaning
1160 			 * we'd map "isdnN" devices to DLT_RAW (they
1161 			 * supply raw IP packets with no link-layer
1162 			 * header) and "isdY" devices to a new DLT_I4L_IP
1163 			 * type that has only an Ethernet packet type as
1164 			 * a link-layer header.
1165 			 *
1166 			 * But sometimes we seem to get random crap
1167 			 * in the link-layer header when capturing on
1168 			 * ISDN devices....
1169 			 */
1170 			handle->linktype = DLT_RAW;
1171 		}
1172 		break;
1173 
1174 #ifndef ARPHRD_CISCO
1175 #define ARPHRD_CISCO 513 /* previously ARPHRD_HDLC */
1176 #endif
1177 	case ARPHRD_CISCO:
1178 		handle->linktype = DLT_C_HDLC;
1179 		break;
1180 
1181 	/* Not sure if this is correct for all tunnels, but it
1182 	 * works for CIPE */
1183 	case ARPHRD_TUNNEL:
1184 #ifndef ARPHRD_SIT
1185 #define ARPHRD_SIT 776	/* From Linux 2.2.13 */
1186 #endif
1187 	case ARPHRD_SIT:
1188 	case ARPHRD_CSLIP:
1189 	case ARPHRD_SLIP6:
1190 	case ARPHRD_CSLIP6:
1191 	case ARPHRD_ADAPT:
1192 	case ARPHRD_SLIP:
1193 #ifndef ARPHRD_RAWHDLC
1194 #define ARPHRD_RAWHDLC 518
1195 #endif
1196 	case ARPHRD_RAWHDLC:
1197 #ifndef ARPHRD_DLCI
1198 #define ARPHRD_DLCI 15
1199 #endif
1200 	case ARPHRD_DLCI:
1201 		/*
1202 		 * XXX - should some of those be mapped to DLT_LINUX_SLL
1203 		 * instead?  Should we just map all of them to DLT_LINUX_SLL?
1204 		 */
1205 		handle->linktype = DLT_RAW;
1206 		break;
1207 
1208 #ifndef ARPHRD_FRAD
1209 #define ARPHRD_FRAD 770
1210 #endif
1211 	case ARPHRD_FRAD:
1212 		handle->linktype = DLT_FRELAY;
1213 		break;
1214 
1215 	case ARPHRD_LOCALTLK:
1216 		handle->linktype = DLT_LTALK;
1217 		break;
1218 
1219 #ifndef ARPHRD_FCPP
1220 #define ARPHRD_FCPP	784
1221 #endif
1222 	case ARPHRD_FCPP:
1223 #ifndef ARPHRD_FCAL
1224 #define ARPHRD_FCAL	785
1225 #endif
1226 	case ARPHRD_FCAL:
1227 #ifndef ARPHRD_FCPL
1228 #define ARPHRD_FCPL	786
1229 #endif
1230 	case ARPHRD_FCPL:
1231 #ifndef ARPHRD_FCFABRIC
1232 #define ARPHRD_FCFABRIC	787
1233 #endif
1234 	case ARPHRD_FCFABRIC:
1235 		/*
1236 		 * We assume that those all mean RFC 2625 IP-over-
1237 		 * Fibre Channel, with the RFC 2625 header at
1238 		 * the beginning of the packet.
1239 		 */
1240 		handle->linktype = DLT_IP_OVER_FC;
1241 		break;
1242 
1243 #ifndef ARPHRD_IRDA
1244 #define ARPHRD_IRDA	783
1245 #endif
1246 	case ARPHRD_IRDA:
1247 		/* Don't expect IP packet out of this interfaces... */
1248 		handle->linktype = DLT_LINUX_IRDA;
1249 		/* We need to save packet direction for IrDA decoding,
1250 		 * so let's use "Linux-cooked" mode. Jean II */
1251 		//handle->md.cooked = 1;
1252 		break;
1253 
1254 	default:
1255 		handle->linktype = -1;
1256 		break;
1257 	}
1258 }
1259 
1260 /* ===== Functions to interface to the newer kernels ================== */
1261 
1262 /*
1263  *  Try to open a packet socket using the new kernel interface.
1264  *  Returns 0 on failure.
1265  *  FIXME: 0 uses to mean success (Sebastian)
1266  */
1267 static int
1268 live_open_new(pcap_t *handle, const char *device, int promisc,
1269 	      int to_ms, char *ebuf)
1270 {
1271 #ifdef HAVE_PF_PACKET_SOCKETS
1272 	int			sock_fd = -1, arptype;
1273 	int			err;
1274 	int			fatal_err = 0;
1275 	struct packet_mreq	mr;
1276 
1277 	/* One shot loop used for error handling - bail out with break */
1278 
1279 	do {
1280 		/*
1281 		 * Open a socket with protocol family packet. If a device is
1282 		 * given we try to open it in raw mode otherwise we use
1283 		 * the cooked interface.
1284 		 */
1285 		sock_fd = device ?
1286 			socket(PF_PACKET, SOCK_RAW, htons(ETH_P_ALL))
1287 		      : socket(PF_PACKET, SOCK_DGRAM, htons(ETH_P_ALL));
1288 
1289 		if (sock_fd == -1) {
1290 			snprintf(ebuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE, "socket: %s",
1291 				 pcap_strerror(errno) );
1292 			break;
1293 		}
1294 
1295 		/* It seems the kernel supports the new interface. */
1296 		handle->md.sock_packet = 0;
1297 
1298 		/*
1299 		 * Get the interface index of the loopback device.
1300 		 * If the attempt fails, don't fail, just set the
1301 		 * "md.lo_ifindex" to -1.
1302 		 *
1303 		 * XXX - can there be more than one device that loops
1304 		 * packets back, i.e. devices other than "lo"?  If so,
1305 		 * we'd need to find them all, and have an array of
1306 		 * indices for them, and check all of them in
1307 		 * "pcap_read_packet()".
1308 		 */
1309 		handle->md.lo_ifindex = iface_get_id(sock_fd, "lo", ebuf);
1310 
1311 		/*
1312 		 * Default value for offset to align link-layer payload
1313 		 * on a 4-byte boundary.
1314 		 */
1315 		handle->offset	 = 0;
1316 
1317 		/*
1318 		 * What kind of frames do we have to deal with? Fall back
1319 		 * to cooked mode if we have an unknown interface type.
1320 		 */
1321 
1322 		if (device) {
1323 			/* Assume for now we don't need cooked mode. */
1324 			handle->md.cooked = 0;
1325 
1326 			arptype	= iface_get_arptype(sock_fd, device, ebuf);
1327 			if (arptype == -1) {
1328 				fatal_err = 1;
1329 				break;
1330 			}
1331 			map_arphrd_to_dlt(handle, arptype, 1);
1332 			if (handle->linktype == -1 ||
1333 			    handle->linktype == DLT_LINUX_SLL ||
1334 			    handle->linktype == DLT_LINUX_IRDA ||
1335 			    (handle->linktype == DLT_EN10MB &&
1336 			     (strncmp("isdn", device, 4) == 0 ||
1337 			      strncmp("isdY", device, 4) == 0))) {
1338 				/*
1339 				 * Unknown interface type (-1), or a
1340 				 * device we explicitly chose to run
1341 				 * in cooked mode (e.g., PPP devices),
1342 				 * or an ISDN device (whose link-layer
1343 				 * type we can only determine by using
1344 				 * APIs that may be different on different
1345 				 * kernels) - reopen in cooked mode.
1346 				 */
1347 				if (close(sock_fd) == -1) {
1348 					snprintf(ebuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
1349 						 "close: %s", pcap_strerror(errno));
1350 					break;
1351 				}
1352 				sock_fd = socket(PF_PACKET, SOCK_DGRAM,
1353 						 htons(ETH_P_ALL));
1354 				if (sock_fd == -1) {
1355 					snprintf(ebuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
1356 						 "socket: %s", pcap_strerror(errno));
1357 					break;
1358 				}
1359 				handle->md.cooked = 1;
1360 
1361 				/*
1362 				 * Get rid of any link-layer type list
1363 				 * we allocated - this only supports cooked
1364 				 * capture.
1365 				 */
1366 				if (handle->dlt_list != NULL) {
1367 					free(handle->dlt_list);
1368 					handle->dlt_list = NULL;
1369 					handle->dlt_count = 0;
1370 				}
1371 
1372 				if (handle->linktype == -1) {
1373 					/*
1374 					 * Warn that we're falling back on
1375 					 * cooked mode; we may want to
1376 					 * update "map_arphrd_to_dlt()"
1377 					 * to handle the new type.
1378 					 */
1379 					snprintf(ebuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
1380 						"arptype %d not "
1381 						"supported by libpcap - "
1382 						"falling back to cooked "
1383 						"socket",
1384 						arptype);
1385 				}
1386 				/* IrDA capture is not a real "cooked" capture,
1387 				 * it's IrLAP frames, not IP packets. */
1388 				if (handle->linktype != DLT_LINUX_IRDA)
1389 					handle->linktype = DLT_LINUX_SLL;
1390 			}
1391 
1392 			handle->md.ifindex = iface_get_id(sock_fd, device, ebuf);
1393 			if (handle->md.ifindex == -1)
1394 				break;
1395 
1396 			if ((err = iface_bind(sock_fd, handle->md.ifindex,
1397 			    ebuf)) < 0) {
1398 				if (err == -2)
1399 					fatal_err = 1;
1400 				break;
1401 			}
1402 		} else {
1403 			/*
1404 			 * This is cooked mode.
1405 			 */
1406 			handle->md.cooked = 1;
1407 			handle->linktype = DLT_LINUX_SLL;
1408 
1409 			/*
1410 			 * We're not bound to a device.
1411 			 * XXX - true?  Or true only if we're using
1412 			 * the "any" device?
1413 			 * For now, we're using this as an indication
1414 			 * that we can't transmit; stop doing that only
1415 			 * if we figure out how to transmit in cooked
1416 			 * mode.
1417 			 */
1418 			handle->md.ifindex = -1;
1419 		}
1420 
1421 		/*
1422 		 * Select promiscuous mode on if "promisc" is set.
1423 		 *
1424 		 * Do not turn allmulti mode on if we don't select
1425 		 * promiscuous mode - on some devices (e.g., Orinoco
1426 		 * wireless interfaces), allmulti mode isn't supported
1427 		 * and the driver implements it by turning promiscuous
1428 		 * mode on, and that screws up the operation of the
1429 		 * card as a normal networking interface, and on no
1430 		 * other platform I know of does starting a non-
1431 		 * promiscuous capture affect which multicast packets
1432 		 * are received by the interface.
1433 		 */
1434 
1435 		/*
1436 		 * Hmm, how can we set promiscuous mode on all interfaces?
1437 		 * I am not sure if that is possible at all.
1438 		 */
1439 
1440 		if (device && promisc) {
1441 			memset(&mr, 0, sizeof(mr));
1442 			mr.mr_ifindex = handle->md.ifindex;
1443 			mr.mr_type    = PACKET_MR_PROMISC;
1444 			if (setsockopt(sock_fd, SOL_PACKET,
1445 				PACKET_ADD_MEMBERSHIP, &mr, sizeof(mr)) == -1)
1446 			{
1447 				snprintf(ebuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
1448 					"setsockopt: %s", pcap_strerror(errno));
1449 				break;
1450 			}
1451 		}
1452 
1453 		/* Save the socket FD in the pcap structure */
1454 
1455 		handle->fd 	 = sock_fd;
1456 
1457 		return 1;
1458 
1459 	} while(0);
1460 
1461 	if (sock_fd != -1)
1462 		close(sock_fd);
1463 
1464 	if (fatal_err) {
1465 		/*
1466 		 * Get rid of any link-layer type list we allocated.
1467 		 */
1468 		if (handle->dlt_list != NULL)
1469 			free(handle->dlt_list);
1470 		return -2;
1471 	} else
1472 		return 0;
1473 #else
1474 	strncpy(ebuf,
1475 		"New packet capturing interface not supported by build "
1476 		"environment", PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE);
1477 	return 0;
1478 #endif
1479 }
1480 
1481 #ifdef HAVE_PF_PACKET_SOCKETS
1482 /*
1483  *  Return the index of the given device name. Fill ebuf and return
1484  *  -1 on failure.
1485  */
1486 static int
1487 iface_get_id(int fd, const char *device, char *ebuf)
1488 {
1489 	struct ifreq	ifr;
1490 
1491 	memset(&ifr, 0, sizeof(ifr));
1492 	strncpy(ifr.ifr_name, device, sizeof(ifr.ifr_name));
1493 
1494 	if (ioctl(fd, SIOCGIFINDEX, &ifr) == -1) {
1495 		snprintf(ebuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
1496 			 "ioctl: %s", pcap_strerror(errno));
1497 		return -1;
1498 	}
1499 
1500 	return ifr.ifr_ifindex;
1501 }
1502 
1503 /*
1504  *  Bind the socket associated with FD to the given device.
1505  */
1506 static int
1507 iface_bind(int fd, int ifindex, char *ebuf)
1508 {
1509 	struct sockaddr_ll	sll;
1510 	int			err;
1511 	socklen_t		errlen = sizeof(err);
1512 
1513 	memset(&sll, 0, sizeof(sll));
1514 	sll.sll_family		= AF_PACKET;
1515 	sll.sll_ifindex		= ifindex;
1516 	sll.sll_protocol	= htons(ETH_P_ALL);
1517 
1518 	if (bind(fd, (struct sockaddr *) &sll, sizeof(sll)) == -1) {
1519 		snprintf(ebuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
1520 			 "bind: %s", pcap_strerror(errno));
1521 		return -1;
1522 	}
1523 
1524 	/* Any pending errors, e.g., network is down? */
1525 
1526 	if (getsockopt(fd, SOL_SOCKET, SO_ERROR, &err, &errlen) == -1) {
1527 		snprintf(ebuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
1528 			"getsockopt: %s", pcap_strerror(errno));
1529 		return -2;
1530 	}
1531 
1532 	if (err > 0) {
1533 		snprintf(ebuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
1534 			"bind: %s", pcap_strerror(err));
1535 		return -2;
1536 	}
1537 
1538 	return 0;
1539 }
1540 
1541 #endif
1542 
1543 
1544 /* ===== Functions to interface to the older kernels ================== */
1545 
1546 /*
1547  * With older kernels promiscuous mode is kind of interesting because we
1548  * have to reset the interface before exiting. The problem can't really
1549  * be solved without some daemon taking care of managing usage counts.
1550  * If we put the interface into promiscuous mode, we set a flag indicating
1551  * that we must take it out of that mode when the interface is closed,
1552  * and, when closing the interface, if that flag is set we take it out
1553  * of promiscuous mode.
1554  */
1555 
1556 /*
1557  * List of pcaps for which we turned promiscuous mode on by hand.
1558  * If there are any such pcaps, we arrange to call "pcap_close_all()"
1559  * when we exit, and have it close all of them to turn promiscuous mode
1560  * off.
1561  */
1562 static struct pcap *pcaps_to_close;
1563 
1564 /*
1565  * TRUE if we've already called "atexit()" to cause "pcap_close_all()" to
1566  * be called on exit.
1567  */
1568 static int did_atexit;
1569 
1570 static void	pcap_close_all(void)
1571 {
1572 	struct pcap *handle;
1573 
1574 	while ((handle = pcaps_to_close) != NULL)
1575 		pcap_close(handle);
1576 }
1577 
1578 static void	pcap_close_linux( pcap_t *handle )
1579 {
1580 	struct pcap	*p, *prevp;
1581 	struct ifreq	ifr;
1582 
1583 	if (handle->md.clear_promisc) {
1584 		/*
1585 		 * We put the interface into promiscuous mode; take
1586 		 * it out of promiscuous mode.
1587 		 *
1588 		 * XXX - if somebody else wants it in promiscuous mode,
1589 		 * this code cannot know that, so it'll take it out
1590 		 * of promiscuous mode.  That's not fixable in 2.0[.x]
1591 		 * kernels.
1592 		 */
1593 		memset(&ifr, 0, sizeof(ifr));
1594 		strncpy(ifr.ifr_name, handle->md.device, sizeof(ifr.ifr_name));
1595 		if (ioctl(handle->fd, SIOCGIFFLAGS, &ifr) == -1) {
1596 			fprintf(stderr,
1597 			    "Can't restore interface flags (SIOCGIFFLAGS failed: %s).\n"
1598 			    "Please adjust manually.\n"
1599 			    "Hint: This can't happen with Linux >= 2.2.0.\n",
1600 			    strerror(errno));
1601 		} else {
1602 			if (ifr.ifr_flags & IFF_PROMISC) {
1603 				/*
1604 				 * Promiscuous mode is currently on; turn it
1605 				 * off.
1606 				 */
1607 				ifr.ifr_flags &= ~IFF_PROMISC;
1608 				if (ioctl(handle->fd, SIOCSIFFLAGS, &ifr) == -1) {
1609 					fprintf(stderr,
1610 					    "Can't restore interface flags (SIOCSIFFLAGS failed: %s).\n"
1611 					    "Please adjust manually.\n"
1612 					    "Hint: This can't happen with Linux >= 2.2.0.\n",
1613 					    strerror(errno));
1614 				}
1615 			}
1616 		}
1617 
1618 		/*
1619 		 * Take this pcap out of the list of pcaps for which we
1620 		 * have to take the interface out of promiscuous mode.
1621 		 */
1622 		for (p = pcaps_to_close, prevp = NULL; p != NULL;
1623 		    prevp = p, p = p->md.next) {
1624 			if (p == handle) {
1625 				/*
1626 				 * Found it.  Remove it from the list.
1627 				 */
1628 				if (prevp == NULL) {
1629 					/*
1630 					 * It was at the head of the list.
1631 					 */
1632 					pcaps_to_close = p->md.next;
1633 				} else {
1634 					/*
1635 					 * It was in the middle of the list.
1636 					 */
1637 					prevp->md.next = p->md.next;
1638 				}
1639 				break;
1640 			}
1641 		}
1642 	}
1643 
1644 	if (handle->md.device != NULL)
1645 		free(handle->md.device);
1646 	handle->md.device = NULL;
1647 	pcap_close_common(handle);
1648 }
1649 
1650 /*
1651  *  Try to open a packet socket using the old kernel interface.
1652  *  Returns 0 on failure.
1653  *  FIXME: 0 uses to mean success (Sebastian)
1654  */
1655 static int
1656 live_open_old(pcap_t *handle, const char *device, int promisc,
1657 	      int to_ms, char *ebuf)
1658 {
1659 	int		arptype;
1660 	struct ifreq	ifr;
1661 
1662 	do {
1663 		/* Open the socket */
1664 
1665 		handle->fd = socket(PF_INET, SOCK_PACKET, htons(ETH_P_ALL));
1666 		if (handle->fd == -1) {
1667 			snprintf(ebuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
1668 				 "socket: %s", pcap_strerror(errno));
1669 			break;
1670 		}
1671 
1672 		/* It worked - we are using the old interface */
1673 		handle->md.sock_packet = 1;
1674 
1675 		/* ...which means we get the link-layer header. */
1676 		handle->md.cooked = 0;
1677 
1678 		/* Bind to the given device */
1679 
1680 		if (!device) {
1681 		        strncpy(ebuf, "pcap_open_live: The \"any\" device isn't supported on 2.0[.x]-kernel systems",
1682 				PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE);
1683 			break;
1684 		}
1685 		if (iface_bind_old(handle->fd, device, ebuf) == -1)
1686 			break;
1687 
1688 		/*
1689 		 * Try to get the link-layer type.
1690 		 */
1691 		arptype = iface_get_arptype(handle->fd, device, ebuf);
1692 		if (arptype == -1)
1693 			break;
1694 
1695 		/*
1696 		 * Try to find the DLT_ type corresponding to that
1697 		 * link-layer type.
1698 		 */
1699 		map_arphrd_to_dlt(handle, arptype, 0);
1700 		if (handle->linktype == -1) {
1701 			snprintf(ebuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
1702 				 "unknown arptype %d", arptype);
1703 			break;
1704 		}
1705 
1706 		/* Go to promisc mode if requested */
1707 
1708 		if (promisc) {
1709 			memset(&ifr, 0, sizeof(ifr));
1710 			strncpy(ifr.ifr_name, device, sizeof(ifr.ifr_name));
1711 			if (ioctl(handle->fd, SIOCGIFFLAGS, &ifr) == -1) {
1712 				snprintf(ebuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
1713 					 "ioctl: %s", pcap_strerror(errno));
1714 				break;
1715 			}
1716 			if ((ifr.ifr_flags & IFF_PROMISC) == 0) {
1717 				/*
1718 				 * Promiscuous mode isn't currently on,
1719 				 * so turn it on, and remember that
1720 				 * we should turn it off when the
1721 				 * pcap_t is closed.
1722 				 */
1723 
1724 				/*
1725 				 * If we haven't already done so, arrange
1726 				 * to have "pcap_close_all()" called when
1727 				 * we exit.
1728 				 */
1729 				if (!did_atexit) {
1730 					if (atexit(pcap_close_all) == -1) {
1731 						/*
1732 						 * "atexit()" failed; don't
1733 						 * put the interface in
1734 						 * promiscuous mode, just
1735 						 * give up.
1736 						 */
1737 						strncpy(ebuf, "atexit failed",
1738 							PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE);
1739 						break;
1740 					}
1741 					did_atexit = 1;
1742 				}
1743 
1744 				ifr.ifr_flags |= IFF_PROMISC;
1745 				if (ioctl(handle->fd, SIOCSIFFLAGS, &ifr) == -1) {
1746 				        snprintf(ebuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
1747 						 "ioctl: %s",
1748 						 pcap_strerror(errno));
1749 					break;
1750 				}
1751 				handle->md.clear_promisc = 1;
1752 
1753 				/*
1754 				 * Add this to the list of pcaps
1755 				 * to close when we exit.
1756 				 */
1757 				handle->md.next = pcaps_to_close;
1758 				pcaps_to_close = handle;
1759 			}
1760 		}
1761 
1762 		/*
1763 		 * Default value for offset to align link-layer payload
1764 		 * on a 4-byte boundary.
1765 		 */
1766 		handle->offset	 = 0;
1767 
1768 		return 1;
1769 
1770 	} while (0);
1771 
1772 	pcap_close_linux(handle);
1773 	return 0;
1774 }
1775 
1776 /*
1777  *  Bind the socket associated with FD to the given device using the
1778  *  interface of the old kernels.
1779  */
1780 static int
1781 iface_bind_old(int fd, const char *device, char *ebuf)
1782 {
1783 	struct sockaddr	saddr;
1784 	int		err;
1785 	socklen_t	errlen = sizeof(err);
1786 
1787 	memset(&saddr, 0, sizeof(saddr));
1788 	strncpy(saddr.sa_data, device, sizeof(saddr.sa_data));
1789 	if (bind(fd, &saddr, sizeof(saddr)) == -1) {
1790 		snprintf(ebuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
1791 			 "bind: %s", pcap_strerror(errno));
1792 		return -1;
1793 	}
1794 
1795 	/* Any pending errors, e.g., network is down? */
1796 
1797 	if (getsockopt(fd, SOL_SOCKET, SO_ERROR, &err, &errlen) == -1) {
1798 		snprintf(ebuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
1799 			"getsockopt: %s", pcap_strerror(errno));
1800 		return -1;
1801 	}
1802 
1803 	if (err > 0) {
1804 		snprintf(ebuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
1805 			"bind: %s", pcap_strerror(err));
1806 		return -1;
1807 	}
1808 
1809 	return 0;
1810 }
1811 
1812 
1813 /* ===== System calls available on all supported kernels ============== */
1814 
1815 /*
1816  *  Query the kernel for the MTU of the given interface.
1817  */
1818 static int
1819 iface_get_mtu(int fd, const char *device, char *ebuf)
1820 {
1821 	struct ifreq	ifr;
1822 
1823 	if (!device)
1824 		return BIGGER_THAN_ALL_MTUS;
1825 
1826 	memset(&ifr, 0, sizeof(ifr));
1827 	strncpy(ifr.ifr_name, device, sizeof(ifr.ifr_name));
1828 
1829 	if (ioctl(fd, SIOCGIFMTU, &ifr) == -1) {
1830 		snprintf(ebuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
1831 			 "ioctl: %s", pcap_strerror(errno));
1832 		return -1;
1833 	}
1834 
1835 	return ifr.ifr_mtu;
1836 }
1837 
1838 /*
1839  *  Get the hardware type of the given interface as ARPHRD_xxx constant.
1840  */
1841 static int
1842 iface_get_arptype(int fd, const char *device, char *ebuf)
1843 {
1844 	struct ifreq	ifr;
1845 
1846 	memset(&ifr, 0, sizeof(ifr));
1847 	strncpy(ifr.ifr_name, device, sizeof(ifr.ifr_name));
1848 
1849 	if (ioctl(fd, SIOCGIFHWADDR, &ifr) == -1) {
1850 		snprintf(ebuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
1851 			 "ioctl: %s", pcap_strerror(errno));
1852 		return -1;
1853 	}
1854 
1855 	return ifr.ifr_hwaddr.sa_family;
1856 }
1857 
1858 #ifdef SO_ATTACH_FILTER
1859 static int
1860 fix_program(pcap_t *handle, struct sock_fprog *fcode)
1861 {
1862 	size_t prog_size;
1863 	register int i;
1864 	register struct bpf_insn *p;
1865 	struct bpf_insn *f;
1866 	int len;
1867 
1868 	/*
1869 	 * Make a copy of the filter, and modify that copy if
1870 	 * necessary.
1871 	 */
1872 	prog_size = sizeof(*handle->fcode.bf_insns) * handle->fcode.bf_len;
1873 	len = handle->fcode.bf_len;
1874 	f = (struct bpf_insn *)malloc(prog_size);
1875 	if (f == NULL) {
1876 		snprintf(handle->errbuf, sizeof(handle->errbuf),
1877 			 "malloc: %s", pcap_strerror(errno));
1878 		return -1;
1879 	}
1880 	memcpy(f, handle->fcode.bf_insns, prog_size);
1881 	fcode->len = len;
1882 	fcode->filter = (struct sock_filter *) f;
1883 
1884 	for (i = 0; i < len; ++i) {
1885 		p = &f[i];
1886 		/*
1887 		 * What type of instruction is this?
1888 		 */
1889 		switch (BPF_CLASS(p->code)) {
1890 
1891 		case BPF_RET:
1892 			/*
1893 			 * It's a return instruction; is the snapshot
1894 			 * length a constant, rather than the contents
1895 			 * of the accumulator?
1896 			 */
1897 			if (BPF_MODE(p->code) == BPF_K) {
1898 				/*
1899 				 * Yes - if the value to be returned,
1900 				 * i.e. the snapshot length, is anything
1901 				 * other than 0, make it 65535, so that
1902 				 * the packet is truncated by "recvfrom()",
1903 				 * not by the filter.
1904 				 *
1905 				 * XXX - there's nothing we can easily do
1906 				 * if it's getting the value from the
1907 				 * accumulator; we'd have to insert
1908 				 * code to force non-zero values to be
1909 				 * 65535.
1910 				 */
1911 				if (p->k != 0)
1912 					p->k = 65535;
1913 			}
1914 			break;
1915 
1916 		case BPF_LD:
1917 		case BPF_LDX:
1918 			/*
1919 			 * It's a load instruction; is it loading
1920 			 * from the packet?
1921 			 */
1922 			switch (BPF_MODE(p->code)) {
1923 
1924 			case BPF_ABS:
1925 			case BPF_IND:
1926 			case BPF_MSH:
1927 				/*
1928 				 * Yes; are we in cooked mode?
1929 				 */
1930 				if (handle->md.cooked) {
1931 					/*
1932 					 * Yes, so we need to fix this
1933 					 * instruction.
1934 					 */
1935 					if (fix_offset(p) < 0) {
1936 						/*
1937 						 * We failed to do so.
1938 						 * Return 0, so our caller
1939 						 * knows to punt to userland.
1940 						 */
1941 						return 0;
1942 					}
1943 				}
1944 				break;
1945 			}
1946 			break;
1947 		}
1948 	}
1949 	return 1;	/* we succeeded */
1950 }
1951 
1952 static int
1953 fix_offset(struct bpf_insn *p)
1954 {
1955 	/*
1956 	 * What's the offset?
1957 	 */
1958 	if (p->k >= SLL_HDR_LEN) {
1959 		/*
1960 		 * It's within the link-layer payload; that starts at an
1961 		 * offset of 0, as far as the kernel packet filter is
1962 		 * concerned, so subtract the length of the link-layer
1963 		 * header.
1964 		 */
1965 		p->k -= SLL_HDR_LEN;
1966 	} else if (p->k == 14) {
1967 		/*
1968 		 * It's the protocol field; map it to the special magic
1969 		 * kernel offset for that field.
1970 		 */
1971 		p->k = SKF_AD_OFF + SKF_AD_PROTOCOL;
1972 	} else {
1973 		/*
1974 		 * It's within the header, but it's not one of those
1975 		 * fields; we can't do that in the kernel, so punt
1976 		 * to userland.
1977 		 */
1978 		return -1;
1979 	}
1980 	return 0;
1981 }
1982 
1983 static int
1984 set_kernel_filter(pcap_t *handle, struct sock_fprog *fcode)
1985 {
1986 	int total_filter_on = 0;
1987 	int save_mode;
1988 	int ret;
1989 	int save_errno;
1990 
1991 	/*
1992 	 * The socket filter code doesn't discard all packets queued
1993 	 * up on the socket when the filter is changed; this means
1994 	 * that packets that don't match the new filter may show up
1995 	 * after the new filter is put onto the socket, if those
1996 	 * packets haven't yet been read.
1997 	 *
1998 	 * This means, for example, that if you do a tcpdump capture
1999 	 * with a filter, the first few packets in the capture might
2000 	 * be packets that wouldn't have passed the filter.
2001 	 *
2002 	 * We therefore discard all packets queued up on the socket
2003 	 * when setting a kernel filter.  (This isn't an issue for
2004 	 * userland filters, as the userland filtering is done after
2005 	 * packets are queued up.)
2006 	 *
2007 	 * To flush those packets, we put the socket in read-only mode,
2008 	 * and read packets from the socket until there are no more to
2009 	 * read.
2010 	 *
2011 	 * In order to keep that from being an infinite loop - i.e.,
2012 	 * to keep more packets from arriving while we're draining
2013 	 * the queue - we put the "total filter", which is a filter
2014 	 * that rejects all packets, onto the socket before draining
2015 	 * the queue.
2016 	 *
2017 	 * This code deliberately ignores any errors, so that you may
2018 	 * get bogus packets if an error occurs, rather than having
2019 	 * the filtering done in userland even if it could have been
2020 	 * done in the kernel.
2021 	 */
2022 	if (setsockopt(handle->fd, SOL_SOCKET, SO_ATTACH_FILTER,
2023 		       &total_fcode, sizeof(total_fcode)) == 0) {
2024 		char drain[1];
2025 
2026 		/*
2027 		 * Note that we've put the total filter onto the socket.
2028 		 */
2029 		total_filter_on = 1;
2030 
2031 		/*
2032 		 * Save the socket's current mode, and put it in
2033 		 * non-blocking mode; we drain it by reading packets
2034 		 * until we get an error (which is normally a
2035 		 * "nothing more to be read" error).
2036 		 */
2037 		save_mode = fcntl(handle->fd, F_GETFL, 0);
2038 		if (save_mode != -1 &&
2039 		    fcntl(handle->fd, F_SETFL, save_mode | O_NONBLOCK) >= 0) {
2040 			while (recv(handle->fd, &drain, sizeof drain,
2041 			       MSG_TRUNC) >= 0)
2042 				;
2043 			save_errno = errno;
2044 			fcntl(handle->fd, F_SETFL, save_mode);
2045 			if (save_errno != EAGAIN) {
2046 				/* Fatal error */
2047 				reset_kernel_filter(handle);
2048 				snprintf(handle->errbuf, sizeof(handle->errbuf),
2049 				 "recv: %s", pcap_strerror(save_errno));
2050 				return -2;
2051 			}
2052 		}
2053 	}
2054 
2055 	/*
2056 	 * Now attach the new filter.
2057 	 */
2058 	ret = setsockopt(handle->fd, SOL_SOCKET, SO_ATTACH_FILTER,
2059 			 fcode, sizeof(*fcode));
2060 	if (ret == -1 && total_filter_on) {
2061 		/*
2062 		 * Well, we couldn't set that filter on the socket,
2063 		 * but we could set the total filter on the socket.
2064 		 *
2065 		 * This could, for example, mean that the filter was
2066 		 * too big to put into the kernel, so we'll have to
2067 		 * filter in userland; in any case, we'll be doing
2068 		 * filtering in userland, so we need to remove the
2069 		 * total filter so we see packets.
2070 		 */
2071 		save_errno = errno;
2072 
2073 		/*
2074 		 * XXX - if this fails, we're really screwed;
2075 		 * we have the total filter on the socket,
2076 		 * and it won't come off.  What do we do then?
2077 		 */
2078 		reset_kernel_filter(handle);
2079 
2080 		errno = save_errno;
2081 	}
2082 	return ret;
2083 }
2084 
2085 static int
2086 reset_kernel_filter(pcap_t *handle)
2087 {
2088 	/* setsockopt() barfs unless it get a dummy parameter */
2089 	int dummy;
2090 
2091 	return setsockopt(handle->fd, SOL_SOCKET, SO_DETACH_FILTER,
2092 				   &dummy, sizeof(dummy));
2093 }
2094 #endif
2095