Matteo Scandolo | a6a3aee | 2019-11-26 13:30:14 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 1 | // Copyright 2012 Google, Inc. All rights reserved. |
| 2 | // |
| 3 | // Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style license |
| 4 | // that can be found in the LICENSE file in the root of the source |
| 5 | // tree. |
| 6 | |
| 7 | package gopacket |
| 8 | |
| 9 | import ( |
| 10 | "fmt" |
| 11 | ) |
| 12 | |
| 13 | // DecodingLayer is an interface for packet layers that can decode themselves. |
| 14 | // |
| 15 | // The important part of DecodingLayer is that they decode themselves in-place. |
| 16 | // Calling DecodeFromBytes on a DecodingLayer totally resets the entire layer to |
| 17 | // the new state defined by the data passed in. A returned error leaves the |
| 18 | // DecodingLayer in an unknown intermediate state, thus its fields should not be |
| 19 | // trusted. |
| 20 | // |
| 21 | // Because the DecodingLayer is resetting its own fields, a call to |
| 22 | // DecodeFromBytes should normally not require any memory allocation. |
| 23 | type DecodingLayer interface { |
| 24 | // DecodeFromBytes resets the internal state of this layer to the state |
| 25 | // defined by the passed-in bytes. Slices in the DecodingLayer may |
| 26 | // reference the passed-in data, so care should be taken to copy it |
| 27 | // first should later modification of data be required before the |
| 28 | // DecodingLayer is discarded. |
| 29 | DecodeFromBytes(data []byte, df DecodeFeedback) error |
| 30 | // CanDecode returns the set of LayerTypes this DecodingLayer can |
| 31 | // decode. For Layers that are also DecodingLayers, this will most |
| 32 | // often be that Layer's LayerType(). |
| 33 | CanDecode() LayerClass |
| 34 | // NextLayerType returns the LayerType which should be used to decode |
| 35 | // the LayerPayload. |
| 36 | NextLayerType() LayerType |
| 37 | // LayerPayload is the set of bytes remaining to decode after a call to |
| 38 | // DecodeFromBytes. |
| 39 | LayerPayload() []byte |
| 40 | } |
| 41 | |
| 42 | // DecodingLayerParser parses a given set of layer types. See DecodeLayers for |
| 43 | // more information on how DecodingLayerParser should be used. |
| 44 | type DecodingLayerParser struct { |
| 45 | // DecodingLayerParserOptions is the set of options available to the |
| 46 | // user to define the parser's behavior. |
| 47 | DecodingLayerParserOptions |
| 48 | first LayerType |
| 49 | decoders map[LayerType]DecodingLayer |
| 50 | df DecodeFeedback |
| 51 | // Truncated is set when a decode layer detects that the packet has been |
| 52 | // truncated. |
| 53 | Truncated bool |
| 54 | } |
| 55 | |
| 56 | // AddDecodingLayer adds a decoding layer to the parser. This adds support for |
| 57 | // the decoding layer's CanDecode layers to the parser... should they be |
| 58 | // encountered, they'll be parsed. |
| 59 | func (l *DecodingLayerParser) AddDecodingLayer(d DecodingLayer) { |
| 60 | for _, typ := range d.CanDecode().LayerTypes() { |
| 61 | l.decoders[typ] = d |
| 62 | } |
| 63 | } |
| 64 | |
| 65 | // SetTruncated is used by DecodingLayers to set the Truncated boolean in the |
| 66 | // DecodingLayerParser. Users should simply read Truncated after calling |
| 67 | // DecodeLayers. |
| 68 | func (l *DecodingLayerParser) SetTruncated() { |
| 69 | l.Truncated = true |
| 70 | } |
| 71 | |
| 72 | // NewDecodingLayerParser creates a new DecodingLayerParser and adds in all |
| 73 | // of the given DecodingLayers with AddDecodingLayer. |
| 74 | // |
| 75 | // Each call to DecodeLayers will attempt to decode the given bytes first by |
| 76 | // treating them as a 'first'-type layer, then by using NextLayerType on |
| 77 | // subsequently decoded layers to find the next relevant decoder. Should a |
| 78 | // deoder not be available for the layer type returned by NextLayerType, |
| 79 | // decoding will stop. |
| 80 | func NewDecodingLayerParser(first LayerType, decoders ...DecodingLayer) *DecodingLayerParser { |
| 81 | dlp := &DecodingLayerParser{ |
| 82 | decoders: make(map[LayerType]DecodingLayer), |
| 83 | first: first, |
| 84 | } |
| 85 | dlp.df = dlp // Cast this once to the interface |
| 86 | for _, d := range decoders { |
| 87 | dlp.AddDecodingLayer(d) |
| 88 | } |
| 89 | return dlp |
| 90 | } |
| 91 | |
| 92 | // DecodeLayers decodes as many layers as possible from the given data. It |
| 93 | // initially treats the data as layer type 'typ', then uses NextLayerType on |
| 94 | // each subsequent decoded layer until it gets to a layer type it doesn't know |
| 95 | // how to parse. |
| 96 | // |
| 97 | // For each layer successfully decoded, DecodeLayers appends the layer type to |
| 98 | // the decoded slice. DecodeLayers truncates the 'decoded' slice initially, so |
| 99 | // there's no need to empty it yourself. |
| 100 | // |
| 101 | // This decoding method is about an order of magnitude faster than packet |
| 102 | // decoding, because it only decodes known layers that have already been |
| 103 | // allocated. This means it doesn't need to allocate each layer it returns... |
| 104 | // instead it overwrites the layers that already exist. |
| 105 | // |
| 106 | // Example usage: |
| 107 | // func main() { |
| 108 | // var eth layers.Ethernet |
| 109 | // var ip4 layers.IPv4 |
| 110 | // var ip6 layers.IPv6 |
| 111 | // var tcp layers.TCP |
| 112 | // var udp layers.UDP |
| 113 | // var payload gopacket.Payload |
| 114 | // parser := gopacket.NewDecodingLayerParser(layers.LayerTypeEthernet, ð, &ip4, &ip6, &tcp, &udp, &payload) |
| 115 | // var source gopacket.PacketDataSource = getMyDataSource() |
| 116 | // decodedLayers := make([]gopacket.LayerType, 0, 10) |
| 117 | // for { |
| 118 | // data, _, err := source.ReadPacketData() |
| 119 | // if err != nil { |
| 120 | // fmt.Println("Error reading packet data: ", err) |
| 121 | // continue |
| 122 | // } |
| 123 | // fmt.Println("Decoding packet") |
| 124 | // err = parser.DecodeLayers(data, &decodedLayers) |
| 125 | // for _, typ := range decodedLayers { |
| 126 | // fmt.Println(" Successfully decoded layer type", typ) |
| 127 | // switch typ { |
| 128 | // case layers.LayerTypeEthernet: |
| 129 | // fmt.Println(" Eth ", eth.SrcMAC, eth.DstMAC) |
| 130 | // case layers.LayerTypeIPv4: |
| 131 | // fmt.Println(" IP4 ", ip4.SrcIP, ip4.DstIP) |
| 132 | // case layers.LayerTypeIPv6: |
| 133 | // fmt.Println(" IP6 ", ip6.SrcIP, ip6.DstIP) |
| 134 | // case layers.LayerTypeTCP: |
| 135 | // fmt.Println(" TCP ", tcp.SrcPort, tcp.DstPort) |
| 136 | // case layers.LayerTypeUDP: |
| 137 | // fmt.Println(" UDP ", udp.SrcPort, udp.DstPort) |
| 138 | // } |
| 139 | // } |
| 140 | // if decodedLayers.Truncated { |
| 141 | // fmt.Println(" Packet has been truncated") |
| 142 | // } |
| 143 | // if err != nil { |
| 144 | // fmt.Println(" Error encountered:", err) |
| 145 | // } |
| 146 | // } |
| 147 | // } |
| 148 | // |
| 149 | // If DecodeLayers is unable to decode the next layer type, it will return the |
| 150 | // error UnsupportedLayerType. |
| 151 | func (l *DecodingLayerParser) DecodeLayers(data []byte, decoded *[]LayerType) (err error) { |
| 152 | l.Truncated = false |
| 153 | if !l.IgnorePanic { |
| 154 | defer panicToError(&err) |
| 155 | } |
| 156 | typ := l.first |
| 157 | *decoded = (*decoded)[:0] // Truncated decoded layers. |
| 158 | for len(data) > 0 { |
| 159 | decoder, ok := l.decoders[typ] |
| 160 | if !ok { |
| 161 | if l.IgnoreUnsupported { |
| 162 | return nil |
| 163 | } |
| 164 | return UnsupportedLayerType(typ) |
| 165 | } else if err = decoder.DecodeFromBytes(data, l.df); err != nil { |
| 166 | return err |
| 167 | } |
| 168 | *decoded = append(*decoded, typ) |
| 169 | typ = decoder.NextLayerType() |
| 170 | data = decoder.LayerPayload() |
| 171 | } |
| 172 | return nil |
| 173 | } |
| 174 | |
| 175 | // UnsupportedLayerType is returned by DecodingLayerParser if DecodeLayers |
| 176 | // encounters a layer type that the DecodingLayerParser has no decoder for. |
| 177 | type UnsupportedLayerType LayerType |
| 178 | |
| 179 | // Error implements the error interface, returning a string to say that the |
| 180 | // given layer type is unsupported. |
| 181 | func (e UnsupportedLayerType) Error() string { |
| 182 | return fmt.Sprintf("No decoder for layer type %v", LayerType(e)) |
| 183 | } |
| 184 | |
| 185 | func panicToError(e *error) { |
| 186 | if r := recover(); r != nil { |
| 187 | *e = fmt.Errorf("panic: %v", r) |
| 188 | } |
| 189 | } |
| 190 | |
| 191 | // DecodingLayerParserOptions provides options to affect the behavior of a given |
| 192 | // DecodingLayerParser. |
| 193 | type DecodingLayerParserOptions struct { |
| 194 | // IgnorePanic determines whether a DecodingLayerParser should stop |
| 195 | // panics on its own (by returning them as an error from DecodeLayers) |
| 196 | // or should allow them to raise up the stack. Handling errors does add |
| 197 | // latency to the process of decoding layers, but is much safer for |
| 198 | // callers. IgnorePanic defaults to false, thus if the caller does |
| 199 | // nothing decode panics will be returned as errors. |
| 200 | IgnorePanic bool |
| 201 | // IgnoreUnsupported will stop parsing and return a nil error when it |
| 202 | // encounters a layer it doesn't have a parser for, instead of returning an |
| 203 | // UnsupportedLayerType error. If this is true, it's up to the caller to make |
| 204 | // sure that all expected layers have been parsed (by checking the decoded |
| 205 | // slice). |
| 206 | IgnoreUnsupported bool |
| 207 | } |