1/*
2 * Copyright (c) 1999 - 2005 NetGroup, Politecnico di Torino (Italy)
3 * Copyright (c) 2005 - 2010 CACE Technologies, Davis (California)
4 * All rights reserved.
5 *
6 * Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
7 * modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
8 * are met:
9 *
10 * 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
11 * notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
12 * 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
13 * notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
14 * documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
15 * 3. Neither the name of the Politecnico di Torino, CACE Technologies
16 * nor the names of its contributors may be used to endorse or promote
17 * products derived from this software without specific prior written
18 * permission.
19 *
20 * THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS
21 * "AS IS" AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT
22 * LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR
23 * A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT
24 * OWNER OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL,
25 * SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT
26 * LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE,
27 * DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY
28 * THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT
29 * (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE
30 * OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
31 *
32 */
33
34#ifdef HAVE_CONFIG_H
35#include <config.h>
36#endif
37
38#include <errno.h>
39#include <limits.h> /* for INT_MAX */
40#define PCAP_DONT_INCLUDE_PCAP_BPF_H
41#include <Packet32.h>
42#include <pcap-int.h>
43#include <pcap/dlt.h>
44
45/*
46 * XXX - Packet32.h defines bpf_program, so we can't include
47 * <pcap/bpf.h>, which also defines it; that's why we define
48 * PCAP_DONT_INCLUDE_PCAP_BPF_H,
49 *
50 * However, no header in the WinPcap or Npcap SDKs defines the
51 * macros for BPF code, so we have to define them ourselves.
52 */
53#define		BPF_RET		0x06
54#define		BPF_K		0x00
55
56/* Old-school MinGW have these headers in a different place.
57 */
58#if defined(__MINGW32__) && !defined(__MINGW64_VERSION_MAJOR)
59  #include <ddk/ntddndis.h>
60  #include <ddk/ndis.h>
61#else
62  #include <ntddndis.h>  /* MSVC/TDM-MinGW/MinGW64 */
63#endif
64
65#ifdef HAVE_DAG_API
66  #include <dagnew.h>
67  #include <dagapi.h>
68#endif /* HAVE_DAG_API */
69
70#include "diag-control.h"
71
72#include "pcap-airpcap.h"
73
74static int pcap_setfilter_npf(pcap_t *, struct bpf_program *);
75static int pcap_setfilter_win32_dag(pcap_t *, struct bpf_program *);
76static int pcap_getnonblock_npf(pcap_t *);
77static int pcap_setnonblock_npf(pcap_t *, int);
78
79/*dimension of the buffer in the pcap_t structure*/
80#define	WIN32_DEFAULT_USER_BUFFER_SIZE 256000
81
82/*dimension of the buffer in the kernel driver NPF */
83#define	WIN32_DEFAULT_KERNEL_BUFFER_SIZE 1000000
84
85/* Equivalent to ntohs(), but a lot faster under Windows */
86#define SWAPS(_X) ((_X & 0xff) << 8) | (_X >> 8)
87
88/*
89 * Private data for capturing on WinPcap/Npcap devices.
90 */
91struct pcap_win {
92	ADAPTER *adapter;		/* the packet32 ADAPTER for the device */
93	int nonblock;
94	int rfmon_selfstart;		/* a flag tells whether the monitor mode is set by itself */
95	int filtering_in_kernel;	/* using kernel filter */
96
97#ifdef HAVE_DAG_API
98	int	dag_fcs_bits;		/* Number of checksum bits from link layer */
99#endif
100
101#ifdef ENABLE_REMOTE
102	int samp_npkt;			/* parameter needed for sampling, with '1 out of N' method has been requested */
103	struct timeval samp_time;	/* parameter needed for sampling, with '1 every N ms' method has been requested */
104#endif
105};
106
107/*
108 * Define stub versions of the monitor-mode support routines if this
109 * isn't Npcap. HAVE_NPCAP_PACKET_API is defined by Npcap but not
110 * WinPcap.
111 */
112#ifndef HAVE_NPCAP_PACKET_API
113static int
114PacketIsMonitorModeSupported(PCHAR AdapterName _U_)
115{
116	/*
117	 * We don't support monitor mode.
118	 */
119	return (0);
120}
121
122static int
123PacketSetMonitorMode(PCHAR AdapterName _U_, int mode _U_)
124{
125	/*
126	 * This should never be called, as PacketIsMonitorModeSupported()
127	 * will return 0, meaning "we don't support monitor mode, so
128	 * don't try to turn it on or off".
129	 */
130	return (0);
131}
132
133static int
134PacketGetMonitorMode(PCHAR AdapterName _U_)
135{
136	/*
137	 * This should fail, so that pcap_activate_npf() returns
138	 * PCAP_ERROR_RFMON_NOTSUP if our caller requested monitor
139	 * mode.
140	 */
141	return (-1);
142}
143#endif
144
145/*
146 * Sigh.  PacketRequest() will have made a DeviceIoControl()
147 * call to the NPF driver to perform the OID request, with a
148 * BIOCQUERYOID ioctl.  The kernel code should get back one
149 * of NDIS_STATUS_INVALID_OID, NDIS_STATUS_NOT_SUPPORTED,
150 * or NDIS_STATUS_NOT_RECOGNIZED if the OID request isn't
151 * supported by the OS or the driver, but that doesn't seem
152 * to make it to the caller of PacketRequest() in a
153 * reliable fashion.
154 */
155#define NDIS_STATUS_INVALID_OID		0xc0010017
156#define NDIS_STATUS_NOT_SUPPORTED	0xc00000bb	/* STATUS_NOT_SUPPORTED */
157#define NDIS_STATUS_NOT_RECOGNIZED	0x00010001
158
159static int
160oid_get_request(ADAPTER *adapter, bpf_u_int32 oid, void *data, size_t *lenp,
161    char *errbuf)
162{
163	PACKET_OID_DATA *oid_data_arg;
164
165	/*
166	 * Allocate a PACKET_OID_DATA structure to hand to PacketRequest().
167	 * It should be big enough to hold "*lenp" bytes of data; it
168	 * will actually be slightly larger, as PACKET_OID_DATA has a
169	 * 1-byte data array at the end, standing in for the variable-length
170	 * data that's actually there.
171	 */
172	oid_data_arg = malloc(sizeof (PACKET_OID_DATA) + *lenp);
173	if (oid_data_arg == NULL) {
174		snprintf(errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
175		    "Couldn't allocate argument buffer for PacketRequest");
176		return (PCAP_ERROR);
177	}
178
179	/*
180	 * No need to copy the data - we're doing a fetch.
181	 */
182	oid_data_arg->Oid = oid;
183	oid_data_arg->Length = (ULONG)(*lenp);	/* XXX - check for ridiculously large value? */
184	if (!PacketRequest(adapter, FALSE, oid_data_arg)) {
185		pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_win32_err(errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
186		    GetLastError(), "Error calling PacketRequest");
187		free(oid_data_arg);
188		return (-1);
189	}
190
191	/*
192	 * Get the length actually supplied.
193	 */
194	*lenp = oid_data_arg->Length;
195
196	/*
197	 * Copy back the data we fetched.
198	 */
199	memcpy(data, oid_data_arg->Data, *lenp);
200	free(oid_data_arg);
201	return (0);
202}
203
204static int
205pcap_stats_npf(pcap_t *p, struct pcap_stat *ps)
206{
207	struct pcap_win *pw = p->priv;
208	struct bpf_stat bstats;
209
210	/*
211	 * Try to get statistics.
212	 *
213	 * (Please note - "struct pcap_stat" is *not* the same as
214	 * WinPcap's "struct bpf_stat". It might currently have the
215	 * same layout, but let's not cheat.
216	 *
217	 * Note also that we don't fill in ps_capt, as we might have
218	 * been called by code compiled against an earlier version of
219	 * WinPcap that didn't have ps_capt, in which case filling it
220	 * in would stomp on whatever comes after the structure passed
221	 * to us.
222	 */
223	if (!PacketGetStats(pw->adapter, &bstats)) {
224		pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_win32_err(p->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
225		    GetLastError(), "PacketGetStats error");
226		return (-1);
227	}
228	ps->ps_recv = bstats.bs_recv;
229	ps->ps_drop = bstats.bs_drop;
230
231	/*
232	 * XXX - PacketGetStats() doesn't fill this in, so we just
233	 * return 0.
234	 */
235#if 0
236	ps->ps_ifdrop = bstats.ps_ifdrop;
237#else
238	ps->ps_ifdrop = 0;
239#endif
240
241	return (0);
242}
243
244/*
245 * Win32-only routine for getting statistics.
246 *
247 * This way is definitely safer than passing the pcap_stat * from the userland.
248 * In fact, there could happen than the user allocates a variable which is not
249 * big enough for the new structure, and the library will write in a zone
250 * which is not allocated to this variable.
251 *
252 * In this way, we're pretty sure we are writing on memory allocated to this
253 * variable.
254 *
255 * XXX - but this is the wrong way to handle statistics.  Instead, we should
256 * have an API that returns data in a form like the Options section of a
257 * pcapng Interface Statistics Block:
258 *
259 *    https://xml2rfc.tools.ietf.org/cgi-bin/xml2rfc.cgi?url=https://raw.githubusercontent.com/pcapng/pcapng/master/draft-tuexen-opsawg-pcapng.xml&modeAsFormat=html/ascii&type=ascii#rfc.section.4.6
260 *
261 * which would let us add new statistics straightforwardly and indicate which
262 * statistics we are and are *not* providing, rather than having to provide
263 * possibly-bogus values for statistics we can't provide.
264 */
265static struct pcap_stat *
266pcap_stats_ex_npf(pcap_t *p, int *pcap_stat_size)
267{
268	struct pcap_win *pw = p->priv;
269	struct bpf_stat bstats;
270
271	*pcap_stat_size = sizeof (p->stat);
272
273	/*
274	 * Try to get statistics.
275	 *
276	 * (Please note - "struct pcap_stat" is *not* the same as
277	 * WinPcap's "struct bpf_stat". It might currently have the
278	 * same layout, but let's not cheat.)
279	 */
280	if (!PacketGetStatsEx(pw->adapter, &bstats)) {
281		pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_win32_err(p->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
282		    GetLastError(), "PacketGetStatsEx error");
283		return (NULL);
284	}
285	p->stat.ps_recv = bstats.bs_recv;
286	p->stat.ps_drop = bstats.bs_drop;
287	p->stat.ps_ifdrop = bstats.ps_ifdrop;
288	/*
289	 * Just in case this is ever compiled for a target other than
290	 * Windows, which is somewhere between extremely unlikely and
291	 * impossible.
292	 */
293#ifdef _WIN32
294	p->stat.ps_capt = bstats.bs_capt;
295#endif
296	return (&p->stat);
297}
298
299/* Set the dimension of the kernel-level capture buffer */
300static int
301pcap_setbuff_npf(pcap_t *p, int dim)
302{
303	struct pcap_win *pw = p->priv;
304
305	if(PacketSetBuff(pw->adapter,dim)==FALSE)
306	{
307		snprintf(p->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE, "driver error: not enough memory to allocate the kernel buffer");
308		return (-1);
309	}
310	return (0);
311}
312
313/* Set the driver working mode */
314static int
315pcap_setmode_npf(pcap_t *p, int mode)
316{
317	struct pcap_win *pw = p->priv;
318
319	if(PacketSetMode(pw->adapter,mode)==FALSE)
320	{
321		snprintf(p->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE, "driver error: working mode not recognized");
322		return (-1);
323	}
324
325	return (0);
326}
327
328/*set the minimum amount of data that will release a read call*/
329static int
330pcap_setmintocopy_npf(pcap_t *p, int size)
331{
332	struct pcap_win *pw = p->priv;
333
334	if(PacketSetMinToCopy(pw->adapter, size)==FALSE)
335	{
336		snprintf(p->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE, "driver error: unable to set the requested mintocopy size");
337		return (-1);
338	}
339	return (0);
340}
341
342static HANDLE
343pcap_getevent_npf(pcap_t *p)
344{
345	struct pcap_win *pw = p->priv;
346
347	return (PacketGetReadEvent(pw->adapter));
348}
349
350static int
351pcap_oid_get_request_npf(pcap_t *p, bpf_u_int32 oid, void *data, size_t *lenp)
352{
353	struct pcap_win *pw = p->priv;
354
355	return (oid_get_request(pw->adapter, oid, data, lenp, p->errbuf));
356}
357
358static int
359pcap_oid_set_request_npf(pcap_t *p, bpf_u_int32 oid, const void *data,
360    size_t *lenp)
361{
362	struct pcap_win *pw = p->priv;
363	PACKET_OID_DATA *oid_data_arg;
364
365	/*
366	 * Allocate a PACKET_OID_DATA structure to hand to PacketRequest().
367	 * It should be big enough to hold "*lenp" bytes of data; it
368	 * will actually be slightly larger, as PACKET_OID_DATA has a
369	 * 1-byte data array at the end, standing in for the variable-length
370	 * data that's actually there.
371	 */
372	oid_data_arg = malloc(sizeof (PACKET_OID_DATA) + *lenp);
373	if (oid_data_arg == NULL) {
374		snprintf(p->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
375		    "Couldn't allocate argument buffer for PacketRequest");
376		return (PCAP_ERROR);
377	}
378
379	oid_data_arg->Oid = oid;
380	oid_data_arg->Length = (ULONG)(*lenp);	/* XXX - check for ridiculously large value? */
381	memcpy(oid_data_arg->Data, data, *lenp);
382	if (!PacketRequest(pw->adapter, TRUE, oid_data_arg)) {
383		pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_win32_err(p->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
384		    GetLastError(), "Error calling PacketRequest");
385		free(oid_data_arg);
386		return (PCAP_ERROR);
387	}
388
389	/*
390	 * Get the length actually copied.
391	 */
392	*lenp = oid_data_arg->Length;
393
394	/*
395	 * No need to copy the data - we're doing a set.
396	 */
397	free(oid_data_arg);
398	return (0);
399}
400
401static u_int
402pcap_sendqueue_transmit_npf(pcap_t *p, pcap_send_queue *queue, int sync)
403{
404	struct pcap_win *pw = p->priv;
405	u_int res;
406
407	res = PacketSendPackets(pw->adapter,
408		queue->buffer,
409		queue->len,
410		(BOOLEAN)sync);
411
412	if(res != queue->len){
413		pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_win32_err(p->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
414		    GetLastError(), "Error queueing packets");
415	}
416
417	return (res);
418}
419
420static int
421pcap_setuserbuffer_npf(pcap_t *p, int size)
422{
423	unsigned char *new_buff;
424
425	if (size<=0) {
426		/* Bogus parameter */
427		snprintf(p->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
428		    "Error: invalid size %d",size);
429		return (-1);
430	}
431
432	/* Allocate the buffer */
433	new_buff=(unsigned char*)malloc(sizeof(char)*size);
434
435	if (!new_buff) {
436		snprintf(p->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
437		    "Error: not enough memory");
438		return (-1);
439	}
440
441	free(p->buffer);
442
443	p->buffer=new_buff;
444	p->bufsize=size;
445
446	return (0);
447}
448
449#ifdef HAVE_NPCAP_PACKET_API
450/*
451 * Kernel dump mode isn't supported in Npcap; calls to PacketSetDumpName(),
452 * PacketSetDumpLimits(), and PacketIsDumpEnded() will get compile-time
453 * deprecation warnings.
454 *
455 * Avoid calling them; just return errors indicating that kernel dump
456 * mode isn't supported in Npcap.
457 */
458static int
459pcap_live_dump_npf(pcap_t *p, char *filename _U_, int maxsize _U_,
460    int maxpacks _U_)
461{
462	snprintf(p->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
463	    "Npcap doesn't support kernel dump mode");
464	return (-1);
465}
466static int
467pcap_live_dump_ended_npf(pcap_t *p, int sync)
468{
469	snprintf(p->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
470	    "Npcap doesn't support kernel dump mode");
471	return (-1);
472}
473#else /* HAVE_NPCAP_PACKET_API */
474static int
475pcap_live_dump_npf(pcap_t *p, char *filename, int maxsize, int maxpacks)
476{
477	struct pcap_win *pw = p->priv;
478	BOOLEAN res;
479
480	/* Set the packet driver in dump mode */
481	res = PacketSetMode(pw->adapter, PACKET_MODE_DUMP);
482	if(res == FALSE){
483		snprintf(p->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
484		    "Error setting dump mode");
485		return (-1);
486	}
487
488	/* Set the name of the dump file */
489	res = PacketSetDumpName(pw->adapter, filename, (int)strlen(filename));
490	if(res == FALSE){
491		snprintf(p->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
492		    "Error setting kernel dump file name");
493		return (-1);
494	}
495
496	/* Set the limits of the dump file */
497	res = PacketSetDumpLimits(pw->adapter, maxsize, maxpacks);
498	if(res == FALSE) {
499		snprintf(p->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
500				"Error setting dump limit");
501		return (-1);
502	}
503
504	return (0);
505}
506
507static int
508pcap_live_dump_ended_npf(pcap_t *p, int sync)
509{
510	struct pcap_win *pw = p->priv;
511
512	return (PacketIsDumpEnded(pw->adapter, (BOOLEAN)sync));
513}
514#endif /* HAVE_NPCAP_PACKET_API */
515
516#ifdef HAVE_AIRPCAP_API
517static PAirpcapHandle
518pcap_get_airpcap_handle_npf(pcap_t *p)
519{
520	struct pcap_win *pw = p->priv;
521
522	return (PacketGetAirPcapHandle(pw->adapter));
523}
524#else /* HAVE_AIRPCAP_API */
525static PAirpcapHandle
526pcap_get_airpcap_handle_npf(pcap_t *p _U_)
527{
528	return (NULL);
529}
530#endif /* HAVE_AIRPCAP_API */
531
532static int
533pcap_read_npf(pcap_t *p, int cnt, pcap_handler callback, u_char *user)
534{
535	PACKET Packet;
536	int cc;
537	int n;
538	register u_char *bp, *ep;
539	u_char *datap;
540	struct pcap_win *pw = p->priv;
541
542	cc = p->cc;
543	if (cc == 0) {
544		/*
545		 * Has "pcap_breakloop()" been called?
546		 */
547		if (p->break_loop) {
548			/*
549			 * Yes - clear the flag that indicates that it
550			 * has, and return PCAP_ERROR_BREAK to indicate
551			 * that we were told to break out of the loop.
552			 */
553			p->break_loop = 0;
554			return (PCAP_ERROR_BREAK);
555		}
556
557		/*
558		 * Capture the packets.
559		 *
560		 * The PACKET structure had a bunch of extra stuff for
561		 * Windows 9x/Me, but the only interesting data in it
562		 * in the versions of Windows that we support is just
563		 * a copy of p->buffer, a copy of p->buflen, and the
564		 * actual number of bytes read returned from
565		 * PacketReceivePacket(), none of which has to be
566		 * retained from call to call, so we just keep one on
567		 * the stack.
568		 */
569		PacketInitPacket(&Packet, (BYTE *)p->buffer, p->bufsize);
570		if (!PacketReceivePacket(pw->adapter, &Packet, TRUE)) {
571			/*
572			 * Did the device go away?
573			 * If so, the error we get can either be
574			 * ERROR_GEN_FAILURE or ERROR_DEVICE_REMOVED.
575			 */
576			DWORD errcode = GetLastError();
577
578			if (errcode == ERROR_GEN_FAILURE ||
579			    errcode == ERROR_DEVICE_REMOVED) {
580				/*
581				 * The device on which we're capturing
582				 * went away, or it became unusable
583				 * by NPF due to a suspend/resume.
584				 *
585				 * ERROR_GEN_FAILURE comes from
586				 * STATUS_UNSUCCESSFUL, as well as some
587				 * other NT status codes that the Npcap
588				 * driver is unlikely to return.
589				 * XXX - hopefully no other error
590				 * conditions are indicated by this.
591				 *
592				 * ERROR_DEVICE_REMOVED comes from
593				 * STATUS_DEVICE_REMOVED.
594				 *
595				 * We report the Windows status code
596				 * name and the corresponding NT status
597				 * code name, for the benefit of attempts
598				 * to debug cases where this error is
599				 * reported when the device *wasn't*
600				 * removed, either because it's not
601				 * removable, it's removable but wasn't
602				 * removed, or it's a device that doesn't
603				 * correspond to a physical device.
604				 *
605				 * XXX - we really should return an
606				 * appropriate error for that, but
607				 * pcap_dispatch() etc. aren't
608				 * documented as having error returns
609				 * other than PCAP_ERROR or PCAP_ERROR_BREAK.
610				 */
611				const char *errcode_msg;
612
613				if (errcode == ERROR_GEN_FAILURE)
614					errcode_msg = "ERROR_GEN_FAILURE/STATUS_UNSUCCESSFUL";
615				else
616					errcode_msg = "ERROR_DEVICE_REMOVED/STATUS_DEVICE_REMOVED";
617				snprintf(p->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
618				    "The interface disappeared (error code %s)",
619				    errcode_msg);
620			} else {
621				pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_win32_err(p->errbuf,
622				    PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE, errcode,
623				    "PacketReceivePacket error");
624			}
625			return (PCAP_ERROR);
626		}
627
628		cc = Packet.ulBytesReceived;
629
630		bp = p->buffer;
631	}
632	else
633		bp = p->bp;
634
635	/*
636	 * Loop through each packet.
637	 *
638	 * This assumes that a single buffer of packets will have
639	 * <= INT_MAX packets, so the packet count doesn't overflow.
640	 */
641#define bhp ((struct bpf_hdr *)bp)
642	n = 0;
643	ep = bp + cc;
644	for (;;) {
645		register u_int caplen, hdrlen;
646
647		/*
648		 * Has "pcap_breakloop()" been called?
649		 * If so, return immediately - if we haven't read any
650		 * packets, clear the flag and return PCAP_ERROR_BREAK
651		 * to indicate that we were told to break out of the loop,
652		 * otherwise leave the flag set, so that the *next* call
653		 * will break out of the loop without having read any
654		 * packets, and return the number of packets we've
655		 * processed so far.
656		 */
657		if (p->break_loop) {
658			if (n == 0) {
659				p->break_loop = 0;
660				return (PCAP_ERROR_BREAK);
661			} else {
662				p->bp = bp;
663				p->cc = (int) (ep - bp);
664				return (n);
665			}
666		}
667		if (bp >= ep)
668			break;
669
670		caplen = bhp->bh_caplen;
671		hdrlen = bhp->bh_hdrlen;
672		datap = bp + hdrlen;
673
674		/*
675		 * Short-circuit evaluation: if using BPF filter
676		 * in kernel, no need to do it now - we already know
677		 * the packet passed the filter.
678		 *
679		 * XXX - pcap_filter() should always return TRUE if
680		 * handed a null pointer for the program, but it might
681		 * just try to "run" the filter, so we check here.
682		 */
683		if (pw->filtering_in_kernel ||
684		    p->fcode.bf_insns == NULL ||
685		    pcap_filter(p->fcode.bf_insns, datap, bhp->bh_datalen, caplen)) {
686#ifdef ENABLE_REMOTE
687			switch (p->rmt_samp.method) {
688
689			case PCAP_SAMP_1_EVERY_N:
690				pw->samp_npkt = (pw->samp_npkt + 1) % p->rmt_samp.value;
691
692				/* Discard all packets that are not '1 out of N' */
693				if (pw->samp_npkt != 0) {
694					bp += Packet_WORDALIGN(caplen + hdrlen);
695					continue;
696				}
697				break;
698
699			case PCAP_SAMP_FIRST_AFTER_N_MS:
700			    {
701				struct pcap_pkthdr *pkt_header = (struct pcap_pkthdr*) bp;
702
703				/*
704				 * Check if the timestamp of the arrived
705				 * packet is smaller than our target time.
706				 */
707				if (pkt_header->ts.tv_sec < pw->samp_time.tv_sec ||
708				   (pkt_header->ts.tv_sec == pw->samp_time.tv_sec && pkt_header->ts.tv_usec < pw->samp_time.tv_usec)) {
709					bp += Packet_WORDALIGN(caplen + hdrlen);
710					continue;
711				}
712
713				/*
714				 * The arrived packet is suitable for being
715				 * delivered to our caller, so let's update
716				 * the target time.
717				 */
718				pw->samp_time.tv_usec = pkt_header->ts.tv_usec + p->rmt_samp.value * 1000;
719				if (pw->samp_time.tv_usec > 1000000) {
720					pw->samp_time.tv_sec = pkt_header->ts.tv_sec + pw->samp_time.tv_usec / 1000000;
721					pw->samp_time.tv_usec = pw->samp_time.tv_usec % 1000000;
722				}
723			    }
724			}
725#endif	/* ENABLE_REMOTE */
726
727			/*
728			 * XXX A bpf_hdr matches a pcap_pkthdr.
729			 */
730			(*callback)(user, (struct pcap_pkthdr*)bp, datap);
731			bp += Packet_WORDALIGN(caplen + hdrlen);
732			if (++n >= cnt && !PACKET_COUNT_IS_UNLIMITED(cnt)) {
733				p->bp = bp;
734				p->cc = (int) (ep - bp);
735				return (n);
736			}
737		} else {
738			/*
739			 * Skip this packet.
740			 */
741			bp += Packet_WORDALIGN(caplen + hdrlen);
742		}
743	}
744#undef bhp
745	p->cc = 0;
746	return (n);
747}
748
749#ifdef HAVE_DAG_API
750static int
751pcap_read_win32_dag(pcap_t *p, int cnt, pcap_handler callback, u_char *user)
752{
753	struct pcap_win *pw = p->priv;
754	PACKET Packet;
755	u_char *dp = NULL;
756	int	packet_len = 0, caplen = 0;
757	struct pcap_pkthdr	pcap_header;
758	u_char *endofbuf;
759	int n = 0;
760	dag_record_t *header;
761	unsigned erf_record_len;
762	ULONGLONG ts;
763	int cc;
764	unsigned swt;
765	unsigned dfp = pw->adapter->DagFastProcess;
766
767	cc = p->cc;
768	if (cc == 0) /* Get new packets only if we have processed all the ones of the previous read */
769	{
770		/*
771		 * Get new packets from the network.
772		 *
773		 * The PACKET structure had a bunch of extra stuff for
774		 * Windows 9x/Me, but the only interesting data in it
775		 * in the versions of Windows that we support is just
776		 * a copy of p->buffer, a copy of p->buflen, and the
777		 * actual number of bytes read returned from
778		 * PacketReceivePacket(), none of which has to be
779		 * retained from call to call, so we just keep one on
780		 * the stack.
781		 */
782		PacketInitPacket(&Packet, (BYTE *)p->buffer, p->bufsize);
783		if (!PacketReceivePacket(pw->adapter, &Packet, TRUE)) {
784			snprintf(p->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE, "read error: PacketReceivePacket failed");
785			return (-1);
786		}
787
788		cc = Packet.ulBytesReceived;
789		if(cc == 0)
790			/* The timeout has expired but we no packets arrived */
791			return (0);
792		header = (dag_record_t*)pw->adapter->DagBuffer;
793	}
794	else
795		header = (dag_record_t*)p->bp;
796
797	endofbuf = (char*)header + cc;
798
799	/*
800	 * This can conceivably process more than INT_MAX packets,
801	 * which would overflow the packet count, causing it either
802	 * to look like a negative number, and thus cause us to
803	 * return a value that looks like an error, or overflow
804	 * back into positive territory, and thus cause us to
805	 * return a too-low count.
806	 *
807	 * Therefore, if the packet count is unlimited, we clip
808	 * it at INT_MAX; this routine is not expected to
809	 * process packets indefinitely, so that's not an issue.
810	 */
811	if (PACKET_COUNT_IS_UNLIMITED(cnt))
812		cnt = INT_MAX;
813
814	/*
815	 * Cycle through the packets
816	 */
817	do
818	{
819		erf_record_len = SWAPS(header->rlen);
820		if((char*)header + erf_record_len > endofbuf)
821			break;
822
823		/* Increase the number of captured packets */
824		p->stat.ps_recv++;
825
826		/* Find the beginning of the packet */
827		dp = ((u_char *)header) + dag_record_size;
828
829		/* Determine actual packet len */
830		switch(header->type)
831		{
832		case TYPE_ATM:
833			packet_len = ATM_SNAPLEN;
834			caplen = ATM_SNAPLEN;
835			dp += 4;
836
837			break;
838
839		case TYPE_ETH:
840			swt = SWAPS(header->wlen);
841			packet_len = swt - (pw->dag_fcs_bits);
842			caplen = erf_record_len - dag_record_size - 2;
843			if (caplen > packet_len)
844			{
845				caplen = packet_len;
846			}
847			dp += 2;
848
849			break;
850
851		case TYPE_HDLC_POS:
852			swt = SWAPS(header->wlen);
853			packet_len = swt - (pw->dag_fcs_bits);
854			caplen = erf_record_len - dag_record_size;
855			if (caplen > packet_len)
856			{
857				caplen = packet_len;
858			}
859
860			break;
861		}
862
863		if(caplen > p->snapshot)
864			caplen = p->snapshot;
865
866		/*
867		 * Has "pcap_breakloop()" been called?
868		 * If so, return immediately - if we haven't read any
869		 * packets, clear the flag and return -2 to indicate
870		 * that we were told to break out of the loop, otherwise
871		 * leave the flag set, so that the *next* call will break
872		 * out of the loop without having read any packets, and
873		 * return the number of packets we've processed so far.
874		 */
875		if (p->break_loop)
876		{
877			if (n == 0)
878			{
879				p->break_loop = 0;
880				return (-2);
881			}
882			else
883			{
884				p->bp = (char*)header;
885				p->cc = endofbuf - (char*)header;
886				return (n);
887			}
888		}
889
890		if(!dfp)
891		{
892			/* convert between timestamp formats */
893			ts = header->ts;
894			pcap_header.ts.tv_sec = (int)(ts >> 32);
895			ts = (ts & 0xffffffffi64) * 1000000;
896			ts += 0x80000000; /* rounding */
897			pcap_header.ts.tv_usec = (int)(ts >> 32);
898			if (pcap_header.ts.tv_usec >= 1000000) {
899				pcap_header.ts.tv_usec -= 1000000;
900				pcap_header.ts.tv_sec++;
901			}
902		}
903
904		/* No underlying filtering system. We need to filter on our own */
905		if (p->fcode.bf_insns)
906		{
907			if (pcap_filter(p->fcode.bf_insns, dp, packet_len, caplen) == 0)
908			{
909				/* Move to next packet */
910				header = (dag_record_t*)((char*)header + erf_record_len);
911				continue;
912			}
913		}
914
915		/* Fill the header for the user supplied callback function */
916		pcap_header.caplen = caplen;
917		pcap_header.len = packet_len;
918
919		/* Call the callback function */
920		(*callback)(user, &pcap_header, dp);
921
922		/* Move to next packet */
923		header = (dag_record_t*)((char*)header + erf_record_len);
924
925		/* Stop if the number of packets requested by user has been reached*/
926		if (++n >= cnt && !PACKET_COUNT_IS_UNLIMITED(cnt))
927		{
928			p->bp = (char*)header;
929			p->cc = endofbuf - (char*)header;
930			return (n);
931		}
932	}
933	while((u_char*)header < endofbuf);
934
935	return (1);
936}
937#endif /* HAVE_DAG_API */
938
939/* Send a packet to the network */
940static int
941pcap_inject_npf(pcap_t *p, const void *buf, int size)
942{
943	struct pcap_win *pw = p->priv;
944	PACKET pkt;
945
946	PacketInitPacket(&pkt, (PVOID)buf, size);
947	if(PacketSendPacket(pw->adapter,&pkt,TRUE) == FALSE) {
948		pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_win32_err(p->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
949		    GetLastError(), "send error: PacketSendPacket failed");
950		return (-1);
951	}
952
953	/*
954	 * We assume it all got sent if "PacketSendPacket()" succeeded.
955	 * "pcap_inject()" is expected to return the number of bytes
956	 * sent.
957	 */
958	return (size);
959}
960
961static void
962pcap_cleanup_npf(pcap_t *p)
963{
964	struct pcap_win *pw = p->priv;
965
966	if (pw->adapter != NULL) {
967		PacketCloseAdapter(pw->adapter);
968		pw->adapter = NULL;
969	}
970	if (pw->rfmon_selfstart)
971	{
972		PacketSetMonitorMode(p->opt.device, 0);
973	}
974	pcap_cleanup_live_common(p);
975}
976
977static void
978pcap_breakloop_npf(pcap_t *p)
979{
980	pcap_breakloop_common(p);
981	struct pcap_win *pw = p->priv;
982
983	/* XXX - what if this fails? */
984	SetEvent(PacketGetReadEvent(pw->adapter));
985}
986
987/*
988 * These are NTSTATUS values:
989 *
990 *    https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/openspecs/windows_protocols/ms-erref/87fba13e-bf06-450e-83b1-9241dc81e781
991 *
992 * with the "Customer" bit set.  If a driver returns them, they are not
993 * mapped to Windows error values in userland; they're returned by
994 * GetLastError().
995 *
996 * Note that "driver" here includes the Npcap NPF driver, as various
997 * versions would take NT status values and set the "Customer" bit
998 * before returning the status code.  The commit message for the
999 * change that started doing that is
1000 *
1001 *    Returned a customer-defined NTSTATUS in OID requests to avoid
1002 *    NTSTATUS-to-Win32 Error code translation.
1003 *
1004 * but I don't know why the goal was to avoid that translation.
1005 *
1006 * Attempting to set the hardware filter on a Microsoft Surface Pro's
1007 * Mobile Broadband Adapter returns an error that appears to be
1008 * NDIS_STATUS_NOT_SUPPORTED ORed with the "Customer" bit, so it's
1009 * probably indicating that it doesn't support that.
1010 *
1011 * It is likely that there are other devices which throw spurious errors,
1012 * at which point this will need refactoring to efficiently check against
1013 * a list, but for now we can just check this one value.  Perhaps the
1014 * right way to do this is compare against various NDIS errors with
1015 * the "customer" bit ORed in.
1016 */
1017#define NT_STATUS_CUSTOMER_DEFINED	0x20000000
1018
1019static int
1020pcap_activate_npf(pcap_t *p)
1021{
1022	struct pcap_win *pw = p->priv;
1023	NetType type;
1024	int res;
1025	int status = 0;
1026	struct bpf_insn total_insn;
1027	struct bpf_program total_prog;
1028
1029	if (p->opt.rfmon) {
1030		/*
1031		 * Monitor mode is supported on Windows Vista and later.
1032		 */
1033		if (PacketGetMonitorMode(p->opt.device) == 1)
1034		{
1035			pw->rfmon_selfstart = 0;
1036		}
1037		else
1038		{
1039			if ((res = PacketSetMonitorMode(p->opt.device, 1)) != 1)
1040			{
1041				pw->rfmon_selfstart = 0;
1042				// Monitor mode is not supported.
1043				if (res == 0)
1044				{
1045					return PCAP_ERROR_RFMON_NOTSUP;
1046				}
1047				else
1048				{
1049					return PCAP_ERROR;
1050				}
1051			}
1052			else
1053			{
1054				pw->rfmon_selfstart = 1;
1055			}
1056		}
1057	}
1058
1059	/* Init Winsock if it hasn't already been initialized */
1060	pcap_wsockinit();
1061
1062	pw->adapter = PacketOpenAdapter(p->opt.device);
1063
1064	if (pw->adapter == NULL)
1065	{
1066		DWORD errcode = GetLastError();
1067
1068		/*
1069		 * What error did we get when trying to open the adapter?
1070		 */
1071		switch (errcode) {
1072
1073		case ERROR_BAD_UNIT:
1074			/*
1075			 * There's no such device.
1076			 * There's nothing to add, so clear the error
1077			 * message.
1078			 */
1079			p->errbuf[0] = '\0';
1080			return (PCAP_ERROR_NO_SUCH_DEVICE);
1081
1082		case ERROR_ACCESS_DENIED:
1083			/*
1084			 * There is, but we don't have permission to
1085			 * use it.
1086			 *
1087			 * XXX - we currently get ERROR_BAD_UNIT if the
1088			 * user says "no" to the UAC prompt.
1089			 */
1090			snprintf(p->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
1091			    "The helper program for \"Admin-only Mode\" must be allowed to make changes to your device");
1092			return (PCAP_ERROR_PERM_DENIED);
1093
1094		default:
1095			/*
1096			 * Unknown - report details.
1097			 */
1098			pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_win32_err(p->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
1099			    errcode, "Error opening adapter");
1100			if (pw->rfmon_selfstart)
1101			{
1102				PacketSetMonitorMode(p->opt.device, 0);
1103			}
1104			return (PCAP_ERROR);
1105		}
1106	}
1107
1108	/*get network type*/
1109	if(PacketGetNetType (pw->adapter,&type) == FALSE)
1110	{
1111		pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_win32_err(p->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
1112		    GetLastError(), "Cannot determine the network type");
1113		goto bad;
1114	}
1115
1116	/*Set the linktype*/
1117	switch (type.LinkType)
1118	{
1119	/*
1120	 * NDIS-defined medium types.
1121	 */
1122	case NdisMedium802_3:
1123		p->linktype = DLT_EN10MB;
1124		/*
1125		 * This is (presumably) a real Ethernet capture; give it a
1126		 * link-layer-type list with DLT_EN10MB and DLT_DOCSIS, so
1127		 * that an application can let you choose it, in case you're
1128		 * capturing DOCSIS traffic that a Cisco Cable Modem
1129		 * Termination System is putting out onto an Ethernet (it
1130		 * doesn't put an Ethernet header onto the wire, it puts raw
1131		 * DOCSIS frames out on the wire inside the low-level
1132		 * Ethernet framing).
1133		 */
1134		p->dlt_list = (u_int *) malloc(sizeof(u_int) * 2);
1135		/*
1136		 * If that fails, just leave the list empty.
1137		 */
1138		if (p->dlt_list != NULL) {
1139			p->dlt_list[0] = DLT_EN10MB;
1140			p->dlt_list[1] = DLT_DOCSIS;
1141			p->dlt_count = 2;
1142		}
1143		break;
1144
1145	case NdisMedium802_5:
1146		/*
1147		 * Token Ring.
1148		 */
1149		p->linktype = DLT_IEEE802;
1150		break;
1151
1152	case NdisMediumFddi:
1153		p->linktype = DLT_FDDI;
1154		break;
1155
1156	case NdisMediumWan:
1157		p->linktype = DLT_EN10MB;
1158		break;
1159
1160	case NdisMediumArcnetRaw:
1161		p->linktype = DLT_ARCNET;
1162		break;
1163
1164	case NdisMediumArcnet878_2:
1165		p->linktype = DLT_ARCNET;
1166		break;
1167
1168	case NdisMediumAtm:
1169		p->linktype = DLT_ATM_RFC1483;
1170		break;
1171
1172	case NdisMediumWirelessWan:
1173		p->linktype = DLT_RAW;
1174		break;
1175
1176	case NdisMediumIP:
1177		p->linktype = DLT_RAW;
1178		break;
1179
1180	/*
1181	 * Npcap-defined medium types.
1182	 */
1183	case NdisMediumNull:
1184		p->linktype = DLT_NULL;
1185		break;
1186
1187	case NdisMediumCHDLC:
1188		p->linktype = DLT_CHDLC;
1189		break;
1190
1191	case NdisMediumPPPSerial:
1192		p->linktype = DLT_PPP_SERIAL;
1193		break;
1194
1195	case NdisMediumBare80211:
1196		p->linktype = DLT_IEEE802_11;
1197		break;
1198
1199	case NdisMediumRadio80211:
1200		p->linktype = DLT_IEEE802_11_RADIO;
1201		break;
1202
1203	case NdisMediumPpi:
1204		p->linktype = DLT_PPI;
1205		break;
1206
1207	default:
1208		/*
1209		 * An unknown medium type is assumed to supply Ethernet
1210		 * headers; if not, the user will have to report it,
1211		 * so that the medium type and link-layer header type
1212		 * can be determined.  If we were to fail here, we
1213		 * might get the link-layer type in the error, but
1214		 * the user wouldn't get a capture, so we wouldn't
1215		 * be able to determine the link-layer type; we report
1216		 * a warning with the link-layer type, so at least
1217		 * some programs will report the warning.
1218		 */
1219		p->linktype = DLT_EN10MB;
1220		snprintf(p->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
1221		    "Unknown NdisMedium value %d, defaulting to DLT_EN10MB",
1222		    type.LinkType);
1223		status = PCAP_WARNING;
1224		break;
1225	}
1226
1227#ifdef HAVE_PACKET_GET_TIMESTAMP_MODES
1228	/*
1229	 * Set the timestamp type.
1230	 * (Yes, we require PacketGetTimestampModes(), not just
1231	 * PacketSetTimestampMode().  If we have the former, we
1232	 * have the latter, unless somebody's using a version
1233	 * of Npcap that they've hacked to provide the former
1234	 * but not the latter; if they've done that, either
1235	 * they're confused or they're trolling us.)
1236	 */
1237	switch (p->opt.tstamp_type) {
1238
1239	case PCAP_TSTAMP_HOST_HIPREC_UNSYNCED:
1240		/*
1241		 * Better than low-res, but *not* synchronized with
1242		 * the OS clock.
1243		 */
1244		if (!PacketSetTimestampMode(pw->adapter, TIMESTAMPMODE_SINGLE_SYNCHRONIZATION))
1245		{
1246			pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_win32_err(p->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
1247			    GetLastError(), "Cannot set the time stamp mode to TIMESTAMPMODE_SINGLE_SYNCHRONIZATION");
1248			goto bad;
1249		}
1250		break;
1251
1252	case PCAP_TSTAMP_HOST_LOWPREC:
1253		/*
1254		 * Low-res, but synchronized with the OS clock.
1255		 */
1256		if (!PacketSetTimestampMode(pw->adapter, TIMESTAMPMODE_QUERYSYSTEMTIME))
1257		{
1258			pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_win32_err(p->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
1259			    GetLastError(), "Cannot set the time stamp mode to TIMESTAMPMODE_QUERYSYSTEMTIME");
1260			goto bad;
1261		}
1262		break;
1263
1264	case PCAP_TSTAMP_HOST_HIPREC:
1265		/*
1266		 * High-res, and synchronized with the OS clock.
1267		 */
1268		if (!PacketSetTimestampMode(pw->adapter, TIMESTAMPMODE_QUERYSYSTEMTIME_PRECISE))
1269		{
1270			pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_win32_err(p->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
1271			    GetLastError(), "Cannot set the time stamp mode to TIMESTAMPMODE_QUERYSYSTEMTIME_PRECISE");
1272			goto bad;
1273		}
1274		break;
1275
1276	case PCAP_TSTAMP_HOST:
1277		/*
1278		 * XXX - do whatever the default is, for now.
1279		 * Set to the highest resolution that's synchronized
1280		 * with the system clock?
1281		 */
1282		break;
1283	}
1284#endif /* HAVE_PACKET_GET_TIMESTAMP_MODES */
1285
1286	/*
1287	 * Turn a negative snapshot value (invalid), a snapshot value of
1288	 * 0 (unspecified), or a value bigger than the normal maximum
1289	 * value, into the maximum allowed value.
1290	 *
1291	 * If some application really *needs* a bigger snapshot
1292	 * length, we should just increase MAXIMUM_SNAPLEN.
1293	 */
1294	if (p->snapshot <= 0 || p->snapshot > MAXIMUM_SNAPLEN)
1295		p->snapshot = MAXIMUM_SNAPLEN;
1296
1297	/* Set promiscuous mode */
1298	if (p->opt.promisc)
1299	{
1300
1301		if (PacketSetHwFilter(pw->adapter,NDIS_PACKET_TYPE_PROMISCUOUS) == FALSE)
1302		{
1303			DWORD errcode = GetLastError();
1304
1305			/*
1306			 * Suppress spurious error generated by non-compiant
1307			 * MS Surface mobile adapters that appear to
1308			 * return NDIS_STATUS_NOT_SUPPORTED for attempts
1309			 * to set the hardware filter.
1310			 *
1311			 * It appears to be reporting NDIS_STATUS_NOT_SUPPORTED,
1312			 * but with the NT status value "Customer" bit set;
1313			 * the Npcap NPF driver sets that bit in some cases.
1314			 *
1315			 * If we knew that this meant "promiscuous mode
1316			 * isn't supported", we could add a "promiscuous
1317			 * mode isn't supported" error code and return
1318			 * that, but:
1319			 *
1320			 *    1) we don't know that it means that
1321			 *    rather than meaning "we reject attempts
1322			 *    to set the filter, even though the NDIS
1323			 *    specifications say you shouldn't do that"
1324			 *
1325			 * and
1326			 *
1327			 *    2) other interface types that don't
1328			 *    support promiscuous mode, at least
1329			 *    on UN*Xes, just silently ignore
1330			 *    attempts to set promiscuous mode
1331			 *
1332			 * and rejecting it with an error could disrupt
1333			 * attempts to capture, as many programs (tcpdump,
1334			 * *shark) default to promiscuous mode.
1335			 *
1336			 * Alternatively, we could return the "promiscuous
1337			 * mode not supported" *warning* value, so that
1338			 * correct code will either ignore it or report
1339			 * it and continue capturing.  (This may require
1340			 * a pcap_init() flag to request that return
1341			 * value, so that old incorrect programs that
1342			 * assume a non-zero return from pcap_activate()
1343			 * is an error don't break.)
1344			 */
1345			if (errcode != (NDIS_STATUS_NOT_SUPPORTED|NT_STATUS_CUSTOMER_DEFINED))
1346			{
1347				pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_win32_err(p->errbuf,
1348				    PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE, errcode,
1349				    "failed to set hardware filter to promiscuous mode");
1350				goto bad;
1351			}
1352		}
1353	}
1354	else
1355	{
1356		/*
1357		 * NDIS_PACKET_TYPE_ALL_LOCAL selects "All packets sent by
1358		 * installed protocols and all packets indicated by the NIC",
1359		 * but if no protocol drivers (like TCP/IP) are installed,
1360		 * NDIS_PACKET_TYPE_DIRECTED, NDIS_PACKET_TYPE_BROADCAST,
1361		 * and NDIS_PACKET_TYPE_MULTICAST are needed to capture
1362		 * incoming frames.
1363		 */
1364		if (PacketSetHwFilter(pw->adapter,
1365			NDIS_PACKET_TYPE_ALL_LOCAL |
1366			NDIS_PACKET_TYPE_DIRECTED |
1367			NDIS_PACKET_TYPE_BROADCAST |
1368			NDIS_PACKET_TYPE_MULTICAST) == FALSE)
1369		{
1370			DWORD errcode = GetLastError();
1371
1372			/*
1373			 * Suppress spurious error generated by non-compiant
1374			 * MS Surface mobile adapters.
1375			 */
1376			if (errcode != (NDIS_STATUS_NOT_SUPPORTED|NT_STATUS_CUSTOMER_DEFINED))
1377			{
1378				pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_win32_err(p->errbuf,
1379				    PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE, errcode,
1380				    "failed to set hardware filter to non-promiscuous mode");
1381				goto bad;
1382			}
1383		}
1384	}
1385
1386	/* Set the buffer size */
1387	p->bufsize = WIN32_DEFAULT_USER_BUFFER_SIZE;
1388
1389	if(!(pw->adapter->Flags & INFO_FLAG_DAG_CARD))
1390	{
1391	/*
1392	 * Traditional Adapter
1393	 */
1394		/*
1395		 * If the buffer size wasn't explicitly set, default to
1396		 * WIN32_DEFAULT_KERNEL_BUFFER_SIZE.
1397		 */
1398		if (p->opt.buffer_size == 0)
1399			p->opt.buffer_size = WIN32_DEFAULT_KERNEL_BUFFER_SIZE;
1400
1401		if(PacketSetBuff(pw->adapter,p->opt.buffer_size)==FALSE)
1402		{
1403			snprintf(p->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE, "driver error: not enough memory to allocate the kernel buffer");
1404			goto bad;
1405		}
1406
1407		p->buffer = malloc(p->bufsize);
1408		if (p->buffer == NULL)
1409		{
1410			pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(p->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
1411			    errno, "malloc");
1412			goto bad;
1413		}
1414
1415		if (p->opt.immediate)
1416		{
1417			/* tell the driver to copy the buffer as soon as data arrives */
1418			if(PacketSetMinToCopy(pw->adapter,0)==FALSE)
1419			{
1420				pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_win32_err(p->errbuf,
1421				    PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE, GetLastError(),
1422				    "Error calling PacketSetMinToCopy");
1423				goto bad;
1424			}
1425		}
1426		else
1427		{
1428			/* tell the driver to copy the buffer only if it contains at least 16K */
1429			if(PacketSetMinToCopy(pw->adapter,16000)==FALSE)
1430			{
1431				pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_win32_err(p->errbuf,
1432				    PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE, GetLastError(),
1433				    "Error calling PacketSetMinToCopy");
1434				goto bad;
1435			}
1436		}
1437	} else {
1438		/*
1439		 * Dag Card
1440		 */
1441#ifdef HAVE_DAG_API
1442		/*
1443		 * We have DAG support.
1444		 */
1445		LONG	status;
1446		HKEY	dagkey;
1447		DWORD	lptype;
1448		DWORD	lpcbdata;
1449		int		postype = 0;
1450		char	keyname[512];
1451
1452		snprintf(keyname, sizeof(keyname), "%s\\CardParams\\%s",
1453			"SYSTEM\\CurrentControlSet\\Services\\DAG",
1454			strstr(_strlwr(p->opt.device), "dag"));
1455		do
1456		{
1457			status = RegOpenKeyEx(HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE, keyname, 0, KEY_READ, &dagkey);
1458			if(status != ERROR_SUCCESS)
1459				break;
1460
1461			status = RegQueryValueEx(dagkey,
1462				"PosType",
1463				NULL,
1464				&lptype,
1465				(char*)&postype,
1466				&lpcbdata);
1467
1468			if(status != ERROR_SUCCESS)
1469			{
1470				postype = 0;
1471			}
1472
1473			RegCloseKey(dagkey);
1474		}
1475		while(FALSE);
1476
1477
1478		p->snapshot = PacketSetSnapLen(pw->adapter, p->snapshot);
1479
1480		/* Set the length of the FCS associated to any packet. This value
1481		 * will be subtracted to the packet length */
1482		pw->dag_fcs_bits = pw->adapter->DagFcsLen;
1483#else /* HAVE_DAG_API */
1484		/*
1485		 * No DAG support.
1486		 */
1487		goto bad;
1488#endif /* HAVE_DAG_API */
1489	}
1490
1491	/*
1492	 * If there's no filter program installed, there's
1493	 * no indication to the kernel of what the snapshot
1494	 * length should be, so no snapshotting is done.
1495	 *
1496	 * Therefore, when we open the device, we install
1497	 * an "accept everything" filter with the specified
1498	 * snapshot length.
1499	 */
1500	total_insn.code = (u_short)(BPF_RET | BPF_K);
1501	total_insn.jt = 0;
1502	total_insn.jf = 0;
1503	total_insn.k = p->snapshot;
1504
1505	total_prog.bf_len = 1;
1506	total_prog.bf_insns = &total_insn;
1507	if (!PacketSetBpf(pw->adapter, &total_prog)) {
1508		pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_win32_err(p->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
1509		    GetLastError(), "PacketSetBpf");
1510		status = PCAP_ERROR;
1511		goto bad;
1512	}
1513
1514	PacketSetReadTimeout(pw->adapter, p->opt.timeout);
1515
1516	/* disable loopback capture if requested */
1517	if (p->opt.nocapture_local)
1518	{
1519		if (!PacketSetLoopbackBehavior(pw->adapter, NPF_DISABLE_LOOPBACK))
1520		{
1521			snprintf(p->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
1522			    "Unable to disable the capture of loopback packets.");
1523			goto bad;
1524		}
1525	}
1526
1527#ifdef HAVE_DAG_API
1528	if(pw->adapter->Flags & INFO_FLAG_DAG_CARD)
1529	{
1530		/* install dag specific handlers for read and setfilter */
1531		p->read_op = pcap_read_win32_dag;
1532		p->setfilter_op = pcap_setfilter_win32_dag;
1533	}
1534	else
1535	{
1536#endif /* HAVE_DAG_API */
1537		/* install traditional npf handlers for read and setfilter */
1538		p->read_op = pcap_read_npf;
1539		p->setfilter_op = pcap_setfilter_npf;
1540#ifdef HAVE_DAG_API
1541	}
1542#endif /* HAVE_DAG_API */
1543	p->setdirection_op = NULL;	/* Not implemented. */
1544	    /* XXX - can this be implemented on some versions of Windows? */
1545	p->inject_op = pcap_inject_npf;
1546	p->set_datalink_op = NULL;	/* can't change data link type */
1547	p->getnonblock_op = pcap_getnonblock_npf;
1548	p->setnonblock_op = pcap_setnonblock_npf;
1549	p->stats_op = pcap_stats_npf;
1550	p->breakloop_op = pcap_breakloop_npf;
1551	p->stats_ex_op = pcap_stats_ex_npf;
1552	p->setbuff_op = pcap_setbuff_npf;
1553	p->setmode_op = pcap_setmode_npf;
1554	p->setmintocopy_op = pcap_setmintocopy_npf;
1555	p->getevent_op = pcap_getevent_npf;
1556	p->oid_get_request_op = pcap_oid_get_request_npf;
1557	p->oid_set_request_op = pcap_oid_set_request_npf;
1558	p->sendqueue_transmit_op = pcap_sendqueue_transmit_npf;
1559	p->setuserbuffer_op = pcap_setuserbuffer_npf;
1560	p->live_dump_op = pcap_live_dump_npf;
1561	p->live_dump_ended_op = pcap_live_dump_ended_npf;
1562	p->get_airpcap_handle_op = pcap_get_airpcap_handle_npf;
1563	p->cleanup_op = pcap_cleanup_npf;
1564
1565	/*
1566	 * XXX - this is only done because WinPcap supported
1567	 * pcap_fileno() returning the hFile HANDLE from the
1568	 * ADAPTER structure.  We make no general guarantees
1569	 * that the caller can do anything useful with it.
1570	 *
1571	 * (Not that we make any general guarantee of that
1572	 * sort on UN*X, either, any more, given that not
1573	 * all capture devices are regular OS network
1574	 * interfaces.)
1575	 */
1576	p->handle = pw->adapter->hFile;
1577
1578	return (status);
1579bad:
1580	pcap_cleanup_npf(p);
1581	return (PCAP_ERROR);
1582}
1583
1584/*
1585* Check if rfmon mode is supported on the pcap_t for Windows systems.
1586*/
1587static int
1588pcap_can_set_rfmon_npf(pcap_t *p)
1589{
1590	return (PacketIsMonitorModeSupported(p->opt.device) == 1);
1591}
1592
1593/*
1594 * Get a list of time stamp types.
1595 */
1596#ifdef HAVE_PACKET_GET_TIMESTAMP_MODES
1597static int
1598get_ts_types(const char *device, pcap_t *p, char *ebuf)
1599{
1600	char *device_copy = NULL;
1601	ADAPTER *adapter = NULL;
1602	ULONG num_ts_modes;
1603	BOOL ret;
1604	DWORD error = ERROR_SUCCESS;
1605	ULONG *modes = NULL;
1606	int status = 0;
1607
1608	do {
1609		/*
1610		 * First, find out how many time stamp modes we have.
1611		 * To do that, we have to open the adapter.
1612		 *
1613		 * XXX - PacketOpenAdapter() takes a non-const pointer
1614		 * as an argument, so we make a copy of the argument and
1615		 * pass that to it.
1616		 */
1617		device_copy = strdup(device);
1618		if (device_copy == NULL) {
1619			pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(ebuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE, errno, "malloc");
1620			status = -1;
1621			break;
1622		}
1623
1624		adapter = PacketOpenAdapter(device_copy);
1625		if (adapter == NULL)
1626		{
1627			error = GetLastError();
1628			/*
1629			 * If we can't open the device now, we won't be
1630			 * able to later, either.
1631			 *
1632			 * If the error is something that indicates
1633			 * that the device doesn't exist, or that they
1634			 * don't have permission to open the device - or
1635			 * perhaps that they don't have permission to get
1636			 * a list of devices, if PacketOpenAdapter() does
1637			 * that - the user will find that out when they try
1638			 * to activate the device; just return an empty
1639			 * list of time stamp types.
1640			 *
1641			 * Treating either of those as errors will, for
1642			 * example, cause "tcpdump -i <number>" to fail,
1643			 * because it first tries to pass the interface
1644			 * name to pcap_create() and pcap_activate(),
1645			 * in order to handle OSes where interfaces can
1646			 * have names that are just numbers (stand up
1647			 * and say hello, Linux!), and, if pcap_activate()
1648			 * fails with a "no such device" error, checks
1649			 * whether the interface name is a valid number
1650			 * and, if so, tries to use it as an index in
1651			 * the list of interfaces.
1652			 *
1653			 * That means pcap_create() must succeed even
1654			 * for interfaces that don't exist, with the
1655			 * failure occurring at pcap_activate() time.
1656			 */
1657			if (error == ERROR_BAD_UNIT ||
1658			    error == ERROR_ACCESS_DENIED) {
1659				p->tstamp_type_count = 0;
1660				p->tstamp_type_list = NULL;
1661				status = 0;
1662			} else {
1663				pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_win32_err(ebuf,
1664				    PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE, error,
1665				    "Error opening adapter");
1666				status = -1;
1667			}
1668			break;
1669		}
1670
1671		/*
1672		 * Get the total number of time stamp modes.
1673		 *
1674		 * The buffer for PacketGetTimestampModes() is
1675		 * a sequence of 1 or more ULONGs.  What's
1676		 * passed to PacketGetTimestampModes() should have
1677		 * the total number of ULONGs in the first ULONG;
1678		 * what's returned *from* PacketGetTimestampModes()
1679		 * has the total number of time stamp modes in
1680		 * the first ULONG.
1681		 *
1682		 * Yes, that means if there are N time stamp
1683		 * modes, the first ULONG should be set to N+1
1684		 * on input, and will be set to N on output.
1685		 *
1686		 * We first make a call to PacketGetTimestampModes()
1687		 * with a pointer to a single ULONG set to 1; the
1688		 * call should fail with ERROR_MORE_DATA (unless
1689		 * there are *no* modes, but that should never
1690		 * happen), and that ULONG should be set to the
1691		 * number of modes.
1692		 */
1693		num_ts_modes = 1;
1694		ret = PacketGetTimestampModes(adapter, &num_ts_modes);
1695		if (!ret) {
1696			/*
1697			 * OK, it failed.  Did it fail with
1698			 * ERROR_MORE_DATA?
1699			 */
1700			error = GetLastError();
1701			if (error != ERROR_MORE_DATA) {
1702				/*
1703				 * No, did it fail with ERROR_INVALID_FUNCTION?
1704				 */
1705				if (error == ERROR_INVALID_FUNCTION) {
1706					/*
1707					 * This is probably due to
1708					 * the driver with which Packet.dll
1709					 * communicates being older, or
1710					 * being a WinPcap driver, so
1711					 * that it doesn't support
1712					 * BIOCGTIMESTAMPMODES.
1713					 *
1714					 * Tell the user to try uninstalling
1715					 * Npcap - and WinPcap if installed -
1716					 * and re-installing it, to flush
1717					 * out all older drivers.
1718					 */
1719					snprintf(ebuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
1720					    "PacketGetTimestampModes() failed with ERROR_INVALID_FUNCTION; try uninstalling Npcap, and WinPcap if installed, and re-installing it from npcap.com");
1721					status = -1;
1722					break;
1723				}
1724
1725				/*
1726				 * No, some other error.  Fail.
1727				 */
1728				pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_win32_err(ebuf,
1729				    PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE, error,
1730				    "Error calling PacketGetTimestampModes");
1731				status = -1;
1732				break;
1733			}
1734		}
1735		/* else (ret == TRUE)
1736		 * Unexpected success. Let's act like we got ERROR_MORE_DATA.
1737		 * If it doesn't work, we'll hit some other error condition farther on.
1738		 */
1739
1740		/* If the driver reports no modes supported *and*
1741		 * ERROR_MORE_DATA, something is seriously wrong.
1742		 * We *could* ignore the error and continue without supporting
1743		 * settable timestamp modes, but that would hide a bug.
1744		 */
1745		if (num_ts_modes == 0) {
1746			snprintf(ebuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
1747			    "PacketGetTimestampModes() reports 0 modes supported.");
1748			status = -1;
1749			break;
1750		}
1751
1752		/*
1753		 * Yes, so we now know how many types to fetch.
1754		 *
1755		 * The buffer needs to have one ULONG for the
1756		 * count and num_ts_modes ULONGs for the
1757		 * num_ts_modes time stamp types.
1758		 */
1759		modes = (ULONG *)malloc((1 + num_ts_modes) * sizeof(ULONG));
1760		if (modes == NULL) {
1761			/* Out of memory. */
1762			pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(ebuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE, errno, "malloc");
1763			status = -1;
1764			break;
1765		}
1766		modes[0] = 1 + num_ts_modes;
1767		if (!PacketGetTimestampModes(adapter, modes)) {
1768			pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_win32_err(ebuf,
1769			    PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE, GetLastError(),
1770			    "Error calling PacketGetTimestampModes");
1771			status = -1;
1772			break;
1773		}
1774		if (modes[0] != num_ts_modes) {
1775			snprintf(ebuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
1776			    "First PacketGetTimestampModes() call gives %lu modes, second call gives %lu modes",
1777			    num_ts_modes, modes[0]);
1778			status = -1;
1779			break;
1780		}
1781
1782		/*
1783		 * Allocate a buffer big enough for
1784		 * PCAP_TSTAMP_HOST (default) plus
1785		 * the explicitly specified modes.
1786		 */
1787		p->tstamp_type_list = malloc((1 + num_ts_modes) * sizeof(u_int));
1788		if (p->tstamp_type_list == NULL) {
1789			pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(ebuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE, errno, "malloc");
1790			status = -1;
1791			break;
1792		}
1793		u_int num_ts_types = 0;
1794		p->tstamp_type_list[num_ts_types] =
1795		    PCAP_TSTAMP_HOST;
1796		num_ts_types++;
1797		for (ULONG i = 0; i < num_ts_modes; i++) {
1798			switch (modes[i + 1]) {
1799
1800			case TIMESTAMPMODE_SINGLE_SYNCHRONIZATION:
1801				/*
1802				 * Better than low-res,
1803				 * but *not* synchronized
1804				 * with the OS clock.
1805				 */
1806				p->tstamp_type_list[num_ts_types] =
1807				    PCAP_TSTAMP_HOST_HIPREC_UNSYNCED;
1808				num_ts_types++;
1809				break;
1810
1811			case TIMESTAMPMODE_QUERYSYSTEMTIME:
1812				/*
1813				 * Low-res, but synchronized
1814				 * with the OS clock.
1815				 */
1816				p->tstamp_type_list[num_ts_types] =
1817				    PCAP_TSTAMP_HOST_LOWPREC;
1818				num_ts_types++;
1819				break;
1820
1821			case TIMESTAMPMODE_QUERYSYSTEMTIME_PRECISE:
1822				/*
1823				 * High-res, and synchronized
1824				 * with the OS clock.
1825				 */
1826				p->tstamp_type_list[num_ts_types] =
1827				    PCAP_TSTAMP_HOST_HIPREC;
1828				num_ts_types++;
1829				break;
1830
1831			default:
1832				/*
1833				 * Unknown, so we can't
1834				 * report it.
1835				 */
1836				break;
1837			}
1838		}
1839		p->tstamp_type_count = num_ts_types;
1840	} while (0);
1841
1842	/* Clean up temporary allocations */
1843	if (device_copy != NULL) {
1844		free(device_copy);
1845	}
1846	if (modes != NULL) {
1847		free(modes);
1848	}
1849	if (adapter != NULL) {
1850		PacketCloseAdapter(adapter);
1851	}
1852
1853	return status;
1854}
1855#else /* HAVE_PACKET_GET_TIMESTAMP_MODES */
1856static int
1857get_ts_types(const char *device _U_, pcap_t *p _U_, char *ebuf _U_)
1858{
1859	/*
1860	 * Nothing to fetch, so it always "succeeds".
1861	 */
1862	return 0;
1863}
1864#endif /* HAVE_PACKET_GET_TIMESTAMP_MODES */
1865
1866pcap_t *
1867pcap_create_interface(const char *device _U_, char *ebuf)
1868{
1869	pcap_t *p;
1870
1871	p = PCAP_CREATE_COMMON(ebuf, struct pcap_win);
1872	if (p == NULL)
1873		return (NULL);
1874
1875	p->activate_op = pcap_activate_npf;
1876	p->can_set_rfmon_op = pcap_can_set_rfmon_npf;
1877
1878	if (get_ts_types(device, p, ebuf) == -1) {
1879		pcap_close(p);
1880		return (NULL);
1881	}
1882	return (p);
1883}
1884
1885static int
1886pcap_setfilter_npf(pcap_t *p, struct bpf_program *fp)
1887{
1888	struct pcap_win *pw = p->priv;
1889
1890	if(PacketSetBpf(pw->adapter,fp)==FALSE){
1891		/*
1892		 * Kernel filter not installed.
1893		 *
1894		 * XXX - we don't know whether this failed because:
1895		 *
1896		 *  the kernel rejected the filter program as invalid,
1897		 *  in which case we should fall back on userland
1898		 *  filtering;
1899		 *
1900		 *  the kernel rejected the filter program as too big,
1901		 *  in which case we should again fall back on
1902		 *  userland filtering;
1903		 *
1904		 *  there was some other problem, in which case we
1905		 *  should probably report an error.
1906		 *
1907		 * For NPF devices, the Win32 status will be
1908		 * STATUS_INVALID_DEVICE_REQUEST for invalid
1909		 * filters, but I don't know what it'd be for
1910		 * other problems, and for some other devices
1911		 * it might not be set at all.
1912		 *
1913		 * So we just fall back on userland filtering in
1914		 * all cases.
1915		 */
1916
1917		/*
1918		 * install_bpf_program() validates the program.
1919		 *
1920		 * XXX - what if we already have a filter in the kernel?
1921		 */
1922		if (install_bpf_program(p, fp) < 0)
1923			return (-1);
1924		pw->filtering_in_kernel = 0;	/* filtering in userland */
1925		return (0);
1926	}
1927
1928	/*
1929	 * It worked.
1930	 */
1931	pw->filtering_in_kernel = 1;	/* filtering in the kernel */
1932
1933	/*
1934	 * Discard any previously-received packets, as they might have
1935	 * passed whatever filter was formerly in effect, but might
1936	 * not pass this filter (BIOCSETF discards packets buffered
1937	 * in the kernel, so you can lose packets in any case).
1938	 */
1939	p->cc = 0;
1940	return (0);
1941}
1942
1943/*
1944 * We filter at user level, since the kernel driver doesn't process the packets
1945 */
1946static int
1947pcap_setfilter_win32_dag(pcap_t *p, struct bpf_program *fp) {
1948
1949	if(!fp)
1950	{
1951		pcap_strlcpy(p->errbuf, "setfilter: No filter specified", sizeof(p->errbuf));
1952		return (-1);
1953	}
1954
1955	/* Install a user level filter */
1956	if (install_bpf_program(p, fp) < 0)
1957		return (-1);
1958
1959	return (0);
1960}
1961
1962static int
1963pcap_getnonblock_npf(pcap_t *p)
1964{
1965	struct pcap_win *pw = p->priv;
1966
1967	/*
1968	 * XXX - if there were a PacketGetReadTimeout() call, we
1969	 * would use it, and return 1 if the timeout is -1
1970	 * and 0 otherwise.
1971	 */
1972	return (pw->nonblock);
1973}
1974
1975static int
1976pcap_setnonblock_npf(pcap_t *p, int nonblock)
1977{
1978	struct pcap_win *pw = p->priv;
1979	int newtimeout;
1980
1981	if (nonblock) {
1982		/*
1983		 * Set the packet buffer timeout to -1 for non-blocking
1984		 * mode.
1985		 */
1986		newtimeout = -1;
1987	} else {
1988		/*
1989		 * Restore the timeout set when the device was opened.
1990		 * (Note that this may be -1, in which case we're not
1991		 * really leaving non-blocking mode.  However, although
1992		 * the timeout argument to pcap_set_timeout() and
1993		 * pcap_open_live() is an int, you're not supposed to
1994		 * supply a negative value, so that "shouldn't happen".)
1995		 */
1996		newtimeout = p->opt.timeout;
1997	}
1998	if (!PacketSetReadTimeout(pw->adapter, newtimeout)) {
1999		pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_win32_err(p->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
2000		    GetLastError(), "PacketSetReadTimeout");
2001		return (-1);
2002	}
2003	pw->nonblock = (newtimeout == -1);
2004	return (0);
2005}
2006
2007static int
2008pcap_add_if_npf(pcap_if_list_t *devlistp, char *name, bpf_u_int32 flags,
2009    const char *description, char *errbuf)
2010{
2011	pcap_if_t *curdev;
2012	npf_if_addr if_addrs[MAX_NETWORK_ADDRESSES];
2013	LONG if_addr_size;
2014	int res = 0;
2015
2016	if_addr_size = MAX_NETWORK_ADDRESSES;
2017
2018	/*
2019	 * Add an entry for this interface, with no addresses.
2020	 */
2021	curdev = add_dev(devlistp, name, flags, description, errbuf);
2022	if (curdev == NULL) {
2023		/*
2024		 * Failure.
2025		 */
2026		return (-1);
2027	}
2028
2029	/*
2030	 * Get the list of addresses for the interface.
2031	 */
2032	if (!PacketGetNetInfoEx((void *)name, if_addrs, &if_addr_size)) {
2033		/*
2034		 * Failure.
2035		 *
2036		 * We don't return an error, because this can happen with
2037		 * NdisWan interfaces, and we want to supply them even
2038		 * if we can't supply their addresses.
2039		 *
2040		 * We return an entry with an empty address list.
2041		 */
2042		return (0);
2043	}
2044
2045	/*
2046	 * Now add the addresses.
2047	 */
2048	while (if_addr_size-- > 0) {
2049		/*
2050		 * "curdev" is an entry for this interface; add an entry for
2051		 * this address to its list of addresses.
2052		 */
2053		res = add_addr_to_dev(curdev,
2054		    (struct sockaddr *)&if_addrs[if_addr_size].IPAddress,
2055		    sizeof (struct sockaddr_storage),
2056		    (struct sockaddr *)&if_addrs[if_addr_size].SubnetMask,
2057		    sizeof (struct sockaddr_storage),
2058		    (struct sockaddr *)&if_addrs[if_addr_size].Broadcast,
2059		    sizeof (struct sockaddr_storage),
2060		    NULL,
2061		    0,
2062		    errbuf);
2063		if (res == -1) {
2064			/*
2065			 * Failure.
2066			 */
2067			break;
2068		}
2069	}
2070
2071	return (res);
2072}
2073
2074static int
2075get_if_flags(const char *name, bpf_u_int32 *flags, char *errbuf)
2076{
2077	char *name_copy;
2078	ADAPTER *adapter;
2079	int status;
2080	size_t len;
2081	NDIS_HARDWARE_STATUS hardware_status;
2082#ifdef OID_GEN_PHYSICAL_MEDIUM
2083	NDIS_PHYSICAL_MEDIUM phys_medium;
2084	bpf_u_int32 gen_physical_medium_oids[] = {
2085  #ifdef OID_GEN_PHYSICAL_MEDIUM_EX
2086		OID_GEN_PHYSICAL_MEDIUM_EX,
2087  #endif
2088		OID_GEN_PHYSICAL_MEDIUM
2089	};
2090#define N_GEN_PHYSICAL_MEDIUM_OIDS	(sizeof gen_physical_medium_oids / sizeof gen_physical_medium_oids[0])
2091	size_t i;
2092#endif /* OID_GEN_PHYSICAL_MEDIUM */
2093#ifdef OID_GEN_LINK_STATE
2094	NDIS_LINK_STATE link_state;
2095#endif
2096	int connect_status;
2097
2098	if (*flags & PCAP_IF_LOOPBACK) {
2099		/*
2100		 * Loopback interface, so the connection status doesn't
2101		 * apply. and it's not wireless (or wired, for that
2102		 * matter...).  We presume it's up and running.
2103		 */
2104		*flags |= PCAP_IF_UP | PCAP_IF_RUNNING | PCAP_IF_CONNECTION_STATUS_NOT_APPLICABLE;
2105		return (0);
2106	}
2107
2108	/*
2109	 * We need to open the adapter to get this information.
2110	 *
2111	 * XXX - PacketOpenAdapter() takes a non-const pointer
2112	 * as an argument, so we make a copy of the argument and
2113	 * pass that to it.
2114	 */
2115	name_copy = strdup(name);
2116	adapter = PacketOpenAdapter(name_copy);
2117	free(name_copy);
2118	if (adapter == NULL) {
2119		/*
2120		 * Give up; if they try to open this device, it'll fail.
2121		 */
2122		return (0);
2123	}
2124
2125#ifdef HAVE_AIRPCAP_API
2126	/*
2127	 * Airpcap.sys do not support the below 'OID_GEN_x' values.
2128	 * Just set these flags (and none of the '*flags' entered with).
2129	 */
2130	if (PacketGetAirPcapHandle(adapter)) {
2131		/*
2132		 * Must be "up" and "running" if the above if succeeded.
2133		 */
2134		*flags = PCAP_IF_UP | PCAP_IF_RUNNING;
2135
2136		/*
2137		 * An airpcap device is a wireless device (duh!)
2138		 */
2139		*flags |= PCAP_IF_WIRELESS;
2140
2141		/*
2142		 * A "network association state" makes no sense for airpcap.
2143		 */
2144		*flags |= PCAP_IF_CONNECTION_STATUS_NOT_APPLICABLE;
2145		PacketCloseAdapter(adapter);
2146		return (0);
2147	}
2148#endif
2149
2150	/*
2151	 * Get the hardware status, and derive "up" and "running" from
2152	 * that.
2153	 */
2154	len = sizeof (hardware_status);
2155	status = oid_get_request(adapter, OID_GEN_HARDWARE_STATUS,
2156	    &hardware_status, &len, errbuf);
2157	if (status == 0) {
2158		switch (hardware_status) {
2159
2160		case NdisHardwareStatusReady:
2161			/*
2162			 * "Available and capable of sending and receiving
2163			 * data over the wire", so up and running.
2164			 */
2165			*flags |= PCAP_IF_UP | PCAP_IF_RUNNING;
2166			break;
2167
2168		case NdisHardwareStatusInitializing:
2169		case NdisHardwareStatusReset:
2170			/*
2171			 * "Initializing" or "Resetting", so up, but
2172			 * not running.
2173			 */
2174			*flags |= PCAP_IF_UP;
2175			break;
2176
2177		case NdisHardwareStatusClosing:
2178		case NdisHardwareStatusNotReady:
2179			/*
2180			 * "Closing" or "Not ready", so neither up nor
2181			 * running.
2182			 */
2183			break;
2184
2185		default:
2186			/*
2187			 * Unknown.
2188			 */
2189			break;
2190		}
2191	} else {
2192		/*
2193		 * Can't get the hardware status, so assume both up and
2194		 * running.
2195		 */
2196		*flags |= PCAP_IF_UP | PCAP_IF_RUNNING;
2197	}
2198
2199	/*
2200	 * Get the network type.
2201	 */
2202#ifdef OID_GEN_PHYSICAL_MEDIUM
2203	/*
2204	 * Try the OIDs we have for this, in order.
2205	 */
2206	for (i = 0; i < N_GEN_PHYSICAL_MEDIUM_OIDS; i++) {
2207		len = sizeof (phys_medium);
2208		status = oid_get_request(adapter, gen_physical_medium_oids[i],
2209		    &phys_medium, &len, errbuf);
2210		if (status == 0) {
2211			/*
2212			 * Success.
2213			 */
2214			break;
2215		}
2216		/*
2217		 * Failed.  We can't determine whether it failed
2218		 * because that particular OID isn't supported
2219		 * or because some other problem occurred, so we
2220		 * just drive on and try the next OID.
2221		 */
2222	}
2223	if (status == 0) {
2224		/*
2225		 * We got the physical medium.
2226		 *
2227		 * XXX - we might want to check for NdisPhysicalMediumWiMax
2228		 * and NdisPhysicalMediumNative802_15_4 being
2229		 * part of the enum, and check for those in the "wireless"
2230		 * case.
2231		 */
2232DIAG_OFF_ENUM_SWITCH
2233		switch (phys_medium) {
2234
2235		case NdisPhysicalMediumWirelessLan:
2236		case NdisPhysicalMediumWirelessWan:
2237		case NdisPhysicalMediumNative802_11:
2238		case NdisPhysicalMediumBluetooth:
2239		case NdisPhysicalMediumUWB:
2240		case NdisPhysicalMediumIrda:
2241			/*
2242			 * Wireless.
2243			 */
2244			*flags |= PCAP_IF_WIRELESS;
2245			break;
2246
2247		default:
2248			/*
2249			 * Not wireless or unknown
2250			 */
2251			break;
2252		}
2253DIAG_ON_ENUM_SWITCH
2254	}
2255#endif
2256
2257	/*
2258	 * Get the connection status.
2259	 */
2260#ifdef OID_GEN_LINK_STATE
2261	len = sizeof(link_state);
2262	status = oid_get_request(adapter, OID_GEN_LINK_STATE, &link_state,
2263	    &len, errbuf);
2264	if (status == 0) {
2265		/*
2266		 * NOTE: this also gives us the receive and transmit
2267		 * link state.
2268		 */
2269		switch (link_state.MediaConnectState) {
2270
2271		case MediaConnectStateConnected:
2272			/*
2273			 * It's connected.
2274			 */
2275			*flags |= PCAP_IF_CONNECTION_STATUS_CONNECTED;
2276			break;
2277
2278		case MediaConnectStateDisconnected:
2279			/*
2280			 * It's disconnected.
2281			 */
2282			*flags |= PCAP_IF_CONNECTION_STATUS_DISCONNECTED;
2283			break;
2284
2285		case MediaConnectStateUnknown:
2286		default:
2287			/*
2288			 * It's unknown whether it's connected or not.
2289			 */
2290			break;
2291		}
2292	}
2293#else
2294	/*
2295	 * OID_GEN_LINK_STATE isn't supported because it's not in our SDK.
2296	 */
2297	status = -1;
2298#endif
2299	if (status == -1) {
2300		/*
2301		 * OK, OID_GEN_LINK_STATE didn't work, try
2302		 * OID_GEN_MEDIA_CONNECT_STATUS.
2303		 */
2304		status = oid_get_request(adapter, OID_GEN_MEDIA_CONNECT_STATUS,
2305		    &connect_status, &len, errbuf);
2306		if (status == 0) {
2307			switch (connect_status) {
2308
2309			case NdisMediaStateConnected:
2310				/*
2311				 * It's connected.
2312				 */
2313				*flags |= PCAP_IF_CONNECTION_STATUS_CONNECTED;
2314				break;
2315
2316			case NdisMediaStateDisconnected:
2317				/*
2318				 * It's disconnected.
2319				 */
2320				*flags |= PCAP_IF_CONNECTION_STATUS_DISCONNECTED;
2321				break;
2322			}
2323		}
2324	}
2325	PacketCloseAdapter(adapter);
2326	return (0);
2327}
2328
2329int
2330pcap_platform_finddevs(pcap_if_list_t *devlistp, char *errbuf)
2331{
2332	int ret = 0;
2333	const char *desc;
2334	char *AdaptersName;
2335	ULONG NameLength;
2336	char *name;
2337
2338	/*
2339	 * Find out how big a buffer we need.
2340	 *
2341	 * This call should always return FALSE; if the error is
2342	 * ERROR_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER, NameLength will be set to
2343	 * the size of the buffer we need, otherwise there's a
2344	 * problem, and NameLength should be set to 0.
2345	 *
2346	 * It shouldn't require NameLength to be set, but,
2347	 * at least as of WinPcap 4.1.3, it checks whether
2348	 * NameLength is big enough before it checks for a
2349	 * NULL buffer argument, so, while it'll still do
2350	 * the right thing if NameLength is uninitialized and
2351	 * whatever junk happens to be there is big enough
2352	 * (because the pointer argument will be null), it's
2353	 * still reading an uninitialized variable.
2354	 */
2355	NameLength = 0;
2356	if (!PacketGetAdapterNames(NULL, &NameLength))
2357	{
2358		DWORD last_error = GetLastError();
2359
2360		if (last_error != ERROR_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER)
2361		{
2362			pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_win32_err(errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
2363			    last_error, "PacketGetAdapterNames");
2364			return (-1);
2365		}
2366	}
2367
2368	if (NameLength <= 0)
2369		return 0;
2370	AdaptersName = (char*) malloc(NameLength);
2371	if (AdaptersName == NULL)
2372	{
2373		snprintf(errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE, "Cannot allocate enough memory to list the adapters.");
2374		return (-1);
2375	}
2376
2377	if (!PacketGetAdapterNames(AdaptersName, &NameLength)) {
2378		pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_win32_err(errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
2379		    GetLastError(), "PacketGetAdapterNames");
2380		free(AdaptersName);
2381		return (-1);
2382	}
2383
2384	/*
2385	 * "PacketGetAdapterNames()" returned a list of
2386	 * null-terminated ASCII interface name strings,
2387	 * terminated by a null string, followed by a list
2388	 * of null-terminated ASCII interface description
2389	 * strings, terminated by a null string.
2390	 * This means there are two ASCII nulls at the end
2391	 * of the first list.
2392	 *
2393	 * Find the end of the first list; that's the
2394	 * beginning of the second list.
2395	 */
2396	desc = &AdaptersName[0];
2397	while (*desc != '\0' || *(desc + 1) != '\0')
2398		desc++;
2399
2400	/*
2401	 * Found it - "desc" points to the first of the two
2402	 * nulls at the end of the list of names, so the
2403	 * first byte of the list of descriptions is two bytes
2404	 * after it.
2405	 */
2406	desc += 2;
2407
2408	/*
2409	 * Loop over the elements in the first list.
2410	 */
2411	name = &AdaptersName[0];
2412	while (*name != '\0') {
2413		bpf_u_int32 flags = 0;
2414
2415#ifdef HAVE_AIRPCAP_API
2416		/*
2417		 * Is this an AirPcap device?
2418		 * If so, ignore it; it'll get added later, by the
2419		 * AirPcap code.
2420		 */
2421		if (device_is_airpcap(name, errbuf) == 1) {
2422			name += strlen(name) + 1;
2423			desc += strlen(desc) + 1;
2424			continue;
2425		}
2426#endif
2427
2428#ifdef HAVE_PACKET_IS_LOOPBACK_ADAPTER
2429		/*
2430		 * Is this a loopback interface?
2431		 */
2432		if (PacketIsLoopbackAdapter(name)) {
2433			/* Yes */
2434			flags |= PCAP_IF_LOOPBACK;
2435		}
2436#endif
2437		/*
2438		 * Get additional flags.
2439		 */
2440		if (get_if_flags(name, &flags, errbuf) == -1) {
2441			/*
2442			 * Failure.
2443			 */
2444			ret = -1;
2445			break;
2446		}
2447
2448		/*
2449		 * Add an entry for this interface.
2450		 */
2451		if (pcap_add_if_npf(devlistp, name, flags, desc,
2452		    errbuf) == -1) {
2453			/*
2454			 * Failure.
2455			 */
2456			ret = -1;
2457			break;
2458		}
2459		name += strlen(name) + 1;
2460		desc += strlen(desc) + 1;
2461	}
2462
2463	free(AdaptersName);
2464	return (ret);
2465}
2466
2467/*
2468 * Return the name of a network interface attached to the system, or NULL
2469 * if none can be found.  The interface must be configured up; the
2470 * lowest unit number is preferred; loopback is ignored.
2471 *
2472 * In the best of all possible worlds, this would be the same as on
2473 * UN*X, but there may be software that expects this to return a
2474 * full list of devices after the first device.
2475 */
2476#define ADAPTERSNAME_LEN	8192
2477char *
2478pcap_lookupdev(char *errbuf)
2479{
2480	DWORD dwVersion;
2481	DWORD dwWindowsMajorVersion;
2482
2483	/*
2484	 * We disable this in "new API" mode, because 1) in WinPcap/Npcap,
2485	 * it may return UTF-16 strings, for backwards-compatibility
2486	 * reasons, and we're also disabling the hack to make that work,
2487	 * for not-going-past-the-end-of-a-string reasons, and 2) we
2488	 * want its behavior to be consistent.
2489	 *
2490	 * In addition, it's not thread-safe, so we've marked it as
2491	 * deprecated.
2492	 */
2493	if (pcap_new_api) {
2494		snprintf(errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
2495		    "pcap_lookupdev() is deprecated and is not supported in programs calling pcap_init()");
2496		return (NULL);
2497	}
2498
2499/* disable MSVC's GetVersion() deprecated warning here */
2500DIAG_OFF_DEPRECATION
2501	dwVersion = GetVersion();	/* get the OS version */
2502DIAG_ON_DEPRECATION
2503	dwWindowsMajorVersion = (DWORD)(LOBYTE(LOWORD(dwVersion)));
2504
2505	if (dwVersion >= 0x80000000 && dwWindowsMajorVersion >= 4) {
2506		/*
2507		 * Windows 95, 98, ME.
2508		 */
2509		ULONG NameLength = ADAPTERSNAME_LEN;
2510		static char AdaptersName[ADAPTERSNAME_LEN];
2511
2512		if (PacketGetAdapterNames(AdaptersName,&NameLength) )
2513			return (AdaptersName);
2514		else
2515			return NULL;
2516	} else {
2517		/*
2518		 * Windows NT (NT 4.0 and later).
2519		 * Convert the names to Unicode for backward compatibility.
2520		 */
2521		ULONG NameLength = ADAPTERSNAME_LEN;
2522		static WCHAR AdaptersName[ADAPTERSNAME_LEN];
2523		size_t BufferSpaceLeft;
2524		char *tAstr;
2525		WCHAR *Unameptr;
2526		char *Adescptr;
2527		size_t namelen, i;
2528		WCHAR *TAdaptersName = (WCHAR*)malloc(ADAPTERSNAME_LEN * sizeof(WCHAR));
2529		int NAdapts = 0;
2530
2531		if(TAdaptersName == NULL)
2532		{
2533			(void)snprintf(errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE, "memory allocation failure");
2534			return NULL;
2535		}
2536
2537		if ( !PacketGetAdapterNames((PTSTR)TAdaptersName,&NameLength) )
2538		{
2539			pcap_fmt_errmsg_for_win32_err(errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
2540			    GetLastError(), "PacketGetAdapterNames");
2541			free(TAdaptersName);
2542			return NULL;
2543		}
2544
2545
2546		BufferSpaceLeft = ADAPTERSNAME_LEN * sizeof(WCHAR);
2547		tAstr = (char*)TAdaptersName;
2548		Unameptr = AdaptersName;
2549
2550		/*
2551		 * Convert the device names to Unicode into AdapterName.
2552		 */
2553		do {
2554			/*
2555			 * Length of the name, including the terminating
2556			 * NUL.
2557			 */
2558			namelen = strlen(tAstr) + 1;
2559
2560			/*
2561			 * Do we have room for the name in the Unicode
2562			 * buffer?
2563			 */
2564			if (BufferSpaceLeft < namelen * sizeof(WCHAR)) {
2565				/*
2566				 * No.
2567				 */
2568				goto quit;
2569			}
2570			BufferSpaceLeft -= namelen * sizeof(WCHAR);
2571
2572			/*
2573			 * Copy the name, converting ASCII to Unicode.
2574			 * namelen includes the NUL, so we copy it as
2575			 * well.
2576			 */
2577			for (i = 0; i < namelen; i++)
2578				*Unameptr++ = *tAstr++;
2579
2580			/*
2581			 * Count this adapter.
2582			 */
2583			NAdapts++;
2584		} while (namelen != 1);
2585
2586		/*
2587		 * Copy the descriptions, but don't convert them from
2588		 * ASCII to Unicode.
2589		 */
2590		Adescptr = (char *)Unameptr;
2591		while(NAdapts--)
2592		{
2593			size_t desclen;
2594
2595			desclen = strlen(tAstr) + 1;
2596
2597			/*
2598			 * Do we have room for the name in the Unicode
2599			 * buffer?
2600			 */
2601			if (BufferSpaceLeft < desclen) {
2602				/*
2603				 * No.
2604				 */
2605				goto quit;
2606			}
2607
2608			/*
2609			 * Just copy the ASCII string.
2610			 * namelen includes the NUL, so we copy it as
2611			 * well.
2612			 */
2613			memcpy(Adescptr, tAstr, desclen);
2614			Adescptr += desclen;
2615			tAstr += desclen;
2616			BufferSpaceLeft -= desclen;
2617		}
2618
2619	quit:
2620		free(TAdaptersName);
2621		return (char *)(AdaptersName);
2622	}
2623}
2624
2625/*
2626 * We can't use the same code that we use on UN*X, as that's doing
2627 * UN*X-specific calls.
2628 *
2629 * We don't just fetch the entire list of devices, search for the
2630 * particular device, and use its first IPv4 address, as that's too
2631 * much work to get just one device's netmask.
2632 */
2633int
2634pcap_lookupnet(const char *device, bpf_u_int32 *netp, bpf_u_int32 *maskp,
2635    char *errbuf)
2636{
2637	/*
2638	 * We need only the first IPv4 address, so we must scan the array returned by PacketGetNetInfo()
2639	 * in order to skip non IPv4 (i.e. IPv6 addresses)
2640	 */
2641	npf_if_addr if_addrs[MAX_NETWORK_ADDRESSES];
2642	LONG if_addr_size = MAX_NETWORK_ADDRESSES;
2643	struct sockaddr_in *t_addr;
2644	LONG i;
2645
2646	if (!PacketGetNetInfoEx((void *)device, if_addrs, &if_addr_size)) {
2647		*netp = *maskp = 0;
2648		return (0);
2649	}
2650
2651	for(i = 0; i < if_addr_size; i++)
2652	{
2653		if(if_addrs[i].IPAddress.ss_family == AF_INET)
2654		{
2655			t_addr = (struct sockaddr_in *) &(if_addrs[i].IPAddress);
2656			*netp = t_addr->sin_addr.S_un.S_addr;
2657			t_addr = (struct sockaddr_in *) &(if_addrs[i].SubnetMask);
2658			*maskp = t_addr->sin_addr.S_un.S_addr;
2659
2660			*netp &= *maskp;
2661			return (0);
2662		}
2663
2664	}
2665
2666	*netp = *maskp = 0;
2667	return (0);
2668}
2669
2670static const char *pcap_lib_version_string;
2671
2672#ifdef HAVE_VERSION_H
2673/*
2674 * libpcap being built for Windows, as part of a WinPcap/Npcap source
2675 * tree.  Include version.h from that source tree to get the WinPcap/Npcap
2676 * version.
2677 *
2678 * XXX - it'd be nice if we could somehow generate the WinPcap/Npcap version
2679 * number when building as part of WinPcap/Npcap.  (It'd be nice to do so
2680 * for the packet.dll version number as well.)
2681 */
2682#include "../../version.h"
2683
2684static const char pcap_version_string[] =
2685	WINPCAP_PRODUCT_NAME " version " WINPCAP_VER_STRING ", based on " PCAP_VERSION_STRING;
2686
2687const char *
2688pcap_lib_version(void)
2689{
2690	if (pcap_lib_version_string == NULL) {
2691		/*
2692		 * Generate the version string.
2693		 */
2694		const char *packet_version_string = PacketGetVersion();
2695
2696		if (strcmp(WINPCAP_VER_STRING, packet_version_string) == 0) {
2697			/*
2698			 * WinPcap/Npcap version string and packet.dll version
2699			 * string are the same; just report the WinPcap/Npcap
2700			 * version.
2701			 */
2702			pcap_lib_version_string = pcap_version_string;
2703		} else {
2704			/*
2705			 * WinPcap/Npcap version string and packet.dll version
2706			 * string are different; that shouldn't be the
2707			 * case (the two libraries should come from the
2708			 * same version of WinPcap/Npcap), so we report both
2709			 * versions.
2710			 */
2711			char *full_pcap_version_string;
2712
2713			if (pcap_asprintf(&full_pcap_version_string,
2714			    WINPCAP_PRODUCT_NAME " version " WINPCAP_VER_STRING " (packet.dll version %s), based on " PCAP_VERSION_STRING,
2715			    packet_version_string) != -1) {
2716				/* Success */
2717				pcap_lib_version_string = full_pcap_version_string;
2718			}
2719		}
2720	}
2721	return (pcap_lib_version_string);
2722}
2723
2724#else /* HAVE_VERSION_H */
2725
2726/*
2727 * libpcap being built for Windows, not as part of a WinPcap/Npcap source
2728 * tree.
2729 */
2730const char *
2731pcap_lib_version(void)
2732{
2733	if (pcap_lib_version_string == NULL) {
2734		/*
2735		 * Generate the version string.  Report the packet.dll
2736		 * version.
2737		 */
2738		char *full_pcap_version_string;
2739
2740		if (pcap_asprintf(&full_pcap_version_string,
2741		    PCAP_VERSION_STRING " (packet.dll version %s)",
2742		    PacketGetVersion()) != -1) {
2743			/* Success */
2744			pcap_lib_version_string = full_pcap_version_string;
2745		}
2746	}
2747	return (pcap_lib_version_string);
2748}
2749#endif /* HAVE_VERSION_H */
2750