Home | History | Annotate | Line # | Download | only in dist
      1 /*	$NetBSD: sf-pcap.c,v 1.12 2026/03/18 23:43:21 christos Exp $	*/
      2 
      3 /*
      4  * Copyright (c) 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997
      5  *	The Regents of the University of California.  All rights reserved.
      6  *
      7  * Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
      8  * modification, are permitted provided that: (1) source code distributions
      9  * retain the above copyright notice and this paragraph in its entirety, (2)
     10  * distributions including binary code include the above copyright notice and
     11  * this paragraph in its entirety in the documentation or other materials
     12  * provided with the distribution, and (3) all advertising materials mentioning
     13  * features or use of this software display the following acknowledgement:
     14  * ``This product includes software developed by the University of California,
     15  * Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory and its contributors.'' Neither the name of
     16  * the University nor the names of its contributors may be used to endorse
     17  * or promote products derived from this software without specific prior
     18  * written permission.
     19  * THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED ``AS IS'' AND WITHOUT ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED
     20  * WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, WITHOUT LIMITATION, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF
     21  * MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
     22  *
     23  * sf-pcap.c - libpcap-file-format-specific code from savefile.c
     24  *	Extraction/creation by Jeffrey Mogul, DECWRL
     25  *	Modified by Steve McCanne, LBL.
     26  *
     27  * Used to save the received packet headers, after filtering, to
     28  * a file, and then read them later.
     29  * The first record in the file contains saved values for the machine
     30  * dependent values so we can print the dump file on any architecture.
     31  */
     32 
     33 #include <sys/cdefs.h>
     34 __RCSID("$NetBSD: sf-pcap.c,v 1.12 2026/03/18 23:43:21 christos Exp $");
     35 
     36 #include <config.h>
     37 
     38 #include <pcap-types.h>
     39 #ifdef _WIN32
     40 #include <io.h>
     41 #include <fcntl.h>
     42 #endif /* _WIN32 */
     43 
     44 #include <errno.h>
     45 #include <memory.h>
     46 #include <stdio.h>
     47 #include <stdlib.h>
     48 #include <string.h>
     49 #include <limits.h> /* for INT_MAX */
     50 
     51 #include "pcap-int.h"
     52 #include "pcap-util.h"
     53 
     54 #include "pcap-common.h"
     55 
     56 #ifdef HAVE_OS_PROTO_H
     57 #include "os-proto.h"
     58 #endif
     59 
     60 #include "sf-pcap.h"
     61 
     62 /*
     63  * Setting O_BINARY on DOS/Windows is a bit tricky
     64  */
     65 #if defined(_WIN32)
     66   #define SET_BINMODE(f)  _setmode(_fileno(f), _O_BINARY)
     67 #elif defined(MSDOS)
     68   #if defined(__HIGHC__)
     69   #define SET_BINMODE(f)  setmode(f, O_BINARY)
     70   #else
     71   #define SET_BINMODE(f)  setmode(fileno(f), O_BINARY)
     72   #endif
     73 #endif
     74 
     75 /*
     76  * Standard libpcap format.
     77  *
     78  * The same value is used in the rpcap protocol as an indication of
     79  * the server byte order, to let the client know whether it needs to
     80  * byte-swap some host-byte-order metadata.
     81  */
     82 #define TCPDUMP_MAGIC		0xa1b2c3d4
     83 
     84 /*
     85  * Alexey Kuznetzov's modified libpcap format.
     86  */
     87 #define KUZNETZOV_TCPDUMP_MAGIC	0xa1b2cd34
     88 
     89 /*
     90  * Reserved for Francisco Mesquita <francisco.mesquita (at) radiomovel.pt>
     91  * for another modified format.
     92  */
     93 #define FMESQUITA_TCPDUMP_MAGIC	0xa1b234cd
     94 
     95 /*
     96  * Navtel Communications' format, with nanosecond timestamps,
     97  * as per a request from Dumas Hwang <dumas.hwang (at) navtelcom.com>.
     98  */
     99 #define NAVTEL_TCPDUMP_MAGIC	0xa12b3c4d
    100 
    101 /*
    102  * Normal libpcap format, except for seconds/nanoseconds timestamps,
    103  * as per a request by Ulf Lamping <ulf.lamping (at) web.de>
    104  */
    105 #define NSEC_TCPDUMP_MAGIC	0xa1b23c4d
    106 
    107 /*
    108  * This is a timeval as stored in a savefile.
    109  * It has to use the same types everywhere, independent of the actual
    110  * `struct timeval'; `struct timeval' has 32-bit tv_sec values on some
    111  * platforms and 64-bit tv_sec values on other platforms, and writing
    112  * out native `struct timeval' values would mean files could only be
    113  * read on systems with the same tv_sec size as the system on which
    114  * the file was written.
    115  *
    116  * The fields are unsigned, as that's what the pcap draft specification
    117  * says they are.  (That gives pcap a 68-year Y2.038K reprieve, although
    118  * in 2106 it runs out for good.  pcapng doesn't have that problem,
    119  * unless you pick a *really* high time stamp precision.)
    120  */
    121 
    122 struct pcap_timeval {
    123 	bpf_u_int32 tv_sec;	/* seconds */
    124 	bpf_u_int32 tv_usec;	/* microseconds */
    125 };
    126 
    127 /*
    128  * This is a `pcap_pkthdr' as actually stored in a savefile.
    129  *
    130  * Do not change the format of this structure, in any way (this includes
    131  * changes that only affect the length of fields in this structure),
    132  * and do not make the time stamp anything other than seconds and
    133  * microseconds (e.g., seconds and nanoseconds).  Instead:
    134  *
    135  *	introduce a new structure for the new format;
    136  *
    137  *	send mail to "tcpdump-workers (at) lists.tcpdump.org", requesting
    138  *	a new magic number for your new capture file format, and, when
    139  *	you get the new magic number, put it in "savefile.c";
    140  *
    141  *	use that magic number for save files with the changed record
    142  *	header;
    143  *
    144  *	make the code in "savefile.c" capable of reading files with
    145  *	the old record header as well as files with the new record header
    146  *	(using the magic number to determine the header format).
    147  *
    148  * Then supply the changes by forking the branch at
    149  *
    150  *	https://github.com/the-tcpdump-group/libpcap/tree/master
    151  *
    152  * and issuing a pull request, so that future versions of libpcap and
    153  * programs that use it (such as tcpdump) will be able to read your new
    154  * capture file format.
    155  */
    156 
    157 struct pcap_sf_pkthdr {
    158 	struct pcap_timeval ts;	/* time stamp */
    159 	bpf_u_int32 caplen;	/* length of portion present */
    160 	bpf_u_int32 len;	/* length of this packet (off wire) */
    161 };
    162 
    163 /*
    164  * How a `pcap_pkthdr' is actually stored in savefiles written
    165  * by some patched versions of libpcap (e.g. the ones in Red
    166  * Hat Linux 6.1 and 6.2).
    167  *
    168  * Do not change the format of this structure, in any way (this includes
    169  * changes that only affect the length of fields in this structure).
    170  * Instead, introduce a new structure, as per the above.
    171  */
    172 
    173 struct pcap_sf_patched_pkthdr {
    174 	struct pcap_timeval ts;	/* time stamp */
    175 	bpf_u_int32 caplen;	/* length of portion present */
    176 	bpf_u_int32 len;	/* length of this packet (off wire) */
    177 	int index;
    178 	unsigned short protocol;
    179 	unsigned char pkt_type;
    180 };
    181 
    182 static int pcap_next_packet(pcap_t *p, struct pcap_pkthdr *hdr, u_char **datap);
    183 
    184 #ifdef _WIN32
    185 /*
    186  * This isn't exported on Windows, because it would only work if both
    187  * libpcap and the code using it were using the same C runtime; otherwise they
    188  * would be using different definitions of a FILE structure.
    189  *
    190  * Instead we define this as a macro in pcap/pcap.h that wraps the hopen
    191  * version that we do export, passing it a raw OS HANDLE, as defined by the
    192  * Win32 / Win64 ABI, obtained from the _fileno() and _get_osfhandle()
    193  * functions of the appropriate CRT.
    194  */
    195 static pcap_dumper_t *pcap_dump_fopen(pcap_t *p, FILE *f);
    196 #endif /* _WIN32 */
    197 
    198 /*
    199  * Private data for reading pcap savefiles.
    200  */
    201 typedef enum {
    202 	NOT_SWAPPED,
    203 	SWAPPED,
    204 	MAYBE_SWAPPED
    205 } swapped_type_t;
    206 
    207 typedef enum {
    208 	PASS_THROUGH,
    209 	SCALE_UP,
    210 	SCALE_DOWN
    211 } tstamp_scale_type_t;
    212 
    213 struct pcap_sf {
    214 	size_t hdrsize;
    215 	swapped_type_t lengths_swapped;
    216 	tstamp_scale_type_t scale_type;
    217 };
    218 
    219 /*
    220  * Check whether this is a pcap savefile and, if it is, extract the
    221  * relevant information from the header.
    222  */
    223 pcap_t *
    224 pcap_check_header(const uint8_t *magic, FILE *fp, u_int precision, char *errbuf,
    225 		  int *err)
    226 {
    227 	bpf_u_int32 magic_int;
    228 	struct pcap_file_header hdr;
    229 	size_t amt_read;
    230 	pcap_t *p;
    231 	int swapped = 0;
    232 	struct pcap_sf *ps;
    233 
    234 	/*
    235 	 * Assume no read errors.
    236 	 */
    237 	*err = 0;
    238 
    239 	/*
    240 	 * Check whether the first 4 bytes of the file are the magic
    241 	 * number for a pcap savefile, or for a byte-swapped pcap
    242 	 * savefile.
    243 	 */
    244 	memcpy(&magic_int, magic, sizeof(magic_int));
    245 	if (magic_int != TCPDUMP_MAGIC &&
    246 	    magic_int != KUZNETZOV_TCPDUMP_MAGIC &&
    247 	    magic_int != NSEC_TCPDUMP_MAGIC) {
    248 		magic_int = SWAPLONG(magic_int);
    249 		if (magic_int != TCPDUMP_MAGIC &&
    250 		    magic_int != KUZNETZOV_TCPDUMP_MAGIC &&
    251 		    magic_int != NSEC_TCPDUMP_MAGIC)
    252 			return (NULL);	/* nope */
    253 		swapped = 1;
    254 	}
    255 
    256 	/*
    257 	 * They are.  Put the magic number in the header, and read
    258 	 * the rest of the header.
    259 	 */
    260 	hdr.magic = magic_int;
    261 	amt_read = fread(((char *)&hdr) + sizeof hdr.magic, 1,
    262 	    sizeof(hdr) - sizeof(hdr.magic), fp);
    263 	if (amt_read != sizeof(hdr) - sizeof(hdr.magic)) {
    264 		if (ferror(fp)) {
    265 			pcapint_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
    266 			    errno, "error reading dump file");
    267 		} else {
    268 			snprintf(errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
    269 			    "truncated dump file; tried to read %zu file header bytes, only got %zu",
    270 			    sizeof(hdr), amt_read);
    271 		}
    272 		*err = 1;
    273 		return (NULL);
    274 	}
    275 
    276 	/*
    277 	 * If it's a byte-swapped capture file, byte-swap the header.
    278 	 */
    279 	if (swapped) {
    280 		hdr.version_major = SWAPSHORT(hdr.version_major);
    281 		hdr.version_minor = SWAPSHORT(hdr.version_minor);
    282 		hdr.thiszone = SWAPLONG(hdr.thiszone);
    283 		hdr.sigfigs = SWAPLONG(hdr.sigfigs);
    284 		hdr.snaplen = SWAPLONG(hdr.snaplen);
    285 		hdr.linktype = SWAPLONG(hdr.linktype);
    286 	}
    287 
    288 	if (hdr.version_major < PCAP_VERSION_MAJOR) {
    289 		snprintf(errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
    290 		    "archaic pcap savefile format");
    291 		*err = 1;
    292 		return (NULL);
    293 	}
    294 
    295 	/*
    296 	 * currently only versions 2.[0-4] are supported with
    297 	 * the exception of 543.0 for DG/UX tcpdump.
    298 	 */
    299 	if (! ((hdr.version_major == PCAP_VERSION_MAJOR &&
    300 		hdr.version_minor <= PCAP_VERSION_MINOR) ||
    301 	       (hdr.version_major == 543 &&
    302 		hdr.version_minor == 0))) {
    303 		snprintf(errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
    304 			 "unsupported pcap savefile version %u.%u",
    305 			 hdr.version_major, hdr.version_minor);
    306 		*err = 1;
    307 		return NULL;
    308 	}
    309 
    310 	/*
    311 	 * Check the main reserved field.
    312 	 */
    313 	if (LT_RESERVED1(hdr.linktype) != 0) {
    314 		snprintf(errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
    315 			 "savefile linktype reserved field not zero (0x%08x)",
    316 			 LT_RESERVED1(hdr.linktype));
    317 		*err = 1;
    318 		return NULL;
    319 	}
    320 
    321 	/*
    322 	 * OK, this is a good pcap file.
    323 	 * Allocate a pcap_t for it.
    324 	 */
    325 	p = PCAP_OPEN_OFFLINE_COMMON(errbuf, struct pcap_sf);
    326 	if (p == NULL) {
    327 		/* Allocation failed. */
    328 		*err = 1;
    329 		return (NULL);
    330 	}
    331 	p->swapped = swapped;
    332 	p->version_major = hdr.version_major;
    333 	p->version_minor = hdr.version_minor;
    334 	p->linktype = linktype_to_dlt(LT_LINKTYPE(hdr.linktype));
    335 	p->linktype_ext = LT_LINKTYPE_EXT(hdr.linktype);
    336 	p->snapshot = pcapint_adjust_snapshot(p->linktype, hdr.snaplen);
    337 
    338 	p->next_packet_op = pcap_next_packet;
    339 
    340 	ps = p->priv;
    341 
    342 	p->opt.tstamp_precision = precision;
    343 
    344 	/*
    345 	 * Will we need to scale the timestamps to match what the
    346 	 * user wants?
    347 	 */
    348 	switch (precision) {
    349 
    350 	case PCAP_TSTAMP_PRECISION_MICRO:
    351 		if (magic_int == NSEC_TCPDUMP_MAGIC) {
    352 			/*
    353 			 * The file has nanoseconds, the user
    354 			 * wants microseconds; scale the
    355 			 * precision down.
    356 			 */
    357 			ps->scale_type = SCALE_DOWN;
    358 		} else {
    359 			/*
    360 			 * The file has microseconds, the
    361 			 * user wants microseconds; nothing to do.
    362 			 */
    363 			ps->scale_type = PASS_THROUGH;
    364 		}
    365 		break;
    366 
    367 	case PCAP_TSTAMP_PRECISION_NANO:
    368 		if (magic_int == NSEC_TCPDUMP_MAGIC) {
    369 			/*
    370 			 * The file has nanoseconds, the
    371 			 * user wants nanoseconds; nothing to do.
    372 			 */
    373 			ps->scale_type = PASS_THROUGH;
    374 		} else {
    375 			/*
    376 			 * The file has microseconds, the user
    377 			 * wants nanoseconds; scale the
    378 			 * precision up.
    379 			 */
    380 			ps->scale_type = SCALE_UP;
    381 		}
    382 		break;
    383 
    384 	default:
    385 		snprintf(errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
    386 		    "unknown time stamp resolution %u", precision);
    387 		free(p);
    388 		*err = 1;
    389 		return (NULL);
    390 	}
    391 
    392 	/*
    393 	 * We interchanged the caplen and len fields at version 2.3,
    394 	 * in order to match the bpf header layout.  But unfortunately
    395 	 * some files were written with version 2.3 in their headers
    396 	 * but without the interchanged fields.
    397 	 *
    398 	 * In addition, DG/UX tcpdump writes out files with a version
    399 	 * number of 543.0, and with the caplen and len fields in the
    400 	 * pre-2.3 order.
    401 	 */
    402 	switch (hdr.version_major) {
    403 
    404 	case 2:
    405 		if (hdr.version_minor < 3)
    406 			ps->lengths_swapped = SWAPPED;
    407 		else if (hdr.version_minor == 3)
    408 			ps->lengths_swapped = MAYBE_SWAPPED;
    409 		else
    410 			ps->lengths_swapped = NOT_SWAPPED;
    411 		break;
    412 
    413 	case 543:
    414 		ps->lengths_swapped = SWAPPED;
    415 		break;
    416 
    417 	default:
    418 		ps->lengths_swapped = NOT_SWAPPED;
    419 		break;
    420 	}
    421 
    422 	if (magic_int == KUZNETZOV_TCPDUMP_MAGIC) {
    423 		/*
    424 		 * XXX - the patch that's in some versions of libpcap
    425 		 * changes the packet header but not the magic number,
    426 		 * and some other versions with this magic number have
    427 		 * some extra debugging information in the packet header;
    428 		 * we'd have to use some hacks^H^H^H^H^Hheuristics to
    429 		 * detect those variants.
    430 		 *
    431 		 * Ethereal does that, but it does so by trying to read
    432 		 * the first two packets of the file with each of the
    433 		 * record header formats.  That currently means it seeks
    434 		 * backwards and retries the reads, which doesn't work
    435 		 * on pipes.  We want to be able to read from a pipe, so
    436 		 * that strategy won't work; we'd have to buffer some
    437 		 * data ourselves and read from that buffer in order to
    438 		 * make that work.
    439 		 */
    440 		ps->hdrsize = sizeof(struct pcap_sf_patched_pkthdr);
    441 
    442 		if (p->linktype == DLT_EN10MB) {
    443 			/*
    444 			 * This capture might have been done in raw mode
    445 			 * or cooked mode.
    446 			 *
    447 			 * If it was done in cooked mode, p->snapshot was
    448 			 * passed to recvfrom() as the buffer size, meaning
    449 			 * that the most packet data that would be copied
    450 			 * would be p->snapshot.  However, a faked Ethernet
    451 			 * header would then have been added to it, so the
    452 			 * most data that would be in a packet in the file
    453 			 * would be p->snapshot + 14.
    454 			 *
    455 			 * We can't easily tell whether the capture was done
    456 			 * in raw mode or cooked mode, so we'll assume it was
    457 			 * cooked mode, and add 14 to the snapshot length.
    458 			 * That means that, for a raw capture, the snapshot
    459 			 * length will be misleading if you use it to figure
    460 			 * out why a capture doesn't have all the packet data,
    461 			 * but there's not much we can do to avoid that.
    462 			 *
    463 			 * But don't grow the snapshot length past the
    464 			 * maximum value of an int.
    465 			 */
    466 			if (p->snapshot <= INT_MAX - 14)
    467 				p->snapshot += 14;
    468 			else
    469 				p->snapshot = INT_MAX;
    470 		}
    471 	} else
    472 		ps->hdrsize = sizeof(struct pcap_sf_pkthdr);
    473 
    474 	/*
    475 	 * Allocate a buffer for the packet data.
    476 	 * Choose the minimum of the file's snapshot length and 2K bytes;
    477 	 * that should be enough for most network packets - we'll grow it
    478 	 * if necessary.  That way, we don't allocate a huge chunk of
    479 	 * memory just because there's a huge snapshot length, as the
    480 	 * snapshot length might be larger than the size of the largest
    481 	 * packet.
    482 	 */
    483 	p->bufsize = p->snapshot;
    484 	if (p->bufsize > 2048)
    485 		p->bufsize = 2048;
    486 	p->buffer = malloc(p->bufsize);
    487 	if (p->buffer == NULL) {
    488 		snprintf(errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE, "out of memory");
    489 		free(p);
    490 		*err = 1;
    491 		return (NULL);
    492 	}
    493 
    494 	p->cleanup_op = pcapint_sf_cleanup;
    495 
    496 	return (p);
    497 }
    498 
    499 /*
    500  * Grow the packet buffer to the specified size.
    501  */
    502 static int
    503 grow_buffer(pcap_t *p, u_int bufsize)
    504 {
    505 	void *bigger_buffer;
    506 
    507 	bigger_buffer = realloc(p->buffer, bufsize);
    508 	if (bigger_buffer == NULL) {
    509 		snprintf(p->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE, "out of memory");
    510 		return (0);
    511 	}
    512 	p->buffer = bigger_buffer;
    513 	p->bufsize = bufsize;
    514 	return (1);
    515 }
    516 
    517 /*
    518  * Read and return the next packet from the savefile.  Return the header
    519  * in hdr and a pointer to the contents in data.  Return 1 on success, 0
    520  * if there were no more packets, and -1 on an error.
    521  */
    522 static int
    523 pcap_next_packet(pcap_t *p, struct pcap_pkthdr *hdr, u_char **data)
    524 {
    525 	struct pcap_sf *ps = p->priv;
    526 	struct pcap_sf_patched_pkthdr sf_hdr;
    527 	FILE *fp = p->rfile;
    528 	size_t amt_read;
    529 	bpf_u_int32 t;
    530 
    531 	/*
    532 	 * Read the packet header; the structure we use as a buffer
    533 	 * is the longer structure for files generated by the patched
    534 	 * libpcap, but if the file has the magic number for an
    535 	 * unpatched libpcap we only read as many bytes as the regular
    536 	 * header has.
    537 	 */
    538 	amt_read = fread(&sf_hdr, 1, ps->hdrsize, fp);
    539 	if (amt_read != ps->hdrsize) {
    540 		if (ferror(fp)) {
    541 			pcapint_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(p->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
    542 			    errno, "error reading dump file");
    543 			return (-1);
    544 		} else {
    545 			if (amt_read != 0) {
    546 				snprintf(p->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
    547 				    "truncated dump file; tried to read %zu header bytes, only got %zu",
    548 				    ps->hdrsize, amt_read);
    549 				return (-1);
    550 			}
    551 			/* EOF */
    552 			return (0);
    553 		}
    554 	}
    555 
    556 	if (p->swapped) {
    557 		/* these were written in opposite byte order */
    558 		hdr->caplen = SWAPLONG(sf_hdr.caplen);
    559 		hdr->len = SWAPLONG(sf_hdr.len);
    560 		hdr->ts.tv_sec = SWAPLONG(sf_hdr.ts.tv_sec);
    561 		hdr->ts.tv_usec = SWAPLONG(sf_hdr.ts.tv_usec);
    562 	} else {
    563 		hdr->caplen = sf_hdr.caplen;
    564 		hdr->len = sf_hdr.len;
    565 		hdr->ts.tv_sec = sf_hdr.ts.tv_sec;
    566 		hdr->ts.tv_usec = sf_hdr.ts.tv_usec;
    567 	}
    568 
    569 	switch (ps->scale_type) {
    570 
    571 	case PASS_THROUGH:
    572 		/*
    573 		 * Just pass the time stamp through.
    574 		 */
    575 		break;
    576 
    577 	case SCALE_UP:
    578 		/*
    579 		 * File has microseconds, user wants nanoseconds; convert
    580 		 * it.
    581 		 */
    582 		hdr->ts.tv_usec = hdr->ts.tv_usec * 1000;
    583 		break;
    584 
    585 	case SCALE_DOWN:
    586 		/*
    587 		 * File has nanoseconds, user wants microseconds; convert
    588 		 * it.
    589 		 */
    590 		hdr->ts.tv_usec = hdr->ts.tv_usec / 1000;
    591 		break;
    592 	}
    593 
    594 	/* Swap the caplen and len fields, if necessary. */
    595 	switch (ps->lengths_swapped) {
    596 
    597 	case NOT_SWAPPED:
    598 		break;
    599 
    600 	case MAYBE_SWAPPED:
    601 		if (hdr->caplen <= hdr->len) {
    602 			/*
    603 			 * The captured length is <= the actual length,
    604 			 * so presumably they weren't swapped.
    605 			 */
    606 			break;
    607 		}
    608 		/* FALLTHROUGH */
    609 
    610 	case SWAPPED:
    611 		t = hdr->caplen;
    612 		hdr->caplen = hdr->len;
    613 		hdr->len = t;
    614 		break;
    615 	}
    616 
    617 	/*
    618 	 * Is the packet bigger than we consider sane?
    619 	 */
    620 	if (hdr->caplen > max_snaplen_for_dlt(p->linktype)) {
    621 		/*
    622 		 * Yes.  This may be a damaged or fuzzed file.
    623 		 *
    624 		 * Is it bigger than the snapshot length?
    625 		 * (We don't treat that as an error if it's not
    626 		 * bigger than the maximum we consider sane; see
    627 		 * below.)
    628 		 */
    629 		if (hdr->caplen > (bpf_u_int32)p->snapshot) {
    630 			snprintf(p->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
    631 			    "invalid packet capture length %u, bigger than "
    632 			    "snaplen of %d", hdr->caplen, p->snapshot);
    633 		} else {
    634 			snprintf(p->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
    635 			    "invalid packet capture length %u, bigger than "
    636 			    "maximum of %u", hdr->caplen,
    637 			    max_snaplen_for_dlt(p->linktype));
    638 		}
    639 		return (-1);
    640 	}
    641 
    642 	if (hdr->caplen > (bpf_u_int32)p->snapshot) {
    643 		/*
    644 		 * The packet is bigger than the snapshot length
    645 		 * for this file.
    646 		 *
    647 		 * This can happen due to Solaris 2.3 systems tripping
    648 		 * over the BUFMOD problem and not setting the snapshot
    649 		 * length correctly in the savefile header.
    650 		 *
    651 		 * libpcap 0.4 and later on Solaris 2.3 should set the
    652 		 * snapshot length correctly in the pcap file header,
    653 		 * even though they don't set a snapshot length in bufmod
    654 		 * (the buggy bufmod chops off the *beginning* of the
    655 		 * packet if a snapshot length is specified); they should
    656 		 * also reduce the captured length, as supplied to the
    657 		 * per-packet callback, to the snapshot length if it's
    658 		 * greater than the snapshot length, so the code using
    659 		 * libpcap should see the packet cut off at the snapshot
    660 		 * length, even though the full packet is copied up to
    661 		 * userland.
    662 		 *
    663 		 * However, perhaps some versions of libpcap failed to
    664 		 * set the snapshot length correctly in the file header
    665 		 * or the per-packet header, or perhaps this is a
    666 		 * corrupted savefile or a savefile built/modified by a
    667 		 * fuzz tester, so we check anyway.  We grow the buffer
    668 		 * to be big enough for the snapshot length, read up
    669 		 * to the snapshot length, discard the rest of the
    670 		 * packet, and report the snapshot length as the captured
    671 		 * length; we don't want to hand our caller a packet
    672 		 * bigger than the snapshot length, because they might
    673 		 * be assuming they'll never be handed such a packet,
    674 		 * and might copy the packet into a snapshot-length-
    675 		 * sized buffer, assuming it'll fit.
    676 		 */
    677 		size_t bytes_to_discard;
    678 		size_t bytes_to_read, bytes_read;
    679 		char discard_buf[4096];
    680 
    681 		if (hdr->caplen > p->bufsize) {
    682 			/*
    683 			 * Grow the buffer to the snapshot length.
    684 			 */
    685 			if (!grow_buffer(p, p->snapshot))
    686 				return (-1);
    687 		}
    688 
    689 		/*
    690 		 * Read the first p->snapshot bytes into the buffer.
    691 		 */
    692 		amt_read = fread(p->buffer, 1, p->snapshot, fp);
    693 		if (amt_read != (bpf_u_int32)p->snapshot) {
    694 			if (ferror(fp)) {
    695 				pcapint_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(p->errbuf,
    696 				     PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE, errno,
    697 				    "error reading dump file");
    698 			} else {
    699 				/*
    700 				 * Yes, this uses hdr->caplen; technically,
    701 				 * it's true, because we would try to read
    702 				 * and discard the rest of those bytes, and
    703 				 * that would fail because we got EOF before
    704 				 * the read finished.
    705 				 */
    706 				snprintf(p->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
    707 				    "truncated dump file; tried to read %d captured bytes, only got %zu",
    708 				    p->snapshot, amt_read);
    709 			}
    710 			return (-1);
    711 		}
    712 
    713 		/*
    714 		 * Now read and discard what's left.
    715 		 */
    716 		bytes_to_discard = hdr->caplen - p->snapshot;
    717 		bytes_read = amt_read;
    718 		while (bytes_to_discard != 0) {
    719 			bytes_to_read = bytes_to_discard;
    720 			if (bytes_to_read > sizeof (discard_buf))
    721 				bytes_to_read = sizeof (discard_buf);
    722 			amt_read = fread(discard_buf, 1, bytes_to_read, fp);
    723 			bytes_read += amt_read;
    724 			if (amt_read != bytes_to_read) {
    725 				if (ferror(fp)) {
    726 					pcapint_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(p->errbuf,
    727 					    PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE, errno,
    728 					    "error reading dump file");
    729 				} else {
    730 					snprintf(p->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
    731 					    "truncated dump file; tried to read %u captured bytes, only got %zu",
    732 					    hdr->caplen, bytes_read);
    733 				}
    734 				return (-1);
    735 			}
    736 			bytes_to_discard -= amt_read;
    737 		}
    738 
    739 		/*
    740 		 * Adjust caplen accordingly, so we don't get confused later
    741 		 * as to how many bytes we have to play with.
    742 		 */
    743 		hdr->caplen = p->snapshot;
    744 	} else {
    745 		/*
    746 		 * The packet is within the snapshot length for this file.
    747 		 */
    748 		if (hdr->caplen > p->bufsize) {
    749 			/*
    750 			 * Grow the buffer to the next power of 2, or
    751 			 * the snaplen, whichever is lower.
    752 			 */
    753 			u_int new_bufsize;
    754 
    755 			new_bufsize = hdr->caplen;
    756 			/*
    757 			 * https://graphics.stanford.edu/~seander/bithacks.html#RoundUpPowerOf2
    758 			 */
    759 			new_bufsize--;
    760 			new_bufsize |= new_bufsize >> 1;
    761 			new_bufsize |= new_bufsize >> 2;
    762 			new_bufsize |= new_bufsize >> 4;
    763 			new_bufsize |= new_bufsize >> 8;
    764 			new_bufsize |= new_bufsize >> 16;
    765 			new_bufsize++;
    766 
    767 			if (new_bufsize > (u_int)p->snapshot)
    768 				new_bufsize = p->snapshot;
    769 
    770 			if (!grow_buffer(p, new_bufsize))
    771 				return (-1);
    772 		}
    773 
    774 		/* read the packet itself */
    775 		amt_read = fread(p->buffer, 1, hdr->caplen, fp);
    776 		if (amt_read != hdr->caplen) {
    777 			if (ferror(fp)) {
    778 				pcapint_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(p->errbuf,
    779 				    PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE, errno,
    780 				    "error reading dump file");
    781 			} else {
    782 				snprintf(p->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
    783 				    "truncated dump file; tried to read %u captured bytes, only got %zu",
    784 				    hdr->caplen, amt_read);
    785 			}
    786 			return (-1);
    787 		}
    788 	}
    789 	*data = p->buffer;
    790 
    791 	pcapint_post_process(p->linktype, p->swapped, hdr, *data);
    792 
    793 	return (1);
    794 }
    795 
    796 static int
    797 sf_write_header(pcap_t *p, FILE *fp, int linktype, int snaplen)
    798 {
    799 	struct pcap_file_header hdr;
    800 
    801 	hdr.magic = p->opt.tstamp_precision == PCAP_TSTAMP_PRECISION_NANO ? NSEC_TCPDUMP_MAGIC : TCPDUMP_MAGIC;
    802 	hdr.version_major = PCAP_VERSION_MAJOR;
    803 	hdr.version_minor = PCAP_VERSION_MINOR;
    804 
    805 	/*
    806 	 * https://www.tcpdump.org/manpages/pcap-savefile.5.txt states:
    807 	 * thiszone (Reserved1): 4-byte not used - SHOULD be filled with 0
    808 	 * sigfigs (Reserved2):  4-byte not used - SHOULD be filled with 0
    809 	 */
    810 	hdr.thiszone = 0;
    811 	hdr.sigfigs = 0;
    812 	hdr.snaplen = snaplen;
    813 	hdr.linktype = linktype;
    814 
    815 	if (fwrite((char *)&hdr, sizeof(hdr), 1, fp) != 1)
    816 		return (-1);
    817 
    818 	return (0);
    819 }
    820 
    821 /*
    822  * Output a packet to the initialized dump file.
    823  */
    824 void
    825 pcap_dump(u_char *user, const struct pcap_pkthdr *h, const u_char *sp)
    826 {
    827 	register FILE *f;
    828 	struct pcap_sf_pkthdr sf_hdr;
    829 
    830 	f = (FILE *)user;
    831 	/*
    832 	 * If the output file handle is in an error state, don't write
    833 	 * anything.
    834 	 *
    835 	 * While in principle a file handle can return from an error state
    836 	 * to a normal state (for example if a disk that is full has space
    837 	 * freed), we have possibly left a broken file already, and won't
    838 	 * be able to clean it up. The safest option is to do nothing.
    839 	 *
    840 	 * Note that if we could guarantee that fwrite() was atomic we
    841 	 * might be able to insure that we don't produce a corrupted file,
    842 	 * but the standard defines fwrite() as a series of fputc() calls,
    843 	 * so we really have no insurance that things are not fubared.
    844 	 *
    845 	 * http://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/009695399/functions/fwrite.html
    846 	 */
    847 	if (ferror(f))
    848 		return;
    849 	/*
    850 	 * Better not try writing pcap files after
    851 	 * 2106-02-07 06:28:15 UTC; switch to pcapng.
    852 	 * (And better not try writing pcap files with time stamps
    853 	 * that predate 1970-01-01 00:00:00 UTC; that's not supported.
    854 	 * You could try using pcapng with the if_tsoffset field in
    855 	 * the IDB for the interface(s) with packets with those time
    856 	 * stamps, but you may also have to get a link-layer type for
    857 	 * IBM Bisync or whatever link layer even older forms
    858 	 * of computer communication used.)
    859 	 */
    860 	sf_hdr.ts.tv_sec  = (bpf_u_int32)h->ts.tv_sec;
    861 	sf_hdr.ts.tv_usec = (bpf_u_int32)h->ts.tv_usec;
    862 	sf_hdr.caplen     = h->caplen;
    863 	sf_hdr.len        = h->len;
    864 	/*
    865 	 * We only write the packet if we can write the header properly.
    866 	 *
    867 	 * This doesn't prevent us from having corrupted output, and if we
    868 	 * for some reason don't get a complete write we don't have any
    869 	 * way to set ferror() to prevent future writes from being
    870 	 * attempted, but it is better than nothing.
    871 	 */
    872 	if (fwrite(&sf_hdr, sizeof(sf_hdr), 1, f) == 1) {
    873 		(void)fwrite(sp, h->caplen, 1, f);
    874 	}
    875 }
    876 
    877 static pcap_dumper_t *
    878 pcap_setup_dump(pcap_t *p, int linktype, FILE *f, const char *fname)
    879 {
    880 
    881 #if defined(_WIN32) || defined(MSDOS)
    882 	/*
    883 	 * If we're writing to the standard output, put it in binary
    884 	 * mode, as savefiles are binary files.
    885 	 *
    886 	 * Otherwise, we turn off buffering.
    887 	 * XXX - why?  And why not on the standard output?
    888 	 */
    889 	if (f == stdout)
    890 		SET_BINMODE(f);
    891 	else
    892 		setvbuf(f, NULL, _IONBF, 0);
    893 #endif
    894 	if (sf_write_header(p, f, linktype, p->snapshot) == -1) {
    895 		pcapint_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(p->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
    896 		    errno, "Can't write to %s", fname);
    897 		if (f != stdout)
    898 			(void)fclose(f);
    899 		return (NULL);
    900 	}
    901 	return ((pcap_dumper_t *)f);
    902 }
    903 
    904 /*
    905  * Initialize so that sf_write() will output to the file named 'fname'.
    906  */
    907 pcap_dumper_t *
    908 pcap_dump_open(pcap_t *p, const char *fname)
    909 {
    910 	FILE *f;
    911 	int linktype;
    912 
    913 	/*
    914 	 * If this pcap_t hasn't been activated, it doesn't have a
    915 	 * link-layer type, so we can't use it.
    916 	 */
    917 	if (!p->activated) {
    918 		snprintf(p->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
    919 		    "%s: not-yet-activated pcap_t passed to pcap_dump_open",
    920 		    fname);
    921 		return (NULL);
    922 	}
    923 	linktype = dlt_to_linktype(p->linktype);
    924 	if (linktype == -1) {
    925 		snprintf(p->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
    926 		    "%s: link-layer type %d isn't supported in savefiles",
    927 		    fname, p->linktype);
    928 		return (NULL);
    929 	}
    930 	linktype |= p->linktype_ext;
    931 
    932 	if (fname == NULL) {
    933 		snprintf(p->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
    934 		    "A null pointer was supplied as the file name");
    935 		return NULL;
    936 	}
    937 	if (fname[0] == '-' && fname[1] == '\0') {
    938 		f = stdout;
    939 		fname = "standard output";
    940 	} else {
    941 		/*
    942 		 * "b" is supported as of C90, so *all* UN*Xes should
    943 		 * support it, even though it does nothing.  It's
    944 		 * required on Windows, as the file is a binary file
    945 		 * and must be written in binary mode.
    946 		 */
    947 		f = pcapint_charset_fopen(fname, "wb");
    948 		if (f == NULL) {
    949 			pcapint_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(p->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
    950 			    errno, "%s", fname);
    951 			return (NULL);
    952 		}
    953 	}
    954 	return (pcap_setup_dump(p, linktype, f, fname));
    955 }
    956 
    957 #ifdef _WIN32
    958 /*
    959  * Initialize so that sf_write() will output to a stream wrapping the given raw
    960  * OS file HANDLE.
    961  */
    962 pcap_dumper_t *
    963 pcap_dump_hopen(pcap_t *p, intptr_t osfd)
    964 {
    965 	int fd;
    966 	FILE *file;
    967 
    968 	fd = _open_osfhandle(osfd, _O_APPEND);
    969 	if (fd < 0) {
    970 		pcapint_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(p->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
    971 		    errno, "_open_osfhandle");
    972 		return NULL;
    973 	}
    974 
    975 	file = _fdopen(fd, "wb");
    976 	if (file == NULL) {
    977 		pcapint_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(p->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
    978 		    errno, "_fdopen");
    979 		_close(fd);
    980 		return NULL;
    981 	}
    982 
    983 	return pcap_dump_fopen(p, file);
    984 }
    985 #endif /* _WIN32 */
    986 
    987 /*
    988  * Initialize so that sf_write() will output to the given stream.
    989  */
    990 #ifdef _WIN32
    991 static
    992 #endif /* _WIN32 */
    993 pcap_dumper_t *
    994 pcap_dump_fopen(pcap_t *p, FILE *f)
    995 {
    996 	int linktype;
    997 
    998 	linktype = dlt_to_linktype(p->linktype);
    999 	if (linktype == -1) {
   1000 		snprintf(p->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
   1001 		    "stream: link-layer type %d isn't supported in savefiles",
   1002 		    p->linktype);
   1003 		return (NULL);
   1004 	}
   1005 	linktype |= p->linktype_ext;
   1006 
   1007 	return (pcap_setup_dump(p, linktype, f, "stream"));
   1008 }
   1009 
   1010 pcap_dumper_t *
   1011 pcap_dump_open_append(pcap_t *p, const char *fname)
   1012 {
   1013 	FILE *f;
   1014 	int linktype;
   1015 	size_t amt_read;
   1016 	struct pcap_file_header ph;
   1017 
   1018 	linktype = dlt_to_linktype(p->linktype);
   1019 	if (linktype == -1) {
   1020 		snprintf(p->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
   1021 		    "%s: link-layer type %d isn't supported in savefiles",
   1022 		    fname, linktype);
   1023 		return (NULL);
   1024 	}
   1025 
   1026 	if (fname == NULL) {
   1027 		snprintf(p->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
   1028 		    "A null pointer was supplied as the file name");
   1029 		return NULL;
   1030 	}
   1031 	if (fname[0] == '-' && fname[1] == '\0')
   1032 		return (pcap_setup_dump(p, linktype, stdout, "standard output"));
   1033 
   1034 	/*
   1035 	 * "a" will cause the file *not* to be truncated if it exists
   1036 	 * but will cause it to be created if it doesn't.  It will
   1037 	 * also cause all writes to be done at the end of the file,
   1038 	 * but will allow reads to be done anywhere in the file.  This
   1039 	 * is what we need, because we need to read from the beginning
   1040 	 * of the file to see if it already has a header and packets
   1041 	 * or if it doesn't.
   1042 	 *
   1043 	 * "b" is supported as of C90, so *all* UN*Xes should support it,
   1044 	 * even though it does nothing.  It's required on Windows, as the
   1045 	 * file is a binary file and must be read in binary mode.
   1046 	 */
   1047 	f = pcapint_charset_fopen(fname, "ab+");
   1048 	if (f == NULL) {
   1049 		pcapint_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(p->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
   1050 		    errno, "%s", fname);
   1051 		return (NULL);
   1052 	}
   1053 
   1054 	/*
   1055 	 * Try to read a pcap header.
   1056 	 *
   1057 	 * We do not assume that the file will be positioned at the
   1058 	 * beginning immediately after we've opened it - we seek to
   1059 	 * the beginning.  ISO C says it's implementation-defined
   1060 	 * whether the file position indicator is at the beginning
   1061 	 * or the end of the file after an append-mode open, and
   1062 	 * it wasn't obvious from the Single UNIX Specification
   1063 	 * or the Microsoft documentation how that works on SUS-
   1064 	 * compliant systems or on Windows.
   1065 	 */
   1066 	if (fseek(f, 0, SEEK_SET) == -1) {
   1067 		pcapint_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(p->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
   1068 		    errno, "Can't seek to the beginning of %s", fname);
   1069 		(void)fclose(f);
   1070 		return (NULL);
   1071 	}
   1072 	amt_read = fread(&ph, 1, sizeof (ph), f);
   1073 	if (amt_read != sizeof (ph)) {
   1074 		if (ferror(f)) {
   1075 			pcapint_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(p->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
   1076 			    errno, "%s", fname);
   1077 			(void)fclose(f);
   1078 			return (NULL);
   1079 		} else if (feof(f) && amt_read > 0) {
   1080 			snprintf(p->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
   1081 			    "%s: truncated pcap file header", fname);
   1082 			(void)fclose(f);
   1083 			return (NULL);
   1084 		}
   1085 	}
   1086 
   1087 #if defined(_WIN32) || defined(MSDOS)
   1088 	/*
   1089 	 * We turn off buffering.
   1090 	 * XXX - why?  And why not on the standard output?
   1091 	 */
   1092 	setvbuf(f, NULL, _IONBF, 0);
   1093 #endif
   1094 
   1095 	/*
   1096 	 * If a header is already present and:
   1097 	 *
   1098 	 *	it's not for a pcap file of the appropriate resolution
   1099 	 *	and the right byte order for this machine;
   1100 	 *
   1101 	 *	the link-layer header types don't match;
   1102 	 *
   1103 	 *	the snapshot lengths don't match;
   1104 	 *
   1105 	 * return an error.
   1106 	 */
   1107 	if (amt_read > 0) {
   1108 		/*
   1109 		 * A header is already present.
   1110 		 * Do the checks.
   1111 		 */
   1112 		switch (ph.magic) {
   1113 
   1114 		case TCPDUMP_MAGIC:
   1115 			if (p->opt.tstamp_precision != PCAP_TSTAMP_PRECISION_MICRO) {
   1116 				snprintf(p->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
   1117 				    "%s: different time stamp precision, cannot append to file", fname);
   1118 				(void)fclose(f);
   1119 				return (NULL);
   1120 			}
   1121 			break;
   1122 
   1123 		case NSEC_TCPDUMP_MAGIC:
   1124 			if (p->opt.tstamp_precision != PCAP_TSTAMP_PRECISION_NANO) {
   1125 				snprintf(p->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
   1126 				    "%s: different time stamp precision, cannot append to file", fname);
   1127 				(void)fclose(f);
   1128 				return (NULL);
   1129 			}
   1130 			break;
   1131 
   1132 		case SWAPLONG(TCPDUMP_MAGIC):
   1133 		case SWAPLONG(NSEC_TCPDUMP_MAGIC):
   1134 			snprintf(p->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
   1135 			    "%s: different byte order, cannot append to file", fname);
   1136 			(void)fclose(f);
   1137 			return (NULL);
   1138 
   1139 		case KUZNETZOV_TCPDUMP_MAGIC:
   1140 		case SWAPLONG(KUZNETZOV_TCPDUMP_MAGIC):
   1141 		case NAVTEL_TCPDUMP_MAGIC:
   1142 		case SWAPLONG(NAVTEL_TCPDUMP_MAGIC):
   1143 			snprintf(p->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
   1144 			    "%s: not a pcap file to which we can append", fname);
   1145 			(void)fclose(f);
   1146 			return (NULL);
   1147 
   1148 		default:
   1149 			snprintf(p->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
   1150 			    "%s: not a pcap file", fname);
   1151 			(void)fclose(f);
   1152 			return (NULL);
   1153 		}
   1154 
   1155 		/*
   1156 		 * Good version?
   1157 		 */
   1158 		if (ph.version_major != PCAP_VERSION_MAJOR ||
   1159 		    ph.version_minor != PCAP_VERSION_MINOR) {
   1160 			snprintf(p->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
   1161 			    "%s: version is %u.%u, cannot append to file", fname,
   1162 			    ph.version_major, ph.version_minor);
   1163 			(void)fclose(f);
   1164 			return (NULL);
   1165 		}
   1166 		if ((bpf_u_int32)linktype != ph.linktype) {
   1167 			snprintf(p->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
   1168 			    "%s: different linktype, cannot append to file", fname);
   1169 			(void)fclose(f);
   1170 			return (NULL);
   1171 		}
   1172 		if ((bpf_u_int32)p->snapshot != ph.snaplen) {
   1173 			snprintf(p->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
   1174 			    "%s: different snaplen, cannot append to file", fname);
   1175 			(void)fclose(f);
   1176 			return (NULL);
   1177 		}
   1178 	} else {
   1179 		/*
   1180 		 * A header isn't present; attempt to write it.
   1181 		 */
   1182 		if (sf_write_header(p, f, linktype, p->snapshot) == -1) {
   1183 			pcapint_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(p->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
   1184 			    errno, "Can't write to %s", fname);
   1185 			(void)fclose(f);
   1186 			return (NULL);
   1187 		}
   1188 	}
   1189 
   1190 	/*
   1191 	 * Start writing at the end of the file.
   1192 	 *
   1193 	 * XXX - this shouldn't be necessary, given that we're opening
   1194 	 * the file in append mode, and ISO C specifies that all writes
   1195 	 * are done at the end of the file in that mode.
   1196 	 */
   1197 	if (fseek(f, 0, SEEK_END) == -1) {
   1198 		pcapint_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(p->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
   1199 		    errno, "Can't seek to the end of %s", fname);
   1200 		(void)fclose(f);
   1201 		return (NULL);
   1202 	}
   1203 	return ((pcap_dumper_t *)f);
   1204 }
   1205 
   1206 FILE *
   1207 pcap_dump_file(pcap_dumper_t *p)
   1208 {
   1209 	return ((FILE *)p);
   1210 }
   1211 
   1212 long
   1213 pcap_dump_ftell(pcap_dumper_t *p)
   1214 {
   1215 	return (ftell((FILE *)p));
   1216 }
   1217 
   1218 #if defined(HAVE_FSEEKO)
   1219 /*
   1220  * We have fseeko(), so we have ftello().
   1221  * If we have large file support (files larger than 2^31-1 bytes),
   1222  * ftello() will give us a current file position with more than 32
   1223  * bits.
   1224  */
   1225 int64_t
   1226 pcap_dump_ftell64(pcap_dumper_t *p)
   1227 {
   1228 	return (ftello((FILE *)p));
   1229 }
   1230 #elif defined(_MSC_VER)
   1231 /*
   1232  * We have Visual Studio; we support only 2015 and later, so we have
   1233  * _ftelli64().
   1234  */
   1235 int64_t
   1236 pcap_dump_ftell64(pcap_dumper_t *p)
   1237 {
   1238 	return (_ftelli64((FILE *)p));
   1239 }
   1240 #else
   1241 /*
   1242  * We don't have ftello() or _ftelli64(), so fall back on ftell().
   1243  * Either long is 64 bits, in which case ftell() should suffice,
   1244  * or this is probably an older 32-bit UN*X without large file
   1245  * support, which means you'll probably get errors trying to
   1246  * write files > 2^31-1, so it won't matter anyway.
   1247  *
   1248  * XXX - what about MinGW?
   1249  */
   1250 int64_t
   1251 pcap_dump_ftell64(pcap_dumper_t *p)
   1252 {
   1253 	return (ftell((FILE *)p));
   1254 }
   1255 #endif
   1256 
   1257 int
   1258 pcap_dump_flush(pcap_dumper_t *p)
   1259 {
   1260 
   1261 	if (fflush((FILE *)p) == EOF)
   1262 		return (-1);
   1263 	else
   1264 		return (0);
   1265 }
   1266 
   1267 void
   1268 pcap_dump_close(pcap_dumper_t *p)
   1269 {
   1270 	FILE *fp = (FILE *)p;
   1271 
   1272 #ifdef notyet
   1273 	if (ferror(fp))
   1274 		return-an-error;
   1275 	/* XXX should check return from fflush()/fclose() too */
   1276 #endif
   1277 	/* Don't close the standard output, but *do* flush it */
   1278 	if (fp == stdout)
   1279 		(void)fflush(fp);
   1280 	else
   1281 		(void)fclose(fp);
   1282 }
   1283