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      1 /*	$NetBSD: savefile.c,v 1.8 2024/09/02 15:33:38 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  * savefile.c - supports offline use of tcpdump
     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: savefile.c,v 1.8 2024/09/02 15:33:38 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 
     53 #ifdef HAVE_OS_PROTO_H
     54 #include "os-proto.h"
     55 #endif
     56 
     57 #include "sf-pcap.h"
     58 #include "sf-pcapng.h"
     59 #include "pcap-common.h"
     60 #include "charconv.h"
     61 
     62 #ifdef _WIN32
     63 /*
     64  * This isn't exported on Windows, because it would only work if both
     65  * WinPcap/Npcap and the code using it were to use the Universal CRT; otherwise,
     66  * a FILE structure in WinPcap/Npcap and a FILE structure in the code using it
     67  * could be different if they're using different versions of the C runtime.
     68  *
     69  * Instead, pcap/pcap.h defines it as a macro that wraps the hopen version,
     70  * with the wrapper calling _fileno() and _get_osfhandle() themselves,
     71  * so that it convert the appropriate CRT version's FILE structure to
     72  * a HANDLE (which is OS-defined, not CRT-defined, and is part of the Win32
     73  * and Win64 ABIs).
     74  */
     75 static pcap_t *pcap_fopen_offline_with_tstamp_precision(FILE *, u_int, char *);
     76 #endif
     77 
     78 /*
     79  * Setting O_BINARY on DOS/Windows is a bit tricky
     80  */
     81 #if defined(_WIN32)
     82   #define SET_BINMODE(f)  _setmode(_fileno(f), _O_BINARY)
     83 #elif defined(MSDOS)
     84   #if defined(__HIGHC__)
     85   #define SET_BINMODE(f)  setmode(f, O_BINARY)
     86   #else
     87   #define SET_BINMODE(f)  setmode(fileno(f), O_BINARY)
     88   #endif
     89 #endif
     90 
     91 static int
     92 sf_getnonblock(pcap_t *p _U_)
     93 {
     94 	/*
     95 	 * This is a savefile, not a live capture file, so never say
     96 	 * it's in non-blocking mode.
     97 	 */
     98 	return (0);
     99 }
    100 
    101 static int
    102 sf_setnonblock(pcap_t *p, int nonblock _U_)
    103 {
    104 	/*
    105 	 * This is a savefile, not a live capture file, so reject
    106 	 * requests to put it in non-blocking mode.  (If it's a
    107 	 * pipe, it could be put in non-blocking mode, but that
    108 	 * would significantly complicate the code to read packets,
    109 	 * as it would have to handle reading partial packets and
    110 	 * keeping the state of the read.)
    111 	 */
    112 	snprintf(p->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
    113 	    "Savefiles cannot be put into non-blocking mode");
    114 	return (-1);
    115 }
    116 
    117 static int
    118 sf_cant_set_rfmon(pcap_t *p _U_)
    119 {
    120 	/*
    121 	 * This is a savefile, not a device on which you can capture,
    122 	 * so never say it supports being put into monitor mode.
    123 	 */
    124 	return (0);
    125 }
    126 
    127 static int
    128 sf_stats(pcap_t *p, struct pcap_stat *ps _U_)
    129 {
    130 	snprintf(p->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
    131 	    "Statistics aren't available from savefiles");
    132 	return (-1);
    133 }
    134 
    135 #ifdef _WIN32
    136 static struct pcap_stat *
    137 sf_stats_ex(pcap_t *p, int *size _U_)
    138 {
    139 	snprintf(p->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
    140 	    "Statistics aren't available from savefiles");
    141 	return (NULL);
    142 }
    143 
    144 static int
    145 sf_setbuff(pcap_t *p, int dim _U_)
    146 {
    147 	snprintf(p->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
    148 	    "The kernel buffer size cannot be set while reading from a file");
    149 	return (-1);
    150 }
    151 
    152 static int
    153 sf_setmode(pcap_t *p, int mode _U_)
    154 {
    155 	snprintf(p->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
    156 	    "impossible to set mode while reading from a file");
    157 	return (-1);
    158 }
    159 
    160 static int
    161 sf_setmintocopy(pcap_t *p, int size _U_)
    162 {
    163 	snprintf(p->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
    164 	    "The mintocopy parameter cannot be set while reading from a file");
    165 	return (-1);
    166 }
    167 
    168 static HANDLE
    169 sf_getevent(pcap_t *pcap)
    170 {
    171 	(void)snprintf(pcap->errbuf, sizeof(pcap->errbuf),
    172 	    "The read event cannot be retrieved while reading from a file");
    173 	return (INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE);
    174 }
    175 
    176 static int
    177 sf_oid_get_request(pcap_t *p, bpf_u_int32 oid _U_, void *data _U_,
    178     size_t *lenp _U_)
    179 {
    180 	snprintf(p->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
    181 	    "An OID get request cannot be performed on a file");
    182 	return (PCAP_ERROR);
    183 }
    184 
    185 static int
    186 sf_oid_set_request(pcap_t *p, bpf_u_int32 oid _U_, const void *data _U_,
    187     size_t *lenp _U_)
    188 {
    189 	snprintf(p->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
    190 	    "An OID set request cannot be performed on a file");
    191 	return (PCAP_ERROR);
    192 }
    193 
    194 static u_int
    195 sf_sendqueue_transmit(pcap_t *p, pcap_send_queue *queue _U_, int sync _U_)
    196 {
    197 	pcapint_strlcpy(p->errbuf, "Sending packets isn't supported on savefiles",
    198 	    PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE);
    199 	return (0);
    200 }
    201 
    202 static int
    203 sf_setuserbuffer(pcap_t *p, int size _U_)
    204 {
    205 	snprintf(p->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
    206 	    "The user buffer cannot be set when reading from a file");
    207 	return (-1);
    208 }
    209 
    210 static int
    211 sf_live_dump(pcap_t *p, char *filename _U_, int maxsize _U_, int maxpacks _U_)
    212 {
    213 	snprintf(p->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
    214 	    "Live packet dumping cannot be performed when reading from a file");
    215 	return (-1);
    216 }
    217 
    218 static int
    219 sf_live_dump_ended(pcap_t *p, int sync _U_)
    220 {
    221 	snprintf(p->errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
    222 	    "Live packet dumping cannot be performed on a pcap_open_dead pcap_t");
    223 	return (-1);
    224 }
    225 
    226 static PAirpcapHandle
    227 sf_get_airpcap_handle(pcap_t *pcap _U_)
    228 {
    229 	return (NULL);
    230 }
    231 #endif
    232 
    233 static int
    234 sf_inject(pcap_t *p, const void *buf _U_, size_t size _U_)
    235 {
    236 	pcapint_strlcpy(p->errbuf, "Sending packets isn't supported on savefiles",
    237 	    PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE);
    238 	return (-1);
    239 }
    240 
    241 /*
    242  * Set direction flag: Which packets do we accept on a forwarding
    243  * single device? IN, OUT or both?
    244  */
    245 static int
    246 sf_setdirection(pcap_t *p, pcap_direction_t d _U_)
    247 {
    248 	snprintf(p->errbuf, sizeof(p->errbuf),
    249 	    "Setting direction is not supported on savefiles");
    250 	return (-1);
    251 }
    252 
    253 void
    254 pcapint_sf_cleanup(pcap_t *p)
    255 {
    256 	if (p->rfile != stdin)
    257 		(void)fclose(p->rfile);
    258 	if (p->buffer != NULL)
    259 		free(p->buffer);
    260 	pcap_freecode(&p->fcode);
    261 }
    262 
    263 #ifdef _WIN32
    264 /*
    265  * Wrapper for fopen() and _wfopen().
    266  *
    267  * If we're in UTF-8 mode, map the pathname from UTF-8 to UTF-16LE and
    268  * call _wfopen().
    269  *
    270  * If we're not, just use fopen(); that'll treat it as being in the
    271  * local code page.
    272  */
    273 FILE *
    274 pcapint_charset_fopen(const char *path, const char *mode)
    275 {
    276 	wchar_t *utf16_path;
    277 #define MAX_MODE_LEN	16
    278 	wchar_t utf16_mode[MAX_MODE_LEN+1];
    279 	int i;
    280 	char c;
    281 	FILE *fp;
    282 	int save_errno;
    283 
    284 	if (pcapint_utf_8_mode) {
    285 		/*
    286 		 * Map from UTF-8 to UTF-16LE.
    287 		 * Fail if there are invalid characters in the input
    288 		 * string, rather than converting them to REPLACEMENT
    289 		 * CHARACTER; the latter is appropriate for strings
    290 		 * to be displayed to the user, but for file names
    291 		 * you just want the attempt to open the file to fail.
    292 		 */
    293 		utf16_path = cp_to_utf_16le(CP_UTF8, path,
    294 		    MB_ERR_INVALID_CHARS);
    295 		if (utf16_path == NULL) {
    296 			/*
    297 			 * Error.  Assume errno has been set.
    298 			 *
    299 			 * XXX - what about Windows errors?
    300 			 */
    301 			return (NULL);
    302 		}
    303 
    304 		/*
    305 		 * Now convert the mode to UTF-16LE as well.
    306 		 * We assume the mode is ASCII, and that
    307 		 * it's short, so that's easy.
    308 		 */
    309 		for (i = 0; (c = *mode) != '\0'; i++, mode++) {
    310 			if (c > 0x7F) {
    311 				/* Not an ASCII character; fail with EINVAL. */
    312 				free(utf16_path);
    313 				errno = EINVAL;
    314 				return (NULL);
    315 			}
    316 			if (i >= MAX_MODE_LEN) {
    317 				/* The mode string is longer than we allow. */
    318 				free(utf16_path);
    319 				errno = EINVAL;
    320 				return (NULL);
    321 			}
    322 			utf16_mode[i] = c;
    323 		}
    324 		utf16_mode[i] = '\0';
    325 
    326 		/*
    327 		 * OK, we have UTF-16LE strings; hand them to
    328 		 * _wfopen().
    329 		 */
    330 		fp = _wfopen(utf16_path, utf16_mode);
    331 
    332 		/*
    333 		 * Make sure freeing the UTF-16LE string doesn't
    334 		 * overwrite the error code we got from _wfopen().
    335 		 */
    336 		save_errno = errno;
    337 		free(utf16_path);
    338 		errno = save_errno;
    339 
    340 		return (fp);
    341 	} else {
    342 		/*
    343 		 * This takes strings in the local code page as an
    344 		 * argument.
    345 		 */
    346 		return (fopen(path, mode));
    347 	}
    348 }
    349 #endif
    350 
    351 pcap_t *
    352 pcap_open_offline_with_tstamp_precision(const char *fname, u_int precision,
    353 					char *errbuf)
    354 {
    355 	FILE *fp;
    356 	pcap_t *p;
    357 
    358 	if (fname == NULL) {
    359 		snprintf(errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
    360 		    "A null pointer was supplied as the file name");
    361 		return (NULL);
    362 	}
    363 	if (fname[0] == '-' && fname[1] == '\0')
    364 	{
    365 		fp = stdin;
    366 		if (fp == NULL) {
    367 			snprintf(errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
    368 			    "The standard input is not open");
    369 			return (NULL);
    370 		}
    371 #if defined(_WIN32) || defined(MSDOS)
    372 		/*
    373 		 * We're reading from the standard input, so put it in binary
    374 		 * mode, as savefiles are binary files.
    375 		 */
    376 		SET_BINMODE(fp);
    377 #endif
    378 	}
    379 	else {
    380 		/*
    381 		 * Use pcapint_charset_fopen(); on Windows, it tests whether we're
    382 		 * in "local code page" or "UTF-8" mode, and treats the
    383 		 * pathname appropriately, and on other platforms, it just
    384 		 * wraps fopen().
    385 		 *
    386 		 * "b" is supported as of C90, so *all* UN*Xes should
    387 		 * support it, even though it does nothing.  For MS-DOS,
    388 		 * we again need it.
    389 		 */
    390 		fp = pcapint_charset_fopen(fname, "rb");
    391 		if (fp == NULL) {
    392 			pcapint_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
    393 			    errno, "%s", fname);
    394 			return (NULL);
    395 		}
    396 	}
    397 	p = pcap_fopen_offline_with_tstamp_precision(fp, precision, errbuf);
    398 	if (p == NULL) {
    399 		if (fp != stdin)
    400 			fclose(fp);
    401 	}
    402 	return (p);
    403 }
    404 
    405 pcap_t *
    406 pcap_open_offline(const char *fname, char *errbuf)
    407 {
    408 	return (pcap_open_offline_with_tstamp_precision(fname,
    409 	    PCAP_TSTAMP_PRECISION_MICRO, errbuf));
    410 }
    411 
    412 #ifdef _WIN32
    413 pcap_t* pcap_hopen_offline_with_tstamp_precision(intptr_t osfd, u_int precision,
    414     char *errbuf)
    415 {
    416 	int fd;
    417 	FILE *file;
    418 
    419 	fd = _open_osfhandle(osfd, _O_RDONLY);
    420 	if ( fd < 0 )
    421 	{
    422 		pcapint_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
    423 		    errno, "_open_osfhandle");
    424 		return NULL;
    425 	}
    426 
    427 	file = _fdopen(fd, "rb");
    428 	if ( file == NULL )
    429 	{
    430 		pcapint_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
    431 		    errno, "_fdopen");
    432 		_close(fd);
    433 		return NULL;
    434 	}
    435 
    436 	return pcap_fopen_offline_with_tstamp_precision(file, precision,
    437 	    errbuf);
    438 }
    439 
    440 pcap_t* pcap_hopen_offline(intptr_t osfd, char *errbuf)
    441 {
    442 	return pcap_hopen_offline_with_tstamp_precision(osfd,
    443 	    PCAP_TSTAMP_PRECISION_MICRO, errbuf);
    444 }
    445 #endif
    446 
    447 /*
    448  * Given a link-layer header type and snapshot length, return a
    449  * snapshot length to use when reading the file; it's guaranteed
    450  * to be > 0 and <= INT_MAX.
    451  *
    452  * XXX - the only reason why we limit it to <= INT_MAX is so that
    453  * it fits in p->snapshot, and the only reason that p->snapshot is
    454  * signed is that pcap_snapshot() returns an int, not an unsigned int.
    455  */
    456 bpf_u_int32
    457 pcapint_adjust_snapshot(bpf_u_int32 linktype, bpf_u_int32 snaplen)
    458 {
    459 	if (snaplen == 0 || snaplen > INT_MAX) {
    460 		/*
    461 		 * Bogus snapshot length; use the maximum for this
    462 		 * link-layer type as a fallback.
    463 		 *
    464 		 * XXX - we don't clamp snapshot lengths that are
    465 		 * <= INT_MAX but > max_snaplen_for_dlt(linktype),
    466 		 * so a capture file could cause us to allocate
    467 		 * a Really Big Buffer.
    468 		 */
    469 		snaplen = max_snaplen_for_dlt(linktype);
    470 	}
    471 	return snaplen;
    472 }
    473 
    474 static pcap_t *(*check_headers[])(const uint8_t *, FILE *, u_int, char *, int *) = {
    475 	pcap_check_header,
    476 	pcap_ng_check_header
    477 };
    478 
    479 #define	N_FILE_TYPES	(sizeof check_headers / sizeof check_headers[0])
    480 
    481 #ifdef _WIN32
    482 static
    483 #endif
    484 pcap_t *
    485 pcap_fopen_offline_with_tstamp_precision(FILE *fp, u_int precision,
    486     char *errbuf)
    487 {
    488 	register pcap_t *p;
    489 	uint8_t magic[4];
    490 	size_t amt_read;
    491 	u_int i;
    492 	int err;
    493 
    494 	/*
    495 	 * Fail if we were passed a NULL fp.
    496 	 *
    497 	 * That shouldn't happen if we're opening with a path name, but
    498 	 * it could happen if buggy code is opening with a FILE * and
    499 	 * didn't bother to make sure the FILE * isn't null.
    500 	 */
    501 	if (fp == NULL) {
    502 		snprintf(errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
    503 		    "Null FILE * pointer provided to savefile open routine");
    504 		return (NULL);
    505 	}
    506 
    507 	/*
    508 	 * Read the first 4 bytes of the file; the network analyzer dump
    509 	 * file formats we support (pcap and pcapng), and several other
    510 	 * formats we might support in the future (such as snoop, DOS and
    511 	 * Windows Sniffer, and Microsoft Network Monitor) all have magic
    512 	 * numbers that are unique in their first 4 bytes.
    513 	 */
    514 	amt_read = fread(&magic, 1, sizeof(magic), fp);
    515 	if (amt_read != sizeof(magic)) {
    516 		if (ferror(fp)) {
    517 			pcapint_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
    518 			    errno, "error reading dump file");
    519 		} else {
    520 			snprintf(errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE,
    521 			    "truncated dump file; tried to read %zu file header bytes, only got %zu",
    522 			    sizeof(magic), amt_read);
    523 		}
    524 		return (NULL);
    525 	}
    526 
    527 	/*
    528 	 * Try all file types.
    529 	 */
    530 	for (i = 0; i < N_FILE_TYPES; i++) {
    531 		p = (*check_headers[i])(magic, fp, precision, errbuf, &err);
    532 		if (p != NULL) {
    533 			/* Yup, that's it. */
    534 			goto found;
    535 		}
    536 		if (err) {
    537 			/*
    538 			 * Error trying to read the header.
    539 			 */
    540 			return (NULL);
    541 		}
    542 	}
    543 
    544 	/*
    545 	 * Well, who knows what this mess is....
    546 	 */
    547 	snprintf(errbuf, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE, "unknown file format");
    548 	return (NULL);
    549 
    550 found:
    551 	p->rfile = fp;
    552 
    553 	/* Padding only needed for live capture fcode */
    554 	p->fddipad = 0;
    555 
    556 #if !defined(_WIN32) && !defined(MSDOS)
    557 	/*
    558 	 * You can do "select()" and "poll()" on plain files on most
    559 	 * platforms, and should be able to do so on pipes.
    560 	 *
    561 	 * You can't do "select()" on anything other than sockets in
    562 	 * Windows, so, on Win32 systems, we don't have "selectable_fd".
    563 	 */
    564 	p->selectable_fd = fileno(fp);
    565 #endif
    566 
    567 	p->can_set_rfmon_op = sf_cant_set_rfmon;
    568 	p->read_op = pcapint_offline_read;
    569 	p->inject_op = sf_inject;
    570 	p->setfilter_op = pcapint_install_bpf_program;
    571 	p->setdirection_op = sf_setdirection;
    572 	p->set_datalink_op = NULL;	/* we don't support munging link-layer headers */
    573 	p->getnonblock_op = sf_getnonblock;
    574 	p->setnonblock_op = sf_setnonblock;
    575 	p->stats_op = sf_stats;
    576 #ifdef _WIN32
    577 	p->stats_ex_op = sf_stats_ex;
    578 	p->setbuff_op = sf_setbuff;
    579 	p->setmode_op = sf_setmode;
    580 	p->setmintocopy_op = sf_setmintocopy;
    581 	p->getevent_op = sf_getevent;
    582 	p->oid_get_request_op = sf_oid_get_request;
    583 	p->oid_set_request_op = sf_oid_set_request;
    584 	p->sendqueue_transmit_op = sf_sendqueue_transmit;
    585 	p->setuserbuffer_op = sf_setuserbuffer;
    586 	p->live_dump_op = sf_live_dump;
    587 	p->live_dump_ended_op = sf_live_dump_ended;
    588 	p->get_airpcap_handle_op = sf_get_airpcap_handle;
    589 #endif
    590 
    591 	/*
    592 	 * For offline captures, the standard one-shot callback can
    593 	 * be used for pcap_next()/pcap_next_ex().
    594 	 */
    595 	p->oneshot_callback = pcapint_oneshot;
    596 
    597 	/*
    598 	 * Default breakloop operation.
    599 	 */
    600 	p->breakloop_op = pcapint_breakloop_common;
    601 
    602 	/*
    603 	 * Savefiles never require special BPF code generation.
    604 	 */
    605 	p->bpf_codegen_flags = 0;
    606 
    607 	p->activated = 1;
    608 
    609 	return (p);
    610 }
    611 
    612 /*
    613  * This isn't needed on Windows; we #define pcap_fopen_offline() as
    614  * a wrapper around pcap_hopen_offline(), and we don't call it from
    615  * inside this file, so it's unused.
    616  */
    617 #ifndef _WIN32
    618 pcap_t *
    619 pcap_fopen_offline(FILE *fp, char *errbuf)
    620 {
    621 	return (pcap_fopen_offline_with_tstamp_precision(fp,
    622 	    PCAP_TSTAMP_PRECISION_MICRO, errbuf));
    623 }
    624 #endif
    625 
    626 /*
    627  * Read packets from a capture file, and call the callback for each
    628  * packet.
    629  * If cnt > 0, return after 'cnt' packets, otherwise continue until eof.
    630  */
    631 int
    632 pcapint_offline_read(pcap_t *p, int cnt, pcap_handler callback, u_char *user)
    633 {
    634 	struct bpf_insn *fcode;
    635 	int n = 0;
    636 	u_char *data;
    637 
    638 	/*
    639 	 * This can conceivably process more than INT_MAX packets,
    640 	 * which would overflow the packet count, causing it either
    641 	 * to look like a negative number, and thus cause us to
    642 	 * return a value that looks like an error, or overflow
    643 	 * back into positive territory, and thus cause us to
    644 	 * return a too-low count.
    645 	 *
    646 	 * Therefore, if the packet count is unlimited, we clip
    647 	 * it at INT_MAX; this routine is not expected to
    648 	 * process packets indefinitely, so that's not an issue.
    649 	 */
    650 	if (PACKET_COUNT_IS_UNLIMITED(cnt))
    651 		cnt = INT_MAX;
    652 
    653 	for (;;) {
    654 		struct pcap_pkthdr h;
    655 		int status;
    656 
    657 		/*
    658 		 * Has "pcap_breakloop()" been called?
    659 		 * If so, return immediately - if we haven't read any
    660 		 * packets, clear the flag and return -2 to indicate
    661 		 * that we were told to break out of the loop, otherwise
    662 		 * leave the flag set, so that the *next* call will break
    663 		 * out of the loop without having read any packets, and
    664 		 * return the number of packets we've processed so far.
    665 		 */
    666 		if (p->break_loop) {
    667 			if (n == 0) {
    668 				p->break_loop = 0;
    669 				return (-2);
    670 			} else
    671 				return (n);
    672 		}
    673 
    674 		status = p->next_packet_op(p, &h, &data);
    675 		if (status < 0) {
    676 			/*
    677 			 * Error.  Pass it back to the caller.
    678 			 */
    679 			return (status);
    680 		}
    681 		if (status == 0) {
    682 			/*
    683 			 * EOF.  Nothing more to process;
    684 			 */
    685 			break;
    686 		}
    687 
    688 		/*
    689 		 * OK, we've read a packet; run it through the filter
    690 		 * and, if it passes, process it.
    691 		 */
    692 		if ((fcode = p->fcode.bf_insns) == NULL ||
    693 		    pcapint_filter(fcode, data, h.len, h.caplen)) {
    694 			(*callback)(user, &h, data);
    695 			n++;	/* count the packet */
    696 			if (n >= cnt)
    697 				break;
    698 		}
    699 	}
    700 	/*XXX this breaks semantics tcpslice expects */
    701 	return (n);
    702 }
    703