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      1 /*
      2  * Copyright (c) 2002 - 2003
      3  * NetGroup, Politecnico di Torino (Italy)
      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 nor the names of its
     16  * contributors may be used to endorse or promote products derived from
     17  * this software without specific prior written permission.
     18  *
     19  * THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS
     20  * "AS IS" AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT
     21  * LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR
     22  * A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT
     23  * OWNER OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL,
     24  * SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT
     25  * LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE,
     26  * DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY
     27  * THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT
     28  * (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE
     29  * OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
     30  *
     31  */
     32 
     33 #include <config.h>
     34 
     35 /*
     36  * \file sockutils.c
     37  *
     38  * The goal of this file is to provide a common set of primitives for socket
     39  * manipulation.
     40  *
     41  * Although the socket interface defined in the RFC 2553 (and its updates)
     42  * is excellent, there are still differences between the behavior of those
     43  * routines on UN*X and Windows, and between UN*Xes.
     44  *
     45  * These calls provide an interface similar to the socket interface, but
     46  * that hides the differences between operating systems.  It does not
     47  * attempt to significantly improve on the socket interface in other
     48  * ways.
     49  */
     50 
     51 #include "ftmacros.h"
     52 
     53 #include <string.h>
     54 #include <errno.h>	/* for the errno variable */
     55 #include <stdio.h>	/* for the stderr file */
     56 #include <stdlib.h>	/* for malloc() and free() */
     57 #include <limits.h>	/* for INT_MAX */
     58 
     59 #include "pcap-int.h"
     60 
     61 #include "sockutils.h"
     62 #include "portability.h"
     63 
     64 #ifdef _WIN32
     65   /*
     66    * Winsock initialization.
     67    *
     68    * Ask for Winsock 2.2.
     69    */
     70   #define WINSOCK_MAJOR_VERSION 2
     71   #define WINSOCK_MINOR_VERSION 2
     72 
     73   static int sockcount = 0;	/*!< Variable that allows calling the WSAStartup() only one time */
     74 #endif
     75 
     76 /* Some minor differences between UNIX and Win32 */
     77 #ifdef _WIN32
     78   #define SHUT_WR SD_SEND	/* The control code for shutdown() is different in Win32 */
     79 #endif
     80 
     81 /* Size of the buffer that has to keep error messages */
     82 #define SOCK_ERRBUF_SIZE 1024
     83 
     84 /* Constants; used in order to keep strings here */
     85 #define SOCKET_NO_NAME_AVAILABLE "No name available"
     86 #define SOCKET_NO_PORT_AVAILABLE "No port available"
     87 #define SOCKET_NAME_NULL_DAD "Null address (possibly DAD Phase)"
     88 
     89 /*
     90  * On UN*X, send() and recv() return ssize_t.
     91  *
     92  * On Windows, send() and recv() return an int.
     93  *
     94  *   With MSVC, there *is* no ssize_t.
     95  *
     96  *   With MinGW, there is an ssize_t type; it is either an int (32 bit)
     97  *   or a long long (64 bit).
     98  *
     99  * So, on Windows, if we don't have ssize_t defined, define it as an
    100  * int, so we can use it, on all platforms, as the type of variables
    101  * that hold the return values from send() and recv().
    102  */
    103 #if defined(_WIN32) && !defined(_SSIZE_T_DEFINED)
    104 typedef int ssize_t;
    105 #endif
    106 
    107 /****************************************************
    108  *                                                  *
    109  * Locally defined functions                        *
    110  *                                                  *
    111  ****************************************************/
    112 
    113 static int sock_ismcastaddr(const struct sockaddr *saddr);
    114 
    115 /****************************************************
    116  *                                                  *
    117  * Function bodies                                  *
    118  *                                                  *
    119  ****************************************************/
    120 
    121 #ifdef FUZZING_BUILD_MODE_UNSAFE_FOR_PRODUCTION
    122 const uint8_t *fuzzBuffer;
    123 size_t fuzzSize;
    124 size_t fuzzPos;
    125 
    126 void sock_initfuzz(const uint8_t *Data, size_t Size) {
    127 	fuzzPos = 0;
    128 	fuzzSize = Size;
    129 	fuzzBuffer = Data;
    130 }
    131 
    132 static int fuzz_recv(char *bufp, int remaining) {
    133 	if (remaining > fuzzSize - fuzzPos) {
    134 		remaining = fuzzSize - fuzzPos;
    135 	}
    136 	if (fuzzPos < fuzzSize) {
    137 		memcpy(bufp, fuzzBuffer + fuzzPos, remaining);
    138 	}
    139 	fuzzPos += remaining;
    140 	return remaining;
    141 }
    142 #endif
    143 
    144 int sock_geterrcode(void)
    145 {
    146 #ifdef _WIN32
    147 	return GetLastError();
    148 #else
    149 	return errno;
    150 #endif
    151 }
    152 
    153 /*
    154  * Format an error message given an errno value (UN*X) or a Winsock error
    155  * (Windows).
    156  */
    157 void sock_vfmterrmsg(char *errbuf, size_t errbuflen, int errcode,
    158     const char *fmt, va_list ap)
    159 {
    160 	if (errbuf == NULL)
    161 		return;
    162 
    163 #ifdef _WIN32
    164 	pcapint_vfmt_errmsg_for_win32_err(errbuf, errbuflen, errcode,
    165 	    fmt, ap);
    166 #else
    167 	pcapint_vfmt_errmsg_for_errno(errbuf, errbuflen, errcode,
    168 	    fmt, ap);
    169 #endif
    170 }
    171 
    172 void sock_fmterrmsg(char *errbuf, size_t errbuflen, int errcode,
    173     const char *fmt, ...)
    174 {
    175 	va_list ap;
    176 
    177 	va_start(ap, fmt);
    178 	sock_vfmterrmsg(errbuf, errbuflen, errcode, fmt, ap);
    179 	va_end(ap);
    180 }
    181 
    182 /*
    183  * Format an error message for the last socket error.
    184  */
    185 void sock_geterrmsg(char *errbuf, size_t errbuflen, const char *fmt, ...)
    186 {
    187 	va_list ap;
    188 
    189 	va_start(ap, fmt);
    190 	sock_vfmterrmsg(errbuf, errbuflen, sock_geterrcode(), fmt, ap);
    191 	va_end(ap);
    192 }
    193 
    194 /*
    195  * Types of error.
    196  *
    197  * These are sorted by how likely they are to be the "underlying" problem,
    198  * so that lower-rated errors for a given address in a given family
    199  * should not overwrite higher-rated errors for another address in that
    200  * family, and higher-rated errors should overwrite lower-rated errors.
    201  */
    202 typedef enum {
    203 	SOCK_CONNERR,		/* connection error */
    204 	SOCK_HOSTERR,		/* host error */
    205 	SOCK_NETERR,		/* network error */
    206 	SOCK_AFNOTSUPERR,	/* address family not supported */
    207 	SOCK_UNKNOWNERR,	/* unknown error */
    208 	SOCK_NOERR		/* no error */
    209 } sock_errtype;
    210 
    211 static sock_errtype sock_geterrtype(int errcode)
    212 {
    213 	switch (errcode) {
    214 
    215 #ifdef _WIN32
    216 	case WSAECONNRESET:
    217 	case WSAECONNABORTED:
    218 	case WSAECONNREFUSED:
    219 #else
    220 	case ECONNRESET:
    221 	case ECONNABORTED:
    222 	case ECONNREFUSED:
    223 #endif
    224 		/*
    225 		 * Connection error; this means the problem is probably
    226 		 * that there's no server set up on the remote machine,
    227 		 * or that it is set up, but it's IPv4-only or IPv6-only
    228 		 * and we're trying the wrong address family.
    229 		 *
    230 		 * These overwrite all other errors, as they indicate
    231 		 * that, even if something else went wrong in another
    232 		 * attempt, this probably wouldn't work even if the
    233 		 * other problems were fixed.
    234 		 */
    235 		return (SOCK_CONNERR);
    236 
    237 #ifdef _WIN32
    238 	case WSAENETUNREACH:
    239 	case WSAETIMEDOUT:
    240 	case WSAEHOSTDOWN:
    241 	case WSAEHOSTUNREACH:
    242 #else
    243 	case ENETUNREACH:
    244 	case ETIMEDOUT:
    245 	case EHOSTDOWN:
    246 	case EHOSTUNREACH:
    247 #endif
    248 		/*
    249 		 * Network errors that could be IPv4-specific, IPv6-
    250 		 * specific, or present with both.
    251 		 *
    252 		 * Don't overwrite connection errors, but overwrite
    253 		 * everything else.
    254 		 */
    255 		return (SOCK_HOSTERR);
    256 
    257 #ifdef _WIN32
    258 	case WSAENETDOWN:
    259 	case WSAENETRESET:
    260 #else
    261 	case ENETDOWN:
    262 	case ENETRESET:
    263 #endif
    264 		/*
    265 		 * Network error; this means we don't know whether
    266 		 * there's a server set up on the remote machine,
    267 		 * and we don't have a reason to believe that IPv6
    268 		 * any worse or better than IPv4.
    269 		 *
    270 		 * These probably indicate a local failure, e.g.
    271 		 * an interface is down.
    272 		 *
    273 		 * Don't overwrite connection errors or host errors,
    274 		 * but overwrite everything else.
    275 		 */
    276 		return (SOCK_NETERR);
    277 
    278 #ifdef _WIN32
    279 	case WSAEAFNOSUPPORT:
    280 #else
    281 	case EAFNOSUPPORT:
    282 #endif
    283 		/*
    284 		 * "Address family not supported" probably means
    285 		 * "No soup^WIPv6 for you!".
    286 		 *
    287 		 * Don't overwrite connection errors, host errors, or
    288 		 * network errors (none of which we should get for this
    289 		 * address family if it's not supported), but overwrite
    290 		 * everything else.
    291 		 */
    292 		return (SOCK_AFNOTSUPERR);
    293 
    294 	default:
    295 		/*
    296 		 * Anything else.
    297 		 *
    298 		 * Don't overwrite any errors.
    299 		 */
    300 		return (SOCK_UNKNOWNERR);
    301 	}
    302 }
    303 
    304 /*
    305  * \brief This function initializes the socket mechanism if it hasn't
    306  * already been initialized or reinitializes it after it has been
    307  * cleaned up.
    308  *
    309  * On UN*Xes, it doesn't need to do anything; on Windows, it needs to
    310  * initialize Winsock.
    311  *
    312  * \param errbuf: a pointer to an user-allocated buffer that will contain
    313  * the complete error message. This buffer has to be at least 'errbuflen'
    314  * in length. It can be NULL; in this case no error message is supplied.
    315  *
    316  * \param errbuflen: length of the buffer that will contains the error.
    317  * The error message cannot be larger than 'errbuflen - 1' because the
    318  * last char is reserved for the string terminator.
    319  *
    320  * \return '0' if everything is fine, '-1' if some errors occurred. The
    321  * error message is returned in the buffer pointed to by 'errbuf' variable.
    322  */
    323 #ifdef _WIN32
    324 int sock_init(char *errbuf, int errbuflen)
    325 {
    326 	if (sockcount == 0)
    327 	{
    328 		WSADATA wsaData;			/* helper variable needed to initialize Winsock */
    329 
    330 		if (WSAStartup(MAKEWORD(WINSOCK_MAJOR_VERSION,
    331 		    WINSOCK_MINOR_VERSION), &wsaData) != 0)
    332 		{
    333 			if (errbuf)
    334 				snprintf(errbuf, errbuflen, "Failed to initialize Winsock\n");
    335 			return -1;
    336 		}
    337 	}
    338 
    339 	sockcount++;
    340 	return 0;
    341 }
    342 #else
    343 int sock_init(char *errbuf _U_, int errbuflen _U_)
    344 {
    345 	/*
    346 	 * Nothing to do on UN*Xes.
    347 	 */
    348 	return 0;
    349 }
    350 #endif
    351 
    352 /*
    353  * \brief This function cleans up the socket mechanism if we have no
    354  * sockets left open.
    355  *
    356  * On UN*Xes, it doesn't need to do anything; on Windows, it needs
    357  * to clean up Winsock.
    358  *
    359  * \return No error values.
    360  */
    361 void sock_cleanup(void)
    362 {
    363 #ifdef _WIN32
    364 	sockcount--;
    365 
    366 	if (sockcount == 0)
    367 		WSACleanup();
    368 #endif
    369 }
    370 
    371 /*
    372  * \brief It checks if the sockaddr variable contains a multicast address.
    373  *
    374  * \return '0' if the address is multicast, '-1' if it is not.
    375  */
    376 static int sock_ismcastaddr(const struct sockaddr *saddr)
    377 {
    378 	if (saddr->sa_family == PF_INET)
    379 	{
    380 		const struct sockaddr_in *saddr4 = (const struct sockaddr_in *) saddr;
    381 		if (IN_MULTICAST(ntohl(saddr4->sin_addr.s_addr))) return 0;
    382 		else return -1;
    383 	}
    384 	else
    385 	{
    386 		const struct sockaddr_in6 *saddr6 = (const struct sockaddr_in6 *) saddr;
    387 		if (IN6_IS_ADDR_MULTICAST(&saddr6->sin6_addr)) return 0;
    388 		else return -1;
    389 	}
    390 }
    391 
    392 struct addr_status {
    393 	struct addrinfo *info;
    394 	int errcode;
    395 	sock_errtype errtype;
    396 };
    397 
    398 /*
    399  * Sort by IPv4 address vs. IPv6 address.
    400  */
    401 static int compare_addrs_to_try_by_address_family(const void *a, const void *b)
    402 {
    403 	const struct addr_status *addr_a = (const struct addr_status *)a;
    404 	const struct addr_status *addr_b = (const struct addr_status *)b;
    405 
    406 	return addr_a->info->ai_family - addr_b->info->ai_family;
    407 }
    408 
    409 /*
    410  * Sort by error type and, within a given error type, by error code and,
    411  * within a given error code, by IPv4 address vs. IPv6 address.
    412  */
    413 static int compare_addrs_to_try_by_status(const void *a, const void *b)
    414 {
    415 	const struct addr_status *addr_a = (const struct addr_status *)a;
    416 	const struct addr_status *addr_b = (const struct addr_status *)b;
    417 
    418 	if (addr_a->errtype == addr_b->errtype)
    419 	{
    420 		if (addr_a->errcode == addr_b->errcode)
    421 		{
    422 			return addr_a->info->ai_family - addr_b->info->ai_family;
    423 		}
    424 		return addr_a->errcode - addr_b->errcode;
    425 	}
    426 
    427 	return addr_a->errtype - addr_b->errtype;
    428 }
    429 
    430 static PCAP_SOCKET sock_create_socket(struct addrinfo *addrinfo, char *errbuf,
    431     int errbuflen)
    432 {
    433 	PCAP_SOCKET sock;
    434 #ifdef SO_NOSIGPIPE
    435 	int on = 1;
    436 #endif
    437 
    438 	sock = socket(addrinfo->ai_family, addrinfo->ai_socktype,
    439 	    addrinfo->ai_protocol);
    440 	if (sock == INVALID_SOCKET)
    441 	{
    442 		sock_geterrmsg(errbuf, errbuflen, "socket() failed");
    443 		return INVALID_SOCKET;
    444 	}
    445 
    446 	/*
    447 	 * Disable SIGPIPE, if we have SO_NOSIGPIPE.  We don't want to
    448 	 * have to deal with signals if the peer closes the connection,
    449 	 * especially in client programs, which may not even be aware that
    450 	 * they're sending to sockets.
    451 	 */
    452 #ifdef SO_NOSIGPIPE
    453 	if (setsockopt(sock, SOL_SOCKET, SO_NOSIGPIPE, (char *)&on,
    454 	    sizeof (int)) == -1)
    455 	{
    456 		sock_geterrmsg(errbuf, errbuflen,
    457 		    "setsockopt(SO_NOSIGPIPE) failed");
    458 		closesocket(sock);
    459 		return INVALID_SOCKET;
    460 	}
    461 #endif
    462 	return sock;
    463 }
    464 
    465 /*
    466  * \brief It initializes a network connection both from the client and the server side.
    467  *
    468  * In case of a client socket, this function calls socket() and connect().
    469  * In the meanwhile, it checks for any socket error.
    470  * If an error occurs, it writes the error message into 'errbuf'.
    471  *
    472  * In case of a server socket, the function calls socket(), bind() and listen().
    473  *
    474  * This function is usually preceded by the sock_initaddress().
    475  *
    476  * \param host: for client sockets, the host name to which we're trying
    477  * to connect.
    478  *
    479  * \param addrinfo: pointer to an addrinfo variable which will be used to
    480  * open the socket and such. This variable is the one returned by the previous call to
    481  * sock_initaddress().
    482  *
    483  * \param server: '1' if this is a server socket, '0' otherwise.
    484  *
    485  * \param nconn: number of the connections that are allowed to wait into the listen() call.
    486  * This value has no meanings in case of a client socket.
    487  *
    488  * \param errbuf: a pointer to an user-allocated buffer that will contain the complete
    489  * error message. This buffer has to be at least 'errbuflen' in length.
    490  * It can be NULL; in this case the error cannot be printed.
    491  *
    492  * \param errbuflen: length of the buffer that will contains the error. The error message cannot be
    493  * larger than 'errbuflen - 1' because the last char is reserved for the string terminator.
    494  *
    495  * \return the socket that has been opened (that has to be used in the following sockets calls)
    496  * if everything is fine, INVALID_SOCKET if some errors occurred. The error message is returned
    497  * in the 'errbuf' variable.
    498  */
    499 PCAP_SOCKET sock_open(const char *host, struct addrinfo *addrinfo,
    500     int server, int nconn, char *errbuf, int errbuflen)
    501 {
    502 	PCAP_SOCKET sock;
    503 
    504 	/* This is a server socket */
    505 	if (server)
    506 	{
    507 		int on;
    508 
    509 		/*
    510 		 * Attempt to create the socket.
    511 		 */
    512 		sock = sock_create_socket(addrinfo, errbuf, errbuflen);
    513 		if (sock == INVALID_SOCKET)
    514 		{
    515 			return INVALID_SOCKET;
    516 		}
    517 
    518 		/*
    519 		 * Allow a new server to bind the socket after the old one
    520 		 * exited, even if lingering sockets are still present.
    521 		 *
    522 		 * Don't treat an error as a failure.
    523 		 */
    524 		on = 1;
    525 		(void)setsockopt(sock, SOL_SOCKET, SO_REUSEADDR,
    526 		    (char *)&on, sizeof (on));
    527 
    528 #if defined(IPV6_V6ONLY) || defined(IPV6_BINDV6ONLY)
    529 		/*
    530 		 * Force the use of IPv6-only addresses.
    531 		 *
    532 		 * RFC 3493 indicates that you can support IPv4 on an
    533 		 * IPv6 socket:
    534 		 *
    535 		 *    https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc3493#section-3.7
    536 		 *
    537 		 * and that this is the default behavior.  This means
    538 		 * that if we first create an IPv6 socket bound to the
    539 		 * "any" address, it is, in effect, also bound to the
    540 		 * IPv4 "any" address, so when we create an IPv4 socket
    541 		 * and try to bind it to the IPv4 "any" address, it gets
    542 		 * EADDRINUSE.
    543 		 *
    544 		 * Not all network stacks support IPv4 on IPv6 sockets;
    545 		 * pre-NT 6 Windows stacks don't support it, and the
    546 		 * OpenBSD stack doesn't support it for security reasons
    547 		 * (see the OpenBSD inet6(4) man page).  Therefore, we
    548 		 * don't want to rely on this behavior.
    549 		 *
    550 		 * So we try to disable it, using either the IPV6_V6ONLY
    551 		 * option from RFC 3493:
    552 		 *
    553 		 *    https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc3493#section-5.3
    554 		 *
    555 		 * or the IPV6_BINDV6ONLY option from older UN*Xes.
    556 		 */
    557 #ifndef IPV6_V6ONLY
    558   /* For older systems */
    559   #define IPV6_V6ONLY IPV6_BINDV6ONLY
    560 #endif /* IPV6_V6ONLY */
    561 		if (addrinfo->ai_family == PF_INET6)
    562 		{
    563 			on = 1;
    564 			if (setsockopt(sock, IPPROTO_IPV6, IPV6_V6ONLY,
    565 			    (char *)&on, sizeof (int)) == -1)
    566 			{
    567 				if (errbuf)
    568 					snprintf(errbuf, errbuflen, "setsockopt(IPV6_V6ONLY)");
    569 				closesocket(sock);
    570 				return INVALID_SOCKET;
    571 			}
    572 		}
    573 #endif /* defined(IPV6_V6ONLY) || defined(IPV6_BINDV6ONLY) */
    574 
    575 		/* WARNING: if the address is a mcast one, I should place the proper Win32 code here */
    576 		if (bind(sock, addrinfo->ai_addr, (int) addrinfo->ai_addrlen) != 0)
    577 		{
    578 			sock_geterrmsg(errbuf, errbuflen, "bind() failed");
    579 			closesocket(sock);
    580 			return INVALID_SOCKET;
    581 		}
    582 
    583 		if (addrinfo->ai_socktype == SOCK_STREAM)
    584 			if (listen(sock, nconn) == -1)
    585 			{
    586 				sock_geterrmsg(errbuf, errbuflen,
    587 				    "listen() failed");
    588 				closesocket(sock);
    589 				return INVALID_SOCKET;
    590 			}
    591 
    592 		/* server side ended */
    593 		return sock;
    594 	}
    595 	else	/* we're the client */
    596 	{
    597 		struct addr_status *addrs_to_try;
    598 		struct addrinfo *tempaddrinfo;
    599 		size_t numaddrinfos;
    600 		size_t i;
    601 		int current_af = AF_UNSPEC;
    602 
    603 		/*
    604 		 * We have to loop though all the addrinfos returned.
    605 		 * For instance, we can have both IPv6 and IPv4 addresses,
    606 		 * but the service we're trying to connect to is unavailable
    607 		 * in IPv6, so we have to try in IPv4 as well.
    608 		 *
    609 		 * How many addrinfos do we have?
    610 		 */
    611 		numaddrinfos =  0;
    612 		for (tempaddrinfo = addrinfo; tempaddrinfo != NULL;
    613 		    tempaddrinfo = tempaddrinfo->ai_next)
    614 		{
    615 			numaddrinfos++;
    616 		}
    617 
    618 		if (numaddrinfos == 0)
    619 		{
    620 			snprintf(errbuf, errbuflen,
    621 			    "There are no addresses in the address list");
    622 			return INVALID_SOCKET;
    623 		}
    624 
    625 		/*
    626 		 * Allocate an array of struct addr_status and fill it in.
    627 		 */
    628 		addrs_to_try = calloc(numaddrinfos, sizeof *addrs_to_try);
    629 		if (addrs_to_try == NULL)
    630 		{
    631 			snprintf(errbuf, errbuflen,
    632 			    "Out of memory connecting to %s", host);
    633 			return INVALID_SOCKET;
    634 		}
    635 
    636 		for (tempaddrinfo = addrinfo, i = 0; tempaddrinfo != NULL;
    637 		    tempaddrinfo = tempaddrinfo->ai_next, i++)
    638 		{
    639 			addrs_to_try[i].info = tempaddrinfo;
    640 			addrs_to_try[i].errcode = 0;
    641 			addrs_to_try[i].errtype = SOCK_NOERR;
    642 		}
    643 
    644 		/*
    645 		 * Sort the structures to put the IPv4 addresses before the
    646 		 * IPv6 addresses; we will have to create an IPv4 socket
    647 		 * for the IPv4 addresses and an IPv6 socket for the IPv6
    648 		 * addresses (one of the arguments to socket() is the
    649 		 * address/protocol family to use, and IPv4 and IPv6 are
    650 		 * separate address/protocol families).
    651 		 */
    652 		qsort(addrs_to_try, numaddrinfos, sizeof *addrs_to_try,
    653 		    compare_addrs_to_try_by_address_family);
    654 
    655 		/* Start out with no socket. */
    656 		sock = INVALID_SOCKET;
    657 
    658 		/*
    659 		 * Now try them all.
    660 		 */
    661 		for (i = 0; i < numaddrinfos; i++)
    662 		{
    663 			tempaddrinfo = addrs_to_try[i].info;
    664 #ifdef FUZZING_BUILD_MODE_UNSAFE_FOR_PRODUCTION
    665 			break;
    666 #endif
    667 			/*
    668 			 * If we have a socket, but it's for a
    669 			 * different address family, close it.
    670 			 */
    671 			if (sock != INVALID_SOCKET &&
    672 			    current_af != tempaddrinfo->ai_family)
    673 			{
    674 				closesocket(sock);
    675 				sock = INVALID_SOCKET;
    676 			}
    677 
    678 			/*
    679 			 * If we don't have a socket, open one
    680 			 * for *this* address's address family.
    681 			 */
    682 			if (sock == INVALID_SOCKET)
    683 			{
    684 				sock = sock_create_socket(tempaddrinfo,
    685 				    errbuf, errbuflen);
    686 				if (sock == INVALID_SOCKET)
    687 				{
    688 					free(addrs_to_try);
    689 					return INVALID_SOCKET;
    690 				}
    691 			}
    692 			if (connect(sock, tempaddrinfo->ai_addr, (int) tempaddrinfo->ai_addrlen) == -1)
    693 			{
    694 				addrs_to_try[i].errcode = sock_geterrcode();
    695 				addrs_to_try[i].errtype =
    696 				   sock_geterrtype(addrs_to_try[i].errcode);
    697 			}
    698 			else
    699 				break;
    700 		}
    701 
    702 		/*
    703 		 * Check how we exited from the previous loop.
    704 		 * If tempaddrinfo is equal to NULL, it means that all
    705 		 * the connect() attempts failed.  Construct an
    706 		 * error message.
    707 		 */
    708 		if (i == numaddrinfos)
    709 		{
    710 			int same_error_for_all;
    711 			int first_error;
    712 
    713 			closesocket(sock);
    714 
    715 			/*
    716 			 * Sort the statuses to group together categories
    717 			 * of errors, errors within categories, and
    718 			 * address families within error sets.
    719 			 */
    720 			qsort(addrs_to_try, numaddrinfos, sizeof *addrs_to_try,
    721 			    compare_addrs_to_try_by_status);
    722 
    723 			/*
    724 			 * Are all the errors the same?
    725 			 */
    726 			same_error_for_all = 1;
    727 			first_error = addrs_to_try[0].errcode;
    728 			for (i = 1; i < numaddrinfos; i++)
    729 			{
    730 				if (addrs_to_try[i].errcode != first_error)
    731 				{
    732 					same_error_for_all = 0;
    733 					break;
    734 				}
    735 			}
    736 
    737 			if (same_error_for_all) {
    738 				/*
    739 				 * Yes.  No need to show the IP
    740 				 * addresses.
    741 				 */
    742 				if (addrs_to_try[0].errtype == SOCK_CONNERR) {
    743 					/*
    744 					 * Connection error; note that
    745 					 * the daemon might not be set
    746 					 * up correctly, or set up at all.
    747 					 */
    748 					sock_fmterrmsg(errbuf, errbuflen,
    749 					    addrs_to_try[0].errcode,
    750 					    "Is the server properly installed? Cannot connect to %s",
    751 					    host);
    752 				} else {
    753 					sock_fmterrmsg(errbuf, errbuflen,
    754 					    addrs_to_try[0].errcode,
    755 					    "Cannot connect to %s", host);
    756 				}
    757 			} else {
    758 				/*
    759 				 * Show all the errors and the IP addresses
    760 				 * to which they apply.
    761 				 */
    762 				char *errbufptr;
    763 				size_t bufspaceleft;
    764 				size_t msglen;
    765 
    766 				snprintf(errbuf, errbuflen,
    767 				    "Connect to %s failed: ", host);
    768 
    769 				msglen = strlen(errbuf);
    770 				errbufptr = errbuf + msglen;
    771 				bufspaceleft = errbuflen - msglen;
    772 
    773 				for (i = 0; i < numaddrinfos &&
    774 				    addrs_to_try[i].errcode != SOCK_NOERR;
    775 				    i++)
    776 				{
    777 					/*
    778 					 * Get the string for the address
    779 					 * and port that got this error.
    780 					 */
    781 					sock_getascii_addrport((struct sockaddr_storage *) addrs_to_try[i].info->ai_addr,
    782 					    errbufptr, (int)bufspaceleft,
    783 					    NULL, 0, NI_NUMERICHOST, NULL, 0);
    784 					msglen = strlen(errbuf);
    785 					errbufptr = errbuf + msglen;
    786 					bufspaceleft = errbuflen - msglen;
    787 
    788 					if (i + 1 < numaddrinfos &&
    789 					    addrs_to_try[i + 1].errcode == addrs_to_try[i].errcode)
    790 					{
    791 						/*
    792 						 * There's another error
    793 						 * after this, and it has
    794 						 * the same error code.
    795 						 *
    796 						 * Append a comma, as the
    797 						 * list of addresses with
    798 						 * this error has another
    799 						 * entry.
    800 						 */
    801 						snprintf(errbufptr, bufspaceleft,
    802 						    ", ");
    803 					}
    804 					else
    805 					{
    806 						/*
    807 						 * Either there are no
    808 						 * more errors after this,
    809 						 * or the next error is
    810 						 * different.
    811 						 *
    812 						 * Append a colon and
    813 						 * the message for tis
    814 						 * error, followed by a
    815 						 * comma if there are
    816 						 * more errors.
    817 						 */
    818 						sock_fmterrmsg(errbufptr,
    819 						    bufspaceleft,
    820 						    addrs_to_try[i].errcode,
    821 						    "%s", "");
    822 						msglen = strlen(errbuf);
    823 						errbufptr = errbuf + msglen;
    824 						bufspaceleft = errbuflen - msglen;
    825 
    826 						if (i + 1 < numaddrinfos &&
    827 						    addrs_to_try[i + 1].errcode != SOCK_NOERR)
    828 						{
    829 							/*
    830 							 * More to come.
    831 							 */
    832 							snprintf(errbufptr,
    833 							    bufspaceleft,
    834 							    ", ");
    835 						}
    836 					}
    837 					msglen = strlen(errbuf);
    838 					errbufptr = errbuf + msglen;
    839 					bufspaceleft = errbuflen - msglen;
    840 				}
    841 			}
    842 			free(addrs_to_try);
    843 			return INVALID_SOCKET;
    844 		}
    845 		else
    846 		{
    847 			free(addrs_to_try);
    848 			return sock;
    849 		}
    850 	}
    851 }
    852 
    853 /*
    854  * \brief Closes the present (TCP and UDP) socket connection.
    855  *
    856  * This function sends a shutdown() on the socket in order to disable send() calls
    857  * (while recv() ones are still allowed). Then, it closes the socket.
    858  *
    859  * \param sock: the socket identifier of the connection that has to be closed.
    860  *
    861  * \param errbuf: a pointer to an user-allocated buffer that will contain the complete
    862  * error message. This buffer has to be at least 'errbuflen' in length.
    863  * It can be NULL; in this case the error cannot be printed.
    864  *
    865  * \param errbuflen: length of the buffer that will contains the error. The error message cannot be
    866  * larger than 'errbuflen - 1' because the last char is reserved for the string terminator.
    867  *
    868  * \return '0' if everything is fine, '-1' if some errors occurred. The error message is returned
    869  * in the 'errbuf' variable.
    870  */
    871 int sock_close(PCAP_SOCKET sock, char *errbuf, int errbuflen)
    872 {
    873 	/*
    874 	 * SHUT_WR: subsequent calls to the send function are disallowed.
    875 	 * For TCP sockets, a FIN will be sent after all data is sent and
    876 	 * acknowledged by the Server.
    877 	 */
    878 	if (shutdown(sock, SHUT_WR))
    879 	{
    880 		sock_geterrmsg(errbuf, errbuflen, "shutdown() failed");
    881 		/* close the socket anyway */
    882 		closesocket(sock);
    883 		return -1;
    884 	}
    885 
    886 	closesocket(sock);
    887 	return 0;
    888 }
    889 
    890 /*
    891  * gai_strerror() has some problems:
    892  *
    893  * 1) on Windows, Microsoft explicitly says it's not thread-safe;
    894  * 2) on UN*X, the Single UNIX Specification doesn't say it *is*
    895  *    thread-safe, so an implementation might use a static buffer
    896  *    for unknown error codes;
    897  * 3) the error message for the most likely error, EAI_NONAME, is
    898  *    truly horrible on several platforms ("nodename nor servname
    899  *    provided, or not known"?  It's typically going to be "not
    900  *    known", not "oopsie, I passed null pointers for the host name
    901  *    and service name", not to mention they forgot the "neither");
    902  *
    903  * so we roll our own.
    904  */
    905 static void
    906 get_gai_errstring(char *errbuf, int errbuflen, const char *prefix, int err,
    907     const char *hostname, const char *portname)
    908 {
    909 	char hostport[PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE];
    910 
    911 	if (hostname != NULL && portname != NULL)
    912 		snprintf(hostport, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE, "host and port %s:%s",
    913 		    hostname, portname);
    914 	else if (hostname != NULL)
    915 		snprintf(hostport, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE, "host %s",
    916 		    hostname);
    917 	else if (portname != NULL)
    918 		snprintf(hostport, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE, "port %s",
    919 		    portname);
    920 	else
    921 		snprintf(hostport, PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE, "<no host or port!>");
    922 	switch (err)
    923 	{
    924 #ifdef EAI_ADDRFAMILY
    925 		case EAI_ADDRFAMILY:
    926 			snprintf(errbuf, errbuflen,
    927 			    "%sAddress family for %s not supported",
    928 			    prefix, hostport);
    929 			break;
    930 #endif
    931 
    932 		case EAI_AGAIN:
    933 			snprintf(errbuf, errbuflen,
    934 			    "%s%s could not be resolved at this time",
    935 			    prefix, hostport);
    936 			break;
    937 
    938 		case EAI_BADFLAGS:
    939 			snprintf(errbuf, errbuflen,
    940 			    "%sThe ai_flags parameter for looking up %s had an invalid value",
    941 			    prefix, hostport);
    942 			break;
    943 
    944 		case EAI_FAIL:
    945 			snprintf(errbuf, errbuflen,
    946 			    "%sA non-recoverable error occurred when attempting to resolve %s",
    947 			    prefix, hostport);
    948 			break;
    949 
    950 		case EAI_FAMILY:
    951 			snprintf(errbuf, errbuflen,
    952 			    "%sThe address family for looking up %s was not recognized",
    953 			    prefix, hostport);
    954 			break;
    955 
    956 		case EAI_MEMORY:
    957 			snprintf(errbuf, errbuflen,
    958 			    "%sOut of memory trying to allocate storage when looking up %s",
    959 			    prefix, hostport);
    960 			break;
    961 
    962 		/*
    963 		 * RFC 2553 had both EAI_NODATA and EAI_NONAME.
    964 		 *
    965 		 * RFC 3493 has only EAI_NONAME.
    966 		 *
    967 		 * Some implementations define EAI_NODATA and EAI_NONAME
    968 		 * to the same value, others don't.  If EAI_NODATA is
    969 		 * defined and isn't the same as EAI_NONAME, we handle
    970 		 * EAI_NODATA.
    971 		 */
    972 #if defined(EAI_NODATA) && EAI_NODATA != EAI_NONAME
    973 		case EAI_NODATA:
    974 			snprintf(errbuf, errbuflen,
    975 			    "%sNo address associated with %s",
    976 			    prefix, hostport);
    977 			break;
    978 #endif
    979 
    980 		case EAI_NONAME:
    981 			snprintf(errbuf, errbuflen,
    982 			    "%sThe %s couldn't be resolved",
    983 			    prefix, hostport);
    984 			break;
    985 
    986 		case EAI_SERVICE:
    987 			snprintf(errbuf, errbuflen,
    988 			    "%sThe service value specified when looking up %s as not recognized for the socket type",
    989 			    prefix, hostport);
    990 			break;
    991 
    992 		case EAI_SOCKTYPE:
    993 			snprintf(errbuf, errbuflen,
    994 			    "%sThe socket type specified when looking up %s as not recognized",
    995 			    prefix, hostport);
    996 			break;
    997 
    998 #ifdef EAI_SYSTEM
    999 		case EAI_SYSTEM:
   1000 			/*
   1001 			 * Assumed to be UN*X.
   1002 			 */
   1003 			pcapint_fmt_errmsg_for_errno(errbuf, errbuflen, errno,
   1004 			    "%sAn error occurred when looking up %s",
   1005 			    prefix, hostport);
   1006 			break;
   1007 #endif
   1008 
   1009 #ifdef EAI_BADHINTS
   1010 		case EAI_BADHINTS:
   1011 			snprintf(errbuf, errbuflen,
   1012 			    "%sInvalid value for hints when looking up %s",
   1013 			    prefix, hostport);
   1014 			break;
   1015 #endif
   1016 
   1017 #ifdef EAI_PROTOCOL
   1018 		case EAI_PROTOCOL:
   1019 			snprintf(errbuf, errbuflen,
   1020 			    "%sResolved protocol when looking up %s is unknown",
   1021 			    prefix, hostport);
   1022 			break;
   1023 #endif
   1024 
   1025 #ifdef EAI_OVERFLOW
   1026 		case EAI_OVERFLOW:
   1027 			snprintf(errbuf, errbuflen,
   1028 			    "%sArgument buffer overflow when looking up %s",
   1029 			    prefix, hostport);
   1030 			break;
   1031 #endif
   1032 
   1033 		default:
   1034 			snprintf(errbuf, errbuflen,
   1035 			    "%sgetaddrinfo() error %d when looking up %s",
   1036 			    prefix, err, hostport);
   1037 			break;
   1038 	}
   1039 }
   1040 
   1041 /*
   1042  * \brief Checks that the address, port and flags given are valid and it returns an 'addrinfo' structure.
   1043  *
   1044  * This function basically calls the getaddrinfo() calls, and it performs a set of sanity checks
   1045  * to control that everything is fine (e.g. a TCP socket cannot have a mcast address, and such).
   1046  * If an error occurs, it writes the error message into 'errbuf'.
   1047  *
   1048  * \param host: a pointer to a string identifying the host. It can be
   1049  * a host name, a numeric literal address, or NULL or "" (useful
   1050  * in case of a server socket which has to bind to all addresses).
   1051  *
   1052  * \param port: a pointer to a user-allocated buffer containing the network port to use.
   1053  *
   1054  * \param hints: an addrinfo variable (passed by reference) containing the flags needed to create the
   1055  * addrinfo structure appropriately.
   1056  *
   1057  * \param addrinfo: it represents the true returning value. This is a pointer to an addrinfo variable
   1058  * (passed by reference), which will be allocated by this function and returned back to the caller.
   1059  * This variable will be used in the next sockets calls.
   1060  *
   1061  * \param errbuf: a pointer to an user-allocated buffer that will contain the complete
   1062  * error message. This buffer has to be at least 'errbuflen' in length.
   1063  * It can be NULL; in this case the error cannot be printed.
   1064  *
   1065  * \param errbuflen: length of the buffer that will contains the error. The error message cannot be
   1066  * larger than 'errbuflen - 1' because the last char is reserved for the string terminator.
   1067  *
   1068  * \return a pointer to the first element in a list of addrinfo structures
   1069  * if everything is fine, NULL if some errors occurred. The error message
   1070  * is returned in the 'errbuf' variable.
   1071  *
   1072  * \warning The list of addrinfo structures returned has to be deleted by
   1073  * the programmer by calling freeaddrinfo() when it is no longer needed.
   1074  *
   1075  * \warning This function requires the 'hints' variable as parameter. The semantic of this variable is the same
   1076  * of the one of the corresponding variable used into the standard getaddrinfo() socket function. We suggest
   1077  * the programmer to look at that function in order to set the 'hints' variable appropriately.
   1078  */
   1079 struct addrinfo *sock_initaddress(const char *host, const char *port,
   1080     struct addrinfo *hints, char *errbuf, int errbuflen)
   1081 {
   1082 	struct addrinfo *addrinfo;
   1083 	int retval;
   1084 
   1085 	/*
   1086 	 * We allow both the host and port to be null, but getaddrinfo()
   1087 	 * is not guaranteed to do so; to handle that, if port is null,
   1088 	 * we provide "0" as the port number.
   1089 	 *
   1090 	 * This results in better error messages from get_gai_errstring(),
   1091 	 * as those messages won't talk about a problem with the port if
   1092 	 * no port was specified.
   1093 	 */
   1094 	retval = getaddrinfo(host, port == NULL ? "0" : port, hints, &addrinfo);
   1095 	if (retval != 0)
   1096 	{
   1097 		/*
   1098 		 * That call failed.
   1099 		 * Determine whether the problem is that the host is bad.
   1100 		 */
   1101 		if (errbuf)
   1102 		{
   1103 			if (host != NULL && port != NULL) {
   1104 				/*
   1105 				 * Try with just a host, to distinguish
   1106 				 * between "host is bad" and "port is
   1107 				 * bad".
   1108 				 */
   1109 				int try_retval;
   1110 
   1111 				try_retval = getaddrinfo(host, NULL, hints,
   1112 				    &addrinfo);
   1113 				if (try_retval == 0) {
   1114 					/*
   1115 					 * Worked with just the host,
   1116 					 * so assume the problem is
   1117 					 * with the port.
   1118 					 *
   1119 					 * Free up the address info first.
   1120 					 */
   1121 					freeaddrinfo(addrinfo);
   1122 					get_gai_errstring(errbuf, errbuflen,
   1123 					    "", retval, NULL, port);
   1124 				} else {
   1125 					/*
   1126 					 * Didn't work with just the host,
   1127 					 * so assume the problem is
   1128 					 * with the host; we assume
   1129 					 * the original error indicates
   1130 					 * the underlying problem.
   1131 					 */
   1132 					get_gai_errstring(errbuf, errbuflen,
   1133 					    "", retval, host, NULL);
   1134 				}
   1135 			} else {
   1136 				/*
   1137 				 * Either the host or port was null, so
   1138 				 * there's nothing to determine; report
   1139 				 * the error from the original call.
   1140 				 */
   1141 				get_gai_errstring(errbuf, errbuflen, "",
   1142 				    retval, host, port);
   1143 			}
   1144 		}
   1145 		return NULL;
   1146 	}
   1147 	/*
   1148 	 * \warning SOCKET: I should check all the accept() in order to bind to all addresses in case
   1149 	 * addrinfo has more han one pointers
   1150 	 */
   1151 
   1152 	/*
   1153 	 * This software only supports PF_INET and PF_INET6.
   1154 	 *
   1155 	 * XXX - should we just check that at least *one* address is
   1156 	 * either PF_INET or PF_INET6, and, when using the list,
   1157 	 * ignore all addresses that are neither?  (What, no IPX
   1158 	 * support? :-))
   1159 	 */
   1160 	if ((addrinfo->ai_family != PF_INET) &&
   1161 	    (addrinfo->ai_family != PF_INET6))
   1162 	{
   1163 		if (errbuf)
   1164 			snprintf(errbuf, errbuflen, "getaddrinfo(): socket type not supported");
   1165 		freeaddrinfo(addrinfo);
   1166 		return NULL;
   1167 	}
   1168 
   1169 	/*
   1170 	 * You can't do multicast (or broadcast) TCP.
   1171 	 */
   1172 	if ((addrinfo->ai_socktype == SOCK_STREAM) &&
   1173 	    (sock_ismcastaddr(addrinfo->ai_addr) == 0))
   1174 	{
   1175 		if (errbuf)
   1176 			snprintf(errbuf, errbuflen, "getaddrinfo(): multicast addresses are not valid when using TCP streams");
   1177 		freeaddrinfo(addrinfo);
   1178 		return NULL;
   1179 	}
   1180 
   1181 	return addrinfo;
   1182 }
   1183 
   1184 /*
   1185  * \brief It sends the amount of data contained into 'buffer' on the given socket.
   1186  *
   1187  * This function basically calls the send() socket function and it checks that all
   1188  * the data specified in 'buffer' (of size 'size') will be sent. If an error occurs,
   1189  * it writes the error message into 'errbuf'.
   1190  * In case the socket buffer does not have enough space, it loops until all data
   1191  * has been sent.
   1192  *
   1193  * \param socket: the connected socket currently opened.
   1194  *
   1195  * \param buffer: a char pointer to a user-allocated buffer in which data is contained.
   1196  *
   1197  * \param size: number of bytes that have to be sent.
   1198  *
   1199  * \param errbuf: a pointer to an user-allocated buffer that will contain the complete
   1200  * error message. This buffer has to be at least 'errbuflen' in length.
   1201  * It can be NULL; in this case the error cannot be printed.
   1202  *
   1203  * \param errbuflen: length of the buffer that will contains the error. The error message cannot be
   1204  * larger than 'errbuflen - 1' because the last char is reserved for the string terminator.
   1205  *
   1206  * \return '0' if everything is fine, '-1' if an error other than
   1207  * "connection reset" or "peer has closed the receive side" occurred,
   1208  * '-2' if we got one of those errors.
   1209  * For errors, an error message is returned in the 'errbuf' variable.
   1210  */
   1211 int sock_send(PCAP_SOCKET sock, SSL *ssl _U_NOSSL_, const char *buffer,
   1212     size_t size, char *errbuf, int errbuflen)
   1213 {
   1214 	int remaining;
   1215 	ssize_t nsent;
   1216 
   1217 	if (size > INT_MAX)
   1218 	{
   1219 		if (errbuf)
   1220 		{
   1221 			snprintf(errbuf, errbuflen,
   1222 			    "Can't send more than %u bytes with sock_send",
   1223 			    INT_MAX);
   1224 		}
   1225 		return -1;
   1226 	}
   1227 	remaining = (int)size;
   1228 
   1229 	do {
   1230 #ifdef HAVE_OPENSSL
   1231 		if (ssl) return ssl_send(ssl, buffer, remaining, errbuf, errbuflen);
   1232 #endif
   1233 
   1234 #ifdef FUZZING_BUILD_MODE_UNSAFE_FOR_PRODUCTION
   1235 		nsent = remaining;
   1236 #else
   1237 #ifdef MSG_NOSIGNAL
   1238 		/*
   1239 		 * Send with MSG_NOSIGNAL, so that we don't get SIGPIPE
   1240 		 * on errors on stream-oriented sockets when the other
   1241 		 * end breaks the connection.
   1242 		 * The EPIPE error is still returned.
   1243 		 */
   1244 		nsent = send(sock, buffer, remaining, MSG_NOSIGNAL);
   1245 #else
   1246 		nsent = send(sock, buffer, remaining, 0);
   1247 #endif
   1248 #endif //FUZZING_BUILD_MODE_UNSAFE_FOR_PRODUCTION
   1249 
   1250 		if (nsent == -1)
   1251 		{
   1252 			/*
   1253 			 * If the client closed the connection out from
   1254 			 * under us, there's no need to log that as an
   1255 			 * error.
   1256 			 */
   1257 			int errcode;
   1258 
   1259 #ifdef _WIN32
   1260 			errcode = GetLastError();
   1261 			if (errcode == WSAECONNRESET ||
   1262 			    errcode == WSAECONNABORTED)
   1263 			{
   1264 				/*
   1265 				 * WSAECONNABORTED appears to be the error
   1266 				 * returned in Winsock when you try to send
   1267 				 * on a connection where the peer has closed
   1268 				 * the receive side.
   1269 				 */
   1270 				return -2;
   1271 			}
   1272 			sock_fmterrmsg(errbuf, errbuflen, errcode,
   1273 			    "send() failed");
   1274 #else
   1275 			errcode = errno;
   1276 			if (errcode == ECONNRESET || errcode == EPIPE)
   1277 			{
   1278 				/*
   1279 				 * EPIPE is what's returned on UN*X when
   1280 				 * you try to send on a connection when
   1281 				 * the peer has closed the receive side.
   1282 				 */
   1283 				return -2;
   1284 			}
   1285 			sock_fmterrmsg(errbuf, errbuflen, errcode,
   1286 			    "send() failed");
   1287 #endif
   1288 			return -1;
   1289 		}
   1290 
   1291 		remaining -= nsent;
   1292 		buffer += nsent;
   1293 	} while (remaining != 0);
   1294 
   1295 	return 0;
   1296 }
   1297 
   1298 /*
   1299  * \brief It copies the amount of data contained in 'data' into 'outbuf'.
   1300  * and it checks for buffer overflows.
   1301  *
   1302  * This function basically copies 'size' bytes of data contained in 'data'
   1303  * into 'outbuf', starting at offset 'offset'. Before that, it checks that the
   1304  * resulting buffer will not be larger	than 'totsize'. Finally, it updates
   1305  * the 'offset' variable in order to point to the first empty location of the buffer.
   1306  *
   1307  * In case the function is called with 'checkonly' equal to 1, it does not copy
   1308  * the data into the buffer. It only checks for buffer overflows and it updates the
   1309  * 'offset' variable. This mode can be useful when the buffer already contains the
   1310  * data (maybe because the producer writes directly into the target buffer), so
   1311  * only the buffer overflow check has to be made.
   1312  * In this case, both 'data' and 'outbuf' can be NULL values.
   1313  *
   1314  * This function is useful in case the userland application does not know immediately
   1315  * all the data it has to write into the socket. This function provides a way to create
   1316  * the "stream" step by step, appending the new data to the old one. Then, when all the
   1317  * data has been bufferized, the application can call the sock_send() function.
   1318  *
   1319  * \param data: a void pointer to the data that has to be copied.
   1320  *
   1321  * \param size: number of bytes that have to be copied.
   1322  *
   1323  * \param outbuf: user-allocated buffer (of size 'totsize') into which data
   1324  * has to be copied.
   1325  *
   1326  * \param offset: an index into 'outbuf' which keeps the location of its first
   1327  * empty location.
   1328  *
   1329  * \param totsize: total size of the buffer into which data is being copied.
   1330  *
   1331  * \param checkonly: '1' if we do not want to copy data into the buffer and we
   1332  * want just do a buffer overflow control, '0' if data has to be copied as well.
   1333  *
   1334  * \param errbuf: a pointer to an user-allocated buffer that will contain the complete
   1335  * error message. This buffer has to be at least 'errbuflen' in length.
   1336  * It can be NULL; in this case the error cannot be printed.
   1337  *
   1338  * \param errbuflen: length of the buffer that will contains the error. The error message cannot be
   1339  * larger than 'errbuflen - 1' because the last char is reserved for the string terminator.
   1340  *
   1341  * \return '0' if everything is fine, '-1' if some errors occurred. The error message
   1342  * is returned in the 'errbuf' variable. When the function returns, 'outbuf' will
   1343  * have the new string appended, and 'offset' will keep the length of that buffer.
   1344  * In case of 'checkonly == 1', data is not copied, but 'offset' is updated in any case.
   1345  *
   1346  * \warning This function assumes that the buffer in which data has to be stored is
   1347  * large 'totbuf' bytes.
   1348  *
   1349  * \warning In case of 'checkonly', be carefully to call this function *before* copying
   1350  * the data into the buffer. Otherwise, the control about the buffer overflow is useless.
   1351  */
   1352 int sock_bufferize(const void *data, int size, char *outbuf, int *offset, int totsize, int checkonly, char *errbuf, int errbuflen)
   1353 {
   1354 	if ((*offset + size) > totsize)
   1355 	{
   1356 		if (errbuf)
   1357 			snprintf(errbuf, errbuflen, "Not enough space in the temporary send buffer.");
   1358 		return -1;
   1359 	}
   1360 
   1361 	if (!checkonly)
   1362 		memcpy(outbuf + (*offset), data, size);
   1363 
   1364 	(*offset) += size;
   1365 
   1366 	return 0;
   1367 }
   1368 
   1369 /*
   1370  * \brief It waits on a connected socket and it manages to receive data.
   1371  *
   1372  * This function basically calls the recv() socket function and it checks that no
   1373  * error occurred. If that happens, it writes the error message into 'errbuf'.
   1374  *
   1375  * This function changes its behavior according to the 'receiveall' flag: if we
   1376  * want to receive exactly 'size' byte, it loops on the recv()	until all the requested
   1377  * data is arrived. Otherwise, it returns the data currently available.
   1378  *
   1379  * In case the socket does not have enough data available, it cycles on the recv()
   1380  * until the requested data (of size 'size') is arrived.
   1381  * In this case, it blocks until the number of bytes read is equal to 'size'.
   1382  *
   1383  * \param sock: the connected socket currently opened.
   1384  *
   1385  * \param buffer: a char pointer to a user-allocated buffer in which data has to be stored
   1386  *
   1387  * \param size: size of the allocated buffer. WARNING: this indicates the number of bytes
   1388  * that we are expecting to be read.
   1389  *
   1390  * \param flags:
   1391  *
   1392  *   SOCK_RECEIVALL_XXX:
   1393  *
   1394  *	if SOCK_RECEIVEALL_NO, return as soon as some data is ready
   1395  *	if SOCK_RECEIVALL_YES, wait until 'size' data has been
   1396  *	    received (in case the socket does not have enough data available).
   1397  *
   1398  *   SOCK_EOF_XXX:
   1399  *
   1400  *	if SOCK_EOF_ISNT_ERROR, if the first read returns 0, just return 0,
   1401  *	    and return an error on any subsequent read that returns 0;
   1402  *	if SOCK_EOF_IS_ERROR, if any read returns 0, return an error.
   1403  *
   1404  * \param errbuf: a pointer to an user-allocated buffer that will contain the complete
   1405  * error message. This buffer has to be at least 'errbuflen' in length.
   1406  * It can be NULL; in this case the error cannot be printed.
   1407  *
   1408  * \param errbuflen: length of the buffer that will contains the error. The error message cannot be
   1409  * larger than 'errbuflen - 1' because the last char is reserved for the string terminator.
   1410  *
   1411  * \return the number of bytes read if everything is fine, '-1' if some errors occurred.
   1412  * The error message is returned in the 'errbuf' variable.
   1413  */
   1414 
   1415 int sock_recv(PCAP_SOCKET sock, SSL *ssl _U_NOSSL_, void *buffer, size_t size,
   1416     int flags, char *errbuf, int errbuflen)
   1417 {
   1418 	int recv_flags = 0;
   1419 	char *bufp = buffer;
   1420 	int remaining;
   1421 	ssize_t nread;
   1422 
   1423 	if (size == 0)
   1424 	{
   1425 		return 0;
   1426 	}
   1427 	if (size > INT_MAX)
   1428 	{
   1429 		if (errbuf)
   1430 		{
   1431 			snprintf(errbuf, errbuflen,
   1432 			    "Can't read more than %u bytes with sock_recv",
   1433 			    INT_MAX);
   1434 		}
   1435 		return -1;
   1436 	}
   1437 
   1438 	if (flags & SOCK_MSG_PEEK)
   1439 		recv_flags |= MSG_PEEK;
   1440 
   1441 	bufp = (char *) buffer;
   1442 	remaining = (int) size;
   1443 
   1444 	/*
   1445 	 * We don't use MSG_WAITALL because it's not supported in
   1446 	 * Win32.
   1447 	 */
   1448 	for (;;) {
   1449 #ifdef FUZZING_BUILD_MODE_UNSAFE_FOR_PRODUCTION
   1450 		nread = fuzz_recv(bufp, remaining);
   1451 #elif defined(HAVE_OPENSSL)
   1452 		if (ssl)
   1453 		{
   1454 			/*
   1455 			 * XXX - what about MSG_PEEK?
   1456 			 */
   1457 			nread = ssl_recv(ssl, bufp, remaining, errbuf, errbuflen);
   1458 			if (nread == -2) return -1;
   1459 		}
   1460 		else
   1461 			nread = recv(sock, bufp, remaining, recv_flags);
   1462 #else
   1463 		nread = recv(sock, bufp, remaining, recv_flags);
   1464 #endif
   1465 
   1466 		if (nread == -1)
   1467 		{
   1468 #ifndef _WIN32
   1469 			if (errno == EINTR)
   1470 				return -3;
   1471 #endif
   1472 			sock_geterrmsg(errbuf, errbuflen, "recv() failed");
   1473 			return -1;
   1474 		}
   1475 
   1476 		if (nread == 0)
   1477 		{
   1478 			if ((flags & SOCK_EOF_IS_ERROR) ||
   1479 			    (remaining != (int) size))
   1480 			{
   1481 				/*
   1482 				 * Either we've already read some data,
   1483 				 * or we're always supposed to return
   1484 				 * an error on EOF.
   1485 				 */
   1486 				if (errbuf)
   1487 				{
   1488 					snprintf(errbuf, errbuflen,
   1489 					    "The other host terminated the connection.");
   1490 				}
   1491 				return -1;
   1492 			}
   1493 			else
   1494 				return 0;
   1495 		}
   1496 
   1497 		/*
   1498 		 * Do we want to read the amount requested, or just return
   1499 		 * what we got?
   1500 		 */
   1501 		if (!(flags & SOCK_RECEIVEALL_YES))
   1502 		{
   1503 			/*
   1504 			 * Just return what we got.
   1505 			 */
   1506 			return (int) nread;
   1507 		}
   1508 
   1509 		bufp += nread;
   1510 		remaining -= nread;
   1511 
   1512 		if (remaining == 0)
   1513 			return (int) size;
   1514 	}
   1515 }
   1516 
   1517 /*
   1518  * Receives a datagram from a socket.
   1519  *
   1520  * Returns the size of the datagram on success or -1 on error.
   1521  */
   1522 int sock_recv_dgram(PCAP_SOCKET sock, SSL *ssl _U_NOSSL_, void *buffer,
   1523     size_t size, char *errbuf, int errbuflen)
   1524 {
   1525 	ssize_t nread;
   1526 #ifndef _WIN32
   1527 	struct msghdr message;
   1528 	struct iovec iov;
   1529 #endif
   1530 
   1531 	if (size == 0)
   1532 	{
   1533 		return 0;
   1534 	}
   1535 	if (size > INT_MAX)
   1536 	{
   1537 		if (errbuf)
   1538 		{
   1539 			snprintf(errbuf, errbuflen,
   1540 			    "Can't read more than %u bytes with sock_recv_dgram",
   1541 			    INT_MAX);
   1542 		}
   1543 		return -1;
   1544 	}
   1545 
   1546 #ifdef HAVE_OPENSSL
   1547 	// TODO: DTLS
   1548 	if (ssl)
   1549 	{
   1550 		snprintf(errbuf, errbuflen, "DTLS not implemented yet");
   1551 		return -1;
   1552 	}
   1553 #endif
   1554 
   1555 	/*
   1556 	 * This should be a datagram socket, so we should get the
   1557 	 * entire datagram in one recv() or recvmsg() call, and
   1558 	 * don't need to loop.
   1559 	 */
   1560 #ifdef _WIN32
   1561 	nread = recv(sock, buffer, (int)size, 0);
   1562 	if (nread == SOCKET_ERROR)
   1563 	{
   1564 		/*
   1565 		 * To quote the MSDN documentation for recv(),
   1566 		 * "If the datagram or message is larger than
   1567 		 * the buffer specified, the buffer is filled
   1568 		 * with the first part of the datagram, and recv
   1569 		 * generates the error WSAEMSGSIZE. For unreliable
   1570 		 * protocols (for example, UDP) the excess data is
   1571 		 * lost..."
   1572 		 *
   1573 		 * So if the message is bigger than the buffer
   1574 		 * supplied to us, the excess data is discarded,
   1575 		 * and we'll report an error.
   1576 		 */
   1577 		sock_fmterrmsg(errbuf, errbuflen, sock_geterrcode(),
   1578 		    "recv() failed");
   1579 		return -1;
   1580 	}
   1581 #else /* _WIN32 */
   1582 	/*
   1583 	 * The Single UNIX Specification says that a recv() on
   1584 	 * a socket for a message-oriented protocol will discard
   1585 	 * the excess data.  It does *not* indicate that the
   1586 	 * receive will fail with, for example, EMSGSIZE.
   1587 	 *
   1588 	 * Therefore, we use recvmsg(), which appears to be
   1589 	 * the only way to get a "message truncated" indication
   1590 	 * when receiving a message for a message-oriented
   1591 	 * protocol.
   1592 	 */
   1593 	message.msg_name = NULL;	/* we don't care who it's from */
   1594 	message.msg_namelen = 0;
   1595 	iov.iov_base = buffer;
   1596 	iov.iov_len = size;
   1597 	message.msg_iov = &iov;
   1598 	message.msg_iovlen = 1;
   1599 #ifdef HAVE_STRUCT_MSGHDR_MSG_CONTROL
   1600 	message.msg_control = NULL;	/* we don't care about control information */
   1601 	message.msg_controllen = 0;
   1602 #endif
   1603 #ifdef HAVE_STRUCT_MSGHDR_MSG_FLAGS
   1604 	message.msg_flags = 0;
   1605 #endif
   1606 #ifdef FUZZING_BUILD_MODE_UNSAFE_FOR_PRODUCTION
   1607 	nread = fuzz_recv(buffer, size);
   1608 #else
   1609 	nread = recvmsg(sock, &message, 0);
   1610 #endif
   1611 	if (nread == -1)
   1612 	{
   1613 		if (errno == EINTR)
   1614 			return -3;
   1615 		sock_geterrmsg(errbuf, errbuflen, "recv() failed");
   1616 		return -1;
   1617 	}
   1618 #ifdef HAVE_STRUCT_MSGHDR_MSG_FLAGS
   1619 	/*
   1620 	 * XXX - Solaris supports this, but only if you ask for the
   1621 	 * X/Open version of recvmsg(); should we use that, or will
   1622 	 * that cause other problems?
   1623 	 */
   1624 	if (message.msg_flags & MSG_TRUNC)
   1625 	{
   1626 		/*
   1627 		 * Message was bigger than the specified buffer size.
   1628 		 *
   1629 		 * Report this as an error, as the Microsoft documentation
   1630 		 * implies we'd do in a similar case on Windows.
   1631 		 */
   1632 		snprintf(errbuf, errbuflen, "recv(): Message too long");
   1633 		return -1;
   1634 	}
   1635 #endif /* HAVE_STRUCT_MSGHDR_MSG_FLAGS */
   1636 #endif /* _WIN32 */
   1637 
   1638 	/*
   1639 	 * The size we're reading fits in an int, so the return value
   1640 	 * will fit in an int.
   1641 	 */
   1642 	return (int)nread;
   1643 }
   1644 
   1645 /*
   1646  * \brief It discards N bytes that are currently waiting to be read on the current socket.
   1647  *
   1648  * This function is useful in case we receive a message we cannot understand (e.g.
   1649  * wrong version number when receiving a network packet), so that we have to discard all
   1650  * data before reading a new message.
   1651  *
   1652  * This function will read 'size' bytes from the socket and discard them.
   1653  * It defines an internal buffer in which data will be copied; however, in case
   1654  * this buffer is not large enough, it will cycle in order to read everything as well.
   1655  *
   1656  * \param sock: the connected socket currently opened.
   1657  *
   1658  * \param size: number of bytes that have to be discarded.
   1659  *
   1660  * \param errbuf: a pointer to an user-allocated buffer that will contain the complete
   1661  * error message. This buffer has to be at least 'errbuflen' in length.
   1662  * It can be NULL; in this case the error cannot be printed.
   1663  *
   1664  * \param errbuflen: length of the buffer that will contains the error. The error message cannot be
   1665  * larger than 'errbuflen - 1' because the last char is reserved for the string terminator.
   1666  *
   1667  * \return '0' if everything is fine, '-1' if some errors occurred.
   1668  * The error message is returned in the 'errbuf' variable.
   1669  */
   1670 int sock_discard(PCAP_SOCKET sock, SSL *ssl, int size, char *errbuf,
   1671     int errbuflen)
   1672 {
   1673 #define TEMP_BUF_SIZE 32768
   1674 
   1675 	char buffer[TEMP_BUF_SIZE];		/* network buffer, to be used when the message is discarded */
   1676 
   1677 	/*
   1678 	 * A static allocation avoids the need of a 'malloc()' each time we want to discard a message
   1679 	 * Our feeling is that a buffer if 32KB is enough for most of the application;
   1680 	 * in case this is not enough, the "while" loop discards the message by calling the
   1681 	 * sockrecv() several times.
   1682 	 * We do not want to create a bigger variable because this causes the program to exit on
   1683 	 * some platforms (e.g. BSD)
   1684 	 */
   1685 	while (size > TEMP_BUF_SIZE)
   1686 	{
   1687 		if (sock_recv(sock, ssl, buffer, TEMP_BUF_SIZE, SOCK_RECEIVEALL_YES, errbuf, errbuflen) == -1)
   1688 			return -1;
   1689 
   1690 		size -= TEMP_BUF_SIZE;
   1691 	}
   1692 
   1693 	/*
   1694 	 * If there is still data to be discarded
   1695 	 * In this case, the data can fit into the temporary buffer
   1696 	 */
   1697 	if (size)
   1698 	{
   1699 		if (sock_recv(sock, ssl, buffer, size, SOCK_RECEIVEALL_YES, errbuf, errbuflen) == -1)
   1700 			return -1;
   1701 	}
   1702 
   1703 	return 0;
   1704 }
   1705 
   1706 /*
   1707  * \brief Checks that one host (identified by the sockaddr_storage structure) belongs to an 'allowed list'.
   1708  *
   1709  * This function is useful after an accept() call in order to check if the connecting
   1710  * host is allowed to connect to me. To do that, we have a buffer that keeps the list of the
   1711  * allowed host; this function checks the sockaddr_storage structure of the connecting host
   1712  * against this host list, and it returns '0' is the host is included in this list.
   1713  *
   1714  * \param hostlist: pointer to a string that contains the list of the allowed host.
   1715  *
   1716  * \param sep: a string that keeps the separators used between the hosts (for example the
   1717  * space character) in the host list.
   1718  *
   1719  * \param from: a sockaddr_storage structure, as it is returned by the accept() call.
   1720  *
   1721  * \param errbuf: a pointer to an user-allocated buffer that will contain the complete
   1722  * error message. This buffer has to be at least 'errbuflen' in length.
   1723  * It can be NULL; in this case the error cannot be printed.
   1724  *
   1725  * \param errbuflen: length of the buffer that will contains the error. The error message cannot be
   1726  * larger than 'errbuflen - 1' because the last char is reserved for the string terminator.
   1727  *
   1728  * \return It returns:
   1729  * - '1' if the host list is empty
   1730  * - '0' if the host belongs to the host list (and therefore it is allowed to connect)
   1731  * - '-1' in case the host does not belong to the host list (and therefore it is not allowed to connect
   1732  * - '-2' in case or error. The error message is returned in the 'errbuf' variable.
   1733  */
   1734 int sock_check_hostlist(const char *hostlist, const char *sep, struct sockaddr_storage *from, char *errbuf, int errbuflen)
   1735 {
   1736 	/* checks if the connecting host is among the ones allowed */
   1737 	if ((hostlist) && (hostlist[0]))
   1738 	{
   1739 		char *token;					/* temp, needed to separate items into the hostlist */
   1740 		struct addrinfo *addrinfo, *ai_next;
   1741 		char *temphostlist;
   1742 		char *lasts;
   1743 		int getaddrinfo_failed = 0;
   1744 
   1745 		/*
   1746 		 * The problem is that strtok modifies the original variable by putting '0' at the end of each token
   1747 		 * So, we have to create a new temporary string in which the original content is kept
   1748 		 */
   1749 		temphostlist = strdup(hostlist);
   1750 		if (temphostlist == NULL)
   1751 		{
   1752 			sock_geterrmsg(errbuf, errbuflen,
   1753 			    "sock_check_hostlist(), malloc() failed");
   1754 			return -2;
   1755 		}
   1756 
   1757 		token = pcapint_strtok_r(temphostlist, sep, &lasts);
   1758 
   1759 		/* it avoids a warning in the compilation ('addrinfo used but not initialized') */
   1760 		addrinfo = NULL;
   1761 
   1762 		while (token != NULL)
   1763 		{
   1764 			struct addrinfo hints;
   1765 			int retval;
   1766 
   1767 			addrinfo = NULL;
   1768 			memset(&hints, 0, sizeof(struct addrinfo));
   1769 			hints.ai_family = PF_UNSPEC;
   1770 			hints.ai_socktype = SOCK_STREAM;
   1771 
   1772 			retval = getaddrinfo(token, NULL, &hints, &addrinfo);
   1773 			if (retval != 0)
   1774 			{
   1775 				if (errbuf)
   1776 					get_gai_errstring(errbuf, errbuflen,
   1777 					    "Allowed host list error: ",
   1778 					    retval, token, NULL);
   1779 
   1780 				/*
   1781 				 * Note that at least one call to getaddrinfo()
   1782 				 * failed.
   1783 				 */
   1784 				getaddrinfo_failed = 1;
   1785 
   1786 				/* Get next token */
   1787 				token = pcapint_strtok_r(NULL, sep, &lasts);
   1788 				continue;
   1789 			}
   1790 
   1791 			/* ai_next is required to preserve the content of addrinfo, in order to deallocate it properly */
   1792 			ai_next = addrinfo;
   1793 			while (ai_next)
   1794 			{
   1795 				if (sock_cmpaddr(from, (struct sockaddr_storage *) ai_next->ai_addr) == 0)
   1796 				{
   1797 					free(temphostlist);
   1798 					freeaddrinfo(addrinfo);
   1799 					return 0;
   1800 				}
   1801 
   1802 				/*
   1803 				 * If we are here, it means that the current address does not matches
   1804 				 * Let's try with the next one in the header chain
   1805 				 */
   1806 				ai_next = ai_next->ai_next;
   1807 			}
   1808 
   1809 			freeaddrinfo(addrinfo);
   1810 			addrinfo = NULL;
   1811 
   1812 			/* Get next token */
   1813 			token = pcapint_strtok_r(NULL, sep, &lasts);
   1814 		}
   1815 
   1816 		if (addrinfo)
   1817 		{
   1818 			freeaddrinfo(addrinfo);
   1819 			addrinfo = NULL;
   1820 		}
   1821 
   1822 		free(temphostlist);
   1823 
   1824 		if (getaddrinfo_failed) {
   1825 			/*
   1826 			 * At least one getaddrinfo() call failed;
   1827 			 * treat that as an error, so rpcapd knows
   1828 			 * that it should log it locally as well
   1829 			 * as telling the client about it.
   1830 			 */
   1831 			return -2;
   1832 		} else {
   1833 			/*
   1834 			 * All getaddrinfo() calls succeeded, but
   1835 			 * the host wasn't in the list.
   1836 			 */
   1837 			if (errbuf)
   1838 				snprintf(errbuf, errbuflen, "The host is not in the allowed host list. Connection refused.");
   1839 			return -1;
   1840 		}
   1841 	}
   1842 
   1843 	/* No hostlist, so we have to return 'empty list' */
   1844 	return 1;
   1845 }
   1846 
   1847 /*
   1848  * \brief Compares two addresses contained into two sockaddr_storage structures.
   1849  *
   1850  * This function is useful to compare two addresses, given their internal representation,
   1851  * i.e. an sockaddr_storage structure.
   1852  *
   1853  * The two structures do not need to be sockaddr_storage; you can have both 'sockaddr_in' and
   1854  * sockaddr_in6, properly casted in order to be compliant to the function interface.
   1855  *
   1856  * This function will return '0' if the two addresses matches, '-1' if not.
   1857  *
   1858  * \param first: a sockaddr_storage structure, (for example the one that is returned by an
   1859  * accept() call), containing the first address to compare.
   1860  *
   1861  * \param second: a sockaddr_storage structure containing the second address to compare.
   1862  *
   1863  * \return '0' if the addresses are equal, '-1' if they are different.
   1864  */
   1865 int sock_cmpaddr(struct sockaddr_storage *first, struct sockaddr_storage *second)
   1866 {
   1867 	if (first->ss_family == second->ss_family)
   1868 	{
   1869 		if (first->ss_family == AF_INET)
   1870 		{
   1871 			if (memcmp(&(((struct sockaddr_in *) first)->sin_addr),
   1872 				&(((struct sockaddr_in *) second)->sin_addr),
   1873 				sizeof(struct in_addr)) == 0)
   1874 				return 0;
   1875 		}
   1876 		else /* address family is AF_INET6 */
   1877 		{
   1878 			if (memcmp(&(((struct sockaddr_in6 *) first)->sin6_addr),
   1879 				&(((struct sockaddr_in6 *) second)->sin6_addr),
   1880 				sizeof(struct in6_addr)) == 0)
   1881 				return 0;
   1882 		}
   1883 	}
   1884 
   1885 	return -1;
   1886 }
   1887 
   1888 /*
   1889  * \brief It gets the address/port the system picked for this socket (on connected sockets).
   1890  *
   1891  * It is used to return the address and port the server picked for our socket on the local machine.
   1892  * It works only on:
   1893  * - connected sockets
   1894  * - server sockets
   1895  *
   1896  * On unconnected client sockets it does not work because the system dynamically chooses a port
   1897  * only when the socket calls a send() call.
   1898  *
   1899  * \param sock: the connected socket currently opened.
   1900  *
   1901  * \param address: it contains the address that will be returned by the function. This buffer
   1902  * must be properly allocated by the user. The address can be either literal or numeric depending
   1903  * on the value of 'Flags'.
   1904  *
   1905  * \param addrlen: the length of the 'address' buffer.
   1906  *
   1907  * \param port: it contains the port that will be returned by the function. This buffer
   1908  * must be properly allocated by the user.
   1909  *
   1910  * \param portlen: the length of the 'port' buffer.
   1911  *
   1912  * \param flags: a set of flags (the ones defined into the getnameinfo() standard socket function)
   1913  * that determine if the resulting address must be in numeric / literal form, and so on.
   1914  *
   1915  * \param errbuf: a pointer to an user-allocated buffer that will contain the complete
   1916  * error message. This buffer has to be at least 'errbuflen' in length.
   1917  * It can be NULL; in this case the error cannot be printed.
   1918  *
   1919  * \param errbuflen: length of the buffer that will contains the error. The error message cannot be
   1920  * larger than 'errbuflen - 1' because the last char is reserved for the string terminator.
   1921  *
   1922  * \return It returns '-1' if this function succeeds, '0' otherwise.
   1923  * The address and port corresponding are returned back in the buffers 'address' and 'port'.
   1924  * In any case, the returned strings are '0' terminated.
   1925  *
   1926  * \warning If the socket is using a connectionless protocol, the address may not be available
   1927  * until I/O occurs on the socket.
   1928  */
   1929 int sock_getmyinfo(PCAP_SOCKET sock, char *address, int addrlen, char *port,
   1930     int portlen, int flags, char *errbuf, int errbuflen)
   1931 {
   1932 	struct sockaddr_storage mysockaddr;
   1933 	socklen_t sockaddrlen;
   1934 
   1935 
   1936 	sockaddrlen = sizeof(struct sockaddr_storage);
   1937 
   1938 	if (getsockname(sock, (struct sockaddr *) &mysockaddr, &sockaddrlen) == -1)
   1939 	{
   1940 		sock_geterrmsg(errbuf, errbuflen, "getsockname() failed");
   1941 		return 0;
   1942 	}
   1943 
   1944 	/* Returns the numeric address of the host that triggered the error */
   1945 	return sock_getascii_addrport(&mysockaddr, address, addrlen, port, portlen, flags, errbuf, errbuflen);
   1946 }
   1947 
   1948 /*
   1949  * \brief It retrieves two strings containing the address and the port of a given 'sockaddr' variable.
   1950  *
   1951  * This function is basically an extended version of the inet_ntop(), which does not exist in
   1952  * Winsock because the same result can be obtained by using the getnameinfo().
   1953  * However, differently from inet_ntop(), this function is able to return also literal names
   1954  * (e.g. 'localhost') dependently from the 'Flags' parameter.
   1955  *
   1956  * The function accepts a sockaddr_storage variable (which can be returned by several functions
   1957  * like bind(), connect(), accept(), and more) and it transforms its content into a 'human'
   1958  * form. So, for instance, it is able to translate an hex address (stored in binary form) into
   1959  * a standard IPv6 address like "::1".
   1960  *
   1961  * The behavior of this function depends on the parameters we have in the 'Flags' variable, which
   1962  * are the ones allowed in the standard getnameinfo() socket function.
   1963  *
   1964  * \param sockaddr: a 'sockaddr_in' or 'sockaddr_in6' structure containing the address that
   1965  * need to be translated from network form into the presentation form. This structure must be
   1966  * zero-ed prior using it, and the address family field must be filled with the proper value.
   1967  * The user must cast any 'sockaddr_in' or 'sockaddr_in6' structures to 'sockaddr_storage' before
   1968  * calling this function.
   1969  *
   1970  * \param address: it contains the address that will be returned by the function. This buffer
   1971  * must be properly allocated by the user. The address can be either literal or numeric depending
   1972  * on the value of 'Flags'.
   1973  *
   1974  * \param addrlen: the length of the 'address' buffer.
   1975  *
   1976  * \param port: it contains the port that will be returned by the function. This buffer
   1977  * must be properly allocated by the user.
   1978  *
   1979  * \param portlen: the length of the 'port' buffer.
   1980  *
   1981  * \param flags: a set of flags (the ones defined into the getnameinfo() standard socket function)
   1982  * that determine if the resulting address must be in numeric / literal form, and so on.
   1983  *
   1984  * \param errbuf: a pointer to an user-allocated buffer that will contain the complete
   1985  * error message. This buffer has to be at least 'errbuflen' in length.
   1986  * It can be NULL; in this case the error cannot be printed.
   1987  *
   1988  * \param errbuflen: length of the buffer that will contains the error. The error message cannot be
   1989  * larger than 'errbuflen - 1' because the last char is reserved for the string terminator.
   1990  *
   1991  * \return It returns '-1' if this function succeeds, '0' otherwise.
   1992  * The address and port corresponding to the given SockAddr are returned back in the buffers 'address'
   1993  * and 'port'.
   1994  * In any case, the returned strings are '0' terminated.
   1995  */
   1996 int sock_getascii_addrport(const struct sockaddr_storage *sockaddr, char *address, int addrlen, char *port, int portlen, int flags, char *errbuf, size_t errbuflen)
   1997 {
   1998 	socklen_t sockaddrlen;
   1999 	int retval;					/* Variable that keeps the return value; */
   2000 
   2001 	retval = -1;
   2002 
   2003 #ifdef _WIN32
   2004 	if (sockaddr->ss_family == AF_INET)
   2005 		sockaddrlen = sizeof(struct sockaddr_in);
   2006 	else
   2007 		sockaddrlen = sizeof(struct sockaddr_in6);
   2008 #else
   2009 	sockaddrlen = sizeof(struct sockaddr_storage);
   2010 #endif
   2011 
   2012 	if ((flags & NI_NUMERICHOST) == 0)	/* Check that we want literal names */
   2013 	{
   2014 		if ((sockaddr->ss_family == AF_INET6) &&
   2015 			(memcmp(&((const struct sockaddr_in6 *) sockaddr)->sin6_addr, "\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0", sizeof(struct in6_addr)) == 0))
   2016 		{
   2017 			if (address)
   2018 				pcapint_strlcpy(address, SOCKET_NAME_NULL_DAD, addrlen);
   2019 			return retval;
   2020 		}
   2021 	}
   2022 
   2023 	if (getnameinfo((const struct sockaddr *) sockaddr, sockaddrlen, address, addrlen, port, portlen, flags) != 0)
   2024 	{
   2025 		/* If the user wants to receive an error message */
   2026 		if (errbuf)
   2027 		{
   2028 			sock_geterrmsg(errbuf, errbuflen,
   2029 			    "getnameinfo() failed");
   2030 			errbuf[errbuflen - 1] = 0;
   2031 		}
   2032 
   2033 		if (address)
   2034 		{
   2035 			pcapint_strlcpy(address, SOCKET_NO_NAME_AVAILABLE, addrlen);
   2036 			address[addrlen - 1] = 0;
   2037 		}
   2038 
   2039 		if (port)
   2040 		{
   2041 			pcapint_strlcpy(port, SOCKET_NO_PORT_AVAILABLE, portlen);
   2042 			port[portlen - 1] = 0;
   2043 		}
   2044 
   2045 		retval = 0;
   2046 	}
   2047 
   2048 	return retval;
   2049 }
   2050 
   2051 /*
   2052  * \brief It translates an address from the 'presentation' form into the 'network' form.
   2053  *
   2054  * This function basically replaces inet_pton(), which does not exist in Winsock because
   2055  * the same result can be obtained by using the getaddrinfo().
   2056  * An additional advantage is that 'Address' can be both a numeric address (e.g. '127.0.0.1',
   2057  * like in inet_pton() ) and a literal name (e.g. 'localhost').
   2058  *
   2059  * This function does the reverse job of sock_getascii_addrport().
   2060  *
   2061  * \param address: a zero-terminated string which contains the name you have to
   2062  * translate. The name can be either literal (e.g. 'localhost') or numeric (e.g. '::1').
   2063  *
   2064  * \param sockaddr: a user-allocated sockaddr_storage structure which will contains the
   2065  * 'network' form of the requested address.
   2066  *
   2067  * \param addr_family: a constant which can assume the following values:
   2068  * - 'AF_INET' if we want to ping an IPv4 host
   2069  * - 'AF_INET6' if we want to ping an IPv6 host
   2070  * - 'AF_UNSPEC' if we do not have preferences about the protocol used to ping the host
   2071  *
   2072  * \param errbuf: a pointer to an user-allocated buffer that will contain the complete
   2073  * error message. This buffer has to be at least 'errbuflen' in length.
   2074  * It can be NULL; in this case the error cannot be printed.
   2075  *
   2076  * \param errbuflen: length of the buffer that will contains the error. The error message cannot be
   2077  * larger than 'errbuflen - 1' because the last char is reserved for the string terminator.
   2078  *
   2079  * \return '-1' if the translation succeeded, '-2' if there was some non critical error, '0'
   2080  * otherwise. In case it fails, the content of the SockAddr variable remains unchanged.
   2081  * A 'non critical error' can occur in case the 'Address' is a literal name, which can be mapped
   2082  * to several network addresses (e.g. 'foo.bar.com' => '10.2.2.2' and '10.2.2.3'). In this case
   2083  * the content of the SockAddr parameter will be the address corresponding to the first mapping.
   2084  *
   2085  * \warning The sockaddr_storage structure MUST be allocated by the user.
   2086  */
   2087 int sock_present2network(const char *address, struct sockaddr_storage *sockaddr, int addr_family, char *errbuf, int errbuflen)
   2088 {
   2089 	struct addrinfo *addrinfo;
   2090 	struct addrinfo hints;
   2091 
   2092 	memset(&hints, 0, sizeof(hints));
   2093 
   2094 	hints.ai_family = addr_family;
   2095 
   2096 	addrinfo = sock_initaddress(address, "22222" /* fake port */, &hints,
   2097 	    errbuf, errbuflen);
   2098 	if (addrinfo == NULL)
   2099 		return 0;
   2100 
   2101 	if (addrinfo->ai_family == PF_INET)
   2102 		memcpy(sockaddr, addrinfo->ai_addr, sizeof(struct sockaddr_in));
   2103 	else
   2104 		memcpy(sockaddr, addrinfo->ai_addr, sizeof(struct sockaddr_in6));
   2105 
   2106 	if (addrinfo->ai_next != NULL)
   2107 	{
   2108 		freeaddrinfo(addrinfo);
   2109 
   2110 		if (errbuf)
   2111 			snprintf(errbuf, errbuflen, "More than one socket requested; using the first one returned");
   2112 		return -2;
   2113 	}
   2114 
   2115 	freeaddrinfo(addrinfo);
   2116 	return -1;
   2117 }
   2118