At 10:49 AM 1/3/01 +0100, Dick Gooris wrote:
>I am working on an analyzer section and made some major progress
>- thanks to the README files and lot of examples :-)
>
>Almost the first message I received was about 3036 octets long. This
>means that the message I get is Malformed. I received the first 1500
>octets which I believe is the standard ethernet boundary. The remaining
>1536 octets are coming in two extra separate messages. The last two
>message are not recognizable in the way I did with the first.
Yes, this is a problem ... and always will be so ... Your dissector needs
to be robust enough to work in the face of missing or duplicate
frames/packets/segments.
>Therefore I need to work with sequence numbers and so, which require
>some
>new procedures or more coding in the area of the ethereal body, rather
>than programming on packet-sapphire.c/h files.
>
>I guess I am not the first one who cannot (fully) decode a message
>longer
>than 1500 octets. Are there any functions/procedures available or
>examples
>from existing packet-*.c files. ( I had difficuties to find these, or
>overlooked ? )
There are no procedure/functions for dealing with this as yet, and while
there has been much discussion, I am firmly of the view that there is no
good solution to the problem, because there will always be cases where data
is missing, out of order, duplicated, etc.
>There is no necessity to solve this in realtime. There should be an easy
>way to access the tvbuff of the next associated message, or to
>concatenate
>then beforehand, because the TCP/IP header indicates limitted data in
>the
>data section.
>
>Hope you can help.
>
>Many thanks in advance,
>
> - Dick Gooris The Netherlands
>
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Regards
-------
Richard Sharpe, sharpe@xxxxxxxxxx
Samba (Team member, www.samba.org), Ethereal (Team member, www.zing.org)
Contributing author, SAMS Teach Yourself Samba in 24 Hours
Author, Special Edition, Using Samba