On Jan 31, 2015, at 1:46 PM, wsgd <wsgd@xxxxxxx> wrote:
> I want to call a sub-dissector many times.
> I know the total size of my data.
> I do NOT know the size to give to the sub-dissector.
> The sub-dissector will know (by itself) the size to dissect.
>
> The corresponding scheme from the parent dissector point of view :
>
> |-----------------------------------Packet data (total size is known)--------------------------------|
> |--Parent dissector--|--sub-dissector 1 (size is unknown)--|...|--sub-dissector N (size is unknown)--|
>
>
> The sub-dissector will be called by dissector_try_uint (or call_dissector or eventually dissector_try_heuristic).
>
>
> Question 1)
> Is it possible to call dissector_try_uint (or ...) with more data than needed by the sub-dissector ?
Yes.
> Question 2)
> How to know how many bytes have been dissected by the sub-dissector ?
Have the sub-dissector be a "new-style" dissector, which is expected to return the number of bytes of data that it dissected.
For "old-style" dissectors, which do not return a value, the dissector-calling mechanism will return tvb_captured_length(), so it appears as if the entire tvbuff handed to it was dissected.
dissector_try_uint(), call_dissector(), etc. return the return value of a new-style dissector or the tvbuff captured length of an old-style dissector.
Note that a new-style dissector can return 0, which is assumed to mean "this isn't a packet for my protocol".
This does *not* work for heuristic dissectors. Perhaps heuristic dissectors could be changed to return a bytes-dissected value rather than a Boolean, with 0 meaning "I dissected nothing because this isn't a packet for my protocol"; I think there were cases for non-heuristic dissectors where nothing is dissected but the dissection was valid, e.g. an RPC-like protocol where a reply has no data at the RPC layer but has data at the layer of the particular RPC protocol being used, and I think I discovered that when trying to make all dissectors new-style dissectors, but I can't remember what I found.
For a heuristic dissector, however, the dissector has to look at *some* data in order to determine whether the packet is for its protocol or not, so presumably it could never return 0 if the packet is for its protocol.