freebsd-skq/usr.sbin/rarpd/rarpd.c

1013 lines
24 KiB
C
Raw Normal View History

Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
/*
* Copyright (c) 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1996
* The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved.
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
*
* Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
* modification, are permitted provided that: (1) source code distributions
* retain the above copyright notice and this paragraph in its entirety, (2)
* distributions including binary code include the above copyright notice and
* this paragraph in its entirety in the documentation or other materials
* provided with the distribution, and (3) all advertising materials mentioning
* features or use of this software display the following acknowledgement:
* ``This product includes software developed by the University of California,
* Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory and its contributors.'' Neither the name of
* the University nor the names of its contributors may be used to endorse
* or promote products derived from this software without specific prior
* written permission.
* THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED ``AS IS'' AND WITHOUT ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED
* WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, WITHOUT LIMITATION, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF
* MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
*/
1997-10-13 11:03:36 +00:00
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
#ifndef lint
1997-10-13 11:03:36 +00:00
static const char copyright[] =
"@(#) Copyright (c) 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1996\n\
The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved.\n";
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
#endif /* not lint */
#ifndef lint
static const char rcsid[] =
1999-08-28 01:35:59 +00:00
"$FreeBSD$";
1997-10-13 11:03:36 +00:00
#endif /* not lint */
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
1995-05-30 03:57:47 +00:00
/*
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
* rarpd - Reverse ARP Daemon
*
* Usage: rarpd -a [ -fsv ] [ hostname ]
* rarpd [ -fsv ] interface [ hostname ]
1995-05-30 03:57:47 +00:00
*
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
* 'hostname' is optional solely for backwards compatibility with Sun's rarpd.
* Currently, the argument is ignored.
*/
#include <sys/param.h>
#include <sys/file.h>
#include <sys/ioctl.h>
#include <sys/socket.h>
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
#include <sys/time.h>
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
#include <net/bpf.h>
#include <net/if.h>
#include <net/if_types.h>
#include <net/if_dl.h>
#include <net/route.h>
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
#include <netinet/in.h>
#include <netinet/if_ether.h>
#include <arpa/inet.h>
#include <errno.h>
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
#include <netdb.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <syslog.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <unistd.h>
#if defined(SUNOS4) || defined(__FreeBSD__) /* XXX */
#define HAVE_DIRENT_H
#endif
#ifdef HAVE_DIRENT_H
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
#include <dirent.h>
#else
#include <sys/dir.h>
#endif
/* Cast a struct sockaddr to a structaddr_in */
#define SATOSIN(sa) ((struct sockaddr_in *)(sa))
#ifndef TFTP_DIR
#define TFTP_DIR "/tftpboot"
#endif
#if BSD >= 199200
#define ARPSECS (20 * 60) /* as per code in netinet/if_ether.c */
#define REVARP_REQUEST ARPOP_REVREQUEST
#define REVARP_REPLY ARPOP_REVREPLY
#endif
#ifndef ETHERTYPE_REVARP
#define ETHERTYPE_REVARP 0x8035
#define REVARP_REQUEST 3
#define REVARP_REPLY 4
#endif
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
/*
* Map field names in ether_arp struct. What a pain in the neck.
*/
#ifdef SUNOS3
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
#undef arp_sha
#undef arp_spa
#undef arp_tha
#undef arp_tpa
#define arp_sha arp_xsha
#define arp_spa arp_xspa
#define arp_tha arp_xtha
#define arp_tpa arp_xtpa
#endif
#ifndef __GNUC__
#define inline
#endif
/*
1995-05-30 03:57:47 +00:00
* The structure for each interface.
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
*/
struct if_info {
struct if_info *ii_next;
int ii_fd; /* BPF file descriptor */
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
u_long ii_ipaddr; /* IP address of this interface */
u_long ii_netmask; /* subnet or net mask */
u_char ii_eaddr[6]; /* Ethernet address of this interface */
char ii_ifname[sizeof(((struct ifreq *)0)->ifr_name) + 1];
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
};
/*
* The list of all interfaces that are being listened to. rarp_loop()
* "selects" on the descriptors in this list.
*/
struct if_info *iflist;
int verbose; /* verbose messages */
int s; /* inet datagram socket */
char *tftp_dir = TFTP_DIR; /* tftp directory */
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
#ifndef __P
#define __P(protos) ()
#endif
#if BSD < 199200
extern char *malloc();
extern void exit();
#endif
extern int ether_ntohost();
void init __P((char *));
void init_one __P((struct ifreq *, char *));
char *intoa __P((u_long));
u_long ipaddrtonetmask __P((u_long));
char *eatoa __P((u_char *));
int rarp_bootable __P((u_long));
void rarp_loop __P((void));
int rarp_open __P((char *));
void rarp_process __P((struct if_info *, u_char *, u_int));
void rarp_reply __P((struct if_info *, struct ether_header *, u_long, u_int));
void update_arptab __P((u_char *, u_long));
1997-10-13 11:03:36 +00:00
static void usage __P((void));
static u_char zero[6];
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
int sflag = 0; /* ignore /tftpboot */
int
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
main(argc, argv)
int argc;
char **argv;
{
int op;
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
char *ifname, *hostname, *name;
int aflag = 0; /* listen on "all" interfaces */
int fflag = 0; /* don't fork */
if ((name = strrchr(argv[0], '/')) != NULL)
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
++name;
else
name = argv[0];
if (*name == '-')
++name;
1995-05-30 03:57:47 +00:00
/*
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
* All error reporting is done through syslogs.
*/
openlog(name, LOG_PID | LOG_CONS, LOG_DAEMON);
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
opterr = 0;
while ((op = getopt(argc, argv, "afsv")) != -1) {
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
switch (op) {
case 'a':
++aflag;
break;
case 'f':
++fflag;
break;
case 's':
++sflag;
break;
case 'v':
++verbose;
break;
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
default:
usage();
/* NOTREACHED */
}
}
ifname = argv[optind++];
hostname = ifname ? argv[optind] : NULL;
if ((aflag && ifname) || (!aflag && ifname == NULL))
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
usage();
if (aflag)
init(NULL);
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
else
init(ifname);
1995-05-30 03:57:47 +00:00
if (!fflag) {
1995-07-18 21:35:32 +00:00
if (daemon(0,0)) {
syslog(LOG_ERR, "cannot fork");
exit(1);
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
}
}
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
rarp_loop();
return(0);
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
}
/*
* Add to the interface list.
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
*/
void
init_one(ifrp, target)
register struct ifreq *ifrp;
register char *target;
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
{
register struct if_info *ii;
register struct sockaddr_dl *ll;
int family;
struct ifreq ifr;
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
family = ifrp->ifr_addr.sa_family;
switch (family) {
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
case AF_INET:
#if BSD >= 199100
case AF_LINK:
#endif
(void)strncpy(ifr.ifr_name, ifrp->ifr_name,
sizeof(ifrp->ifr_name));
if (ioctl(s, SIOCGIFFLAGS, (char *)&ifr) < 0) {
syslog(LOG_ERR,
"SIOCGIFFLAGS: %.*s: %m",
sizeof(ifrp->ifr_name), ifrp->ifr_name);
exit(1);
}
if ((ifr.ifr_flags & IFF_UP) == 0 ||
(ifr.ifr_flags & (IFF_LOOPBACK | IFF_POINTOPOINT)) != 0)
return;
break;
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
default:
return;
}
/* Don't bother going any further if not the target interface */
if (target != NULL &&
strncmp(ifrp->ifr_name, target, sizeof(ifrp->ifr_name)) != 0)
return;
/* Look for interface in list */
for (ii = iflist; ii != NULL; ii = ii->ii_next)
if (strncmp(ifrp->ifr_name, ii->ii_ifname,
sizeof(ifrp->ifr_name)) == 0)
break;
/* Allocate a new one if not found */
if (ii == NULL) {
ii = (struct if_info *)malloc(sizeof(*ii));
if (ii == NULL) {
syslog(LOG_ERR, "malloc: %m");
exit(1);
}
bzero(ii, sizeof(*ii));
ii->ii_fd = -1;
(void)strncpy(ii->ii_ifname, ifrp->ifr_name,
sizeof(ifrp->ifr_name));
ii->ii_ifname[sizeof(ii->ii_ifname) - 1] = '\0';
ii->ii_next = iflist;
iflist = ii;
}
switch (family) {
case AF_INET:
if (ioctl(s, SIOCGIFADDR, (char *)&ifr) < 0) {
syslog(LOG_ERR, "ipaddr SIOCGIFADDR: %s: %m",
ii->ii_ifname);
exit(1);
}
ii->ii_ipaddr = SATOSIN(&ifr.ifr_addr)->sin_addr.s_addr;
if (ioctl(s, SIOCGIFNETMASK, (char *)&ifr) < 0) {
syslog(LOG_ERR, "SIOCGIFNETMASK: %m");
exit(1);
}
ii->ii_netmask = SATOSIN(&ifr.ifr_addr)->sin_addr.s_addr;
if (ii->ii_netmask == 0)
ii->ii_netmask = ipaddrtonetmask(ii->ii_ipaddr);
if (ii->ii_fd < 0) {
ii->ii_fd = rarp_open(ii->ii_ifname);
#if BSD < 199100
/* Use BPF descriptor to get ethernet address. */
if (ioctl(ii->ii_fd, SIOCGIFADDR, (char *)&ifr) < 0) {
syslog(LOG_ERR, "eaddr SIOCGIFADDR: %s: %m",
ii->ii_ifname);
exit(1);
}
bcopy(&ifr.ifr_addr.sa_data[0], ii->ii_eaddr, 6);
#endif
}
break;
#if BSD >= 199100
case AF_LINK:
ll = (struct sockaddr_dl *)&ifrp->ifr_addr;
if (ll->sdl_type == IFT_ETHER)
bcopy(LLADDR(ll), ii->ii_eaddr, 6);
break;
#endif
}
}
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
/*
* Initialize all "candidate" interfaces that are in the system
* configuration list. A "candidate" is up, not loopback and not
* point to point.
*/
void
init(target)
char *target;
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
{
register int n;
register struct ifreq *ifrp, *ifend;
register struct if_info *ii, *nii, *lii;
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
struct ifconf ifc;
struct ifreq ibuf[16];
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
if ((s = socket(AF_INET, SOCK_DGRAM, 0)) < 0) {
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
syslog(LOG_ERR, "socket: %m");
exit(1);
}
ifc.ifc_len = sizeof ibuf;
ifc.ifc_buf = (caddr_t)ibuf;
if (ioctl(s, SIOCGIFCONF, (char *)&ifc) < 0 ||
(u_int)ifc.ifc_len < sizeof(struct ifreq)) {
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
syslog(LOG_ERR, "SIOCGIFCONF: %m");
exit(1);
}
ifrp = ibuf;
ifend = (struct ifreq *)((char *)ibuf + ifc.ifc_len);
while (ifrp < ifend) {
init_one(ifrp, target);
#if BSD >= 199100
n = ifrp->ifr_addr.sa_len + sizeof(ifrp->ifr_name);
if (n < sizeof(*ifrp))
n = sizeof(*ifrp);
ifrp = (struct ifreq *)((char *)ifrp + n);
#else
++ifrp;
#endif
}
/* Throw away incomplete interfaces */
lii = NULL;
for (ii = iflist; ii != NULL; ii = nii) {
nii = ii->ii_next;
if (ii->ii_ipaddr == 0 ||
bcmp(ii->ii_eaddr, zero, 6) == 0) {
if (lii == NULL)
iflist = nii;
else
lii->ii_next = nii;
if (ii->ii_fd >= 0)
close(ii->ii_fd);
free(ii);
continue;
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
}
lii = ii;
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
}
/* Verbose stuff */
if (verbose)
for (ii = iflist; ii != NULL; ii = ii->ii_next)
syslog(LOG_DEBUG, "%s %s 0x%08x %s",
ii->ii_ifname, intoa(ntohl(ii->ii_ipaddr)),
ntohl(ii->ii_netmask), eatoa(ii->ii_eaddr));
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
}
1997-10-13 11:03:36 +00:00
static void
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
usage()
{
(void)fprintf(stderr, "usage: rarpd [-afsv] [interface]\n");
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
exit(1);
}
static int
bpf_open()
{
int fd;
int n = 0;
char device[sizeof "/dev/bpf000"];
/*
1995-05-30 03:57:47 +00:00
* Go through all the minors and find one that isn't in use.
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
*/
do {
(void)sprintf(device, "/dev/bpf%d", n++);
fd = open(device, O_RDWR);
} while (fd < 0 && errno == EBUSY);
if (fd < 0) {
syslog(LOG_ERR, "%s: %m", device);
exit(1);
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
}
return fd;
}
/*
* Open a BPF file and attach it to the interface named 'device'.
* Set immediate mode, and set a filter that accepts only RARP requests.
*/
int
rarp_open(device)
char *device;
{
int fd;
struct ifreq ifr;
u_int dlt;
int immediate;
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
static struct bpf_insn insns[] = {
BPF_STMT(BPF_LD|BPF_H|BPF_ABS, 12),
BPF_JUMP(BPF_JMP|BPF_JEQ|BPF_K, ETHERTYPE_REVARP, 0, 3),
BPF_STMT(BPF_LD|BPF_H|BPF_ABS, 20),
BPF_JUMP(BPF_JMP|BPF_JEQ|BPF_K, REVARP_REQUEST, 0, 1),
BPF_STMT(BPF_RET|BPF_K, sizeof(struct ether_arp) +
sizeof(struct ether_header)),
BPF_STMT(BPF_RET|BPF_K, 0),
};
static struct bpf_program filter = {
sizeof insns / sizeof(insns[0]),
insns
};
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
fd = bpf_open();
1995-05-30 03:57:47 +00:00
/*
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
* Set immediate mode so packets are processed as they arrive.
*/
immediate = 1;
if (ioctl(fd, BIOCIMMEDIATE, &immediate) < 0) {
syslog(LOG_ERR, "BIOCIMMEDIATE: %m");
exit(1);
}
(void)strncpy(ifr.ifr_name, device, sizeof ifr.ifr_name);
if (ioctl(fd, BIOCSETIF, (caddr_t)&ifr) < 0) {
syslog(LOG_ERR, "BIOCSETIF: %m");
exit(1);
}
/*
* Check that the data link layer is an Ethernet; this code won't
* work with anything else.
*/
if (ioctl(fd, BIOCGDLT, (caddr_t)&dlt) < 0) {
syslog(LOG_ERR, "BIOCGDLT: %m");
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
exit(1);
}
if (dlt != DLT_EN10MB) {
syslog(LOG_ERR, "%s is not an ethernet", device);
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
exit(1);
}
/*
* Set filter program.
*/
if (ioctl(fd, BIOCSETF, (caddr_t)&filter) < 0) {
syslog(LOG_ERR, "BIOCSETF: %m");
exit(1);
}
return fd;
}
/*
* Perform various sanity checks on the RARP request packet. Return
* false on failure and log the reason.
*/
static int
rarp_check(p, len)
u_char *p;
u_int len;
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
{
struct ether_header *ep = (struct ether_header *)p;
struct ether_arp *ap = (struct ether_arp *)(p + sizeof(*ep));
if (len < sizeof(*ep) + sizeof(*ap)) {
syslog(LOG_ERR, "truncated request, got %d, expected %d",
len, sizeof(*ep) + sizeof(*ap));
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
return 0;
}
/*
* XXX This test might be better off broken out...
*/
if (ntohs(ep->ether_type) != ETHERTYPE_REVARP ||
ntohs(ap->arp_hrd) != ARPHRD_ETHER ||
ntohs(ap->arp_op) != REVARP_REQUEST ||
ntohs(ap->arp_pro) != ETHERTYPE_IP ||
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
ap->arp_hln != 6 || ap->arp_pln != 4) {
syslog(LOG_DEBUG, "request fails sanity check");
return 0;
}
if (bcmp((char *)&ep->ether_shost, (char *)&ap->arp_sha, 6) != 0) {
syslog(LOG_DEBUG, "ether/arp sender address mismatch");
return 0;
}
if (bcmp((char *)&ap->arp_sha, (char *)&ap->arp_tha, 6) != 0) {
syslog(LOG_DEBUG, "ether/arp target address mismatch");
return 0;
}
return 1;
}
#ifndef FD_SETSIZE
#define FD_SET(n, fdp) ((fdp)->fds_bits[0] |= (1 << (n)))
#define FD_ISSET(n, fdp) ((fdp)->fds_bits[0] & (1 << (n)))
#define FD_ZERO(fdp) ((fdp)->fds_bits[0] = 0)
#endif
/*
1995-05-30 03:57:47 +00:00
* Loop indefinitely listening for RARP requests on the
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
* interfaces in 'iflist'.
*/
void
rarp_loop()
{
u_char *buf, *bp, *ep;
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
int cc, fd;
fd_set fds, listeners;
int bufsize, maxfd = 0;
struct if_info *ii;
if (iflist == NULL) {
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
syslog(LOG_ERR, "no interfaces");
exit(1);
}
if (ioctl(iflist->ii_fd, BIOCGBLEN, (caddr_t)&bufsize) < 0) {
syslog(LOG_ERR, "BIOCGBLEN: %m");
exit(1);
}
buf = (u_char *)malloc((unsigned)bufsize);
if (buf == NULL) {
syslog(LOG_ERR, "malloc: %m");
exit(1);
}
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
while (1) {
/*
* Find the highest numbered file descriptor for select().
* Initialize the set of descriptors to listen to.
*/
FD_ZERO(&fds);
for (ii = iflist; ii != NULL; ii = ii->ii_next) {
FD_SET(ii->ii_fd, &fds);
if (ii->ii_fd > maxfd)
maxfd = ii->ii_fd;
}
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
listeners = fds;
if (select(maxfd + 1, &listeners, NULL, NULL, NULL) < 0) {
/* Don't choke when we get ptraced */
if (errno == EINTR)
continue;
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
syslog(LOG_ERR, "select: %m");
exit(1);
}
for (ii = iflist; ii != NULL; ii = ii->ii_next) {
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
fd = ii->ii_fd;
if (!FD_ISSET(fd, &listeners))
continue;
again:
cc = read(fd, (char *)buf, bufsize);
/* Don't choke when we get ptraced */
if (cc < 0 && errno == EINTR)
goto again;
#if defined(SUNOS3) || defined(SUNOS4)
/*
* Due to a SunOS bug, after 2^31 bytes, the
* file offset overflows and read fails with
* EINVAL. The lseek() to 0 will fix things.
*/
if (cc < 0) {
if (errno == EINVAL &&
(long)(tell(fd) + bufsize) < 0) {
(void)lseek(fd, 0, 0);
goto again;
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
}
syslog(LOG_ERR, "read: %m");
exit(1);
}
#endif
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
/* Loop through the packet(s) */
#define bhp ((struct bpf_hdr *)bp)
bp = buf;
ep = bp + cc;
while (bp < ep) {
register u_int caplen, hdrlen;
caplen = bhp->bh_caplen;
hdrlen = bhp->bh_hdrlen;
if (rarp_check(bp + hdrlen, caplen))
rarp_process(ii, bp + hdrlen, caplen);
bp += BPF_WORDALIGN(hdrlen + caplen);
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
}
}
}
#undef bhp
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
}
/*
* True if this server can boot the host whose IP address is 'addr'.
* This check is made by looking in the tftp directory for the
* configuration file.
*/
int
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
rarp_bootable(addr)
u_long addr;
{
#ifdef HAVE_DIRENT_H
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
register struct dirent *dent;
#else
register struct direct *dent;
#endif
register DIR *d;
char ipname[9];
static DIR *dd = NULL;
(void)sprintf(ipname, "%08X", (unsigned int )ntohl(addr));
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
/*
* If directory is already open, rewind it. Otherwise, open it.
*/
if ((d = dd) != NULL)
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
rewinddir(d);
else {
if (chdir(tftp_dir) == -1) {
syslog(LOG_ERR, "chdir: %s: %m", tftp_dir);
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
exit(1);
}
d = opendir(".");
if (d == NULL) {
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
syslog(LOG_ERR, "opendir: %m");
exit(1);
}
dd = d;
}
while ((dent = readdir(d)) != NULL)
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
if (strncmp(dent->d_name, ipname, 8) == 0)
return 1;
return 0;
}
/*
* Given a list of IP addresses, 'alist', return the first address that
* is on network 'net'; 'netmask' is a mask indicating the network portion
* of the address.
*/
u_long
choose_ipaddr(alist, net, netmask)
u_long **alist;
u_long net;
u_long netmask;
{
for (; *alist; ++alist)
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
if ((**alist & netmask) == net)
return **alist;
return 0;
}
/*
* Answer the RARP request in 'pkt', on the interface 'ii'. 'pkt' has
* already been checked for validity. The reply is overlaid on the request.
*/
void
rarp_process(ii, pkt, len)
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
struct if_info *ii;
u_char *pkt;
u_int len;
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
{
struct ether_header *ep;
struct hostent *hp;
u_long target_ipaddr;
char ename[256];
ep = (struct ether_header *)pkt;
/* should this be arp_tha? */
if (ether_ntohost(ename, &ep->ether_shost) != 0) {
syslog(LOG_ERR, "cannot map %s to name",
eatoa(ep->ether_shost));
return;
}
if ((hp = gethostbyname(ename)) == NULL) {
syslog(LOG_ERR, "cannot map %s to IP address", ename);
return;
}
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
/*
* Choose correct address from list.
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
*/
if (hp->h_addrtype != AF_INET) {
syslog(LOG_ERR, "cannot handle non IP addresses for %s",
ename);
return;
}
target_ipaddr = choose_ipaddr((u_long **)hp->h_addr_list,
ii->ii_ipaddr & ii->ii_netmask,
ii->ii_netmask);
if (target_ipaddr == 0) {
syslog(LOG_ERR, "cannot find %s on net %s",
ename, intoa(ntohl(ii->ii_ipaddr & ii->ii_netmask)));
return;
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
}
if (sflag || rarp_bootable(target_ipaddr))
rarp_reply(ii, ep, target_ipaddr, len);
else if (verbose > 1)
syslog(LOG_INFO, "%s %s at %s DENIED (not bootable)",
ii->ii_ifname,
eatoa(ep->ether_shost),
intoa(ntohl(target_ipaddr)));
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
}
/*
* Poke the kernel arp tables with the ethernet/ip address combinataion
* given. When processing a reply, we must do this so that the booting
* host (i.e. the guy running rarpd), won't try to ARP for the hardware
* address of the guy being booted (he cannot answer the ARP).
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
*/
#if BSD >= 199200
static struct sockaddr_inarp sin_inarp = {
sizeof(struct sockaddr_inarp), AF_INET
};
static struct sockaddr_dl sin_dl = {
sizeof(struct sockaddr_dl), AF_LINK, 0, IFT_ETHER, 0, 6
};
static struct {
struct rt_msghdr rthdr;
char rtspace[512];
} rtmsg;
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
void
update_arptab(ep, ipaddr)
u_char *ep;
u_long ipaddr;
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
{
register int cc;
register struct sockaddr_inarp *ar, *ar2;
register struct sockaddr_dl *ll, *ll2;
register struct rt_msghdr *rt;
register int xtype, xindex;
static pid_t pid;
int r;
static seq;
r = socket(PF_ROUTE, SOCK_RAW, 0);
if (r < 0) {
syslog(LOG_ERR, "raw route socket: %m");
exit(1);
}
pid = getpid();
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
ar = &sin_inarp;
ar->sin_addr.s_addr = ipaddr;
ll = &sin_dl;
bcopy(ep, LLADDR(ll), 6);
/* Get the type and interface index */
rt = &rtmsg.rthdr;
bzero(rt, sizeof(rtmsg));
rt->rtm_version = RTM_VERSION;
rt->rtm_addrs = RTA_DST;
rt->rtm_type = RTM_GET;
rt->rtm_seq = ++seq;
ar2 = (struct sockaddr_inarp *)rtmsg.rtspace;
bcopy(ar, ar2, sizeof(*ar));
rt->rtm_msglen = sizeof(*rt) + sizeof(*ar);
errno = 0;
if (write(r, rt, rt->rtm_msglen) < 0 && errno != ESRCH) {
syslog(LOG_ERR, "rtmsg get write: %m");
close(r);
return;
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
}
do {
cc = read(r, rt, sizeof(rtmsg));
} while (cc > 0 && (rt->rtm_seq != seq || rt->rtm_pid != pid));
if (cc < 0) {
syslog(LOG_ERR, "rtmsg get read: %m");
close(r);
return;
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
}
ll2 = (struct sockaddr_dl *)((u_char *)ar2 + ar2->sin_len);
if (ll2->sdl_family != AF_LINK) {
/*
* XXX I think this means the ip address is not on a
* directly connected network (the family is AF_INET in
* this case).
*/
syslog(LOG_ERR, "bogus link family (%d) wrong net for %08X?\n",
ll2->sdl_family, ipaddr);
close(r);
return;
}
xtype = ll2->sdl_type;
xindex = ll2->sdl_index;
/* Set the new arp entry */
bzero(rt, sizeof(rtmsg));
rt->rtm_version = RTM_VERSION;
rt->rtm_addrs = RTA_DST | RTA_GATEWAY;
rt->rtm_inits = RTV_EXPIRE;
rt->rtm_rmx.rmx_expire = time(0) + ARPSECS;
rt->rtm_flags = RTF_HOST | RTF_STATIC;
rt->rtm_type = RTM_ADD;
rt->rtm_seq = ++seq;
bcopy(ar, ar2, sizeof(*ar));
ll2 = (struct sockaddr_dl *)((u_char *)ar2 + sizeof(*ar2));
bcopy(ll, ll2, sizeof(*ll));
ll2->sdl_type = xtype;
ll2->sdl_index = xindex;
rt->rtm_msglen = sizeof(*rt) + sizeof(*ar2) + sizeof(*ll2);
errno = 0;
if (write(r, rt, rt->rtm_msglen) < 0 && errno != EEXIST) {
syslog(LOG_ERR, "rtmsg add write: %m");
close(r);
return;
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
}
do {
cc = read(r, rt, sizeof(rtmsg));
} while (cc > 0 && (rt->rtm_seq != seq || rt->rtm_pid != pid));
close(r);
if (cc < 0) {
syslog(LOG_ERR, "rtmsg add read: %m");
return;
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
}
}
#else
void
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
update_arptab(ep, ipaddr)
u_char *ep;
u_long ipaddr;
{
struct arpreq request;
struct sockaddr_in *sin;
request.arp_flags = 0;
sin = (struct sockaddr_in *)&request.arp_pa;
sin->sin_family = AF_INET;
sin->sin_addr.s_addr = ipaddr;
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
request.arp_ha.sa_family = AF_UNSPEC;
bcopy((char *)ep, (char *)request.arp_ha.sa_data, 6);
if (ioctl(s, SIOCSARP, (caddr_t)&request) < 0)
syslog(LOG_ERR, "SIOCSARP: %m");
}
#endif
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
/*
* Build a reverse ARP packet and sent it out on the interface.
* 'ep' points to a valid REVARP_REQUEST. The REVARP_REPLY is built
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
* on top of the request, then written to the network.
*
* RFC 903 defines the ether_arp fields as follows. The following comments
* are taken (more or less) straight from this document.
*
* REVARP_REQUEST
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
*
* arp_sha is the hardware address of the sender of the packet.
* arp_spa is undefined.
* arp_tha is the 'target' hardware address.
* In the case where the sender wishes to determine his own
* protocol address, this, like arp_sha, will be the hardware
* address of the sender.
* arp_tpa is undefined.
*
* REVARP_REPLY
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
*
* arp_sha is the hardware address of the responder (the sender of the
* reply packet).
* arp_spa is the protocol address of the responder (see the note below).
* arp_tha is the hardware address of the target, and should be the same as
* that which was given in the request.
* arp_tpa is the protocol address of the target, that is, the desired address.
1995-05-30 03:57:47 +00:00
*
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
* Note that the requirement that arp_spa be filled in with the responder's
1995-05-30 03:57:47 +00:00
* protocol is purely for convenience. For instance, if a system were to use
* both ARP and RARP, then the inclusion of the valid protocol-hardware
* address pair (arp_spa, arp_sha) may eliminate the need for a subsequent
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
* ARP request.
*/
void
rarp_reply(ii, ep, ipaddr, len)
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
struct if_info *ii;
struct ether_header *ep;
u_long ipaddr;
u_int len;
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
{
int n;
struct ether_arp *ap = (struct ether_arp *)(ep + 1);
update_arptab((u_char *)&ap->arp_sha, ipaddr);
/*
* Build the rarp reply by modifying the rarp request in place.
*/
ap->arp_op = htons(REVARP_REPLY);
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
#ifdef BROKEN_BPF
ep->ether_type = ETHERTYPE_REVARP;
#endif
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
bcopy((char *)&ap->arp_sha, (char *)&ep->ether_dhost, 6);
bcopy((char *)ii->ii_eaddr, (char *)&ep->ether_shost, 6);
bcopy((char *)ii->ii_eaddr, (char *)&ap->arp_sha, 6);
bcopy((char *)&ipaddr, (char *)ap->arp_tpa, 4);
/* Target hardware is unchanged. */
bcopy((char *)&ii->ii_ipaddr, (char *)ap->arp_spa, 4);
/* Zero possible garbage after packet. */
bzero((char *)ep + (sizeof(*ep) + sizeof(*ap)),
len - (sizeof(*ep) + sizeof(*ap)));
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
n = write(ii->ii_fd, (char *)ep, len);
if (n != len)
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
syslog(LOG_ERR, "write: only %d of %d bytes written", n, len);
if (verbose)
syslog(LOG_INFO, "%s %s at %s REPLIED", ii->ii_ifname,
eatoa(ap->arp_tha),
intoa(ntohl(ipaddr)));
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
}
/*
* Get the netmask of an IP address. This routine is used if
* SIOCGIFNETMASK doesn't work.
*/
u_long
ipaddrtonetmask(addr)
u_long addr;
{
addr = ntohl(addr);
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
if (IN_CLASSA(addr))
return htonl(IN_CLASSA_NET);
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
if (IN_CLASSB(addr))
return htonl(IN_CLASSB_NET);
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
if (IN_CLASSC(addr))
return htonl(IN_CLASSC_NET);
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
syslog(LOG_DEBUG, "unknown IP address class: %08X", addr);
return htonl(0xffffffff);
Obtained from: An old BPF release packaged with the tcpdump-2.0 source code. "Yes Virginia, there is a rarpd." (Before anyone asks, this *not* the rarpd from NetBSD. It did come from the same place as theirs, however.) This is a port of the rarpd program included with the tcpdump-2.0 source code (which I finally unearthed after scrounging around some of the darker corners of the Internet). It's as close to the original as I could keep it except for the following changes: - The original program was based on an older version of the Berkeley Packet Filter which used different filter programming instructions. Fortunately, an updated RARP packet filter is available right in the BPF man page so this was easy to fix. - The old code didn't know how to deal with variable length addresses in ifreq buffers. This has been fixed. - Some byte order weirdness had to be fixed. The sanity checks in rarp_check() needed some htons()es, and the rarp_reply() function needed to properly set the ether_type field in the ethernet header to ETHERTYPE_REVARP before transmitting the packet, otherwise the bytes in ether_type would wind up reversed. It is important to note that using htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP) will not work. This is odd, because the NetBSD rarpd uses htons(ETHERTYPE_REVARP). (Praise be to tcpdump: I would never have been able to track this silliness down without it.) - The update_arptab() function has been castrated. It depends on SIOCSARP which has been deprecated in 4.4BSD. The NetBSD people don't seem to be using this function either. It wouldn't be too hard to replace this with equivalent code from arp.c, but it might not be necessary. - I put together an ether_ntohost() support function that allows both local (/etc/ethers) and NIS lookups. This stuff should go in libc at some point, but nothing else seems to need it for now, so it can wait a while. As you may have guessed, you need to have the Berkeley Packet Filter in your kernel in order to use this program. The good news is that together with the recently added bootparamd, you can use finally use a FreeBSD box to boot Sun boxes over the network. (This was my whole motivation for getting this stuff to work: I have this one subnet that has a whole bunch of Sun3 X-terminals on it with only two Sun4 workstations, both of which are locked in peoples' offices. If those two machines crash (and they do every so often) then none of the X-terms will boot. Now I can use a spare PC that I have as a boot server. :)
1995-03-02 06:41:40 +00:00
}
/*
* A faster replacement for inet_ntoa().
*/
char *
intoa(addr)
u_long addr;
{
register char *cp;
register u_int byte;
register int n;
static char buf[sizeof(".xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx")];
cp = &buf[sizeof buf];
*--cp = '\0';
n = 4;
do {
byte = addr & 0xff;
*--cp = byte % 10 + '0';
byte /= 10;
if (byte > 0) {
*--cp = byte % 10 + '0';
byte /= 10;
if (byte > 0)
*--cp = byte + '0';
}
*--cp = '.';
addr >>= 8;
} while (--n > 0);
return cp + 1;
}
char *
eatoa(ea)
register u_char *ea;
{
static char buf[sizeof("xx:xx:xx:xx:xx:xx")];
(void)sprintf(buf, "%x:%x:%x:%x:%x:%x",
ea[0], ea[1], ea[2], ea[3], ea[4], ea[5]);
return (buf);
}