Provided your compiler doesn't introduce any alignment blocks within that structure (make sure that CHAR_BIT
is 8 and sizeof(struct ipheader)
is 20), you should just be able to include it in your code as-is, and then add something like:
struct ipheader *iph = (struct ipheader *)blk;
printf ("TTL = %d\n", iph->ip_ttl);
In that code, you will have an IP header pointed to by blk
, which is probably a char*
. Casting it to the correct pointer type will allow you to easily access the fields.
The following complete program shows this in action:
#include <stdio.h>
#include <limits.h>
struct ipheader {
/* 0 */ unsigned char ip_hl:4, ip_v:4;
/* 1 */ unsigned char ip_tos;
/* 2 */ unsigned short int ip_len;
/* 3 */ unsigned short int ip_id;
/* 4 */ unsigned short int ip_off;
/* 5 */ unsigned char ip_ttl;
/* 6 */ unsigned char ip_p;
/* 7 */ unsigned short int ip_sum;
/* 8 */ unsigned int ip_src;
/* 9 */ unsigned int ip_dst;
};
int main (void) {
char blk[] = {
'\x00','\x11','\x22','\x22','\x33','\x33','\x44','\x44',
'\x55','\x66','\x77','\x77','\x88','\x88','\x88','\x88',
'\x99','\x99','\x99','\x99'
};
struct ipheader *iph = (struct ipheader *)(&blk);
printf ("TTL = %x\n", iph->ip_ttl);
printf ("sum = %x\n", iph->ip_sum);
printf ("dst = %x\n", iph->ip_dst);
return 0;
}
Output is, as expected:
TTL = 55
sum = 7777
dst = 99999999