2

I have a c++ application in which I am starting another process(wireshark) something like following.

   if (fp == NULL){
    fp = popen(processpath, "r"); //processpath is the process I want to start
    if (!fp){
        throw std::invalid_argument("Cannot start process");        
    }
    fprintf(fp, d_msg);//d_msg is the input I want to provide to process 
} else if(fp != NULL){
    fprintf(fp, d_msg);
}

The problem is when I execute my c++ application, it does start the wireshark but with error End of File on pipe magic during open

what should I do to avoid that?

Also I tried using mkfifo to create a named pipe and execute it. I used something like this:

   if (fp == NULL){
    system("mkfifo /tmp/mine.pcap");
    fp = popen("wireshark -k -i /tmp/mine.pcap", "r");
    if (!fp){
        dout << "Cannot start wireshark"<<std::endl;
        throw std::invalid_argument("Cannot start wireshark");      
    }
    input = fopen("/tmp/mine.pcap", "wb");
    fprintf(input , d_msg);
    fclose(input);
} else if(fp != NULL){
    input = fopen("/tmp/mine.pcap", "wb");
    fprintf(input , d_msg);
    fclose(input);
}

But that too didn't work. With this I get following error:

The file "/tmp/wireshark_mine.pcap_20130730012654_ndbFzk" is a capture for a network type that Wireshark doesn't support

Any help would be appreciated.

Thank you very much.

6
  • You've seen that you opened the pipe with "r", i.e. for reading instead of writing?
    – arne
    Jul 31, 2013 at 9:10
  • You open the pipe for reading and fprintf something to it.
    – urzeit
    Jul 31, 2013 at 9:10
  • 1
    "You open the pipe for reading and fprintf something to it." Not if you're piping to a named pipe on which Wireshark is capturing, you don't, as you have to write a pcap file or a pcap-ng file to Wireshark, and neither of those are text files.
    – user862787
    Jul 31, 2013 at 9:40
  • Thanks everyone for the input. Doesnt "r" makes one end of pipe readable and another end writable? May be I understood it wrong. @GuyHarris: Actually I have pcap headers in my c++ application which I wish to pass to wireshark directly. So should I create a pcap file(with the header etc) and then do the mkfifp and use it to write the packets?
    – WiData
    Jul 31, 2013 at 9:51
  • 1
    "Doesnt "r" makes one end of pipe readable and another end writable?" Yes, but the end you get from popen() will only be readable, not writable. If you open with "w", you get the writable end.
    – user862787
    Jul 31, 2013 at 18:57

1 Answer 1

2

The problem is when I execute my c++ application, it does start the wireshark but with error End of File on pipe magic during open

what should I do to avoid that?

You should write a pcap file or a pcap-ng file to the pipe, rather than fprintfing something.

Both of those file formats are binary. If you're constructing your own packets, you will have to construct and write to the pipe a valid pcap file header or several valid pcap-ng blocks (Section Header Block and at least one Interface Description Block) before you can write any packets, and then, for each packet, you will have to write a per-packet pcap header or the beginning and end of a pcap-ng Enhanced Packet Block before (and, for an Enhanced Block, after) the raw packet data. If you're just sending an existing file to Wireshark, you will need to read raw bytes from the file and send those raw bytes down the pipe.

8
  • Clear Enough. I am constructing valid pcap-headers and pcap-file-header both with all the details. and I am providing each of them. Then also I am having the same issue. May be I will check it again and ask again here, is that fine?
    – WiData
    Jul 31, 2013 at 10:00
  • 1
    Radiotap header? Then d_link must be 127; if it's not 127, that won't work. Also, make sure all the fields in the structures have the appropriate size; do not, for example, use long or unsigned long for sizes, as those might be 64-bit on 64-bit systems.
    – user862787
    Jul 31, 2013 at 18:56
  • 1
    fp = popen("wireshark -k -i -", "r"); should be fp = popen("wireshark -k -i -", "w");, as you're trying to write to Wireshark, not read from Wireshark (if you want to read decrypted packets from a pipe, use TShark, not Wireshark).
    – user862787
    Aug 1, 2013 at 16:37
  • 1
    d_msg shouldn't be a char *, as what you write on the pipe to Wireshark are NOT text characters, they're binary bytes. It should be a uint8_t, if those are available in the version of C++ you're using. You should write it with fwrite(), NOT fprintf(), as it's NOT a format string or other form of text.
    – user862787
    Aug 1, 2013 at 16:40
  • 1
    What you got was probably Frame 5 too long (NNN bytes), for some value of "NNN". "NNN" is what dumpcap read as the "captured length" of the packet in the per-packet header (hdr->incl_len), and it must be <= 65535. If it's a bit larger, you need to write smaller packets; if it's a lot larger, it might be that you're writing the packet header wrong.
    – user862787
    Aug 4, 2013 at 18:57

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