I am a moderate programmer, just getting into network programming.

As an attempt to improve my understanding of networks in general, I am trying to perform several basic HTTP actions from the packet level. My question is this: How might I use a library such as SCAPY to build an HTTP GET request and assosciated items at the packet level? I realise this may sound odd, but I can't seem to find any information detailing it, and my own attempts with PAROS and Ethereal have been... Less than satisfactory.

Thanks for any offered help!

Trimiert

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I would suggest to do this in a lower-level language than Python, like C/C++. – nightcracker Jan 20 '11 at 18:15
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@nightcracker: I strongly disagree. Scapy lets you build and send packets very easily without worrying about any of the stuff a C or C++ programmer needs. If you're interested in how the networks work, Scapy is the way to go. If you want to write an actual server, then maybe a different language is more appropriate. And I say this as someone who writes C code for network devices for a living. – nmichaels Jan 20 '11 at 18:36
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@OP: Listen to what nmichaels says. I'm just a 16 year old with an (unbased) opinion about everything. – nightcracker Jan 20 '11 at 18:48
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2 Answers

up vote 7 down vote accepted

If you want to do a full three-way handshake, you'll have to do it manually.

Start with your SYN packet:

>>> syn = IP(dst='www.google.com') / TCP(dport=80, flags='S')
>>> syn
<IP  frag=0 proto=tcp dst=Net('www.google.com') |<TCP  dport=www flags=S |>>

Then receive the SYN-ACK packet from the server, sr1 works. Then send your HTTP GET request:

>>> syn_ack = sr1(syn)
Begin emission:
Finished to send 1 packets.
*
Received 1 packets, got 1 answers, remaining 0 packets

>>> syn_ack
<IP  version=4L ihl=5L tos=0x0 len=44 id=424 flags= frag=0L ttl=55 proto=tcp chksum=0x2caa src=74.125.226.148 dst=10.20.30.40 options=[] |<TCP  sport=www dport=ftp_data seq=3833491143 ack=1 dataofs=6L reserved=0L flags=SA window=5720 chksum=0xd8b6 urgptr=0 options=[('MSS', 1430)] |<Padding  load='\x00\x00' |>>>

Then set your TCP sequence and ack numbers and send the GET:

getStr = 'GET / HTTP/1.1\r\nHost: www.google.com\r\n\r\n'
request = IP(dst='www.google.com') / TCP(dport=80, sport=syn_ack[TCP].dport,
             seq=syn_ack[TCP].ack, ack=syn_ack[TCP].seq + 1, flags='A') / getStr
reply = sr1(request)
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Thank you very much! By far the best information I've seen yet. And yes, I did plan to do the three-way shake myself, but that was as much as I had. Thank you! – Trimiert Jan 21 '11 at 10:17
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Have you had a look at the tutorial? Just copying and pasting, this looks like it's going to assemble an HTTP request:

>>>  a=Ether()/IP(dst="www.slashdot.org")/TCP()/"GET /index.html HTTP/1.0 \n\n"
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Yes, I did. But just sending it like that didn't seem to work, and doesn't give me any idea of how it works at the packet level. – Trimiert Jan 21 '11 at 10:18
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