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Print TCP Packet Data

In TCP Communication, when the packet is being transferred from ethernet to network(IP) layer, I want to print the data present in that packet?

I am working on linux.

I got some information that it can be done with the help of linux kernel code i.e in linux NAT Firewall code. But where I will get kernel source code? Where these coding is being done?

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rbm Avatar asked Apr 10 '15 05:04

rbm


1 Answers

How to print data from TCP packets

Below is an example which does exactly what you need: hook received TCP packets and print their payloads. If you want to print some other information from received packet (like binary data), you just need to modify a bit the section under this comment:

/* ----- Print all needed information from received TCP packet ------ */

If you need to trace transmitted packets instead of received ones, you can replace this line:

nfho.hooknum = NF_INET_PRE_ROUTING;

with this one:

nfho.hooknum = NF_INET_POST_ROUTING;

Save next files and issue make command to build kernel module. Then do sudo insmod print_tcp.ko to load it. After that you will be able to see sniffed information using dmesg command. If you want to unload your module, run sudo rmmod print_tcp command.

print_tcp.c:

#include <linux/module.h>
#include <linux/netfilter.h>
#include <linux/netfilter_ipv4.h>
#include <linux/ip.h>
#include <linux/tcp.h>

#define PTCP_WATCH_PORT     80  /* HTTP port */

static struct nf_hook_ops nfho;

static unsigned int ptcp_hook_func(const struct nf_hook_ops *ops,
                                   struct sk_buff *skb,
                                   const struct net_device *in,
                                   const struct net_device *out,
                                   int (*okfn)(struct sk_buff *))
{
    struct iphdr *iph;          /* IPv4 header */
    struct tcphdr *tcph;        /* TCP header */
    u16 sport, dport;           /* Source and destination ports */
    u32 saddr, daddr;           /* Source and destination addresses */
    unsigned char *user_data;   /* TCP data begin pointer */
    unsigned char *tail;        /* TCP data end pointer */
    unsigned char *it;          /* TCP data iterator */

    /* Network packet is empty, seems like some problem occurred. Skip it */
    if (!skb)
        return NF_ACCEPT;

    iph = ip_hdr(skb);          /* get IP header */

    /* Skip if it's not TCP packet */
    if (iph->protocol != IPPROTO_TCP)
        return NF_ACCEPT;

    tcph = tcp_hdr(skb);        /* get TCP header */

    /* Convert network endianness to host endiannes */
    saddr = ntohl(iph->saddr);
    daddr = ntohl(iph->daddr);
    sport = ntohs(tcph->source);
    dport = ntohs(tcph->dest);

    /* Watch only port of interest */
    if (sport != PTCP_WATCH_PORT)
        return NF_ACCEPT;

    /* Calculate pointers for begin and end of TCP packet data */
    user_data = (unsigned char *)((unsigned char *)tcph + (tcph->doff * 4));
    tail = skb_tail_pointer(skb);

    /* ----- Print all needed information from received TCP packet ------ */

    /* Show only HTTP packets */
    if (user_data[0] != 'H' || user_data[1] != 'T' || user_data[2] != 'T' ||
            user_data[3] != 'P') {
        return NF_ACCEPT;
    }

    /* Print packet route */
    pr_debug("print_tcp: %pI4h:%d -> %pI4h:%d\n", &saddr, sport,
                              &daddr, dport);

    /* Print TCP packet data (payload) */
    pr_debug("print_tcp: data:\n");
    for (it = user_data; it != tail; ++it) {
        char c = *(char *)it;

        if (c == '\0')
            break;

        printk("%c", c);
    }
    printk("\n\n");

    return NF_ACCEPT;
}

static int __init ptcp_init(void)
{
    int res;

    nfho.hook = (nf_hookfn *)ptcp_hook_func;    /* hook function */
    nfho.hooknum = NF_INET_PRE_ROUTING;         /* received packets */
    nfho.pf = PF_INET;                          /* IPv4 */
    nfho.priority = NF_IP_PRI_FIRST;            /* max hook priority */

    res = nf_register_hook(&nfho);
    if (res < 0) {
        pr_err("print_tcp: error in nf_register_hook()\n");
        return res;
    }

    pr_debug("print_tcp: loaded\n");
    return 0;
}

static void __exit ptcp_exit(void)
{
    nf_unregister_hook(&nfho);
    pr_debug("print_tcp: unloaded\n");
}

module_init(ptcp_init);
module_exit(ptcp_exit);

MODULE_AUTHOR("Sam Protsenko");
MODULE_DESCRIPTION("Module for printing TCP packet data");
MODULE_LICENSE("GPL");

Makefile:

ifeq ($(KERNELRELEASE),)

KERNELDIR ?= /lib/modules/$(shell uname -r)/build

module:
    $(MAKE) -C $(KERNELDIR) M=$(PWD) C=1 modules

clean:
    $(MAKE) -C $(KERNELDIR) M=$(PWD) C=1 clean

.PHONY: module clean

else

MODULE = print_tcp.o
CFLAGS_$(MODULE) := -DDEBUG
obj-m := $(MODULE)

endif

Explanation

I would recommend you to read this book: [4]. Particularly you are interested in next chapters:

  • chapter 11: Layer 4 Protocols
    • TCP (Transmission Control Protocol)
      • Receiving Packets from the Network Layer (L3) with TCP
      • Sending Packets with TCP
  • chapter 9: Netfilter
    • Netfilter Hooks

How to obtain Linux kernel source code

You can obtain kernel source code using one of ways you prefer:

  1. Vanilla kernel from kernel.org (more specifically from kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git), using Git. E.g. if you need k3.13, it can be done next way:

    $ git clone git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git
    $ cd linux/
    $ git checkout v3.13
    
  2. Kernel sources from your distro. E.g. in Debian you can just install linux-source package (sources will be installed to /usr/src). For Ubuntu see these instructions.


Details:

[1] How to get TCP header from sk_buff

[2] Network flow control in Linux kernel

[3] Writing Loadable Kernel Modules using netfilter hooks

[4] "Linux Kernel Networking: Implementation and Theory" by Rami Rosen

[5] How to access data/payload from tcphdr


UPDATE

where the hook captures packets for this example? In other words, is it upon TCP stack so that I don't need to take care of packet losing, reordering, etc.?

Netfilter hook is called in ip_rcv() function (here), so you are basically working in IPv4 layer (which is Network layer in OSI). So I believe packet loss handling, packet reordering etc. is not handled yet in that netfilter hook.

See next links for insights:

  • Netfilter packet flow
  • Control flow in Linux networking
  • Network data flow through kernel (diagram)

If you want a hook packets upon Transport layer (TCP) -- netfilter is not sufficient for this task, as it works exclusively in Network layer (IPv4).

like image 51
Sam Protsenko Avatar answered Oct 19 '22 19:10

Sam Protsenko