ipv4

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Published: Jun 19, 2019 License: Apache-2.0, BSD-3-Clause Imports: 12 Imported by: 0

Documentation

Overview

Package ipv4 implements IP-level socket options for the Internet Protocol version 4.

The package provides IP-level socket options that allow manipulation of IPv4 facilities.

The IPv4 protocol and basic host requirements for IPv4 are defined in RFC 791 and RFC 1122. Host extensions for multicasting and socket interface extensions for multicast source filters are defined in RFC 1112 and RFC 3678. IGMPv1, IGMPv2 and IGMPv3 are defined in RFC 1112, RFC 2236 and RFC 3376. Source-specific multicast is defined in RFC 4607.

Unicasting

The options for unicasting are available for net.TCPConn, net.UDPConn and net.IPConn which are created as network connections that use the IPv4 transport. When a single TCP connection carrying a data flow of multiple packets needs to indicate the flow is important, Conn is used to set the type-of-service field on the IPv4 header for each packet.

ln, err := net.Listen("tcp4", "0.0.0.0:1024")
if err != nil {
	// error handling
}
defer ln.Close()
for {
	c, err := ln.Accept()
	if err != nil {
		// error handling
	}
	go func(c net.Conn) {
		defer c.Close()

The outgoing packets will be labeled DiffServ assured forwarding class 1 low drop precedence, known as AF11 packets.

		if err := ipv4.NewConn(c).SetTOS(0x28); err != nil {
			// error handling
		}
		if _, err := c.Write(data); err != nil {
			// error handling
		}
	}(c)
}

Multicasting

The options for multicasting are available for net.UDPConn and net.IPconn which are created as network connections that use the IPv4 transport. A few network facilities must be prepared before you begin multicasting, at a minimum joining network interfaces and multicast groups.

en0, err := net.InterfaceByName("en0")
if err != nil {
	// error handling
}
en1, err := net.InterfaceByIndex(911)
if err != nil {
	// error handling
}
group := net.IPv4(224, 0, 0, 250)

First, an application listens to an appropriate address with an appropriate service port.

c, err := net.ListenPacket("udp4", "0.0.0.0:1024")
if err != nil {
	// error handling
}
defer c.Close()

Second, the application joins multicast groups, starts listening to the groups on the specified network interfaces. Note that the service port for transport layer protocol does not matter with this operation as joining groups affects only network and link layer protocols, such as IPv4 and Ethernet.

p := ipv4.NewPacketConn(c)
if err := p.JoinGroup(en0, &net.UDPAddr{IP: group}); err != nil {
	// error handling
}
if err := p.JoinGroup(en1, &net.UDPAddr{IP: group}); err != nil {
	// error handling
}

The application might set per packet control message transmissions between the protocol stack within the kernel. When the application needs a destination address on an incoming packet, SetControlMessage of PacketConn is used to enable control message transmissions.

if err := p.SetControlMessage(ipv4.FlagDst, true); err != nil {
	// error handling
}

The application could identify whether the received packets are of interest by using the control message that contains the destination address of the received packet.

b := make([]byte, 1500)
for {
	n, cm, src, err := p.ReadFrom(b)
	if err != nil {
		// error handling
	}
	if cm.Dst.IsMulticast() {
		if cm.Dst.Equal(group) {
			// joined group, do something
		} else {
			// unknown group, discard
			continue
		}
	}

The application can also send both unicast and multicast packets.

	p.SetTOS(0x0)
	p.SetTTL(16)
	if _, err := p.WriteTo(data, nil, src); err != nil {
		// error handling
	}
	dst := &net.UDPAddr{IP: group, Port: 1024}
	for _, ifi := range []*net.Interface{en0, en1} {
		if err := p.SetMulticastInterface(ifi); err != nil {
			// error handling
		}
		p.SetMulticastTTL(2)
		if _, err := p.WriteTo(data, nil, dst); err != nil {
			// error handling
		}
	}
}

More multicasting

An application that uses PacketConn or RawConn may join multiple multicast groups. For example, a UDP listener with port 1024 might join two different groups across over two different network interfaces by using:

c, err := net.ListenPacket("udp4", "0.0.0.0:1024")
if err != nil {
	// error handling
}
defer c.Close()
p := ipv4.NewPacketConn(c)
if err := p.JoinGroup(en0, &net.UDPAddr{IP: net.IPv4(224, 0, 0, 248)}); err != nil {
	// error handling
}
if err := p.JoinGroup(en0, &net.UDPAddr{IP: net.IPv4(224, 0, 0, 249)}); err != nil {
	// error handling
}
if err := p.JoinGroup(en1, &net.UDPAddr{IP: net.IPv4(224, 0, 0, 249)}); err != nil {
	// error handling
}

It is possible for multiple UDP listeners that listen on the same UDP port to join the same multicast group. The net package will provide a socket that listens to a wildcard address with reusable UDP port when an appropriate multicast address prefix is passed to the net.ListenPacket or net.ListenUDP.

c1, err := net.ListenPacket("udp4", "224.0.0.0:1024")
if err != nil {
	// error handling
}
defer c1.Close()
c2, err := net.ListenPacket("udp4", "224.0.0.0:1024")
if err != nil {
	// error handling
}
defer c2.Close()
p1 := ipv4.NewPacketConn(c1)
if err := p1.JoinGroup(en0, &net.UDPAddr{IP: net.IPv4(224, 0, 0, 248)}); err != nil {
	// error handling
}
p2 := ipv4.NewPacketConn(c2)
if err := p2.JoinGroup(en0, &net.UDPAddr{IP: net.IPv4(224, 0, 0, 248)}); err != nil {
	// error handling
}

Also it is possible for the application to leave or rejoin a multicast group on the network interface.

if err := p.LeaveGroup(en0, &net.UDPAddr{IP: net.IPv4(224, 0, 0, 248)}); err != nil {
	// error handling
}
if err := p.JoinGroup(en0, &net.UDPAddr{IP: net.IPv4(224, 0, 0, 250)}); err != nil {
	// error handling
}

Source-specific multicasting

An application that uses PacketConn or RawConn on IGMPv3 supported platform is able to join source-specific multicast groups. The application may use JoinSourceSpecificGroup and LeaveSourceSpecificGroup for the operation known as "include" mode,

ssmgroup := net.UDPAddr{IP: net.IPv4(232, 7, 8, 9)}
ssmsource := net.UDPAddr{IP: net.IPv4(192, 168, 0, 1)})
if err := p.JoinSourceSpecificGroup(en0, &ssmgroup, &ssmsource); err != nil {
	// error handling
}
if err := p.LeaveSourceSpecificGroup(en0, &ssmgroup, &ssmsource); err != nil {
	// error handling
}

or JoinGroup, ExcludeSourceSpecificGroup, IncludeSourceSpecificGroup and LeaveGroup for the operation known as "exclude" mode.

exclsource := net.UDPAddr{IP: net.IPv4(192, 168, 0, 254)}
if err := p.JoinGroup(en0, &ssmgroup); err != nil {
	// error handling
}
if err := p.ExcludeSourceSpecificGroup(en0, &ssmgroup, &exclsource); err != nil {
	// error handling
}
if err := p.LeaveGroup(en0, &ssmgroup); err != nil {
	// error handling
}

Note that it depends on each platform implementation what happens when an application which runs on IGMPv3 unsupported platform uses JoinSourceSpecificGroup and LeaveSourceSpecificGroup. In general the platform tries to fall back to conversations using IGMPv1 or IGMPv2 and starts to listen to multicast traffic. In the fallback case, ExcludeSourceSpecificGroup and IncludeSourceSpecificGroup may return an error.

Index

Examples

Constants

View Source
const (
	Version   = 4  // protocol version
	HeaderLen = 20 // header length without extension headers

)

Variables

This section is empty.

Functions

func NewControlMessage

func NewControlMessage(cf ControlFlags) []byte

NewControlMessage returns a new control message.

The returned message is large enough for options specified by cf.

Types

type Conn

type Conn struct {
	// contains filtered or unexported fields
}

A Conn represents a network endpoint that uses the IPv4 transport. It is used to control basic IP-level socket options such as TOS and TTL.

Example (MarkingTCP)
package main

import (
	"log"
	"net"

	"golang.org/x/net/ipv4"
)

func main() {
	ln, err := net.Listen("tcp", "0.0.0.0:1024")
	if err != nil {
		log.Fatal(err)
	}
	defer ln.Close()

	for {
		c, err := ln.Accept()
		if err != nil {
			log.Fatal(err)
		}
		go func(c net.Conn) {
			defer c.Close()
			if c.RemoteAddr().(*net.TCPAddr).IP.To4() != nil {
				p := ipv4.NewConn(c)
				if err := p.SetTOS(0x28); err != nil { // DSCP AF11
					log.Fatal(err)
				}
				if err := p.SetTTL(128); err != nil {
					log.Fatal(err)
				}
			}
			if _, err := c.Write([]byte("HELLO-R-U-THERE-ACK")); err != nil {
				log.Fatal(err)
			}
		}(c)
	}
}
Output:

func NewConn

func NewConn(c net.Conn) *Conn

NewConn returns a new Conn.

func (*Conn) SetTOS

func (c *Conn) SetTOS(tos int) error

SetTOS sets the type-of-service field value for future outgoing packets.

func (*Conn) SetTTL

func (c *Conn) SetTTL(ttl int) error

SetTTL sets the time-to-live field value for future outgoing packets.

func (*Conn) TOS

func (c *Conn) TOS() (int, error)

TOS returns the type-of-service field value for outgoing packets.

func (*Conn) TTL

func (c *Conn) TTL() (int, error)

TTL returns the time-to-live field value for outgoing packets.

type ControlFlags

type ControlFlags uint
const (
	FlagTTL       ControlFlags = 1 << iota // pass the TTL on the received packet
	FlagSrc                                // pass the source address on the received packet
	FlagDst                                // pass the destination address on the received packet
	FlagInterface                          // pass the interface index on the received packet
)

type ControlMessage

type ControlMessage struct {
	// Receiving socket options: SetControlMessage allows to
	// receive the options from the protocol stack using ReadFrom
	// method of PacketConn or RawConn.
	//
	// Specifying socket options: ControlMessage for WriteTo
	// method of PacketConn or RawConn allows to send the options
	// to the protocol stack.
	//
	TTL     int    // time-to-live, receiving only
	Src     net.IP // source address, specifying only
	Dst     net.IP // destination address, receiving only
	IfIndex int    // interface index, must be 1 <= value when specifying
}

A ControlMessage represents per packet basis IP-level socket options.

func (*ControlMessage) Marshal

func (cm *ControlMessage) Marshal() []byte

Marshal returns the binary encoding of cm.

func (*ControlMessage) Parse

func (cm *ControlMessage) Parse(b []byte) error

Parse parses b as a control message and stores the result in cm.

func (*ControlMessage) String

func (cm *ControlMessage) String() string
type Header struct {
	Version  int         // protocol version
	Len      int         // header length
	TOS      int         // type-of-service
	TotalLen int         // packet total length
	ID       int         // identification
	Flags    HeaderFlags // flags
	FragOff  int         // fragment offset
	TTL      int         // time-to-live
	Protocol int         // next protocol
	Checksum int         // checksum
	Src      net.IP      // source address
	Dst      net.IP      // destination address
	Options  []byte      // options, extension headers
}

A Header represents an IPv4 header.

func ParseHeader

func ParseHeader(b []byte) (*Header, error)

ParseHeader parses b as an IPv4 header.

func (*Header) Marshal

func (h *Header) Marshal() ([]byte, error)

Marshal returns the binary encoding of h.

func (*Header) Parse

func (h *Header) Parse(b []byte) error

Parse parses b as an IPv4 header and stores the result in h.

func (*Header) String

func (h *Header) String() string

type HeaderFlags

type HeaderFlags int
const (
	MoreFragments HeaderFlags = 1 << iota // more fragments flag
	DontFragment                          // don't fragment flag
)

type ICMPFilter

type ICMPFilter struct {
	// contains filtered or unexported fields
}

An ICMPFilter represents an ICMP message filter for incoming packets. The filter belongs to a packet delivery path on a host and it cannot interact with forwarding packets or tunnel-outer packets.

Note: RFC 8200 defines a reasonable role model and it works not only for IPv6 but IPv4. A node means a device that implements IP. A router means a node that forwards IP packets not explicitly addressed to itself, and a host means a node that is not a router.

func (*ICMPFilter) Accept

func (f *ICMPFilter) Accept(typ ICMPType)

Accept accepts incoming ICMP packets including the type field value typ.

func (*ICMPFilter) Block

func (f *ICMPFilter) Block(typ ICMPType)

Block blocks incoming ICMP packets including the type field value typ.

func (*ICMPFilter) SetAll

func (f *ICMPFilter) SetAll(block bool)

SetAll sets the filter action to the filter.

func (*ICMPFilter) WillBlock

func (f *ICMPFilter) WillBlock(typ ICMPType) bool

WillBlock reports whether the ICMP type will be blocked.

type ICMPType

type ICMPType int

An ICMPType represents a type of ICMP message.

const (
	ICMPTypeEchoReply              ICMPType = 0  // Echo Reply
	ICMPTypeDestinationUnreachable ICMPType = 3  // Destination Unreachable
	ICMPTypeRedirect               ICMPType = 5  // Redirect
	ICMPTypeEcho                   ICMPType = 8  // Echo
	ICMPTypeRouterAdvertisement    ICMPType = 9  // Router Advertisement
	ICMPTypeRouterSolicitation     ICMPType = 10 // Router Solicitation
	ICMPTypeTimeExceeded           ICMPType = 11 // Time Exceeded
	ICMPTypeParameterProblem       ICMPType = 12 // Parameter Problem
	ICMPTypeTimestamp              ICMPType = 13 // Timestamp
	ICMPTypeTimestampReply         ICMPType = 14 // Timestamp Reply
	ICMPTypePhoturis               ICMPType = 40 // Photuris
	ICMPTypeExtendedEchoRequest    ICMPType = 42 // Extended Echo Request
	ICMPTypeExtendedEchoReply      ICMPType = 43 // Extended Echo Reply
)

Internet Control Message Protocol (ICMP) Parameters, Updated: 2018-02-26

func (ICMPType) Protocol

func (typ ICMPType) Protocol() int

Protocol returns the ICMPv4 protocol number.

func (ICMPType) String

func (typ ICMPType) String() string

type Message

type Message = socket.Message

A Message represents an IO message.

type Message struct {
	Buffers [][]byte
	OOB     []byte
	Addr    net.Addr
	N       int
	NN      int
	Flags   int
}

The Buffers fields represents a list of contiguous buffers, which can be used for vectored IO, for example, putting a header and a payload in each slice. When writing, the Buffers field must contain at least one byte to write. When reading, the Buffers field will always contain a byte to read.

The OOB field contains protocol-specific control or miscellaneous ancillary data known as out-of-band data. It can be nil when not required.

The Addr field specifies a destination address when writing. It can be nil when the underlying protocol of the endpoint uses connection-oriented communication. After a successful read, it may contain the source address on the received packet.

The N field indicates the number of bytes read or written from/to Buffers.

The NN field indicates the number of bytes read or written from/to OOB.

The Flags field contains protocol-specific information on the received message.

type PacketConn

type PacketConn struct {
	// contains filtered or unexported fields
}

A PacketConn represents a packet network endpoint that uses the IPv4 transport. It is used to control several IP-level socket options including multicasting. It also provides datagram based network I/O methods specific to the IPv4 and higher layer protocols such as UDP.

Example (ServingOneShotMulticastDNS)
package main

import (
	"log"
	"net"

	"golang.org/x/net/ipv4"
)

func main() {
	c, err := net.ListenPacket("udp4", "0.0.0.0:5353") // mDNS over UDP
	if err != nil {
		log.Fatal(err)
	}
	defer c.Close()
	p := ipv4.NewPacketConn(c)

	en0, err := net.InterfaceByName("en0")
	if err != nil {
		log.Fatal(err)
	}
	mDNSLinkLocal := net.UDPAddr{IP: net.IPv4(224, 0, 0, 251)}
	if err := p.JoinGroup(en0, &mDNSLinkLocal); err != nil {
		log.Fatal(err)
	}
	defer p.LeaveGroup(en0, &mDNSLinkLocal)
	if err := p.SetControlMessage(ipv4.FlagDst, true); err != nil {
		log.Fatal(err)
	}

	b := make([]byte, 1500)
	for {
		_, cm, peer, err := p.ReadFrom(b)
		if err != nil {
			log.Fatal(err)
		}
		if !cm.Dst.IsMulticast() || !cm.Dst.Equal(mDNSLinkLocal.IP) {
			continue
		}
		answers := []byte("FAKE-MDNS-ANSWERS") // fake mDNS answers, you need to implement this
		if _, err := p.WriteTo(answers, nil, peer); err != nil {
			log.Fatal(err)
		}
	}
}
Output:

Example (TracingIPPacketRoute)
package main

import (
	"fmt"
	"log"
	"net"
	"os"
	"time"

	"golang.org/x/net/icmp"
	"golang.org/x/net/ipv4"
)

func main() {
	// Tracing an IP packet route to www.google.com.

	const host = "www.google.com"
	ips, err := net.LookupIP(host)
	if err != nil {
		log.Fatal(err)
	}
	var dst net.IPAddr
	for _, ip := range ips {
		if ip.To4() != nil {
			dst.IP = ip
			fmt.Printf("using %v for tracing an IP packet route to %s\n", dst.IP, host)
			break
		}
	}
	if dst.IP == nil {
		log.Fatal("no A record found")
	}

	c, err := net.ListenPacket("ip4:1", "0.0.0.0") // ICMP for IPv4
	if err != nil {
		log.Fatal(err)
	}
	defer c.Close()
	p := ipv4.NewPacketConn(c)

	if err := p.SetControlMessage(ipv4.FlagTTL|ipv4.FlagSrc|ipv4.FlagDst|ipv4.FlagInterface, true); err != nil {
		log.Fatal(err)
	}
	wm := icmp.Message{
		Type: ipv4.ICMPTypeEcho, Code: 0,
		Body: &icmp.Echo{
			ID:   os.Getpid() & 0xffff,
			Data: []byte("HELLO-R-U-THERE"),
		},
	}

	rb := make([]byte, 1500)
	for i := 1; i <= 64; i++ { // up to 64 hops
		wm.Body.(*icmp.Echo).Seq = i
		wb, err := wm.Marshal(nil)
		if err != nil {
			log.Fatal(err)
		}
		if err := p.SetTTL(i); err != nil {
			log.Fatal(err)
		}

		// In the real world usually there are several
		// multiple traffic-engineered paths for each hop.
		// You may need to probe a few times to each hop.
		begin := time.Now()
		if _, err := p.WriteTo(wb, nil, &dst); err != nil {
			log.Fatal(err)
		}
		if err := p.SetReadDeadline(time.Now().Add(3 * time.Second)); err != nil {
			log.Fatal(err)
		}
		n, cm, peer, err := p.ReadFrom(rb)
		if err != nil {
			if err, ok := err.(net.Error); ok && err.Timeout() {
				fmt.Printf("%v\t*\n", i)
				continue
			}
			log.Fatal(err)
		}
		rm, err := icmp.ParseMessage(1, rb[:n])
		if err != nil {
			log.Fatal(err)
		}
		rtt := time.Since(begin)

		// In the real world you need to determine whether the
		// received message is yours using ControlMessage.Src,
		// ControlMessage.Dst, icmp.Echo.ID and icmp.Echo.Seq.
		switch rm.Type {
		case ipv4.ICMPTypeTimeExceeded:
			names, _ := net.LookupAddr(peer.String())
			fmt.Printf("%d\t%v %+v %v\n\t%+v\n", i, peer, names, rtt, cm)
		case ipv4.ICMPTypeEchoReply:
			names, _ := net.LookupAddr(peer.String())
			fmt.Printf("%d\t%v %+v %v\n\t%+v\n", i, peer, names, rtt, cm)
			return
		default:
			log.Printf("unknown ICMP message: %+v\n", rm)
		}
	}
}
Output:

func NewPacketConn

func NewPacketConn(c net.PacketConn) *PacketConn

NewPacketConn returns a new PacketConn using c as its underlying transport.

func (*PacketConn) Close

func (c *PacketConn) Close() error

Close closes the endpoint.

func (*PacketConn) ExcludeSourceSpecificGroup

func (c *PacketConn) ExcludeSourceSpecificGroup(ifi *net.Interface, group, source net.Addr) error

ExcludeSourceSpecificGroup excludes the source-specific group from the already joined any-source groups by JoinGroup on the interface ifi.

func (*PacketConn) ICMPFilter

func (c *PacketConn) ICMPFilter() (*ICMPFilter, error)

ICMPFilter returns an ICMP filter. Currently only Linux supports this.

func (*PacketConn) IncludeSourceSpecificGroup

func (c *PacketConn) IncludeSourceSpecificGroup(ifi *net.Interface, group, source net.Addr) error

IncludeSourceSpecificGroup includes the excluded source-specific group by ExcludeSourceSpecificGroup again on the interface ifi.

func (*PacketConn) JoinGroup

func (c *PacketConn) JoinGroup(ifi *net.Interface, group net.Addr) error

JoinGroup joins the group address group on the interface ifi. By default all sources that can cast data to group are accepted. It's possible to mute and unmute data transmission from a specific source by using ExcludeSourceSpecificGroup and IncludeSourceSpecificGroup. JoinGroup uses the system assigned multicast interface when ifi is nil, although this is not recommended because the assignment depends on platforms and sometimes it might require routing configuration.

func (*PacketConn) JoinSourceSpecificGroup

func (c *PacketConn) JoinSourceSpecificGroup(ifi *net.Interface, group, source net.Addr) error

JoinSourceSpecificGroup joins the source-specific group comprising group and source on the interface ifi. JoinSourceSpecificGroup uses the system assigned multicast interface when ifi is nil, although this is not recommended because the assignment depends on platforms and sometimes it might require routing configuration.

func (*PacketConn) LeaveGroup

func (c *PacketConn) LeaveGroup(ifi *net.Interface, group net.Addr) error

LeaveGroup leaves the group address group on the interface ifi regardless of whether the group is any-source group or source-specific group.

func (*PacketConn) LeaveSourceSpecificGroup

func (c *PacketConn) LeaveSourceSpecificGroup(ifi *net.Interface, group, source net.Addr) error

LeaveSourceSpecificGroup leaves the source-specific group on the interface ifi.

func (*PacketConn) MulticastInterface

func (c *PacketConn) MulticastInterface() (*net.Interface, error)

MulticastInterface returns the default interface for multicast packet transmissions.

func (*PacketConn) MulticastLoopback

func (c *PacketConn) MulticastLoopback() (bool, error)

MulticastLoopback reports whether transmitted multicast packets should be copied and send back to the originator.

func (*PacketConn) MulticastTTL

func (c *PacketConn) MulticastTTL() (int, error)

MulticastTTL returns the time-to-live field value for outgoing multicast packets.

func (*PacketConn) ReadBatch

func (c *PacketConn) ReadBatch(ms []Message, flags int) (int, error)

ReadBatch reads a batch of messages.

The provided flags is a set of platform-dependent flags, such as syscall.MSG_PEEK.

On a successful read it returns the number of messages received, up to len(ms).

On Linux, a batch read will be optimized. On other platforms, this method will read only a single message.

Unlike the ReadFrom method, it doesn't strip the IPv4 header followed by option headers from the received IPv4 datagram when the underlying transport is net.IPConn. Each Buffers field of Message must be large enough to accommodate an IPv4 header and option headers.

func (*PacketConn) ReadFrom

func (c *PacketConn) ReadFrom(b []byte) (n int, cm *ControlMessage, src net.Addr, err error)

ReadFrom reads a payload of the received IPv4 datagram, from the endpoint c, copying the payload into b. It returns the number of bytes copied into b, the control message cm and the source address src of the received datagram.

func (*PacketConn) SetBPF

func (c *PacketConn) SetBPF(filter []bpf.RawInstruction) error

SetBPF attaches a BPF program to the connection.

Only supported on Linux.

func (*PacketConn) SetControlMessage

func (c *PacketConn) SetControlMessage(cf ControlFlags, on bool) error

SetControlMessage sets the per packet IP-level socket options.

func (*PacketConn) SetDeadline

func (c *PacketConn) SetDeadline(t time.Time) error

SetDeadline sets the read and write deadlines associated with the endpoint.

func (*PacketConn) SetICMPFilter

func (c *PacketConn) SetICMPFilter(f *ICMPFilter) error

SetICMPFilter deploys the ICMP filter. Currently only Linux supports this.

func (*PacketConn) SetMulticastInterface

func (c *PacketConn) SetMulticastInterface(ifi *net.Interface) error

SetMulticastInterface sets the default interface for future multicast packet transmissions.

func (*PacketConn) SetMulticastLoopback

func (c *PacketConn) SetMulticastLoopback(on bool) error

SetMulticastLoopback sets whether transmitted multicast packets should be copied and send back to the originator.

func (*PacketConn) SetMulticastTTL

func (c *PacketConn) SetMulticastTTL(ttl int) error

SetMulticastTTL sets the time-to-live field value for future outgoing multicast packets.

func (*PacketConn) SetReadDeadline

func (c *PacketConn) SetReadDeadline(t time.Time) error

SetReadDeadline sets the read deadline associated with the endpoint.

func (*PacketConn) SetTOS

func (c *PacketConn) SetTOS(tos int) error

SetTOS sets the type-of-service field value for future outgoing packets.

func (*PacketConn) SetTTL

func (c *PacketConn) SetTTL(ttl int) error

SetTTL sets the time-to-live field value for future outgoing packets.

func (*PacketConn) SetWriteDeadline

func (c *PacketConn) SetWriteDeadline(t time.Time) error

SetWriteDeadline sets the write deadline associated with the endpoint.

func (*PacketConn) TOS

func (c *PacketConn) TOS() (int, error)

TOS returns the type-of-service field value for outgoing packets.

func (*PacketConn) TTL

func (c *PacketConn) TTL() (int, error)

TTL returns the time-to-live field value for outgoing packets.

func (*PacketConn) WriteBatch

func (c *PacketConn) WriteBatch(ms []Message, flags int) (int, error)

WriteBatch writes a batch of messages.

The provided flags is a set of platform-dependent flags, such as syscall.MSG_DONTROUTE.

It returns the number of messages written on a successful write.

On Linux, a batch write will be optimized. On other platforms, this method will write only a single message.

func (*PacketConn) WriteTo

func (c *PacketConn) WriteTo(b []byte, cm *ControlMessage, dst net.Addr) (n int, err error)

WriteTo writes a payload of the IPv4 datagram, to the destination address dst through the endpoint c, copying the payload from b. It returns the number of bytes written. The control message cm allows the datagram path and the outgoing interface to be specified. Currently only Darwin and Linux support this. The cm may be nil if control of the outgoing datagram is not required.

type RawConn

type RawConn struct {
	// contains filtered or unexported fields
}

A RawConn represents a packet network endpoint that uses the IPv4 transport. It is used to control several IP-level socket options including IPv4 header manipulation. It also provides datagram based network I/O methods specific to the IPv4 and higher layer protocols that handle IPv4 datagram directly such as OSPF, GRE.

Example (AdvertisingOSPFHello)
package main

import (
	"log"
	"net"
	"runtime"

	"golang.org/x/net/ipv4"
)

func main() {
	c, err := net.ListenPacket("ip4:89", "0.0.0.0") // OSPF for IPv4
	if err != nil {
		log.Fatal(err)
	}
	defer c.Close()
	r, err := ipv4.NewRawConn(c)
	if err != nil {
		log.Fatal(err)
	}

	en0, err := net.InterfaceByName("en0")
	if err != nil {
		log.Fatal(err)
	}
	allSPFRouters := net.IPAddr{IP: net.IPv4(224, 0, 0, 5)}
	if err := r.JoinGroup(en0, &allSPFRouters); err != nil {
		log.Fatal(err)
	}
	defer r.LeaveGroup(en0, &allSPFRouters)

	hello := make([]byte, 24) // fake hello data, you need to implement this
	ospf := make([]byte, 24)  // fake ospf header, you need to implement this
	ospf[0] = 2               // version 2
	ospf[1] = 1               // hello packet
	ospf = append(ospf, hello...)
	iph := &ipv4.Header{
		Version:  ipv4.Version,
		Len:      ipv4.HeaderLen,
		TOS:      0xc0, // DSCP CS6
		TotalLen: ipv4.HeaderLen + len(ospf),
		TTL:      1,
		Protocol: 89,
		Dst:      allSPFRouters.IP.To4(),
	}

	var cm *ipv4.ControlMessage
	switch runtime.GOOS {
	case "darwin", "linux":
		cm = &ipv4.ControlMessage{IfIndex: en0.Index}
	default:
		if err := r.SetMulticastInterface(en0); err != nil {
			log.Fatal(err)
		}
	}
	if err := r.WriteTo(iph, ospf, cm); err != nil {
		log.Fatal(err)
	}
}
Output:

func NewRawConn

func NewRawConn(c net.PacketConn) (*RawConn, error)

NewRawConn returns a new RawConn using c as its underlying transport.

func (*RawConn) Close

func (c *RawConn) Close() error

Close closes the endpoint.

func (*RawConn) ExcludeSourceSpecificGroup

func (c *RawConn) ExcludeSourceSpecificGroup(ifi *net.Interface, group, source net.Addr) error

ExcludeSourceSpecificGroup excludes the source-specific group from the already joined any-source groups by JoinGroup on the interface ifi.

func (*RawConn) ICMPFilter

func (c *RawConn) ICMPFilter() (*ICMPFilter, error)

ICMPFilter returns an ICMP filter. Currently only Linux supports this.

func (*RawConn) IncludeSourceSpecificGroup

func (c *RawConn) IncludeSourceSpecificGroup(ifi *net.Interface, group, source net.Addr) error

IncludeSourceSpecificGroup includes the excluded source-specific group by ExcludeSourceSpecificGroup again on the interface ifi.

func (*RawConn) JoinGroup

func (c *RawConn) JoinGroup(ifi *net.Interface, group net.Addr) error

JoinGroup joins the group address group on the interface ifi. By default all sources that can cast data to group are accepted. It's possible to mute and unmute data transmission from a specific source by using ExcludeSourceSpecificGroup and IncludeSourceSpecificGroup. JoinGroup uses the system assigned multicast interface when ifi is nil, although this is not recommended because the assignment depends on platforms and sometimes it might require routing configuration.

func (*RawConn) JoinSourceSpecificGroup

func (c *RawConn) JoinSourceSpecificGroup(ifi *net.Interface, group, source net.Addr) error

JoinSourceSpecificGroup joins the source-specific group comprising group and source on the interface ifi. JoinSourceSpecificGroup uses the system assigned multicast interface when ifi is nil, although this is not recommended because the assignment depends on platforms and sometimes it might require routing configuration.

func (*RawConn) LeaveGroup

func (c *RawConn) LeaveGroup(ifi *net.Interface, group net.Addr) error

LeaveGroup leaves the group address group on the interface ifi regardless of whether the group is any-source group or source-specific group.

func (*RawConn) LeaveSourceSpecificGroup

func (c *RawConn) LeaveSourceSpecificGroup(ifi *net.Interface, group, source net.Addr) error

LeaveSourceSpecificGroup leaves the source-specific group on the interface ifi.

func (*RawConn) MulticastInterface

func (c *RawConn) MulticastInterface() (*net.Interface, error)

MulticastInterface returns the default interface for multicast packet transmissions.

func (*RawConn) MulticastLoopback

func (c *RawConn) MulticastLoopback() (bool, error)

MulticastLoopback reports whether transmitted multicast packets should be copied and send back to the originator.

func (*RawConn) MulticastTTL

func (c *RawConn) MulticastTTL() (int, error)

MulticastTTL returns the time-to-live field value for outgoing multicast packets.

func (*RawConn) ReadBatch

func (c *RawConn) ReadBatch(ms []Message, flags int) (int, error)

ReadBatch reads a batch of messages.

The provided flags is a set of platform-dependent flags, such as syscall.MSG_PEEK.

On a successful read it returns the number of messages received, up to len(ms).

On Linux, a batch read will be optimized. On other platforms, this method will read only a single message.

func (*RawConn) ReadFrom

func (c *RawConn) ReadFrom(b []byte) (h *Header, p []byte, cm *ControlMessage, err error)

ReadFrom reads an IPv4 datagram from the endpoint c, copying the datagram into b. It returns the received datagram as the IPv4 header h, the payload p and the control message cm.

func (*RawConn) SetBPF

func (c *RawConn) SetBPF(filter []bpf.RawInstruction) error

SetBPF attaches a BPF program to the connection.

Only supported on Linux.

func (*RawConn) SetControlMessage

func (c *RawConn) SetControlMessage(cf ControlFlags, on bool) error

SetControlMessage sets the per packet IP-level socket options.

func (*RawConn) SetDeadline

func (c *RawConn) SetDeadline(t time.Time) error

SetDeadline sets the read and write deadlines associated with the endpoint.

func (*RawConn) SetICMPFilter

func (c *RawConn) SetICMPFilter(f *ICMPFilter) error

SetICMPFilter deploys the ICMP filter. Currently only Linux supports this.

func (*RawConn) SetMulticastInterface

func (c *RawConn) SetMulticastInterface(ifi *net.Interface) error

SetMulticastInterface sets the default interface for future multicast packet transmissions.

func (*RawConn) SetMulticastLoopback

func (c *RawConn) SetMulticastLoopback(on bool) error

SetMulticastLoopback sets whether transmitted multicast packets should be copied and send back to the originator.

func (*RawConn) SetMulticastTTL

func (c *RawConn) SetMulticastTTL(ttl int) error

SetMulticastTTL sets the time-to-live field value for future outgoing multicast packets.

func (*RawConn) SetReadDeadline

func (c *RawConn) SetReadDeadline(t time.Time) error

SetReadDeadline sets the read deadline associated with the endpoint.

func (*RawConn) SetTOS

func (c *RawConn) SetTOS(tos int) error

SetTOS sets the type-of-service field value for future outgoing packets.

func (*RawConn) SetTTL

func (c *RawConn) SetTTL(ttl int) error

SetTTL sets the time-to-live field value for future outgoing packets.

func (*RawConn) SetWriteDeadline

func (c *RawConn) SetWriteDeadline(t time.Time) error

SetWriteDeadline sets the write deadline associated with the endpoint.

func (*RawConn) TOS

func (c *RawConn) TOS() (int, error)

TOS returns the type-of-service field value for outgoing packets.

func (*RawConn) TTL

func (c *RawConn) TTL() (int, error)

TTL returns the time-to-live field value for outgoing packets.

func (*RawConn) WriteBatch

func (c *RawConn) WriteBatch(ms []Message, flags int) (int, error)

WriteBatch writes a batch of messages.

The provided flags is a set of platform-dependent flags, such as syscall.MSG_DONTROUTE.

It returns the number of messages written on a successful write.

On Linux, a batch write will be optimized. On other platforms, this method will write only a single message.

func (*RawConn) WriteTo

func (c *RawConn) WriteTo(h *Header, p []byte, cm *ControlMessage) error

WriteTo writes an IPv4 datagram through the endpoint c, copying the datagram from the IPv4 header h and the payload p. The control message cm allows the datagram path and the outgoing interface to be specified. Currently only Darwin and Linux support this. The cm may be nil if control of the outgoing datagram is not required.

The IPv4 header h must contain appropriate fields that include:

Version       = <must be specified>
Len           = <must be specified>
TOS           = <must be specified>
TotalLen      = <must be specified>
ID            = platform sets an appropriate value if ID is zero
FragOff       = <must be specified>
TTL           = <must be specified>
Protocol      = <must be specified>
Checksum      = platform sets an appropriate value if Checksum is zero
Src           = platform sets an appropriate value if Src is nil
Dst           = <must be specified>
Options       = optional

Notes

Bugs

  • On Windows, the ReadBatch and WriteBatch methods of PacketConn are not implemented.

  • On Windows, the ReadBatch and WriteBatch methods of RawConn are not implemented.

  • This package is not implemented on NaCl and Plan 9.

  • On Windows, the JoinSourceSpecificGroup, LeaveSourceSpecificGroup, ExcludeSourceSpecificGroup and IncludeSourceSpecificGroup methods of PacketConn and RawConn are not implemented.

  • On Windows, the ReadFrom and WriteTo methods of RawConn are not implemented.

  • On Windows, the ControlMessage for ReadFrom and WriteTo methods of PacketConn is not implemented.

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