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Date:      Mon, 30 Aug 2004 21:10:47 -0500
From:      Dan Nelson <dnelson@allantgroup.com>
To:        "Lucas (a.k.a T-Bird or bsdfan3)" <tbird-contact@cox.net>
Cc:        freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: Variable length packets?
Message-ID:  <20040831021047.GC33896@dan.emsphone.com>
In-Reply-To: <000301c48efa$bfa00500$c022fc18@yourxu5v9frokn>
References:  <000301c48efa$bfa00500$c022fc18@yourxu5v9frokn>

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In the last episode (Aug 30), Lucas (a.k.a T-Bird or bsdfan3) said:
> I am trying to implement a custom protocol that sends and receives
> variable-length packets on top of TCP/IPv4.  The problem is that the
> length field of the packet is silently being mangled first becoming 0
> and then getting turned into a very large number (about 2-3 billion). 
> The length field is a u_int32_t and I am using the byteorder
> routines.  Source code snippets follow:
> 
> --decl of struct packet_t--
> struct packet_t
> {
>  u_int16_t num;
>  u_int32_t len;
>  char data[0];
> };

If these are different OSes, the structure may be packed differently.
There's almost certainly two bytes of padding between num and len to
ensure that len is 32-bit aligned, for example.

If you run ktrace on your client (or server), the kdump output will
include a hexdump of all data read or written, which might help you
determine what's going wrong.

-- 
	Dan Nelson
	dnelson@allantgroup.com



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