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- /*
- * IPv6 library code, needed by static components when full IPv6 support is
- * not configured or static.
- */
- #include <net/ipv6.h>
- /*
- * find out if nexthdr is a well-known extension header or a protocol
- */
- int ipv6_ext_hdr(u8 nexthdr)
- {
- /*
- * find out if nexthdr is an extension header or a protocol
- */
- return (nexthdr == NEXTHDR_HOP) ||
- (nexthdr == NEXTHDR_ROUTING) ||
- (nexthdr == NEXTHDR_FRAGMENT) ||
- (nexthdr == NEXTHDR_AUTH) ||
- (nexthdr == NEXTHDR_NONE) ||
- (nexthdr == NEXTHDR_DEST);
- }
- /*
- * Skip any extension headers. This is used by the ICMP module.
- *
- * Note that strictly speaking this conflicts with RFC 2460 4.0:
- * ...The contents and semantics of each extension header determine whether
- * or not to proceed to the next header. Therefore, extension headers must
- * be processed strictly in the order they appear in the packet; a
- * receiver must not, for example, scan through a packet looking for a
- * particular kind of extension header and process that header prior to
- * processing all preceding ones.
- *
- * We do exactly this. This is a protocol bug. We can't decide after a
- * seeing an unknown discard-with-error flavour TLV option if it's a
- * ICMP error message or not (errors should never be send in reply to
- * ICMP error messages).
- *
- * But I see no other way to do this. This might need to be reexamined
- * when Linux implements ESP (and maybe AUTH) headers.
- * --AK
- *
- * This function parses (probably truncated) exthdr set "hdr".
- * "nexthdrp" initially points to some place,
- * where type of the first header can be found.
- *
- * It skips all well-known exthdrs, and returns pointer to the start
- * of unparsable area i.e. the first header with unknown type.
- * If it is not NULL *nexthdr is updated by type/protocol of this header.
- *
- * NOTES: - if packet terminated with NEXTHDR_NONE it returns NULL.
- * - it may return pointer pointing beyond end of packet,
- * if the last recognized header is truncated in the middle.
- * - if packet is truncated, so that all parsed headers are skipped,
- * it returns NULL.
- * - First fragment header is skipped, not-first ones
- * are considered as unparsable.
- * - ESP is unparsable for now and considered like
- * normal payload protocol.
- * - Note also special handling of AUTH header. Thanks to IPsec wizards.
- *
- * --ANK (980726)
- */
- int ipv6_skip_exthdr(const struct sk_buff *skb, int start, u8 *nexthdrp)
- {
- u8 nexthdr = *nexthdrp;
- while (ipv6_ext_hdr(nexthdr)) {
- struct ipv6_opt_hdr _hdr, *hp;
- int hdrlen;
- if (nexthdr == NEXTHDR_NONE)
- return -1;
- hp = skb_header_pointer(skb, start, sizeof(_hdr), &_hdr);
- if (hp == NULL)
- return -1;
- if (nexthdr == NEXTHDR_FRAGMENT) {
- __be16 _frag_off, *fp;
- fp = skb_header_pointer(skb,
- start+offsetof(struct frag_hdr,
- frag_off),
- sizeof(_frag_off),
- &_frag_off);
- if (fp == NULL)
- return -1;
- if (ntohs(*fp) & ~0x7)
- break;
- hdrlen = 8;
- } else if (nexthdr == NEXTHDR_AUTH)
- hdrlen = (hp->hdrlen+2)<<2;
- else
- hdrlen = ipv6_optlen(hp);
- nexthdr = hp->nexthdr;
- start += hdrlen;
- }
- *nexthdrp = nexthdr;
- return start;
- }
- EXPORT_SYMBOL(ipv6_ext_hdr);
- EXPORT_SYMBOL(ipv6_skip_exthdr);
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