GSP
Quick Navigator

Search Site

Unix VPS
A - Starter
B - Basic
C - Preferred
D - Commercial
MPS - Dedicated
Previous VPSs
* Sign Up! *

Support
Contact Us
Online Help
Handbooks
Domain Status
Man Pages

FAQ
Virtual Servers
Pricing
Billing
Technical

Network
Facilities
Connectivity
Topology Map

Miscellaneous
Server Agreement
Year 2038
Credits
 

USA Flag

 

 

Man Pages
LIBSCAMPERFILE(3) FreeBSD Library Functions Manual LIBSCAMPERFILE(3)

libscamperfile
scamper warts file library

scamper warts file library (libscamperfile -lscamperfile)

#include <scamper_file.h>
#include <scamper_addr.h>
#include <scamper_list.h>
#include <scamper_icmpext.h>
#include <scamper_trace.h>
#include <scamper_ping.h>
#include <scamper_tracelb.h>
#include <scamper_dealias.h>
#include <scamper_neighbourdisc.h>
#include <scamper_tbit.h>
#include <scamper_sting.h>
#include <scamper_sniff.h>

The libscamperfile library provides the ability to read and write warts files produced by scamper, read arts files produced by CAIDA's Skitter, and write simple text representations of these data. A program that uses libscamperfile to read a warts file (1) allocates a filter defining the types of data contained in the file the program is interested in, (2) opens the file, (3) reads each object from the file until end of file is reached, (4) closes the file and frees the filter. A program that uses libscamperfile is responsible for freeing the data returned.

scamper_file_t * scamper_file_filter_alloc(uint16_t *types, uint16_t num)
Allocate a filter to use with scamper_file_read() that specifies the types of data the program is interested in with the types parameter, and the number of types in the num parameter. When the filter is no longer required, the caller should use scamper_file_filter_free() to free the filter. For each data type specified the caller is subsequently responsible for freeing the data object when it is no longer required. Valid data type values to specify in the types array are:
  • SCAMPER_FILE_OBJ_LIST
  • SCAMPER_FILE_OBJ_CYCLE_START
  • SCAMPER_FILE_OBJ_CYCLE_DEF
  • SCAMPER_FILE_OBJ_CYCLE_STOP
  • SCAMPER_FILE_OBJ_ADDR
  • SCAMPER_FILE_OBJ_TRACE
  • SCAMPER_FILE_OBJ_PING
  • SCAMPER_FILE_OBJ_TRACELB
  • SCAMPER_FILE_OBJ_DEALIAS
  • SCAMPER_FILE_OBJ_NEIGHBOURDISC
  • SCAMPER_FILE_OBJ_TBIT
  • SCAMPER_FILE_OBJ_STING
  • SCAMPER_FILE_OBJ_SNIFF

void scamper_file_filter_free(scamper_file_filter_t *filter)
Free a file filter structure.

int scamper_file_filter_isset(scamper_file_filter_t *filter, uint16_t type)
Determine if a particular data type will be passed by the filter. It returns zero if the type is not set in the filter, and one if it is.

scamper_file_t * scamper_file_open(char *name, char mode, char *type)
Open the file specified by the name parameter. The mode parameter specifies how the file should be opened. If the mode character `r' is specified the file is opened read-only. If the mode character `w' is specified the file is truncated and opened for writing. If the mode character `a' is specified the file is open for writing, but without truncating any existing file. When opening a file for reading, the type parameter is optional as the type of file will be automatically determined. When writing a file, the type parameter allows the caller to define whether the file should be written in "warts" or "text". Note that only "warts" and "arts" can be read by libscamperfile so use of "warts" is highly recommended.

scamper_file_t * scamper_file_openfd(int fd, char *name, char mode, char *type)
Allocate a new scamper_file_t structure with the file descriptor passed. The name parameter is an optional parameter giving the scamper_file_t a name. The mode parameter has the same meaning as in the scamper_file_open() function. The type paramater is used to define the type of file to be read. If the file descriptor is a socket and the file is to be read, this parameter is useful as libscamperfile is currently unable to automatically determine the type of file in this scenario. Valid types are "warts", "arts", and "text".

scamper_file_t * scamper_file_opennull(void)
Allocate a new scamper_file_t that does not write to a file. Use in conjection with scamper_file_setwritefunc() to do your own I/O.

void scamper_file_close(scamper_file_t *sf)
Close the file and free the scamper_file_t.

void scamper_file_free(scamper_file_t *sf)
Free the scamper_file_t but do not close the underlying file descriptor. This function is useful if the scamper_file_t was created using a file descriptor and scamper_file_openfd().

int scamper_file_read(scamper_file_t *sf, scamper_file_filter_t *filter, uint16_t *obj_type, void **obj_data)
Read the next data object from the file according to the filter passed in. Returns zero on success, -1 if an error occured. When the end of file is reached, zero is returned and obj_data is set to NULL. The next data object is returned in obj_data, and the type of that object is returned in obj_type. The caller is responsible for freeing the data after it is no longer required; for example, call scamper_trace_free() for trace objects, and scamper_ping_free() for ping objects.

void scamper_file_setwritefunc(scamper_file_t *sf, void *param, scamper_file_writefunc_t writefunc)
Override the function used to write warts data. The writefunc takes three parameters: the first is the param variable passed to scamper_file_setwritefunc(), the second is a pointer to the data to write, and the third is the length of the data, in bytes. This function is used in conjunction with scamper_file_opennull().

The following opens the file specified by name, reads all traceroute and ping data until end of file, processes the data, calls the appropriate methods to free the data, and then closes the file.
uint16_t types[] = {
  SCAMPER_FILE_OBJ_TRACE,
  SCAMPER_FILE_OBJ_PING,
};
scamper_file_t *in;
scamper_file_filter_t *filter;
scamper_trace_t *trace;
scamper_ping_t *ping;
uint16_t type;
void *data;

if((filter = scamper_file_filter_alloc(types, 2)) == NULL) {
  fprintf(stderr, "could not allocate filter\n");
  return -1;
}

if((in = scamper_file_open(name, 'r', NULL)) == NULL) {
  fprintf(stderr, "could not open %s: %s\n", name, strerror(errno));
  return -1;
}

while(scamper_file_read(in, filter, &type, (void *)&data) == 0) {

  if(data == NULL)
    break; /* EOF */

  switch(type) {
    case SCAMPER_FILE_OBJ_TRACE:
       trace = data;
       process_trace(trace);
       scamper_trace_free(trace);
       break;

    case SCAMPER_FILE_OBJ_PING:
       ping = data;
       process_ping(ping);
       scamper_ping_free(ping);
       break;
  }
}

scamper_file_close(in);
scamper_file_filter_free(filter);

scamper(1), sc_wartsdump(1), sc_warts2text(1),

M. Luckie, Scamper: a Scalable and Extensible Packet Prober for Active Measurement of the Internet, Proc. ACM/SIGCOMM Internet Measurement Conference 2010.

libscamperfile was written by Matthew Luckie <mjl@luckie.org.nz>.
May 12, 2011 FreeBSD 13.1-RELEASE

Search for    or go to Top of page |  Section 3 |  Main Index

Powered by GSP Visit the GSP FreeBSD Man Page Interface.
Output converted with ManDoc.