On Fri, Aug 3, 2018 at 4:20 PM, Dominique Martinet
<asmad...@codewreck.org> wrote:
> Tom Herbert wrote on Fri, Aug 03, 2018:
>> struct my_proto {
>>    struct _hdr {
>>        uint32_t len;
>>     } hdr;
>>     char data[32];
>> } __attribute__((packed));
>>
>> // use htons to use LE header size, since load_half does a first convertion
>> // from network byte order
>> const char *bpf_prog_string = " \
>> ssize_t bpf_prog1(struct __sk_buff *skb) \
>> { \
>>     return bpf_htons(load_half(skb, 0)) + 4; \
>> }";
>>
>> The length in hdr is uint32_t above, but this looks like it's being
>> read as a short.
>
> Err, I agree this is obviously wrong here (I can blame my lack of
> attention to this and the example I used), but this isn't the problem as
> the actual size is between 0 and 32 -- I could use any size I want here
> and the result would the same.
>
> A "real" problem with the conversion program would mean that my example
> would not work if I slow it down, but I can send as many packet as I
> want if I uncomment the usleep() on the client side or if I just
> throttle the network stack with a loud tcpdump writing to stdout -- that
> means the algorithm is working even if it's making some badly-sized
> conversions.
>
> (Just to make sure I did fix it to htonl(load_word()) and I can confirm
> there is no difference)
>

You also need to htonl for

my_msg.hdr.len = (i++ * 1312739ULL) % 31 + 1;


>
> Thanks,
> --
> Dominique Martinet

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