Wireshark-dev: Re: [Wireshark-dev] Calculating UDP checksum
From: Guy Harris <guy@xxxxxxxxxxxx>
Date: Wed, 22 Apr 2009 13:25:12 -0700

On Apr 22, 2009, at 2:32 AM, Rayne wrote:

In packet-udp.c, the following code is used to calculate UDP checksum:

	...

Are

pinfo->src.data;
pinfo->src.len;
pinfo->dst.data;
pinfo->dst.len;

equivalent to

inet_ntoa(ip->ip_src);
4
inet_ntoa(ip->ip_dst);
4

respectively?

If the packet was transported over IPv4, then pinfo->src.data points to 4 bytes of source IPv4 address and pinfo->src.len is 4. That's not equivalent to inet_ntoa(ip->ip_src), as inet_ntoa() takes 4 bytes of source IPv4 addresa and turns it into a text string; the UDP checksum (and the TCP checksum) use the raw address, *not* its representation as a text string showing a dotted quad.

Similarly, if the packet was transported over IPv4, then pinfo- >dst.data points to 4 bytes of destination IPv4 address and pinfo- >dst.len is 4.

If the packet was transported over IPv6, then pinfo->src.data points to 16 bytes of source IPv6 address and pinfo->src.len is 16 - and that applies, *mutatis mutandis* (i.e. change "source" to "destination"), for pinfo->dst as well.

And does cksum_vec[3].ptr point to the beginning of the UDP header?

"offset" is still 0 at that point, so tvb_get_ptr(tvb, offset, udph- >uh_ulen) returns a pointer to the beginning of the data in the tvbuff handed to the UDP dissector; that data begins with the UDP header, so, yes, it points to the beginning of the UDP header.