PCAP_GET_SELECTABLE_FD(3) FreeBSD Library Functions Manual
NAME
pcap_get_selectable_fd - get a file descriptor on which a select() can
be done for a live capture
SYNOPSIS
#include <pcap/pcap.h>
int pcap_get_selectable_fd(pcap_t *p);
DESCRIPTION
pcap_get_selectable_fd() returns, on UNIX, a file descriptor number for
a file descriptor on which one can do a select(2), poll(2),
epoll_wait(2), kevent(), or other such call to wait for it to be
possible to read packets without blocking, if such a descriptor exists,
or PCAP_ERROR, if no such descriptor exists.
Some network devices opened with pcap_create(3) and pcap_activate(3),
or with pcap_open_live(3), do not support those calls (for example,
regular network devices on FreeBSD 4.3 and 4.4, and Endace DAG
devices), so PCAP_ERROR is returned for those devices. In that case,
those calls must be given a timeout less than or equal to the timeout
returned by pcap_get_required_select_timeout(3) for the device for
which pcap_get_selectable_fd() returned PCAP_ERROR, the device must be
put in non-blocking mode with a call to pcap_setnonblock(3), and an
attempt must always be made to read packets from the device when the
call returns. If pcap_get_required_select_timeout() returns NULL, it
is not possible to wait for packets to arrive on the device in an event
loop.
Note that a device on which a read can be done without blocking may, on
some platforms, not have any packets to read if the packet buffer
timeout has expired. A call to pcap_dispatch(3) or pcap_next_ex(3)
will return 0 in this case, but will not block.
Note that in:
FreeBSD prior to FreeBSD 4.6;
NetBSD prior to NetBSD 3.0;
OpenBSD prior to OpenBSD 2.4;
Mac OS X prior to Mac OS X 10.7;
select(), poll(), and kevent() do not work correctly on BPF devices;
pcap_get_selectable_fd() will return a file descriptor on most of those
versions (the exceptions being FreeBSD 4.3 and 4.4), but a simple
select(), poll(), or kevent() call will not indicate that the
descriptor is readable until a full buffer's worth of packets is
received, even if the packet timeout expires before then. To work
around this, code that uses those calls to wait for packets to arrive
must put the pcap_t in non-blocking mode, and must arrange that the
call have a timeout less than or equal to the packet buffer timeout,
and must try to read packets after that timeout expires, regardless of
whether the call indicated that the file descriptor for the pcap_t is
ready to be read or not. (That workaround will not work in FreeBSD 4.3
and later; however, in FreeBSD 4.6 and later, those calls work
correctly on BPF devices, so the workaround isn't necessary, although
it does no harm.)
Note also that poll() and kevent() doesn't work on character special
files, including BPF devices, in Mac OS X 10.4 and 10.5, so, while
select() can be used on the descriptor returned by
pcap_get_selectable_fd(), poll() and kevent() cannot be used on it
those versions of Mac OS X. poll(), but not kevent(), works on that
descriptor in Mac OS X releases prior to 10.4; poll() and kevent() work
on that descriptor in Mac OS X 10.6 and later.
pcap_get_selectable_fd() is not available on Windows.
RETURN VALUE
A selectable file descriptor is returned if one exists; otherwise,
PCAP_ERROR is returned.
SEE ALSO
pcap(3), kqueue(2)
25 July 2018 PCAP_GET_SELECTABLE_FD(3)
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