I am trying to do discovery via UDP, my code sends a multicast message and other devices on the network reply back to me. I am using UdpClient on .NET 4.5.2, binding it on a random port and sending my message to a multicast address that the devices are listening on (e.g. 233.255.255.237:8003). The devices reply to me from the multicast port 8003, but some reply from their own ip (e.g. 10.0.23.66) and some from local broadcast ip (e.g. 10.0.23.255).
This runs just fine on Windows, I can see replies from all devices, but when running on Mono (version 5.2.0.224), I can only see the messages sent from the devices that don't use the local broadcast ip.
When I do tcpdump and open it in Wireshark I can clearly see the UDP messages reaching me, even those with Source = 10.0.23.255 they have the correct destination ip and port(my random port), but the code never picks them up...
I have searched SO and the web and tried literally everything over the past 2 days, different UdpClient constructors, 2 UdpClients on the same port(otherwise no replies are be picked up, receiving code has to listen on the same port as sending code is using) - one for sending and one for receiving, using a plain socket for receiving, setting EnableBroadcast = true, binding to a specific port(multicast port and other), using JoinMulticastGroup(shouldn't matter though, I am only sending messages to multicast address, not receiving the, the replies come directly to my local andpoint), and then some, but nothing works and I'm at the end of my wits...
Maybe there is a mono bug / different behavior, or some arcane setting that can be used, I would appreciate any help.
Here is how my code looks like(omitting parts like cleanup when disposing, etc.):
client = new UdpClient { MulticastLoopback = false, EnableBroadcast = true };
client.Client.Bind(new IPEndPoint(IPAddress.Any, 0));
client.BeginReceive(EndReceive, null);
private void EndReceive(IAsyncResult ar)
{
try
{
var source = new IPEndPoint(IPAddress.Any, 0);
var data = client.EndReceive(ar, ref source);
Console.WriteLine("{0} received msg:\r\n{1}", source.Address, Encoding.UTF8.GetString(data));
}
catch (Exception e)
{
Console.WriteLine(e);
}
client.BeginReceive(EndReceive, null);
}
For sending the multicast message I use client.Send() in try catch as well, the messages are definitely sent and clients are responding as seen on Wireshark, just under Windows I get all the responses written out to Console, under Linux/Mono only the ones that respond from Source=10.0.23.XXX and and the ones from 10.0.23.255 seem to be filtered out (I compared the messages carefully in Wireshark, they are the same whether my code runs on Win or Linux/Mono).
Related
Currently I have this C# code to open Socket Multicast connection.
IPAddress destAddr = IPAddress.Parse(m_Address);
m_Socket = new Socket(AddressFamily.InterNetwork, SocketType.Dgram, ProtocolType.Udp);
m_Socket.SetSocketOption(SocketOptionLevel.IP,SocketOptionName.MulticastTimeToLive, m_TTL);
m_EndPoint = new IPEndPoint(destAddr, m_Port);
//Try to fix Network issue
m_Socket.MulticastLoopback = true;
m_Socket.Ttl = 255;
I connect using this code and Send Packet to Reciver,what happen is:
On my device every thing work fine and receiver receive data without any problem.
Using an other device on the same network using ethernet adapter packets go out (i see it in wire-shark) but never received !, same device using WiFi every thing working nice !.
An other device on an other network using WiFi nothing work!
Any advice?
Again if I use Wire-Shark I see packets go out without problem!
I did figure it out
Me as a Sender use WiFi no problem happened, the problem comes up if sender use Cable from different Switch other than the switch receiver plugged on it !
So no thing to do in programming,it's Switch settings .
Please refer to this Cisco Tutorial for problem and solution
Multicast does not work on the same vLan
I have a SIP application that needs to send UDP packets to set up the SIP calls. SIP has a timeout mechanism to cope with delivery failures. An additional thing I would like to be able to do is detect whether a UDP socket is closed in order having to wait the 32s retransmit interval SIP uses.
The cases I am referring to are when an attempt to send to a UDP socket results in an ICMP Destination Unreachable packet being generated by the remote host. If I attempt to send a UDP packet to a host that's up but that the port is not listening I can see the ICMP message arriving back with a packet tracer but the question is how do I get access to that from my C# code?
I'm playing around with raw sockets but as yet have not been able to get the ICMP packets to be received by my program. The sample below never receives a packet even though ICMP messages are arriving on my PC.
Socket icmpListener = new Socket(AddressFamily.InterNetwork, SocketType.Raw, ProtocolType.Icmp);
icmpListener.Bind(new IPEndPoint(IPAddress.Any, 0));
byte[] buffer = new byte[4096];
EndPoint remoteEndPoint = new IPEndPoint(IPAddress.Any, 0);
int bytesRead = icmpListener.ReceiveFrom(buffer, ref remoteEndPoint);
logger.Debug("ICMPListener received " + bytesRead + " from " + remoteEndPoint.ToString());
Below is a wireshark trace showing the ICMP responses coming into my PC from an attempt to send a UDP packet from 10.0.0.100 (my PC) to 10.0.0.138 (my router) on a port I know it's not listening on. My problem is how to make use of those ICMP packets to realise the UDP send has failed rather than just waiting for the application to timeout after an arbitrary period?
Nearly 3 years later and I stumbled across http://www.codeproject.com/Articles/17031/A-Network-Sniffer-in-C which gave me enough of a hint to help me find a solution to receiving ICMP packets on Windows 7 (don't know about Vista, which the original question was about but I suspect this solution would work).
The two key points are that the socket has to be bound to a single specific IP address rather than IPAddress.Any and the IOControl call which sets the SIO_RCVALL flag.
Socket icmpListener = new Socket(AddressFamily.InterNetwork, SocketType.Raw, ProtocolType.Icmp);
icmpListener.Bind(new IPEndPoint(IPAddress.Parse("10.1.1.2"), 0));
icmpListener.IOControl(IOControlCode.ReceiveAll, new byte[] { 1, 0, 0, 0 }, new byte[] { 1, 0, 0, 0 });
byte[] buffer = new byte[4096];
EndPoint remoteEndPoint = new IPEndPoint(IPAddress.Any, 0);
int bytesRead = icmpListener.ReceiveFrom(buffer, ref remoteEndPoint);
Console.WriteLine("ICMPListener received " + bytesRead + " from " + remoteEndPoint);
Console.ReadLine();
I also had to set a firewall rule to allow ICMP Port Unreachable packets to be received.
netsh advfirewall firewall add rule name="All ICMP v4" dir=in action=allow protocol=icmpv4:any,any
UPDATE: I think I'm going crazy.... That piece of code that you posted is also working for me...
The following piece of code works fine for me(xp sp3):
using System;
using System.Net;
using System.Net.Sockets;
namespace icmp_capture
{
class Program
{
static void Main(string[] args)
{
IPEndPoint ipMyEndPoint = new IPEndPoint(IPAddress.Any, 0);
EndPoint myEndPoint = (ipMyEndPoint);
Socket socket = new Socket(AddressFamily.InterNetwork, SocketType.Raw, ProtocolType.Icmp);
socket.Bind(myEndPoint);
while (true)
{
/*
//SEND SOME BS (you will get a nice infinite loop if you uncomment this)
var udpClient = new UdpClient("192.168.2.199", 666); //**host must exist if it's in the same subnet (if not routed)**
Byte[] messagebyte = Encoding.Default.GetBytes("hi".ToCharArray());
int s = udpClient.Send(messagebyte, messagebyte.Length);
*/
Byte[] ReceiveBuffer = new Byte[256];
var nBytes = socket.ReceiveFrom(ReceiveBuffer, 256, 0, ref myEndPoint);
if (ReceiveBuffer[20] == 3)// ICMP type = Delivery failed
{
Console.WriteLine("Delivery failed");
Console.WriteLine("Returned by: " + myEndPoint.ToString());
Console.WriteLine("Destination: " + ReceiveBuffer[44] + "." + ReceiveBuffer[45] + "." + ReceiveBuffer[46] + "." + ReceiveBuffer[47]);
Console.WriteLine("---------------");
}
else {
Console.WriteLine("Some (not delivery failed) ICMP packet ignored");
}
}
}
}
}
Icmp is using an identifier which seems to be different for every icmp "session" (for every icmp socket). So the reply to an icmp packet not sent by the same socket is helpfully filtered out for you. This is why that piece of code won't work. (I'm not sure about this. It's just an assumption after looking at some ICMP traffic.)
You could simply ping the host and see whether you can reach it or not and then try your SIP thing. However that won't work if the other host is filtering out icmp.
An ugly (but working) solution is using winpcap. (Having this as the only working solutions just seems to be too bad to be true.)
What I mean by using winpcap is the you could capture ICMP traffic and then see if the captured packet is about your UDP packet being undeliverable or not.
Here is an example for capturing tcp packets:
http://www.tamirgal.com/home/SourceView.aspx?Item=SharpPcap&File=Example6.DumpTCP.cs
(It shouldn't be too hard to do the same with ICMP.)
Just use connected udp sockets and the OS will match the icmp unreachable and return an error in the udp socket.
Google for connected udp sockets.
So you want to pick up the dest unreachable return icmp packet programmatically? A tough one. I'd say the network stack soaks that up before you can get anywhere near it.
I don't think a pure C# approach will work here. You'll need to use a driver level intercept to get a hook in. Take a look at this app that uses windows' ipfiltdrv.sys to trap packets (icmp,tcp,udp etc) and read/play with them with managed code (c#).
http://www.codeproject.com/KB/IP/firewall_sniffer.aspx?display=Print
Oisin
There are a number of posts on the web mentioning the problem of ICMP Port Unreachable packets no longer being accessible on Vista.
http://www.eggheadcafe.com/software/aspnet/31961998/icmp-port-unreachable-and.aspx
http://social.msdn.microsoft.com/Forums/en-US/Offtopic/thread/5bd8b275-cc6f-43cd-949d-7c411973b2f3/
The stack should give you back an exception when it receives the ICMP. But it doesn't, at least on Vista. And hence you are trying a workaround.
I don't like answers that say it's not possible, but it seems that way. So I suggest you go back a step to the original problem, which was long timeouts in SIP.
You could let the user configure the
timeout (hence sort of complying with
the spec).
You can start doing other things (like checking other proxies) before
the timeout ends.
You could cache known bad destinations (but that would need
good management of the cache.
If icmp, and udp don't give proper error messages, try tcp or another protocol. Just to elicit the desired information.
(Anything is possible, it just may take a lot of resources.)
I am writing this as a separate answer, since the details are completely different from the one I wrote earlier.
So based on the comment from Kalmi about the session ID, it got me to thinking about why I can open up two ping programs on the same machine, and the responses don't cross over. They are both ICMP, therefore both using port-less raw sockets. That means something in the IP stack, has to know what socket those responses were intended for. For ping it turns out there is an ID used in the data of the ICMP package as part of ECHO REQUEST and ECHO REPLY.
Then I ran across this comment on wikipedia about ICMP:
Although ICMP messages are contained
within standard IP datagrams, ICMP
messages are usually processed as a
special case, distinguished from
normal IP processing, rather than
processed as a normal sub-protocol of
IP. In many cases, it is necessary to
inspect the contents of the ICMP
message and deliver the appropriate
error message to the application that
generated the original IP packet, the
one that prompted the sending of the
ICMP message.
Which was elaborated on (indirectly) here:
The internet header plus the first 64
bits of the original datagram's data.
This data is used by the host to match
the message to the appropriate
process. If a higher level protocol
uses port numbers, they are assumed to
be in the first 64 data bits of the
original datagram's data.
Since you are using UDP, which uses ports, it is possible the network stack is routing the ICMP message back to the original socket. This is why your new, and separate, socket is never receiving those messages. I imagine UDP eats the ICMP message.
If I am correct, one solution to this is to open a raw socket and manually create your UDP packets, listen for the anything coming back, and handle UDP and ICMP messages as appropriate. I am not sure what that would look like in code, but I don't imagine it would be too difficult, and may be considered more "elegant" than the winpcap solution.
Additionally this link, http://www.networksorcery.com/enp/default1003.htm, appears to be a great resource for low level network protocols.
I hope this helps.
I know this question has been asked many times. I've read ALL the answers and tried EVRY piece of code I could find. After a few days I'm so desperate that I have to ask you for help.
I have a device and a PC in my home network. The device sends UDP broadcast messages. On my PC I can see those messages in wireshark:
Source Destination Length
192.168.1.102 0.0.0.0 UDP 60 Source port: 9050 Destination port: 0
That means the packets are arriving on my PC. My next step was to create a C# application that receives those packets. As mentioned above I tried every possible solution, but it just won't receive anything.
So I guess there must be something very basic I'm doing wrong.
Can anyone help me out? Thanks!
Just experienced the same issue, and wanted to share what fixed it for me.
Briefly: it seems that Windows Firewall was somehow the cause of this weird behavior, and just disabling the service does not help. You have to explicitly allow incoming UDP packets for specific program (executable) in Windows Firewall inbound rules list.
For full case description, read on.
My network setup is: IP of my (receiving) machine was 192.168.1.2, IP of sending machine was 192.168.1.50, and subnet mask on both machines was 255.255.255.0.
My machine is running Windows 7 x64.
This is the code (roughly) that I used:
Socket sock = new Socket(AddressFamily.InterNetwork, SocketType.Dgram, ProtocolType.Udp);
IPEndPoint iep = new IPEndPoint(IPAddress.Any, 0);
sock.Bind(iep);
sock.EnableBroadcast = true;
EndPoint ep = (EndPoint)iep;
byte[] buffer = new byte[1000];
sock.ReceiveFrom(buffer, ref ep);
Initially this did not work unless I sent a broadcast packet from that socket before I call ReceiveFrom on it. I.e. adding this line before ReceiveFrom call:
sock.SendTo(someData, new IPEndPoint(IPAddress.Broadcast, somePort))
When I didn't send the broadcast packet first from receiving socket, incoming broadcast packets were not received by it, even though they appeared in Wireshark (destination of packets was 255.255.255.255).
I thought that it looks like firewall is messing with incoming packets (unless some kind of UDP hole is opened first by outgoing packet - even though I haven't heard before that UDP hole punching applies to broadcast packets somehow), so I went to services and disabled Windows firewall service altogether. This changed nothing.
However, after trying everything else, I re-enabled the firewall service, and tried to run the program again. This time, firewall prompt appeared asking me whether I want to allow MyProgram.vshost.exe process (I was debugging in Visual Studio) through firewall, I accepted it, and voila - everything worked! Incoming packets were being received now!
You are OK, they have something wired in the code which causes the problem. (I haven't read the article, just copy pasted)
It always works from the local machine, but from a remote machine it will fail for some reason.
To fix this:
In the Broadcst.cs they broadcast twice. once for the localhost and then for the target IP adress (iep2). simply remove the
sock.SendTo(data, iep1);
and it should work.
No idea why.
I have a SIP application that needs to send UDP packets to set up the SIP calls. SIP has a timeout mechanism to cope with delivery failures. An additional thing I would like to be able to do is detect whether a UDP socket is closed in order having to wait the 32s retransmit interval SIP uses.
The cases I am referring to are when an attempt to send to a UDP socket results in an ICMP Destination Unreachable packet being generated by the remote host. If I attempt to send a UDP packet to a host that's up but that the port is not listening I can see the ICMP message arriving back with a packet tracer but the question is how do I get access to that from my C# code?
I'm playing around with raw sockets but as yet have not been able to get the ICMP packets to be received by my program. The sample below never receives a packet even though ICMP messages are arriving on my PC.
Socket icmpListener = new Socket(AddressFamily.InterNetwork, SocketType.Raw, ProtocolType.Icmp);
icmpListener.Bind(new IPEndPoint(IPAddress.Any, 0));
byte[] buffer = new byte[4096];
EndPoint remoteEndPoint = new IPEndPoint(IPAddress.Any, 0);
int bytesRead = icmpListener.ReceiveFrom(buffer, ref remoteEndPoint);
logger.Debug("ICMPListener received " + bytesRead + " from " + remoteEndPoint.ToString());
Below is a wireshark trace showing the ICMP responses coming into my PC from an attempt to send a UDP packet from 10.0.0.100 (my PC) to 10.0.0.138 (my router) on a port I know it's not listening on. My problem is how to make use of those ICMP packets to realise the UDP send has failed rather than just waiting for the application to timeout after an arbitrary period?
Nearly 3 years later and I stumbled across http://www.codeproject.com/Articles/17031/A-Network-Sniffer-in-C which gave me enough of a hint to help me find a solution to receiving ICMP packets on Windows 7 (don't know about Vista, which the original question was about but I suspect this solution would work).
The two key points are that the socket has to be bound to a single specific IP address rather than IPAddress.Any and the IOControl call which sets the SIO_RCVALL flag.
Socket icmpListener = new Socket(AddressFamily.InterNetwork, SocketType.Raw, ProtocolType.Icmp);
icmpListener.Bind(new IPEndPoint(IPAddress.Parse("10.1.1.2"), 0));
icmpListener.IOControl(IOControlCode.ReceiveAll, new byte[] { 1, 0, 0, 0 }, new byte[] { 1, 0, 0, 0 });
byte[] buffer = new byte[4096];
EndPoint remoteEndPoint = new IPEndPoint(IPAddress.Any, 0);
int bytesRead = icmpListener.ReceiveFrom(buffer, ref remoteEndPoint);
Console.WriteLine("ICMPListener received " + bytesRead + " from " + remoteEndPoint);
Console.ReadLine();
I also had to set a firewall rule to allow ICMP Port Unreachable packets to be received.
netsh advfirewall firewall add rule name="All ICMP v4" dir=in action=allow protocol=icmpv4:any,any
UPDATE: I think I'm going crazy.... That piece of code that you posted is also working for me...
The following piece of code works fine for me(xp sp3):
using System;
using System.Net;
using System.Net.Sockets;
namespace icmp_capture
{
class Program
{
static void Main(string[] args)
{
IPEndPoint ipMyEndPoint = new IPEndPoint(IPAddress.Any, 0);
EndPoint myEndPoint = (ipMyEndPoint);
Socket socket = new Socket(AddressFamily.InterNetwork, SocketType.Raw, ProtocolType.Icmp);
socket.Bind(myEndPoint);
while (true)
{
/*
//SEND SOME BS (you will get a nice infinite loop if you uncomment this)
var udpClient = new UdpClient("192.168.2.199", 666); //**host must exist if it's in the same subnet (if not routed)**
Byte[] messagebyte = Encoding.Default.GetBytes("hi".ToCharArray());
int s = udpClient.Send(messagebyte, messagebyte.Length);
*/
Byte[] ReceiveBuffer = new Byte[256];
var nBytes = socket.ReceiveFrom(ReceiveBuffer, 256, 0, ref myEndPoint);
if (ReceiveBuffer[20] == 3)// ICMP type = Delivery failed
{
Console.WriteLine("Delivery failed");
Console.WriteLine("Returned by: " + myEndPoint.ToString());
Console.WriteLine("Destination: " + ReceiveBuffer[44] + "." + ReceiveBuffer[45] + "." + ReceiveBuffer[46] + "." + ReceiveBuffer[47]);
Console.WriteLine("---------------");
}
else {
Console.WriteLine("Some (not delivery failed) ICMP packet ignored");
}
}
}
}
}
Icmp is using an identifier which seems to be different for every icmp "session" (for every icmp socket). So the reply to an icmp packet not sent by the same socket is helpfully filtered out for you. This is why that piece of code won't work. (I'm not sure about this. It's just an assumption after looking at some ICMP traffic.)
You could simply ping the host and see whether you can reach it or not and then try your SIP thing. However that won't work if the other host is filtering out icmp.
An ugly (but working) solution is using winpcap. (Having this as the only working solutions just seems to be too bad to be true.)
What I mean by using winpcap is the you could capture ICMP traffic and then see if the captured packet is about your UDP packet being undeliverable or not.
Here is an example for capturing tcp packets:
http://www.tamirgal.com/home/SourceView.aspx?Item=SharpPcap&File=Example6.DumpTCP.cs
(It shouldn't be too hard to do the same with ICMP.)
Just use connected udp sockets and the OS will match the icmp unreachable and return an error in the udp socket.
Google for connected udp sockets.
So you want to pick up the dest unreachable return icmp packet programmatically? A tough one. I'd say the network stack soaks that up before you can get anywhere near it.
I don't think a pure C# approach will work here. You'll need to use a driver level intercept to get a hook in. Take a look at this app that uses windows' ipfiltdrv.sys to trap packets (icmp,tcp,udp etc) and read/play with them with managed code (c#).
http://www.codeproject.com/KB/IP/firewall_sniffer.aspx?display=Print
Oisin
There are a number of posts on the web mentioning the problem of ICMP Port Unreachable packets no longer being accessible on Vista.
http://www.eggheadcafe.com/software/aspnet/31961998/icmp-port-unreachable-and.aspx
http://social.msdn.microsoft.com/Forums/en-US/Offtopic/thread/5bd8b275-cc6f-43cd-949d-7c411973b2f3/
The stack should give you back an exception when it receives the ICMP. But it doesn't, at least on Vista. And hence you are trying a workaround.
I don't like answers that say it's not possible, but it seems that way. So I suggest you go back a step to the original problem, which was long timeouts in SIP.
You could let the user configure the
timeout (hence sort of complying with
the spec).
You can start doing other things (like checking other proxies) before
the timeout ends.
You could cache known bad destinations (but that would need
good management of the cache.
If icmp, and udp don't give proper error messages, try tcp or another protocol. Just to elicit the desired information.
(Anything is possible, it just may take a lot of resources.)
I am writing this as a separate answer, since the details are completely different from the one I wrote earlier.
So based on the comment from Kalmi about the session ID, it got me to thinking about why I can open up two ping programs on the same machine, and the responses don't cross over. They are both ICMP, therefore both using port-less raw sockets. That means something in the IP stack, has to know what socket those responses were intended for. For ping it turns out there is an ID used in the data of the ICMP package as part of ECHO REQUEST and ECHO REPLY.
Then I ran across this comment on wikipedia about ICMP:
Although ICMP messages are contained
within standard IP datagrams, ICMP
messages are usually processed as a
special case, distinguished from
normal IP processing, rather than
processed as a normal sub-protocol of
IP. In many cases, it is necessary to
inspect the contents of the ICMP
message and deliver the appropriate
error message to the application that
generated the original IP packet, the
one that prompted the sending of the
ICMP message.
Which was elaborated on (indirectly) here:
The internet header plus the first 64
bits of the original datagram's data.
This data is used by the host to match
the message to the appropriate
process. If a higher level protocol
uses port numbers, they are assumed to
be in the first 64 data bits of the
original datagram's data.
Since you are using UDP, which uses ports, it is possible the network stack is routing the ICMP message back to the original socket. This is why your new, and separate, socket is never receiving those messages. I imagine UDP eats the ICMP message.
If I am correct, one solution to this is to open a raw socket and manually create your UDP packets, listen for the anything coming back, and handle UDP and ICMP messages as appropriate. I am not sure what that would look like in code, but I don't imagine it would be too difficult, and may be considered more "elegant" than the winpcap solution.
Additionally this link, http://www.networksorcery.com/enp/default1003.htm, appears to be a great resource for low level network protocols.
I hope this helps.
I have an application that sends broadcast messages and listens for response packets. Below is the code snippet.
m_socket = new Socket(AddressFamily.InterNetwork, SocketType.Dgram, ProtocolType.Udp);
m_socket.SetSocketOption(SocketOptionLevel.Socket, SocketOptionName.Broadcast, 1);
m_socket.Bind(new IPEndPoint(IPAddress.Any, 2000));
m_socket.BeginSendTo(
buffer,
0,
buffer.Length,
SocketFlags.None,
new IPEndPoint(IPAddress.Broadcast, 2000),
Callback),
null
);
When I run the application the broadcast message was not being sent. On my machine I have three network adapters. One is my local network adapter and other two are VMWare network virtual adapters. When I run my application I can see (using wireshark network capture) that the broadcast message is being sent from one of the VMWare network adapters.
I would like to modify the code so that the broadcast message will be sent from all network adapters on the pc. What is the best way to do that?
You can use the following to get all your IP Addresses (and a lot more). So you can iterate through the list and bind (like Jon B said) to the specific IP you want when you send out your multicast.
foreach (var i in System.Net.NetworkInformation.NetworkInterface.GetAllNetworkInterfaces())
foreach (var ua in i.GetIPProperties().UnicastAddresses)
Console.WriteLine(ua.Address);
When you call Bind(), you are setting the local IP end point. Instead of using IPAddress.Any, use the IP address of the NIC that you want to send from. You'll need to do this separately for each NIC.
Check this http://salaam.codeplex.com/
I and my friend developed a class library called Salaam. download the source code or use the binaries (.dll) to use it.
You can use IPAddress.Any when constructing the tcpListener. This will bind the tcp listener to all interfaces