On Sat, Mar 01, 2008 at 10:30:16AM -0600, Frank Bulk wrote: > Thanks for your willingness to look at this. I'm glad to have a tool like > Wireshark because I can't interpret the raw packets. =) > > Attached are three ping packets that my Wireshark PC caught. The info line > complains "Bogus IP length (8, less than header length 24)".
Looking at the first packet, I think the data is it is as follows. First I see the dst-mac of the packet which should be the mac address of the Wireshark-pc, as this is configured in the ip traffic-export profile: 00 12 79 63 1a 8c dst-mac (the wireshark-PC) Then there is the source mac-address, which is the interface address of the cisco (as you stated in another mail): 00 30 b6 53 00 06 src-mac (the cisco interface towards the ws-pc) Then there is the ethertype "08 00" since the cisco expects to send out ip traffic (it is the *IP* traffic export option): 08 00 Ethertype IP (because it's ip traffic-export) Now things get funny, there are 4 bytes that look like the last four octets of another interface of the same cisco-router. I expect this to be the mac-address of the interface on which the PPPoE packet was received: b6 53 00 08 4 leftover bytes of the original PPPoE packet's dst-mac??? What follows looks like the rest of the PPPoE packet: 00 01 4a 9e 0e 06 original PPPoE src-address 88 64 Ethertype PPPoE session 11 00 00 06 00 3e PPPoE header 00 21 PPP header 45 00 00 .. 68 69 IP header + payload (icmp packet) So, to me it looks like a bug in the cisco. It either needs to strip the whole PPPoE and PPP headers and send something like: 00 12 79 63 1a 8c dst-mac (the wireshark-PC) 00 30 b6 53 00 06 src-mac (the cisco interface towards the ws-pc) 08 00 Ethertype IP (because it's ip traffic-export) 45 00 00 .. 68 69 IP header + payload (icmp packet) Or it should strip the L2 header of the PPPoE packet and send something like: 00 12 79 63 1a 8c dst-mac (the wireshark-PC) 00 30 b6 53 00 06 src-mac (the cisco interface towards the ws-pc) 88 64 Ethertype PPPoE session 11 00 00 06 00 3e PPPoE header 00 21 PPP header 45 00 00 .. 68 69 IP header + payload (icmp packet) Both of which will generate valid frames. The first would be more consistent with the functionality, ie *IP* traffic-export. [...] > This may or may not be relevant, but he's also running the same code and > hardware platform, so, it's *possible* that what I'm seeing is the result of > some Cisco bug that is both in SII and IP Traffic Export. I think it *is* a cisco bug... I tried to open the bug-tracker, but it seems to be offline at the moment. I think you should open a case with the Cisco-TAC for this issue. Feel free to use my analysis in the report. (if my assumptions on addresses were correct of course) Cheers, Sake _______________________________________________ Wireshark-users mailing list Wireshark-users@wireshark.org http://www.wireshark.org/mailman/listinfo/wireshark-users