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Revision: 1.23
Committed: Sat Apr 20 14:53:29 2019 UTC (5 years, 1 month ago) by root
Branch: MAIN
Changes since 1.22: +13 -6 lines
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# Content
1 =head1 NAME
2
3 Convert::BER::XS - I<very> low level BER en-/decoding
4
5 =head1 SYNOPSIS
6
7 use Convert::BER::XS ':all';
8
9 my $ber = ber_decode $buf, $Convert::BER::XS::SNMP_PROFILE
10 or die "unable to decode SNMP message";
11
12 # The above results in a data structure consisting of
13 # (class, tag, # constructed, data)
14 # tuples. Below is such a message, SNMPv1 trap
15 # with a Cisco mac change notification.
16 # Did you know that Cisco is in the news almost
17 # every week because of some backdoor password
18 # or other extremely stupid security bug?
19
20 [ ASN_UNIVERSAL, ASN_SEQUENCE, 1,
21 [
22 [ ASN_UNIVERSAL, ASN_INTEGER32, 0, 0 ], # snmp version 1
23 [ ASN_UNIVERSAL, 4, 0, "public" ], # community
24 [ ASN_CONTEXT, 4, 1, # CHOICE, constructed - trap PDU
25 [
26 [ ASN_UNIVERSAL, ASN_OBJECT_IDENTIFIER, 0, "1.3.6.1.4.1.9.9.215.2" ], # enterprise oid
27 [ ASN_APPLICATION, SNMP_IPADDRESS, 0, "10.0.0.1" ], # SNMP IpAddress
28 [ ASN_UNIVERSAL, ASN_INTEGER32, 0, 6 ], # generic trap
29 [ ASN_UNIVERSAL, ASN_INTEGER32, 0, 1 ], # specific trap
30 [ ASN_APPLICATION, SNMP_TIMETICKS, 0, 1817903850 ], # SNMP TimeTicks
31 [ ASN_UNIVERSAL, ASN_SEQUENCE, 1, # the varbindlist
32 [
33 [ ASN_UNIVERSAL, ASN_SEQUENCE, 1, # a single varbind, "key value" pair
34 [
35 [ ASN_UNIVERSAL, ASN_OBJECT_IDENTIFIER, 0, "1.3.6.1.4.1.9.9.215.1.1.8.1.2.1" ],
36 [ ASN_UNIVERSAL, ASN_OCTET_STRING, 0, "...data..." # the value
37 ]
38 ]
39 ],
40 ...
41
42 # let's decode it a bit with some helper functions
43
44 my $msg = ber_is_seq $ber
45 or die "SNMP message does not start with a sequence";
46
47 ber_is $msg->[0], ASN_UNIVERSAL, ASN_INTEGER32, 0
48 or die "SNMP message does not start with snmp version\n";
49
50 # message is SNMP v1 or v2c?
51 if ($msg->[0][BER_DATA] == 0 || $msg->[0][BER_DATA] == 1) {
52
53 # message is v1 trap?
54 if (ber_is $msg->[2], ASN_CONTEXT, 4, 1) {
55 my $trap = $msg->[2][BER_DATA];
56
57 # check whether trap is a cisco mac notification mac changed message
58 if (
59 (ber_is_oid $trap->[0], "1.3.6.1.4.1.9.9.215.2") # cmnInterfaceObjects
60 and (ber_is_i32 $trap->[2], 6)
61 and (ber_is_i32 $trap->[3], 1) # mac changed msg
62 ) {
63 ... and so on
64
65 # finally, let's encode it again and hope it results in the same bit pattern
66
67 my $buf = ber_encode $ber, $Convert::BER::XS::SNMP_PROFILE;
68
69 =head1 DESCRIPTION
70
71 WARNING: Before release 1.0, the API is not considered stable in any way.
72
73 This module implements a I<very> low level BER/DER en-/decoder.
74
75 It is tuned for low memory and high speed, while still maintaining some
76 level of user-friendlyness.
77
78 =head2 EXPORT TAGS AND CONSTANTS
79
80 By default this module doesn't export any symbols, but if you don't want
81 to break your keyboard, editor or eyesight with extremely long names, I
82 recommend importing the C<:all> tag. Still, you can selectively import
83 things.
84
85 =over
86
87 =item C<:all>
88
89 All of the below. Really. Recommended for at least first steps, or if you
90 don't care about a few kilobytes of wasted memory (and namespace).
91
92 =item C<:const>
93
94 All of the strictly ASN.1-related constants defined by this module, the
95 same as C<:const_asn :const_index>. Notably, this does not contain
96 C<:const_ber_type> and C<:const_snmp>.
97
98 A good set to get everything you need to decode and match BER data would be
99 C<:decode :const>.
100
101 =item C<:const_index>
102
103 The BER tuple array index constants:
104
105 BER_CLASS BER_TAG BER_CONSTRUCTED BER_DATA
106
107 =item C<:const_asn>
108
109 ASN class values (these are C<0>, C<1>, C<2> and C<3>, respectively -
110 exactly thw two topmost bits from the identifier octet shifted 6 bits to
111 the right):
112
113 ASN_UNIVERSAL ASN_APPLICATION ASN_CONTEXT ASN_PRIVATE
114
115 ASN tag values (some of which are aliases, such as C<ASN_OID>). Their
116 numerical value corresponds exactly to the numbers used in BER/X.690.
117
118 ASN_BOOLEAN ASN_INTEGER32 ASN_BIT_STRING ASN_OCTET_STRING ASN_NULL ASN_OBJECT_IDENTIFIER
119 ASN_OBJECT_DESCRIPTOR ASN_OID ASN_EXTERNAL ASN_REAL ASN_SEQUENCE ASN_ENUMERATED
120 ASN_EMBEDDED_PDV ASN_UTF8_STRING ASN_RELATIVE_OID ASN_SET ASN_NUMERIC_STRING
121 ASN_PRINTABLE_STRING ASN_TELETEX_STRING ASN_T61_STRING ASN_VIDEOTEX_STRING ASN_IA5_STRING
122 ASN_ASCII_STRING ASN_UTC_TIME ASN_GENERALIZED_TIME ASN_GRAPHIC_STRING ASN_VISIBLE_STRING
123 ASN_ISO646_STRING ASN_GENERAL_STRING ASN_UNIVERSAL_STRING ASN_CHARACTER_STRING ASN_BMP_STRING
124
125 =item C<:const_ber_type>
126
127 The BER type constants, explained in the PROFILES section.
128
129 BER_TYPE_BYTES BER_TYPE_UTF8 BER_TYPE_UCS2 BER_TYPE_UCS4 BER_TYPE_INT
130 BER_TYPE_OID BER_TYPE_RELOID BER_TYPE_NULL BER_TYPE_BOOL BER_TYPE_REAL
131 BER_TYPE_IPADDRESS BER_TYPE_CROAK
132
133 =item C<:const_snmp>
134
135 Constants only relevant to SNMP. These are the tag values used by SNMP in
136 the C<ASN_APPLICATION> namespace and have the exact numerical value as in
137 BER/RFC 2578.
138
139 SNMP_IPADDRESS SNMP_COUNTER32 SNMP_UNSIGNED32 SNMP_TIMETICKS SNMP_OPAQUE SNMP_COUNTER64
140
141 =item C<:decode>
142
143 C<ber_decode> and the match helper functions:
144
145 ber_decode ber_is ber_is_seq ber_is_i32 ber_is_oid
146
147 =item C<:encode>
148
149 C<ber_encode> and the construction helper functions:
150
151 ber_encode ber_i32
152
153 =back
154
155 =head2 ASN.1/BER/DER/... BASICS
156
157 ASN.1 is a strange language that can be used to describe protocols and
158 data structures. It supports various mappings to JSON, XML, but most
159 importantly, to a various binary encodings such as BER, that is the topic
160 of this module, and is used in SNMP or LDAP for example.
161
162 While ASN.1 defines a schema that is useful to interpret encoded data,
163 the BER encoding is actually somewhat self-describing: you might not know
164 whether something is a string or a number or a sequence or something else,
165 but you can nevertheless decode the overall structure, even if you end up
166 with just a binary blob for the actual value.
167
168 This works because BER values are tagged with a type and a namespace,
169 and also have a flag that says whether a value consists of subvalues (is
170 "constructed") or not (is "primitive").
171
172 Tags are simple integers, and ASN.1 defines a somewhat weird assortment of
173 those - for example, you have 32 bit signed integers and 16(!) different
174 string types, but there is no Unsigned32 type for example. Different
175 applications work around this in different ways, for example, SNMP defines
176 application-specific Gauge32, Counter32 and Unsigned32, which are mapped
177 to two different tags: you can distinguish between Counter32 and the
178 others, but not between Gause32 and Unsigned32, without the ASN.1 schema.
179
180 Ugh.
181
182 =head2 DECODED BER REPRESENTATION
183
184 This module represents every BER value as a 4-element tuple (actually an
185 array-reference):
186
187 [CLASS, TAG, CONSTRUCTED, DATA]
188
189 For example:
190
191 [ASN_UNIVERSAL, ASN_INTEGER32, 0, 177] # the integer 177
192 [ASN_UNIVERSAL, ASN_OCTET_STRING, 0, "john"] # the string "john"
193 [ASN_UNIVERSAL, ASN_OID, 0, "1.3.6.133"] # some OID
194 [ASN_UNIVERSAL, ASN_SEQUENCE, 1, [ [ASN_UNIVERSAL... # a sequencE
195
196 To avoid non-descriptive hardcoded array index numbers, this module
197 defines symbolic constants to access these members: C<BER_CLASS>,
198 C<BER_TAG>, C<BER_CONSTRUCTED> and C<BER_DATA>.
199
200 Also, the first three members are integers with a little caveat: for
201 performance reasons, these are readonly and shared, so you must not modify
202 them (increment, assign to them etc.) in any way. You may modify the
203 I<DATA> member, and you may re-assign the array itself, e.g.:
204
205 $ber = ber_decode $binbuf;
206
207 # the following is NOT legal:
208 $ber->[BER_CLASS] = ASN_PRIVATE; # ERROR, CLASS/TAG/CONSTRUCTED are READ ONLY(!)
209
210 # but all of the following are fine:
211 $ber->[BER_DATA] = "string";
212 $ber->[BER_DATA] = [ASN_UNIVERSAL, ASN_INTEGER32, 0, 123];
213 @$ber = (ASN_APPLICATION, SNMP_TIMETICKS, 0, 1000);
214
215 I<CLASS> is something like a namespace for I<TAG>s - there is the
216 C<ASN_UNIVERSAL> namespace which defines tags common to all ASN.1
217 implementations, the C<ASN_APPLICATION> namespace which defines tags for
218 specific applications (for example, the SNMP C<Unsigned32> type is in this
219 namespace), a special-purpose context namespace (C<ASN_CONTEXT>, used e.g.
220 for C<CHOICE>) and a private namespace (C<ASN_PRIVATE>).
221
222 The meaning of the I<TAG> depends on the namespace, and defines a
223 (partial) interpretation of the data value. For example, right now, SNMP
224 application namespace knowledge ix hardcoded into this module, so it
225 knows that SNMP C<Unsigned32> values need to be decoded into actual perl
226 integers.
227
228 The most common tags in the C<ASN_UNIVERSAL> namespace are
229 C<ASN_INTEGER32>, C<ASN_BIT_STRING>, C<ASN_NULL>, C<ASN_OCTET_STRING>,
230 C<ASN_OBJECT_IDENTIFIER>, C<ASN_SEQUENCE>, C<ASN_SET> and
231 C<ASN_IA5_STRING>.
232
233 The most common tags in SNMP's C<ASN_APPLICATION> namespace
234 are C<SNMP_IPADDRESS>, C<SNMP_COUNTER32>, C<SNMP_UNSIGNED32>,
235 C<SNMP_TIMETICKS>, C<SNMP_OPAQUE> and C<SNMP_COUNTER64>.
236
237 The I<CONSTRUCTED> flag is really just a boolean - if it is false, the
238 the value is "primitive" and contains no subvalues, kind of like a
239 non-reference perl scalar. IF it is true, then the value is "constructed"
240 which just means it contains a list of subvalues which this module will
241 en-/decode as BER tuples themselves.
242
243 The I<DATA> value is either a reference to an array of further tuples (if
244 the value is I<CONSTRUCTED>), some decoded representation of the value,
245 if this module knows how to decode it (e.g. for the integer types above)
246 or a binary string with the raw octets if this module doesn't know how to
247 interpret the namespace/tag.
248
249 Thus, you can always decode a BER data structure and at worst you get a
250 string in place of some nice decoded value.
251
252 See the SYNOPSIS for an example of such an encoded tuple representation.
253
254 =head2 DECODING AND ENCODING
255
256 =over
257
258 =item $tuple = ber_decoded $bindata
259
260 Decodes binary BER data in C<$bindata> and returns the resulting BER
261 tuple. Croaks on any decoding error, so the returned C<$tuple> is always
262 valid.
263
264 =item $bindata = ber_encode $tuple
265
266 Encodes the BER tuple into a BER/DER data structure.
267
268 =back
269
270 =head2 HELPER FUNCTIONS
271
272 Working with a 4-tuple for every value can be annoying. Or, rather, I<is>
273 annoying. To reduce this a bit, this module defines a number of helper
274 functions, both to match BER tuples and to conmstruct BER tuples:
275
276 =head3 MATCH HELPERS
277
278 Thse functions accept a BER tuple as first argument and either paertially
279 or fully match it. They often come in two forms, one which exactly matches
280 a value, and one which only matches the type and returns the value.
281
282 They do check whether valid tuples are passed in and croak otherwise. As
283 a ease-of-use exception, they usually also accept C<undef> instead of a
284 tuple reference. in which case they silently fail to match.
285
286 =over
287
288 =item $bool = ber_is $tuple, $class, $tag, $constructed, $data
289
290 This takes a BER C<$tuple> and matches its elements agains the privded
291 values, all of which are optional - values that are either missing or
292 C<undef> will be ignored, the others will be matched exactly (e.g. as if
293 you used C<==> or C<eq> (for C<$data>)).
294
295 Some examples:
296
297 ber_is $tuple, ASN_UNIVERSAL, ASN_SEQUENCE, 1
298 orf die "tuple is not an ASN SEQUENCE";
299
300 ber_is $tuple, ASN_UNIVERSAL, ASN_NULL
301 or die "tuple is not an ASN NULL value";
302
303 ber_is $tuple, ASN_UNIVERSAL, ASN_INTEGER32, 0, 50
304 or die "BER integer must be 50";
305
306 =item $seq = ber_is_seq $tuple
307
308 Returns the sequence members (the array of subvalues) if the C<$tuple> is
309 an ASN SEQUENCE, i.e. the C<BER_DATA> member. If the C<$tuple> is not a
310 sequence it returns C<undef>. For example, SNMP version 1/2c/3 packets all
311 consist of an outer SEQUENCE value:
312
313 my $ber = ber_decode $snmp_data;
314
315 my $snmp = ber_is_seq $ber
316 or die "SNMP packet invalid: does not start with SEQUENCE";
317
318 # now we know $snmp is a sequence, so decode the SNMP version
319
320 my $version = ber_is_i32 $snmp->[0]
321 or die "SNMP packet invalid: does not start with version number";
322
323 =item $bool = ber_is_i32 $tuple, $i32
324
325 Returns a true value if the C<$tuple> represents an ASN INTEGER32 with
326 the value C<$i32>.
327
328 =item $i32 = ber_is_i32 $tuple
329
330 Returns true (and extracts the integer value) if the C<$tuple> is an ASN
331 INTEGER32. For C<0>, this function returns a special value that is 0 but
332 true.
333
334 =item $bool = ber_is_oid $tuple, $oid_string
335
336 Returns true if the C<$tuple> represents an ASN_OBJECT_IDENTIFIER
337 that exactly matches C<$oid_string>. Example:
338
339 ber_is_oid $tuple, "1.3.6.1.4"
340 or die "oid must be 1.3.6.1.4";
341
342 =item $oid = ber_is_oid $tuple
343
344 Returns true (and extracts the OID string) if the C<$tuple> is an ASN
345 OBJECT IDENTIFIER. Otherwise, it returns C<undef>.
346
347 =back
348
349 =head3 CONSTRUCTION HELPERS
350
351 =over
352
353 =item $tuple = ber_i32 $value
354
355 Constructs a new C<ASN_INTEGER32> tuple.
356
357 =back
358
359 =head2 RELATIONSHIP TO L<Convert::BER> and L<Convert::ASN1>
360
361 This module is I<not> the XS version of L<Convert::BER>, but a different
362 take at doing the same thing. I imagine this module would be a good base
363 for speeding up either of these, or write a similar module, or write your
364 own LDAP or SNMP module for example.
365
366 =cut
367
368 package Convert::BER::XS;
369
370 use common::sense;
371
372 use XSLoader ();
373 use Exporter qw(import);
374
375 our $VERSION;
376
377 BEGIN {
378 $VERSION = 0.8;
379 XSLoader::load __PACKAGE__, $VERSION;
380 }
381
382 our %EXPORT_TAGS = (
383 const_index => [qw(
384 BER_CLASS BER_TAG BER_CONSTRUCTED BER_DATA
385 )],
386 const_asn => [qw(
387 ASN_BOOLEAN ASN_INTEGER32 ASN_BIT_STRING ASN_OCTET_STRING ASN_NULL ASN_OBJECT_IDENTIFIER
388 ASN_OBJECT_DESCRIPTOR ASN_OID ASN_EXTERNAL ASN_REAL ASN_SEQUENCE ASN_ENUMERATED
389 ASN_EMBEDDED_PDV ASN_UTF8_STRING ASN_RELATIVE_OID ASN_SET ASN_NUMERIC_STRING
390 ASN_PRINTABLE_STRING ASN_TELETEX_STRING ASN_T61_STRING ASN_VIDEOTEX_STRING ASN_IA5_STRING
391 ASN_ASCII_STRING ASN_UTC_TIME ASN_GENERALIZED_TIME ASN_GRAPHIC_STRING ASN_VISIBLE_STRING
392 ASN_ISO646_STRING ASN_GENERAL_STRING ASN_UNIVERSAL_STRING ASN_CHARACTER_STRING ASN_BMP_STRING
393
394 ASN_UNIVERSAL ASN_APPLICATION ASN_CONTEXT ASN_PRIVATE
395 )],
396 const_ber_type => [qw(
397 BER_TYPE_BYTES BER_TYPE_UTF8 BER_TYPE_UCS2 BER_TYPE_UCS4 BER_TYPE_INT
398 BER_TYPE_OID BER_TYPE_RELOID BER_TYPE_NULL BER_TYPE_BOOL BER_TYPE_REAL
399 BER_TYPE_IPADDRESS BER_TYPE_CROAK
400 )],
401 const_snmp => [qw(
402 SNMP_IPADDRESS SNMP_COUNTER32 SNMP_UNSIGNED32 SNMP_TIMETICKS SNMP_OPAQUE SNMP_COUNTER64
403 )],
404 decode => [qw(
405 ber_decode
406 ber_is ber_is_seq ber_is_i32 ber_is_oid
407 )],
408 encode => [qw(
409 ber_encode
410 ber_i32
411 )],
412 );
413
414 our @EXPORT_OK = map @$_, values %EXPORT_TAGS;
415
416 $EXPORT_TAGS{all} = \@EXPORT_OK;
417 $EXPORT_TAGS{const} = [map @{ $EXPORT_TAGS{$_} }, qw(const_index const_asn)];
418 use Data::Dump; ddx \%EXPORT_TAGS;
419
420 =head1 PROFILES
421
422 While any BER data can be correctly encoded and decoded out of the box, it
423 can be inconvenient to have to manually decode some values into a "better"
424 format: for instance, SNMP TimeTicks values are decoded into the raw octet
425 strings of their BER representation, which is quite hard to decode. With
426 profiles, you can change which class/tag combinations map to which decoder
427 function inside C<ber_decode> (and of course also which encoder functions
428 are used in C<ber_encode>).
429
430 This works by mapping specific class/tag combinations to an internal "ber
431 type".
432
433 The default profile supports the standard ASN.1 types, but no
434 application-specific ones. This means that class/tag combinations not in
435 the base set of ASN.1 are decoded into their raw octet strings.
436
437 C<Convert::BER::XS> defines two profile variables you can use out of the box:
438
439 =over
440
441 =item C<$Convert::BER::XS::DEFAULT_PROFILE>
442
443 This is the default profile, i.e. the profile that is used when no
444 profile is specified for de-/encoding.
445
446 You can modify it, but remember that this modifies the defaults for all
447 callers that rely on the default profile.
448
449 =item C<$Convert::BER::XS::SNMP_PROFILE>
450
451 A profile with mappings for SNMP-specific application tags added. This is
452 useful when de-/encoding SNMP data.
453
454 Example:
455
456 $ber = ber_decode $data, $Convert::BER::XS::SNMP_PROFILE;
457
458 =back
459
460 =head2 The Convert::BER::XS::Profile class
461
462 =over
463
464 =item $profile = new Convert::BER::XS::Profile
465
466 Create a new profile. The profile will be identical to the default
467 profile.
468
469 =item $profile->set ($class, $tag, $type)
470
471 Sets the mapping for the given C<$class>/C<$tag> combination to C<$type>,
472 which must be one of the C<BER_TYPE_*> constants.
473
474 Note that currently, the mapping is stored in a flat array, so large
475 values of C<$tag> will consume large amounts of memory.
476
477 Example:
478
479 $profile = new Convert::BER::XS::Profile;
480 $profile->set (ASN_APPLICATION, SNMP_COUNTER32, BER_TYPE_INT);
481 $ber = ber_decode $data, $profile;
482
483 =item $type = $profile->get ($class, $tag)
484
485 Returns the BER type mapped to the given C<$class>/C<$tag> combination.
486
487 =back
488
489 =head2 BER TYPES
490
491 This lists the predefined BER types - you can map any C<CLASS>/C<TAG>
492 combination to any C<BER_TYPE_*>.
493
494 =over
495
496 =item C<BER_TYPE_BYTES>
497
498 The raw octets of the value. This is the default type for unknown tags and
499 de-/encodes the value as if it were an octet string, i.e. by copying the
500 raw bytes.
501
502 =item C<BER_TYPE_UTF8>
503
504 Like C<BER_TYPE_BYTES>, but decodes the value as if it were a UTF-8 string
505 (without validation!) and encodes a perl unicode string into a UTF-8 BER
506 string.
507
508 =item C<BER_TYPE_UCS2>
509
510 Similar to C<BER_TYPE_UTF8>, but treats the BER value as UCS-2 encoded
511 string.
512
513 =item C<BER_TYPE_UCS4>
514
515 Similar to C<BER_TYPE_UTF8>, but treats the BER value as UCS-4 encoded
516 string.
517
518 =item C<BER_TYPE_INT>
519
520 Encodes and decodes a BER integer value to a perl integer scalar. This
521 should correctly handle 64 bit signed and unsigned values.
522
523 =item C<BER_TYPE_OID>
524
525 Encodes and decodes an OBJECT IDENTIFIER into dotted form without leading
526 dot, e.g. C<1.3.6.1.213>.
527
528 =item C<BER_TYPE_RELOID>
529
530 Same as C<BER_TYPE_OID> but uses relative object identifier
531 encoding: ASN.1 has this hack of encoding the first two OID components
532 into a single integer in a weird attempt to save an insignificant amount
533 of space in an otherwise wasteful encoding, and relative OIDs are
534 basically OIDs without this hack. The practical difference is that the
535 second component of an OID can only have the values 1..40, while relative
536 OIDs do not have this restriction.
537
538 =item C<BER_TYPE_NULL>
539
540 Decodes an C<ASN_NULL> value into C<undef>, and always encodes a
541 C<ASN_NULL> type, regardless of the perl value.
542
543 =item C<BER_TYPE_BOOL>
544
545 Decodes an C<ASN_BOOLEAN> value into C<0> or C<1>, and encodes a perl
546 boolean value into an C<ASN_BOOLEAN>.
547
548 =item C<BER_TYPE_REAL>
549
550 Decodes/encodes a BER real value. NOT IMPLEMENTED.
551
552 =item C<BER_TYPE_IPADDRESS>
553
554 Decodes/encodes a four byte string into an IPv4 dotted-quad address string
555 in Perl. Given the obsolete nature of this type, this is a low-effort
556 implementation that simply uses C<sprintf> and C<sscanf>-style conversion,
557 so it won't handle all string forms supported by C<inet_aton> for example.
558
559 =item C<BER_TYPE_CROAK>
560
561 Always croaks when encountered during encoding or decoding - the
562 default behaviour when encountering an unknown type is to treat it as
563 C<BER_TYPE_BYTES>. When you don't want that but instead prefer a hard
564 error for some types, then C<BER_TYPE_CROAK> is for you.
565
566 =back
567
568 =cut
569
570 our $DEFAULT_PROFILE = new Convert::BER::XS::Profile;
571 our $SNMP_PROFILE = new Convert::BER::XS::Profile;
572
573 # additional SNMP application types
574 $SNMP_PROFILE->set (ASN_APPLICATION, SNMP_IPADDRESS , BER_TYPE_IPADDRESS);
575 $SNMP_PROFILE->set (ASN_APPLICATION, SNMP_COUNTER32 , BER_TYPE_INT);
576 $SNMP_PROFILE->set (ASN_APPLICATION, SNMP_UNSIGNED32, BER_TYPE_INT);
577 $SNMP_PROFILE->set (ASN_APPLICATION, SNMP_TIMETICKS , BER_TYPE_INT);
578 $SNMP_PROFILE->set (ASN_APPLICATION, SNMP_OPAQUE , BER_TYPE_IPADDRESS);
579 $SNMP_PROFILE->set (ASN_APPLICATION, SNMP_COUNTER64 , BER_TYPE_INT);
580
581 $DEFAULT_PROFILE->_set_default;
582
583 1;
584
585 =head2 LIMITATIONS/NOTES
586
587 This module can only en-/decode 64 bit signed and unsigned integers, and
588 only when your perl supports those.
589
590 This module does not generally care about ranges, i.e. it will happily
591 de-/encode 64 bit integers into an C<ASN_INTEGER32> value, or a negative
592 number into an C<SNMP_COUNTER64>.
593
594 OBJECT IDENTIFIEERs cannot have unlimited length, although the limit is
595 much larger than e.g. the one imposed by SNMP or other protocols,a nd is
596 about 4kB.
597
598 REAL values are not supported and will currently croak.
599
600 This module has undergone little to no testing so far.
601
602 =head2 ITHREADS SUPPORT
603
604 This module is unlikely to work when the (officially discouraged) ithreads
605 are in use.
606
607 =head1 AUTHOR
608
609 Marc Lehmann <schmorp@schmorp.de>
610 http://software.schmorp.de/pkg/Convert-BER-XS
611
612 =cut
613