001/* 002 * Licensed to the Apache Software Foundation (ASF) under one or more 003 * contributor license agreements. See the NOTICE file distributed with 004 * this work for additional information regarding copyright ownership. 005 * The ASF licenses this file to You under the Apache License, Version 2.0 006 * (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with 007 * the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at 008 * 009 * http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 010 * 011 * Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software 012 * distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, 013 * WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. 014 * See the License for the specific language governing permissions and 015 * limitations under the License. 016 */ 017 018package org.apache.commons.net.tftp; 019 020import java.net.DatagramPacket; 021import java.net.InetAddress; 022 023/** 024 * TFTPPacket is an abstract class encapsulating the functionality common to the 5 types of TFTP packets. It also provides a static factory method that will 025 * create the correct TFTP packet instance from a datagram. This relieves the programmer from having to figure out what kind of TFTP packet is contained in a 026 * datagram and create it himself. 027 * <p> 028 * Details regarding the TFTP protocol and the format of TFTP packets can be found in RFC 783. But the point of these classes is to keep you from having to 029 * worry about the internals. Additionally, only very few people should have to care about any of the TFTPPacket classes or derived classes. Almost all users 030 * should only be concerned with the {@link org.apache.commons.net.tftp.TFTPClient} class {@link org.apache.commons.net.tftp.TFTPClient#receiveFile 031 * receiveFile()} and {@link org.apache.commons.net.tftp.TFTPClient#sendFile sendFile()} methods. 032 * 033 * 034 * @see TFTPPacketException 035 * @see TFTP 036 */ 037 038public abstract class TFTPPacket { 039 /** 040 * The minimum size of a packet. This is 4 bytes. It is enough to store the opcode and blocknumber or other required data depending on the packet type. 041 */ 042 static final int MIN_PACKET_SIZE = 4; 043 044 /** 045 * This is the actual TFTP spec identifier and is equal to 1. Identifier returned by {@link #getType getType()} indicating a read request packet. 046 */ 047 public static final int READ_REQUEST = 1; 048 049 /** 050 * This is the actual TFTP spec identifier and is equal to 2. Identifier returned by {@link #getType getType()} indicating a write request packet. 051 */ 052 public static final int WRITE_REQUEST = 2; 053 054 /** 055 * This is the actual TFTP spec identifier and is equal to 3. Identifier returned by {@link #getType getType()} indicating a data packet. 056 */ 057 public static final int DATA = 3; 058 059 /** 060 * This is the actual TFTP spec identifier and is equal to 4. Identifier returned by {@link #getType getType()} indicating an acknowledgement packet. 061 */ 062 public static final int ACKNOWLEDGEMENT = 4; 063 064 /** 065 * This is the actual TFTP spec identifier and is equal to 5. Identifier returned by {@link #getType getType()} indicating an error packet. 066 */ 067 public static final int ERROR = 5; 068 069 /** 070 * The TFTP data packet maximum segment size in bytes. This is 512 and is useful for those familiar with the TFTP protocol who want to use the 071 * {@link org.apache.commons.net.tftp.TFTP} class methods to implement their own TFTP servers or clients. 072 */ 073 public static final int SEGMENT_SIZE = 512; 074 075 /** 076 * When you receive a datagram that you expect to be a TFTP packet, you use this factory method to create the proper TFTPPacket object encapsulating the 077 * data contained in that datagram. This method is the only way you can instantiate a TFTPPacket derived class from a datagram. 078 * 079 * @param datagram The datagram containing a TFTP packet. 080 * @return The TFTPPacket object corresponding to the datagram. 081 * @throws TFTPPacketException If the datagram does not contain a valid TFTP packet. 082 */ 083 public static final TFTPPacket newTFTPPacket(final DatagramPacket datagram) throws TFTPPacketException { 084 final byte[] data; 085 TFTPPacket packet; 086 087 if (datagram.getLength() < MIN_PACKET_SIZE) { 088 throw new TFTPPacketException("Bad packet. Datagram data length is too short."); 089 } 090 091 data = datagram.getData(); 092 093 switch (data[1]) { 094 case READ_REQUEST: 095 packet = new TFTPReadRequestPacket(datagram); 096 break; 097 case WRITE_REQUEST: 098 packet = new TFTPWriteRequestPacket(datagram); 099 break; 100 case DATA: 101 packet = new TFTPDataPacket(datagram); 102 break; 103 case ACKNOWLEDGEMENT: 104 packet = new TFTPAckPacket(datagram); 105 break; 106 case ERROR: 107 packet = new TFTPErrorPacket(datagram); 108 break; 109 default: 110 throw new TFTPPacketException("Bad packet. Invalid TFTP operator code."); 111 } 112 113 return packet; 114 } 115 116 /** The type of packet. */ 117 int type; 118 119 /** The port the packet came from or is going to. */ 120 int port; 121 122 /** The host the packet is going to be sent or where it came from. */ 123 InetAddress address; 124 125 /** 126 * This constructor is not visible outside the package. It is used by subclasses within the package to initialize base data. 127 * 128 * @param type The type of the packet. 129 * @param address The host the packet came from or is going to be sent. 130 * @param port The port the packet came from or is going to be sent. 131 **/ 132 TFTPPacket(final int type, final InetAddress address, final int port) { 133 this.type = type; 134 this.address = address; 135 this.port = port; 136 } 137 138 /** 139 * Returns the address of the host where the packet is going to be sent or where it came from. 140 * 141 * @return The type of the packet. 142 */ 143 public final InetAddress getAddress() { 144 return address; 145 } 146 147 /** 148 * Returns the port where the packet is going to be sent or where it came from. 149 * 150 * @return The port where the packet came from or where it is going. 151 */ 152 public final int getPort() { 153 return port; 154 } 155 156 /** 157 * Returns the type of the packet. 158 * 159 * @return The type of the packet. 160 */ 161 public final int getType() { 162 return type; 163 } 164 165 /** 166 * Creates a UDP datagram containing all the TFTP packet data in the proper format. This is an abstract method, exposed to the programmer in case he wants 167 * to implement his own TFTP client instead of using the {@link org.apache.commons.net.tftp.TFTPClient} class. Under normal circumstances, you should not 168 * have a need to call this method. 169 * 170 * @return A UDP datagram containing the TFTP packet. 171 */ 172 public abstract DatagramPacket newDatagram(); 173 174 /** 175 * This is an abstract method only available within the package for implementing efficient datagram transport by eliminating buffering. It takes a datagram 176 * as an argument, and a byte buffer in which to store the raw datagram data. Inside the method, the data should be set as the datagram's data and the 177 * datagram returned. 178 * 179 * @param datagram The datagram to create. 180 * @param data The buffer to store the packet and to use in the datagram. 181 * @return The datagram argument. 182 */ 183 abstract DatagramPacket newDatagram(DatagramPacket datagram, byte[] data); 184 185 /** 186 * Sets the host address where the packet is going to be sent. 187 * 188 * @param address the address to set 189 */ 190 public final void setAddress(final InetAddress address) { 191 this.address = address; 192 } 193 194 /** 195 * Sets the port where the packet is going to be sent. 196 * 197 * @param port the port to set 198 */ 199 public final void setPort(final int port) { 200 this.port = port; 201 } 202 203 /** 204 * For debugging 205 * 206 * @since 3.6 207 */ 208 @Override 209 public String toString() { 210 return address + " " + port + " " + type; 211 } 212}