valence/crates/packet_inspector
AviiNL 628a0ff3c3
fix key input with filters, also removed regex from gui and make text… (#298)
… filters case-insensitive

Closes #297

## Description

Up and down arrow to select previous/next packet now ignore filtered
packets.

## Test Plan

1. Query the server using refresh on the server browser
2. Uncheck QueryResponseS2c in the packet-selector list
3. Click HandshakeC2s
4. Press down arrow until last packet is selected
5. It shouldn't go "blank" anymore when going from QueryRequestC2s to
QueryPingC2s

As an additive request, I've removed the regex check from the main GUI
filter box, such that this is now case-insensitive when filtering
specific packets.
CLI still uses regex to be able to filter on multiple packets
(unchanged)
2023-03-21 23:49:44 -07:00
..
src fix key input with filters, also removed regex from gui and make text… (#298) 2023-03-21 23:49:44 -07:00
Cargo.toml Packet inspector gui (#238) 2023-03-09 03:09:53 -08:00
README.md Packet inspector gui (#238) 2023-03-09 03:09:53 -08:00

What's This?

The packet inspector is a Minecraft proxy for viewing the contents of packets as they are sent/received. It uses Valence's protocol facilities to display packet contents. This was made for three purposes:

  • Check that packets between Valence and client are matching your expectations.
  • Check that packets between vanilla server and client are parsed correctly by Valence.
  • Understand how the protocol works between the vanilla server and client.

Usage

Firstly, we should have a server running that we're going to be proxying/inspecting.

cargo r -r --example conway

Next up, we need to run the proxy server, this can be done in 2 different ways, either using the GUI application (default) or using the --nogui flag to log the packets to a terminal instance.

To assist, --help will produce the following:

A simple Minecraft proxy for inspecting packets.

Usage: packet_inspector [OPTIONS] [CLIENT_ADDR] [SERVER_ADDR]

Arguments:
  [CLIENT_ADDR]  The socket address to listen for connections on. This is the address clients should connect to
  [SERVER_ADDR]  The socket address the proxy will connect to. This is the address of the server

Options:
  -m, --max-connections <MAX_CONNECTIONS>
          The maximum number of connections allowed to the proxy. By default, there is no limit
      --nogui
          Disable the GUI. Logging to stdout
  -i, --include-filter <INCLUDE_FILTER>
          Only show packets that match the filter
  -e, --exclude-filter <EXCLUDE_FILTER>
          Hide packets that match the filter. Note: Only in effect if nogui is set
  -h, --help
          Print help
  -V, --version
          Print version

To launch in a Gui environment, simply launch packet_inspector[.exe] (or cargo r -r -p packet_inspector to run from source). The gui will prompt you for the CLIENT_ADDR and SERVER_ADDR if they have not been supplied via the command line arguments.

In a terminal only environment, use the --nogui option and supply CLIENT_ADDR and SERVER_ADDR as arguments.

cargo r -r -p packet_inspector -- --nogui 127.0.0.1:25566 127.0.0.1:25565

The client must connect to localhost:25566. You should see the packets in stdout when running in --nogui, or you should see packets streaming in on the Gui.

The -i and -e flags accept a regex to filter packets according to their name. The -i regex includes matching packets while the -e regex excludes matching packets. Do note that -e only applies in --nogui environment, as the Gui has a "packet selector" to enable/disable packets dynamically. The -i parameter value will be included in the Filter input field on the Gui.

For instance, if you only want to print the packets Foo, Bar, and Baz, you can use a regex such as ^(Foo|Bar|Baz)$ with the -i flag.

cargo r -r -p packet_inspector -- --nogui 127.0.0.1:25566 127.0.0.1:25565 -i '^(Foo|Bar|Baz)$'

Packets are printed to stdout while errors are printed to stderr. If you only want to see errors in your terminal, direct stdout elsewhere.

cargo r -r -p packet_inspector -- --nogui 127.0.0.1:25566 127.0.0.1:25565 > log.txt

Quick start with Vanilla Server via Docker

Start the server

docker run -e EULA=TRUE -e ONLINE_MODE=false -d -p 25565:25565 --name mc itzg/minecraft-server

View server logs

docker logs -f mc

Server Rcon

docker exec -i mc rcon-cli

In a separate terminal, start the packet inspector.

cargo r -r -p packet_inspector -- --nogui 127.0.0.1:25566 127.0.0.1:25565

Open Minecraft and connect to localhost:25566.

Clean up

docker stop mc
docker rm mc