diff options
-rw-r--r-- | curvetun.8 | 2 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | netsniff-ng.8 | 4 |
2 files changed, 3 insertions, 3 deletions
@@ -134,7 +134,7 @@ such as the Internet. Only a few software utilities exist to create such tunnels or, VPNs. Two popular representatives of such software are OpenVPN and VTUN. .PP The latter also introduced the TUN/TAP interfaces into the Linux kernel. VTUN -only has a rather basic encryption module, that does not fit todays +only has a rather basic encryption module, that does not fit today's cryptographic needs. By default, MD5 is used to create 128-Bit wide keys for the symmetric BlowFish cipher in ECB mode [1]. .PP diff --git a/netsniff-ng.8 b/netsniff-ng.8 index fb208cf..b51eba2 100644 --- a/netsniff-ng.8 +++ b/netsniff-ng.8 @@ -109,7 +109,7 @@ over sockets (\[lq]roll\[rq]) which means if one socket's queue is full, we move to the next one, or by NIC hardware queue mapping (\[lq]qm\[rq]). .PP .SS -L <defrag|roll>, --fanout-opts <defrag|roll> -Defines some auxillary fanout options to be used in addition to a given fanout type. +Defines some auxiliary fanout options to be used in addition to a given fanout type. These options apply to any fanout type. In case of \[lq]defrag\[rq], the kernel is being told to defragment packets before delivering to user space, and \[lq]roll\[rq] provides the same roll-over option as the \[lq]roll\[rq] fanout type, so that on any @@ -575,7 +575,7 @@ made with two machines, and it seems that results depend on the driver ... - wireshark gets the vlan header - netsniff-ng doesn't get the vlan header ethtool \-K eth0 rxvlan off - - wireshark gets a QinQ header even though noone sent QinQ + - wireshark gets a QinQ header even though no one sent QinQ - netsniff-ng gets the vlan header .PP RTL8111/8168B: |