From 4d1057fcb06e9d26cece9dbae8e62bf57bacd68c Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Jon Schipp Date: Sat, 8 Jun 2013 09:47:18 -0700 Subject: mausezahn: man: fixed typo and minor sentence edits That's a first part of the manpage edit for now. Signed-off-by: Jon Schipp Signed-off-by: Daniel Borkmann --- mausezahn.8 | 25 ++++++++++++------------- 1 file changed, 12 insertions(+), 13 deletions(-) (limited to 'mausezahn.8') diff --git a/mausezahn.8 b/mausezahn.8 index e124322..876184f 100644 --- a/mausezahn.8 +++ b/mausezahn.8 @@ -41,14 +41,14 @@ the cli is very close to the Cisco IOS^tm command line. You can start the interactive mode by executing mausezahn with the ``\-x'' argument (an optional port number may follow, otherwise it is 25542). Then use telnet(1) to connect to this mausezahn instance. If not otherwise specified, -the default login/password combination is mz:mz, enable password is: mops. +the default login/password combination is mz:mz and the enable password is: mops. This can be changed in /etc/netsniff-ng/mausezahn.conf. .PP The direct mode supports two specification schemes: The ``raw-layer-2'' scheme, where every single byte to be sent can be specified, and ``higher-layer'' scheme, where packet builder interfaces are used (using the ``\-t'' option). .PP -To use the ``raw-layer-2'' scheme, simply specify the desired frame as +To use the ``raw-layer-2'' scheme, simply specify the desired frame as a hexadecimal sequence (the ``hex-string''), such as: .PP mausezahn eth0 "00:ab:cd:ef:00 00:00:00:00:00:01 08:00 ca:fe:ba:be" @@ -56,13 +56,12 @@ hexadecimal sequence (the ``hex-string''), such as: In this example, whitespaces within the byte string are optional and separate the Ethernet fields (destination and source address, type field, and a short payload). The only additional options supported are ``\-a'', ``\-b'', ``\-c'', -and ``\-p''. The frame length must be greater or equal 15 bytes. +and ``\-p''. The frame length must be greater than or equal to 15 bytes. .PP The ``higher-layer'' scheme is enabled using the ``\-t '' option. -This option activates a packet builder and besides the ``packet-type'' an -optional ``arg-string'' can be specified. The ``arg-string'' contains -packet-specific parameters, such as TCP flags, port numbers, etc (see example -section). +This option activates a packet builder, and besides the ``packet-type'', an +optional ``arg-string'' can be specified. The ``arg-string'' contains packet- +specific parameters, such as TCP flags, port numbers, etc (see example section). .PP .SH OPTIONS .PP @@ -94,7 +93,7 @@ Apply delay between transmissions. The delay value can be specified in usec in seconds (e.g. 100s or 100sec). Note: mops also supports nanosecond delay granulation if you need it (see interactive mode). .PP -.SS -p +.SS -p Pad the raw frame to specified length using zero bytes. Note that for raw layer 2 frames the specified length defines the whole frame length, while for higher layer packets the number of additional padding bytes are specified. @@ -128,7 +127,7 @@ As with the source address (see above) you can also specify a range or a DNS nam .SS -t Create the specified packet type using the built-in packet builder. Currently, supported packet types are: ``arp'', ``bpdu'', ``ip'', ``udp'', ``tcp'', ``rtp'', -and ``dns''. There is currently also a limited support for ``icmp''. Type +and ``dns''. Currently, there is also limited support for ``icmp''. Type ``\-t help'' to verify which packet builders your actual mausezahn version supports. Also, for any particular packet type, for example ``tcp'' type ``mausezahn \-t tcp help'' to receive a more in-depth context specific help. @@ -216,7 +215,7 @@ nowhere. .PP .SS Telnet: .PP -Using the interactive mode requires to start mausezahn as server: +Using the interactive mode requires starting mausezahn as a server: .PP mausezahn \-x .PP @@ -254,7 +253,7 @@ It is recommended to configure your own login credentials in .PP .SS Basics: .PP -Since you reached the mausezahn prompt, lets try some first commands. You can +Since you reached the mausezahn prompt, lets try some common commands. You can use the '?' character at any time for a content-sensitive help. .PP First try out the show command: @@ -301,7 +300,7 @@ Currently, its state is config which means that the process is sleeping. .PP .SS General packet options: .PP -Now let's create our own packet process and therefore switch into the global +Now let's create our own packet process and switch into the global configuration mode: .PP mz# configure term @@ -549,7 +548,7 @@ is indicated with the additional flag 'i' when inactive or 'I' when active: Note that the flag 'I' indicates that an interval has been specified for packet 2. The process is not active at the moment (only packet 5 is active here) but it will become active in a regular interval. You can verify the -actual interval when viewing the packet details via the show packet 2 command. +actual interval when viewing the packet details via the 'show packet 2' command. .PP .SS Load prepared configurations: .PP -- cgit v1.2.3-54-g00ecf