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.\" netsniff-ng - the packet sniffing beast
.\" Copyright 2013 Daniel Borkmann.
.\" Subject to the GPL, version 2.
.TH NETSNIFF-NG 8 "03 March 2013" "Linux" "netsniff-ng toolkit"
.SH NAME
netsniff-ng \- the packet sniffing beast
.SH SYNOPSIS
\fB netsniff-ng\fR { [\fIoptions\fR] [\fIfilter-expression\fR] }
.SH DESCRIPTION
Blubber.
.SH OPTIONS
.SS -d <netdev>, --dev <netdev>
Networking device to fetch statistics from, e.g. eth0, wlan0.
.SS -v, --version
Show versioning information.
.SS -h, --help
Show user help.
.SH USAGE EXAMPLE
.SS netsniff-ng
The most simple command is to just run ``netsniff-ng''. This will start
listening on all available networking devices in promiscuous mode and dump
the packet dissector output to the terminal. No files will be recorded.
.SS netsniff-ng --in eth0 --out dump.pcap -s -T 0xa1e2cb12 -b 0 tcp or udp
Capture TCP or UDP traffic from the networking device eth0 into the pcap file
named dump.pcap, which has netsniff-ng specific pcap extensions (see
``netsniff-ng -D'' for capabilities). Also, do not print the content to the
terminal and pin the process and NIC IRQ affinity to CPU 0. The pcap write
method is scatter-gather I/O.
.SS netsniff-ng --in wlan0 --rfraw --out dump.pcap --silent --bind-cpu 0
Put the wlan0 device into monitoring mode and capture all raw 802.11 frames
into the file dump.pcap. Do not dissect and print the content to the terminal
and pin the process and NIC IRQ affinity to CPU 0. The pcap write method is
scatter-gather I/O.
.SS netsniff-ng --in dump.pcap --mmap --out eth0 -k1000 --silent --bind-cpu 0
Replay the pcap file dump.pcap which is read through mmap(2) I/O and send
the packets out via the eth0 networking device. Do not dissect and print the
content to the terminal and pin the process and NIC IRQ affinity to CPU 0.
Also trigger the kernel every 1000us to traverse the TX_RING instead of every
10us. Note that the pcap magic type is detected automatically from the pcap
file header.
.SS netsniff-ng --in eth0 --out eth1 --silent --bind-cpu 0 --type host -r
Redirect network traffic from the networking device eth0 to eth1 for traffic
that is destined to our host, thus ignore broadcast, multicast and promiscuous
traffic. Randomize the order of packets for the outgoing device and do not
print any packet contents to the terminal. Also, pin the process and NIC IRQ
affinity to CPU 0.
.SS netsniff-ng --in team0 --out /opt/probe/ -s -m -J --interval 100MiB -b 0
Capture on an aggregated team0 networkoing device and dump packets into multiple
pcap files that are split into 100MiB each. Use mmap(2) I/O as a pcap write
method, enable support for super jumbo frames up to 64KB, and do not print
the captured data to the terminal. Pin netsniff-ng to and NIC IRQ affinity to
CPU 0. The default pcap magic type is 0xa1b2c3d4 (tcpdump-capable pcap).
.SS netsniff-ng --in vlan0 --out dump.pcap -c -u `id -u bob` -g `id -g bob`
Capture network traffic on device wlan0 into a pcap file called dump.pcap
by using normal read(2), write(2) I/O for the pcap file (slower but less
latency). Also, after setting up the RX_RING for capture, drop priviledges
from root to the user/group ``bob''. Invoke the packet dissector and print
packet contents to the terminal for further analysis.
.SS netsniff-ng --in any --filter http.bpf -B --jumbo-support --ascii -V
Capture from all available networking interfaces and install a low-level
filter that was previously compiled by bpfc(8) into http.bpf in order to
filter HTTP traffic. Enable super jumbo frame support and only print
human readable packet data to the terminal, be also more verbose during
setup phase. Moreover, dump BPF disassembly from http.bpf.
.SS netsniff-ng --in dump.pcap --out dump.cfg --silent
Convert the pcap file dump.pcap into a trafgen(8) configuration file dump.cfg.
Do not print pcap contents to the terminal.
.SS netsniff-ng -i dump.pcap -f beacon.bpf -o -
Convert the pcap file dump.pcap into a trafgen(8) configuration file to
stdout. However, do not dump all of its content, but only the one that
passes the low-level filter for raw 802.11 from beacon.bpf. The BPF engine
here is invoked in user space inside of netsniff-ng, so Linux extensions
are not available.
.SS cat foo.pcap | netsniff-ng -i - -o -
Read a pcap file from stdin and convert it into a trafgen(8) configuration
file to stdout.
.SH FILTER EXAMPLE
netsniff-ng supports both, low-level and high-level filters that are
attached to its packet(7) socket. Low-level filters are described in
the bpfc(8) man page.
Low-level filters can be used with netsniff-ng in the following way:
1. bpfc foo > bar
2. netsniff-ng -f bar
Here, foo is the bpfc program that will be translated into a netsniff-ng
readable ``opcodes'' file and passed to netsniff-ng through the -f option.
Similarly, high-level filter can be either passed through the -f option,
e.g. -f "tcp or udp" or at the end of all options without the ``-f''.
The filter syntax is the same as in tcpdump(8), which is described in
the man page pcap-filter(7). Just to quote some examples from pcap-filter(7):
.SS host sundown
To select all packets arriving at or departing from sundown.
.SS host helios and \( hot or ace \)
To select traffic between helios and either hot or ace.
.SS ip host ace and not helios
To select all IP packets between ace and any host except helios.
.SS net ucb-ether
To select all traffic between local hosts and hosts at Berkeley.
.SS gateway snup and (port ftp or ftp-data)
To select all ftp traffic through internet gateway snup.
.SS ip and not net localnet
To select traffic neither sourced from nor destined for local hosts (if you
gateway to one other net, this stuff should never make it onto your local net).
.SS tcp[tcpflags] & (tcp-syn|tcp-fin) != 0 and not src and dst net localnet
To select the start and end packets (the SYN and FIN packets) of each TCP
conversation that involve a non-local host.
.SS tcp port 80 and (((ip[2:2] - ((ip[0]&0xf)<<2)) - ((tcp[12]&0xf0)>>2)) != 0)
To select all IPv4 HTTP packets to and from port 80, i.e. print only packets
that contain data, not, for example, SYN and FIN packets and ACK-only packets.
(IPv6 is left as an exercise for the reader.)
.SS gateway snup and ip[2:2] > 576
To select IP packets longer than 576 bytes sent through gateway snup.
.SS ether[0] & 1 = 0 and ip[16] >= 224
To select IP broadcast or multicast packets that were not sent via Ethernet
broadcast or multicast.
.SS icmp[icmptype] != icmp-echo and icmp[icmptype] != icmp-echoreply
To select all ICMP packets that are not echo requests/replies (i.e., not
ping packets).
.SH NOTE
For introducing bit errors, delays with random variation and more
while replaying pcaps, make use of tc(8) with its disciplines such
as netem.
netsniff-ng does only some basic, architecture generic tuning on
startup. If you are considering to do high performance capturing,
you need to carefully tune your machine, hardware and software-wise.
Simply letting netsniff-ng run without thinking about your underlying
system might not necessarily give you the desired performance. Note
that tuning your system is always a tradeoff and fine-grained
balancing act (e.g. throughput vs. latency). You should know what
you're doing!
One recommendation for software-based tuning is tuned(8). Besides
that, there are many other things to consider. Just to throw you
a few things that you might want to look at: NAPI networking drivers,
tickless kernel, I/OAT DMA engine, Direct Cache Access, RAM-based
file systems, multi-queues, and many more things. Also, you might
want to read the kernel's Documentation/networking/scaling.txt file
regarding technologies such as RSS, RPS, RFS, aRFS and XPS. Also
check your ethtool(8) settings, e.g. regarding offloading.
Moreover, to get a deeper understanding of netsniff-ng internals
and how it interacts with the Linux kernel, the kernel documentation
under Documentation/networking/{packet_mmap.txt, filter.txt,
multiqueue.txt} might be of interest.
If you do not need to dump all possible traffic, you have to consider
running netsniff-ng with a BPF filter for the ingress path. For that
purpose, read the bpfc(8) man page.
Also, to aggregate multiple NICs that you want to capture on, you
should consider using team devices, further explained in libteam resp.
teamd(8).
The following netsniff-ng pcap magic numbers are compatible with other
tools, at least tcpdump or Wireshark:
0xa1b2c3d4 (tcpdump-capable pcap)
0xa1b23c4d (tcpdump-capable pcap with ns resolution)
0xa1b2cd34 (Alexey Kuznetzov's pcap)
.SH BUGS
When replaying pcap files, the timing information from the pcap packet
header is currently ignored.
Also, when replaying pcap files, demultiplexing traffic among multiple
networking interfaces does not work. Currently, it is only sent via the
interface that is given by the --out parameter.
.SH LEGAL
netsniff-ng is licensed under the GNU GPL version 2.0.
.SH HISTORY
.B netsniff-ng
was originally written for the netsniff-ng toolkit by Daniel Borkmann. Bigger
contributions were made by Emmanuel Roullit, Markus Amend, Tobias Klauser and
Christoph Jaeger. It is currently maintained by Tobias Klauser
<tklauser@distanz.ch> and Daniel Borkmann <dborkma@tik.ee.ethz.ch>.
.SH SEE ALSO
.BR trafgen (8),
.BR mausezahn (8),
.BR ifpps (8),
.BR bpfc (8),
.BR flowtop (8),
.BR astraceroute (8),
.BR curvetun (8)
.SH AUTHOR
Manpage was written by Daniel Borkmann.
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