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23 .TH TCPDUMP 1 "10 March 2025"
24 .SH NAME
25 tcpdump \- dump traffic on a network
26 .SH SYNOPSIS
27 .na
28 .B tcpdump
29 [
30 .B \-AbdDefhHIJKlLnNOpqStuUvxX#
31 ] [
32 .B \-B
33 .I buffer_size
34 ]
35 .ti +8
36 [
37 .B \-c
38 .I count
39 ]
40 [
41 .B \-\-count
42 ]
43 [
44 .B \-C
45 .I file_size
46 ]
47 .ti +8
48 [
49 .B \-E
50 .I spi@ipaddr algo:secret,...
51 ]
52 .ti +8
53 [
54 .B \-F
55 .I file
56 ]
57 [
58 .B \-G
59 .I rotate_seconds
60 ]
61 [
62 .B \-i
63 .I interface
64 ]
65 .ti +8
66 [
67 .B \-\-immediate\-mode
68 ]
69 [
70 .B \-j
71 .I tstamp_type
72 ]
73 .ti +8
74 [
75 .BI \-\-lengths
76 ]
77 [
78 .B \-m
79 .I module
80 ]
81 .ti +8
82 [
83 .B \-M
84 .I secret
85 ]
86 [
87 .B \-\-number
88 ]
89 [
90 .B \-\-print
91 ]
92 .ti +8
93 [
94 .B \-\-print\-sampling
95 .I nth
96 ]
97 [
98 .B \-Q
99 .I in|out|inout
100 ]
101 [
102 .B \-r
103 .I file
104 ]
105 .ti +8
106 [
107 .B \-s
108 .I snaplen
109 ]
110 [
111 .B \-\-skip
112 .I count
113 ]
114 [
115 .B \-T
116 .I type
117 ]
118 [
119 .B \-\-version
120 ]
121 .ti +8
122 [
123 .B \-V
124 .I file
125 ]
126 [
127 .B \-w
128 .I file
129 ]
130 [
131 .B \-W
132 .I filecount
133 ]
134 [
135 .B \-y
136 .I datalinktype
137 ]
138 .ti +8
139 [
140 .B \-z
141 .I postrotate-command
142 ]
143 [
144 .B \-Z
145 .I user
146 ]
147 .ti +8
148 [
149 .BI \-\-time\-stamp\-precision= tstamp_precision
150 ]
151 .ti +8
152 [
153 .BI \-\-micro
154 ]
155 [
156 .BI \-\-nano
157 ]
158 .ti +8
159 [
160 .I expression
161 ]
162 .br
163 .ad
164 .SH DESCRIPTION
165 .LP
166 \fItcpdump\fP prints out a description of the contents of packets on a
167 network interface that match the Boolean \fIexpression\fP (see
168 .BR \%pcap-filter (@MAN_MISC_INFO@)
169 for the \fIexpression\fP syntax); the
170 description is preceded by a time stamp, printed, by default, as hours,
171 minutes, seconds, and fractions of a second since midnight. It can also
172 be run with the
173 .B \-w
174 flag, which causes it to save the packet data to a file for later
175 analysis, and/or with the
176 .B \-r
177 flag, which causes it to read from a saved packet file rather than to
178 read packets from a network interface. It can also be run with the
179 .B \-V
180 flag, which causes it to read a list of saved packet files. In all cases,
181 only packets that match
182 .I expression
183 will be processed by
184 .IR tcpdump .
185 .LP
186 .I tcpdump
187 will, if not run with the
188 .B \-c
189 flag, continue capturing packets until it is interrupted by a
190 .B SIGINT
191 signal (generated, for example, by typing your interrupt character,
192 typically control-C) or a
193 .B SIGTERM
194 signal (typically generated with the
195 .BR kill (1)
196 command); if run with the
197 .B \-c
198 flag, it will capture packets until it is interrupted by a
199 .B SIGINT
200 or
201 .B SIGTERM
202 signal or the specified number of packets have been processed.
203 .LP
204 When
205 .I tcpdump
206 finishes capturing packets, it will report counts of:
207 .IP
208 packets ``captured'' (this is the number of packets that
209 .I tcpdump
210 has received and processed);
211 .IP
212 packets ``received by filter'' (the meaning of this depends on the OS on
213 which you're running
214 .IR tcpdump ,
215 and possibly on the way the OS was configured - if a filter was
216 specified on the command line, on some OSes it counts packets regardless
217 of whether they were matched by the filter expression and, even if they
218 were matched by the filter expression, regardless of whether
219 .I tcpdump
220 has read and processed them yet, on other OSes it counts only packets that were
221 matched by the filter expression regardless of whether
222 .I tcpdump
223 has read and processed them yet, and on other OSes it counts only
224 packets that were matched by the filter expression and were processed by
225 .IR tcpdump );
226 .IP
227 packets ``dropped by kernel'' (this is the number of packets that were
228 dropped, due to a lack of buffer space, by the packet capture mechanism
229 in the OS on which
230 .I tcpdump
231 is running, if the OS reports that information to applications; if not,
232 it will be reported as 0).
233 .LP
234 On platforms that support the
235 .B SIGINFO
236 signal, such as most BSDs
237 (including macOS), it will report those counts
238 when it receives a
239 .B SIGINFO
240 signal (generated, for example, by typing
241 your ``status'' character, typically control-T, although on some
242 platforms, such as macOS, the ``status'' character is not set by
243 default, so you must set it with
244 .BR stty (1)
245 in order to use it) and will continue capturing packets. On platforms that
246 do not support the
247 .B SIGINFO
248 signal, the same can be achieved by using the
249 .B SIGUSR1
250 signal.
251 .LP
252 Using the
253 .B SIGUSR2
254 signal along with the
255 .B \-w
256 flag will forcibly flush the packet buffer into the output file.
257 .LP
258 Reading packets from a network interface may require that you have
259 special privileges; see the
260 .BR pcap (3PCAP)
261 man page for details. Reading a saved packet file doesn't require
262 special privileges.
263 .SH OPTIONS
264 .TP
265 .B \-A
266 Print each packet (minus its link level header) in ASCII. Handy for
267 capturing web pages.
268 No effect when
269 .B \-x[x]
270 or
271 .B \-X[X]
272 options are used.
273 .TP
274 .B \-b
275 Print the AS number in BGP packets using "asdot" rather than "asplain"
276 representation, in RFC 5396 terms.
277 .TP
278 .BI \-B " buffer_size"
279 .PD 0
280 .TP
281 .BI \-\-buffer\-size= buffer_size
282 .PD
283 Set the operating system capture buffer size to \fIbuffer_size\fP, in
284 units of KiB (1024 bytes).
285 .TP
286 .BI \-c " count"
287 Exit after receiving or reading \fIcount\fP packets.
288 If the
289 .B --skip
290 option is used, the \fIcount\fP starts after the skipped packets.
291 .TP
292 .BI \-\-count
293 Print only on stdout the packet count when reading capture file(s) instead
294 of parsing/printing the packets. If a filter is specified on the command
295 line, \fItcpdump\fP counts only packets that were matched by the filter
296 expression.
297 .TP
298 .BI \-C " file_size"
299 Before writing a raw packet to a savefile, check whether the file is
300 currently larger than \fIfile_size\fP and, if so, close the current
301 savefile and open a new one. Savefiles after the first savefile will
302 have the name specified with the
303 .B \-w
304 flag, with a number after it, starting at 1 and continuing upward.
305 The default unit of \fIfile_size\fP is millions of bytes (1,000,000 bytes,
306 not 1,048,576 bytes).
307 .IP
308 By adding a suffix of k/K, m/M or g/G to the value, the unit
309 can be changed to 1,024 (KiB), 1,048,576 (MiB), or 1,073,741,824 (GiB)
310 respectively.
311 .TP
312 .B \-d
313 Dump the compiled packet-matching code in a human readable form to
314 standard output and stop.
315 .IP
316 Please mind that although code compilation is always DLT-specific,
317 typically it is impossible (and unnecessary) to specify which DLT to use
318 for the dump because \fItcpdump\fP uses either the DLT of the input pcap
319 file specified with
320 .BR -r ,
321 or the default DLT of the network interface specified with
322 .BR -i ,
323 or the particular DLT of the network interface specified with
324 .B -y
325 and
326 .B -i
327 respectively. In these cases the dump shows the same exact code that
328 would filter the input file or the network interface without
329 .BR -d .
330 .IP
331 However, when neither
332 .B -r
333 nor
334 .B -i
335 is specified, specifying
336 .B -d
337 prevents \fItcpdump\fP from guessing a suitable network interface (see
338 .BR -i ).
339 In this case the DLT defaults to EN10MB and can be set to another valid
340 value manually with
341 .BR -y .
342 .TP
343 .B \-dd
344 Dump packet-matching code as a C array of
345 .B "struct bpf_insn"
346 structures.
347 .TP
348 .B \-ddd
349 Dump packet-matching code as decimal numbers (preceded with a count).
350 .TP
351 .B \-D
352 .PD 0
353 .TP
354 .B \-\-list\-interfaces
355 .PD
356 Print the list of the network interfaces available on the system and on
357 which
358 .I tcpdump
359 can capture packets. For each network interface, a number and an
360 interface name, possibly followed by a text description of the
361 interface, are printed. The interface name or the number can be supplied
362 to the
363 .B \-i
364 flag to specify an interface on which to capture.
365 .IP
366 This can be useful on systems that don't have a command to list them
367 (e.g., Windows systems, or UNIX systems lacking
368 .BR "ifconfig \-a" );
369 the number can be useful on Windows 2000 and later systems, where the
370 interface name is a somewhat complex string.
371 .TP
372 .B \-e
373 Print the link-level header on each dump line. This can be used, for
374 example, to print MAC layer addresses for protocols such as Ethernet and
375 IEEE 802.11.
376 .TP
377 .B \-E
378 Use \fIspi@ipaddr algo:secret\fP for decrypting IPsec ESP packets that
379 are addressed to \fIaddr\fP and contain Security Parameter Index value
380 \fIspi\fP. This combination may be repeated with comma or newline separation.
381 .IP
382 Note that setting the secret for IPv4 ESP packets is supported at this time.
383 .IP
384 Algorithms may be
385 \fBdes-cbc\fP,
386 \fB3des-cbc\fP,
387 \fBblowfish-cbc\fP,
388 \fBrc3-cbc\fP,
389 \fBcast128-cbc\fP,
390 or
391 \fBnone\fP.
392 The default is
393 .BR des-cbc .
394 The ability to decrypt packets is only present if \fItcpdump\fP was compiled
395 with cryptography enabled.
396 .IP
397 \fIsecret\fP is the ASCII text for ESP secret key.
398 If preceded by 0x, then a hex value will be read.
399 .IP
400 The option assumes RFC 2406 ESP, not RFC 1827 ESP.
401 The option is only for debugging purposes, and
402 the use of this option with a true `secret' key is discouraged.
403 By presenting IPsec secret key onto command line
404 you make it visible to others, via
405 .BR ps (1)
406 and other occasions.
407 .IP
408 In addition to the above syntax, the syntax \fIfile name\fP may be used
409 to have tcpdump read the provided file in. The file is opened upon
410 receiving the first ESP packet, so any special permissions that tcpdump
411 may have been given should already have been given up.
412 .TP
413 .B \-f
414 Print `foreign' IPv4 addresses numerically rather than symbolically
415 (this option is intended to get around serious brain damage in
416 Sun's NIS server \(em usually it hangs forever translating non-local
417 internet numbers).
418 .IP
419 The test for `foreign' IPv4 addresses is done using the IPv4 address and
420 netmask of the interface on that capture is being done. If the interface
421 has no IPv4 addresses (which by convention applies to the "any"
422 pseudo-interface (see the
423 .B \-i
424 flag below), the IPv4 netmask is assumed to be /0 and any IPv4 address is
425 considered non-foreign. If the IPv4 netmask is /32, all IPv4 addresses
426 except the interface's own address are considered foreign. If the
427 interface has more than one IPv4 address, it is not trivial to predict
428 which one will be used for the test.
429 .IP
430 Without the
431 .B \-f
432 flag, or when the netmask is assumed to be /0 (as discussed above), the
433 .B "ip broadcast"
434 primitive in the filter expression matches IPv4 packets that have either
435 0.0.0.0 or 255.255.255.255 as the destination address. With the flag,
436 the primitive uses the same netmask (but not the network address) to test
437 the IPv4 destination address as the foreign address test. One exception
438 is the netmask /32, in which case the primitive is considered invalid for
439 the interface.
440 .TP
441 .BI \-F " file"
442 Use \fIfile\fP as input for the filter expression.
443 An additional expression given on the command line is ignored.
444 .TP
445 .BI \-G " rotate_seconds"
446 If specified, rotates the dump file specified with the
447 .B \-w
448 option every \fIrotate_seconds\fP seconds.
449 Savefiles will have the name specified by
450 .B \-w
451 which should include a time format as defined by
452 .BR strftime (3).
453 If no time format is specified, each new file will overwrite the previous.
454 Whenever a generated filename is not unique, tcpdump will overwrite the
455 preexisting data; providing a time specification that is coarser than the
456 capture period is therefore not advised.
457 .IP
458 If used in conjunction with the
459 .B \-C
460 option, filenames will take the form of `\fIfile\fP<count>'.
461 .TP
462 .B \-h
463 .PD 0
464 .TP
465 .B \-\-help
466 .PD
467 Print the tcpdump and libpcap version strings, print a usage message,
468 and exit.
469 .TP
470 .B \-\-version
471 .PD
472 Print the tcpdump and libpcap version strings and exit.
473 .TP
474 .B \-H
475 Attempt to detect 802.11s draft mesh headers.
476 .TP
477 .BI \-i " interface"
478 .PD 0
479 .TP
480 .BI \-\-interface= interface
481 .PD
482 Listen, report the list of link-layer types, report the list of time
483 stamp types, or report the results of compiling a filter expression on
484 \fIinterface\fP. If unspecified and if the
485 .B -d
486 flag is not given, \fItcpdump\fP searches the system
487 interface list for the lowest numbered, configured up interface
488 (excluding loopback), which may turn out to be, for example, ``eth0''.
489 .IP
490 On all supported Linux systems, as well as on recent versions of macOS
491 and Solaris, an
492 .I interface
493 argument of ``any'' means a special pseudo-interface, which captures packets
494 from all regular network interfaces of the OS. What is considered a regular
495 network interface is an implementation detail of the OS (for example, on
496 Linux this includes SocketCAN devices), so packets captured on the ``any''
497 pseudo-interface may represent more different network protocols than expected.
498 Also all regular network interfaces are a subset of all available capture
499 devices as printed by the
500 .B \-D
501 flag. The latter may also include capture devices that libpcap implements by
502 means other than the OS network stack: Bluetooth, DAG, D-Bus, SNF and USB.
503 Note that captures on the ``any'' pseudo-interface will not be done in promiscuous
504 mode.
505 .IP
506 An interface number as printed by the
507 .B \-D
508 flag can be used as the
509 .I interface
510 argument, if no interface on the system has that number as a name.
511 .TP
512 .B \-I
513 .PD 0
514 .TP
515 .B \-\-monitor\-mode
516 .PD
517 Put the interface in "monitor mode"; this is supported only on IEEE
518 802.11 Wi-Fi interfaces, and supported only on some operating systems.
519 .IP
520 Note that in monitor mode the adapter might disassociate from the
521 network with which it's associated, so that you will not be able to use
522 any wireless networks with that adapter. This could prevent accessing
523 files on a network server, or resolving host names or network addresses,
524 if you are capturing in monitor mode and are not connected to another
525 network with another adapter.
526 .IP
527 This flag will affect the output of the
528 .B \-L
529 flag. If
530 .B \-I
531 isn't specified, only those link-layer types available when not in
532 monitor mode will be shown; if
533 .B \-I
534 is specified, only those link-layer types available when in monitor mode
535 will be shown.
536 .TP
537 .BI \-\-immediate\-mode
538 Capture in "immediate mode". In this mode, packets are delivered to
539 tcpdump as soon as they arrive, rather than being buffered for
540 efficiency. This is the default when printing packets rather than
541 saving packets to a ``savefile'' if the packets are being printed to a
542 terminal rather than to a file or pipe.
543 .TP
544 .BI \-j " tstamp_type"
545 .PD 0
546 .TP
547 .BI \-\-time\-stamp\-type= tstamp_type
548 .PD
549 Set the time stamp type for the capture to \fItstamp_type\fP. The names
550 to use for the time stamp types are given in
551 .BR \%pcap-tstamp (@MAN_MISC_INFO@);
552 not all the types listed there will necessarily be valid for any given
553 interface.
554 .TP
555 .B \-J
556 .PD 0
557 .TP
558 .B \-\-list\-time\-stamp\-types
559 .PD
560 List the supported time stamp types for the interface and exit. If the
561 time stamp type cannot be set for the interface, no time stamp types are
562 listed.
563 .TP
564 .BI \-\-time\-stamp\-precision= tstamp_precision
565 When capturing, set the time stamp precision for the capture to
566 \fItstamp_precision\fP. Note that availability of high precision time
567 stamps (nanoseconds) and their actual accuracy is platform and hardware
568 dependent. Also note that when writing captures made with nanosecond
569 accuracy to a savefile, the time stamps are written with nanosecond
570 resolution, and the file is written with a different magic number, to
571 indicate that the time stamps are in seconds and nanoseconds; not all
572 programs that read pcap savefiles will be able to read those captures.
573 .IP
574 When reading a savefile, convert time stamps to the precision specified
575 by \fItimestamp_precision\fP, and display them with that resolution. If
576 the precision specified is less than the precision of time stamps in the
577 file, the conversion will lose precision.
578 .IP
579 The supported values for \fItimestamp_precision\fP are \fBmicro\fP for
580 microsecond resolution and \fBnano\fP for nanosecond resolution. The
581 default is microsecond resolution.
582 .TP
583 .B \-\-micro
584 .PD 0
585 .TP
586 .B \-\-nano
587 .PD
588 Shorthands for
589 .B \-\-time\-stamp\-precision=micro
590 or
591 .BR \-\-time\-stamp\-precision=nano ,
592 adjusting the time stamp
593 precision accordingly. When reading packets from a savefile, using
594 .B \-\-micro
595 truncates time stamps if the savefile was created with
596 nanosecond precision. In contrast, a savefile created with microsecond
597 precision will have trailing zeroes added to the time stamp when
598 .B \-\-nano
599 is used.
600 .TP
601 .B \-K
602 .PD 0
603 .TP
604 .B \-\-dont\-verify\-checksums
605 .PD
606 Don't attempt to verify IP, TCP, or UDP checksums. This is useful for
607 interfaces that perform some or all of those checksum calculation in
608 hardware; otherwise, all outgoing TCP checksums will be flagged as bad.
609 .TP
610 .B \-l
611 Make stdout line buffered.
612 Useful if you want to see the data
613 while capturing it.
614 E.g.,
615 .IP
616 .RS
617 .RS
618 .nf
619 \fBtcpdump \-l | tee dat\fP
620 .fi
621 .RE
622 .RE
623 .IP
624 or
625 .IP
626 .RS
627 .RS
628 .nf
629 \fBtcpdump \-l > dat & tail \-f dat\fP
630 .fi
631 .RE
632 .RE
633 .IP
634 Note that on Windows,``line buffered'' means ``unbuffered'', so that
635 tcpdump will write each character individually if
636 .B \-l
637 is specified.
638 .IP
639 .B \-U
640 is similar to
641 .B \-l
642 in its behavior, but it will cause output to be ``packet-buffered'', so
643 that the output is written to stdout at the end of each packet rather
644 than at the end of each line; this is buffered on all platforms,
645 including Windows.
646 .TP
647 .B \-L
648 .PD 0
649 .TP
650 .B \-\-list\-data\-link\-types
651 .PD
652 List the known data link types for the interface, in the specified mode,
653 and exit. The list of known data link types may be dependent on the
654 specified mode; for example, on some platforms, a Wi-Fi interface might
655 support one set of data link types when not in monitor mode (for
656 example, it might support only fake Ethernet headers, or might support
657 802.11 headers but not support 802.11 headers with radio information)
658 and another set of data link types when in monitor mode (for example, it
659 might support 802.11 headers, or 802.11 headers with radio information,
660 only in monitor mode).
661 .TP
662 .BI \-\-lengths
663 Print the captured and original packet lengths.
664 The lengths are printed at the beginning of the line or after the packet
665 number, if any.
666 \fIcaplen\fP is the captured packet length (see the
667 .B \-s
668 option).
669 \fIlen\fP is the original (on wire) packet length.
670 .TP
671 .BI \-m " module"
672 Load SMI MIB module definitions from file \fImodule\fR.
673 This option
674 can be used several times to load several MIB modules into \fItcpdump\fP.
675 .TP
676 .BI \-M " secret"
677 Use \fIsecret\fP as a shared secret for validating the digests found in
678 TCP segments with the TCP-MD5 option (RFC 2385), if present.
679 .TP
680 .B \-n
681 Don't convert addresses (i.e., host addresses, port numbers, etc.) to names.
682 .TP
683 .B \-N
684 Don't print domain name qualification of host names.
685 E.g.,
686 if you give this flag then \fItcpdump\fP will print ``nic''
687 instead of ``nic.ddn.mil''.
688 .TP
689 .B \-#
690 .PD 0
691 .TP
692 .B \-\-number
693 .PD
694 Print a packet number at the beginning of the line.
695 .TP
696 .B \-O
697 .PD 0
698 .TP
699 .B \-\-no\-optimize
700 .PD
701 Do not run the packet-matching code optimizer.
702 This is useful only
703 if you suspect a bug in the optimizer.
704 .TP
705 .B \-p
706 .PD 0
707 .TP
708 .B \-\-no\-promiscuous\-mode
709 .PD
710 \fIDon't\fP put the interface
711 into promiscuous mode.
712 Note that the interface might be in promiscuous
713 mode for some other reason; hence,
714 .B \-p
715 cannot be used as an abbreviation for
716 .BR "ether host {local-hw-addr} or ether broadcast" .
717 .TP
718 .BI \-\-print
719 Print parsed packet output, even if the raw packets are being saved to a
720 file with the
721 .B \-w
722 flag.
723 .TP
724 .BI \-\-print\-sampling= nth
725 .PD
726 Print every \fInth\fP packet. This option enables the
727 .B \-\-print
728 flag.
729 .IP
730 Unprinted packets are not parsed, which decreases processing time. Setting
731 \fInth\fP to \fB100\fP for example, will (counting from 1) parse and print the
732 100th packet, 200th packet, 300th packet, and so on.
733 .IP
734 This option also enables the
735 .B \-S
736 flag, as relative TCP sequence
737 numbers are not tracked for unprinted packets.
738 .TP
739 .BI \-Q " direction"
740 .PD 0
741 .TP
742 .BI \-\-direction= direction
743 .PD
744 Choose send/receive direction \fIdirection\fR for which packets should be
745 captured. Possible values are `in', `out' and `inout'. Not available
746 on all platforms.
747 .TP
748 .B \-q
749 Quick output.
750 Print less protocol information so output
751 lines are shorter.
752 .TP
753 .BI \-r " file"
754 Read packets from \fIfile\fR (which was created with the
755 .B \-w
756 option or by other tools that write pcap or pcapng files).
757 Standard input is used if \fIfile\fR is ``-''.
758 .TP
759 .B \-S
760 .PD 0
761 .TP
762 .B \-\-absolute\-tcp\-sequence\-numbers
763 .PD
764 Print absolute, rather than relative, TCP sequence numbers.
765 .TP
766 .BI \-s " snaplen"
767 .PD 0
768 .TP
769 .BI \-\-snapshot\-length= snaplen
770 .PD
771 Snarf \fIsnaplen\fP bytes of data from each packet rather than the
772 default of 262144 bytes.
773 Packets truncated because of a limited snapshot
774 are indicated in the output with ``[|\fIproto\fP]'', where \fIproto\fP
775 is the name of the protocol level at which the truncation has occurred.
776 .IP
777 Note that taking larger snapshots both increases
778 the amount of time it takes to process packets and, effectively,
779 decreases the amount of packet buffering.
780 This may cause packets to be
781 lost.
782 Note also that taking smaller snapshots will discard data from protocols
783 above the transport layer, which loses information that may be
784 important. NFS and AFS requests and replies, for example, are very
785 large, and much of the detail won't be available if a too-short snapshot
786 length is selected.
787 .IP
788 If you need to reduce the snapshot size below the default, you should
789 limit \fIsnaplen\fP to the smallest number that will capture the
790 protocol information you're interested in. Setting
791 \fIsnaplen\fP to 0 sets it to the default of 262144,
792 for backwards compatibility with recent older versions of
793 .IR tcpdump .
794 .TP
795 .BI \-\-skip " count"
796 Skip \fIcount\fP packets before writing or printing.
797 \fIcount\fP with value 0 is allowed.
798 .TP
799 .BI \-T " type"
800 Force packets selected by "\fIexpression\fP" to be interpreted the
801 specified \fItype\fR.
802 Currently known types are
803 \fBaodv\fR (Ad-hoc On-demand Distance Vector protocol),
804 \fBcarp\fR (Common Address Redundancy Protocol),
805 \fBcnfp\fR (Cisco NetFlow protocol),
806 \fBdomain\fR (Domain Name System),
807 \fBlmp\fR (Link Management Protocol),
808 \fBpgm\fR (Pragmatic General Multicast),
809 \fBpgm_zmtp1\fR (ZMTP/1.0 inside PGM/EPGM),
810 \fBptp\fR (Precision Time Protocol),
811 \fBquic\fR (QUIC),
812 \fBradius\fR (RADIUS),
813 \fBresp\fR (REdis Serialization Protocol),
814 \fBrpc\fR (Remote Procedure Call),
815 \fBrtcp\fR (Real-Time Applications control protocol),
816 \fBrtp\fR (Real-Time Applications protocol),
817 \fBsnmp\fR (Simple Network Management Protocol),
818 \fBsomeip\fR (SOME/IP),
819 \fBtftp\fR (Trivial File Transfer Protocol),
820 \fBvat\fR (Visual Audio Tool),
821 \fBvxlan\fR (Virtual eXtensible Local Area Network),
822 \fBwb\fR (distributed White Board)
823 and
824 \fBzmtp1\fR (ZeroMQ Message Transport Protocol 1.0).
825 .IP
826 Note that the \fBpgm\fR type above affects UDP interpretation only, the native
827 PGM is always recognised as IP protocol 113 regardless. UDP-encapsulated PGM is
828 often called "EPGM" or "PGM/UDP".
829 .IP
830 Note that the \fBpgm_zmtp1\fR type above affects interpretation of both native
831 PGM and UDP at once. During the native PGM decoding the application data of an
832 ODATA/RDATA packet would be decoded as a ZeroMQ datagram with ZMTP/1.0 frames.
833 During the UDP decoding in addition to that any UDP packet would be treated as
834 an encapsulated PGM packet.
835 .TP
836 .B \-t
837 \fIDon't\fP print a timestamp on each dump line.
838 .TP
839 .B \-tt
840 Print the timestamp, as seconds since January 1, 1970, 00:00:00, UTC, and
841 fractions of a second since that time, on each dump line.
842 .TP
843 .B \-ttt
844 Print a delta (microsecond or nanosecond resolution depending on the
845 .B \-\-time\-stamp-precision
846 option) between current and previous line on each dump line.
847 The default is microsecond resolution.
848 .TP
849 .B \-tttt
850 Print a timestamp, as hours, minutes, seconds, and fractions of a second
851 since midnight, preceded by the date, on each dump line.
852 .TP
853 .B \-ttttt
854 Print a delta (microsecond or nanosecond resolution depending on the
855 .B \-\-time\-stamp-precision
856 option) between current and first line on each dump line.
857 The default is microsecond resolution.
858 .TP
859 .B \-u
860 Print undecoded NFS handles.
861 .TP
862 .B \-U
863 .PD 0
864 .TP
865 .B \-\-packet\-buffered
866 .PD
867 If the
868 .B \-w
869 option is not specified, or if it is specified but the
870 .B \-\-print
871 flag is also specified, make the printed packet output
872 ``packet-buffered''; i.e., as the description of the contents of each
873 packet is printed, it will be written to the standard output, rather
874 than, when not writing to a terminal, being written only when the output
875 buffer fills.
876 .IP
877 If the
878 .B \-w
879 option is specified, make the saved raw packet output
880 ``packet-buffered''; i.e., as each packet is saved, it will be written
881 to the output file, rather than being written only when the output
882 buffer fills.
883 .TP
884 .B \-v
885 When parsing and printing, produce (slightly more) verbose output.
886 For example, the time to live,
887 identification, total length and options in an IP packet are printed.
888 Also enables additional packet integrity checks such as verifying the
889 IP and ICMP header checksum.
890 .IP
891 When writing to a file with the
892 .B \-w
893 option and at the same time not reading from a file with the
894 .B \-r
895 option, report to stderr, once per second, the number of packets captured. In
896 Solaris, FreeBSD and possibly other operating systems this periodic update
897 currently can cause loss of captured packets on their way from the kernel to
898 tcpdump.
899 .TP
900 .B \-vv
901 Even more verbose output.
902 For example, additional fields are
903 printed from NFS reply packets, and SMB packets are fully decoded.
904 .TP
905 .B \-vvv
906 Even more verbose output.
907 For example,
908 telnet
909 .BR SB ... SE
910 options are printed in full. With
911 .B \-X
912 telnet options are printed in hex as well.
913 .TP
914 .BI \-V " file"
915 Read a list of filenames from \fIfile\fR. Standard input is used
916 if \fIfile\fR is ``-''.
917 .TP
918 .BI \-w " file"
919 Write the raw packets to \fIfile\fR rather than parsing and printing
920 them out.
921 They can later be printed with the \-r option.
922 Standard output is used if \fIfile\fR is ``-''.
923 .IP
924 This output will be buffered if written to a file or pipe, so a program
925 reading from the file or pipe may not see packets for an arbitrary
926 amount of time after they are received. Use the
927 .B \-U
928 flag to cause packets to be written as soon as they are received.
929 .IP
930 The MIME type \fIapplication/vnd.tcpdump.pcap\fP has been registered
931 with IANA for \fIpcap\fP files. The filename extension \fI.pcap\fP
932 appears to be the most commonly used along with \fI.cap\fP and
933 \fI.dmp\fP. \fItcpdump\fP itself doesn't check the extension when
934 reading capture files and doesn't add an extension when writing them
935 (it uses magic numbers in the file header instead). However, many
936 operating systems and applications will use the extension if it is
937 present and adding one (e.g. .pcap) is recommended.
938 .IP
939 See
940 .BR \%pcap-savefile (@MAN_FILE_FORMATS@)
941 for a description of the file format.
942 .TP
943 .BI \-W " filecount"
944 Used in conjunction with the
945 .B \-C
946 option, this will limit the number
947 of files created to the specified number, and begin overwriting files
948 from the beginning, thus creating a 'rotating' buffer.
949 In addition, it will name
950 the files with enough leading 0s to support the maximum number of
951 files, allowing them to sort correctly.
952 .IP
953 Used in conjunction with the
954 .B \-G
955 option, this will limit the number of rotated dump files that get
956 created, exiting with status 0 when reaching the limit.
957 .IP
958 If used in conjunction with both
959 .B \-C
960 and
961 .B \-G,
962 the
963 .B \-W
964 option will currently be ignored, and will only affect the file name.
965 .TP
966 .B \-x
967 When parsing and printing,
968 in addition to printing the headers of each packet, print the data of
969 each packet (minus its link level header) in hex.
970 The smaller of the entire packet or
971 .I snaplen
972 bytes will be printed. Note that this is the entire link-layer
973 packet, so for link layers that pad (e.g. Ethernet), the padding bytes
974 will also be printed when the higher layer packet is shorter than the
975 required padding.
976 In the current implementation this flag may have the same effect as
977 .B \-xx
978 if the packet is truncated.
979 No effect when
980 .B \-X[X]
981 option is used.
982 .TP
983 .B \-xx
984 When parsing and printing,
985 in addition to printing the headers of each packet, print the data of
986 each packet,
987 .I including
988 its link level header, in hex.
989 No effect when
990 .B \-X[X]
991 option is used.
992 .TP
993 .B \-X
994 When parsing and printing,
995 in addition to printing the headers of each packet, print the data of
996 each packet (minus its link level header) in hex and ASCII.
997 This is very handy for analysing new protocols.
998 In the current implementation this flag may have the same effect as
999 .B \-XX
1000 if the packet is truncated.
1001 .TP
1002 .B \-XX
1003 When parsing and printing,
1004 in addition to printing the headers of each packet, print the data of
1005 each packet,
1006 .I including
1007 its link level header, in hex and ASCII.
1008 .TP
1009 .BI \-y " datalinktype"
1010 .PD 0
1011 .TP
1012 .BI \-\-linktype= datalinktype
1013 .PD
1014 Set the data link type to use while capturing packets (see
1015 .BR -L )
1016 or just compiling and dumping packet-matching code (see
1017 .BR -d )
1018 to \fIdatalinktype\fP.
1019 .TP
1020 .BI \-z " postrotate-command"
1021 Used in conjunction with the
1022 .B -C
1023 or
1024 .B -G
1025 options, this will make
1026 .I tcpdump
1027 run "
1028 .I postrotate-command file
1029 " where
1030 .I file
1031 is the savefile being closed after each rotation. For example, specifying
1032 .B \-z gzip
1033 or
1034 .B \-z bzip2
1035 will compress each savefile using gzip or bzip2.
1036 .IP
1037 This option can only be used if fork subprocess is implemented (e.g. not on Windows systems).
1038 .IP
1039 Note that tcpdump will run the command in parallel to the capture, using
1040 the lowest priority so that this doesn't disturb the capture process.
1041 .IP
1042 And in case you would like to use a command that itself takes flags or
1043 different arguments, you can always write a shell script that will take the
1044 savefile name as the only argument, make the flags & arguments arrangements
1045 and execute the command that you want.
1046 .TP
1047 .BI \-Z " user"
1048 .PD 0
1049 .TP
1050 .BI \-\-relinquish\-privileges= user
1051 .PD
1052 If
1053 .I tcpdump
1054 is running as root, after opening the capture device or input savefile,
1055 but before opening any savefiles for output, change the user ID to
1056 .I user
1057 and the group ID to the primary group of
1058 .IR user .
1059 .IP
1060 This behavior can also be enabled by default at compile time.
1061 .IP "\fI expression\fP"
1062 .RS
1063 selects which packets will be dumped.
1064 If no \fIexpression\fP
1065 is given, all packets on the net will be dumped.
1066 Otherwise,
1067 only packets for that \fIexpression\fP is `true' will be dumped.
1068 .LP
1069 For the \fIexpression\fP syntax, see
1070 .BR \%pcap-filter (@MAN_MISC_INFO@).
1071 .LP
1072 The \fIexpression\fP argument can be passed to \fItcpdump\fP as either a single
1073 Shell argument, or as multiple Shell arguments, whichever is more convenient.
1074 Generally, if the expression contains Shell metacharacters, such as
1075 backslashes used to escape protocol names, it is easier to pass it as
1076 a single, quoted argument rather than to escape the Shell
1077 metacharacters.
1078 Multiple arguments are concatenated with spaces before being parsed.
1079 .SH EXAMPLES
1080 .LP
1081 To print all packets arriving at or departing from \fIsundown\fP:
1082 .RS
1083 .nf
1084 \fBtcpdump host sundown\fP
1085 .fi
1086 .RE
1087 .LP
1088 To print traffic between \fIhelios\fR and either \fIhot\fR or \fIace\fR:
1089 .RS
1090 .nf
1091 \fBtcpdump host helios and \\( hot or ace \\)\fP
1092 .fi
1093 .RE
1094 .LP
1095 To print all IP packets between \fIace\fR and any host except \fIhelios\fR:
1096 .RS
1097 .nf
1098 \fBtcpdump ip host ace and not helios\fP
1099 .fi
1100 .RE
1101 .LP
1102 To print all traffic between local hosts and hosts at Berkeley:
1103 .RS
1104 .nf
1105 .B
1106 tcpdump net ucb-ether
1107 .fi
1108 .RE
1109 .LP
1110 To print all ftp traffic through internet gateway \fIsnup\fP:
1111 (note that the expression is quoted to prevent the shell from
1112 (mis-)interpreting the parentheses):
1113 .RS
1114 .nf
1115 .B
1116 tcpdump 'gateway snup and (port ftp or ftp-data)'
1117 .fi
1118 .RE
1119 .LP
1120 To print traffic neither sourced from nor destined for local hosts
1121 (if you gateway to one other net, this stuff should never make it
1122 onto your local net).
1123 .RS
1124 .nf
1125 .B
1126 tcpdump ip and not net \fIlocalnet\fP
1127 .fi
1128 .RE
1129 .LP
1130 To print the start and end packets (the SYN and FIN packets) of each
1131 TCP conversation that involves a non-local host.
1132 .RS
1133 .nf
1134 .B
1135 tcpdump 'tcp[tcpflags] & (tcp-syn|tcp-fin) != 0 and not src and dst net \fIlocalnet\fP'
1136 .fi
1137 .RE
1138 .LP
1139 To print the TCP packets with flags RST and ACK both set.
1140 (i.e. select only the RST and ACK flags in the flags field, and if the result
1141 is "RST and ACK both set", match)
1142 .RS
1143 .nf
1144 .B
1145 tcpdump 'tcp[tcpflags] & (tcp-rst|tcp-ack) == (tcp-rst|tcp-ack)'
1146 .fi
1147 .RE
1148 .LP
1149 To print all IPv4 HTTP packets to and from port 80, i.e. print only
1150 packets that contain data, not, for example, SYN and FIN packets and
1151 ACK-only packets. (IPv6 is left as an exercise for the reader.)
1152 .RS
1153 .nf
1154 .B
1155 tcpdump 'tcp port 80 and (((ip[2:2] - ((ip[0]&0xf)<<2)) - ((tcp[12]&0xf0)>>2)) != 0)'
1156 .fi
1157 .RE
1158 .LP
1159 To print IP packets longer than 576 bytes sent through gateway \fIsnup\fP:
1160 .RS
1161 .nf
1162 .B
1163 tcpdump 'gateway snup and ip[2:2] > 576'
1164 .fi
1165 .RE
1166 .LP
1167 To print IP broadcast or multicast packets that were
1168 .I not
1169 sent via Ethernet broadcast or multicast:
1170 .RS
1171 .nf
1172 .B
1173 tcpdump 'ether[0] & 1 = 0 and ip[16] >= 224'
1174 .fi
1175 .RE
1176 .LP
1177 To print all ICMP packets that are not echo requests/replies (i.e., not
1178 ping packets):
1179 .RS
1180 .nf
1181 .B
1182 tcpdump 'icmp[icmptype] != icmp-echo and icmp[icmptype] != icmp-echoreply'
1183 .fi
1184 .RE
1185 .SH OUTPUT FORMAT
1186 .LP
1187 The output of \fItcpdump\fP is protocol dependent.
1188 The following
1189 gives a brief description and examples of most of the formats.
1190 .de HD
1191 .sp 1.5
1192 .B
1193 ..
1194 .SS Timestamps
1195 .LP
1196 By default, all output lines are preceded by a timestamp.
1197 The timestamp
1198 is the current clock time in the form
1199 .RS
1200 .nf
1201 \fIhh:mm:ss.frac\fP
1202 .fi
1203 .RE
1204 and is as accurate as the kernel's clock.
1205 The timestamp reflects the time the kernel applied a time stamp to the packet.
1206 No attempt is made to account for the time lag between when the network
1207 interface finished receiving the packet from the network and when the
1208 kernel applied a time stamp to the packet; that time lag could include a
1209 delay between the time when the network interface finished receiving a
1210 packet from the network and the time when an interrupt was delivered to
1211 the kernel to get it to read the packet and a delay between the time
1212 when the kernel serviced the `new packet' interrupt and the time when it
1213 applied a time stamp to the packet.
1214 .SS Interface
1215 .LP
1216 When the \fIany\fP interface is selected on capture or when a
1217 .B LINKTYPE_LINUX_SLL2
1218 capture file is read, the
1219 interface name is printed after the timestamp. This is followed by the packet
1220 type with \fIIn\fP and \fIOut\fP denoting a packet destined for this host or
1221 originating from this host respectively. Other possible values are \fIB\fP
1222 for broadcast packets, \fIM\fP for multicast packets, and \fIP\fP for packets
1223 destined for other hosts.
1224 .SS Link Level Headers
1225 .LP
1226 If the
1227 .B \-e
1228 option is given, the link level header is printed out.
1229 On Ethernets, the source and destination addresses, protocol,
1230 and packet length are printed.
1231 .LP
1232 On FDDI networks, the
1233 .B \-e
1234 option causes \fItcpdump\fP to print
1235 the `frame control' field, the source and destination addresses,
1236 and the packet length.
1237 (The `frame control' field governs the
1238 interpretation of the rest of the packet.
1239 Normal packets (such
1240 as those containing IP datagrams) are `async' packets, with a priority
1241 value between 0 and 7; for example, `\fBasync4\fR'.
1242 Such packets
1243 are assumed to contain an 802.2 Logical Link Control (LLC) packet;
1244 the LLC header is printed if it is \fInot\fR an ISO datagram or a
1245 so-called SNAP packet.
1246 .LP
1247 On Token Ring networks, the
1248 .B \-e
1249 option causes \fItcpdump\fP to print
1250 the `access control' and `frame control' fields, the source and
1251 destination addresses, and the packet length.
1252 As on FDDI networks,
1253 packets are assumed to contain an LLC packet.
1254 Regardless of whether
1255 the
1256 .B \-e
1257 option is specified or not, the source routing information is
1258 printed for source-routed packets.
1259 .LP
1260 On 802.11 networks, the
1261 .B \-e
1262 option causes \fItcpdump\fP to print
1263 the `frame control' fields, all of the addresses in the 802.11 header,
1264 and the packet length.
1265 As on FDDI networks,
1266 packets are assumed to contain an LLC packet.
1267 .LP
1268 \fI(N.B.: The following description assumes familiarity with
1269 the SLIP compression algorithm described in RFC 1144.)\fP
1270 .LP
1271 On SLIP links, a direction indicator (``I'' for inbound, ``O'' for outbound),
1272 packet type, and compression information are printed out.
1273 The packet type is printed first.
1274 The three types are \fIip\fP, \fIutcp\fP, and \fIctcp\fP.
1275 No further link information is printed for \fIip\fR packets.
1276 For TCP packets, the connection identifier is printed following the type.
1277 If the packet is compressed, its encoded header is printed out.
1278 The special cases are printed out as
1279 \fB*S+\fIn\fR and \fB*SA+\fIn\fR, where \fIn\fR is the amount by which
1280 the sequence number (or sequence number and ack) has changed.
1281 If it is not a special case,
1282 zero or more changes are printed.
1283 A change is indicated by U (urgent pointer), W (window), A (ack),
1284 S (sequence number), and I (packet ID), followed by a delta (+n or -n),
1285 or a new value (=n).
1286 Finally, the amount of data in the packet and compressed header length
1287 are printed.
1288 .LP
1289 For example, the following line shows an outbound compressed TCP packet,
1290 with an implicit connection identifier; the ack has changed by 6,
1291 the sequence number by 49, and the packet ID by 6; there are 3 bytes of
1292 data and 6 bytes of compressed header:
1293 .RS
1294 .nf
1295 \fBO ctcp * A+6 S+49 I+6 3 (6)\fP
1296 .fi
1297 .RE
1298 .SS ARP/RARP Packets
1299 .LP
1300 ARP/RARP output shows the type of request and its arguments.
1301 The
1302 format is intended to be self explanatory.
1303 Here is a short sample taken from the start of an `rlogin' from
1304 host \fIrtsg\fP to host \fIcsam\fP:
1305 .RS
1306 .nf
1307 .sp .5
1308 \f(CWarp who-has csam tell rtsg
1309 arp reply csam is-at CSAM\fR
1310 .sp .5
1311 .fi
1312 .RE
1313 The first line says that rtsg sent an ARP packet asking
1314 for the Ethernet address of internet host csam.
1315 Csam
1316 replies with its Ethernet address (in this example, Ethernet addresses
1317 are in caps and internet addresses in lower case).
1318 .LP
1319 This would look less redundant if we had done
1320 .BR "tcpdump \-n" :
1321 .RS
1322 .nf
1323 .sp .5
1324 \f(CWarp who-has 128.3.254.6 tell 128.3.254.68
1325 arp reply 128.3.254.6 is-at 02:07:01:00:01:c4\fP
1326 .fi
1327 .RE
1328 .LP
1329 If we had done
1330 .BR "tcpdump \-e" ,
1331 the fact that the first packet is
1332 broadcast and the second is point-to-point would be visible:
1333 .RS
1334 .nf
1335 .sp .5
1336 \f(CWRTSG Broadcast 0806 64: arp who-has csam tell rtsg
1337 CSAM RTSG 0806 64: arp reply csam is-at CSAM\fR
1338 .sp .5
1339 .fi
1340 .RE
1341 For the first packet this says the Ethernet source address is RTSG, the
1342 destination is the Ethernet broadcast address, the type field
1343 contained hex 0806
1344 .RB ( ETHERTYPE_ARP )
1345 and the total length was 64 bytes.
1346 .SS IPv4 Packets
1347 .LP
1348 If the link-layer header is not being printed, for IPv4 packets,
1349 \fBIP\fP is printed after the time stamp.
1350 .LP
1351 If the
1352 .B \-v
1353 flag is specified, information from the IPv4 header is shown in
1354 parentheses after the \fBIP\fP or the link-layer header.
1355 The general format of this information is:
1356 .RS
1357 .nf
1358 .sp .5
1359 tos \fItos\fP, ttl \fIttl\fP, id \fIid\fP, offset \fIoffset\fP, flags [\fIflags\fP], proto \fIproto\fP, length \fIlength\fP, options (\fIoptions\fP)
1360 .sp .5
1361 .fi
1362 .RE
1363 \fItos\fP is the type of service field; if the ECN bits are non-zero,
1364 those are reported as \fBECT(1)\fP, \fBECT(0)\fP, or \fBCE\fP.
1365 \fIttl\fP is the time-to-live; it is not reported if it is zero.
1366 \fIid\fP is the IP identification field.
1367 \fIoffset\fP is the fragment offset field; it is printed whether this is
1368 part of a fragmented datagram or not.
1369 \fIflags\fP are the MF and DF flags; \fB+\fP is reported if MF is set,
1370 and \fBDF\fP is reported if F is set. If neither are set, \fB.\fP is
1371 reported.
1372 \fIproto\fP is the protocol ID field.
1373 \fIlength\fP is the total length field; if the packet is a presumed TSO
1374 (TCP Segmentation Offload) send, [was 0, presumed TSO] is reported.
1375 \fIoptions\fP are the IP options, if any.
1376 .LP
1377 Next, for TCP and UDP packets, the source and destination IP addresses
1378 and TCP or UDP ports, with a dot between each IP address and its
1379 corresponding port, will be printed, with a > separating the source and
1380 destination. For other protocols, the addresses will be printed, with
1381 a > separating the source and destination. Higher level protocol
1382 information, if any, will be printed after that.
1383 .LP
1384 For fragmented IP datagrams, the first fragment contains the higher
1385 level protocol header; fragments after the first contain no higher level
1386 protocol header. Fragmentation information will be printed only with
1387 the
1388 .B \-v
1389 flag, in the IP header information, as described above.
1390 .SS TCP Packets
1391 .LP
1392 \fI(N.B.:The following description assumes familiarity with
1393 the TCP protocol described in RFC 793.
1394 If you are not familiar
1395 with the protocol, this description will not
1396 be of much use to you.)\fP
1397 .LP
1398 The general format of a TCP protocol line is:
1399 .RS
1400 .nf
1401 .sp .5
1402 \fIsrc\fP > \fIdst\fP: Flags [\fItcpflags\fP], seq \fIdata-seqno\fP, ack \fIackno\fP, win \fIwindow\fP, urg \fIurgent\fP, options [\fIopts\fP], length \fIlen\fP
1403 .sp .5
1404 .fi
1405 .RE
1406 \fISrc\fP and \fIdst\fP are the source and destination IP
1407 addresses and ports.
1408 \fITcpflags\fP are some combination of S (SYN), F (FIN),
1409 P (PSH), R (RST), U (URG), W (CWR), E (ECE), e (AE) or
1410 `.' (ACK), or `none' if no flags are set.
1411 \fIData-seqno\fP describes the portion of sequence space covered
1412 by the data in this packet (see example below).
1413 \fIAckno\fP is sequence number of the next data expected the other
1414 direction on this connection.
1415 \fIWindow\fP is the number of bytes of receive buffer space available
1416 the other direction on this connection.
1417 \fIUrg\fP indicates there is `urgent' data in the packet.
1418 \fIOpts\fP are TCP options (e.g., mss 1024).
1419 \fILen\fP is the length of payload data.
1420 .LP
1421 \fIIptype\fR, \fISrc\fP, \fIdst\fP, and \fIflags\fP are always present.
1422 The other fields
1423 depend on the contents of the packet's TCP protocol header and
1424 are output only if appropriate.
1425 .LP
1426 Here is the opening portion of an rlogin from host \fIrtsg\fP to
1427 host \fIcsam\fP.
1428 .RS
1429 .nf
1430 .sp .5
1431 \f(CWIP rtsg.1023 > csam.login: Flags [S], seq 768512:768512, win 4096, opts [mss 1024]
1432 IP csam.login > rtsg.1023: Flags [S.], seq, 947648:947648, ack 768513, win 4096, opts [mss 1024]
1433 IP rtsg.1023 > csam.login: Flags [.], ack 1, win 4096
1434 IP rtsg.1023 > csam.login: Flags [P.], seq 1:2, ack 1, win 4096, length 1
1435 IP csam.login > rtsg.1023: Flags [.], ack 2, win 4096
1436 IP rtsg.1023 > csam.login: Flags [P.], seq 2:21, ack 1, win 4096, length 19
1437 IP csam.login > rtsg.1023: Flags [P.], seq 1:2, ack 21, win 4077, length 1
1438 IP csam.login > rtsg.1023: Flags [P.], seq 2:3, ack 21, win 4077, urg 1, length 1
1439 IP csam.login > rtsg.1023: Flags [P.], seq 3:4, ack 21, win 4077, urg 1, length 1\fR
1440 .sp .5
1441 .fi
1442 .RE
1443 The first line says that TCP port 1023 on rtsg sent a packet
1444 to port \fIlogin\fP
1445 on csam.
1446 The \fBS\fP indicates that the \fISYN\fP flag was set.
1447 The packet sequence number was 768512 and it contained no data.
1448 (The notation is `first:last' which means `sequence
1449 numbers \fIfirst\fP
1450 up to but not including \fIlast\fP'.)
1451 There was no piggy-backed ACK, the available receive window was 4096
1452 bytes and there was a max-segment-size option requesting an MSS of
1453 1024 bytes.
1454 .LP
1455 Csam replies with a similar packet except it includes a piggy-backed
1456 ACK for rtsg's SYN.
1457 Rtsg then ACKs csam's SYN.
1458 The `.' means the ACK flag was set.
1459 The packet contained no data so there is no data sequence number or length.
1460 Note that the ACK sequence
1461 number is a small integer (1).
1462 The first time \fItcpdump\fP sees a
1463 TCP `conversation', it prints the sequence number from the packet.
1464 On subsequent packets of the conversation, the difference between
1465 the current packet's sequence number and this initial sequence number
1466 is printed.
1467 This means that sequence numbers after the
1468 first can be interpreted
1469 as relative byte positions in the conversation's data stream (with the
1470 first data byte each direction being `1').
1471 .B \-S
1472 will override this
1473 feature, causing the original sequence numbers to be output.
1474 .LP
1475 On the 6th line, rtsg sends csam 19 bytes of data (bytes 2 through 20
1476 in the rtsg \(-> csam side of the conversation).
1477 The PSH flag is set in the packet.
1478 On the 7th line, csam says it's received data sent by rtsg up to
1479 but not including byte 21.
1480 Most of this data is apparently sitting in the
1481 socket buffer since csam's receive window has gotten 19 bytes smaller.
1482 Csam also sends one byte of data to rtsg in this packet.
1483 On the 8th and 9th lines,
1484 csam sends two bytes of urgent, pushed data to rtsg.
1485 .LP
1486 If the snapshot was small enough that \fItcpdump\fP didn't capture
1487 the full TCP header, it interprets as much of the header as it can
1488 and then reports ``[|\fItcp\fP]'' to indicate the remainder could not
1489 be interpreted.
1490 If the header contains a bogus option (one with a length
1491 that's either too small or beyond the end of the header), \fItcpdump\fP
1492 reports it as ``[\fIbad opt\fP]'' and does not interpret any further
1493 options (since it's impossible to tell where they start).
1494 If the header
1495 length indicates options are present but the IP datagram length is not
1496 long enough for the options to actually be there, \fItcpdump\fP reports
1497 it as ``[\fIbad hdr length\fP]''.
1498 .SS Particular TCP Flag Combinations (SYN-ACK, URG-ACK, etc.)
1499 .PP
1500 There are 9 bits in the control bits section of the TCP header:
1501 .LP
1502 \fIAE(e) CWR(W) ECE(E) URG(U) ACK(.) PSH(P) RST(R) SYN(S) FIN(F)\fP
1503 .LP
1504 Let's assume that we want to watch packets used in establishing
1505 a TCP connection.
1506 Recall that TCP uses a 3-way handshake protocol
1507 when it initializes a new connection; the connection sequence with
1508 regard to the TCP control bits is
1509 .PP
1510 .RS
1511 1) Caller sends SYN
1512 .RE
1513 .RS
1514 2) Recipient responds with SYN, ACK
1515 .RE
1516 .RS
1517 3) Caller sends ACK
1518 .RE
1519 .PP
1520 Now we're interested in capturing packets that have only the
1521 SYN bit set (Step 1).
1522 Note that we don't want packets from step 2
1523 (SYN-ACK), just a plain initial SYN.
1524 What we need is a correct filter
1525 expression for \fItcpdump\fP.
1526 .PP
1527 Recall the structure of a TCP header without options:
1528 .PP
1529 .nf
1530 0 15 31
1531 -----------------------------------------------------------------
1532 | source port | destination port |
1533 -----------------------------------------------------------------
1534 | sequence number |
1535 -----------------------------------------------------------------
1536 | acknowledgment number |
1537 -----------------------------------------------------------------
1538 |header |re |A|C|E|U|A|P|R|S|F| |
1539 |length |serv |E|W|C|R|C|S|S|Y|I| window size |
1540 | | ed | |R|E|G|K|H|T|N|N| |
1541 -----------------------------------------------------------------
1542 | TCP checksum | urgent pointer |
1543 -----------------------------------------------------------------
1544 .fi
1545 .PP
1546 A TCP header usually holds 20 octets of data, unless options are
1547 present.
1548 The first line of the graph contains octets 0 - 3, the
1549 second line shows octets 4 - 7 etc.
1550 .PP
1551 Starting to count with 0, the relevant TCP control bits are contained
1552 in octets 12 and 13:
1553 .PP
1554 .nf
1555 0 7| 15| 23| 31
1556 ----------------|---------------|---------------|----------------
1557 |header |re |A|C|E|U|A|P|R|S|F| |
1558 |length |serv |E|W|C|R|C|S|S|Y|I| window size |
1559 | | ed | |R|E|G|K|H|T|N|N| |
1560 ----------------|---------------|---------------|----------------
1561 | | 13th octet | | |
1562 .fi
1563 .PP
1564 Let's have a closer look at octet no. 13:
1565 .PP
1566 .nf
1567 | |
1568 |---------------|
1569 |C|E|U|A|P|R|S|F|
1570 |W|C|R|C|S|S|Y|I|
1571 |R|E|G|K|H|T|N|N|
1572 |---------------|
1573 |7 5 3 0|
1574 .fi
1575 .PP
1576 These are the TCP control bits we are interested
1577 in.
1578 We have numbered the bits in this octet from 0 to 7, right to
1579 left, so the PSH bit is bit number 3, while the URG bit is number 5.
1580 .PP
1581 Recall that we want to capture packets with only SYN set.
1582 Let's see what happens to octet 13 if a TCP datagram arrives
1583 with the SYN bit set in its header:
1584 .PP
1585 .nf
1586 |C|E|U|A|P|R|S|F|
1587 |W|C|R|C|S|S|Y|I|
1588 |R|E|G|K|H|T|N|N|
1589 |---------------|
1590 |0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0|
1591 |---------------|
1592 |7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0|
1593 .fi
1594 .PP
1595 Looking at the
1596 control bits section we see that only bit number 1 (SYN) is set.
1597 .PP
1598 Assuming that octet number 13 is an 8-bit unsigned integer in
1599 network byte order, the binary value of this octet is
1600 .IP
1601 00000010
1602 .PP
1603 and its decimal representation is
1604 .PP
1605 .nf
1606 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0
1607 0*2 + 0*2 + 0*2 + 0*2 + 0*2 + 0*2 + 1*2 + 0*2 = 2
1608 .fi
1609 .PP
1610 We're almost done, because now we know that if only SYN is set,
1611 the value of the 13th octet in the TCP header, when interpreted
1612 as a 8-bit unsigned integer in network byte order, must be exactly 2.
1613 .PP
1614 This relationship can be expressed as
1615 .RS
1616 .B
1617 tcp[13] == 2
1618 .RE
1619 .PP
1620 We can use this expression as the filter for \fItcpdump\fP in order
1621 to watch packets which have only SYN set:
1622 .RS
1623 .B
1624 tcpdump -i xl0 'tcp[13] == 2'
1625 .RE
1626 .PP
1627 The expression says "let the 13th octet of a TCP datagram have
1628 the decimal value 2", which is exactly what we want.
1629 .PP
1630 Now, let's assume that we need to capture SYN packets, but we
1631 don't care if ACK or any other TCP control bit is set at the
1632 same time.
1633 Let's see what happens to octet 13 when a TCP datagram
1634 with SYN-ACK set arrives:
1635 .PP
1636 .nf
1637 |C|E|U|A|P|R|S|F|
1638 |W|C|R|C|S|S|Y|I|
1639 |R|E|G|K|H|T|N|N|
1640 |---------------|
1641 |0 0 0 1 0 0 1 0|
1642 |---------------|
1643 |7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0|
1644 .fi
1645 .PP
1646 Now bits 1 and 4 are set in the 13th octet.
1647 The binary value of
1648 octet 13 is
1649 .IP
1650 00010010
1651 .PP
1652 which translates to decimal
1653 .PP
1654 .nf
1655 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0
1656 0*2 + 0*2 + 0*2 + 1*2 + 0*2 + 0*2 + 1*2 + 0*2 = 18
1657 .fi
1658 .PP
1659 Now we can't just use
1660 .B "tcp[13] == 18"
1661 in the \fItcpdump\fP filter
1662 expression, because that would select only those packets that have
1663 SYN-ACK set, but not those with only SYN set.
1664 Remember that we don't care
1665 if ACK or any other control bit is set as long as SYN is set.
1666 .PP
1667 In order to achieve our goal, we need to logically AND the
1668 binary value of octet 13 with some other value to preserve
1669 the SYN bit.
1670 We know that we want SYN to be set in any case,
1671 so we'll logically AND the value in the 13th octet with
1672 the binary value of a SYN:
1673 .PP
1674 .nf
1675
1676 00010010 SYN-ACK 00000010 SYN
1677 AND 00000010 (we want SYN) AND 00000010 (we want SYN)
1678 -------- --------
1679 = 00000010 = 00000010
1680 .fi
1681 .PP
1682 We see that this AND operation delivers the same result
1683 regardless whether ACK or another TCP control bit is set.
1684 The decimal representation of the AND value as well as
1685 the result of this operation is 2 (binary 00000010),
1686 so we know that for packets with SYN set the following
1687 relation must hold true:
1688 .IP
1689 ( ( value of octet 13 ) AND ( 2 ) ) == ( 2 )
1690 .PP
1691 This points us to the \fItcpdump\fP filter expression
1692 .RS
1693 .B
1694 tcpdump -i xl0 'tcp[13] & 2 == 2'
1695 .RE
1696 .PP
1697 Some offsets and field values may be expressed as names
1698 rather than as numeric values. For example,
1699 .B tcp[13]
1700 may be replaced with
1701 .BR tcp[tcpflags] .
1702 The following TCP flag
1703 field values are also available: tcp-fin, tcp-syn, tcp-rst,
1704 tcp-push, tcp-ack, tcp-urg, tcp-ece and tcp-cwr.
1705 .PP
1706 This can be demonstrated as:
1707 .RS
1708 .B
1709 tcpdump -i xl0 'tcp[tcpflags] & tcp-push != 0'
1710 .RE
1711 .PP
1712 Note that you should use single quotes or a backslash
1713 in the expression to hide the AND ('&') special character
1714 from the shell.
1715 .SS UDP Packets
1716 .LP
1717 UDP format is illustrated by this rwho packet:
1718 .RS
1719 .nf
1720 .sp .5
1721 \f(CWactinide.who > broadcast.who: udp 84\fP
1722 .sp .5
1723 .fi
1724 .RE
1725 This says that port \fIwho\fP on host \fIactinide\fP sent a UDP
1726 datagram to port \fIwho\fP on host \fIbroadcast\fP, the Internet
1727 broadcast address.
1728 The packet contained 84 bytes of user data.
1729 .LP
1730 Some UDP services are recognized (from the source or destination
1731 port number) and the higher level protocol information printed.
1732 In particular, Domain Name service requests (RFC 1034/1035) and Sun
1733 RPC calls (RFC 1050) to NFS.
1734 .SS TCP or UDP Name Server Requests
1735 .LP
1736 \fI(N.B.:The following description assumes familiarity with
1737 the Domain Service protocol described in RFC 1035.
1738 If you are not familiar
1739 with the protocol, the following description will appear to be written
1740 in Greek.)\fP
1741 .LP
1742 Name server requests are formatted as
1743 .RS
1744 .nf
1745 .sp .5
1746 \fIsrc > dst: id op? flags qtype qclass name (len)\fP
1747 .sp .5
1748 \f(CWh2opolo.1538 > helios.domain: 3+ A? ucbvax.berkeley.edu. (37)\fR
1749 .sp .5
1750 .fi
1751 .RE
1752 Host \fIh2opolo\fP asked the domain server on \fIhelios\fP for an
1753 address record (qtype=A) associated with the name \fIucbvax.berkeley.edu.\fP
1754 The query id was `3'.
1755 The `+' indicates the \fIrecursion desired\fP flag
1756 was set.
1757 The query length was 37 bytes, excluding the TCP or UDP and
1758 IP protocol headers.
1759 The query operation was the normal one, \fIQuery\fP,
1760 so the op field was omitted.
1761 If the op had been anything else, it would
1762 have been printed between the `3' and the `+'.
1763 Similarly, the qclass was the normal one,
1764 .BR C_IN ,
1765 and omitted.
1766 Any other qclass would have been printed
1767 immediately after the `A'.
1768 .LP
1769 A few anomalies are checked and may result in extra fields enclosed in
1770 square brackets: If a query contains an answer, authority records or
1771 additional records section,
1772 .IR ancount ,
1773 .IR nscount ,
1774 or
1775 .I arcount
1776 are printed as `[\fIn\fPa]', `[\fIn\fPn]' or `[\fIn\fPau]' where \fIn\fP
1777 is the appropriate count.
1778 If any of the response bits are set (AA, RA or rcode) or any of the
1779 `must be zero' bits are set in bytes two and three, `[b2&3=\fIx\fP]'
1780 is printed, where \fIx\fP is the hex value of header bytes two and three.
1781 .SS TCP or UDP Name Server Responses
1782 .LP
1783 Name server responses are formatted as
1784 .RS
1785 .nf
1786 .sp .5
1787 \fIsrc > dst: id op rcode flags a/n/au type class data (len)\fP
1788 .sp .5
1789 \f(CWhelios.domain > h2opolo.1538: 3 3/3/7 A 128.32.137.3 (273)
1790 helios.domain > h2opolo.1537: 2 NXDomain* 0/1/0 (97)\fR
1791 .sp .5
1792 .fi
1793 .RE
1794 In the first example, \fIhelios\fP responds to query id 3 from \fIh2opolo\fP
1795 with 3 answer records, 3 name server records and 7 additional records.
1796 The first answer record is type A (address) and its data is internet
1797 address 128.32.137.3.
1798 The total size of the response was 273 bytes,
1799 excluding TCP or UDP and IP headers.
1800 The op (Query) and response code
1801 (NoError) were omitted, as was the class
1802 .RB ( C_IN )
1803 of the A record.
1804 .LP
1805 In the second example, \fIhelios\fP responds to query 2 with a
1806 response code of nonexistent domain (NXDomain) with no answers,
1807 one name server and no authority records.
1808 The `*' indicates that
1809 the \fIauthoritative answer\fP bit was set.
1810 Since there were no
1811 answers, no type, class or data were printed.
1812 .LP
1813 Other flag characters that might appear are `\-' (recursion available,
1814 RA, \fInot\fP set) and `|' (truncated message, TC, set).
1815 If the
1816 `question' section doesn't contain exactly one entry, `[\fIn\fPq]'
1817 is printed.
1818 .SS SMB/CIFS Decoding
1819 .LP
1820 \fItcpdump\fP now includes fairly extensive SMB/CIFS/NBT decoding for data
1821 on UDP/137, UDP/138 and TCP/139.
1822 Some primitive decoding of IPX and
1823 NetBEUI SMB data is also done.
1824 .LP
1825 By default a fairly minimal decode is done, with a much more detailed
1826 decode done if
1827 .B \-v
1828 is used. Be warned that with
1829 .B \-v
1830 a single SMB packet may take up a page or more, so only use
1831 .B \-v
1832 if you really want all the gory details.
1833 .LP
1834 For information on SMB packet formats and what all the fields mean see
1835 \%https://download.samba.org/pub/samba/specs/ and other online resources.
1836 The SMB patches were written by Andrew Tridgell
1837 (tridge@samba.org).
1838 .SS NFS Requests and Replies
1839 .LP
1840 Network File System requests and replies are printed as:
1841 .RS
1842 .nf
1843 .sp .5
1844 \fIsrc.sport > dst.nfs: NFS request xid xid len op args\fP
1845 \fIsrc.nfs > dst.dport: NFS reply xid xid reply stat len op results\fP
1846 .sp .5
1847 \f(CW
1848 sushi.1023 > wrl.nfs: NFS request xid 26377
1849 112 readlink fh 21,24/10.73165
1850 wrl.nfs > sushi.1023: NFS reply xid 26377
1851 reply ok 40 readlink "../var"
1852 sushi.1022 > wrl.nfs: NFS request xid 8219
1853 144 lookup fh 9,74/4096.6878 "xcolors"
1854 wrl.nfs > sushi.1022: NFS reply xid 8219
1855 reply ok 128 lookup fh 9,74/4134.3150
1856 \fR
1857 .sp .5
1858 .fi
1859 .RE
1860 In the first line, host \fIsushi\fP sends a transaction with id \fI26377\fP
1861 to \fIwrl\fP.
1862 The request was 112 bytes,
1863 excluding the UDP and IP headers.
1864 The operation was a \fIreadlink\fP
1865 (read symbolic link) on file handle (\fIfh\fP) 21,24/10.731657119.
1866 (If one is lucky, as in this case, the file handle can be interpreted
1867 as a major,minor device number pair, followed by the inode number and
1868 generation number.) In the second line, \fIwrl\fP replies `ok' with
1869 the same transaction id and the contents of the link.
1870 .LP
1871 In the third line, \fIsushi\fP asks (using a new transaction id) \fIwrl\fP
1872 to lookup the name `\fIxcolors\fP' in directory file 9,74/4096.6878. In
1873 the fourth line, \fIwrl\fP sends a reply with the respective transaction id.
1874 .LP
1875 Note that the data printed
1876 depends on the operation type.
1877 The format is intended to be self
1878 explanatory if read in conjunction with
1879 an NFS protocol spec.
1880 Also note that older versions of tcpdump printed NFS packets in a
1881 slightly different format: the transaction id (xid) would be printed
1882 instead of the non-NFS port number of the packet.
1883 .LP
1884 If the
1885 .B \-v
1886 (verbose) flag is given, additional information is printed.
1887 For example:
1888 .RS
1889 .nf
1890 .sp .5
1891 \f(CW
1892 sushi.1023 > wrl.nfs: NFS request xid 79658
1893 148 read fh 21,11/12.195 8192 bytes @ 24576
1894 wrl.nfs > sushi.1023: NFS reply xid 79658
1895 reply ok 1472 read REG 100664 ids 417/0 sz 29388
1896 \fP
1897 .sp .5
1898 .fi
1899 .RE
1900 .RB ( \-v
1901 also prints the IP header TTL, ID, length, and fragmentation fields,
1902 which have been omitted from this example.) In the first line,
1903 \fIsushi\fP asks \fIwrl\fP to read 8192 bytes from file 21,11/12.195,
1904 at byte offset 24576.
1905 \fIWrl\fP replies `ok'; the packet shown on the
1906 second line is the first fragment of the reply, and hence is only 1472
1907 bytes long (the other bytes will follow in subsequent fragments, but
1908 these fragments do not have NFS or even UDP headers and so might not be
1909 printed, depending on the filter expression used).
1910 Because the \-v flag
1911 is given, some of the file attributes (which are returned in addition
1912 to the file data) are printed: the file type (``REG'', for regular file),
1913 the file mode (in octal), the UID and GID, and the file size.
1914 .LP
1915 If the
1916 .B \-v
1917 flag is given more than once, even more details are printed.
1918 .LP
1919 NFS reply packets do not explicitly identify the RPC operation.
1920 Instead,
1921 \fItcpdump\fP keeps track of ``recent'' requests, and matches them to the
1922 replies using the transaction ID.
1923 If a reply does not closely follow the
1924 corresponding request, it might not be parsable.
1925 .SS AFS Requests and Replies
1926 .LP
1927 Andrew File System requests and replies are printed
1928 as:
1929 .HD
1930 .RS
1931 .nf
1932 .sp .5
1933 \fIsrc.sport > dst.dport: rx packet-type\fP
1934 \fIsrc.sport > dst.dport: rx packet-type service call call-name args\fP
1935 \fIsrc.sport > dst.dport: rx packet-type service reply call-name args\fP
1936 .sp .5
1937 \f(CW
1938 elvis.7001 > pike.afsfs:
1939 rx data fs call rename old fid 536876964/1/1 ".newsrc.new"
1940 new fid 536876964/1/1 ".newsrc"
1941 pike.afsfs > elvis.7001: rx data fs reply rename
1942 \fR
1943 .sp .5
1944 .fi
1945 .RE
1946 In the first line, host elvis sends a RX packet to pike.
1947 This was
1948 a RX data packet to the fs (fileserver) service, and is the start of
1949 an RPC call.
1950 The RPC call was a rename, with the old directory file id
1951 of 536876964/1/1 and an old filename of `.newsrc.new', and a new directory
1952 file id of 536876964/1/1 and a new filename of `.newsrc'.
1953 The host pike
1954 responds with a RPC reply to the rename call (which was successful, because
1955 it was a data packet and not an abort packet).
1956 .LP
1957 In general, all AFS RPCs are decoded at least by RPC call name.
1958 Most
1959 AFS RPCs have at least some of the arguments decoded (generally only
1960 the `interesting' arguments, for some definition of interesting).
1961 .LP
1962 The format is intended to be self-describing, but it will probably
1963 not be useful to people who are not familiar with the workings of
1964 AFS and RX.
1965 .LP
1966 If the
1967 .B \-v
1968 (verbose) flag is given, acknowledgement packets and
1969 additional header information is printed, such as the RX call ID,
1970 call number, sequence number, serial number, and the RX packet flags.
1971 .LP
1972 If the
1973 .B \-v
1974 flag is given twice, additional information is printed,
1975 such as the RX call ID, serial number, and the RX packet flags.
1976 The MTU negotiation information is also printed from RX ack packets.
1977 .LP
1978 If the
1979 .B \-v
1980 flag is given three times, the security index and service id
1981 are printed.
1982 .LP
1983 Error codes are printed for abort packets, with the exception of Ubik
1984 beacon packets (because abort packets are used to signify a yes vote
1985 for the Ubik protocol).
1986 .LP
1987 AFS reply packets do not explicitly identify the RPC operation.
1988 Instead,
1989 \fItcpdump\fP keeps track of ``recent'' requests, and matches them to the
1990 replies using the call number and service ID.
1991 If a reply does not closely
1992 follow the
1993 corresponding request, it might not be parsable.
1994
1995 .SS KIP AppleTalk (DDP in UDP)
1996 .LP
1997 AppleTalk DDP packets encapsulated in UDP datagrams are de-encapsulated
1998 and dumped as DDP packets (i.e., all the UDP header information is
1999 discarded).
2000 The file
2001 .I /etc/atalk.names
2002 is used to translate AppleTalk net and node numbers to names.
2003 Lines in this file have the form
2004 .RS
2005 .nf
2006 .sp .5
2007 \fInumber name\fP
2008
2009 \f(CW1.254 ether
2010 16.1 icsd-net
2011 1.254.110 ace\fR
2012 .sp .5
2013 .fi
2014 .RE
2015 The first two lines give the names of AppleTalk networks.
2016 The third
2017 line gives the name of a particular host (a host is distinguished
2018 from a net by the 3rd octet in the number \-
2019 a net number \fImust\fP have two octets and a host number \fImust\fP
2020 have three octets.) The number and name should be separated by
2021 whitespace (blanks or tabs).
2022 The
2023 .I /etc/atalk.names
2024 file may contain blank lines or comment lines (lines starting with
2025 a `#').
2026 .LP
2027 AppleTalk addresses are printed in the form
2028 .RS
2029 .nf
2030 .sp .5
2031 \fInet.host.port\fP
2032
2033 \f(CW144.1.209.2 > icsd-net.112.220
2034 office.2 > icsd-net.112.220
2035 jssmag.149.235 > icsd-net.2\fR
2036 .sp .5
2037 .fi
2038 .RE
2039 (If the
2040 .I /etc/atalk.names
2041 doesn't exist or doesn't contain an entry for some AppleTalk
2042 host/net number, addresses are printed in numeric form.)
2043 In the first example, NBP (DDP port 2) on net 144.1 node 209
2044 is sending to whatever is listening on port 220 of net icsd node 112.
2045 The second line is the same except the full name of the source node
2046 is known (`office').
2047 The third line is a send from port 235 on
2048 net jssmag node 149 to broadcast on the icsd-net NBP port (note that
2049 the broadcast address (255) is indicated by a net name with no host
2050 number \- for this reason it's a good idea to keep node names and
2051 net names distinct in /etc/atalk.names).
2052 .LP
2053 NBP (name binding protocol) and ATP (AppleTalk transaction protocol)
2054 packets have their contents interpreted.
2055 Other protocols just dump
2056 the protocol name (or number if no name is registered for the
2057 protocol) and packet size.
2058
2059 .SS NBP Packets
2060 NBP packets are formatted like the following examples:
2061 .RS
2062 .nf
2063 .sp .5
2064 \f(CWicsd-net.112.220 > jssmag.2: nbp-lkup 190: "=:LaserWriter@*"
2065 jssmag.209.2 > icsd-net.112.220: nbp-reply 190: "RM1140:LaserWriter@*" 250
2066 techpit.2 > icsd-net.112.220: nbp-reply 190: "techpit:LaserWriter@*" 186\fR
2067 .sp .5
2068 .fi
2069 .RE
2070 The first line is a name lookup request for laserwriters sent by net icsd host
2071 112 and broadcast on net jssmag.
2072 The nbp id for the lookup is 190.
2073 The second line shows a reply for this request (note that it has the
2074 same id) from host jssmag.209 saying that it has a laserwriter
2075 resource named "RM1140" registered on port 250.
2076 The third line is
2077 another reply to the same request saying host techpit has laserwriter
2078 "techpit" registered on port 186.
2079
2080 .SS ATP Packets
2081 ATP packet formatting is demonstrated by the following example:
2082 .RS
2083 .nf
2084 .sp .5
2085 \f(CWjssmag.209.165 > helios.132: atp-req 12266<0-7> 0xae030001
2086 helios.132 > jssmag.209.165: atp-resp 12266:0 (512) 0xae040000
2087 helios.132 > jssmag.209.165: atp-resp 12266:1 (512) 0xae040000
2088 helios.132 > jssmag.209.165: atp-resp 12266:2 (512) 0xae040000
2089 helios.132 > jssmag.209.165: atp-resp 12266:3 (512) 0xae040000
2090 helios.132 > jssmag.209.165: atp-resp 12266:4 (512) 0xae040000
2091 helios.132 > jssmag.209.165: atp-resp 12266:5 (512) 0xae040000
2092 helios.132 > jssmag.209.165: atp-resp 12266:6 (512) 0xae040000
2093 helios.132 > jssmag.209.165: atp-resp*12266:7 (512) 0xae040000
2094 jssmag.209.165 > helios.132: atp-req 12266<3,5> 0xae030001
2095 helios.132 > jssmag.209.165: atp-resp 12266:3 (512) 0xae040000
2096 helios.132 > jssmag.209.165: atp-resp 12266:5 (512) 0xae040000
2097 jssmag.209.165 > helios.132: atp-rel 12266<0-7> 0xae030001
2098 jssmag.209.133 > helios.132: atp-req* 12267<0-7> 0xae030002\fR
2099 .sp .5
2100 .fi
2101 .RE
2102 Jssmag.209 initiates transaction id 12266 with host helios by requesting
2103 up to 8 packets (the `<0-7>').
2104 The hex number at the end of the line
2105 is the value of the `userdata' field in the request.
2106 .LP
2107 Helios responds with 8 512-byte packets.
2108 The `:digit' following the
2109 transaction id gives the packet sequence number in the transaction
2110 and the number in parens is the amount of data in the packet,
2111 excluding the ATP header.
2112 The `*' on packet 7 indicates that the
2113 EOM bit was set.
2114 .LP
2115 Jssmag.209 then requests that packets 3 & 5 be retransmitted.
2116 Helios
2117 resends them then jssmag.209 releases the transaction.
2118 Finally,
2119 jssmag.209 initiates the next request.
2120 The `*' on the request
2121 indicates that XO (`exactly once') was \fInot\fP set.
2122
2123 .SH BACKWARD COMPATIBILITY
2124 The TCP flag names
2125 .B tcp-ece
2126 and
2127 .B tcp-cwr
2128 became available when linking with libpcap 1.9.0 or later.
2129 .LP
2130 This version of tcpdump requires libpcap 1.0 or later.
2131
2132 .SH "SEE ALSO"
2133 .BR stty (1),
2134 .BR pcap (3PCAP),
2135 .BR \%pcap-savefile (@MAN_FILE_FORMATS@),
2136 .BR \%pcap-filter (@MAN_MISC_INFO@),
2137 .BR \%pcap-tstamp (@MAN_MISC_INFO@)
2138 .LP
2139 .RS
2140 .na
2141 .I https://www.iana.org/assignments/media-types/application/vnd.tcpdump.pcap
2142 .ad
2143 .RE
2144 .LP
2145 .SH AUTHORS
2146 The original authors are:
2147 .LP
2148 Van Jacobson,
2149 Craig Leres and
2150 Steven McCanne, all of the
2151 Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, University of California, Berkeley, CA.
2152 .LP
2153 It is currently maintained by The Tcpdump Group.
2154 .LP
2155 The current version is available via HTTPS:
2156 .LP
2157 .RS
2158 .I https://www.tcpdump.org/
2159 .RE
2160 .LP
2161 The original distribution is available via anonymous FTP:
2162 .LP
2163 .RS
2164 .I ftp://ftp.ee.lbl.gov/old/tcpdump.tar.Z
2165 .RE
2166 .LP
2167 IPv6/IPsec support is added by WIDE/KAME project.
2168 This program uses OpenSSL/LibreSSL, under specific configurations.
2169 .SH BUGS
2170 To report a security issue please send an e-mail to \%security@tcpdump.org.
2171 .LP
2172 To report bugs and other problems, contribute patches, request a
2173 feature, provide generic feedback etc. please see the file
2174 .I CONTRIBUTING.md
2175 in the tcpdump source tree root.
2176 .LP
2177 Some attempt should be made to reassemble IP fragments or, at least
2178 to compute the right length for the higher level protocol.
2179 .LP
2180 Name server inverse queries are not dumped correctly: the (empty)
2181 question section is printed rather than real query in the answer
2182 section.
2183 Some believe that inverse queries are themselves a bug and
2184 prefer to fix the program generating them rather than \fItcpdump\fP.
2185 .LP
2186 A packet trace that crosses a daylight savings time change will give
2187 skewed time stamps (the time change is ignored).