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24 .\"
25 .TH TCPDUMP 1 "7 January 2004"
26 .SH NAME
27 tcpdump \- dump traffic on a network
28 .SH SYNOPSIS
29 .na
30 .B tcpdump
31 [
32 .B \-AdDeflLnNOpqRStuUvxX
33 ] [
34 .B \-c
35 .I count
36 ]
37 .br
38 .ti +8
39 [
40 .B \-C
41 .I file_size
42 ] [
43 .B \-F
44 .I file
45 ]
46 .br
47 .ti +8
48 [
49 .B \-i
50 .I interface
51 ]
52 [
53 .B \-m
54 .I module
55 ]
56 [
57 .B \-r
58 .I file
59 ]
60 .br
61 .ti +8
62 [
63 .B \-s
64 .I snaplen
65 ]
66 [
67 .B \-T
68 .I type
69 ]
70 [
71 .B \-w
72 .I file
73 ]
74 .br
75 .ti +8
76 [
77 .B \-E
78 .I spi@ipaddr algo:secret,...
79 ]
80 .br
81 .ti +8
82 [
83 .B \-y
84 .I datalinktype
85 ]
86 .ti +8
87 [
88 .I expression
89 ]
90 .br
91 .ad
92 .SH DESCRIPTION
93 .LP
94 \fITcpdump\fP prints out the headers of packets on a network interface
95 that match the boolean \fIexpression\fP. It can also be run with the
96 .B \-w
97 flag, which causes it to save the packet data to a file for later
98 analysis, and/or with the
99 .B \-r
100 flag, which causes it to read from a saved packet file rather than to
101 read packets from a network interface. In all cases, only packets that
102 match
103 .I expression
104 will be processed by
105 .IR tcpdump .
106 .LP
107 .I Tcpdump
108 will, if not run with the
109 .B \-c
110 flag, continue capturing packets until it is interrupted by a SIGINT
111 signal (generated, for example, by typing your interrupt character,
112 typically control-C) or a SIGTERM signal (typically generated with the
113 .BR kill (1)
114 command); if run with the
115 .B \-c
116 flag, it will capture packets until it is interrupted by a SIGINT or
117 SIGTERM signal or the specified number of packets have been processed.
118 .LP
119 When
120 .I tcpdump
121 finishes capturing packets, it will report counts of:
122 .IP
123 packets ``captured'' (this is the number of packets that
124 .I tcpdump
125 has received and processed);
126 .IP
127 packets ``received by filter'' (the meaning of this depends on the OS on
128 which you're running
129 .IR tcpdump ,
130 and possibly on the way the OS was configured - if a filter was
131 specified on the command line, on some OSes it counts packets regardless
132 of whether they were matched by the filter expression and, even if they
133 were matched by the filter expression, regardless of whether
134 .I tcpdump
135 has read and processed them yet, on other OSes it counts only packets that were
136 matched by the filter expression regardless of whether
137 .I tcpdump
138 has read and processed them yet, and on other OSes it counts only
139 packets that were matched by the filter expression and were processed by
140 .IR tcpdump );
141 .IP
142 packets ``dropped by kernel'' (this is the number of packets that were
143 dropped, due to a lack of buffer space, by the packet capture mechanism
144 in the OS on which
145 .I tcpdump
146 is running, if the OS reports that information to applications; if not,
147 it will be reported as 0).
148 .LP
149 On platforms that support the SIGINFO signal, such as most BSDs
150 (including Mac OS X) and Digital/Tru64 UNIX, it will report those counts
151 when it receives a SIGINFO signal (generated, for example, by typing
152 your ``status'' character, typically control-T, although on some
153 platforms, such as Mac OS X, the ``status'' character is not set by
154 default, so you must set it with
155 .BR stty (1)
156 in order to use it) and will continue capturing packets.
157 .LP
158 Reading packets from a network interface may require that you have
159 special privileges:
160 .TP
161 .B Under SunOS 3.x or 4.x with NIT or BPF:
162 You must have read access to
163 .I /dev/nit
164 or
165 .IR /dev/bpf* .
166 .TP
167 .B Under Solaris with DLPI:
168 You must have read/write access to the network pseudo device, e.g.
169 .IR /dev/le .
170 On at least some versions of Solaris, however, this is not sufficient to
171 allow
172 .I tcpdump
173 to capture in promiscuous mode; on those versions of Solaris, you must
174 be root, or
175 .I tcpdump
176 must be installed setuid to root, in order to capture in promiscuous
177 mode. Note that, on many (perhaps all) interfaces, if you don't capture
178 in promiscuous mode, you will not see any outgoing packets, so a capture
179 not done in promiscuous mode may not be very useful.
180 .TP
181 .B Under HP-UX with DLPI:
182 You must be root or
183 .I tcpdump
184 must be installed setuid to root.
185 .TP
186 .B Under IRIX with snoop:
187 You must be root or
188 .I tcpdump
189 must be installed setuid to root.
190 .TP
191 .B Under Linux:
192 You must be root or
193 .I tcpdump
194 must be installed setuid to root (unless your distribution has a kernel
195 that supports capability bits such as CAP_NET_RAW and code to allow
196 those capability bits to be given to particular accounts and to cause
197 those bits to be set on a user's initial processes when they log in, in
198 which case you must have CAP_NET_RAW in order to capture and
199 CAP_NET_ADMIN to enumerate network devices with, for example, the
200 .B \-D
201 flag).
202 .TP
203 .B Under ULTRIX and Digital UNIX/Tru64 UNIX:
204 Any user may capture network traffic with
205 .IR tcpdump .
206 However, no user (not even the super-user) can capture in promiscuous
207 mode on an interface unless the super-user has enabled promiscuous-mode
208 operation on that interface using
209 .IR pfconfig (8),
210 and no user (not even the super-user) can capture unicast traffic
211 received by or sent by the machine on an interface unless the super-user
212 has enabled copy-all-mode operation on that interface using
213 .IR pfconfig ,
214 so
215 .I useful
216 packet capture on an interface probably requires that either
217 promiscuous-mode or copy-all-mode operation, or both modes of
218 operation, be enabled on that interface.
219 .TP
220 .B Under BSD (this includes Mac OS X):
221 You must have read access to
222 .IR /dev/bpf* .
223 On BSDs with a devfs (this includes Mac OS X), this might involve more
224 than just having somebody with super-user access setting the ownership
225 or permissions on the BPF devices - it might involve configuring devfs
226 to set the ownership or permissions every time the system is booted,
227 if the system even supports that; if it doesn't support that, you might
228 have to find some other way to make that happen at boot time.
229 .LP
230 Reading a saved packet file doesn't require special privileges.
231 .SH OPTIONS
232 .TP
233 .B \-A
234 Print each packet (minus its link level header) in ASCII. Handy for
235 capturing web pages.
236 .TP
237 .B \-c
238 Exit after receiving \fIcount\fP packets.
239 .TP
240 .B \-C
241 Before writing a raw packet to a savefile, check whether the file is
242 currently larger than \fIfile_size\fP and, if so, close the current
243 savefile and open a new one. Savefiles after the first savefile will
244 have the name specified with the
245 .B \-w
246 flag, with a number after it, starting at 2 and continuing upward.
247 The units of \fIfile_size\fP are millions of bytes (1,000,000 bytes,
248 not 1,048,576 bytes).
249 .TP
250 .B \-d
251 Dump the compiled packet-matching code in a human readable form to
252 standard output and stop.
253 .TP
254 .B \-dd
255 Dump packet-matching code as a
256 .B C
257 program fragment.
258 .TP
259 .B \-ddd
260 Dump packet-matching code as decimal numbers (preceded with a count).
261 .TP
262 .B \-D
263 Print the list of the network interfaces available on the system and on
264 which
265 .I tcpdump
266 can capture packets. For each network interface, a number and an
267 interface name, possibly followed by a text description of the
268 interface, is printed. The interface name or the number can be supplied
269 to the
270 .B \-i
271 flag to specify an interface on which to capture.
272 .IP
273 This can be useful on systems that don't have a command to list them
274 (e.g., Windows systems, or UNIX systems lacking
275 .BR "ifconfig \-a" );
276 the number can be useful on Windows 2000 and later systems, where the
277 interface name is a somewhat complex string.
278 .IP
279 The
280 .B \-D
281 flag will not be supported if
282 .I tcpdump
283 was built with an older version of
284 .I libpcap
285 that lacks the
286 .B pcap_findalldevs()
287 function.
288 .TP
289 .B \-e
290 Print the link-level header on each dump line.
291 .TP
292 .B \-E
293 Use \fIspi@ipaddr algo:secret\fP for decrypting IPsec ESP packets that
294 are addressed to \fIaddr\fP and contain Security Parameter Index value
295 \fIspi\fP. This combination may be repeated with comma or newline seperation.
296 .IP
297 Note that setting the secret for IPv4 ESP packets is supported at this time.
298 .IP
299 Algorithms may be
300 \fBdes-cbc\fP,
301 \fB3des-cbc\fP,
302 \fBblowfish-cbc\fP,
303 \fBrc3-cbc\fP,
304 \fBcast128-cbc\fP, or
305 \fBnone\fP.
306 The default is \fBdes-cbc\fP.
307 The ability to decrypt packets is only present if \fItcpdump\fP was compiled
308 with cryptography enabled.
309 .IP
310 \fIsecret\fP is the ASCII text for ESP secret key.
311 If preceeded by 0x, then a hex value will be read.
312 .IP
313 The option assumes RFC2406 ESP, not RFC1827 ESP.
314 The option is only for debugging purposes, and
315 the use of this option with a true `secret' key is discouraged.
316 By presenting IPsec secret key onto command line
317 you make it visible to others, via
318 .IR ps (1)
319 and other occasions.
320 .IP
321 In addition to the above syntax, the syntax \fIfile name\fP may be used
322 to have tcpdump read the provided file in. The file is opened upon
323 receiving the first ESP packet, so any special permissions that tcpdump
324 may have been given should already have been given up.
325 .TP
326 .B \-f
327 Print `foreign' IPv4 addresses numerically rather than symbolically
328 (this option is intended to get around serious brain damage in
329 Sun's NIS server \(em usually it hangs forever translating non-local
330 internet numbers).
331 .IP
332 The test for `foreign' IPv4 addresses is done using the IPv4 address and
333 netmask of the interface on which capture is being done. If that
334 address or netmask are not available, available, either because the
335 interface on which capture is being done has no address or netmask or
336 because the capture is being done on the Linux "any" interface, which
337 can capture on more than one interface, this option will not work
338 correctly.
339 .TP
340 .B \-F
341 Use \fIfile\fP as input for the filter expression.
342 An additional expression given on the command line is ignored.
343 .TP
344 .B \-i
345 Listen on \fIinterface\fP.
346 If unspecified, \fItcpdump\fP searches the system interface list for the
347 lowest numbered, configured up interface (excluding loopback).
348 Ties are broken by choosing the earliest match.
349 .IP
350 On Linux systems with 2.2 or later kernels, an
351 .I interface
352 argument of ``any'' can be used to capture packets from all interfaces.
353 Note that captures on the ``any'' device will not be done in promiscuous
354 mode.
355 .IP
356 If the
357 .B \-D
358 flag is supported, an interface number as printed by that flag can be
359 used as the
360 .I interface
361 argument.
362 .TP
363 .B \-l
364 Make stdout line buffered.
365 Useful if you want to see the data
366 while capturing it.
367 E.g.,
368 .br
369 ``tcpdump\ \ \-l\ \ |\ \ tee dat'' or
370 ``tcpdump\ \ \-l \ \ > dat\ \ &\ \ tail\ \ \-f\ \ dat''.
371 .TP
372 .B \-L
373 List the known data link types for the interface and exit.
374 .TP
375 .B \-m
376 Load SMI MIB module definitions from file \fImodule\fR.
377 This option
378 can be used several times to load several MIB modules into \fItcpdump\fP.
379 .TP
380 .B \-n
381 Don't convert addresses (i.e., host addresses, port numbers, etc.) to names.
382 .TP
383 .B \-N
384 Don't print domain name qualification of host names.
385 E.g.,
386 if you give this flag then \fItcpdump\fP will print ``nic''
387 instead of ``nic.ddn.mil''.
388 .TP
389 .B \-O
390 Do not run the packet-matching code optimizer.
391 This is useful only
392 if you suspect a bug in the optimizer.
393 .TP
394 .B \-p
395 \fIDon't\fP put the interface
396 into promiscuous mode.
397 Note that the interface might be in promiscuous
398 mode for some other reason; hence, `-p' cannot be used as an abbreviation for
399 `ether host {local-hw-addr} or ether broadcast'.
400 .TP
401 .B \-q
402 Quick (quiet?) output.
403 Print less protocol information so output
404 lines are shorter.
405 .TP
406 .B \-R
407 Assume ESP/AH packets to be based on old specification (RFC1825 to RFC1829).
408 If specified, \fItcpdump\fP will not print replay prevention field.
409 Since there is no protocol version field in ESP/AH specification,
410 \fItcpdump\fP cannot deduce the version of ESP/AH protocol.
411 .TP
412 .B \-r
413 Read packets from \fIfile\fR (which was created with the
414 .B \-w
415 option).
416 Standard input is used if \fIfile\fR is ``-''.
417 .TP
418 .B \-S
419 Print absolute, rather than relative, TCP sequence numbers.
420 .TP
421 .B \-s
422 Snarf \fIsnaplen\fP bytes of data from each packet rather than the
423 default of 68 (with SunOS's NIT, the minimum is actually 96).
424 68 bytes is adequate for IP, ICMP, TCP
425 and UDP but may truncate protocol information from name server and NFS
426 packets (see below).
427 Packets truncated because of a limited snapshot
428 are indicated in the output with ``[|\fIproto\fP]'', where \fIproto\fP
429 is the name of the protocol level at which the truncation has occurred.
430 Note that taking larger snapshots both increases
431 the amount of time it takes to process packets and, effectively,
432 decreases the amount of packet buffering.
433 This may cause packets to be
434 lost.
435 You should limit \fIsnaplen\fP to the smallest number that will
436 capture the protocol information you're interested in.
437 Setting
438 \fIsnaplen\fP to 0 means use the required length to catch whole packets.
439 .TP
440 .B \-T
441 Force packets selected by "\fIexpression\fP" to be interpreted the
442 specified \fItype\fR.
443 Currently known types are
444 \fBaodv\fR (Ad-hoc On-demand Distance Vector protocol),
445 \fBcnfp\fR (Cisco NetFlow protocol),
446 \fBrpc\fR (Remote Procedure Call),
447 \fBrtp\fR (Real-Time Applications protocol),
448 \fBrtcp\fR (Real-Time Applications control protocol),
449 \fBsnmp\fR (Simple Network Management Protocol),
450 \fBtftp\fR (Trivial File Transfer Protocol),
451 \fBvat\fR (Visual Audio Tool),
452 and
453 \fBwb\fR (distributed White Board).
454 .TP
455 .B \-t
456 \fIDon't\fP print a timestamp on each dump line.
457 .TP
458 .B \-tt
459 Print an unformatted timestamp on each dump line.
460 .TP
461 .B \-ttt
462 Print a delta (in micro-seconds) between current and previous line
463 on each dump line.
464 .TP
465 .B \-tttt
466 Print a timestamp in default format proceeded by date on each dump line.
467 .TP
468 .B \-u
469 Print undecoded NFS handles.
470 .TP
471 .B \-U
472 Make output saved via the
473 .B \-w
474 option ``packet-buffered''; i.e., as each packet is saved, it will be
475 written to the output file, rather than being written only when the
476 output buffer fills.
477 .IP
478 The
479 .B \-U
480 flag will not be supported if
481 .I tcpdump
482 was built with an older version of
483 .I libpcap
484 that lacks the
485 .B pcap_dump_flush()
486 function.
487 .TP
488 .B \-v
489 (Slightly more) verbose output.
490 For example, the time to live,
491 identification, total length and options in an IP packet are printed.
492 Also enables additional packet integrity checks such as verifying the
493 IP and ICMP header checksum.
494 .TP
495 .B \-vv
496 Even more verbose output.
497 For example, additional fields are
498 printed from NFS reply packets, and SMB packets are fully decoded.
499 .TP
500 .B \-vvv
501 Even more verbose output.
502 For example,
503 telnet \fBSB\fP ... \fBSE\fP options
504 are printed in full.
505 With
506 .B \-X
507 Telnet options are printed in hex as well.
508 .TP
509 .B \-w
510 Write the raw packets to \fIfile\fR rather than parsing and printing
511 them out.
512 They can later be printed with the \-r option.
513 Standard output is used if \fIfile\fR is ``-''.
514 .TP
515 .B \-x
516 Print each packet (minus its link level header) in hex.
517 The smaller of the entire packet or
518 .I snaplen
519 bytes will be printed. Note that this is the entire link-layer
520 packet, so for link layers that pad (e.g. Ethernet), the padding bytes
521 will also be printed when the higher layer packet is shorter than the
522 required padding.
523 .TP
524 .B \-xx
525 Print each packet,
526 .I including
527 its link level header, in hex.
528 .TP
529 .B \-X
530 Print each packet (minus its link level header) in hex and ASCII.
531 This is very handy for analysing new protocols.
532 .TP
533 .B \-XX
534 Print each packet,
535 .I including
536 its link level header, in hex and ASCII.
537 .TP
538 .B \-y
539 Set the data link type to use while capturing packets to \fIdatalinktype\fP.
540 .IP "\fI expression\fP"
541 .RS
542 selects which packets will be dumped.
543 If no \fIexpression\fP
544 is given, all packets on the net will be dumped.
545 Otherwise,
546 only packets for which \fIexpression\fP is `true' will be dumped.
547 .LP
548 The \fIexpression\fP consists of one or more
549 .I primitives.
550 Primitives usually consist of an
551 .I id
552 (name or number) preceded by one or more qualifiers.
553 There are three
554 different kinds of qualifier:
555 .IP \fItype\fP
556 qualifiers say what kind of thing the id name or number refers to.
557 Possible types are
558 .BR host ,
559 .B net
560 and
561 .BR port .
562 E.g., `host foo', `net 128.3', `port 20'.
563 If there is no type
564 qualifier,
565 .B host
566 is assumed.
567 .IP \fIdir\fP
568 qualifiers specify a particular transfer direction to and/or from
569 .IR id .
570 Possible directions are
571 .BR src ,
572 .BR dst ,
573 .B "src or dst"
574 and
575 .B "src and"
576 .BR dst .
577 E.g., `src foo', `dst net 128.3', `src or dst port ftp-data'.
578 If
579 there is no dir qualifier,
580 .B "src or dst"
581 is assumed.
582 For some link layers, such as SLIP and the ``cooked'' Linux capture mode
583 used for the ``any'' device and for some other device types, the
584 .B inbound
585 and
586 .B outbound
587 qualifiers can be used to specify a desired direction.
588 .IP \fIproto\fP
589 qualifiers restrict the match to a particular protocol.
590 Possible
591 protos are:
592 .BR ether ,
593 .BR fddi ,
594 .BR tr ,
595 .BR wlan ,
596 .BR ip ,
597 .BR ip6 ,
598 .BR arp ,
599 .BR rarp ,
600 .BR decnet ,
601 .B tcp
602 and
603 .BR udp .
604 E.g., `ether src foo', `arp net 128.3', `tcp port 21'.
605 If there is
606 no proto qualifier, all protocols consistent with the type are
607 assumed.
608 E.g., `src foo' means `(ip or arp or rarp) src foo'
609 (except the latter is not legal syntax), `net bar' means `(ip or
610 arp or rarp) net bar' and `port 53' means `(tcp or udp) port 53'.
611 .LP
612 [`fddi' is actually an alias for `ether'; the parser treats them
613 identically as meaning ``the data link level used on the specified
614 network interface.'' FDDI headers contain Ethernet-like source
615 and destination addresses, and often contain Ethernet-like packet
616 types, so you can filter on these FDDI fields just as with the
617 analogous Ethernet fields.
618 FDDI headers also contain other fields,
619 but you cannot name them explicitly in a filter expression.
620 .LP
621 Similarly, `tr' and `wlan' are aliases for `ether'; the previous
622 paragraph's statements about FDDI headers also apply to Token Ring
623 and 802.11 wireless LAN headers. For 802.11 headers, the destination
624 address is the DA field and the source address is the SA field; the
625 BSSID, RA, and TA fields aren't tested.]
626 .LP
627 In addition to the above, there are some special `primitive' keywords
628 that don't follow the pattern:
629 .BR gateway ,
630 .BR broadcast ,
631 .BR less ,
632 .B greater
633 and arithmetic expressions.
634 All of these are described below.
635 .LP
636 More complex filter expressions are built up by using the words
637 .BR and ,
638 .B or
639 and
640 .B not
641 to combine primitives.
642 E.g., `host foo and not port ftp and not port ftp-data'.
643 To save typing, identical qualifier lists can be omitted.
644 E.g.,
645 `tcp dst port ftp or ftp-data or domain' is exactly the same as
646 `tcp dst port ftp or tcp dst port ftp-data or tcp dst port domain'.
647 .LP
648 Allowable primitives are:
649 .IP "\fBdst host \fIhost\fR"
650 True if the IPv4/v6 destination field of the packet is \fIhost\fP,
651 which may be either an address or a name.
652 .IP "\fBsrc host \fIhost\fR"
653 True if the IPv4/v6 source field of the packet is \fIhost\fP.
654 .IP "\fBhost \fIhost\fP
655 True if either the IPv4/v6 source or destination of the packet is \fIhost\fP.
656 Any of the above host expressions can be prepended with the keywords,
657 \fBip\fP, \fBarp\fP, \fBrarp\fP, or \fBip6\fP as in:
658 .in +.5i
659 .nf
660 \fBip host \fIhost\fR
661 .fi
662 .in -.5i
663 which is equivalent to:
664 .in +.5i
665 .nf
666 \fBether proto \fI\\ip\fB and host \fIhost\fR
667 .fi
668 .in -.5i
669 If \fIhost\fR is a name with multiple IP addresses, each address will
670 be checked for a match.
671 .IP "\fBether dst \fIehost\fP
672 True if the ethernet destination address is \fIehost\fP.
673 \fIEhost\fP
674 may be either a name from /etc/ethers or a number (see
675 .IR ethers (3N)
676 for numeric format).
677 .IP "\fBether src \fIehost\fP
678 True if the ethernet source address is \fIehost\fP.
679 .IP "\fBether host \fIehost\fP
680 True if either the ethernet source or destination address is \fIehost\fP.
681 .IP "\fBgateway\fP \fIhost\fP
682 True if the packet used \fIhost\fP as a gateway.
683 I.e., the ethernet
684 source or destination address was \fIhost\fP but neither the IP source
685 nor the IP destination was \fIhost\fP.
686 \fIHost\fP must be a name and
687 must be found both by the machine's host-name-to-IP-address resolution
688 mechanisms (host name file, DNS, NIS, etc.) and by the machine's
689 host-name-to-Ethernet-address resolution mechanism (/etc/ethers, etc.).
690 (An equivalent expression is
691 .in +.5i
692 .nf
693 \fBether host \fIehost \fBand not host \fIhost\fR
694 .fi
695 .in -.5i
696 which can be used with either names or numbers for \fIhost / ehost\fP.)
697 This syntax does not work in IPv6-enabled configuration at this moment.
698 .IP "\fBdst net \fInet\fR"
699 True if the IPv4/v6 destination address of the packet has a network
700 number of \fInet\fP.
701 \fINet\fP may be either a name from /etc/networks
702 or a network number (see \fInetworks(4)\fP for details).
703 .IP "\fBsrc net \fInet\fR"
704 True if the IPv4/v6 source address of the packet has a network
705 number of \fInet\fP.
706 .IP "\fBnet \fInet\fR"
707 True if either the IPv4/v6 source or destination address of the packet has a network
708 number of \fInet\fP.
709 .IP "\fBnet \fInet\fR \fBmask \fInetmask\fR"
710 True if the IP address matches \fInet\fR with the specific \fInetmask\fR.
711 May be qualified with \fBsrc\fR or \fBdst\fR.
712 Note that this syntax is not valid for IPv6 \fInet\fR.
713 .IP "\fBnet \fInet\fR/\fIlen\fR"
714 True if the IPv4/v6 address matches \fInet\fR with a netmask \fIlen\fR
715 bits wide.
716 May be qualified with \fBsrc\fR or \fBdst\fR.
717 .IP "\fBdst port \fIport\fR"
718 True if the packet is ip/tcp, ip/udp, ip6/tcp or ip6/udp and has a
719 destination port value of \fIport\fP.
720 The \fIport\fP can be a number or a name used in /etc/services (see
721 .IR tcp (4P)
722 and
723 .IR udp (4P)).
724 If a name is used, both the port
725 number and protocol are checked.
726 If a number or ambiguous name is used,
727 only the port number is checked (e.g., \fBdst port 513\fR will print both
728 tcp/login traffic and udp/who traffic, and \fBport domain\fR will print
729 both tcp/domain and udp/domain traffic).
730 .IP "\fBsrc port \fIport\fR"
731 True if the packet has a source port value of \fIport\fP.
732 .IP "\fBport \fIport\fR"
733 True if either the source or destination port of the packet is \fIport\fP.
734 Any of the above port expressions can be prepended with the keywords,
735 \fBtcp\fP or \fBudp\fP, as in:
736 .in +.5i
737 .nf
738 \fBtcp src port \fIport\fR
739 .fi
740 .in -.5i
741 which matches only tcp packets whose source port is \fIport\fP.
742 .IP "\fBless \fIlength\fR"
743 True if the packet has a length less than or equal to \fIlength\fP.
744 This is equivalent to:
745 .in +.5i
746 .nf
747 \fBlen <= \fIlength\fP.
748 .fi
749 .in -.5i
750 .IP "\fBgreater \fIlength\fR"
751 True if the packet has a length greater than or equal to \fIlength\fP.
752 This is equivalent to:
753 .in +.5i
754 .nf
755 \fBlen >= \fIlength\fP.
756 .fi
757 .in -.5i
758 .IP "\fBip proto \fIprotocol\fR"
759 True if the packet is an IP packet (see
760 .IR ip (4P))
761 of protocol type \fIprotocol\fP.
762 \fIProtocol\fP can be a number or one of the names
763 \fIicmp\fP, \fIicmp6\fP, \fIigmp\fP, \fIigrp\fP, \fIpim\fP, \fIah\fP,
764 \fIesp\fP, \fIvrrp\fP, \fIudp\fP, or \fItcp\fP.
765 Note that the identifiers \fItcp\fP, \fIudp\fP, and \fIicmp\fP are also
766 keywords and must be escaped via backslash (\\), which is \\\\ in the C-shell.
767 Note that this primitive does not chase the protocol header chain.
768 .IP "\fBip6 proto \fIprotocol\fR"
769 True if the packet is an IPv6 packet of protocol type \fIprotocol\fP.
770 Note that this primitive does not chase the protocol header chain.
771 .IP "\fBip6 protochain \fIprotocol\fR"
772 True if the packet is IPv6 packet,
773 and contains protocol header with type \fIprotocol\fR
774 in its protocol header chain.
775 For example,
776 .in +.5i
777 .nf
778 \fBip6 protochain 6\fR
779 .fi
780 .in -.5i
781 matches any IPv6 packet with TCP protocol header in the protocol header chain.
782 The packet may contain, for example,
783 authentication header, routing header, or hop-by-hop option header,
784 between IPv6 header and TCP header.
785 The BPF code emitted by this primitive is complex and
786 cannot be optimized by BPF optimizer code in \fItcpdump\fP,
787 so this can be somewhat slow.
788 .IP "\fBip protochain \fIprotocol\fR"
789 Equivalent to \fBip6 protochain \fIprotocol\fR, but this is for IPv4.
790 .IP "\fBether broadcast\fR"
791 True if the packet is an ethernet broadcast packet.
792 The \fIether\fP
793 keyword is optional.
794 .IP "\fBip broadcast\fR"
795 True if the packet is an IPv4 broadcast packet.
796 It checks for both the all-zeroes and all-ones broadcast conventions,
797 and looks up the subnet mask on the interface on which the capture is
798 being done.
799 .IP
800 If the subnet mask of the interface on which the capture is being done
801 is not available, either because the interface on which capture is being
802 done has no netmask or because the capture is being done on the Linux
803 "any" interface, which can capture on more than one interface, this
804 check will not work correctly.
805 .IP "\fBether multicast\fR"
806 True if the packet is an ethernet multicast packet.
807 The \fIether\fP
808 keyword is optional.
809 This is shorthand for `\fBether[0] & 1 != 0\fP'.
810 .IP "\fBip multicast\fR"
811 True if the packet is an IP multicast packet.
812 .IP "\fBip6 multicast\fR"
813 True if the packet is an IPv6 multicast packet.
814 .IP "\fBether proto \fIprotocol\fR"
815 True if the packet is of ether type \fIprotocol\fR.
816 \fIProtocol\fP can be a number or one of the names
817 \fIip\fP, \fIip6\fP, \fIarp\fP, \fIrarp\fP, \fIatalk\fP, \fIaarp\fP,
818 \fIdecnet\fP, \fIsca\fP, \fIlat\fP, \fImopdl\fP, \fImoprc\fP,
819 \fIiso\fP, \fIstp\fP, \fIipx\fP, or \fInetbeui\fP.
820 Note these identifiers are also keywords
821 and must be escaped via backslash (\\).
822 .IP
823 [In the case of FDDI (e.g., `\fBfddi protocol arp\fR'), Token Ring
824 (e.g., `\fBtr protocol arp\fR'), and IEEE 802.11 wireless LANS (e.g.,
825 `\fBwlan protocol arp\fR'), for most of those protocols, the
826 protocol identification comes from the 802.2 Logical Link Control (LLC)
827 header, which is usually layered on top of the FDDI, Token Ring, or
828 802.11 header.
829 .IP
830 When filtering for most protocol identifiers on FDDI, Token Ring, or
831 802.11, \fItcpdump\fR checks only the protocol ID field of an LLC header
832 in so-called SNAP format with an Organizational Unit Identifier (OUI) of
833 0x000000, for encapsulated Ethernet; it doesn't check whether the packet
834 is in SNAP format with an OUI of 0x000000.
835 The exceptions are:
836 .RS
837 .TP
838 \fBiso\fP
839 \fItcpdump\fR checks the DSAP (Destination Service Access Point) and
840 SSAP (Source Service Access Point) fields of the LLC header;
841 .TP
842 \fBstp\fP and \fInetbeui\fP
843 \fItcpdump\fR checks the DSAP of the LLC header;
844 .TP
845 \fIatalk\fP
846 \fItcpdump\fR checks for a SNAP-format packet with an OUI of 0x080007
847 and the AppleTalk etype.
848 .RE
849 .IP
850 In the case of Ethernet, \fItcpdump\fR checks the Ethernet type field
851 for most of those protocols. The exceptions are:
852 .RS
853 .TP
854 \fBiso\fP, \fBsap\fP, and \fBnetbeui\fP
855 \fItcpdump\fR checks for an 802.3 frame and then checks the LLC header as
856 it does for FDDI, Token Ring, and 802.11;
857 .TP
858 \fBatalk\fP
859 \fItcpdump\fR checks both for the AppleTalk etype in an Ethernet frame and
860 for a SNAP-format packet as it does for FDDI, Token Ring, and 802.11;
861 .TP
862 \fBaarp\fP
863 \fItcpdump\fR checks for the AppleTalk ARP etype in either an Ethernet
864 frame or an 802.2 SNAP frame with an OUI of 0x000000;
865 .TP
866 \fBipx\fP
867 \fItcpdump\fR checks for the IPX etype in an Ethernet frame, the IPX
868 DSAP in the LLC header, the 802.3-with-no-LLC-header encapsulation of
869 IPX, and the IPX etype in a SNAP frame.
870 .RE
871 .IP "\fBdecnet src \fIhost\fR"
872 True if the DECNET source address is
873 .IR host ,
874 which may be an address of the form ``10.123'', or a DECNET host
875 name.
876 [DECNET host name support is only available on ULTRIX systems
877 that are configured to run DECNET.]
878 .IP "\fBdecnet dst \fIhost\fR"
879 True if the DECNET destination address is
880 .IR host .
881 .IP "\fBdecnet host \fIhost\fR"
882 True if either the DECNET source or destination address is
883 .IR host .
884 .IP "\fBifname \fIinterface\fR"
885 True if the packet was logged as coming from the specified interface (applies
886 only to packets logged by OpenBSD's
887 .BR pf (4)).
888 .IP "\fBon \fIinterface\fR"
889 Synonymous with the
890 .B ifname
891 modifier.
892 .IP "\fBrnr \fInum\fR"
893 True if the packet was logged as matching the specified PF rule number
894 (applies only to packets logged by OpenBSD's
895 .BR pf (4)).
896 .IP "\fBrulenum \fInum\fR"
897 Synonomous with the
898 .B rnr
899 modifier.
900 .IP "\fBreason \fIcode\fR"
901 True if the packet was logged with the specified PF reason code. The known
902 codes are:
903 .BR match ,
904 .BR bad-offset ,
905 .BR fragment ,
906 .BR short ,
907 .BR normalize ,
908 and
909 .B memory
910 (applies only to packets logged by OpenBSD's
911 .BR pf (4)).
912 .IP "\fBaction \fIact\fR"
913 True if PF took the specified action when the packet was logged. Known actions
914 are:
915 .B pass
916 and
917 .B block
918 (applies only to packets logged by OpenBSD's
919 .BR pf(4)).
920 .IP "\fBip\fR, \fBip6\fR, \fBarp\fR, \fBrarp\fR, \fBatalk\fR, \fBaarp\fR, \fBdecnet\fR, \fBiso\fR, \fBstp\fR, \fBipx\fR, \fInetbeui\fP"
921 Abbreviations for:
922 .in +.5i
923 .nf
924 \fBether proto \fIp\fR
925 .fi
926 .in -.5i
927 where \fIp\fR is one of the above protocols.
928 .IP "\fBlat\fR, \fBmoprc\fR, \fBmopdl\fR"
929 Abbreviations for:
930 .in +.5i
931 .nf
932 \fBether proto \fIp\fR
933 .fi
934 .in -.5i
935 where \fIp\fR is one of the above protocols.
936 Note that
937 \fItcpdump\fP does not currently know how to parse these protocols.
938 .IP "\fBvlan \fI[vlan_id]\fR"
939 True if the packet is an IEEE 802.1Q VLAN packet.
940 If \fI[vlan_id]\fR is specified, only true is the packet has the specified
941 \fIvlan_id\fR.
942 Note that the first \fBvlan\fR keyword encountered in \fIexpression\fR
943 changes the decoding offsets for the remainder of \fIexpression\fR
944 on the assumption that the packet is a VLAN packet.
945 .IP "\fBtcp\fR, \fBudp\fR, \fBicmp\fR"
946 Abbreviations for:
947 .in +.5i
948 .nf
949 \fBip proto \fIp\fR\fB or ip6 proto \fIp\fR
950 .fi
951 .in -.5i
952 where \fIp\fR is one of the above protocols.
953 .IP "\fBiso proto \fIprotocol\fR"
954 True if the packet is an OSI packet of protocol type \fIprotocol\fP.
955 \fIProtocol\fP can be a number or one of the names
956 \fIclnp\fP, \fIesis\fP, or \fIisis\fP.
957 .IP "\fBclnp\fR, \fBesis\fR, \fBisis\fR"
958 Abbreviations for:
959 .in +.5i
960 .nf
961 \fBiso proto \fIp\fR
962 .fi
963 .in -.5i
964 where \fIp\fR is one of the above protocols.
965 .IP "\fBl1\fR, \fBl2\fR, \fBiih\fR, \fBlsp\fR, \fBsnp\fR, \fBcsnp\fR, \fBpsnp\fR"
966 Abbreviations for IS-IS PDU types.
967 .IP "\fBvpi\fP \fIn\fR
968 True if the packet is an ATM packet, for SunATM on Solaris, with a
969 virtual path identifier of
970 .IR n .
971 .IP "\fBvci\fP \fIn\fR
972 True if the packet is an ATM packet, for SunATM on Solaris, with a
973 virtual channel identifier of
974 .IR n .
975 .IP \fBlane\fP
976 True if the packet is an ATM packet, for SunATM on Solaris, and is
977 an ATM LANE packet.
978 Note that the first \fBlane\fR keyword encountered in \fIexpression\fR
979 changes the tests done in the remainder of \fIexpression\fR
980 on the assumption that the packet is either a LANE emulated Ethernet
981 packet or a LANE LE Control packet. If \fBlane\fR isn't specified, the
982 tests are done under the assumption that the packet is an
983 LLC-encapsulated packet.
984 .IP \fBllc\fP
985 True if the packet is an ATM packet, for SunATM on Solaris, and is
986 an LLC-encapsulated packet.
987 .IP \fBoamf4s\fP
988 True if the packet is an ATM packet, for SunATM on Solaris, and is
989 a segment OAM F4 flow cell (VPI=0 & VCI=3).
990 .IP \fBoamf4e\fP
991 True if the packet is an ATM packet, for SunATM on Solaris, and is
992 an end-to-end OAM F4 flow cell (VPI=0 & VCI=4).
993 .IP \fBoamf4\fP
994 True if the packet is an ATM packet, for SunATM on Solaris, and is
995 a segment or end-to-end OAM F4 flow cell (VPI=0 & (VCI=3 | VCI=4)).
996 .IP \fBoam\fP
997 True if the packet is an ATM packet, for SunATM on Solaris, and is
998 a segment or end-to-end OAM F4 flow cell (VPI=0 & (VCI=3 | VCI=4)).
999 .IP \fBmetac\fP
1000 True if the packet is an ATM packet, for SunATM on Solaris, and is
1001 on a meta signaling circuit (VPI=0 & VCI=1).
1002 .IP \fBbcc\fP
1003 True if the packet is an ATM packet, for SunATM on Solaris, and is
1004 on a broadcast signaling circuit (VPI=0 & VCI=2).
1005 .IP \fBsc\fP
1006 True if the packet is an ATM packet, for SunATM on Solaris, and is
1007 on a signaling circuit (VPI=0 & VCI=5).
1008 .IP \fBilmic\fP
1009 True if the packet is an ATM packet, for SunATM on Solaris, and is
1010 on an ILMI circuit (VPI=0 & VCI=16).
1011 .IP \fBconnectmsg\fP
1012 True if the packet is an ATM packet, for SunATM on Solaris, and is
1013 on a signaling circuit and is a Q.2931 Setup, Call Proceeding, Connect,
1014 Connect Ack, Release, or Release Done message.
1015 .IP \fBmetaconnect\fP
1016 True if the packet is an ATM packet, for SunATM on Solaris, and is
1017 on a meta signaling circuit and is a Q.2931 Setup, Call Proceeding, Connect,
1018 Release, or Release Done message.
1019 .IP "\fIexpr relop expr\fR"
1020 True if the relation holds, where \fIrelop\fR is one of >, <, >=, <=, =,
1021 !=, and \fIexpr\fR is an arithmetic expression composed of integer
1022 constants (expressed in standard C syntax), the normal binary operators
1023 [+, -, *, /, &, |, <<, >>], a length operator, and special packet data
1024 accessors.
1025 To access
1026 data inside the packet, use the following syntax:
1027 .in +.5i
1028 .nf
1029 \fIproto\fB [ \fIexpr\fB : \fIsize\fB ]\fR
1030 .fi
1031 .in -.5i
1032 \fIProto\fR is one of \fBether, fddi, tr, wlan, ppp, slip, link,
1033 ip, arp, rarp, tcp, udp, icmp\fR or \fBip6\fR, and
1034 indicates the protocol layer for the index operation.
1035 (\fBether, fddi, wlan, tr, ppp, slip\fR and \fBlink\fR all refer to the
1036 link layer.)
1037 Note that \fItcp, udp\fR and other upper-layer protocol types only
1038 apply to IPv4, not IPv6 (this will be fixed in the future).
1039 The byte offset, relative to the indicated protocol layer, is
1040 given by \fIexpr\fR.
1041 \fISize\fR is optional and indicates the number of bytes in the
1042 field of interest; it can be either one, two, or four, and defaults to one.
1043 The length operator, indicated by the keyword \fBlen\fP, gives the
1044 length of the packet.
1045
1046 For example, `\fBether[0] & 1 != 0\fP' catches all multicast traffic.
1047 The expression `\fBip[0] & 0xf != 5\fP'
1048 catches all IP packets with options.
1049 The expression
1050 `\fBip[6:2] & 0x1fff = 0\fP'
1051 catches only unfragmented datagrams and frag zero of fragmented datagrams.
1052 This check is implicitly applied to the \fBtcp\fP and \fBudp\fP
1053 index operations.
1054 For instance, \fBtcp[0]\fP always means the first
1055 byte of the TCP \fIheader\fP, and never means the first byte of an
1056 intervening fragment.
1057
1058 Some offsets and field values may be expressed as names rather than
1059 as numeric values.
1060 The following protocol header field offsets are
1061 available: \fBicmptype\fP (ICMP type field), \fBicmpcode\fP (ICMP
1062 code field), and \fBtcpflags\fP (TCP flags field).
1063
1064 The following ICMP type field values are available: \fBicmp-echoreply\fP,
1065 \fBicmp-unreach\fP, \fBicmp-sourcequench\fP, \fBicmp-redirect\fP,
1066 \fBicmp-echo\fP, \fBicmp-routeradvert\fP, \fBicmp-routersolicit\fP,
1067 \fBicmp-timxceed\fP, \fBicmp-paramprob\fP, \fBicmp-tstamp\fP,
1068 \fBicmp-tstampreply\fP, \fBicmp-ireq\fP, \fBicmp-ireqreply\fP,
1069 \fBicmp-maskreq\fP, \fBicmp-maskreply\fP.
1070
1071 The following TCP flags field values are available: \fBtcp-fin\fP,
1072 \fBtcp-syn\fP, \fBtcp-rst\fP, \fBtcp-push\fP,
1073 \fBtcp-ack\fP, \fBtcp-urg\fP.
1074 .LP
1075 Primitives may be combined using:
1076 .IP
1077 A parenthesized group of primitives and operators
1078 (parentheses are special to the Shell and must be escaped).
1079 .IP
1080 Negation (`\fB!\fP' or `\fBnot\fP').
1081 .IP
1082 Concatenation (`\fB&&\fP' or `\fBand\fP').
1083 .IP
1084 Alternation (`\fB||\fP' or `\fBor\fP').
1085 .LP
1086 Negation has highest precedence.
1087 Alternation and concatenation have equal precedence and associate
1088 left to right.
1089 Note that explicit \fBand\fR tokens, not juxtaposition,
1090 are now required for concatenation.
1091 .LP
1092 If an identifier is given without a keyword, the most recent keyword
1093 is assumed.
1094 For example,
1095 .in +.5i
1096 .nf
1097 \fBnot host vs and ace\fR
1098 .fi
1099 .in -.5i
1100 is short for
1101 .in +.5i
1102 .nf
1103 \fBnot host vs and host ace\fR
1104 .fi
1105 .in -.5i
1106 which should not be confused with
1107 .in +.5i
1108 .nf
1109 \fBnot ( host vs or ace )\fR
1110 .fi
1111 .in -.5i
1112 .LP
1113 Expression arguments can be passed to \fItcpdump\fP as either a single
1114 argument or as multiple arguments, whichever is more convenient.
1115 Generally, if the expression contains Shell metacharacters, it is
1116 easier to pass it as a single, quoted argument.
1117 Multiple arguments are concatenated with spaces before being parsed.
1118 .SH EXAMPLES
1119 .LP
1120 To print all packets arriving at or departing from \fIsundown\fP:
1121 .RS
1122 .nf
1123 \fBtcpdump host sundown\fP
1124 .fi
1125 .RE
1126 .LP
1127 To print traffic between \fIhelios\fR and either \fIhot\fR or \fIace\fR:
1128 .RS
1129 .nf
1130 \fBtcpdump host helios and \\( hot or ace \\)\fP
1131 .fi
1132 .RE
1133 .LP
1134 To print all IP packets between \fIace\fR and any host except \fIhelios\fR:
1135 .RS
1136 .nf
1137 \fBtcpdump ip host ace and not helios\fP
1138 .fi
1139 .RE
1140 .LP
1141 To print all traffic between local hosts and hosts at Berkeley:
1142 .RS
1143 .nf
1144 .B
1145 tcpdump net ucb-ether
1146 .fi
1147 .RE
1148 .LP
1149 To print all ftp traffic through internet gateway \fIsnup\fP:
1150 (note that the expression is quoted to prevent the shell from
1151 (mis-)interpreting the parentheses):
1152 .RS
1153 .nf
1154 .B
1155 tcpdump 'gateway snup and (port ftp or ftp-data)'
1156 .fi
1157 .RE
1158 .LP
1159 To print traffic neither sourced from nor destined for local hosts
1160 (if you gateway to one other net, this stuff should never make it
1161 onto your local net).
1162 .RS
1163 .nf
1164 .B
1165 tcpdump ip and not net \fIlocalnet\fP
1166 .fi
1167 .RE
1168 .LP
1169 To print the start and end packets (the SYN and FIN packets) of each
1170 TCP conversation that involves a non-local host.
1171 .RS
1172 .nf
1173 .B
1174 tcpdump 'tcp[tcpflags] & (tcp-syn|tcp-fin) != 0 and not src and dst net \fIlocalnet\fP'
1175 .fi
1176 .RE
1177 .LP
1178 To print IP packets longer than 576 bytes sent through gateway \fIsnup\fP:
1179 .RS
1180 .nf
1181 .B
1182 tcpdump 'gateway snup and ip[2:2] > 576'
1183 .fi
1184 .RE
1185 .LP
1186 To print IP broadcast or multicast packets that were
1187 .I not
1188 sent via ethernet broadcast or multicast:
1189 .RS
1190 .nf
1191 .B
1192 tcpdump 'ether[0] & 1 = 0 and ip[16] >= 224'
1193 .fi
1194 .RE
1195 .LP
1196 To print all ICMP packets that are not echo requests/replies (i.e., not
1197 ping packets):
1198 .RS
1199 .nf
1200 .B
1201 tcpdump 'icmp[icmptype] != icmp-echo and icmp[icmptype] != icmp-echoreply'
1202 .fi
1203 .RE
1204 .SH OUTPUT FORMAT
1205 .LP
1206 The output of \fItcpdump\fP is protocol dependent.
1207 The following
1208 gives a brief description and examples of most of the formats.
1209 .de HD
1210 .sp 1.5
1211 .B
1212 ..
1213 .HD
1214 Link Level Headers
1215 .LP
1216 If the '-e' option is given, the link level header is printed out.
1217 On ethernets, the source and destination addresses, protocol,
1218 and packet length are printed.
1219 .LP
1220 On FDDI networks, the '-e' option causes \fItcpdump\fP to print
1221 the `frame control' field, the source and destination addresses,
1222 and the packet length.
1223 (The `frame control' field governs the
1224 interpretation of the rest of the packet.
1225 Normal packets (such
1226 as those containing IP datagrams) are `async' packets, with a priority
1227 value between 0 and 7; for example, `\fBasync4\fR'.
1228 Such packets
1229 are assumed to contain an 802.2 Logical Link Control (LLC) packet;
1230 the LLC header is printed if it is \fInot\fR an ISO datagram or a
1231 so-called SNAP packet.
1232 .LP
1233 On Token Ring networks, the '-e' option causes \fItcpdump\fP to print
1234 the `access control' and `frame control' fields, the source and
1235 destination addresses, and the packet length.
1236 As on FDDI networks,
1237 packets are assumed to contain an LLC packet.
1238 Regardless of whether
1239 the '-e' option is specified or not, the source routing information is
1240 printed for source-routed packets.
1241 .LP
1242 On 802.11 networks, the '-e' option causes \fItcpdump\fP to print
1243 the `frame control' fields, all of the addresses in the 802.11 header,
1244 and the packet length.
1245 As on FDDI networks,
1246 packets are assumed to contain an LLC packet.
1247 .LP
1248 \fI(N.B.: The following description assumes familiarity with
1249 the SLIP compression algorithm described in RFC-1144.)\fP
1250 .LP
1251 On SLIP links, a direction indicator (``I'' for inbound, ``O'' for outbound),
1252 packet type, and compression information are printed out.
1253 The packet type is printed first.
1254 The three types are \fIip\fP, \fIutcp\fP, and \fIctcp\fP.
1255 No further link information is printed for \fIip\fR packets.
1256 For TCP packets, the connection identifier is printed following the type.
1257 If the packet is compressed, its encoded header is printed out.
1258 The special cases are printed out as
1259 \fB*S+\fIn\fR and \fB*SA+\fIn\fR, where \fIn\fR is the amount by which
1260 the sequence number (or sequence number and ack) has changed.
1261 If it is not a special case,
1262 zero or more changes are printed.
1263 A change is indicated by U (urgent pointer), W (window), A (ack),
1264 S (sequence number), and I (packet ID), followed by a delta (+n or -n),
1265 or a new value (=n).
1266 Finally, the amount of data in the packet and compressed header length
1267 are printed.
1268 .LP
1269 For example, the following line shows an outbound compressed TCP packet,
1270 with an implicit connection identifier; the ack has changed by 6,
1271 the sequence number by 49, and the packet ID by 6; there are 3 bytes of
1272 data and 6 bytes of compressed header:
1273 .RS
1274 .nf
1275 \fBO ctcp * A+6 S+49 I+6 3 (6)\fP
1276 .fi
1277 .RE
1278 .HD
1279 ARP/RARP Packets
1280 .LP
1281 Arp/rarp output shows the type of request and its arguments.
1282 The
1283 format is intended to be self explanatory.
1284 Here is a short sample taken from the start of an `rlogin' from
1285 host \fIrtsg\fP to host \fIcsam\fP:
1286 .RS
1287 .nf
1288 .sp .5
1289 \f(CWarp who-has csam tell rtsg
1290 arp reply csam is-at CSAM\fR
1291 .sp .5
1292 .fi
1293 .RE
1294 The first line says that rtsg sent an arp packet asking
1295 for the ethernet address of internet host csam.
1296 Csam
1297 replies with its ethernet address (in this example, ethernet addresses
1298 are in caps and internet addresses in lower case).
1299 .LP
1300 This would look less redundant if we had done \fItcpdump \-n\fP:
1301 .RS
1302 .nf
1303 .sp .5
1304 \f(CWarp who-has 128.3.254.6 tell 128.3.254.68
1305 arp reply 128.3.254.6 is-at 02:07:01:00:01:c4\fP
1306 .fi
1307 .RE
1308 .LP
1309 If we had done \fItcpdump \-e\fP, the fact that the first packet is
1310 broadcast and the second is point-to-point would be visible:
1311 .RS
1312 .nf
1313 .sp .5
1314 \f(CWRTSG Broadcast 0806 64: arp who-has csam tell rtsg
1315 CSAM RTSG 0806 64: arp reply csam is-at CSAM\fR
1316 .sp .5
1317 .fi
1318 .RE
1319 For the first packet this says the ethernet source address is RTSG, the
1320 destination is the ethernet broadcast address, the type field
1321 contained hex 0806 (type ETHER_ARP) and the total length was 64 bytes.
1322 .HD
1323 TCP Packets
1324 .LP
1325 \fI(N.B.:The following description assumes familiarity with
1326 the TCP protocol described in RFC-793.
1327 If you are not familiar
1328 with the protocol, neither this description nor \fItcpdump\fP will
1329 be of much use to you.)\fP
1330 .LP
1331 The general format of a tcp protocol line is:
1332 .RS
1333 .nf
1334 .sp .5
1335 \fIsrc > dst: flags data-seqno ack window urgent options\fP
1336 .sp .5
1337 .fi
1338 .RE
1339 \fISrc\fP and \fIdst\fP are the source and destination IP
1340 addresses and ports.
1341 \fIFlags\fP are some combination of S (SYN),
1342 F (FIN), P (PUSH), R (RST), W (ECN CWR) or E (ECN-Echo), or a single
1343 `.' (no flags).
1344 \fIData-seqno\fP describes the portion of sequence space covered
1345 by the data in this packet (see example below).
1346 \fIAck\fP is sequence number of the next data expected the other
1347 direction on this connection.
1348 \fIWindow\fP is the number of bytes of receive buffer space available
1349 the other direction on this connection.
1350 \fIUrg\fP indicates there is `urgent' data in the packet.
1351 \fIOptions\fP are tcp options enclosed in angle brackets (e.g., <mss 1024>).
1352 .LP
1353 \fISrc, dst\fP and \fIflags\fP are always present.
1354 The other fields
1355 depend on the contents of the packet's tcp protocol header and
1356 are output only if appropriate.
1357 .LP
1358 Here is the opening portion of an rlogin from host \fIrtsg\fP to
1359 host \fIcsam\fP.
1360 .RS
1361 .nf
1362 .sp .5
1363 \s-2\f(CWrtsg.1023 > csam.login: S 768512:768512(0) win 4096 <mss 1024>
1364 csam.login > rtsg.1023: S 947648:947648(0) ack 768513 win 4096 <mss 1024>
1365 rtsg.1023 > csam.login: . ack 1 win 4096
1366 rtsg.1023 > csam.login: P 1:2(1) ack 1 win 4096
1367 csam.login > rtsg.1023: . ack 2 win 4096
1368 rtsg.1023 > csam.login: P 2:21(19) ack 1 win 4096
1369 csam.login > rtsg.1023: P 1:2(1) ack 21 win 4077
1370 csam.login > rtsg.1023: P 2:3(1) ack 21 win 4077 urg 1
1371 csam.login > rtsg.1023: P 3:4(1) ack 21 win 4077 urg 1\fR\s+2
1372 .sp .5
1373 .fi
1374 .RE
1375 The first line says that tcp port 1023 on rtsg sent a packet
1376 to port \fIlogin\fP
1377 on csam.
1378 The \fBS\fP indicates that the \fISYN\fP flag was set.
1379 The packet sequence number was 768512 and it contained no data.
1380 (The notation is `first:last(nbytes)' which means `sequence
1381 numbers \fIfirst\fP
1382 up to but not including \fIlast\fP which is \fInbytes\fP bytes of user data'.)
1383 There was no piggy-backed ack, the available receive window was 4096
1384 bytes and there was a max-segment-size option requesting an mss of
1385 1024 bytes.
1386 .LP
1387 Csam replies with a similar packet except it includes a piggy-backed
1388 ack for rtsg's SYN.
1389 Rtsg then acks csam's SYN.
1390 The `.' means no
1391 flags were set.
1392 The packet contained no data so there is no data sequence number.
1393 Note that the ack sequence
1394 number is a small integer (1).
1395 The first time \fItcpdump\fP sees a
1396 tcp `conversation', it prints the sequence number from the packet.
1397 On subsequent packets of the conversation, the difference between
1398 the current packet's sequence number and this initial sequence number
1399 is printed.
1400 This means that sequence numbers after the
1401 first can be interpreted
1402 as relative byte positions in the conversation's data stream (with the
1403 first data byte each direction being `1').
1404 `-S' will override this
1405 feature, causing the original sequence numbers to be output.
1406 .LP
1407 On the 6th line, rtsg sends csam 19 bytes of data (bytes 2 through 20
1408 in the rtsg \(-> csam side of the conversation).
1409 The PUSH flag is set in the packet.
1410 On the 7th line, csam says it's received data sent by rtsg up to
1411 but not including byte 21.
1412 Most of this data is apparently sitting in the
1413 socket buffer since csam's receive window has gotten 19 bytes smaller.
1414 Csam also sends one byte of data to rtsg in this packet.
1415 On the 8th and 9th lines,
1416 csam sends two bytes of urgent, pushed data to rtsg.
1417 .LP
1418 If the snapshot was small enough that \fItcpdump\fP didn't capture
1419 the full TCP header, it interprets as much of the header as it can
1420 and then reports ``[|\fItcp\fP]'' to indicate the remainder could not
1421 be interpreted.
1422 If the header contains a bogus option (one with a length
1423 that's either too small or beyond the end of the header), \fItcpdump\fP
1424 reports it as ``[\fIbad opt\fP]'' and does not interpret any further
1425 options (since it's impossible to tell where they start).
1426 If the header
1427 length indicates options are present but the IP datagram length is not
1428 long enough for the options to actually be there, \fItcpdump\fP reports
1429 it as ``[\fIbad hdr length\fP]''.
1430 .HD
1431 .B Capturing TCP packets with particular flag combinations (SYN-ACK, URG-ACK, etc.)
1432 .PP
1433 There are 8 bits in the control bits section of the TCP header:
1434 .IP
1435 .I CWR | ECE | URG | ACK | PSH | RST | SYN | FIN
1436 .PP
1437 Let's assume that we want to watch packets used in establishing
1438 a TCP connection.
1439 Recall that TCP uses a 3-way handshake protocol
1440 when it initializes a new connection; the connection sequence with
1441 regard to the TCP control bits is
1442 .PP
1443 .RS
1444 1) Caller sends SYN
1445 .RE
1446 .RS
1447 2) Recipient responds with SYN, ACK
1448 .RE
1449 .RS
1450 3) Caller sends ACK
1451 .RE
1452 .PP
1453 Now we're interested in capturing packets that have only the
1454 SYN bit set (Step 1).
1455 Note that we don't want packets from step 2
1456 (SYN-ACK), just a plain initial SYN.
1457 What we need is a correct filter
1458 expression for \fItcpdump\fP.
1459 .PP
1460 Recall the structure of a TCP header without options:
1461 .PP
1462 .nf
1463 0 15 31
1464 -----------------------------------------------------------------
1465 | source port | destination port |
1466 -----------------------------------------------------------------
1467 | sequence number |
1468 -----------------------------------------------------------------
1469 | acknowledgment number |
1470 -----------------------------------------------------------------
1471 | HL | rsvd |C|E|U|A|P|R|S|F| window size |
1472 -----------------------------------------------------------------
1473 | TCP checksum | urgent pointer |
1474 -----------------------------------------------------------------
1475 .fi
1476 .PP
1477 A TCP header usually holds 20 octets of data, unless options are
1478 present.
1479 The first line of the graph contains octets 0 - 3, the
1480 second line shows octets 4 - 7 etc.
1481 .PP
1482 Starting to count with 0, the relevant TCP control bits are contained
1483 in octet 13:
1484 .PP
1485 .nf
1486 0 7| 15| 23| 31
1487 ----------------|---------------|---------------|----------------
1488 | HL | rsvd |C|E|U|A|P|R|S|F| window size |
1489 ----------------|---------------|---------------|----------------
1490 | | 13th octet | | |
1491 .fi
1492 .PP
1493 Let's have a closer look at octet no. 13:
1494 .PP
1495 .nf
1496 | |
1497 |---------------|
1498 |C|E|U|A|P|R|S|F|
1499 |---------------|
1500 |7 5 3 0|
1501 .fi
1502 .PP
1503 These are the TCP control bits we are interested
1504 in.
1505 We have numbered the bits in this octet from 0 to 7, right to
1506 left, so the PSH bit is bit number 3, while the URG bit is number 5.
1507 .PP
1508 Recall that we want to capture packets with only SYN set.
1509 Let's see what happens to octet 13 if a TCP datagram arrives
1510 with the SYN bit set in its header:
1511 .PP
1512 .nf
1513 |C|E|U|A|P|R|S|F|
1514 |---------------|
1515 |0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0|
1516 |---------------|
1517 |7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0|
1518 .fi
1519 .PP
1520 Looking at the
1521 control bits section we see that only bit number 1 (SYN) is set.
1522 .PP
1523 Assuming that octet number 13 is an 8-bit unsigned integer in
1524 network byte order, the binary value of this octet is
1525 .IP
1526 00000010
1527 .PP
1528 and its decimal representation is
1529 .PP
1530 .nf
1531 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0
1532 0*2 + 0*2 + 0*2 + 0*2 + 0*2 + 0*2 + 1*2 + 0*2 = 2
1533 .fi
1534 .PP
1535 We're almost done, because now we know that if only SYN is set,
1536 the value of the 13th octet in the TCP header, when interpreted
1537 as a 8-bit unsigned integer in network byte order, must be exactly 2.
1538 .PP
1539 This relationship can be expressed as
1540 .RS
1541 .B
1542 tcp[13] == 2
1543 .RE
1544 .PP
1545 We can use this expression as the filter for \fItcpdump\fP in order
1546 to watch packets which have only SYN set:
1547 .RS
1548 .B
1549 tcpdump -i xl0 tcp[13] == 2
1550 .RE
1551 .PP
1552 The expression says "let the 13th octet of a TCP datagram have
1553 the decimal value 2", which is exactly what we want.
1554 .PP
1555 Now, let's assume that we need to capture SYN packets, but we
1556 don't care if ACK or any other TCP control bit is set at the
1557 same time.
1558 Let's see what happens to octet 13 when a TCP datagram
1559 with SYN-ACK set arrives:
1560 .PP
1561 .nf
1562 |C|E|U|A|P|R|S|F|
1563 |---------------|
1564 |0 0 0 1 0 0 1 0|
1565 |---------------|
1566 |7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0|
1567 .fi
1568 .PP
1569 Now bits 1 and 4 are set in the 13th octet.
1570 The binary value of
1571 octet 13 is
1572 .IP
1573 00010010
1574 .PP
1575 which translates to decimal
1576 .PP
1577 .nf
1578 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0
1579 0*2 + 0*2 + 0*2 + 1*2 + 0*2 + 0*2 + 1*2 + 0*2 = 18
1580 .fi
1581 .PP
1582 Now we can't just use 'tcp[13] == 18' in the \fItcpdump\fP filter
1583 expression, because that would select only those packets that have
1584 SYN-ACK set, but not those with only SYN set.
1585 Remember that we don't care
1586 if ACK or any other control bit is set as long as SYN is set.
1587 .PP
1588 In order to achieve our goal, we need to logically AND the
1589 binary value of octet 13 with some other value to preserve
1590 the SYN bit.
1591 We know that we want SYN to be set in any case,
1592 so we'll logically AND the value in the 13th octet with
1593 the binary value of a SYN:
1594 .PP
1595 .nf
1596
1597 00010010 SYN-ACK 00000010 SYN
1598 AND 00000010 (we want SYN) AND 00000010 (we want SYN)
1599 -------- --------
1600 = 00000010 = 00000010
1601 .fi
1602 .PP
1603 We see that this AND operation delivers the same result
1604 regardless whether ACK or another TCP control bit is set.
1605 The decimal representation of the AND value as well as
1606 the result of this operation is 2 (binary 00000010),
1607 so we know that for packets with SYN set the following
1608 relation must hold true:
1609 .IP
1610 ( ( value of octet 13 ) AND ( 2 ) ) == ( 2 )
1611 .PP
1612 This points us to the \fItcpdump\fP filter expression
1613 .RS
1614 .B
1615 tcpdump -i xl0 'tcp[13] & 2 == 2'
1616 .RE
1617 .PP
1618 Note that you should use single quotes or a backslash
1619 in the expression to hide the AND ('&') special character
1620 from the shell.
1621 .HD
1622 .B
1623 UDP Packets
1624 .LP
1625 UDP format is illustrated by this rwho packet:
1626 .RS
1627 .nf
1628 .sp .5
1629 \f(CWactinide.who > broadcast.who: udp 84\fP
1630 .sp .5
1631 .fi
1632 .RE
1633 This says that port \fIwho\fP on host \fIactinide\fP sent a udp
1634 datagram to port \fIwho\fP on host \fIbroadcast\fP, the Internet
1635 broadcast address.
1636 The packet contained 84 bytes of user data.
1637 .LP
1638 Some UDP services are recognized (from the source or destination
1639 port number) and the higher level protocol information printed.
1640 In particular, Domain Name service requests (RFC-1034/1035) and Sun
1641 RPC calls (RFC-1050) to NFS.
1642 .HD
1643 UDP Name Server Requests
1644 .LP
1645 \fI(N.B.:The following description assumes familiarity with
1646 the Domain Service protocol described in RFC-1035.
1647 If you are not familiar
1648 with the protocol, the following description will appear to be written
1649 in greek.)\fP
1650 .LP
1651 Name server requests are formatted as
1652 .RS
1653 .nf
1654 .sp .5
1655 \fIsrc > dst: id op? flags qtype qclass name (len)\fP
1656 .sp .5
1657 \f(CWh2opolo.1538 > helios.domain: 3+ A? ucbvax.berkeley.edu. (37)\fR
1658 .sp .5
1659 .fi
1660 .RE
1661 Host \fIh2opolo\fP asked the domain server on \fIhelios\fP for an
1662 address record (qtype=A) associated with the name \fIucbvax.berkeley.edu.\fP
1663 The query id was `3'.
1664 The `+' indicates the \fIrecursion desired\fP flag
1665 was set.
1666 The query length was 37 bytes, not including the UDP and
1667 IP protocol headers.
1668 The query operation was the normal one, \fIQuery\fP,
1669 so the op field was omitted.
1670 If the op had been anything else, it would
1671 have been printed between the `3' and the `+'.
1672 Similarly, the qclass was the normal one,
1673 \fIC_IN\fP, and omitted.
1674 Any other qclass would have been printed
1675 immediately after the `A'.
1676 .LP
1677 A few anomalies are checked and may result in extra fields enclosed in
1678 square brackets: If a query contains an answer, authority records or
1679 additional records section,
1680 .IR ancount ,
1681 .IR nscount ,
1682 or
1683 .I arcount
1684 are printed as `[\fIn\fPa]', `[\fIn\fPn]' or `[\fIn\fPau]' where \fIn\fP
1685 is the appropriate count.
1686 If any of the response bits are set (AA, RA or rcode) or any of the
1687 `must be zero' bits are set in bytes two and three, `[b2&3=\fIx\fP]'
1688 is printed, where \fIx\fP is the hex value of header bytes two and three.
1689 .HD
1690 UDP Name Server Responses
1691 .LP
1692 Name server responses are formatted as
1693 .RS
1694 .nf
1695 .sp .5
1696 \fIsrc > dst: id op rcode flags a/n/au type class data (len)\fP
1697 .sp .5
1698 \f(CWhelios.domain > h2opolo.1538: 3 3/3/7 A 128.32.137.3 (273)
1699 helios.domain > h2opolo.1537: 2 NXDomain* 0/1/0 (97)\fR
1700 .sp .5
1701 .fi
1702 .RE
1703 In the first example, \fIhelios\fP responds to query id 3 from \fIh2opolo\fP
1704 with 3 answer records, 3 name server records and 7 additional records.
1705 The first answer record is type A (address) and its data is internet
1706 address 128.32.137.3.
1707 The total size of the response was 273 bytes,
1708 excluding UDP and IP headers.
1709 The op (Query) and response code
1710 (NoError) were omitted, as was the class (C_IN) of the A record.
1711 .LP
1712 In the second example, \fIhelios\fP responds to query 2 with a
1713 response code of non-existent domain (NXDomain) with no answers,
1714 one name server and no authority records.
1715 The `*' indicates that
1716 the \fIauthoritative answer\fP bit was set.
1717 Since there were no
1718 answers, no type, class or data were printed.
1719 .LP
1720 Other flag characters that might appear are `\-' (recursion available,
1721 RA, \fInot\fP set) and `|' (truncated message, TC, set).
1722 If the
1723 `question' section doesn't contain exactly one entry, `[\fIn\fPq]'
1724 is printed.
1725 .LP
1726 Note that name server requests and responses tend to be large and the
1727 default \fIsnaplen\fP of 68 bytes may not capture enough of the packet
1728 to print.
1729 Use the \fB\-s\fP flag to increase the snaplen if you
1730 need to seriously investigate name server traffic.
1731 `\fB\-s 128\fP'
1732 has worked well for me.
1733
1734 .HD
1735 SMB/CIFS decoding
1736 .LP
1737 \fItcpdump\fP now includes fairly extensive SMB/CIFS/NBT decoding for data
1738 on UDP/137, UDP/138 and TCP/139.
1739 Some primitive decoding of IPX and
1740 NetBEUI SMB data is also done.
1741
1742 By default a fairly minimal decode is done, with a much more detailed
1743 decode done if -v is used.
1744 Be warned that with -v a single SMB packet
1745 may take up a page or more, so only use -v if you really want all the
1746 gory details.
1747
1748 If you are decoding SMB sessions containing unicode strings then you
1749 may wish to set the environment variable USE_UNICODE to 1.
1750 A patch to
1751 auto-detect unicode strings would be welcome.
1752
1753 For information on SMB packet formats and what all te fields mean see
1754 www.cifs.org or the pub/samba/specs/ directory on your favorite
1755 samba.org mirror site.
1756 The SMB patches were written by Andrew Tridgell
1757 (tridge@samba.org).
1758
1759 .HD
1760 NFS Requests and Replies
1761 .LP
1762 Sun NFS (Network File System) requests and replies are printed as:
1763 .RS
1764 .nf
1765 .sp .5
1766 \fIsrc.xid > dst.nfs: len op args\fP
1767 \fIsrc.nfs > dst.xid: reply stat len op results\fP
1768 .sp .5
1769 \f(CW
1770 sushi.6709 > wrl.nfs: 112 readlink fh 21,24/10.73165
1771 wrl.nfs > sushi.6709: reply ok 40 readlink "../var"
1772 sushi.201b > wrl.nfs:
1773 144 lookup fh 9,74/4096.6878 "xcolors"
1774 wrl.nfs > sushi.201b:
1775 reply ok 128 lookup fh 9,74/4134.3150
1776 \fR
1777 .sp .5
1778 .fi
1779 .RE
1780 In the first line, host \fIsushi\fP sends a transaction with id \fI6709\fP
1781 to \fIwrl\fP (note that the number following the src host is a
1782 transaction id, \fInot\fP the source port).
1783 The request was 112 bytes,
1784 excluding the UDP and IP headers.
1785 The operation was a \fIreadlink\fP
1786 (read symbolic link) on file handle (\fIfh\fP) 21,24/10.731657119.
1787 (If one is lucky, as in this case, the file handle can be interpreted
1788 as a major,minor device number pair, followed by the inode number and
1789 generation number.)
1790 \fIWrl\fP replies `ok' with the contents of the link.
1791 .LP
1792 In the third line, \fIsushi\fP asks \fIwrl\fP to lookup the name
1793 `\fIxcolors\fP' in directory file 9,74/4096.6878.
1794 Note that the data printed
1795 depends on the operation type.
1796 The format is intended to be self
1797 explanatory if read in conjunction with
1798 an NFS protocol spec.
1799 .LP
1800 If the \-v (verbose) flag is given, additional information is printed.
1801 For example:
1802 .RS
1803 .nf
1804 .sp .5
1805 \f(CW
1806 sushi.1372a > wrl.nfs:
1807 148 read fh 21,11/12.195 8192 bytes @ 24576
1808 wrl.nfs > sushi.1372a:
1809 reply ok 1472 read REG 100664 ids 417/0 sz 29388
1810 \fP
1811 .sp .5
1812 .fi
1813 .RE
1814 (\-v also prints the IP header TTL, ID, length, and fragmentation fields,
1815 which have been omitted from this example.) In the first line,
1816 \fIsushi\fP asks \fIwrl\fP to read 8192 bytes from file 21,11/12.195,
1817 at byte offset 24576.
1818 \fIWrl\fP replies `ok'; the packet shown on the
1819 second line is the first fragment of the reply, and hence is only 1472
1820 bytes long (the other bytes will follow in subsequent fragments, but
1821 these fragments do not have NFS or even UDP headers and so might not be
1822 printed, depending on the filter expression used).
1823 Because the \-v flag
1824 is given, some of the file attributes (which are returned in addition
1825 to the file data) are printed: the file type (``REG'', for regular file),
1826 the file mode (in octal), the uid and gid, and the file size.
1827 .LP
1828 If the \-v flag is given more than once, even more details are printed.
1829 .LP
1830 Note that NFS requests are very large and much of the detail won't be printed
1831 unless \fIsnaplen\fP is increased.
1832 Try using `\fB\-s 192\fP' to watch
1833 NFS traffic.
1834 .LP
1835 NFS reply packets do not explicitly identify the RPC operation.
1836 Instead,
1837 \fItcpdump\fP keeps track of ``recent'' requests, and matches them to the
1838 replies using the transaction ID.
1839 If a reply does not closely follow the
1840 corresponding request, it might not be parsable.
1841 .HD
1842 AFS Requests and Replies
1843 .LP
1844 Transarc AFS (Andrew File System) requests and replies are printed
1845 as:
1846 .HD
1847 .RS
1848 .nf
1849 .sp .5
1850 \fIsrc.sport > dst.dport: rx packet-type\fP
1851 \fIsrc.sport > dst.dport: rx packet-type service call call-name args\fP
1852 \fIsrc.sport > dst.dport: rx packet-type service reply call-name args\fP
1853 .sp .5
1854 \f(CW
1855 elvis.7001 > pike.afsfs:
1856 rx data fs call rename old fid 536876964/1/1 ".newsrc.new"
1857 new fid 536876964/1/1 ".newsrc"
1858 pike.afsfs > elvis.7001: rx data fs reply rename
1859 \fR
1860 .sp .5
1861 .fi
1862 .RE
1863 In the first line, host elvis sends a RX packet to pike.
1864 This was
1865 a RX data packet to the fs (fileserver) service, and is the start of
1866 an RPC call.
1867 The RPC call was a rename, with the old directory file id
1868 of 536876964/1/1 and an old filename of `.newsrc.new', and a new directory
1869 file id of 536876964/1/1 and a new filename of `.newsrc'.
1870 The host pike
1871 responds with a RPC reply to the rename call (which was successful, because
1872 it was a data packet and not an abort packet).
1873 .LP
1874 In general, all AFS RPCs are decoded at least by RPC call name.
1875 Most
1876 AFS RPCs have at least some of the arguments decoded (generally only
1877 the `interesting' arguments, for some definition of interesting).
1878 .LP
1879 The format is intended to be self-describing, but it will probably
1880 not be useful to people who are not familiar with the workings of
1881 AFS and RX.
1882 .LP
1883 If the -v (verbose) flag is given twice, acknowledgement packets and
1884 additional header information is printed, such as the the RX call ID,
1885 call number, sequence number, serial number, and the RX packet flags.
1886 .LP
1887 If the -v flag is given twice, additional information is printed,
1888 such as the the RX call ID, serial number, and the RX packet flags.
1889 The MTU negotiation information is also printed from RX ack packets.
1890 .LP
1891 If the -v flag is given three times, the security index and service id
1892 are printed.
1893 .LP
1894 Error codes are printed for abort packets, with the exception of Ubik
1895 beacon packets (because abort packets are used to signify a yes vote
1896 for the Ubik protocol).
1897 .LP
1898 Note that AFS requests are very large and many of the arguments won't
1899 be printed unless \fIsnaplen\fP is increased.
1900 Try using `\fB-s 256\fP'
1901 to watch AFS traffic.
1902 .LP
1903 AFS reply packets do not explicitly identify the RPC operation.
1904 Instead,
1905 \fItcpdump\fP keeps track of ``recent'' requests, and matches them to the
1906 replies using the call number and service ID.
1907 If a reply does not closely
1908 follow the
1909 corresponding request, it might not be parsable.
1910
1911 .HD
1912 KIP AppleTalk (DDP in UDP)
1913 .LP
1914 AppleTalk DDP packets encapsulated in UDP datagrams are de-encapsulated
1915 and dumped as DDP packets (i.e., all the UDP header information is
1916 discarded).
1917 The file
1918 .I /etc/atalk.names
1919 is used to translate AppleTalk net and node numbers to names.
1920 Lines in this file have the form
1921 .RS
1922 .nf
1923 .sp .5
1924 \fInumber name\fP
1925
1926 \f(CW1.254 ether
1927 16.1 icsd-net
1928 1.254.110 ace\fR
1929 .sp .5
1930 .fi
1931 .RE
1932 The first two lines give the names of AppleTalk networks.
1933 The third
1934 line gives the name of a particular host (a host is distinguished
1935 from a net by the 3rd octet in the number \-
1936 a net number \fImust\fP have two octets and a host number \fImust\fP
1937 have three octets.) The number and name should be separated by
1938 whitespace (blanks or tabs).
1939 The
1940 .I /etc/atalk.names
1941 file may contain blank lines or comment lines (lines starting with
1942 a `#').
1943 .LP
1944 AppleTalk addresses are printed in the form
1945 .RS
1946 .nf
1947 .sp .5
1948 \fInet.host.port\fP
1949
1950 \f(CW144.1.209.2 > icsd-net.112.220
1951 office.2 > icsd-net.112.220
1952 jssmag.149.235 > icsd-net.2\fR
1953 .sp .5
1954 .fi
1955 .RE
1956 (If the
1957 .I /etc/atalk.names
1958 doesn't exist or doesn't contain an entry for some AppleTalk
1959 host/net number, addresses are printed in numeric form.)
1960 In the first example, NBP (DDP port 2) on net 144.1 node 209
1961 is sending to whatever is listening on port 220 of net icsd node 112.
1962 The second line is the same except the full name of the source node
1963 is known (`office').
1964 The third line is a send from port 235 on
1965 net jssmag node 149 to broadcast on the icsd-net NBP port (note that
1966 the broadcast address (255) is indicated by a net name with no host
1967 number \- for this reason it's a good idea to keep node names and
1968 net names distinct in /etc/atalk.names).
1969 .LP
1970 NBP (name binding protocol) and ATP (AppleTalk transaction protocol)
1971 packets have their contents interpreted.
1972 Other protocols just dump
1973 the protocol name (or number if no name is registered for the
1974 protocol) and packet size.
1975
1976 \fBNBP packets\fP are formatted like the following examples:
1977 .RS
1978 .nf
1979 .sp .5
1980 \s-2\f(CWicsd-net.112.220 > jssmag.2: nbp-lkup 190: "=:LaserWriter@*"
1981 jssmag.209.2 > icsd-net.112.220: nbp-reply 190: "RM1140:LaserWriter@*" 250
1982 techpit.2 > icsd-net.112.220: nbp-reply 190: "techpit:LaserWriter@*" 186\fR\s+2
1983 .sp .5
1984 .fi
1985 .RE
1986 The first line is a name lookup request for laserwriters sent by net icsd host
1987 112 and broadcast on net jssmag.
1988 The nbp id for the lookup is 190.
1989 The second line shows a reply for this request (note that it has the
1990 same id) from host jssmag.209 saying that it has a laserwriter
1991 resource named "RM1140" registered on port 250.
1992 The third line is
1993 another reply to the same request saying host techpit has laserwriter
1994 "techpit" registered on port 186.
1995
1996 \fBATP packet\fP formatting is demonstrated by the following example:
1997 .RS
1998 .nf
1999 .sp .5
2000 \s-2\f(CWjssmag.209.165 > helios.132: atp-req 12266<0-7> 0xae030001
2001 helios.132 > jssmag.209.165: atp-resp 12266:0 (512) 0xae040000
2002 helios.132 > jssmag.209.165: atp-resp 12266:1 (512) 0xae040000
2003 helios.132 > jssmag.209.165: atp-resp 12266:2 (512) 0xae040000
2004 helios.132 > jssmag.209.165: atp-resp 12266:3 (512) 0xae040000
2005 helios.132 > jssmag.209.165: atp-resp 12266:4 (512) 0xae040000
2006 helios.132 > jssmag.209.165: atp-resp 12266:5 (512) 0xae040000
2007 helios.132 > jssmag.209.165: atp-resp 12266:6 (512) 0xae040000
2008 helios.132 > jssmag.209.165: atp-resp*12266:7 (512) 0xae040000
2009 jssmag.209.165 > helios.132: atp-req 12266<3,5> 0xae030001
2010 helios.132 > jssmag.209.165: atp-resp 12266:3 (512) 0xae040000
2011 helios.132 > jssmag.209.165: atp-resp 12266:5 (512) 0xae040000
2012 jssmag.209.165 > helios.132: atp-rel 12266<0-7> 0xae030001
2013 jssmag.209.133 > helios.132: atp-req* 12267<0-7> 0xae030002\fR\s+2
2014 .sp .5
2015 .fi
2016 .RE
2017 Jssmag.209 initiates transaction id 12266 with host helios by requesting
2018 up to 8 packets (the `<0-7>').
2019 The hex number at the end of the line
2020 is the value of the `userdata' field in the request.
2021 .LP
2022 Helios responds with 8 512-byte packets.
2023 The `:digit' following the
2024 transaction id gives the packet sequence number in the transaction
2025 and the number in parens is the amount of data in the packet,
2026 excluding the atp header.
2027 The `*' on packet 7 indicates that the
2028 EOM bit was set.
2029 .LP
2030 Jssmag.209 then requests that packets 3 & 5 be retransmitted.
2031 Helios
2032 resends them then jssmag.209 releases the transaction.
2033 Finally,
2034 jssmag.209 initiates the next request.
2035 The `*' on the request
2036 indicates that XO (`exactly once') was \fInot\fP set.
2037
2038 .HD
2039 IP Fragmentation
2040 .LP
2041 Fragmented Internet datagrams are printed as
2042 .RS
2043 .nf
2044 .sp .5
2045 \fB(frag \fIid\fB:\fIsize\fB@\fIoffset\fB+)\fR
2046 \fB(frag \fIid\fB:\fIsize\fB@\fIoffset\fB)\fR
2047 .sp .5
2048 .fi
2049 .RE
2050 (The first form indicates there are more fragments.
2051 The second
2052 indicates this is the last fragment.)
2053 .LP
2054 \fIId\fP is the fragment id.
2055 \fISize\fP is the fragment
2056 size (in bytes) excluding the IP header.
2057 \fIOffset\fP is this
2058 fragment's offset (in bytes) in the original datagram.
2059 .LP
2060 The fragment information is output for each fragment.
2061 The first
2062 fragment contains the higher level protocol header and the frag
2063 info is printed after the protocol info.
2064 Fragments
2065 after the first contain no higher level protocol header and the
2066 frag info is printed after the source and destination addresses.
2067 For example, here is part of an ftp from arizona.edu to lbl-rtsg.arpa
2068 over a CSNET connection that doesn't appear to handle 576 byte datagrams:
2069 .RS
2070 .nf
2071 .sp .5
2072 \s-2\f(CWarizona.ftp-data > rtsg.1170: . 1024:1332(308) ack 1 win 4096 (frag 595a:328@0+)
2073 arizona > rtsg: (frag 595a:204@328)
2074 rtsg.1170 > arizona.ftp-data: . ack 1536 win 2560\fP\s+2
2075 .sp .5
2076 .fi
2077 .RE
2078 There are a couple of things to note here: First, addresses in the
2079 2nd line don't include port numbers.
2080 This is because the TCP
2081 protocol information is all in the first fragment and we have no idea
2082 what the port or sequence numbers are when we print the later fragments.
2083 Second, the tcp sequence information in the first line is printed as if there
2084 were 308 bytes of user data when, in fact, there are 512 bytes (308 in
2085 the first frag and 204 in the second).
2086 If you are looking for holes
2087 in the sequence space or trying to match up acks
2088 with packets, this can fool you.
2089 .LP
2090 A packet with the IP \fIdon't fragment\fP flag is marked with a
2091 trailing \fB(DF)\fP.
2092 .HD
2093 Timestamps
2094 .LP
2095 By default, all output lines are preceded by a timestamp.
2096 The timestamp
2097 is the current clock time in the form
2098 .RS
2099 .nf
2100 \fIhh:mm:ss.frac\fP
2101 .fi
2102 .RE
2103 and is as accurate as the kernel's clock.
2104 The timestamp reflects the time the kernel first saw the packet.
2105 No attempt
2106 is made to account for the time lag between when the
2107 ethernet interface removed the packet from the wire and when the kernel
2108 serviced the `new packet' interrupt.
2109 .SH "SEE ALSO"
2110 stty(1), pcap(3), bpf(4), nit(4P), pfconfig(8)
2111 .SH AUTHORS
2112 The original authors are:
2113 .LP
2114 Van Jacobson,
2115 Craig Leres and
2116 Steven McCanne, all of the
2117 Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, University of California, Berkeley, CA.
2118 .LP
2119 It is currently being maintained by tcpdump.org.
2120 .LP
2121 The current version is available via http:
2122 .LP
2123 .RS
2124 .I http://www.tcpdump.org/
2125 .RE
2126 .LP
2127 The original distribution is available via anonymous ftp:
2128 .LP
2129 .RS
2130 .I ftp://ftp.ee.lbl.gov/tcpdump.tar.Z
2131 .RE
2132 .LP
2133 IPv6/IPsec support is added by WIDE/KAME project.
2134 This program uses Eric Young's SSLeay library, under specific configuration.
2135 .SH BUGS
2136 Please send problems, bugs, questions, desirable enhancements, etc. to:
2137 .LP
2138 .RS
2139 tcpdump-workers@tcpdump.org
2140 .RE
2141 .LP
2142 Please send source code contributions, etc. to:
2143 .LP
2144 .RS
2145 patches@tcpdump.org
2146 .RE
2147 .LP
2148 NIT doesn't let you watch your own outbound traffic, BPF will.
2149 We recommend that you use the latter.
2150 .LP
2151 On Linux systems with 2.0[.x] kernels:
2152 .IP
2153 packets on the loopback device will be seen twice;
2154 .IP
2155 packet filtering cannot be done in the kernel, so that all packets must
2156 be copied from the kernel in order to be filtered in user mode;
2157 .IP
2158 all of a packet, not just the part that's within the snapshot length,
2159 will be copied from the kernel (the 2.0[.x] packet capture mechanism, if
2160 asked to copy only part of a packet to userland, will not report the
2161 true length of the packet; this would cause most IP packets to get an
2162 error from
2163 .BR tcpdump );
2164 .IP
2165 capturing on some PPP devices won't work correctly.
2166 .LP
2167 We recommend that you upgrade to a 2.2 or later kernel.
2168 .LP
2169 Some attempt should be made to reassemble IP fragments or, at least
2170 to compute the right length for the higher level protocol.
2171 .LP
2172 Name server inverse queries are not dumped correctly: the (empty)
2173 question section is printed rather than real query in the answer
2174 section.
2175 Some believe that inverse queries are themselves a bug and
2176 prefer to fix the program generating them rather than \fItcpdump\fP.
2177 .LP
2178 A packet trace that crosses a daylight savings time change will give
2179 skewed time stamps (the time change is ignored).
2180 .LP
2181 Filter expressions on fields other than those in Token Ring headers will
2182 not correctly handle source-routed Token Ring packets.
2183 .LP
2184 Filter expressions on fields other than those in 802.11 headers will not
2185 correctly handle 802.11 data packets with both To DS and From DS set.
2186 .LP
2187 .BR "ip6 proto"
2188 should chase header chain, but at this moment it does not.
2189 .BR "ip6 protochain"
2190 is supplied for this behavior.
2191 .LP
2192 Arithmetic expression against transport layer headers, like \fBtcp[0]\fP,
2193 does not work against IPv6 packets.
2194 It only looks at IPv4 packets.