shithub: riscv

ref: 2a29b497f215f91d05b6718a0e852e8a9b6ce6da
dir: /sys/man/8/snoopy/

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.TH SNOOPY 8
.SH NAME
snoopy \- spy on network packets
.SH SYNOPSIS
.B snoopy
[
.B -CDdpst
] [
.B -M
.I m
] [
.B -N
.I n
] [
.B -f
.I filter-expression
] [
.B -h
.I first-header
] [
.I packet-source
]
.PP
.B snoopy
.B -?
[
.I proto...
]
.SH DESCRIPTION
.I Snoopy
reads packets from a
.I packet-source
(default
.BR /net/ether0 ),
matches them to a filter (by default anything matches), and writes
matching packets to standard output either in human readable form (default)
or in a binary trace format that can be later read by
.IR snoopy .
.I Packet-source
can be the name of an Ethernet
(e.g.,
.BR /net/ether0 ),
an interface
(e.g.,
.BR /net/ipifc/0 ),
or a file of captured packets.
.PP
The human readable format consists of multiple lines per packet.
The first line contains the milliseconds since the
trace was started.  Subsequent ones are indented with a tab
and each contains the dump of a single protocol header.  The last line
contains the dump of any contained data.  For example, a
.SM BOOTP
packet would look like:
.IP
.EX
324389 ms
  	ether(s=0000929b1b54 d=ffffffffffff pr=0800 ln=342)
  	ip(s=135.104.9.62 d=255.255.255.255 id=5099 frag=0000...
  	udp(s=68 d=67 ck=d151 ln= 308)
  	bootp(t=Req ht=1 hl=16 hp=0 xid=217e5f27 sec=0 fl=800...
  	dhcp(t=Request clientid=0152415320704e7266238ebf01030...
.EE
.PP
The binary format consists of:
.IP
2 bytes of packet length, msb first
.IP
8 bytes of nanosecond time, msb first
.IP
the packet
.PP
Filters are expressions specifying protocols to be traced
and specific values for fields in the protocol headers.
The grammar is:
.IP
.EX
\fIexpr\fP:	  \fIprotocol\fP
	| \fIfield\fP '=' \fIvalue\fP
	| \fIfield\fP '!=' \fIvalue\fP
	| \fIprotocol\fP '(' \fIexpr\fP ')'
	| '(' \fIexpr\fP ')'
	| \fIexpr\fP '||' \fIexpr\fP
	| \fIexpr\fP '&&' \fIexpr\fP
	| '!' \fIexpr\fP
.EE
.PP
The values for
.I protocol
and 
.I field
can
be obtained using the
.B -?
option.  With no arguments, it lists the known protocols.
Otherwise it prints, for each protocol specified,
which subprotocols it can multiplex to,
and which fields can be used for filtering.
For example, the listing for ethernet is currently:
.IP
.EX
ether's filter attributes:
  s  - source address
  d  - destination address
  a  - source|destination address
  sd - source|destination address
  t  - type
ether's subprotos:
  0x0800 ip		  0x8863 pppoe_disc
  0x0806 arp		  0x8864 pppoe_sess
  0x0806 rarp		  0x888e eapol
  0x86dd ip6
.EE
.PP
The format of 
.I value
depends on context.  In general,
ethernet addresses are entered as a string of hex
digits; IP numbers in the canonical `.' format for v4 and `:' format
for v6; and ports in decimal.
.PP
.IR Snoopy 's
options are:
.TP
.B -C
compute the correct checksum for each packet;
on mismatch, add a field
.B !ck=\fIxxxx\fP
where
.I xxxx
is the correct checksum.
.TP
.B -D
output will be a binary trace file in Unix pcap format.
.TP
.B -d
output will be a binary trace file.
.TP
.B -t
input is a binary trace file as generated with the
.B -d
option.
.TP
.B -p
do not enter promiscuous mode.  Only packets to
this interface will be seen.
.TP
.B -s
force one output line per packet.  The
default is multiline.
.TP
.B -M
discard all but the first
.I m
bytes of each packet.  The default is to keep the entire packet.
This option is most useful when writing packets to a file with the
.B -d
option.
.TP
.B -N
dump
.I n
data bytes per packet.  The default is 32.
.TP
.B -f
use
.I filter-expression
to filter the packet stream.  The default is
to match all packets.
.TP
.B -h
assume the first header per packet to be of the
.I first-header
protocol.
The default is
.LR ether .
For packet interfaces without a media header, use
.B ippkt
as the
.I first-header
type to decode ipv4 and ipv6 packets.
.SH EXAMPLES
To display only
.SM BOOTP
and
.SM ARP
packets:
.IP
.EX
% snoopy -f 'arp || bootp'
after optimize: ether(arp || ip(udp(bootp)))
.EE
.PP
The first line of output shows the completed filter
expression.
.I Snoopy
will fill in other protocols as necessary to complete
the filter and then optimize to remove redundant
comparisons.
.PP
To save all packets between 135.104.9.2 to 135.104.9.6 and
later display those to/from TCP port 80:
.IP
.EX
% ramfs
% snoopy -df 'ip(s=135.104.9.2 && d=135.104.9.6) ||\\
	ip(s=135.104.9.6 && d=135.104.9.2)' > /tmp/quux
<interrupt from the keyboard>
% snoopy -tf 'tcp(sd=80)' /tmp/quux
.EE
.SH FILES
.TP
.B /net/ether0
Ethernet device
.SH SOURCE
.B /sys/src/cmd/ip/snoopy