Documentation ¶
Overview ¶
Package pcap allows users of gopacket to read packets off the wire or from pcap files.
This package is meant to be used with its parent, http://code.google.com/p/gopacket, although it can also be used independently if you just want to get packet data from the wire.
Reading PCAP Files ¶
The following code can be used to read in data from a pcap file.
if handle, err := pcap.OpenOffline("/path/to/my/file"); err != nil { panic(err) } else { packetSource := gopacket.NewPacketSource(handle, handle.LinkType()) for packet := range packetSource.Packets() { handlePacket(packet) // Do something with a packet here. } }
Reading Live Packets ¶
The following code can be used to read in data from a live device, in this case "eth0".
if handle, err := pcap.OpenLive("eth0", 1600, true, 0); err != nil { panic(err) } else if err := handle.SetBPFFilter("tcp and port 80"); err != nil { // optional panic(err) } else { packetSource := gopacket.NewPacketSource(handle, handle.LinkType()) for packet := range packetSource.Packets() { handlePacket(packet) // Do something with a packet here. } }
Inactive Handles ¶
Newer PCAP functionality requires the concept of an 'inactive' PCAP handle. Instead of constantly adding new arguments to pcap_open_live, users now call pcap_create to create a handle, set it up with a bunch of optional function calls, then call pcap_activate to activate it. This library mirrors that mechanism, for those that want to expose/use these new features:
inactive, err := pcap.NewInactiveHandle(deviceName) if err != nil { log.Fatal(err) } defer inactive.CleanUp() // Call various functions on inactive to set it up the way you'd like: if err = inactive.SetTimeout(time.Minute); err != nil { log.Fatal(err) } else if err = inactive.SetTimestampSource("foo"); err != nil { log.Fatal(err) } // Finally, create the actual handle by calling Activate: handle, err := inactive.Activate() // after this, inactive is no longer valid if err != nil { log.Fatal(err) } defer handle.Close() // Now use your handle as you see fit.
PCAP Timeouts ¶
pcap.OpenLive and pcap.SetTimeout both take timeouts. If you don't care about timeouts, just pass in BlockForever, which should do what you expect with minimal fuss.
A timeout of 0 is not recommended. Some platforms, like Macs (http://www.manpages.info/macosx/pcap.3.html) say:
The read timeout is used to arrange that the read not necessarily return immediately when a packet is seen, but that it wait for some amount of time to allow more packets to arrive and to read multiple packets from the OS kernel in one operation.
This means that if you only capture one packet, the kernel might decide to wait 'timeout' for more packets to batch with it before returning. A timeout of 0, then, means 'wait forever for more packets', which is... not good.
To get around this, we've introduced the following behavior: if a negative timeout is passed in, we set the positive timeout in the handle, then loop internally in ReadPacketData/ZeroCopyReadPacketData when we see timeout errors.
Index ¶
- Constants
- func Version() string
- type Handle
- func (p *Handle) Close()
- func (p *Handle) Error() error
- func (p *Handle) LinkType() layers.LinkType
- func (p *Handle) ReadPacketData() (data []byte, ci gopacket.CaptureInfo, err error)
- func (p *Handle) SetBPFFilter(expr string) (err error)
- func (p *Handle) SetLinkType(dlt layers.LinkType) error
- func (p *Handle) Stats() (stat *Stats, err error)
- func (p *Handle) WritePacketData(data []byte) (err error)
- func (p *Handle) ZeroCopyReadPacketData() (data []byte, ci gopacket.CaptureInfo, err error)
- type InactiveHandle
- func (p *InactiveHandle) Activate() (*Handle, error)
- func (p *InactiveHandle) CleanUp()
- func (p *InactiveHandle) SetPromisc(promisc bool) error
- func (p *InactiveHandle) SetSnapLen(snaplen int) error
- func (p *InactiveHandle) SetTimeout(timeout time.Duration) error
- func (p *InactiveHandle) SetTimestampSource(t TimestampSource) error
- func (p *InactiveHandle) SupportedTimestamps() (out []TimestampSource)
- type Interface
- type InterfaceAddress
- type NextError
- type Stats
- type TimestampSource
Constants ¶
const BlockForever = -time.Millisecond * 10
BlockForever, when passed into OpenLive/SetTimeout, causes it to block forever waiting for packets, while still returning incoming packets to userland relatively quickly.
Variables ¶
This section is empty.
Functions ¶
Types ¶
type Handle ¶
type Handle struct {
// contains filtered or unexported fields
}
Handle provides a connection to a pcap handle, allowing users to read packets off the wire (Next), inject packets onto the wire (Inject), and perform a number of other functions to affect and understand packet output.
Handles are already pcap_activate'd
func OpenLive ¶
func OpenLive(device string, snaplen int32, promisc bool, timeout time.Duration) (handle *Handle, _ error)
OpenLive opens a device and returns a *Handle. It takes as arguments the name of the device ("eth0"), the maximum size to read for each packet (snaplen), whether to put the interface in promiscuous mode, and a timeout.
See the package documentation for important details regarding 'timeout'.
func OpenOffline ¶
OpenOffline opens a file and returns its contents as a *Handle.
func (*Handle) ReadPacketData ¶
func (p *Handle) ReadPacketData() (data []byte, ci gopacket.CaptureInfo, err error)
NextError returns the next packet read from the pcap handle, along with an error code associated with that packet. If the packet is read successfully, the returned error is nil.
func (*Handle) SetBPFFilter ¶
SetBPFFilter compiles and sets a BPF filter for the pcap handle.
func (*Handle) SetLinkType ¶
SetLinkType calls pcap_set_datalink on the pcap handle.
func (*Handle) WritePacketData ¶
WritePacketData calls pcap_sendpacket, injecting the given data into the pcap handle.
func (*Handle) ZeroCopyReadPacketData ¶
func (p *Handle) ZeroCopyReadPacketData() (data []byte, ci gopacket.CaptureInfo, err error)
ZeroCopyReadPacketData reads the next packet off the wire, and returns its data. The slice returned by ZeroCopyReadPacketData points to bytes owned by the the Handle. Each call to ZeroCopyReadPacketData invalidates any data previously returned by ZeroCopyReadPacketData. Care must be taken not to keep pointers to old bytes when using ZeroCopyReadPacketData... if you need to keep data past the next time you call ZeroCopyReadPacketData, use ReadPacketData, which copies the bytes into a new buffer for you.
data1, _, _ := handle.ZeroCopyReadPacketData() // do everything you want with data1 here, copying bytes out of it if you'd like to keep them around. data2, _, _ := handle.ZeroCopyReadPacketData() // invalidates bytes in data1
type InactiveHandle ¶ added in v1.1.0
type InactiveHandle struct {
// contains filtered or unexported fields
}
InactiveHandle allows you to call pre-pcap_activate functions on your pcap handle to set it up just the way you'd like.
func NewInactiveHandle ¶ added in v1.1.0
func NewInactiveHandle(device string) (*InactiveHandle, error)
NewInactiveHandle creates a new InactiveHandle, which wraps an un-activated PCAP handle. Callers of NewInactiveHandle should immediately defer 'CleanUp', as in:
inactive := NewInactiveHandle("eth0") defer inactive.CleanUp()
func (*InactiveHandle) Activate ¶ added in v1.1.0
func (p *InactiveHandle) Activate() (*Handle, error)
Activate activates the handle. The current InactiveHandle becomes invalid and all future function calls on it will fail.
func (*InactiveHandle) CleanUp ¶ added in v1.1.0
func (p *InactiveHandle) CleanUp()
CleanUp cleans up any stuff left over from a successful or failed building of a handle.
func (*InactiveHandle) SetPromisc ¶ added in v1.1.0
func (p *InactiveHandle) SetPromisc(promisc bool) error
SetPromisc sets the handle to either be promiscuous (capture packets unrelated to this host) or not.
func (*InactiveHandle) SetSnapLen ¶ added in v1.1.0
func (p *InactiveHandle) SetSnapLen(snaplen int) error
SetSnapLen sets the snap length (max bytes per packet to capture).
func (*InactiveHandle) SetTimeout ¶ added in v1.1.0
func (p *InactiveHandle) SetTimeout(timeout time.Duration) error
SetTimeout sets the read timeout for the handle.
See the package documentation for important details regarding 'timeout'.
func (*InactiveHandle) SetTimestampSource ¶ added in v1.1.0
func (p *InactiveHandle) SetTimestampSource(t TimestampSource) error
SetTimestampSource sets the type of timestamp generator PCAP uses when attaching timestamps to packets.
func (*InactiveHandle) SupportedTimestamps ¶ added in v1.1.0
func (p *InactiveHandle) SupportedTimestamps() (out []TimestampSource)
SupportedTimestamps returns a list of supported timstamp types for this handle.
type Interface ¶
type Interface struct { Name string Description string Addresses []InterfaceAddress }
Interface describes a single network interface on a machine.
func FindAllDevs ¶
FindAllDevs attempts to enumerate all interfaces on the current machine.
type InterfaceAddress ¶
InterfaceAddress describes an address associated with an Interface. Currently, it's IPv4/6 specific.
type NextError ¶
type NextError int32
NextError is the return code from a call to Next.
const ( NextErrorOk NextError = 1 NextErrorTimeoutExpired NextError = 0 NextErrorReadError NextError = -1 // NextErrorNoMorePackets is returned when reading from a file (OpenOffline) and // EOF is reached. When this happens, Next() returns io.EOF instead of this. NextErrorNoMorePackets NextError = -2 NextErrorNotActivated NextError = -3 )
type Stats ¶
Stats contains statistics on how many packets were handled by a pcap handle, and what was done with those packets.
type TimestampSource ¶ added in v1.0.8
TimestampSource tells PCAP which type of timestamp to use for packets.
func TimestampSourceFromString ¶ added in v1.0.8
func TimestampSourceFromString(s string) (TimestampSource, error)
TimestampSourceFromString translates a string into a timestamp type, case insensitive.
func (TimestampSource) String ¶ added in v1.0.8
func (t TimestampSource) String() string
String returns the timestamp type as a human-readable string.
Directories ¶
Path | Synopsis |
---|---|
This benchmark reads in file <tempdir>/gopacket_benchmark.pcap and measures the time it takes to decode all packets from that file.
|
This benchmark reads in file <tempdir>/gopacket_benchmark.pcap and measures the time it takes to decode all packets from that file. |