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authorDaniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org>2024-04-10 20:34:10 +0000
committerDaniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org>2024-04-10 20:34:10 +0000
commite4ba6dbc3f1e76890b22773807ea37fe8fa2b1bc (patch)
tree68cb5ef9081156392f1dd62a00c6ccc1451b93df /README.linux
parentInitial commit. (diff)
downloadwireshark-e4ba6dbc3f1e76890b22773807ea37fe8fa2b1bc.tar.xz
wireshark-e4ba6dbc3f1e76890b22773807ea37fe8fa2b1bc.zip
Adding upstream version 4.2.2.upstream/4.2.2
Signed-off-by: Daniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org>
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+In order to capture packets (with Wireshark/TShark, tcpdump, or any
+other libpcap-based packet capture program) on a Linux system, the
+"packet" protocol must be supported by your kernel. If it is not, you
+may get error messages such as
+
+ modprobe: can't locate module net-pf-17
+
+in "/var/adm/messages", or may get messages such as
+
+ socket: Address family not supported by protocol
+
+from applications using libpcap.
+
+Most recent Linux distributions will have this configured in by default.
+If it is not configured in with the default kernel, and if it is not a
+module loaded by default, you must configure the kernel with the
+CONFIG_PACKET option for this protocol; the following note is from the
+Linux "Configure.help" file for the 2.0[.x] kernel:
+
+ Packet socket
+ CONFIG_PACKET
+ The Packet protocol is used by applications which communicate
+ directly with network devices without an intermediate network
+ protocol implemented in the kernel, e.g. tcpdump. If you want them
+ to work, choose Y.
+
+ This driver is also available as a module called af_packet.o ( =
+ code which can be inserted in and removed from the running kernel
+ whenever you want). If you want to compile it as a module, say M
+ here and read Documentation/modules.txt; if you use modprobe or
+ kmod, you may also want to add "alias net-pf-17 af_packet" to
+ /etc/modules.conf.
+
+and the note for the 2.2[.x] kernel says:
+
+ Packet socket
+ CONFIG_PACKET
+ The Packet protocol is used by applications which communicate
+ directly with network devices without an intermediate network
+ protocol implemented in the kernel, e.g. tcpdump. If you want them
+ to work, choose Y. This driver is also available as a module called
+ af_packet.o ( = code which can be inserted in and removed from the
+ running kernel whenever you want). If you want to compile it as a
+ module, say M here and read Documentation/modules.txt. You will
+ need to add 'alias net-pf-17 af_packet' to your /etc/conf.modules
+ file for the module version to function automatically. If unsure,
+ say Y.
+
+In addition, there is an option that, in 2.2 and later kernels, will
+allow packet capture filters specified to programs such as tcpdump to be
+executed in the kernel, so that packets that don't pass the filter won't
+be copied from the kernel to the program, rather than having all packets
+copied to the program and libpcap doing the filtering in user mode.
+
+Copying packets from the kernel to the program consumes a significant
+amount of CPU, so filtering in the kernel can reduce the overhead of
+capturing packets if a filter has been specified that discards a
+significant number of packets. (If no filter is specified, it makes no
+difference whether the filtering isn't performed in the kernel or isn't
+performed in user mode. :-))
+
+Most recent Linux distributions will have this configured in by default.
+If it is not configured in with the default kernel, you must configure
+the kernel with the CONFIG_FILTER option; the "Configure.help" file
+says:
+
+ Socket filtering
+ CONFIG_FILTER
+ The Linux Socket Filter is derived from the Berkeley Packet Filter.
+ If you say Y here, user-space programs can attach a filter to any
+ socket and thereby tell the kernel that it should allow or disallow
+ certain types of data to get through the socket. Linux Socket
+ Filtering works on all socket types except TCP for now. See the text
+ file linux/Documentation/networking/filter.txt for more information.
+ If unsure, say N.
+
+An additional problem, on Linux, with older versions of libpcap, is that
+capture filters do not work when snooping loopback devices; if you're
+capturing on a Linux loopback device, do not use a capture filter, as it
+will probably reject most if not all packets, including the packets it's
+intended to accept - instead, capture all packets and use a display
+filter to select the packets you want to see. Most recent Linux
+distribution releases will not have this problem.
+
+In addition, older versions of libpcap will, on Linux systems with a
+2.0[.x] kernel, or if built for systems with a 2.0[.x] kernel, not turn
+promiscuous mode off on a network device until the program using
+promiscuous mode exits, so if you start a capture with Wireshark on some
+Linux distributions, the network interface will be put in promiscuous
+mode and will remain in promiscuous mode until Wireshark exits. There
+might be additional libpcap bugs that cause it not to be turned off even
+when Wireshark exits; if your network is busy, this could cause the Linux
+networking stack to do a lot more work discarding packets not intended
+for the machine, so you may want to check, after running Wireshark,
+whether any network interfaces are in promiscuous mode (the output of
+"ifconfig -a" will say something such as
+
+eth0 Link encap:Ethernet HWaddr 00:00:66:66:66:66
+ inet addr:66.66.66.66 Bcast:66.66.66.255 Mask:255.255.255.0
+ UP BROADCAST RUNNING PROMISC MULTICAST MTU:1500 Metric:1
+ RX packets:6493 errors:0 dropped:0 overruns:0 frame:0
+ TX packets:3380 errors:0 dropped:0 overruns:0 carrier:0
+ collisions:0 txqueuelen:100
+ Interrupt:18 Base address:0xfc80
+
+with "PROMISC" indicating that the interface is in promiscuous mode),
+and, if any interfaces are in promiscuous mode and no capture is being
+done on that interface, turn promiscuous mode off by hand with
+
+ ifconfig <ifname> -promisc
+
+where "<ifname>" is the name of the interface.
+
+Newer versions of libpcap shouldn't have this problem, even on 2.0[.x]
+kernels; no version of libpcap should have that problem on systems with
+2.2 or later kernels.