Sponsored Content
Special Forums IP Networking Capture packets (TcpDump) and forwarding them Post 302410191 by ziedf on Monday 5th of April 2010 08:26:52 AM
Old 04-05-2010
pleaaaaase help...
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

how to capture multicast packets using snoop

How do I use snoop command to capture multicast packets in the network? (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: caden312
1 Replies

2. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

how to use tcpdump to track packets(mails) ?

I am running 2 Unix machines and trying to use IMAP.pm/Simple.pm perl modules to exchange mails between 2 systems. Mail exchanges is through SMTP(for sending the mail) and IMAP(for retrieving the mails). Somehow it's not working So wanted to check where the packets are and what is their path. I... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: contactme
3 Replies

3. IP Networking

i would like to know about tcpdump

i would like to know about tcpdump i would like to use tcpdump to get information about these - Date - time - source hostname - source mac address - source ip address - destination ip address - see outbound only then i use command like this tcpdump -i le0 -n -q -tttt -e src net... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: chamnanpol
2 Replies

4. Cybersecurity

ssh X-forwarding and remote forwarding behind proxy

Hi, from my workplace we use a proxy to connect to the outside world, including external ssh servers. The problem is that the server is seeing the connection coming from the proxy and knows nothing about the client behind it. The ssh connection itself works fine, but x-forwarding does not work as... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: vampirodolce
1 Replies

5. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

Forwarding internal internet packets to internal webserver using iptables

Hi, I need to redirect internal internet requests to a auth client site siting on the gateway. Currently users that are authenticated to access the internet have there mac address listed in the FORWARD chain. All other users need to be redirected to a internal site for authentication. Can... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: mshindo
1 Replies

6. AIX

Capture Network Packets from AIX

Hi, I am using smitty to create and configure a print queue. I am giving a print of a text file to the print queue created. I am using this in network. How to capture network packets of the print from AIX to the printer and printer to AIX. I tried Wireshark to capture network packets. I am... (16 Replies)
Discussion started by: meeraramanathan
16 Replies

7. Infrastructure Monitoring

capture snmp packets in AIX

Hi, I want to capture snmp packets in AIX. When i give print from AIX6.1, Printer will give its response thru' snmp. I used iptrace command like below, but it is not capturing snmp packets other packets are captured like udp, tcp.. 1. iptrace command: /usr/sbin/iptrace -a -i en0... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: meeraramanathan
1 Replies

8. IP Networking

tcpdump -w file is not capturing all the packets

I am trying to capture tcpdump for traffic to a port in a file but this does not seem to capture all the packets. Command I use is : tcpdump -w tdump.dat port 22 Why is it not capturing all the packets ? Here is my experiment: root@pmode-client6 adc-demo]# tcpdump port 22 tcpdump:... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: radiatejava
5 Replies

9. IP Networking

Detect Socket timeout in tcpdump capture

Hello, I detect these errors in my logs : Socket timeout calling url http://server:port/bla/soap/selfcare/infoRapide] Unable to make proxyRequest I've made a tcpdump capture this way : tcpdump -i eth0 -s 0 -w /app/captura.pcap port 8080 But I'm fairly new in reading .pcap files with... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: black_fender
0 Replies

10. Programming

Why am i getting these strange packets while running my packet capture module written in c.?

I have made an packet capture application running on intel machine, it is capturing packets with src address- 17.0.0.0 destination ip- 66.0.0.0, source port- 0, destination port- 0, and protocol- 0 what does these packets mean ? The code written to interpreter captured bytes is given below.... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: arunpushkar
5 Replies
PFLOG(4)						   BSD Kernel Interfaces Manual 						  PFLOG(4)

NAME
pflog -- packet filter logging interface SYNOPSIS
device pflog DESCRIPTION
The pflog interface is a pseudo-device which makes visible all packets logged by the packet filter, pf(4). Logged packets can easily be mon- itored in real time by invoking tcpdump(1) on the pflog interface, or stored to disk using pflogd(8). The pflog0 interface is created automatically at boot if both pf(4) and pflogd(8) are enabled; further instances can be created using ifconfig(8). Each packet retrieved on this interface has a header associated with it of length PFLOG_HDRLEN. This header documents the address family, interface name, rule number, reason, action, and direction of the packet that was logged. This structure, defined in <net/if_pflog.h> looks like struct pfloghdr { u_int8_t length; sa_family_t af; u_int8_t action; u_int8_t reason; char ifname[IFNAMSIZ]; char ruleset[PF_RULESET_NAME_SIZE]; u_int32_t rulenr; u_int32_t subrulenr; uid_t uid; pid_t pid; uid_t rule_uid; pid_t rule_pid; u_int8_t dir; u_int8_t pad[3]; }; EXAMPLES
Create a pflog interface and monitor all packets logged on it: # ifconfig pflog1 up # tcpdump -n -e -ttt -i pflog1 SEE ALSO
tcpdump(1) inet(4), inet6(4), netintro(4), pf(4), ifconfig(8), pflogd(8) HISTORY
The pflog device first appeared in OpenBSD 3.0. BSD
December 10, 2001 BSD
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 11:14 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy