/* $Id$ */ /* * Copyright (c) 2001-2010 Aaron Turner * Copyright (c) 2013-2018 Fred Klassen - AppNeta * * The Tcpreplay Suite of tools is free software: you can redistribute it * and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as * published by the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the * License, or with the authors permission any later version. * * The Tcpreplay Suite is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, * but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of * MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the * GNU General Public License for more details. * * You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License * along with the Tcpreplay Suite. If not, see . */ autogen definitions options; copyright = { date = "2000-2018"; owner = "Aaron Turner and Fred Klassen"; eaddr = "tcpreplay-users@lists.sourceforge.net"; type = gpl; author = <<- EOText Copyright 2013-2018 Fred Klassen - AppNeta Copyright 2000-2012 Aaron Turner For support please use the tcpreplay-users@lists.sourceforge.net mailing list. The latest version of this software is always available from: http://tcpreplay.appneta.com/ EOText; }; package = "tcpreplay"; #ifdef TCPREPLAY_EDIT_MAN prog-name = "tcpreplay-edit"; #else prog-name = "tcpreplay"; #endif prog-title = "Replay network traffic stored in pcap files"; long-opts; gnu-usage; help-value = "H"; save-opts-value = ""; load-opts-value = ""; argument = ""; config-header = "config.h"; include = "#include \"defines.h\"\n" "#include \"tcpreplay.h\"\n" "#include \"common.h\"\n" "#include \"config.h\"\n" "#include \n" "#include \n" "#include \n"; homerc = "$$/"; #ifdef TCPREPLAY_EDIT #include tcpedit/tcpedit_opts.def #endif explain = <<- EOExplain tcpreplay is a tool for replaying network traffic from files saved with tcpdump or other tools which write pcap(3) files. EOExplain; detail = <<- EODetail The basic operation of tcpreplay is to resend all packets from the input file(s) at the speed at which they were recorded, or a specified data rate, up to as fast as the hardware is capable. Optionally, the traffic can be split between two interfaces, written to files, filtered and edited in various ways, providing the means to test firewalls, NIDS and other network devices. For more details, please see the Tcpreplay Manual at: http://tcpreplay.appneta.com EODetail; man-doc = <<- EOMan .SH "SIGNALS" tcpreplay understands the following signals: @enumerate @item @var{SIGUSR1} Suspend tcpreplay @item @var{SIGCONT} Restart tcpreplay @end enumerate .SH "SEE ALSO" tcpdump(1), tcpbridge(1), tcprewrite(1), tcpprep(1), tcpcapinfo(1) .SH "BUGS" tcpreplay can only send packets as fast as your computer's interface, processor, disk and system bus will allow. Packet timing at high speeds is a black art and very OS/CPU dependent. Replaying captured traffic may simulate odd or broken conditions on your network and cause all sorts of problems. In most cases, you can not replay traffic back to/at a server. Some operating systems by default do not allow for forging source MAC addresses. Please consult your operating system's documentation and the tcpreplay FAQ if you experience this issue. EOMan; flag = { ifdef = DEBUG; name = dbug; value = d; arg-type = number; max = 1; immediate; arg-range = "0->5"; arg-default = 0; descrip = "Enable debugging output"; doc = <<- EOText If configured with --enable-debug, then you can specify a verbosity level for debugging output. Higher numbers increase verbosity. EOText; }; flag = { name = quiet; value = q; descrip = "Quiet mode"; doc = "Print nothing except the statistics at the end of the run"; }; flag = { name = timer; value = T; arg-default = "gtod"; max = 1; arg-type = string; descrip = "Select packet timing mode: select, ioport, gtod, nano"; doc = <<- EOText Allows you to select the packet timing method to use: @enumerate @item nano - Use nanosleep() API @item select - Use select() API @item ioport - Write to the i386 IO Port 0x80 @item gtod [default] - Use a gettimeofday() loop @end enumerate EOText; }; flag = { name = maxsleep; arg-type = number; arg-default = 0; descrip = "Sleep for no more then X milliseconds between packets"; doc = <<- EOText Set a limit for the maximum number of milliseconds that tcpreplay will sleep between packets. Effectively prevents long delays between packets without effecting the majority of packets. Default is disabled. EOText; }; /* Verbose decoding via tcpdump */ flag = { ifdef = ENABLE_VERBOSE; name = verbose; value = v; max = 1; immediate; descrip = "Print decoded packets via tcpdump to STDOUT"; settable; doc = ""; }; flag = { ifdef = ENABLE_VERBOSE; name = decode; flags-must = verbose; value = A; arg-type = string; max = 1; descrip = "Arguments passed to tcpdump decoder"; doc = <<- EOText When enabling verbose mode (@var{-v}) you may also specify one or more additional arguments to pass to @code{tcpdump} to modify the way packets are decoded. By default, -n and -l are used. Be sure to quote the arguments like: -A "-axxx" so that they are not interpreted by tcpreplay. Please see the tcpdump(1) man page for a complete list of options. EOText; }; flag = { name = preload_pcap; value = K; descrip = "Preloads packets into RAM before sending"; doc = <<- EOText This option loads the specified pcap(s) into RAM before starting to send in order to improve replay performance while introducing a startup performance hit. Preloading can be used with or without @var{--loop}. This option also suppresses flow statistics collection for every iteration, which can significantly reduce memory usage. Flow statistics are predicted based on options supplied and statistics collected from the first loop iteration. EOText; }; /* * Output modifiers: -c */ flag = { name = cachefile; value = c; arg-type = string; flags-cant = dualfile; flags-must = intf2; max = 1; descrip = "Split traffic via a tcpprep cache file"; doc = <<- EOText If you have a pcap file you would like to use to send bi-directional traffic through a device (firewall, router, IDS, etc) then using tcpprep you can create a cachefile which tcpreplay will use to split the traffic across two network interfaces. EOText; }; flag = { name = dualfile; value = 2; max = 1; flags-cant = cachefile; flags-must = intf2; descrip = "Replay two files at a time from a network tap"; doc = <<- EOText If you captured network traffic using a network tap, then you can end up with two pcap files- one for each direction. This option will replay these two files at the same time, one on each interface and inter-mix them using the timestamps in each. EOText; }; /* * Outputs: -i, -I */ flag = { name = intf1; value = i; arg-type = string; max = 1; must-set; descrip = "Client to server/RX/primary traffic output interface"; doc = <<- EOText Required network interface used to send either all traffic or traffic which is marked as 'primary' via tcpprep. Primary traffic is usually client-to-server or inbound (RX) on khial virtual interfaces. EOText; }; flag = { name = intf2; value = I; arg-type = string; max = 1; descrip = "Server to client/TX/secondary traffic output interface"; doc = <<- EOText Optional network interface used to send traffic which is marked as 'secondary' via tcpprep. Secondary traffic is usually server-to-client or outbound (TX) on khial virtual interfaces. Generally, it only makes sense to use this option with --cachefile. EOText; }; flag = { ifdef = ENABLE_PCAP_FINDALLDEVS; name = listnics; descrip = "List available network interfaces and exit"; immediate; doc = ""; flag-code = <<- EOFlag interface_list_t *list = get_interface_list(); list_interfaces(list); free(list); exit(0); EOFlag; }; /* * Limits and loops: -l */ flag = { name = loop; value = l; arg-type = number; arg-range = "0->"; max = 1; descrip = "Loop through the capture file X times"; arg-default = 1; doc = ""; }; flag = { name = loopdelay-ms; flags-must = loop; arg-type = number; arg-range = "0->"; descrip = "Delay between loops in milliseconds"; arg-default = 0; doc = ""; }; flag = { name = pktlen; max = 1; descrip = "Override the snaplen and use the actual packet len"; doc = <<- EOText By default, tcpreplay will send packets based on the size of the "snaplen" stored in the pcap file which is usually the correct thing to do. However, occasionally, tools will store more bytes then told to. By specifying this option, tcpreplay will ignore the snaplen field and instead try to send packets based on the original packet length. Bad things may happen if you specify this option. EOText; }; flag = { name = limit; value = L; arg-type = number; max = 1; arg-default = -1; arg-range = "1->"; descrip = "Limit the number of packets to send"; doc = <<- EOText By default, tcpreplay will send all the packets. Alternatively, you can specify a maximum number of packets to send. EOText; }; flag = { name = duration; arg-type = number; max = 1; arg-default = -1; arg-range = "1->"; descrip = "Limit the number of seconds to send"; doc = <<- EOText By default, tcpreplay will send all the packets. Alternatively, you can specify a maximum number of seconds to transmit. EOText; }; /* * Replay speed modifiers: -m, -p, -r, -R, -o */ /* note that this is really a float, but autoopts does not support float */ flag = { name = multiplier; flags-cant = pps; flags-cant = mbps; flags-cant = oneatatime; flags-cant = topspeed; value = x; arg-type = string; max = 1; descrip = "Modify replay speed to a given multiple"; doc = <<- EOText Specify a value to modify the packet replay speed. Examples: @example 2.0 will replay traffic at twice the speed captured 0.7 will replay traffic at 70% the speed captured @end example EOText; }; flag = { name = pps; flags-cant = multiplier; flags-cant = mbps; flags-cant = oneatatime; flags-cant = topspeed; value = p; arg-type = string; max = 1; descrip = "Replay packets at a given packets/sec"; doc = <<- EOText Specify a value to regulate the packet replay to a specific packet-per-second rate. Examples: @example 200 will replay traffic at 200 packets per second 0.25 will replay traffic at 15 packets per minute @end example EOText; }; flag = { name = mbps; flags-cant = multiplier; flags-cant = pps; flags-cant = oneatatime; flags-cant = topspeed; value = M; arg-type = string; max = 1; descrip = "Replay packets at a given Mbps"; doc = <<- EOText Specify a floating point value for the Mbps rate that tcpreplay should send packets at. EOText; }; flag = { name = topspeed; flags-cant = mbps; flags-cant = multiplier; flags-cant = pps; flags-cant = oneatatime; value = t; descrip = "Replay packets as fast as possible"; doc = ""; }; flag = { name = oneatatime; flags-cant = mbps; flags-cant = pps; flags-cant = multiplier; flags-cant = topspeed; value = o; descrip = "Replay one packet at a time for each user input"; doc = <<- EOText Allows you to step through one or more packets at a time. EOText; }; flag = { name = pps-multi; arg-type = number; flags-must = pps; arg-default = 1; arg-range = "1->"; descrip = "Number of packets to send for each time interval"; doc = <<- EOText When trying to send packets at very high rates, the time between each packet can be so short that it is impossible to accurately sleep for the required period of time. This option allows you to send multiple packets at a time, thus allowing for longer sleep times which can be more accurately implemented. EOText; }; flag = { name = unique-ip; flags-must = loop; #ifdef TCPREPLAY_EDIT flags-cant = seed; flags-cant = fuzz-seed; #endif descrip = "Modify IP addresses each loop iteration to generate unique flows"; doc = <<- EOText Ensure IPv4 and IPv6 packets will be unique for each @var{--loop} iteration. This is done in a way that will not alter packet CRC, and therefore will genrally not affect performance. This option will significantly increase the flows/sec over generated over multiple loop iterations. EOText; }; flag = { name = unique-ip-loops; flags-must = unique-ip; arg-type = string; max = 1; descrip = "Number of times to loop before assigning new unique ip"; doc = <<- EOText Number of @var{--loop} iterations before a new unique IP is assigned. Default is 1. Assumes both @var{--loop} and @var{--unique-ip}. EOText; }; flag = { ifdef = HAVE_NETMAP; name = netmap; descrip = "Write packets directly to netmap enabled network adapter"; doc = <<- EOText This feature will detect netmap capable network drivers on Linux and BSD systems. If detected, the network driver is bypassed for the execution duration, and network buffers will be written to directly. This will allow you to achieve full line rates on commodity network adapters, similar to rates achieved by commercial network traffic generators. Note that bypassing the network driver will disrupt other applications connected through the test interface. See INSTALL for more information. This feature can also be enabled by specifying an interface as 'netmap:' or 'vale:. For example 'netmap:eth0' specifies netmap over interface eth0. EOText; }; flag = { ifdef = HAVE_NETMAP; name = nm-delay; arg-type = number; arg-default = 10; descrip = "Netmap startup delay"; doc = <<- EOText Number of seconds to delay after netmap is loaded. Required to ensure interfaces are fully up before netmap transmit. Requires netmap option. Default is 10 seconds. EOText; }; flag = { name = no-flow-stats; descrip = "Suppress printing and tracking flow count, rates and expirations"; doc = <<- EOText Suppress the collection and printing of flow statistics. This option may improve performance when not using @var{--preload-pcap} option, otherwise its only function is to suppress printing. The flow feature will track and print statistics of the flows being sent. A flow is loosely defined as a unique combination of a 5-tuple, i.e. source IP, destination IP, source port, destination port and protocol. If @var{--loop} is specified, the flows from one iteration to the next will not be unique, unless the packets are altered. Use @var{--unique-ip} or @var{tcpreplay-edit} to alter packets between iterations. EOText; }; flag = { name = flow-expiry; arg-type = number; flags-cant = no-flow-stats; arg-default = 0; arg-range = "0->"; descrip = "Number of inactive seconds before a flow is considered expired"; doc = <<- EOText This option will track and report flow expirations based on the flow idle times. The timestamps within the pcap file are used to determine the expiry, not the actual timestamp of the packets are replayed. For example, a value of 30 suggests that if no traffic is seen on a flow for 30 seconds, any subsequent traffic would be considered a new flow, and thereby will increment the flows and flows per second (fps) statistics. This option can be used to optimize flow timeout settings for flow products. Setting the timeout low may lead to flows being dropped when in fact the flow is simply slow to respond. Configuring your flow timeouts too high may increase resources required by your flow product. Note that using this option while replaying at higher than original speeds can lead to inflated flows and fps counts. Default is 0 (no expiry) and a typical value is 30-120 seconds. EOText; }; flag = { name = pid; value = P; descrip = "Print the PID of tcpreplay at startup"; flag-code = <<- EOPid fprintf(stderr, "PID: %d\n", getpid()); EOPid; doc = ""; }; flag = { name = stats; arg-type = number; arg-range = "0->"; descrip = "Print statistics every X seconds, or every loop if '0'"; doc = <<- EOText Note that timed delays are a "best effort" and long delays between sending packets may cause equally long delays between printing statistics. EOText; }; flag = { name = version; value = V; descrip = "Print version information"; flag-code = <<- EOVersion fprintf(stderr, "tcpreplay version: %s (build %s)", VERSION, git_version()); #ifdef DEBUG fprintf(stderr, " (debug)"); #endif #ifdef TIMESTAMP_TRACE fprintf(stderr, " (timestamp-trace)"); #endif fprintf(stderr, "\n"); fprintf(stderr, "Copyright 2013-2018 by Fred Klassen - AppNeta\n"); fprintf(stderr, "Copyright 2000-2012 by Aaron Turner \n"); fprintf(stderr, "The entire Tcpreplay Suite is licensed under the GPLv3\n"); fprintf(stderr, "Cache file supported: %s\n", CACHEVERSION); #ifdef HAVE_LIBDNET fprintf(stderr, "Compiled against libdnet: %s\n", LIBDNET_VERSION); #else fprintf(stderr, "Not compiled with libdnet.\n"); #endif #ifdef HAVE_WINPCAP fprintf(stderr, "Compiled against winpcap: %s\n", get_pcap_version()); #elif defined HAVE_PF_RING_PCAP fprintf(stderr, "Compiled against PF_RING libpcap: %s\n", get_pcap_version()); #else fprintf(stderr, "Compiled against libpcap: %s\n", get_pcap_version()); #endif #ifdef ENABLE_64BITS fprintf(stderr, "64 bit packet counters: enabled\n"); #else fprintf(stderr, "64 bit packet counters: disabled\n"); #endif #ifdef ENABLE_VERBOSE fprintf(stderr, "Verbose printing via tcpdump: enabled\n"); #else fprintf(stderr, "Verbose printing via tcpdump: disabled\n"); #endif #ifdef TCPREPLAY_EDIT fprintf(stderr, "Packet editing: enabled\n"); #else fprintf(stderr, "Packet editing: disabled\n"); #endif #ifdef ENABLE_FRAGROUTE fprintf(stderr, "Fragroute engine: enabled\n"); #else fprintf(stderr, "Fragroute engine: disabled\n"); #endif #if defined HAVE_NETMAP fprintf(stderr, "Default injection method: %s\n", sendpacket_get_method(NULL)); #else fprintf(stderr, "Injection method: %s\n", sendpacket_get_method(NULL)); #endif #ifdef HAVE_NETMAP fprintf(stderr, "Optional injection method: netmap\n"); #else fprintf(stderr, "Not compiled with netmap\n"); #endif exit(0); EOVersion; doc = ""; }; flag = { name = less-help; value = "h"; immediate; descrip = "Display less usage information and exit"; flag-code = <<- EOHelp USAGE(EXIT_FAILURE); EOHelp; doc = ""; };