Generally this occurs when the interface (eth0 in this example) is not up or doesn't have an IP address assigned to it.
Version 1.1.0 of Libnet is unable to send traffic on the loopback device. Upgrade to a later release of the Libnet library to solve this problem.
Tcpreplay requires that you run it as root.
When tcpreplay displays a message like "100000 write attempts failed from full buffers and were repeated", this usually means the kernel buffers were full and it had to wait until memory was available. This is quite common when replaying files as fast as possible with the "-R" option. See the tuning OS section in this document for suggestions on solving this problem.
Currently tcpreplay reserves the MAC address of 00:00:00:00:00:00 as reserved for internal use. Hence you can't rewrite the MAC address of packets to be all zeros. While we intend to fix this someday it's not currently high on our priority list, so let us know if we should re-prioritize things.
Cache files generated by tcpprep and read by tcpreplay are versioned to allow enhancements to the cache file format. Anytime the cache file format changes, the version is incremented. Since this occurs on a very rare basis, this is generally not an issue; however anytime there is a change, it breaks compatibility with previously created cache files. The solution for this problem is to use the same version of tcpreplay and tcpprep to read/write the cache files. Cache file versions match the following versions of tcpprep/tcpreplay:
Your capture file was created on Linux with the 'any' parameter which then captured a packet on the loopback interface. However, tcpreplay doesn't have enough information to actual send the packet, so it skips it. Specifying a destination and source MAC address (-D and -S) will allow tcpreplay to send these packets.
The packet length (in this case 8892 bytes) is greater then the maximum transmition unit (MTU) on the outgoing interface. Tcpreplay must skip the packet. Alternatively, you can specify the -T option and tcpreplay will truncate the packet to the MTU size, fix the checksums and send it.
Aaron Turner 2005-06-28