Commit changes that happened in IPFilter versions 3.4.27 - 3.4.28

This commit is contained in:
Darren Reed 2002-06-07 09:01:41 +00:00
parent 47ec634d3e
commit edf0752ebe
2 changed files with 18 additions and 7 deletions

View File

@ -1254,14 +1254,15 @@ int main(argc, argv)
int argc;
char *argv[];
{
struct stat sb;
FILE *log = stdout;
int fd[3], doread, n, i;
int tr, nr, regular[3], c;
int fdt[3], devices = 0, make_daemon = 0;
char buf[IPLLOGSIZE], *iplfile[3], *s;
extern int optind;
int fd[3], doread, n, i;
extern char *optarg;
extern int optind;
int regular[3], c;
FILE *log = stdout;
struct stat sb;
size_t nr, tr;
fd[0] = fd[1] = fd[2] = -1;
fdt[0] = fdt[1] = fdt[2] = -1;

View File

@ -1,10 +1,11 @@
.\" $FreeBSD$
.TH ipftest 1
.SH NAME
ipftest \- test packet filter rules with arbitrary input.
.SH SYNOPSIS
.B ipftest
[
.B \-vbdPSTEHX
.B \-vbdPRSTEHX
] [
.B \-I
interface
@ -76,6 +77,10 @@ The input file specified by \fB\-i\fP is a binary file produced using libpcap
(i.e., tcpdump version 3). Packets are read from this file as being input
(for rule purposes). An interface maybe specified using \fB\-I\fP.
.TP
.B \-R
Remove rules rather than load them. This is not a toggle option, so once
set, it cannot be reset by further use of -R.
.TP
.B \-S
The input file is to be in "snoop" format (see RFC 1761). Packets are read
from this file and used as input from any interface. This is perhaps the
@ -98,7 +103,12 @@ option combinations:
.B \-H
The input file is to be hex digits, representing the binary makeup of the
packet. No length correction is made, if an incorrect length is put in
the IP header.
the IP header. A packet may be broken up over several lines of hex digits,
a blank line indicating the end of the packet. It is possible to specify
both the interface name and direction of the packet (for filtering purposes)
at the start of the line using this format: [direction,interface] To define
a packet going in on le0, we would use \fB[in,le0]\fP - the []'s are required
and part of the input syntax.
.TP
.B \-X
The input file is composed of text descriptions of IP packets.