freebsd-nq/contrib/libpcap/README

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@(#) $Header: /tcpdump/master/libpcap/README,v 1.24 2001/06/05 03:45:55 guy Exp $ (LBL)
LIBPCAP 0.6.2
Now maintained by "The Tcpdump Group"
See www.tcpdump.org
Please send inquiries/comments/reports to tcpdump-workers@tcpdump.org
Anonymous CVS is available via:
cvs -d :pserver:tcpdump@cvs.tcpdump.org:/tcpdump/master login
(password "anoncvs")
cvs -d :pserver:tcpdump@cvs.tcpdump.org:/tcpdump/master checkout libpcap
Version 0.6.2 of LIBPCAP can be retrieved with the CVS tag "libpcap_0_6rel2":
cvs -d :pserver:tcpdump@cvs.tcpdump.org:/tcpdump/master checkout -r libpcap_0_6rel2 libpcap
Please send patches against the master copy to patches@tcpdump.org.
formerly from Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
Network Research Group <libpcap@ee.lbl.gov>
ftp://ftp.ee.lbl.gov/libpcap.tar.Z (0.4)
This directory contains source code for libpcap, a system-independent
interface for user-level packet capture. libpcap provides a portable
framework for low-level network monitoring. Applications include
network statistics collection, security monitoring, network debugging,
etc. Since almost every system vendor provides a different interface
for packet capture, and since we've developed several tools that
require this functionality, we've created this system-independent API
to ease in porting and to alleviate the need for several
system-dependent packet capture modules in each application.
Note well: this interface is new and is likely to change.
The libpcap interface supports a filtering mechanism based on the
architecture in the BSD packet filter. BPF is described in the 1993
Winter Usenix paper ``The BSD Packet Filter: A New Architecture for
User-level Packet Capture''. A compressed postscript version is in:
ftp://ftp.ee.lbl.gov/papers/bpf-usenix93.ps.Z.
Although most packet capture interfaces support in-kernel filtering,
libpcap utilizes in-kernel filtering only for the BPF interface.
On systems that don't have BPF, all packets are read into user-space
and the BPF filters are evaluated in the libpcap library, incurring
added overhead (especially, for selective filters). Ideally, libpcap
would translate BPF filters into a filter program that is compatible
with the underlying kernel subsystem, but this is not yet implemented.
BPF is standard in 4.4BSD, BSD/OS, NetBSD, FreeBSD, and OpenBSD. DEC OSF/1
uses the packetfilter interface but has been extended to accept BPF
filters (which libpcap utilizes). Also, you can add BPF filter support
to Ultrix using the kernel source and/or object patches available in:
ftp://gatekeeper.dec.com/pub/DEC/net/bpfext42.tar.Z.
Problems, bugs, questions, desirable enhancements, etc.
should be sent to the address "tcpdump-workers@tcpdump.org".
Source code contributions, etc. should be sent to the email address
"patches@tcpdump.org".
Current versions can be found at www.tcpdump.org
- The TCPdump team