tcpprof
—
report profile of network traffic
tcpprof |
[-?hdnpR ] [-f
filter expr] [-i
interface] [-P
port] [-r
filename] [-s
seconds] [-S
letters] [-t
lines] |
tcpprof
reports a profile of network traffic by ranking
it by link type, ip protocol, TCP/UDP port, ip address, or network address.
Network information is collected either by reading data from
filename, or by directly monitoring the network
interface interface. The default action for
tcpprof
is to automatically search for an
appropriate interface, and to generate a profile before it exits.
When reading data from filename,
tcpprof
will display the profile and exit
immediately after the entire file has been processed. When collecting data
from interface, tcpprof
will
keep running unless the -s
option had been
specified.
The options are as follows:
-f
filter expr
- Filter the packets according the rules given by filter
expr. For the syntax of these rules, see
tcpdump(1).
The argument must be quoted if it contains spaces in order to separate it
from other options.
-h
,
-
?
- Display version and a brief help message.
-d
tcpprof
will track the source and destination
information separately, where applicable, and identify source data with a
">" and destination data with "<". For example,
a "http <" statistic signifies all traffic with destination
port 80 (http). This option only applies to port, host and network
statistics.
-i
interface
- Do a live capture (rather than read from a file) on the interface
interface given on the command line. If
interface is "auto" then
tcpprof
tries to find an appropriate one by
itself.
-P
port
- This tells
tcpprof
to ignore TCP and UDP ports
greater than or equal to port when displaying port
statistics. This is not the same as filtering these port numbers out of
the data set. This way, packets with i.e. the source port above
port and the destination port below
port will be able to still count the lower port
number as a statistic. In addition, this doesn't affect the other
statistic types (link, protocol, etc.)
-p
- Set the interface into non-promiscuous mode (promiscuous is the default)
when doing live captures.
-r
filename
- Read all data from filename, which may be a regular
file, a named pipe or "-" to read it's data from standard input.
Acceptable file formats include pcap
(tcpdump(1)
files) and "snoop" format files. filename
is usually a file created by the
tcpdump(1)
command using the "-w" option.
-S
letters
- Tells
tcpprof
which statistics to display.
letters must be a string of one or more of the
following letters:
- l
- show stats about the link layer
- i
- show stats about all ip protocols
- p
- show stats about TCP/UDP ports
- h
- show stats about hosts/ip addresses
- n
- show stats about network addresses
- a
- a synonym for "liphn"
-s
seconds
- When monitoring an interface,
tcpprof
runs for
only seconds seconds, and then quits. Has no effect
when reading data from a file.
-t
lines
- When printing a profile of the data,
tcpprof
will
display a maximum of lines lines for each
statistic.
Upon receiving a SIGINT, tcpprof
will print any
remaining statistics, and then exit.
- /dev/bpfn
- the packet filter device
tcpprof -i fxp0 -S a
Displays a complete profile of network data passing through the
fxp0 network interface, after the user enters ^C (control C).
tcpprof -r file.dump -S
a
Displays a complete profile of network data from the
tcpdump(1)
generated file "file.dump".
tcpprof
was first written along side tcpstat in Winter
1998 using FreeBSD 3.0, and then finaly retrofited for Linux in Spring 2000.
It became installed along with tcpstat since version 1.5.
Paul Herman ⟨pherman@frenchfries.net⟩
Cologne, Germany.
Please send all bug reports to this address.
Not tested with link types other than Ethernet, PPP, and "None" types.
There may be problems reading non-IPv4 packets across platforms
when reading null type link layers. This is due to a lack of a standardized
packet type descriptor in libpcap for this link type.
Snoop file formats cannot be read from stdin or named pipes.