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Net::RawIP(3) |
User Contributed Perl Documentation |
Net::RawIP(3) |
Net::RawIP - Perl extension to manipulate raw IP packets with interface to
libpcap
This is the documentation of "Net::RawIP" version
0.25
use Net::RawIP;
$n = Net::RawIP->new({
ip => {
saddr => 'my.target.lan',
daddr => 'my.target.lan',
},
});
tcp => {
source => 139,
dest => 139,
psh => 1,
syn => 1,
},
});
$n->send;
$n->ethnew("eth0");
$n->ethset(source => 'my.target.lan', dest =>'my.target.lan');
$n->ethsend;
$p = $n->pcapinit("eth0", "dst port 21", 1500, 30);
$f = dump_open($p, "/my/home/log");
loop($p, 10, \&dump, $f);
This package provides a class which can be used for creating, manipulating and
sending raw IP packets with optional features for manipulating Ethernet
headers.
Note: Ethernet related methods are implemented on Linux and
*BSD only.
As its name implies, this module is quite low-level, and currently
duplicates some features with "Net::Pcap".
If you prefer a higher-level module (in terms of Perl support), please take
a look at "Net::Write", which provides a
portable interface to construct and send raw packets on the network.
PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE
PCAP_VERSION_MAJOR
PCAP_VERSION_MINOR
lib_pcap_h
open_live open_offline dump_open lookupdev lookupnet dispatch loop dump compile
setfilter next datalink snapshot is_swapped major_version minor_version stats
file fileno perror geterr strerror close dump_close timem linkoffset
ifaddrlist rdev
By default exported functions are the loop,
dispatch, dump_open, dump, open_live,
timem, linkoffset, ifaddrlist, rdev. You have to
use the export tag pcap for export all of the pcap functions. Please
read the docs for the libpcap and look at
Net::RawIP::libpcap(3pm).
Please look at the examples in the examples/ folder of the
distribution.
- new
-
Net::RawIP->new({
ARGPROTO => {PROTOKEY => PROTOVALUE,...}
ip => {IPKEY => IPVALUE,...},
})
ARGPROTO is one of (tcp, udp,
icmp, generic) defining the protcol of the current packet.
Defaults to tcp.
You can NOT change protocol in the object after its
creation. Unless you want your packet to be TCP, you must set the
protocol type in the new() call.
The possible values of PROTOKEY depend on the value of
ARGPROTO
If ARGPROTO is <tcp> PROTOKEY can be one of
(source, dest, seq, ack_seq, doff,
res1, res2, urg, ack, psh,
rst, syn, fin, window, check,
urg_ptr, data).
If ARGPROTO is icmp PROTOKEY can be one of
(type, code, check, gateway, id,
sequence, unused, mtu, data).
If ARGPROTO is udp PROTOKEY can be one of
(source, dest, len, check, data)
If ARGPROTO is generic PROTOKEY can be data
only.
The data entries are scalars containing packed network
byte order data.
As the real icmp packet is a C union one can specify only one
of the following set of values.
- gateway - (int)
- (id and sequence) - (short and short)
- (mtu and unused) - (short and short)
The default values are:
- (0,0,0,0,5,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0xffff,0,0,'') for tcp
- (0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,'') for icmp
- (0,0,0,0,'') for udp
- ('') for generic
The valid values for urg ack psh rst
syn fin are 0 or 1. The value of data is a string.
Length of the result packet will be calculated if you do not specify
non-zero value for tot_len.
The value of ip is a hash defining the parameters of the IP
header (iphdr) in the current IP packet.
IPKEY is one of (version, ihl, tos,
tot_len, id, frag_off, ttl, protocol,
check, saddr, daddr). You can to specify any and all of
the above parameters. If check is not given checksum will be
calculated automatically.
The values of the saddr and the daddr can be
hostname (e.g. www.oracle.com ) or IP address (205.227.44.16), and even the
integer value if you happen to know what is 205.227.44.16 as an unsigned int
in the host format ;).
Examples:
my $rawip = Net::RawIP->new({udp =>{}});
or
my $rawip = Net::RawIP->new({ip => { tos => 22 }, udp => { source => 22,dest =>23 } });
The default values of the ip hash are
- (4,5,16,0,0,0x4000,64,6,0,0,0) for tcp
- (4,5,16,0,0,0x4000,64,17,0,0,0) for udp
- (4,5,16,0,0,0x4000,64,1,0,0,0) for icmp
- (4,5,16,0,0,0x4000,64,0,0,0,0) for generic
- dump_open
- If dump_open opens and returns a valid file descriptor, this
descriptor can be used in the perl callback as a perl filehandle.
- loop
- dispatch
- loop and dispatch can run a perl code refs as a callbacks
for packet analyzing and printing. the fourth parameter for loop
and dispatch can be an array or a hash reference and it can be
dereferenced in a perl callback.
- next
- next() returns a string (next packet).
- timem
- timem() returns a string that looks like
sec.microsec, where the sec and the microsec
are the values returned by gettimeofday(3). If microsec is
less than 100000 then zeros will be added to the left side of
microsec for adjusting to six digits.
Similar to sprintf("%.6f",
Time::HiRes::time());
- linkoffset
- The function which called linkoffset returns a number of the bytes
in the link protocol header e.g. 14 for a Ethernet or 4 for a
Point-to-Point protocol. This function has one input parameter (pcap_t*)
that is returned by open_live.
- ifaddrlist
- ifaddrlist() returns a hash reference. In this hash
keys are the running network devices, values are ip addresses of those
devices in an internet address format.
- rdev
- rdev() returns a name of the outgoing device for
given destination address. It has one input parameter (destination address
in an internet address or a domain name or a host byteorder int
formats).
- proto
- Returns the name of the subclass current object e.g. tcp. No input
parameters.
- packet
- Returns a scalar which contain the packed ip packet of the current object.
No input parameters.
- set
- Method for setting the parameters of the current object. The given
parameters must look like the parameters for the constructor.
- bset($packet,$eth)
- Method for setting the parameters of the current object.
$packet is a scalar which contain binary structure
(an ip or an eth packet). This scalar must match with the subclass of the
current object. If $eth is given and it have a
non-zero value then assumed that packet is a ethernet packet,otherwise it
is a ip packet.
- get
- is a method for get the parameters from the current object. This method
returns the array which will be filled with an asked parameters in order
as they have ordered in packet if you'd call it with an array context. If
this method is called with a scalar context then it returns a hash
reference. In that hash will stored an asked parameters as values,the keys
are their names.
The input parameter is a hash reference. In this hash can be
three keys. They are a ip and an one of the ARGPROTOs. The
value must be an array reference. This array contain asked parameters.
E.g. you want to know current value of the tos from the iphdr and the
flags of the tcphdr. Here is a code :
($tos,$urg,$ack,$psh,$rst,$syn,$fin) = $packet->get({
ip => [qw(tos)],
tcp => [qw(psh syn urg ack rst fin)]
});
The members in the array can be given in any order.
For get the ethernet parameters you have to use the key
eth and the values of the array
(dest,source,proto). The values of the dest
and the source will look like the output of the
ifconfig(8) e.g. 00:00:E8:43:0B:2A.
- open_live
- send($delay,$times)
- is a method which has used for send raw ip packet. The input parameters
are the delay seconds and the times for repeating send. If you do not
specify parameters for the send,then packet will be sent once
without delay. If you do specify for the times a negative value then
packet will be sent forever. E.g. you want to send the packet for ten
times with delay equal to one second. Here is a code :
$packet->send(1,10);
The delay could be specified not only as integer but and as
0.25 for sleep to 250 ms or 3.5 to sleep for 3 seconds and 500 ms.
- pcapinit($device,$filter,$psize,$timeout)
- is a method for some a pcap init. The input parameters are a device,a
string with a program for a filter,a packet size,a timeout. This method
will call the function open_live,then compile the filter string by
compile(), set the filter and returns the pointer (pcap_t
*).
- pcapinit_offline($fname)
- is a method for an offline pcap init.The input parameter is a name of the
file which contains raw output of the libpcap dump function. Returns the
pointer (pcap_t *).
- ethnew($device,dest =>
ARGOFDEST,source => ARGOFSOURCE)
- is a method for init the ethernet subclass in the current object,
$device is a required parameter,dest and
source are an optional, $device is an ethernet
device e.g. eth0, an ARGOFDEST and an ARGOFSOURCE are
a the ethernet addresses in the ethernet header of the current object.
The ARGOFDEST and the ARGOFSOURCE can be given
as a string which contain just 6 bytes of the real ethernet address or
like the output of the ifconfig(8) e.g. 00:00:E8:43:0B:2A or just
an ip address or a hostname of a target, then a mac address will be
discovered automatically.
The ethernet frame will be sent with given addresses. By
default the source and the dest will be filled with a
hardware address of the $device.
NOTE: For use methods which are related to the ethernet
you have to before initialize ethernet subclass by ethnew.
- ethset
- is a method for set an ethernet parameters in the current object. The
given parameters must look like parameters for the ethnew without a
$device.
- ethsend
- is a method for send an ethernet frame. The given parameters must look
like a parameters for the send.
- send_eth_frame($frame,$times,$delay)
- is a method for send any ethernet frame which you may construct by
hands.$frame is a packed ethernet frame exept
destination and source fields(these fields can be setting by ethset
or ethnew). Another parameters must look like the parameters for
the send.
- optset(OPTPROTO => { type => [...],data => [...] },...)
- is a method for set an IP and a TCP options. The parameters for the optset
must be given as a key-value pairs. The OPTPROTO,s are the
prototypes of the options(ip,tcp),values are the hashes
references.The keys in this hashes are type and data. The
value of the type is an array reference. This array must be filled
with an integers.Refer to a RFC for a valid types.The value of the
data also is an array reference. This array must be filled with
strings which must contain all bytes from a option except bytes with type
and length of an option.Of course indexes in those arrays must be equal
for the one option.If type is equal to 0 or 1 then there is no bytes with
a length and a data,but you have to specify zero data for
compability.
- optget(OPTPROTO => { type => [...] },...)
- is a method for get an IP and a TCP options. The parameters for the optget
must be given as key-value pairs. The OPTPROTO is the prototype of
the options(ip,tcp),the values are the hashes references.The
key is the type.The value of the type is an array reference.
The return value is an array which will be filled with asked
types,lengths,datas of the each type of the option in order as you have
asked.If you do not specify type then all types,lengths,datas of an
options will be returned. E.g. you want to know all the IP options from
the current object. Here is a code:
@opts = $n->optget(ip => {});
E.g. you want to know just the IP options with the type which
equal to 131 and 137. Here is a code:
($t131,$l131,$d131,$t137,$l137,$d137) = $n->optget(
ip =>{
type =>[(131,137)]
} );
- optunset
- is a method for unset a subclass of the IP or the TCP options from a
current object.It can be used if you won't use options in the current
object later. This method must be used only after the optset. The
parameters for this method are the OPTPROTO's. E.g. you want to
unset an IP options. Here is a code:
$n->optunset('ip');
E.g. you want to unset a TCP and an IP options. Here is a
code:
$n->optunset('ip','tcp');
pcap(3), tcpdump(1), RFC 791-793, RFC 768.
Net::Pcap, Net::Pcap::Easy, Net::Pcap::Reassemble,
Net::Pcap::FindDevice
Net::Write for an alternative module to send raw packets on the
network
Current maintainer is Sébastien Aperghis-Tramoni
<sebastien@aperghis.net>
Previous authors & maintainers:
- Sergey Kolychev <ksv@al.lg.ua>
- Gabor Szabo <gabor@pti.co.il>
Copyright (c) 1998-2006 Sergey Kolychev. All rights reserved. This program is
free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms
as Perl itself.
Steve Bonds <u5rhsiz02@sneakemail.com>
+ work on some endianness bugs and improving code comments
Hey! The above document had some coding errors, which are explained
below:
- Around line 704:
- Unknown directive: =head
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