snoop(1M) System Administration Commands snoop(1M)NAMEsnoop - capture and inspect network packets
SYNOPSISsnoop [-aqrCDNPSvV] [-t [r | a | d]] [-c maxcount]
[-d device] [-i filename] [-n filename] [-o filename]
[-p first [, last]] [-s snaplen] [-x offset [, length]]
[expression]
DESCRIPTIONsnoop captures packets from the network and displays their contents.
snoop uses both the network packet filter and streams buffer modules to
provide efficient capture of packets from the network. Captured packets
can be displayed as they are received, or saved to a file (which is RFC
1761-compliant) for later inspection.
snoop can display packets in a single-line summary form or in verbose
multi-line forms. In summary form, with the exception of certain VLAN
packets, only the data pertaining to the highest level protocol is dis‐
played. If a packet has a VLAN header and its VLAN ID is non-zero, then
snoop will show that the packet is VLAN tagged. For example, an NFS
packet will have only NFS information displayed. Except for VLAN infor‐
mation under the condition just described, the underlying RPC, UDP, IP,
and Ethernet frame information is suppressed, but can be displayed if
either of the verbose options are chosen.
In the absence of a name service, such as LDAP or NIS, snoop displays
host names as numeric IP addresses.
snoop requires an interactive interface.
OPTIONS-C
List the code generated from the filter expression for either the
kernel packet filter, or snoop's own filter.
-D
Display number of packets dropped during capture on the summary
line.
-N
Create an IP address-to-name file from a capture file. This must be
set together with the -i option that names a capture file. The
address-to-name file has the same name as the capture file with
.names appended. This file records the IP address to hostname map‐
ping at the capture site and increases the portability of the cap‐
ture file. Generate a .names file if the capture file is to be ana‐
lyzed elsewhere. Packets are not displayed when this flag is used.
-P
Capture packets in non-promiscuous mode. Only broadcast, multicast,
or packets addressed to the host machine will be seen.
-S
Display size of the entire link layer frame in bytes on the summary
line.
-V
Verbose summary mode. This is halfway between summary mode and ver‐
bose mode in degree of verbosity. Instead of displaying just the
summary line for the highest level protocol in a packet, it dis‐
plays a summary line for each protocol layer in the packet. For
instance, for an NFS packet it will display a line each for the
ETHER, IP, UDP, RPC and NFS layers. Verbose summary mode output may
be easily piped through grep to extract packets of interest. For
example, to view only RPC summary lines, enter the following: exam‐
ple# snoop-i rpc.cap -V | grep RPC
-a
Listen to packets on /dev/audio (warning: can be noisy).
-c maxcount
Quit after capturing maxcount packets. Otherwise keep capturing
until there is no disk space left or until interrupted with Con‐
trol-C.
-d device
Receive packets from the network using the interface specified by
device, for example, eri0 or hme0. The program netstat(1M), when
invoked with the -i flag, lists all the interfaces that a machine
has. Normally, snoop will automatically choose the first non-loop‐
back interface it finds.
-i filename
Display packets previously captured in filename. Without this
option, snoop reads packets from the network interface. If a file‐
name.names file is present, it is automatically loaded into the
snoop IP address-to-name mapping table (See -N flag).
-n filename
Use filename as an IP address-to-name mapping table. This file must
have the same format as the /etc/hosts file (IP address followed by
the hostname).
-o filename
Save captured packets in filename as they are captured. (This file‐
name is referred to as the "capture file".) The format of the cap‐
ture file is RFC 1761-compliant. During packet capture, a count of
the number of packets saved in the file is displayed. If you wish
just to count packets without saving to a file, name the file
/dev/null.
-p first [ , last ]
Select one or more packets to be displayed from a capture file. The
first packet in the file is packet number 1.
-q
When capturing network packets into a file, do not display the
packet count. This can improve packet capturing performance.
-r
Do not resolve the IP address to the symbolic name. This prevents
snoop from generating network traffic while capturing and display‐
ing packets. However, if the -n option is used, and an address is
found in the mapping file, its corresponding name will be used.
-s snaplen
Truncate each packet after snaplen bytes. Usually the whole packet
is captured. This option is useful if only certain packet header
information is required. The packet truncation is done within the
kernel giving better utilization of the streams packet buffer. This
means less chance of dropped packets due to buffer overflow during
periods of high traffic. It also saves disk space when capturing
large traces to a capture file. To capture only IP headers (no
options) use a snaplen of 34. For UDP use 42, and for TCP use 54.
You can capture RPC headers with a snaplen of 80 bytes. NFS headers
can be captured in 120 bytes.
-t [ r | a | d ]
Time-stamp presentation. Time-stamps are accurate to within 4
microseconds. The default is for times to be presented in d (delta)
format (the time since receiving the previous packet). Option a
(absolute) gives wall-clock time. Option r (relative) gives time
relative to the first packet displayed. This can be used with the
-p option to display time relative to any selected packet.
-v
Verbose mode. Print packet headers in lots of detail. This display
consumes many lines per packet and should be used only on selected
packets.
-xoffset [ , length]
Display packet data in hexadecimal and ASCII format. The offset and
length values select a portion of the packet to be displayed. To
display the whole packet, use an offset of 0. If a length value is
not provided, the rest of the packet is displayed.
OPERANDS
expression
Select packets either from the network or from a capture file. Only
packets for which the expression is true will be selected. If no
expression is provided it is assumed to be true.
Given a filter expression, snoop generates code for either the ker‐
nel packet filter or for its own internal filter. If capturing
packets with the network interface, code for the kernel packet fil‐
ter is generated. This filter is implemented as a streams module,
upstream of the buffer module. The buffer module accumulates pack‐
ets until it becomes full and passes the packets on to snoop. The
kernel packet filter is very efficient, since it rejects unwanted
packets in the kernel before they reach the packet buffer or snoop.
The kernel packet filter has some limitations in its implementa‐
tion; it is possible to construct filter expressions that it cannot
handle. In this event, snoop tries to split the filter and do as
much filtering in the kernel as possible. The remaining filtering
is done by the packet filter for snoop. The -C flag can be used to
view generated code for either the packet filter for the kernel or
the packet filter for snoop. If packets are read from a capture
file using the -i option, only the packet filter for snoop is used.
A filter expression consists of a series of one or more boolean
primitives that may be combined with boolean operators (AND, OR,
and NOT). Normal precedence rules for boolean operators apply.
Order of evaluation of these operators may be controlled with
parentheses. Since parentheses and other filter expression charac‐
ters are known to the shell, it is often necessary to enclose the
filter expression in quotes. Refer to for information about set‐
ting up more efficient filters.
The primitives are:
host hostname
True if the source or destination address is that of hostname.
The hostname argument may be a literal address. The keyword
host may be omitted if the name does not conflict with the name
of another expression primitive. For example, pinky selects
packets transmitted to or received from the host pinky, whereas
pinky and dinky selects packets exchanged between hosts pinky
AND dinky.
The type of address used depends on the primitive which pre‐
cedes the host primitive. The possible qualifiers are inet,
inet6, ether, or none. These three primitives are discussed
below. Having none of the primitives present is equivalent to
"inet host hostname or inet6 host hostname". In other words,
snoop tries to filter on all IP addresses associated with host‐
name.
inet or inet6
A qualifier that modifies the host primitive that follows. If
it is inet, then snoop tries to filter on all IPv4 addresses
returned from a name lookup. If it is inet6, snoop tries to
filter on all IPv6 addresses returned from a name lookup.
ipaddr, atalkaddr, or etheraddr
Literal addresses, IP dotted, AppleTalk dotted, and Ethernet
colon are recognized. For example,
o "172.16.40.13" matches all packets with that IP
o "2::9255:a00:20ff:fe73:6e35" matches all packets
with that IPv6 address as source or destination;
o "65281.13" matches all packets with that AppleTalk
address;
o "8:0:20:f:b1:51" matches all packets with the Ether‐
net address as source or destination.
An Ethernet address beginning with a letter is interpreted as a
hostname. To avoid this, prepend a zero when specifying the
address. For example, if the Ethernet address is
aa:0:45:23:52:44, then specify it by add a leading zero to make
it 0aa:0:45:23:52:44.
from or src
A qualifier that modifies the following host, net, ipaddr,
atalkaddr, etheraddr, port or rpc primitive to match just the
source address, port, or RPC reply.
to or dst
A qualifier that modifies the following host, net, ipaddr,
atalkaddr, etheraddr, port or rpc primitive to match just the
destination address, port, or RPC call.
ether
A qualifier that modifies the following host primitive to
resolve a name to an Ethernet address. Normally, IP address
matching is performed. This option is not supported on media
such as IPoIB (IP over InfiniBand).
ethertype number
True if the Ethernet type field has value number. If number is
not 0x8100 (VLAN) and the packet is VLAN tagged, then the
expression will match the encapsulated Ethernet type.
ip, ip6, arp, rarp, pppoed, pppoes
True if the packet is of the appropriate ethertype.
vlan
True if the packet has ethertype VLAN and the VLAN ID is not
zero.
vlan-id id
True for packets of ethertype VLAN with the id id.
pppoe
True if the ethertype of the packet is either pppoed or pppoes.
broadcast
True if the packet is a broadcast packet. Equivalent to
ether[2:4] = 0xffffffff for Ethernet. This option is not sup‐
ported on media such as IPoIB (IP over InfiniBand).
multicast
True if the packet is a multicast packet. Equivalent to
"ether[0] & 1 = 1" on Ethernet. This option is not supported on
media such as IPoIB (IP over InfiniBand).
bootp, dhcp
True if the packet is an unfragmented IPv4 UDP packet with
either a source port of BOOTPS (67) and a destination port of
BOOTPC (68), or a source port of BOOTPC (68) and a destination
of BOOTPS (67).
dhcp6
True if the packet is an unfragmented IPv6 UDP packet with
either a source port of DHCPV6-SERVER (547) and a destination
port of DHCPV6-CLIENT (546), or a source port of DHCPV6-CLIENT
(546) and a destination of DHCPV6-SERVER (547).
apple
True if the packet is an Apple Ethertalk packet. Equivalent to
"ethertype 0x809b or ethertype 0x80f3".
decnet
True if the packet is a DECNET packet.
greater length
True if the packet is longer than length.
less length
True if the packet is shorter than length.
udp, tcp, icmp, icmp6, ah, esp
True if the IP or IPv6 protocol is of the appropriate type.
net net
True if either the IP source or destination address has a net‐
work number of net. The from or to qualifier may be used to
select packets for which the network number occurs only in the
source or destination address.
port port
True if either the source or destination port is port. The port
may be either a port number or name from /etc/services. The tcp
or udp primitives may be used to select TCP or UDP ports only.
The from or to qualifier may be used to select packets for
which the port occurs only as the source or destination.
rpc prog [ , vers [ , proc ] ]
True if the packet is an RPC call or reply packet for the pro‐
tocol identified by prog. The prog may be either the name of an
RPC protocol from /etc/rpc or a program number. The vers and
proc may be used to further qualify the program version and
procedure number, for example, rpc nfs,2,0 selects all calls
and replies for the NFS null procedure. The to or from quali‐
fier may be used to select either call or reply packets only.
ldap
True if the packet is an LDAP packet on port 389.
gateway host
True if the packet used host as a gateway, that is, the Ether‐
net source or destination address was for host but not the IP
address. Equivalent to "ether host host and not host host".
nofrag
True if the packet is unfragmented or is the first in a series
of IP fragments. Equivalent to ip[6:2] & 0x1fff = 0.
expr relop expr
True if the relation holds, where relop is one of >, <, >=, <=,
=, !=, and expr is an arithmetic expression composed of num‐
bers, packet field selectors, the length primitive, and arith‐
metic operators +, −, *, &, |, ^, and %. The arithmetic opera‐
tors within expr are evaluated before the relational operator
and normal precedence rules apply between the arithmetic opera‐
tors, such as multiplication before addition. Parentheses may
be used to control the order of evaluation. To use the value of
a field in the packet use the following syntax:
base[expr [: size ] ]
where expr evaluates the value of an offset into the packet
from a base offset which may be ether, ip, ip6, udp, tcp, or
icmp. The size value specifies the size of the field. If not
given, 1 is assumed. Other legal values are 2 and 4. For exam‐
ple,
ether[0] & 1 = 1
is equivalent to multicast
ether[2:4] = 0xffffffff
is equivalent to broadcast.
ip[ip[0] & 0xf * 4 : 2] = 2049
is equivalent to udp[0:2] = 2049
ip[0] & 0xf > 5
selects IP packets with options.
ip[6:2] & 0x1fff = 0
eliminates IP fragments.
udp and ip[6:2]&0x1fff = 0 and udp[6:2] != 0
finds all packets with UDP checksums.
The length primitive may be used to obtain the length of the
packet. For instance "length > 60" is equivalent to "greater
60", and "ether[length − 1]" obtains the value of the last byte
in a packet.
and
Perform a logical AND operation between two boolean values. The
AND operation is implied by the juxtaposition of two boolean
expressions, for example "dinky pinky" is the same as "dinky
AND pinky".
or or ,
Perform a logical OR operation between two boolean values. A
comma may be used instead, for example, "dinky,pinky" is the
same as "dinky OR pinky".
not or !
Perform a logical NOT operation on the following boolean value.
This operator is evaluated before AND or OR.
slp
True if the packet is an SLP packet.
sctp
True if the packet is an SCTP packet.
ospf
True if the packet is an OSPF packet.
EXAMPLES
Example 1 Using the snoop Command
Capture all packets and display them as they are received:
example# snoop
Capture packets with host funky as either the source or destination and
display them as they are received:
example# snoop funky
Capture packets between funky and pinky and save them to a file. Then
inspect the packets using times (in seconds) relative to the first cap‐
tured packet:
example# snoop-o cap funky pinky
example# snoop-i cap -t r | more
To look at selected packets in another capture file:
example# snoop-i pkts -p 99,108
99 0.0027 boutique -> sunroof NFS C GETATTR FH=8E6
100 0.0046 sunroof -> boutique NFS R GETATTR OK
101 0.0080 boutique -> sunroof NFS C RENAME FH=8E6C MTra00192 to .nfs08
102 0.0102 marmot -> viper NFS C LOOKUP FH=561E screen.r.13.i386
103 0.0072 viper -> marmot NFS R LOOKUP No such file or directory
104 0.0085 bugbomb -> sunroof RLOGIN C PORT=1023 h
105 0.0005 kandinsky -> sparky RSTAT C Get Statistics
106 0.0004 beeblebrox -> sunroof NFS C GETATTR FH=0307
107 0.0021 sparky -> kandinsky RSTAT R
108 0.0073 office -> jeremiah NFS C READ FH=2584 at 40960 for 8192
To look at packet 101 in more detail:
example# snoop-i pkts -v -p101
ETHER: ----- Ether Header -----
ETHER:
ETHER: Packet 101 arrived at 16:09:53.59
ETHER: Packet size = 210 bytes
ETHER: Destination = 8:0:20:1:3d:94, Sun
ETHER: Source = 8:0:69:1:5f:e, Silicon Graphics
ETHER: Ethertype = 0800 (IP)
ETHER:
IP: ----- IP Header -----
IP:
IP: Version = 4, header length = 20 bytes
IP: Type of service = 00
IP: ..0. .... = routine
IP: ...0 .... = normal delay
IP: .... 0... = normal throughput
IP: .... .0.. = normal reliability
IP: Total length = 196 bytes
IP: Identification 19846
IP: Flags = 0X
IP: .0.. .... = may fragment
IP: ..0. .... = more fragments
IP: Fragment offset = 0 bytes
IP: Time to live = 255 seconds/hops
IP: Protocol = 17 (UDP)
IP: Header checksum = 18DC
IP: Source address = 172.16.40.222, boutique
IP: Destination address = 172.16.40.200, sunroof
IP:
UDP: ----- UDP Header -----
UDP:
UDP: Source port = 1023
UDP: Destination port = 2049 (Sun RPC)
UDP: Length = 176
UDP: Checksum = 0
UDP:
RPC: ----- SUN RPC Header -----
RPC:
RPC: Transaction id = 665905
RPC: Type = 0 (Call)
RPC: RPC version = 2
RPC: Program = 100003 (NFS), version = 2, procedure = 1
RPC: Credentials: Flavor = 1 (Unix), len = 32 bytes
RPC: Time = 06-Mar-90 07:26:58
RPC: Hostname = boutique
RPC: Uid = 0, Gid = 1
RPC: Groups = 1
RPC: Verifier : Flavor = 0 (None), len = 0 bytes
RPC:
NFS: ----- SUN NFS -----
NFS:
NFS: Proc = 11 (Rename)
NFS: File handle = 000016430000000100080000305A1C47
NFS: 597A0000000800002046314AFC450000
NFS: File name = MTra00192
NFS: File handle = 000016430000000100080000305A1C47
NFS: 597A0000000800002046314AFC450000
NFS: File name = .nfs08
NFS:
To view just the NFS packets between sunroof and boutique:
example# snoop-i pkts rpc nfs and sunroof and boutique
1 0.0000 boutique -> sunroof NFS C GETATTR FH=8E6C
2 0.0046 sunroof -> boutique NFS R GETATTR OK
3 0.0080 boutique -> sunroof NFS C RENAME FH=8E6C MTra00192 to .nfs08
To save these packets to a new capture file:
example# snoop-i pkts -o pkts.nfs rpc nfs sunroof boutique
To view encapsulated packets, there will be an indicator of encapsula‐
tion:
example# snoop ip-in-ip
sunroof -> boutique ICMP Echo request (1 encap)
If -V is used on an encapsulated packet:
example# snoop-V ip-in-ip
sunroof -> boutique ETHER Type=0800 (IP), size = 118 bytes
sunroof -> boutique IP D=172.16.40.222 S=172.16.40.200 LEN=104, ID=27497
sunroof -> boutique IP D=10.1.1.2 S=10.1.1.1 LEN=84, ID=27497
sunroof -> boutique ICMP Echo request
Example 2 Setting Up A More Efficient Filter
To set up a more efficient filter, the following filters should be used
toward the end of the expression, so that the first part of the expres‐
sion can be set up in the kernel: greater, less, port, rpc, nofrag, and
relop. The presence of OR makes it difficult to split the filtering
when using these primitives that cannot be set in the kernel. Instead,
use parentheses to enforce the primitives that should be OR'd.
To capture packets between funky and pinky of type tcp or udp on port
80:
example# snoop funky and pinky and port 80 and tcp or udp
Since the primitive port cannot be handled by the kernel filter, and
there is also an OR in the expression, a more efficient way to filter
is to move the OR to the end of the expression and to use parentheses
to enforce the OR between tcp and udp:
example# snoop funky and pinky and (tcp or udp) and port 80
EXIT STATUS
0 Successful completion.
1 An error occurred.
FILES
/dev/audio Symbolic link to the system's primary audio device.
/dev/null The null file.
/etc/hosts Host name database.
/etc/rpc RPC program number data base.
/etc/services Internet services and aliases.
ATTRIBUTES
See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes:
┌─────────────────────────────┬─────────────────────────────┐
│ ATTRIBUTE TYPE │ ATTRIBUTE VALUE │
├─────────────────────────────┼─────────────────────────────┤
│Availability │SUNWrcmdc │
└─────────────────────────────┴─────────────────────────────┘
SEE ALSOnetstat(1M), hosts(4), rpc(4), services(4), attributes(5), audio(7I),
bufmod(7M), dlpi(7P), pfmod(7M), tun(7M)
Callaghan, B. and Gilligan, R. RFC 1761, Snoop Version 2 Packet Capture
File Format. Network Working Group. February 1995.
WARNINGS
The processing overhead is much higher for realtime packet interpreta‐
tion. Consequently, the packet drop count may be higher. For more reli‐
able capture, output raw packets to a file using the -o option and ana‐
lyze the packets off-line.
Unfiltered packet capture imposes a heavy processing load on the host
computer, particularly if the captured packets are interpreted real‐
time. This processing load further increases if verbose options are
used. Since heavy use of snoop may deny computing resources to other
processes, it should not be used on production servers. Heavy use of
snoop should be restricted to a dedicated computer.
snoop does not reassemble IP fragments. Interpretation of higher level
protocol halts at the end of the first IP fragment.
snoop may generate extra packets as a side-effect of its use. For exam‐
ple it may use a network name service (NIS or NIS+) to convert IP
addresses to host names for display. Capturing into a file for later
display can be used to postpone the address-to-name mapping until after
the capture session is complete. Capturing into an NFS-mounted file may
also generate extra packets.
Setting the snaplen (-s option) to small values may remove header
information that is needed to interpret higher level protocols. The
exact cutoff value depends on the network and protocols being used. For
NFS Version 2 traffic using UDP on 10 Mb/s Ethernet, do not set snaplen
less than 150 bytes. For NFS Version 3 traffic using TCP on 100 Mb/s
Ethernet, snaplen should be 250 bytes or more.
snoop requires information from an RPC request to fully interpret an
RPC reply. If an RPC reply in a capture file or packet range does not
have a request preceding it, then only the RPC reply header will be
displayed.
SunOS 5.10 10 Jan 2007 snoop(1M)