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authorfenner <fenner@FreeBSD.org>2002-06-21 01:36:27 +0000
committerfenner <fenner@FreeBSD.org>2002-06-21 01:36:27 +0000
commit1e8ea467791f99f6068888787c27fd8b6b923d2c (patch)
tree4bf19d614b784f03cdea171c65cf7b2e9f63715c /contrib/libpcap/INSTALL.txt
parenta6bce8883c0f9dd7fee0eb03667f57b40b1d9dab (diff)
downloadFreeBSD-src-1e8ea467791f99f6068888787c27fd8b6b923d2c.zip
FreeBSD-src-1e8ea467791f99f6068888787c27fd8b6b923d2c.tar.gz
Import libpcap 0.7.1, from
http://www.tcpdump.org/release/libpcap-0.7.1.tar.gz
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+@(#) $Header: /tcpdump/master/libpcap/INSTALL.txt,v 1.2 2001/06/05 03:45:53 guy Exp $ (LBL)
+
+To build libpcap, run "./configure" (a shell script). The configure
+script will determine your system attributes and generate an
+appropriate Makefile from Makefile.in. Next run "make". If everything
+goes well you can su to root and run "make install". However, you need
+not install libpcap if you just want to build tcpdump; just make sure
+the tcpdump and libpcap directory trees have the same parent
+directory.
+
+If configure says:
+
+ configure: warning: cannot determine packet capture interface
+ configure: warning: (see INSTALL for more info)
+
+then your system either does not support packet capture or your system
+does support packet capture but libpcap does not support that
+particular type. (If you have HP-UX, see below.) If your system uses a
+packet capture not supported by libpcap, please send us patches; don't
+forget to include an autoconf fragment suitable for use in
+configure.in.
+
+It is possible to override the default packet capture type, although
+the circumstance where this works are limited. For example if you have
+installed bpf under SunOS 4 and wish to build a snit libpcap:
+
+ ./configure --with-pcap=snit
+
+Another example is to force a supported packet capture type in the case
+where the configure scripts fails to detect it.
+
+You will need an ANSI C compiler to build libpcap. The configure script
+will abort if your compiler is not ANSI compliant. If this happens, use
+the GNU C compiler, available via anonymous ftp:
+
+ ftp://ftp.gnu.org/pub/gnu/gcc/
+
+If you use flex, you must use version 2.4.6 or higher. The configure
+script automatically detects the version of flex and will not use it
+unless it is new enough. You can use "flex -V" to see what version you
+have (unless it's really old). The current version of flex is available
+via anonymous ftp:
+
+ ftp://ftp.ee.lbl.gov/flex-*.tar.Z
+
+As of this writing, the current version is 2.5.4.
+
+If you use bison, you must use flex (and visa versa). The configure
+script automatically falls back to lex and yacc if both flex and bison
+are not found.
+
+Sometimes the stock C compiler does not interact well with flex and
+bison. The list of problems includes undefined references for alloca.
+You can get around this by installing gcc or manually disabling flex
+and bison with:
+
+ ./configure --without-flex --without-bison
+
+If your system only has AT&T lex, this is okay unless your libpcap
+program uses other lex/yacc generated code. (Although it's possible to
+map the yy* identifiers with a script, we use flex and bison so we
+don't feel this is necessary.)
+
+Some systems support the Berkeley Packet Filter natively; for example
+out of the box OSF and BSD/OS have bpf. If your system does not support
+bpf, you will need to pick up:
+
+ ftp://ftp.ee.lbl.gov/bpf-*.tar.Z
+
+Note well: you MUST have kernel source for your operating system in
+order to install bpf. An exception is SunOS 4; the bpf distribution
+includes replacement kernel objects for some of the standard SunOS 4
+network device drivers. See the bpf INSTALL document for more
+information.
+
+If you use Solaris, there is a bug with bufmod(7) that is fixed in
+Solaris 2.3.2 (aka SunOS 5.3.2). Setting a snapshot length with the
+broken bufmod(7) results in data be truncated from the FRONT of the
+packet instead of the end. The work around is to not set a snapshot
+length but this results in performance problems since the entire packet
+is copied to user space. If you must run an older version of Solaris,
+there is a patch available from Sun; ask for bugid 1149065. After
+installing the patch, use "setenv BUFMOD_FIXED" to enable use of
+bufmod(7). However, we recommend you run a more current release of
+Solaris.
+
+If you use the SPARCompiler, you must be careful to not use the
+/usr/ucb/cc interface. If you do, you will get bogus warnings and
+perhaps errors. Either make sure your path has /opt/SUNWspro/bin
+before /usr/ucb or else:
+
+ setenv CC /opt/SUNWspro/bin/cc
+
+before running configure. (You might have to do a "make distclean"
+if you already ran configure once).
+
+Also note that "make depend" won't work; while all of the known
+universe uses -M, the SPARCompiler uses -xM to generate makefile
+dependencies.
+
+If you are trying to do packet capture with a FORE ATM card, you may or
+may not be able to. They usually only release their driver in object
+code so unless their driver supports packet capture, there's not much
+libpcap can do.
+
+If you get an error like:
+
+ tcpdump: recv_ack: bind error 0x???
+
+when using DLPI, look for the DL_ERROR_ACK error return values, usually
+in /usr/include/sys/dlpi.h, and find the corresponding value.
+
+Under {DEC OSF/1, Digital UNIX, Tru64 UNIX}, packet capture must be
+enabled before it can be used. For instructions on how to enable packet
+filter support, see:
+
+ ftp://ftp.digital.com/pub/Digital/dec-faq/Digital-UNIX
+
+Look for the "How do I configure the Berkeley Packet Filter and capture
+tcpdump traces?" item.
+
+Once you enable packet filter support, your OSF system will support bpf
+natively.
+
+Under Ultrix, packet capture must be enabled before it can be used. For
+instructions on how to enable packet filter support, see:
+
+ ftp://ftp.digital.com/pub/Digital/dec-faq/ultrix
+
+If you use HP-UX, you must have at least version 9 and either the
+version of cc that supports ANSI C (cc -Aa) or else use the GNU C
+compiler. You must also buy the optional streams package. If you don't
+have:
+
+ /usr/include/sys/dlpi.h
+ /usr/include/sys/dlpi_ext.h
+
+then you don't have the streams package. In addition, we believe you
+need to install the "9.X LAN and DLPI drivers cumulative" patch
+(PHNE_6855) to make the version 9 DLPI work with libpcap.
+
+The DLPI streams package is standard starting with HP-UX 10.
+
+The HP implementation of DLPI is a little bit eccentric. Unlike
+Solaris, you must attach /dev/dlpi instead of the specific /dev/*
+network pseudo device entry in order to capture packets. The PPA is
+based on the ifnet "index" number. Under HP-UX 9, it is necessary to
+read /dev/kmem and the kernel symbol file (/hp-ux). Under HP-UX 10,
+DLPI can provide information for determining the PPA. It does not seem
+to be possible to trace the loopback interface. Unlike other DLPI
+implementations, PHYS implies MULTI and SAP and you get an error if you
+try to enable more than one promiscuous mode at a time.
+
+It is impossible to capture outbound packets on HP-UX 9. To do so on
+HP-UX 10, you will, apparently, need a late "LAN products cumulative
+patch" (at one point, it was claimed that this would be PHNE_18173 for
+s700/10.20; at another point, it was claimed that the required patches
+were PHNE_20892, PHNE_20725 and PHCO_10947, or newer patches), and to do
+so on HP-UX 11 you will, apparently, need the latest lancommon/DLPI
+patches and the latest driver patch for the interface(s) in use on HP-UX
+11 (at one point, it was claimed that patches PHNE_19766, PHNE_19826,
+PHNE_20008, and PHNE_20735 did the trick).
+
+Furthermore, on HP-UX 10, you will need to turn on a kernel switch by
+doing
+
+ echo 'lanc_outbound_promisc_flag/W 1' | adb -w /stand/vmunix /dev/mem
+
+You would have to arrange that this happen on reboots; the right way to
+do that would probably be to put it into an executable script file
+"/sbin/init.d/outbound_promisc" and making
+"/sbin/rc2.d/S350outbound_promisc" a symbolic link to that script.
+
+Finally, testing shows that there can't be more than one simultaneous
+DLPI user per network interface.
+
+If you use Linux, this version of libpcap is known to compile and run
+under Red Hat 4.0 with the 2.0.25 kernel. It may work with earlier 2.X
+versions but is guaranteed not to work with 1.X kernels. Running more
+than one libpcap program at a time, on a system with a 2.0.X kernel, can
+cause problems since promiscuous mode is implemented by twiddling the
+interface flags from the libpcap application; the packet capture
+mechanism in the 2.2 and later kernels doesn't have this problem. Also,
+packet timestamps aren't very good. This appears to be due to haphazard
+handling of the timestamp in the kernel.
+
+Note well: there is rumoured to be a version of tcpdump floating around
+called 3.0.3 that includes libpcap and is supposed to support Linux.
+You should be advised that neither the Network Research Group at LBNL
+nor the Tcpdump Group ever generated a release with this version number.
+The LBNL Network Research Group notes with interest that a standard
+cracker trick to get people to install trojans is to distribute bogus
+packages that have a version number higher than the current release.
+They also noted with annoyance that 90% of the Linux related bug reports
+they got are due to changes made to unofficial versions of their page.
+If you are having trouble but aren't using a version that came from
+tcpdump.org, please try that before submitting a bug report!
+
+On Linux, libpcap will not work if the kernel does not have the packet
+socket option enabled; see the README.linux file for information about
+this.
+
+If you use AIX, you may not be able to build libpcap from this release.
+We do not have an AIX system in house so it's impossible for us to test
+AIX patches submitted to us. We are told that you must link against
+/lib/pse.exp, that you must use AIX cc or a GNU C compiler newer than
+2.7.2, and that you may need to run strload before running a libpcap
+application.
+
+Read the README.aix file for information on installing libpcap and
+configuring your system to be able to support libpcap.
+
+If you use NeXTSTEP, you will not be able to build libpcap from this
+release. We hope to support this operating system in some future
+release of libpcap.
+
+If you use SINIX, you should be able to build libpcap from this
+release. It is known to compile and run on SINIX-Y/N 5.42 with the C-DS
+V1.0 or V1.1 compiler. But note that in some releases of SINIX, yacc
+emits incorrect code; if grammar.y fails to compile, change every
+occurence of:
+
+ #ifdef YYDEBUG
+
+to:
+ #if YYDEBUG
+
+Another workaround is to use flex and bison.
+
+If you use SCO, you might have trouble building libpcap from this
+release. We do not have a machine running SCO and have not had reports
+of anyone successfully building on it. Since SCO apparently supports
+DLPI, it's possible the current version works. Meanwhile, SCO provides
+a tcpdump binary as part of their "Network/Security Tools" package:
+
+ http://www.sco.com/technology/internet/goodies/#SECURITY
+
+There is also a README that explains how to enable packet capture.
+
+If you use UnixWare, you will not be able to build libpcap from this
+release. We hope to support this operating system in some future
+release of libpcap. Meanwhile, there appears to be an UnixWare port of
+libpcap 0.0 (and tcpdump 3.0) in:
+
+ ftp://ftp1.freebird.org/pub/mirror/freebird/internet/systools/
+
+UnixWare appears to use a hacked version of DLPI.
+
+If linking tcpdump fails with "Undefined: _alloca" when using bison on
+a Sun4, your version of bison is broken. In any case version 1.16 or
+higher is recommended (1.14 is known to cause problems 1.16 is known to
+work). Either pick up a current version from:
+
+ ftp://ftp.gnu.org/pub/gnu/bison
+
+or hack around it by inserting the lines:
+
+ #ifdef __GNUC__
+ #define alloca __builtin_alloca
+ #else
+ #ifdef sparc
+ #include <alloca.h>
+ #else
+ char *alloca ();
+ #endif
+ #endif
+
+right after the (100 line!) GNU license comment in bison.simple, remove
+grammar.[co] and fire up make again.
+
+If you use SunOS 4, your kernel must support streams NIT. If you run a
+libpcap program and it dies with:
+
+ /dev/nit: No such device
+
+You must add streams NIT support to your kernel configuration, run
+config and boot the new kernel.
+
+If you are running a version of SunOS earlier than 4.1, you will need
+to replace the Sun supplied /sys/sun{3,4,4c}/OBJ/nit_if.o with the
+appropriate version from this distribution's SUNOS4 subdirectory and
+build a new kernel:
+
+ nit_if.o.sun3-sunos4 (any flavor of sun3)
+ nit_if.o.sun4c-sunos4.0.3c (SS1, SS1+, IPC, SLC, etc.)
+ nit_if.o.sun4-sunos4 (Sun4's not covered by
+ nit_if.o.sun4c-sunos4.0.3c)
+
+These nit replacements fix a bug that makes nit essentially unusable in
+pre-SunOS 4.1. In addition, our sun4c-sunos4.0.3c nit gives you
+timestamps to the resolution of the SS-1 clock (1 us) rather than the
+lousy 20ms timestamps Sun gives you (tcpdump will print out the full
+timestamp resolution if it finds it's running on a SS-1).
+
+FILES
+-----
+CHANGES - description of differences between releases
+FILES - list of files exported as part of the distribution
+INSTALL - this file
+Makefile.in - compilation rules (input to the configure script)
+README - description of distribution
+SUNOS4 - pre-SunOS 4.1 replacement kernel nit modules
+VERSION - version of this release
+aclocal.m4 - autoconf macros
+bpf/net - copies of bpf_filter.c and bpf.h
+bpf_filter.c - symlink to bpf/net/bpf_filter.c
+bpf_image.c - bpf disassembly routine
+config.guess - autoconf support
+config.sub - autoconf support
+configure - configure script (run this first)
+configure.in - configure script source
+etherent.c - /etc/ethers support routines
+ethertype.h - ethernet protocol types and names definitions
+gencode.c - bpf code generation routines
+gencode.h - bpf code generation definitions
+grammar.y - filter string grammar
+inet.c - network routines
+install-sh - BSD style install script
+lbl/gnuc.h - gcc macros and defines
+lbl/os-*.h - os dependent defines and prototypes
+mkdep - construct Makefile dependency list
+nametoaddr.c - hostname to address routines
+net - symlink to bpf/net
+optimize.c - bpf optimization routines
+pcap-bpf.c - BSD Packet Filter support
+pcap-dlpi.c - Data Link Provider Interface support
+pcap-enet.c - enet support
+pcap-int.h - internal libpcap definitions
+pcap-namedb.h - public libpcap name database definitions
+pcap-nit.c - Network Interface Tap support
+pcap-nit.h - Network Interface Tap definitions
+pcap-null.c - dummy monitor support (allows offline use of libpcap)
+pcap-pf.c - Packet Filter support
+pcap-pf.h - Packet Filter definitions
+pcap-snit.c - Streams based Network Interface Tap support
+pcap-snoop.c - Snoop network monitoring support
+pcap.3 - manual entry
+pcap.c - pcap utility routines
+pcap.h - public libpcap definitions
+ppp.h - Point to Point Protocol definitions
+savefile.c - offline support
+scanner.l - filter string scanner
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