table of contents
BPF(9) | Kernel Developer's Manual | BPF(9) |
NAME¶
bpf
—
SYNOPSIS¶
#include <net/bpf.h>
void
bpfattach
(struct
ifnet *ifp, u_int
dlt, u_int
hdrlen);
void
bpfattach2
(struct ifnet *ifp,
u_int dlt, u_int hdrlen,
struct bpf_if **driverp);
void
bpfdetach
(struct
ifnet *ifp);
void
bpf_tap
(struct
ifnet *ifp, u_char
*pkt, u_int
*pktlen);
void
bpf_mtap
(struct
ifnet *ifp, struct mbuf
*m);
void
bpf_mtap2
(struct
bpf_if *bp, void
*data, u_int dlen,
struct mbuf *m);
u_int
bpf_filter
(const struct bpf_insn *pc
, u_char *pkt, u_int
wirelen, u_int buflen);
int
bpf_validate
(const
struct bpf_insn *fcode,
int flen);
DESCRIPTION¶
The Berkeley Packet Filter provides a raw interface, that is protocol independent, to data link layers. It allows all packets on the network, even those destined for other hosts, to be passed from a network interface to user programs. Each program may specify a filter, in the form of abpf
filter machine program. The
bpf(4) manual page describes the interface used by user
programs. This manual page describes the functions used by interfaces to pass
packets to bpf
and the functions for testing and
running bpf
filter machine programs.
The bpfattach
() function attaches a
network interface to bpf
. The
ifp argument is a pointer to the structure that
defines the interface to be attached to an interface. The
dlt argument is the data link-layer type:
DLT_NULL
(no link-layer encapsulation),
DLT_EN10MB
(Ethernet),
DLT_IEEE802_11
(802.11 wireless networks), etc. The
rest of the link layer types can be found in
<net/bpf.h>
. The
hdrlen argument is the fixed size of the link header;
variable length headers are not yet supported. The
bpf
system will hold a pointer to
ifp->if_bpf. This variable will set to a
non-NULL
value when bpf
requires packets from this interface to be tapped using the functions
below.
The bpfattach2
() function allows multiple
bpf
instances to be attached to a single interface,
by registering an explicit if_bpf rather than using
ifp->if_bpf. It is then possible to run
tcpdump(1) on the interface for any data link-layer types
attached.
The bpfdetach
() function detaches a
bpf
instance from an interface, specified by
ifp. The bpfdetach
() function
should be called once for each bpf
instance
attached.
The bpf_tap
() function is used by an
interface to pass the packet to bpf
. The packet data
(including link-header), pointed to by pkt, is of
length pktlen, which must be a contiguous buffer. The
ifp argument is a pointer to the structure that
defines the interface to be tapped. The packet is parsed by each processes
filter, and if accepted, it is buffered for the process to read.
The bpf_mtap
() function is like
bpf_tap
() except that it is used to tap packets that
are in an mbuf chain, m. The
ifp argument is a pointer to the structure that
defines the interface to be tapped. Like bpf_tap
(),
bpf_mtap
() requires a link-header for whatever data
link layer type is specified. Note that bpf
only
reads from the mbuf chain, it does not free it or keep
a pointer to it. This means that an mbuf containing
the link-header can be prepended to the chain if necessary. A cleaner
interface to achieve this is provided by
bpf_mtap2
().
The bpf_mtap2
() function allows the user
to pass a link-header data, of length
dlen, independent of the mbuf
m, containing the packet. This simplifies the passing
of some link-headers.
The bpf_filter
() function executes the
filter program starting at pc on the packet
pkt. The wirelen argument is the
length of the original packet and buflen is the amount
of data present. The buflen value of 0 is special; it
indicates that the pkt is actually a pointer to an
mbuf chain (struct mbuf *).
The bpf_validate
() function checks that
the filter code fcode, of length
flen, is valid.
RETURN VALUES¶
Thebpf_filter
() function returns -1 (cast to an
unsigned integer) if there is no filter. Otherwise, it returns the result of
the filter program.
The bpf_validate
() function returns 0 when
the program is not a valid filter program.
EVENT HANDLERS¶
bpf
invokes bpf_track
EVENTHANDLER(9) event each time listener attaches to or
detaches from an interface. Pointer to (struct ifnet *)
is passed as the first argument, interface dlt follows.
Last argument indicates listener is attached (1) or detached (0). Note that
handler is invoked with bpf
global lock held, which
implies restriction on sleeping and calling bpf
subsystem inside EVENTHANDLER(9) dispatcher. Note that
handler is not called for write-only listeners.
SEE ALSO¶
tcpdump(1), bpf(4), EVENTHANDLER(9)HISTORY¶
The Enet packet filter was created in 1980 by Mike Accetta and Rick Rashid at Carnegie-Mellon University. Jeffrey Mogul, at Stanford, ported the code to BSD and continued its development from 1983 on. Since then, it has evolved into the Ultrix Packet Filter at DEC, a STREAMS NIT module under SunOS 4.1, and BPF.AUTHORS¶
Steven McCanne, of Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory, implemented BPF in Summer 1990. Much of the design is due to Van Jacobson. This manpage was written by Orla McGann.May 11, 2012 | Linux 4.19.0-10-amd64 |