1 @(#) $Header: /tcpdump/master/libpcap/INSTALL.txt,v 1.12.2.2 2007/09/12 19:17:24 guy Exp $ (LBL) 2 3 To build libpcap, run "./configure" (a shell script). The configure 4 script will determine your system attributes and generate an 5 appropriate Makefile from Makefile.in. Next run "make". If everything 6 goes well you can su to root and run "make install". However, you need 7 not install libpcap if you just want to build tcpdump; just make sure 8 the tcpdump and libpcap directory trees have the same parent 9 directory. 10 11 If configure says: 12 13 configure: warning: cannot determine packet capture interface 14 configure: warning: (see INSTALL for more info) 15 16 then your system either does not support packet capture or your system 17 does support packet capture but libpcap does not support that 18 particular type. (If you have HP-UX, see below.) If your system uses a 19 packet capture not supported by libpcap, please send us patches; don't 20 forget to include an autoconf fragment suitable for use in 21 configure.in. 22 23 It is possible to override the default packet capture type, although 24 the circumstance where this works are limited. For example if you have 25 installed bpf under SunOS 4 and wish to build a snit libpcap: 26 27 ./configure --with-pcap=snit 28 29 Another example is to force a supported packet capture type in the case 30 where the configure scripts fails to detect it. 31 32 You will need an ANSI C compiler to build libpcap. The configure script 33 will abort if your compiler is not ANSI compliant. If this happens, use 34 the GNU C compiler, available via anonymous ftp: 35 36 ftp://ftp.gnu.org/pub/gnu/gcc/ 37 38 If you use flex, you must use version 2.4.6 or higher. The configure 39 script automatically detects the version of flex and will not use it 40 unless it is new enough. You can use "flex -V" to see what version you 41 have (unless it's really old). The current version of flex is available 42 via anonymous ftp: 43 44 ftp://ftp.ee.lbl.gov/flex-*.tar.Z 45 46 As of this writing, the current version is 2.5.4. 47 48 If you use bison, you must use flex (and visa versa). The configure 49 script automatically falls back to lex and yacc if both flex and bison 50 are not found. 51 52 Sometimes the stock C compiler does not interact well with flex and 53 bison. The list of problems includes undefined references for alloca. 54 You can get around this by installing gcc or manually disabling flex 55 and bison with: 56 57 ./configure --without-flex --without-bison 58 59 If your system only has AT&T lex, this is okay unless your libpcap 60 program uses other lex/yacc generated code. (Although it's possible to 61 map the yy* identifiers with a script, we use flex and bison so we 62 don't feel this is necessary.) 63 64 Some systems support the Berkeley Packet Filter natively; for example 65 out of the box OSF and BSD/OS have bpf. If your system does not support 66 bpf, you will need to pick up: 67 68 ftp://ftp.ee.lbl.gov/bpf-*.tar.Z 69 70 Note well: you MUST have kernel source for your operating system in 71 order to install bpf. An exception is SunOS 4; the bpf distribution 72 includes replacement kernel objects for some of the standard SunOS 4 73 network device drivers. See the bpf INSTALL document for more 74 information. 75 76 If you use Solaris, there is a bug with bufmod(7) that is fixed in 77 Solaris 2.3.2 (aka SunOS 5.3.2). Setting a snapshot length with the 78 broken bufmod(7) results in data be truncated from the FRONT of the 79 packet instead of the end. The work around is to not set a snapshot 80 length but this results in performance problems since the entire packet 81 is copied to user space. If you must run an older version of Solaris, 82 there is a patch available from Sun; ask for bugid 1149065. After 83 installing the patch, use "setenv BUFMOD_FIXED" to enable use of 84 bufmod(7). However, we recommend you run a more current release of 85 Solaris. 86 87 If you use the SPARCompiler, you must be careful to not use the 88 /usr/ucb/cc interface. If you do, you will get bogus warnings and 89 perhaps errors. Either make sure your path has /opt/SUNWspro/bin 90 before /usr/ucb or else: 91 92 setenv CC /opt/SUNWspro/bin/cc 93 94 before running configure. (You might have to do a "make distclean" 95 if you already ran configure once). 96 97 Also note that "make depend" won't work; while all of the known 98 universe uses -M, the SPARCompiler uses -xM to generate makefile 99 dependencies. 100 101 If you are trying to do packet capture with a FORE ATM card, you may or 102 may not be able to. They usually only release their driver in object 103 code so unless their driver supports packet capture, there's not much 104 libpcap can do. 105 106 If you get an error like: 107 108 tcpdump: recv_ack: bind error 0x??? 109 110 when using DLPI, look for the DL_ERROR_ACK error return values, usually 111 in /usr/include/sys/dlpi.h, and find the corresponding value. 112 113 Under {DEC OSF/1, Digital UNIX, Tru64 UNIX}, packet capture must be 114 enabled before it can be used. For instructions on how to enable packet 115 filter support, see: 116 117 ftp://ftp.digital.com/pub/Digital/dec-faq/Digital-UNIX 118 119 Look for the "How do I configure the Berkeley Packet Filter and capture 120 tcpdump traces?" item. 121 122 Once you enable packet filter support, your OSF system will support bpf 123 natively. 124 125 Under Ultrix, packet capture must be enabled before it can be used. For 126 instructions on how to enable packet filter support, see: 127 128 ftp://ftp.digital.com/pub/Digital/dec-faq/ultrix 129 130 If you use HP-UX, you must have at least version 9 and either the 131 version of cc that supports ANSI C (cc -Aa) or else use the GNU C 132 compiler. You must also buy the optional streams package. If you don't 133 have: 134 135 /usr/include/sys/dlpi.h 136 /usr/include/sys/dlpi_ext.h 137 138 then you don't have the streams package. In addition, we believe you 139 need to install the "9.X LAN and DLPI drivers cumulative" patch 140 (PHNE_6855) to make the version 9 DLPI work with libpcap. 141 142 The DLPI streams package is standard starting with HP-UX 10. 143 144 The HP implementation of DLPI is a little bit eccentric. Unlike 145 Solaris, you must attach /dev/dlpi instead of the specific /dev/* 146 network pseudo device entry in order to capture packets. The PPA is 147 based on the ifnet "index" number. Under HP-UX 9, it is necessary to 148 read /dev/kmem and the kernel symbol file (/hp-ux). Under HP-UX 10, 149 DLPI can provide information for determining the PPA. It does not seem 150 to be possible to trace the loopback interface. Unlike other DLPI 151 implementations, PHYS implies MULTI and SAP and you get an error if you 152 try to enable more than one promiscuous mode at a time. 153 154 It is impossible to capture outbound packets on HP-UX 9. To do so on 155 HP-UX 10, you will, apparently, need a late "LAN products cumulative 156 patch" (at one point, it was claimed that this would be PHNE_18173 for 157 s700/10.20; at another point, it was claimed that the required patches 158 were PHNE_20892, PHNE_20725 and PHCO_10947, or newer patches), and to do 159 so on HP-UX 11 you will, apparently, need the latest lancommon/DLPI 160 patches and the latest driver patch for the interface(s) in use on HP-UX 161 11 (at one point, it was claimed that patches PHNE_19766, PHNE_19826, 162 PHNE_20008, and PHNE_20735 did the trick). 163 164 Furthermore, on HP-UX 10, you will need to turn on a kernel switch by 165 doing 166 167 echo 'lanc_outbound_promisc_flag/W 1' | adb -w /stand/vmunix /dev/mem 168 169 You would have to arrange that this happen on reboots; the right way to 170 do that would probably be to put it into an executable script file 171 "/sbin/init.d/outbound_promisc" and making 172 "/sbin/rc2.d/S350outbound_promisc" a symbolic link to that script. 173 174 Finally, testing shows that there can't be more than one simultaneous 175 DLPI user per network interface. 176 177 If you use Linux, this version of libpcap is known to compile and run 178 under Red Hat 4.0 with the 2.0.25 kernel. It may work with earlier 2.X 179 versions but is guaranteed not to work with 1.X kernels. Running more 180 than one libpcap program at a time, on a system with a 2.0.X kernel, can 181 cause problems since promiscuous mode is implemented by twiddling the 182 interface flags from the libpcap application; the packet capture 183 mechanism in the 2.2 and later kernels doesn't have this problem. Also, 184 packet timestamps aren't very good. This appears to be due to haphazard 185 handling of the timestamp in the kernel. 186 187 Note well: there is rumoured to be a version of tcpdump floating around 188 called 3.0.3 that includes libpcap and is supposed to support Linux. 189 You should be advised that neither the Network Research Group at LBNL 190 nor the Tcpdump Group ever generated a release with this version number. 191 The LBNL Network Research Group notes with interest that a standard 192 cracker trick to get people to install trojans is to distribute bogus 193 packages that have a version number higher than the current release. 194 They also noted with annoyance that 90% of the Linux related bug reports 195 they got are due to changes made to unofficial versions of their page. 196 If you are having trouble but aren't using a version that came from 197 tcpdump.org, please try that before submitting a bug report! 198 199 On Linux, libpcap will not work if the kernel does not have the packet 200 socket option enabled; see the README.linux file for information about 201 this. 202 203 If you use AIX, you may not be able to build libpcap from this release. 204 We do not have an AIX system in house so it's impossible for us to test 205 AIX patches submitted to us. We are told that you must link against 206 /lib/pse.exp, that you must use AIX cc or a GNU C compiler newer than 207 2.7.2, and that you may need to run strload before running a libpcap 208 application. 209 210 Read the README.aix file for information on installing libpcap and 211 configuring your system to be able to support libpcap. 212 213 If you use NeXTSTEP, you will not be able to build libpcap from this 214 release. We hope to support this operating system in some future 215 release of libpcap. 216 217 If you use SINIX, you should be able to build libpcap from this 218 release. It is known to compile and run on SINIX-Y/N 5.42 with the C-DS 219 V1.0 or V1.1 compiler. But note that in some releases of SINIX, yacc 220 emits incorrect code; if grammar.y fails to compile, change every 221 occurence of: 222 223 #ifdef YYDEBUG 224 225 to: 226 #if YYDEBUG 227 228 Another workaround is to use flex and bison. 229 230 If you use SCO, you might have trouble building libpcap from this 231 release. We do not have a machine running SCO and have not had reports 232 of anyone successfully building on it. Since SCO apparently supports 233 DLPI, it's possible the current version works. Meanwhile, SCO provides 234 a tcpdump binary as part of their "Network/Security Tools" package: 235 236 http://www.sco.com/technology/internet/goodies/#SECURITY 237 238 There is also a README that explains how to enable packet capture. 239 240 If you use UnixWare, you will not be able to build libpcap from this 241 release. We hope to support this operating system in some future 242 release of libpcap. Meanwhile, there appears to be an UnixWare port of 243 libpcap 0.0 (and tcpdump 3.0) in: 244 245 ftp://ftp1.freebird.org/pub/mirror/freebird/internet/systools/ 246 247 UnixWare appears to use a hacked version of DLPI. 248 249 If linking tcpdump fails with "Undefined: _alloca" when using bison on 250 a Sun4, your version of bison is broken. In any case version 1.16 or 251 higher is recommended (1.14 is known to cause problems 1.16 is known to 252 work). Either pick up a current version from: 253 254 ftp://ftp.gnu.org/pub/gnu/bison 255 256 or hack around it by inserting the lines: 257 258 #ifdef __GNUC__ 259 #define alloca __builtin_alloca 260 #else 261 #ifdef sparc 262 #include <alloca.h> 263 #else 264 char *alloca (); 265 #endif 266 #endif 267 268 right after the (100 line!) GNU license comment in bison.simple, remove 269 grammar.[co] and fire up make again. 270 271 If you use SunOS 4, your kernel must support streams NIT. If you run a 272 libpcap program and it dies with: 273 274 /dev/nit: No such device 275 276 You must add streams NIT support to your kernel configuration, run 277 config and boot the new kernel. 278 279 If you are running a version of SunOS earlier than 4.1, you will need 280 to replace the Sun supplied /sys/sun{3,4,4c}/OBJ/nit_if.o with the 281 appropriate version from this distribution's SUNOS4 subdirectory and 282 build a new kernel: 283 284 nit_if.o.sun3-sunos4 (any flavor of sun3) 285 nit_if.o.sun4c-sunos4.0.3c (SS1, SS1+, IPC, SLC, etc.) 286 nit_if.o.sun4-sunos4 (Sun4's not covered by 287 nit_if.o.sun4c-sunos4.0.3c) 288 289 These nit replacements fix a bug that makes nit essentially unusable in 290 pre-SunOS 4.1. In addition, our sun4c-sunos4.0.3c nit gives you 291 timestamps to the resolution of the SS-1 clock (1 us) rather than the 292 lousy 20ms timestamps Sun gives you (tcpdump will print out the full 293 timestamp resolution if it finds it's running on a SS-1). 294 295 FILES 296 ----- 297 CHANGES - description of differences between releases 298 ChmodBPF/* - Mac OS X startup item to set ownership and permissions 299 on /dev/bpf* 300 CREDITS - people that have helped libpcap along 301 FILES - list of files exported as part of the distribution 302 INSTALL.txt - this file 303 LICENSE - the license under which tcpdump is distributed 304 Makefile.in - compilation rules (input to the configure script) 305 README - description of distribution 306 README.aix - notes on using libpcap on AIX 307 README.dag - notes on using libpcap to capture on Endace DAG devices 308 README.hpux - notes on using libpcap on HP-UX 309 README.linux - notes on using libpcap on Linux 310 README.macosx - notes on using libpcap on Mac OS X 311 README.septel - notes on using libpcap to capture on Intel/Septel devices 312 README.tru64 - notes on using libpcap on Digital/Tru64 UNIX 313 README.Win32 - notes on using libpcap on Win32 systems (with WinPcap) 314 SUNOS4 - pre-SunOS 4.1 replacement kernel nit modules 315 VERSION - version of this release 316 acconfig.h - support for post-2.13 autoconf 317 aclocal.m4 - autoconf macros 318 arcnet.h - ARCNET definitions 319 atmuni31.h - ATM Q.2931 definitions 320 bpf/net - copy of bpf_filter.c 321 bpf_dump.c - BPF program printing routines 322 bpf_filter.c - symlink to bpf/net/bpf_filter.c 323 bpf_image.c - BPF disassembly routine 324 config.guess - autoconf support 325 config.h.in - autoconf input 326 config.sub - autoconf support 327 configure - configure script (run this first) 328 configure.in - configure script source 329 etherent.c - /etc/ethers support routines 330 ethertype.h - Ethernet protocol types and names definitions 331 fad-getad.c - pcap_findalldevs() for systems with getifaddrs() 332 fad-gifc.c - pcap_findalldevs() for systems with only SIOCGIFLIST 333 fad-glifc.c - pcap_findalldevs() for systems with SIOCGLIFCONF 334 fad-null.c - pcap_findalldevs() for systems without capture support 335 fad-win32.c - pcap_findalldevs() for WinPcap 336 gencode.c - BPF code generation routines 337 gencode.h - BPF code generation definitions 338 grammar.y - filter string grammar 339 inet.c - network routines 340 install-sh - BSD style install script 341 lbl/os-*.h - OS-dependent defines and prototypes 342 llc.h - 802.2 LLC SAP definitions 343 missing/* - replacements for missing library functions 344 mkdep - construct Makefile dependency list 345 msdos/* - drivers for MS-DOS capture support 346 nametoaddr.c - hostname to address routines 347 nlpid.h - OSI network layer protocol identifier definitions 348 net - symlink to bpf/net 349 optimize.c - BPF optimization routines 350 packaging - packaging information for building libpcap RPMs 351 pcap-bpf.c - BSD Packet Filter support 352 pcap-bpf.h - BPF definitions 353 pcap-dag.c - Endace DAG device capture support 354 pcap-dag.h - Endace DAG device capture support 355 pcap-dlpi.c - Data Link Provider Interface support 356 pcap-dos.c - MS-DOS capture support 357 pcap-dos.h - headers for MS-DOS capture support 358 pcap-enet.c - enet support 359 pcap-int.h - internal libpcap definitions 360 pcap-linux.c - Linux packet socket support 361 pcap-namedb.h - public libpcap name database definitions 362 pcap-nit.c - SunOS Network Interface Tap support 363 pcap-nit.h - SunOS Network Interface Tap definitions 364 pcap-null.c - dummy monitor support (allows offline use of libpcap) 365 pcap-pf.c - Ultrix and Digital/Tru64 UNIX Packet Filter support 366 pcap-pf.h - Ultrix and Digital/Tru64 UNIX Packet Filter definitions 367 pcap-septel.c - INTEL/Septel device capture support 368 pcap-septel.h - INTEL/Septel device capture support 369 pcap-stdinc.h - includes and #defines for compiling on Win32 systems 370 pcap-snit.c - SunOS 4.x STREAMS-based Network Interface Tap support 371 pcap-snoop.c - IRIX Snoop network monitoring support 372 pcap-win32.c - WinPcap capture support 373 pcap.3 - manual entry 374 pcap.c - pcap utility routines 375 pcap.h - public libpcap definitions 376 ppp.h - Point to Point Protocol definitions 377 rawss7.h - information on DLT_ types for SS7 378 savefile.c - offline support 379 scanner.l - filter string scanner 380 sll.h - definitions for Linux cooked mode fake link-layer header 381 sunatmpos.h - definitions for SunATM capturing 382 Win32 - headers and routines for building on Win32 systems 383