INSTALL.txt revision 98530
1@(#) $Header: /tcpdump/master/libpcap/INSTALL.txt,v 1.2 2001/06/05 03:45:53 guy Exp $ (LBL)
2
3To build libpcap, run "./configure" (a shell script). The configure
4script will determine your system attributes and generate an
5appropriate Makefile from Makefile.in. Next run "make". If everything
6goes well you can su to root and run "make install". However, you need
7not install libpcap if you just want to build tcpdump; just make sure
8the tcpdump and libpcap directory trees have the same parent
9directory.
10
11If configure says:
12
13    configure: warning: cannot determine packet capture interface
14    configure: warning: (see INSTALL for more info)
15
16then your system either does not support packet capture or your system
17does support packet capture but libpcap does not support that
18particular type. (If you have HP-UX, see below.) If your system uses a
19packet capture not supported by libpcap, please send us patches; don't
20forget to include an autoconf fragment suitable for use in
21configure.in.
22
23It is possible to override the default packet capture type, although
24the circumstance where this works are limited. For example if you have
25installed bpf under SunOS 4 and wish to build a snit libpcap:
26
27    ./configure --with-pcap=snit
28
29Another example is to force a supported packet capture type in the case
30where the configure scripts fails to detect it.
31
32You will need an ANSI C compiler to build libpcap. The configure script
33will abort if your compiler is not ANSI compliant. If this happens, use
34the GNU C compiler, available via anonymous ftp:
35
36	ftp://ftp.gnu.org/pub/gnu/gcc/
37
38If you use flex, you must use version 2.4.6 or higher. The configure
39script automatically detects the version of flex and will not use it
40unless it is new enough. You can use "flex -V" to see what version you
41have (unless it's really old). The current version of flex is available
42via anonymous ftp:
43
44	ftp://ftp.ee.lbl.gov/flex-*.tar.Z
45
46As of this writing, the current version is 2.5.4.
47
48If you use bison, you must use flex (and visa versa). The configure
49script automatically falls back to lex and yacc if both flex and bison
50are not found.
51
52Sometimes the stock C compiler does not interact well with flex and
53bison. The list of problems includes undefined references for alloca.
54You can get around this by installing gcc or manually disabling flex
55and bison with:
56
57    ./configure --without-flex --without-bison
58
59If your system only has AT&T lex, this is okay unless your libpcap
60program uses other lex/yacc generated code. (Although it's possible to
61map the yy* identifiers with a script, we use flex and bison so we
62don't feel this is necessary.)
63
64Some systems support the Berkeley Packet Filter natively; for example
65out of the box OSF and BSD/OS have bpf. If your system does not support
66bpf, you will need to pick up:
67
68	ftp://ftp.ee.lbl.gov/bpf-*.tar.Z
69
70Note well: you MUST have kernel source for your operating system in
71order to install bpf. An exception is SunOS 4; the bpf distribution
72includes replacement kernel objects for some of the standard SunOS 4
73network device drivers. See the bpf INSTALL document for more
74information.
75
76If you use Solaris, there is a bug with bufmod(7) that is fixed in
77Solaris 2.3.2 (aka SunOS 5.3.2). Setting a snapshot length with the
78broken bufmod(7) results in data be truncated from the FRONT of the
79packet instead of the end.  The work around is to not set a snapshot
80length but this results in performance problems since the entire packet
81is copied to user space. If you must run an older version of Solaris,
82there is a patch available from Sun; ask for bugid 1149065. After
83installing the patch, use "setenv BUFMOD_FIXED" to enable use of
84bufmod(7). However, we recommend you run a more current release of
85Solaris.
86
87If 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
89perhaps errors. Either make sure your path has /opt/SUNWspro/bin
90before /usr/ucb or else:
91
92    setenv CC /opt/SUNWspro/bin/cc
93
94before running configure. (You might have to do a "make distclean"
95if you already ran configure once).
96
97Also note that "make depend" won't work; while all of the known
98universe uses -M, the SPARCompiler uses -xM to generate makefile
99dependencies.
100
101If you are trying to do packet capture with a FORE ATM card, you may or
102may not be able to. They usually only release their driver in object
103code so unless their driver supports packet capture, there's not much
104libpcap can do.
105
106If you get an error like:
107
108    tcpdump: recv_ack: bind error 0x???
109
110when using DLPI, look for the DL_ERROR_ACK error return values, usually
111in /usr/include/sys/dlpi.h, and find the corresponding value.
112
113Under {DEC OSF/1, Digital UNIX, Tru64 UNIX}, packet capture must be
114enabled before it can be used.  For instructions on how to enable packet
115filter support, see:
116
117	ftp://ftp.digital.com/pub/Digital/dec-faq/Digital-UNIX
118
119Look for the "How do I configure the Berkeley Packet Filter and capture
120tcpdump traces?" item.
121
122Once you enable packet filter support, your OSF system will support bpf
123natively.
124
125Under Ultrix, packet capture must be enabled before it can be used. For
126instructions on how to enable packet filter support, see:
127
128	ftp://ftp.digital.com/pub/Digital/dec-faq/ultrix
129
130If you use HP-UX, you must have at least version 9 and either the
131version of cc that supports ANSI C (cc -Aa) or else use the GNU C
132compiler. You must also buy the optional streams package. If you don't
133have:
134
135    /usr/include/sys/dlpi.h
136    /usr/include/sys/dlpi_ext.h
137
138then you don't have the streams package. In addition, we believe you
139need to install the "9.X LAN and DLPI drivers cumulative" patch
140(PHNE_6855) to make the version 9 DLPI work with libpcap.
141
142The DLPI streams package is standard starting with HP-UX 10.
143
144The HP implementation of DLPI is a little bit eccentric. Unlike
145Solaris, you must attach /dev/dlpi instead of the specific /dev/*
146network pseudo device entry in order to capture packets. The PPA is
147based on the ifnet "index" number. Under HP-UX 9, it is necessary to
148read /dev/kmem and the kernel symbol file (/hp-ux). Under HP-UX 10,
149DLPI can provide information for determining the PPA. It does not seem
150to be possible to trace the loopback interface. Unlike other DLPI
151implementations, PHYS implies MULTI and SAP and you get an error if you
152try to enable more than one promiscuous mode at a time.
153
154It is impossible to capture outbound packets on HP-UX 9.  To do so on
155HP-UX 10, you will, apparently, need a late "LAN products cumulative
156patch" (at one point, it was claimed that this would be PHNE_18173 for
157s700/10.20; at another point, it was claimed that the required patches
158were PHNE_20892, PHNE_20725 and PHCO_10947, or newer patches), and to do
159so on HP-UX 11 you will, apparently, need the latest lancommon/DLPI
160patches and the latest driver patch for the interface(s) in use on HP-UX
16111 (at one point, it was claimed that patches PHNE_19766, PHNE_19826,
162PHNE_20008, and PHNE_20735 did the trick).
163
164Furthermore, on HP-UX 10, you will need to turn on a kernel switch by
165doing
166
167	echo 'lanc_outbound_promisc_flag/W 1' | adb -w /stand/vmunix /dev/mem
168
169You would have to arrange that this happen on reboots; the right way to
170do 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
174Finally, testing shows that there can't be more than one simultaneous
175DLPI user per network interface.
176
177If you use Linux, this version of libpcap is known to compile and run
178under Red Hat 4.0 with the 2.0.25 kernel.  It may work with earlier 2.X
179versions but is guaranteed not to work with 1.X kernels.  Running more
180than one libpcap program at a time, on a system with a 2.0.X kernel, can
181cause problems since promiscuous mode is implemented by twiddling the
182interface flags from the libpcap application; the packet capture
183mechanism in the 2.2 and later kernels doesn't have this problem.  Also,
184packet timestamps aren't very good.  This appears to be due to haphazard
185handling of the timestamp in the kernel.
186
187Note well: there is rumoured to be a version of tcpdump floating around
188called 3.0.3 that includes libpcap and is supposed to support Linux. 
189You should be advised that neither the Network Research Group at LBNL
190nor the Tcpdump Group ever generated a release with this version number. 
191The LBNL Network Research Group notes with interest that a standard
192cracker trick to get people to install trojans is to distribute bogus
193packages that have a version number higher than the current release. 
194They also noted with annoyance that 90% of the Linux related bug reports
195they got are due to changes made to unofficial versions of their page. 
196If you are having trouble but aren't using a version that came from
197tcpdump.org, please try that before submitting a bug report!
198
199On Linux, libpcap will not work if the kernel does not have the packet
200socket option enabled; see the README.linux file for information about
201this.
202
203If you use AIX, you may not be able to build libpcap from this release.
204We do not have an AIX system in house so it's impossible for us to test
205AIX 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
2072.7.2, and that you may need to run strload before running a libpcap
208application.
209
210Read the README.aix file for information on installing libpcap and
211configuring your system to be able to support libpcap.
212
213If you use NeXTSTEP, you will not be able to build libpcap from this
214release. We hope to support this operating system in some future
215release of libpcap.
216
217If you use SINIX, you should be able to build libpcap from this
218release. It is known to compile and run on SINIX-Y/N 5.42 with the C-DS
219V1.0 or V1.1 compiler. But note that in some releases of SINIX, yacc
220emits incorrect code; if grammar.y fails to compile, change every
221occurence of:
222
223	#ifdef YYDEBUG
224
225to:
226	#if YYDEBUG
227
228Another workaround is to use flex and bison.
229
230If you use SCO, you might have trouble building libpcap from this
231release. We do not have a machine running SCO and have not had reports
232of anyone successfully building on it. Since SCO apparently supports
233DLPI, it's possible the current version works. Meanwhile, SCO provides
234a tcpdump binary as part of their "Network/Security Tools" package:
235
236    http://www.sco.com/technology/internet/goodies/#SECURITY
237
238There is also a README that explains how to enable packet capture.
239
240If you use UnixWare, you will not be able to build libpcap from this
241release. We hope to support this operating system in some future
242release of libpcap. Meanwhile, there appears to be an UnixWare port of
243libpcap 0.0 (and tcpdump 3.0) in:
244
245    ftp://ftp1.freebird.org/pub/mirror/freebird/internet/systools/
246
247UnixWare appears to use a hacked version of DLPI.
248
249If linking tcpdump fails with "Undefined: _alloca" when using bison on
250a Sun4, your version of bison is broken. In any case version 1.16 or
251higher is recommended (1.14 is known to cause problems 1.16 is known to
252work). Either pick up a current version from:
253
254	ftp://ftp.gnu.org/pub/gnu/bison
255
256or 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
268right after the (100 line!) GNU license comment in bison.simple, remove
269grammar.[co] and fire up make again.
270
271If you use SunOS 4, your kernel must support streams NIT. If you run a
272libpcap program and it dies with:
273
274    /dev/nit: No such device
275
276You must add streams NIT support to your kernel configuration, run
277config and boot the new kernel.
278
279If you are running a version of SunOS earlier than 4.1, you will need
280to replace the Sun supplied /sys/sun{3,4,4c}/OBJ/nit_if.o with the
281appropriate version from this distribution's SUNOS4 subdirectory and
282build 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
289These nit replacements fix a bug that makes nit essentially unusable in
290pre-SunOS 4.1.  In addition, our sun4c-sunos4.0.3c nit gives you
291timestamps to the resolution of the SS-1 clock (1 us) rather than the
292lousy 20ms timestamps Sun gives you  (tcpdump will print out the full
293timestamp resolution if it finds it's running on a SS-1).
294
295FILES
296-----
297CHANGES		- description of differences between releases
298FILES		- list of files exported as part of the distribution
299INSTALL		- this file
300Makefile.in	- compilation rules (input to the configure script)
301README		- description of distribution
302SUNOS4		- pre-SunOS 4.1 replacement kernel nit modules
303VERSION		- version of this release
304aclocal.m4	- autoconf macros
305bpf/net		- copies of bpf_filter.c and bpf.h
306bpf_filter.c	- symlink to bpf/net/bpf_filter.c
307bpf_image.c	- bpf disassembly routine
308config.guess	- autoconf support
309config.sub	- autoconf support
310configure	- configure script (run this first)
311configure.in	- configure script source
312etherent.c	- /etc/ethers support routines
313ethertype.h	- ethernet protocol types and names definitions
314gencode.c	- bpf code generation routines
315gencode.h	- bpf code generation definitions
316grammar.y	- filter string grammar
317inet.c		- network routines
318install-sh	- BSD style install script
319lbl/gnuc.h	- gcc macros and defines
320lbl/os-*.h	- os dependent defines and prototypes
321mkdep		- construct Makefile dependency list
322nametoaddr.c	- hostname to address routines
323net		- symlink to bpf/net
324optimize.c	- bpf optimization routines
325pcap-bpf.c	- BSD Packet Filter support
326pcap-dlpi.c	- Data Link Provider Interface support
327pcap-enet.c	- enet support
328pcap-int.h	- internal libpcap definitions
329pcap-namedb.h	- public libpcap name database definitions
330pcap-nit.c	- Network Interface Tap support
331pcap-nit.h	- Network Interface Tap definitions
332pcap-null.c	- dummy monitor support (allows offline use of libpcap)
333pcap-pf.c	- Packet Filter support
334pcap-pf.h	- Packet Filter definitions
335pcap-snit.c	- Streams based Network Interface Tap support
336pcap-snoop.c	- Snoop network monitoring support
337pcap.3		- manual entry
338pcap.c		- pcap utility routines
339pcap.h		- public libpcap definitions
340ppp.h		- Point to Point Protocol definitions
341savefile.c	- offline support
342scanner.l	- filter string scanner
343