1<HTML><HEAD> 2<STYLE type="text/css"> 3<!-- 4A { text-decoration:none } 5--> 6</STYLE> 7</HEAD> 8<BODY> 9 10<TABLE WIDTH=100%><TR> 11 <TD ALIGN=LEFT VALIGN=TOP> 12 <FONT SIZE=+0 FACE="COURIER"><B>A "Distributed Pcap" for<BR>Remote Monitoring LANs & WANs</B><BR> 13 (Design Notes for the SITA ACN device)</FONT> 14 </TD> 15 <TD ALIGN=RIGHT VALIGN=TOP> 16 Fulko Hew<BR>SITA INC Canada, Inc.<BR>Revised: October 2, 2007 17 </TD> 18</TR></TABLE> 19 20 21<H3>SUMMARY</H3> 22<UL> 23 <STRONG>Note:</STRONG> This document is part of the libpcap Git and was derived from 'pcap.3' (circa Aug/07). 24 <P> 25 The ACN provides a customized/distributed version of this library that allows SMPs to 26 interact with the various IOPs within the site providing a standard mechanism 27 to capture LAN and WAN message traffic. 28 <P> 29 <CENTER> 30 <TABLE BORDER=1 CELLSPACING=0 CELLPADDING=3 WIDTH=75%> 31 <TR> 32 <TH VALIGN=TOP>SMP</TH> 33 <TD VALIGN=TOP>The Supervisory Management Processor where Wireshark (or equivalent) 34 runs in conjunction with a libpcap front-end.</TD> 35 </TR> 36 <TR> 37 <TH VALIGN=TOP>IOP</TH> 38 <TD VALIGN=TOP>I/O Processors where the monitored ports exist in conjunction 39 with a custom device driver/libpcap back-end.</TD> 40 </TR> 41 </TABLE> 42 </CENTER> 43 <P> 44 Each IOP will be capable of supporting multiple connections from an SMP 45 enabling monitoring of more than one interface at a time, each through 46 its own separate connection. The IOP is responsible to ensure and report 47 an error if any attempt is made to monitor the same interface more than once. 48 <P> 49 There are three applications that will be supported by the ACN version of libpcap. 50 They each use a slightly different mode for looping/capturing and termination 51 as summarized in the following table: 52 <P> 53 <CENTER> 54 <TABLE BORDER=1 CELLSPACING=0 CELLPADDING=3> 55 <TR><TH>Application</TH> <TH>Capture</TH> <TH>Termination</TH></TR> 56 <TR><TH VALIGN=TOP NOWRAP>wireshark</TH> 57 <TD VALIGN=TOP>pcap_dispatch(all packets in one buffer of capture only)</TD> 58 <TD VALIGN=TOP>pcap_breakloop()</TD> 59 </TR> 60 <TR><TH VALIGN=TOP NOWRAP>tshark</TH> 61 <TD VALIGN=TOP>pcap_dispatch(one buffer of capture only)</TD> 62 <TD VALIGN=TOP>Since a CTRL-C was used to terminate the application, pcap_breakloop() is never called.</TD> 63 </TR> 64 <TR><TH VALIGN=TOP NOWRAP>tcpdump</TH> 65 <TD VALIGN=TOP>pcap_loop(all packets in the next buffer, and loop forever)</TD> 66 <TD VALIGN=TOP>pcap_breakloop()</TD> 67 </TR> 68 </TABLE> 69 </CENTER> 70 <P> 71 <B>Note: </B>In all cases, the termination of capturing is always (apparently) followed by 72 pcap_close(). Pcap_breakloop() is only used to stop/suspend looping/processing, 73 and upon close interpretation of the function definitions, it is possible to resume 74 capturing following a pcap_breakloop() without any re-initialization. 75 <P> 76 <H4>ACN Limitations</H4> 77 <OL> 78 <LI>Monitoring of backup IOPs is not currently supported. 79 <LI>Ethernet interfaces cannot be monitored in promiscuous mode. 80 </OL> 81 82</UL> 83 84<H3>ROUTINES</H3> 85<UL> 86 The following list of functions is the sub-set of Pcap functions that have been 87 altered/enhanced to support the ACN remote monitoring facility. The remainder of the Pcap 88 functions continue to perform their duties un-altered. Libpcap only supports this 89 mode of operation if it has been configured/compiled for SITA/ACN support. 90 <P> 91 <UL><FONT FACE=COURIER> 92 pcap_findalldevs<BR> 93 pcap_freealldevs<BR> 94 pcap_open_live<BR> 95 pcap_close<BR> 96 pcap_setfilter<BR> 97 pcap_dispatch<BR> 98 pcap_loop<BR> 99 pcap_next<BR> 100 pcap_next_ex<BR> 101 pcap_stats<BR> 102 </FONT></UL> 103 104 These subroutines have been modified for the ACN specific distributed and remote monitoring 105 ability perform the following basic functions. More detail is provided in the 106 "SMP/IOP Inter-Process Communication Protocol" section. 107 <P> 108<TABLE BORDER=1 CELLSPACING=0 CELLPADDING=3> 109 <TR> 110 <TD VALIGN=TOP ROWSPAN=2><B>pcap_open_live()</B></TD> 111 <TD VALIGN=TOP>Used to obtain a packet capture descriptor to look at packets on the network.</TD> 112 </TR> 113 <TR><TD><TABLE BORDER=0 CELLSPACING=0 CELLPADDING=3 WIDTH=100%> 114 <TR><TH VALIGN=TOP NOWRAP>SMP -> IOP</TH> 115 <TD> 116 The SMP will open a connection to the selected IOP on its 'sniffer' port 117 to ensure it is available. It sends a null terminated string identifying 118 the interface to be monitored. 119 </TD> 120 </TR> 121 <TR><TH VALIGN=TOP NOWRAP>IOP -> SMP</TH> 122 <TD> 123 After any required processing is complete, the IOP will return a 124 null terminated string containing an error message if one occurred. 125 If no error occurred, a empty string is still returned. 126 Errors are: 127 <UL> 128 <LI>"Interface (xxx) does not exist." 129 <LI>"Interface (xxx) not configured." 130 <LI>"Interface (xxx) already being monitored." 131 </UL> 132 </TD> 133 </TR> 134 </TABLE></TD></TR> 135 136 <TR> 137 <TD VALIGN=TOP ROWSPAN=2><B>pcap_findalldevs()</B></TD> 138 <TD VALIGN=TOP>It constructs a list of network devices that can be opened with pcap_open_live().</TD> 139 </TR> 140 <TR><TD><TABLE BORDER=0 CELLSPACING=0 CELLPADDING=3 WIDTH=100%> 141 <TR><TH VALIGN=TOP NOWRAP>SMP</TH> 142 <TD> 143 It obtains a list of IOPs currently available (via /etc/hosts). 144 </TD> 145 </TR> 146 <TR><TH VALIGN=TOP NOWRAP>SMP -> IOP</TH> 147 <TD> 148 The SMP will sequentially open a connection to each IOP on its 'sniffer' port to ensure 149 the IOP is available. 150 It sends a null terminated empty interface ID followed by the query request command. 151 </TD> 152 </TR> 153 <TR><TH VALIGN=TOP NOWRAP>IOP -> SMP</TH> 154 <TD>The IOP returns an error response and its list of devices. 155 </TD> 156 </TR> 157 <TR><TH VALIGN=TOP NOWRAP>SMP -> IOP</TH> 158 <TD> 159 The SMP closes the TCP connection with each IOP. 160 </TD> 161 </TR> 162 <TR><TH VALIGN=TOP NOWRAP>SMP</TH> 163 <TD> 164 The SMP adds the received information to its internal structure. 165 </TD> 166 </TR> 167 </TABLE></TD></TR> 168 169 <TR> 170 <TD VALIGN=TOP ROWSPAN=2><B>pcap_freealldevs()</B></TD> 171 <TD VALIGN=TOP>Used to free a list allocated by pcap_findalldevs().</TD> 172 </TR> 173 <TR><TD><TABLE BORDER=0 CELLSPACING=0 CELLPADDING=3 WIDTH=100%> 174 <TR><TH VALIGN=TOP NOWRAP>SMP</TH> 175 <TD> 176 The SMP frees the structure it built as a result of the previous 177 invocation of pcap_findalldevs(). 178 </TD> 179 </TR> 180 </TABLE></TD></TR> 181 182 <TR> 183 <TD VALIGN=TOP ROWSPAN=2><B>pcap_dispatch()</B></TD> 184 <TD VALIGN=TOP>Used to collect and process packets.</TD> 185 </TR> 186 <TR><TD><TABLE BORDER=0 CELLSPACING=0 CELLPADDING=3 WIDTH=100%> 187 <TR><TH VALIGN=TOP NOWRAP>SMP -> IOP</TH> 188 <TD> 189 On the first invocation of pcap_dispatch(), pcap_loop(), or pcap_next(), or pcap_next_ex() following a pcap_open_live(), 190 the SMP will pass down the monitor start command and various parameters the IOP should use. 191 </TD> 192 </TR> 193 <TR><TH VALIGN=TOP NOWRAP>IOP -> SMP</TH> 194 <TD> 195 The IOP now sends a stream of captured data. 196 </TD> 197 </TR> 198 <TR><TH VALIGN=TOP NOWRAP>SMP</TH> 199 <TD> 200 The SMP will read the reverse channel of the connection between the SMP and the 201 IOP that provides the captured data (via 'p->read_op' which is 'pcap_read_linux()' 202 until the select() call returns a 'no more data' indication. 203 It will the process (at most) the next 'cnt' packets and invoke the specified 204 callback function for each packet processed. 205 </TD> 206 </TR> 207 <TR><TH VALIGN=TOP NOWRAP>IOP</TH> 208 <TD> 209 The IOP continues to listen for additional commands as well as capturing and forwarding data to the SMP. 210 </TD> 211 </TR> 212 </TABLE></TD></TR> 213 214 <TR> 215 <TD VALIGN=TOP ROWSPAN=2><B>pcap_loop()</B></TD> 216 <TD VALIGN=TOP> 217 Is similar to pcap_dispatch() except it keeps reading packets until 218 the requested number of packets are processed or an error occurs. 219 </TD> 220 </TR> 221 <TR><TD><TABLE BORDER=0 CELLSPACING=0 CELLPADDING=3 WIDTH=100%> 222 <TR><TH VALIGN=TOP NOWRAP>SMP -> IOP</TH> 223 <TD> 224 On the first invocation of pcap_dispatch(), pcap_loop(), or pcap_next(), or pcap_next_ex() following a pcap_open_live(), 225 the SMP will pass down the monitor start command and various parameters the IOP should use. 226 </TD> 227 </TR> 228 <TR><TH VALIGN=TOP NOWRAP>IOP -> SMP</TH> 229 <TD> 230 The IOP now sends a stream of captured data. 231 </TD> 232 </TR> 233 <TR><TH VALIGN=TOP NOWRAP>SMP</TH> 234 <TD> 235 The SMP continuously reads the next packet from the reverse channel of the connection 236 between the SMP and the IOP that provides the captured data (via 'p->read_op' 237 which is 'pcap_read_linux()' until 'cnt' packets have been received. 238 The specified callback function will be invoked for each packet received. 239 </TD> 240 </TR> 241 <TR><TH VALIGN=TOP NOWRAP>IOP</TH> 242 <TD> 243 The IOP continues to listen for additional commands as well as capturing and forwarding data to the SMP. 244 </TD> 245 </TR> 246 </TABLE></TD></TR> 247 248 <TR> 249 <TD VALIGN=TOP ROWSPAN=2><B>pcap_next()</B></TD> 250 <TD VALIGN=TOP> 251 It reads the next packet (by calling pcap_dispatch() with a count of 1) 252 and returns a pointer to the data in that packet. 253 </TD> 254 </TR> 255 <TR><TD><TABLE BORDER=0 CELLSPACING=0 CELLPADDING=3 WIDTH=100%> 256 <TR><TH VALIGN=TOP NOWRAP>SMP -> IOP</TH> 257 <TD> 258 On the first invocation of pcap_dispatch(), pcap_loop(), or pcap_next(), or pcap_next_ex() following a pcap_open_live(), 259 the SMP will pass down the monitor start command and various parameters the IOP should use. 260 </TD> 261 </TR> 262 <TR><TH VALIGN=TOP NOWRAP>IOP -> SMP</TH> 263 <TD> 264 The IOP now sends a stream of captured data. 265 </TD> 266 </TR> 267 <TR><TH VALIGN=TOP NOWRAP>SMP</TH> 268 <TD> 269 The SMP reads only the next packet from the reverse channel of the connection 270 between the SMP and the IOP that provides the captured data (via calling pcap_dispatch() 271 with a count of 1) and returns a pointer to that data by invoking an internal callback. 272 </TD> 273 </TR> 274 <TR><TH VALIGN=TOP NOWRAP>IOP</TH> 275 <TD> 276 The IOP continues to listen for additional commands as well as capturing and forwarding data to the SMP. 277 </TD> 278 </TR> 279 </TABLE></TD></TR> 280 281 <TR> 282 <TD VALIGN=TOP ROWSPAN=2><B>pcap_next_ex()</B></TD> 283 <TD VALIGN=TOP>Reads the next packet and returns a success/failure indication.</TD> 284 </TR> 285 <TR><TD><TABLE BORDER=0 CELLSPACING=0 CELLPADDING=3 WIDTH=100%> 286 <TR><TH VALIGN=TOP NOWRAP>SMP -> IOP</TH> 287 <TD> 288 On the first invocation of pcap_dispatch(), pcap_loop(), or pcap_next(), or pcap_next_ex() following a pcap_open_live(), 289 the SMP will pass down the monitor start command and various parameters the IOP should use. 290 </TD> 291 </TR> 292 <TR><TH VALIGN=TOP NOWRAP>IOP -> SMP</TH> 293 <TD> 294 The IOP now sends a stream of captured data. 295 </TD> 296 </TR> 297 <TR><TH VALIGN=TOP NOWRAP>SMP</TH> 298 <TD> 299 The SMP reads only the next packet from the reverse channel of the connection 300 between the SMP and the IOP that provides the captured data (via calling pcap_dispatch() 301 with a count of 1) and returns separate pointers to both the 302 packet header and packet data by invoking an internal callback. 303 </TD> 304 </TR> 305 <TR><TH VALIGN=TOP NOWRAP>IOP</TH> 306 <TD> 307 The IOP continues to listen for additional commands as well as capturing and forwarding data to the SMP. 308 </TD> 309 </TR> 310 </TABLE></TD></TR> 311 312 <TR> 313 <TD VALIGN=TOP ROWSPAN=2><B>pcap_setfilter()</B></TD> 314 <TD VALIGN=TOP>Used to specify a filter program.</TD> 315 </TR> 316 <TR><TD><TABLE BORDER=0 CELLSPACING=0 CELLPADDING=3 WIDTH=100%> 317 <TR><TH VALIGN=TOP NOWRAP>SMP -> IOP</TH> 318 <TD> 319 The SMP sends a 'set filter' command followed by the BPF commands. 320 </TD> 321 </TR> 322 <TR><TH VALIGN=TOP NOWRAP>IOP -> SMP</TH> 323 <TD> 324 The IOP returns a null terminated error string if it failed to accept the filter. 325 If no error occurred, then a NULL terminated empty string is returned instead. 326 Errors are: 327 <UL> 328 <LI>"Invalid BPF." 329 <LI>"Insufficient resources for BPF." 330 </UL> 331 </TD> 332 </TR> 333 </TABLE></TD></TR> 334 335 <TR> 336 <TD VALIGN=TOP ROWSPAN=2><B>pcap_stats()</B></TD> 337 <TD VALIGN=TOP>Fills in a pcap_stat struct with packet statistics.</TD> 338 </TR> 339 <TR><TD><TABLE BORDER=0 CELLSPACING=0 CELLPADDING=3 WIDTH=100%> 340 <TR><TH VALIGN=TOP NOWRAP>SMP -> IOP</TH> 341 <TD> 342 The SMP sends a message to the IOP requesting its statistics. 343 </TD> 344 </TR> 345 <TR><TH VALIGN=TOP NOWRAP>IOP -> SMP</TH> 346 <TD> 347 The IOP returns the statistics. 348 </TD> 349 </TR> 350 <TR><TH VALIGN=TOP NOWRAP>SMP</TH> 351 <TD> 352 The SMP fills in the structure provided with the information retrieved from the IOP. 353 </TD> 354 </TR> 355 </TABLE></TD></TR> 356 357 <TR> 358 <TD VALIGN=TOP ROWSPAN=2><B>pcap_close()</B></TD> 359 <TD VALIGN=TOP>Closes the file and deallocates resources.</TD> 360 </TR> 361 <TR><TD><TABLE BORDER=0 CELLSPACING=0 CELLPADDING=3 WIDTH=100%> 362 <TR><TH VALIGN=TOP NOWRAP>SMP -> IOP</TH> 363 <TD> 364 The SMP closes the file descriptor, and if the descriptor is that of 365 the communication session with an IOP, it too is terminated. 366 </TD> 367 </TR> 368 <TR><TH VALIGN=TOP NOWRAP>IOP</TH> 369 <TD> 370 If the IOP detects that its communication session with an SMP 371 has closed, it will terminate any monitoring in progress, 372 release any resources and close its end of the session. 373 It will not maintain persistence of any information or prior mode of operation. 374 </TD> 375 </TR> 376 </TABLE></TD></TR> 377</TABLE> 378</UL> 379 380<P> 381<H3>SMP/IOP Inter-Process Communication Protocol</H3> 382 383<UL> 384 <LI><P>Communications between an SMP and an IOP consists of a TCP session 385 between an ephemeral port on the SMP and the well known port of 49152 386 (which is the first available port in the 'dynamic and/or private port' 387 range) on an IOP. 388 <LI><P>Following a TCP open operation the IOP receives a null terminated 389 'interface ID' string to determine the type of operation that follows: 390 <LI><P>Every command received by an IOP implies a 'stop trace/stop forwarding' operation must 391 occur before executing the received command. 392 <LI><P>A session is closed when the SMP closes the TCP session with the IOP. 393 Obviously monitoring and forwarding is also stopped at that time. 394 395 <B>Note: </B>All multi-octet entities are sent in network neutral order. 396 <P> 397 398 <TABLE BORDER=0 CELLSPACING=0 CELLPADDING=5> 399 <TR><TH COLSPAN=3><HR WIDTH=100%></TH></TR> 400 <TR> 401 <TD VALIGN=TOP ROWSPAN=6>pcap_findalldevs()</TD> 402 <TD VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER NOWRAP>SMP -> IOP</TD> 403 <TD VALIGN=TOP>Open socket (to each IOP), and sends: 404 <P> 405 <TABLE BORDER=1 CELLSPACING=0 CELLPADDING=3> 406 <TR> 407 <TH VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER>Name/<BR>Purpose</TH> 408 <TH VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER NOWRAP>Size<BR>(in bytes)</TH> 409 <TH VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER>Description</TH> 410 </TR> 411 <TR> 412 <TD VALIGN=TOP>Interface ID</TD> 413 <TD VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER>1</TD> 414 <TD VALIGN=TOP>A NULL to indicate an empty 'interface ID'.</TD> 415 </TR> 416 </TABLE> 417 </TD> 418 </TR> 419 <TR> 420 <TD VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER NOWRAP>IOP -> SMP</TD> 421 <TD VALIGN=TOP>Send its (possibly empty) NULL terminated error response string.</TD> 422 </TR> 423 <TR> 424 <TD VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER NOWRAP>SMP -> IOP</TD> 425 <TD VALIGN=TOP>Sends the 'interface query request': 426 <P> 427 <TABLE BORDER=1 CELLSPACING=0 CELLPADDING=3> 428 <TR> 429 <TH VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER>Name/<BR>Purpose</TH> 430 <TH VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER NOWRAP>Size<BR>(in bytes)</TH> 431 <TH VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER>Description</TH> 432 </TR> 433 <TR> 434 <TD VALIGN=TOP>Interface ID</TD> 435 <TD VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER>1</TD> 436 <TD VALIGN=TOP>A 'Q' (indicating 'interface query request').</TD> 437 </TR> 438 </TABLE> 439 </TD> 440 </TR> 441 <TR> 442 <TD VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER NOWRAP>IOP -> SMP</TD> 443 <TD VALIGN=TOP>The IOP returns a list of sequences of information as 444 defined by the return parameter of this function call (as shown in the following table). 445 Elements are specified by providing an unsigned byte preceding the actual data that contains length information. 446 <P> 447 <TABLE BORDER=1 CELLSPACING=0 CELLPADDING=3> 448 <TR> 449 <TH VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER>Notes:</TH> 450 <TH VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER>Name/<BR>Purpose</TH> 451 <TH VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER NOWRAP>Size<BR>(in bytes)</TH> 452 <TH VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER>Description</TH> 453 </TR> 454 <TR> 455 <TD ROWSPAN=7> </TD> 456 <TD VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=RIGHT>length</TD> 457 <TD VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER>1</TD> 458 <TD VALIGN=TOP>The number of octets in the name field that follows.</TD> 459 </TR> 460 <TR><TD VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=LEFT>Name</TD> 461 <TD VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER>1-255</TD> 462 <TD VALIGN=TOP>The name of the interface. The format of the name is an alphabetic string (indicating 463 the type of interface) followed by an optional numeric string (indicating the interface's 464 sequence number). 465 Sequence numbers (if needed) will begin at zero and progress monotonically upwards. 466 (i.e. 'eth0', 'lo', 'wan0', etc.) 467 <P> 468 For an IOP, the alphabetic string will be one of: 'eth', 'wan', and 'lo' 469 for Ethernet, WAN ports and the IP loopback device respectively. 470 An IOP currently supports: 'eth0', 'eth1', 'lo', 'wan0' ... 'wan7'. 471 <P> 472 <B>Note:</B> IOPs and ACNs will not currently support the concept of 'any' interface.</TD> 473 </TR> 474 <TR><TD VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=RIGHT>length</TD> 475 <TD VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER>1</TD> 476 <TD VALIGN=TOP>The number of octets in the interface description field that follows.</TD> 477 </TR> 478 <TR><TD VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=LEFT>Interface Description</TD> 479 <TD VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER>0-255</TD> 480 <TD VALIGN=TOP>A description of the interface or it may be an empty string. (i.e. 'ALC')</TD> 481 </TR> 482 <TR><TD VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=LEFT>Interface Type</TD> 483 <TD VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER>4</TD> 484 <TD VALIGN=TOP>The type of interface as defined in the description for pcap_datalink() (in network neutral order).</TD> 485 </TR> 486 <TR><TD VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=LEFT>Loopback Flag</TD> 487 <TD VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER>1</TD> 488 <TD VALIGN=TOP>1 = if the interface is a loopback interface, zero = otherwise.</TD> 489 </TR> 490 <TR><TD VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=RIGHT>count</TD> 491 <TD VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER>1</TD> 492 <TD VALIGN=TOP># of address entries that follow. 493 Each entry is a series of bytes in network neutral order. 494 See the parameter definition above for more details.</TD> 495 </TR> 496 <TR> 497 <TD ALIGN=CENTER ROWSPAN=8 WIDTH=1%>Repeated 'count' number of times.</TD> 498 <TD VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=RIGHT>length</TD> 499 <TD VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER>1</TD> 500 <TD VALIGN=TOP>The number of octets in the address field that follows.</TD> 501 </TR> 502 <TR><TD VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=LEFT>Address</TD> 503 <TD VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER>1-255</TD> 504 <TD VALIGN=TOP>The address of this interface (in network neutral order).</TD> 505 </TR> 506 <TR><TD VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=RIGHT>length</TD> 507 <TD VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER>1</TD> 508 <TD VALIGN=TOP>The number of octets in the netmask field that follows.</TD> 509 </TR> 510 <TR><TD VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=LEFT>Network Mask</TD> 511 <TD VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER>0-255</TD> 512 <TD VALIGN=TOP>The network mask used on this interface (if applicable) (in network neutral order).</TD> 513 </TR> 514 <TR><TD VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=RIGHT>length</TD> 515 <TD VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER>1</TD> 516 <TD VALIGN=TOP>The number of octets in the broadcast address field that follows.</TD> 517 </TR> 518 <TR><TD VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=LEFT>Broadcast Address</TD> 519 <TD VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER>0-255</TD> 520 <TD VALIGN=TOP>The broadcast address of this interface (if applicable) (in network neutral order).</TD> 521 </TR> 522 <TR><TD VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=RIGHT>length</TD> 523 <TD VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER>1</TD> 524 <TD VALIGN=TOP>The number of octets in the destination address field that follows.</TD> 525 </TR> 526 <TR><TD VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=LEFT>Destination Address</TD> 527 <TD VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER>0-255</TD> 528 <TD VALIGN=TOP>The destination address of this interface (if applicable) (in network neutral order).</TD> 529 </TR> 530 </TABLE> 531 </TR> 532 <TR> 533 <TD VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER NOWRAP>SMP -> IOP</TD> 534 <TD VALIGN=TOP>Close the socket.</TD> 535 </TR> 536 <TR> 537 <TD VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER NOWRAP>IOP -> SMP</TD> 538 <TD VALIGN=TOP>Close the socket.</TD> 539 </TR> 540 <TR><TH COLSPAN=3><HR WIDTH=100%></TH></TR> 541 <TR> 542 <TD VALIGN=TOP ROWSPAN=2>pcap_open_live()</TD> 543 <TD VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER NOWRAP>SMP -> IOP</TD> 544 <TD VALIGN=TOP>Open socket, and sends: 545 <P> 546 <TABLE BORDER=1 CELLSPACING=0 CELLPADDING=3> 547 <TR> 548 <TH VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER>Name/<BR>Purpose</TH> 549 <TH VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER NOWRAP>Size<BR>(in bytes)</TH> 550 <TH VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER>Description</TH> 551 </TR> 552 <TR> 553 <TD VALIGN=TOP>Interface ID</TD> 554 <TD VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER>'n'</TD> 555 <TD VALIGN=TOP>'n' octets containing a NULL terminated interface name string.</TD> 556 </TR> 557 </TABLE> 558 </TD> 559 </TR> 560 <TR> 561 <TD VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER NOWRAP>IOP -> SMP</TD> 562 <TD VALIGN=TOP>Send its NULL terminated error response string.</TD> 563 </TR> 564 <TR><TH COLSPAN=3><HR WIDTH=100%></TH></TR> 565 <TR> 566 <TD VALIGN=TOP NOWRAP ROWSPAN=2>pcap_dispatch()<BR>pcap_loop()<BR>pcap_next()<BR>pcap_next_ex()</TD> 567 <TD VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER NOWRAP>SMP -> IOP</TD> 568 <TD VALIGN=TOP>On the first invocation following a pcap_open_live() or pcap_breakloop() additional information is sent: 569 <P> 570 <TABLE BORDER=1 CELLSPACING=0 CELLPADDING=3> 571 <TR> 572 <TH VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER>Name/<BR>Purpose</TH> 573 <TH VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER NOWRAP>Size<BR>(in bytes)</TH> 574 <TH VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER>Description</TH> 575 </TR> 576 <TR> 577 <TD VALIGN=TOP>command</TD> 578 <TD VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER>1</TD> 579 <TD VALIGN=TOP>'M' (indicating 'monitor start')</TD> 580 </TR> 581 <TR> 582 <TD VALIGN=TOP>snaplen</TD> 583 <TD VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER>4</TD> 584 <TD VALIGN=TOP>snaplen</TD> 585 </TR> 586 <TR> 587 <TD VALIGN=TOP>timeout</TD> 588 <TD VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER>1</TD> 589 <TD VALIGN=TOP>timeout value (in milliseconds)</TD> 590 </TR> 591 <TR> 592 <TD VALIGN=TOP>promiscuous</TD> 593 <TD VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER>1</TD> 594 <TD VALIGN=TOP>A flag indicating that the interface being monitored show operate 595 in promiscuous mode. [off(0) / on(NZ)]</TD> 596 </TR> 597 <TR> 598 <TD VALIGN=TOP>direction</TD> 599 <TD VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER>1</TD> 600 <TD VALIGN=TOP>A flag indicating the direction of traffic that should be captuted [both(0) / in(1) / out(2)]</TD> 601 </TR> 602 </TABLE> 603 </TD> 604 </TR> 605 <TR> 606 <TD VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER NOWRAP>IOP -> SMP</TD> 607 <TD VALIGN=TOP>Sends captured packets.</TD> 608 </TR> 609 <TR><TH COLSPAN=3><HR WIDTH=100%></TH></TR> 610 <TR> 611 <TD VALIGN=TOP ROWSPAN=2>pcap_setfilter()</TD> 612 <TD VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER NOWRAP>SMP -> IOP</TD> 613 <TD VALIGN=TOP>At any time, the SMP can issue a set filter command which contains 614 an indicator, a count of the number of statements in the filter, 615 followed by the sequence of filter commands represented as a sequence 616 of C-style structures. 617 <P> 618 <TABLE BORDER=1 CELLSPACING=0 CELLPADDING=3> 619 <TR> 620 <TH VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER>Name/<BR>Purpose</TH> 621 <TH VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER NOWRAP>Size<BR>(in bytes)</TH> 622 <TH VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER>Description</TH> 623 </TR> 624 <TR> 625 <TD VALIGN=TOP>command</TD> 626 <TD VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER>1</TD> 627 <TD VALIGN=TOP>'F' (indicating 'filter')</TD> 628 </TR> 629 <TR> 630 <TD VALIGN=TOP>count</TD> 631 <TD VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER>4</TD> 632 <TD VALIGN=TOP>The number of command in the Berkeley Packet Filter that follow.</TD> 633 </TR> 634 <TR> 635 <TD VALIGN=TOP>BPF program</TD> 636 <TD VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER>'n'</TD> 637 <TD VALIGN=TOP>8 bytes of each command (repeated 'n' times).<BR> 638 Each command consists of that C-style structure which contains: 639 <P> 640 <TABLE BORDER=1 CELLSPACING=0 CELLPADDING=3> 641 <TR> 642 <TH VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER>Name/<BR>Purpose</TH> 643 <TH VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER NOWRAP>Size<BR>(in bytes)</TH> 644 <TH VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER>Description</TH> 645 </TR> 646 <TR> 647 <TD VALIGN=TOP>opcode</TD> 648 <TD VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER>2</TD> 649 <TD VALIGN=TOP>The command's opcode.</TD> 650 </TR> 651 <TR> 652 <TD VALIGN=TOP>'jt'</TD> 653 <TD VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER>1</TD> 654 <TD VALIGN=TOP>The 'jump if true' program counter offset.</TD> 655 </TR> 656 <TR> 657 <TD VALIGN=TOP>'jf'</TD> 658 <TD VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER>1</TD> 659 <TD VALIGN=TOP>The 'jump if false' program counter offset.</TD> 660 </TR> 661 <TR> 662 <TD VALIGN=TOP>'k'</TD> 663 <TD VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER>4</TD> 664 <TD VALIGN=TOP>The 'other' data field.</TD> 665 </TR> 666 </TABLE> 667 <P> 668 Refer to the bpf(4) man page for more details. 669 </TD> 670 </TR> 671 </TABLE> 672 </TD> 673 </TR> 674 <TR> 675 <TD VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER NOWRAP>IOP -> SMP</TD> 676 <TD VALIGN=TOP>In return the IOP will send its (possibly empty) NULL terminated error response string.</TD> 677 </TR> 678 <TR><TH COLSPAN=3><HR WIDTH=100%></TH></TR> 679 <TR> 680 <TD VALIGN=TOP ROWSPAN=2>pcap_stats()</TD> 681 <TD VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER NOWRAP>SMP -> IOP</TD> 682 <TD VALIGN=TOP>At any time, the SMP can issue a 'retrieve statistics' command which contains:<BR> 683 <P> 684 <TABLE BORDER=1 CELLSPACING=0 CELLPADDING=3> 685 <TR> 686 <TH VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER>Name/<BR>Purpose</TH> 687 <TH VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER NOWRAP>Size<BR>(in bytes)</TH> 688 <TH VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER>Description</TH> 689 </TR> 690 <TR> 691 <TD VALIGN=TOP>command</TD> 692 <TD VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER>1</TD> 693 <TD VALIGN=TOP>'S' (indicating 'request statistics')</TD> 694 </TR> 695 </TABLE> 696 </TD> 697 </TR> 698 <TR> 699 <TD VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER NOWRAP>IOP -> SMP</TD> 700 <TD VALIGN=TOP>In return the IOP will send: 701 <P> 702 <TABLE BORDER=1 CELLSPACING=0 CELLPADDING=3> 703 <TR> 704 <TH VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER>Name/<BR>Purpose</TH> 705 <TH VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER NOWRAP>Size<BR>(in bytes)</TH> 706 <TH VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER>Description</TH> 707 </TR> 708 <TR> 709 <TD VALIGN=TOP>ps_recv</TD> 710 <TD VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER>4</TD> 711 <TD VALIGN=TOP>The number of packets that passed the filter.</TD> 712 </TR> 713 <TR> 714 <TD VALIGN=TOP>ps_drop</TD> 715 <TD VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER>4</TD> 716 <TD VALIGN=TOP>The number of packets that were dropped because the input queue was full, 717 regardless of whether they passed the filter.</TD> 718 </TR> 719 <TR> 720 <TD VALIGN=TOP>ps_ifdrop</TD> 721 <TD VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER>4</TD> 722 <TD VALIGN=TOP>The number of packets dropped by the network interface 723 (regardless of whether they would have passed the input filter).</TD> 724 </TR> 725 </TABLE> 726 </TD> 727 </TR> 728 <TR><TH COLSPAN=3><HR WIDTH=100%></TH></TR> 729 <TR> 730 <TD VALIGN=TOP ROWSPAN=1>pcap_close()</TD> 731 <TD VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER NOWRAP>SMP -> IOP</TD> 732 <TD VALIGN=TOP>At any time, the SMP can close the TCP session with the IOP.</TD> 733 </TR> 734 <TR><TH COLSPAN=3><HR WIDTH=100%></TH></TR> 735 </TABLE> 736</UL> 737 738<H3>Interface ID Naming Convention</H3> 739<UL> 740 Each interface within an IOP will be referred to uniquely. Since an currently contains 741 8 monitorable WAN ports and a monitorable Ethernet port, the naming convention is: 742 <P> 743 <CENTER> 744 <TABLE BORDER=1 CELLSPACING=0 CELLPADDING=3> 745 <TR><TH>Interface #</TH> <TH>Type</TH> <TH>Name</TH></TR> 746 <TR><TD ALIGN=CENTER>1</TD> <TD ALIGN=CENTER>WAN</TD> <TD ALIGN=CENTER>wan0</TD></TR> 747 <TR><TD ALIGN=CENTER>2</TD> <TD ALIGN=CENTER>WAN</TD> <TD ALIGN=CENTER>wan1</TD></TR> 748 <TR><TD ALIGN=CENTER>3</TD> <TD ALIGN=CENTER>WAN</TD> <TD ALIGN=CENTER>wan2</TD></TR> 749 <TR><TD ALIGN=CENTER>4</TD> <TD ALIGN=CENTER>WAN</TD> <TD ALIGN=CENTER>wan3</TD></TR> 750 <TR><TD ALIGN=CENTER>5</TD> <TD ALIGN=CENTER>WAN</TD> <TD ALIGN=CENTER>wan4</TD></TR> 751 <TR><TD ALIGN=CENTER>6</TD> <TD ALIGN=CENTER>WAN</TD> <TD ALIGN=CENTER>wan5</TD></TR> 752 <TR><TD ALIGN=CENTER>7</TD> <TD ALIGN=CENTER>WAN</TD> <TD ALIGN=CENTER>wan6</TD></TR> 753 <TR><TD ALIGN=CENTER>8</TD> <TD ALIGN=CENTER>WAN</TD> <TD ALIGN=CENTER>wan7</TD></TR> 754 <TR><TD ALIGN=CENTER>9</TD> <TD ALIGN=CENTER>Ethernet</TD> <TD ALIGN=CENTER>eth0</TD></TR> 755 <TR><TD ALIGN=CENTER>10</TD> <TD ALIGN=CENTER>Ethernet</TD> <TD ALIGN=CENTER>eth1</TD></TR> 756 </TABLE> 757 </CENTER> 758</UL> 759 760<H3>Packet Trace Data Format</H3> 761<UL> 762 The format of the trace data that is sent to the SMP follows a portion of the libpcap file format 763 and is summarized here. This format specifies the generic requirements needed to 764 be able to decode packets, but does not cover ACN specifics such as custom MAC addressing 765 and WAN protocol support. 766 <P> 767 768 Although a libpcap file begins with a global header followed by zero or 769 more records for each captured packet, trace data sent to the SMP does NOT begin with a global header. 770 A trace sequence looks like this: 771 <P> 772 <TABLE> 773 <TR> 774 <TD STYLE="background-color: #c0FFc0"> [Packet Header] </TD> 775 <TD STYLE="background-color: #c0FFc0"> [Packet Data] </TD> 776 <TD STYLE="background-color: #c0c0FF"> [Packet Header] </TD> 777 <TD STYLE="background-color: #c0c0FF"> [Packet Data] </TD> 778 <TD STYLE="background-color: #e0c0c0"> [Packet Header] </TD> 779 <TD STYLE="background-color: #e0c0c0"> [Packet Data] </TD> 780 <TD>...</TD> 781 </TR> 782 </TABLE> 783 784<H4>Packet Header</H4> 785 <UL> 786 Each captured packet starts with a header that contains the following values 787 (in network neutral order): 788 789 <FONT SIZE=-1> 790 <PRE> 791 uint32 tv_sec; /* timestamp seconds */ 792 uint32 tv_usec; /* timestamp microseconds */ 793 uint32 caplen; /* number of octets in the following packet */ 794 uint32 len; /* original length of packet on the wire */ 795 </PRE> 796 </FONT> 797 798 <TABLE BORDER=1 CELLSPACING=0 CELLPADDING=3> 799 <TR> 800 <TD VALIGN=TOP>tv_sec</TD> 801 <TD>The date and time when this packet was captured. 802 This value is in seconds since January 1, 1970 00:00:00 GMT; 803 this is also known as a UN*X time_t. You can use the ANSI C 804 <em>time()</em> function from <em>time.h</em> to get this value, 805 but you might use a more optimized way to get this timestamp value. 806 If this timestamp isn't based on GMT (UTC), use <em>thiszone</em> 807 from the global header for adjustments.</TD> 808 </TR> 809 <TR> 810 <TD VALIGN=TOP>tv_usec</TD> 811 <TD>The microseconds when this packet was captured, as an offset to <em>ts_sec</em>. 812 <B>Beware: </B>this value must never reach 1 second (1,000,000), 813 in this case <em>ts_sec</em> must be increased instead!</TD> 814 </TR> 815 <TR> 816 <TD VALIGN=TOP>caplen</TD> 817 <TD>The number of bytes actually provided in the capture record. 818 This value should never become larger than <em>len</em> or the 819 <em>snaplen</em> value specified during the capture.</TD> 820 </TR> 821 <TR> 822 <TD VALIGN=TOP>len</TD> 823 <TD>The length of the packet "on the wire" when it was captured. 824 If <em>caplen</em> and <em>len</em> differ, the actually 825 saved packet size was limited by the value of <em>snaplen</em> specified 826 during one of the capture directives such as pcap_dispatch().</TD> 827 </TR> 828 </TABLE> 829 </UL> 830 831<H4>Packet Data</H4> 832 <UL> 833 The actual packet data will immediately follow the packet header as a sequence of <em>caplen</em> octets. 834 Depending on the DLT encoding number assigned to the interface, the packet data will contain an additional 835 custom header used to convey WAN port related information. 836 </UL> 837 838<H4>ACN Custom Packet Header</H4> 839 <UL> 840 PCAP, Wireshark and Tcpdump enhancements have been added to the ACN to support 841 monitoring of its ports, however each of these facilities were focused on capturing 842 and displaying traffic from LAN interfaces. The SITA extensions to these facilities 843 are used to also provide the ability to capture, filter, and display information from 844 an ACN's WAN ports. 845 <P> 846 Although each packet follows the standard libpcap format, since there are 847 two types of interfaces that can be monitored, the format of the data 848 packet varies slightly. 849 <P> 850 <UL TYPE=DISC> 851 <LI>For Ethernet (like) devices, the packet format is unchanged from the standard Pcap format. 852 <LI>For WAN devices, the packet contains a 5 byte header that precedes the actual captured data 853 described by the following table: 854 </UL> 855 <P> 856 <CENTER> 857 <TABLE BORDER=1 CELLSPACING=0 CELLPADDING=3> 858 <TR> <TH>Octet</TH> 859 <TH>Name</TH> 860 <TH>Mask/Value</TH> 861 <TH COLSPAN=2>Definition</TH> </TR> 862 863 <TR> <TH VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER ROWSPAN=3>0</TH> 864 <TH VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER ROWSPAN=3>Control / Status</TH> 865 866 <TD VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER><FONT FACE="COURIER">xxxxxxx0</FONT></TD> 867 <TD>Transmitted by capture device</TD> 868 <TD ROWSPAN=2 ALIGN=CENTER>(see 'Errors' octets)</TD> </TR> 869 <TR> <TD VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER><FONT FACE="COURIER">xxxxxxx1</FONT></TD> 870 <TD>Received by capture device</TD> </TR> 871 <TR> <TD VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER><FONT FACE="COURIER">1xxxxxxx</FONT></TD> 872 <TD COLSPAN=2>No buffer was available during capture of previous packet.</TD> </TR> 873 874 <TR> <TH VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER ROWSPAN=8>1</TH> 875 <TH VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER ROWSPAN=8>Signals</TH> 876 877 <TD VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER><FONT FACE="COURIER">xxxxxxx1</FONT></TD> <TD COLSPAN=2>DSR asserted</TD> </TR> 878 <TR> <TD VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER><FONT FACE="COURIER">xxxxxx1x</FONT></TD> <TD COLSPAN=2>DTR asserted</TD> </TR> 879 <TR> <TD VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER><FONT FACE="COURIER">xxxxx1xx</FONT></TD> <TD COLSPAN=2>CTS asserted</TD> </TR> 880 <TR> <TD VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER><FONT FACE="COURIER">xxxx1xxx</FONT></TD> <TD COLSPAN=2>RTS asserted</TD> </TR> 881 <TR> <TD VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER><FONT FACE="COURIER">xxx1xxxx</FONT></TD> <TD COLSPAN=2>DCD asserted</TD> </TR> 882 <TR> <TD VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER><FONT FACE="COURIER">xx1xxxxx</FONT></TD> <TD COLSPAN=2>Undefined</TD> </TR> 883 <TR> <TD VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER><FONT FACE="COURIER">x1xxxxxx</FONT></TD> <TD COLSPAN=2>Undefined</TD> </TR> 884 <TR> <TD VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER><FONT FACE="COURIER">1xxxxxxx</FONT></TD> <TD COLSPAN=2>Undefined</TD> </TR> 885 886 <TR> <TH VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER ROWSPAN=9>2</TH> 887 <TH VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER ROWSPAN=9>Errors<BR>(octet 1)</TH> 888 889 <TH> </TH> <TH>Tx</TH> <TH>Rx</TH> </TR> 890 <TR> <TD VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER><FONT FACE="COURIER">xxxxxxx1</FONT></TD> <TD>Underrun</TD> <TD>Framing</TD> </TR> 891 <TR> <TD VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER><FONT FACE="COURIER">xxxxxx1x</FONT></TD> <TD>CTS Lost</TD> <TD>Parity</TD> </TR> 892 <TR> <TD VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER><FONT FACE="COURIER">xxxxx1xx</FONT></TD> <TD>UART Error</TD> <TD>Collision</TD> </TR> 893 <TR> <TD VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER><FONT FACE="COURIER">xxxx1xxx</FONT></TD> <TD>Re-Tx Limit Reached</TD> <TD>Long Frame</TD> </TR> 894 <TR> <TD VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER><FONT FACE="COURIER">xxx1xxxx</FONT></TD> <TD>Undefined</TD> <TD>Short Frame</TD> </TR> 895 <TR> <TD VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER><FONT FACE="COURIER">xx1xxxxx</FONT></TD> <TD>Undefined</TD> <TD>Undefined</TD> </TR> 896 <TR> <TD VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER><FONT FACE="COURIER">x1xxxxxx</FONT></TD> <TD>Undefined</TD> <TD>Undefined</TD> </TR> 897 <TR> <TD VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER><FONT FACE="COURIER">1xxxxxxx</FONT></TD> <TD>Undefined</TD> <TD>Undefined</TD> </TR> 898 899 <TR> <TH VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER ROWSPAN=9>3</TH> 900 <TH VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER ROWSPAN=9>Errors<BR>(octet 2)</TH> 901 902 <TH> </TH> <TH>Tx</TH> <TH>Rx</TH> </TR> 903 <TR> <TD VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER><FONT FACE="COURIER">xxxxxxx1</FONT></TD> <TD>Undefined</TD> <TD>Non-Octet Aligned</TD> </TR> 904 <TR> <TD VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER><FONT FACE="COURIER">xxxxxx1x</FONT></TD> <TD>Undefined</TD> <TD>Abort Received</TD> </TR> 905 <TR> <TD VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER><FONT FACE="COURIER">xxxxx1xx</FONT></TD> <TD>Undefined</TD> <TD>CD Lost</TD> </TR> 906 <TR> <TD VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER><FONT FACE="COURIER">xxxx1xxx</FONT></TD> <TD>Undefined</TD> <TD>Digital PLL Error</TD> </TR> 907 <TR> <TD VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER><FONT FACE="COURIER">xxx1xxxx</FONT></TD> <TD>Undefined</TD> <TD>Overrun</TD> </TR> 908 <TR> <TD VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER><FONT FACE="COURIER">xx1xxxxx</FONT></TD> <TD>Undefined</TD> <TD>Frame Length Violation</TD> </TR> 909 <TR> <TD VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER><FONT FACE="COURIER">x1xxxxxx</FONT></TD> <TD>Undefined</TD> <TD>CRC Error</TD> </TR> 910 <TR> <TD VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER><FONT FACE="COURIER">1xxxxxxx</FONT></TD> <TD>Undefined</TD> <TD>Break Received</TD> </TR> 911 912 <TR> <TH VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER ROWSPAN=12>4</TH> 913 <TH VALIGN=TOP ALIGN=CENTER>Protocol</TH> 914 915 <TD COLSPAN=3> 916 <CENTER> 917 <TABLE BORDER=0 CELLPADDING=0 CELLSPACING=0> 918 <TR VALIGN=BOTTOM><TD ALIGN=CENTER>0x01</TD> <TD>-</TD> <TD>LAPB (BOP) <SUP> </SUP> </TD> </TR> 919 <TR VALIGN=BOTTOM><TD ALIGN=CENTER>0x02</TD> <TD>-</TD> <TD>Ethernet <SUP>1</SUP> </TD> </TR> 920 <TR VALIGN=BOTTOM><TD ALIGN=CENTER>0x03</TD> <TD>-</TD> <TD>Async (Interrupt IO) <SUP> </SUP> </TD> </TR> 921 <TR VALIGN=BOTTOM><TD ALIGN=CENTER>0x04</TD> <TD>-</TD> <TD>Async (Block IO) <SUP> </SUP> </TD> </TR> 922 <TR VALIGN=BOTTOM><TD ALIGN=CENTER>0x05</TD> <TD>-</TD> <TD>IPARS <SUP> </SUP> </TD> </TR> 923 <TR VALIGN=BOTTOM><TD ALIGN=CENTER>0x06</TD> <TD>-</TD> <TD>UTS <SUP> </SUP> </TD> </TR> 924 <TR VALIGN=BOTTOM><TD ALIGN=CENTER>0x07</TD> <TD>-</TD> <TD>PPP (HDLC) <SUP> </SUP> </TD> </TR> 925 <TR VALIGN=BOTTOM><TD ALIGN=CENTER>0x08</TD> <TD>-</TD> <TD>SDLC <SUP> </SUP> </TD> </TR> 926 <TR VALIGN=BOTTOM><TD ALIGN=CENTER>0x09</TD> <TD>-</TD> <TD>Token Ring <SUP>1</SUP> </TD> </TR> 927 <TR VALIGN=BOTTOM><TD ALIGN=CENTER>0x10</TD> <TD>-</TD> <TD>I2C <SUP> </SUP> </TD> </TR> 928 <TR VALIGN=BOTTOM><TD ALIGN=CENTER>0x11</TD> <TD>-</TD> <TD>DPM Link <SUP> </SUP> </TD> </TR> 929 <TR VALIGN=BOTTOM><TD ALIGN=CENTER>0x12</TD> <TD>-</TD> <TD>Frame Relay (BOP) <SUP> </SUP> </TD> </TR> 930 </TABLE> 931 </CENTER> 932 <P> 933 <STRONG>Note 1:</STRONG> 934 Ethernet and Token Ring frames will never be sent as DLT_SITA (with the 5 octet header), 935 but will be sent as their corresponding DLT types instead. 936 </TD> 937 </TR> 938 </TABLE> 939 </CENTER> 940</UL> 941<P> 942</UL> 943</UL> 944