tcpick - Man Page

tcp stream sniffer and connection tracker

Examples (TL;DR)

Synopsis

tcpick [ -a ] [ -n ] [ -C ]

[ -e count ]
[ -i interface | -r file ]
[ -X timeout ]
[ -D ] [ -F1 | -F2 ]
[ -yH | -yP | -yR | -yU | -yx | -yX ]
[ -bH | -bP | -bR | -bU | -bx | -bX ]
[ -wH[ub] | -wP[ub] | -wR[ub] | -wU[ub] ]
[ -v [ verbosity ]] [ -S ] [ -h ]
[ --separator ]
[ -T | -Tf [ number ]]
[ -E | -Ef [ number ]]
[ -Pc | -Ps ]
[  "filter" ]
[ --help ] [ --version ]

Description

tcpick  is a textmode sniffer libpcap-based that can track tcp streams and saves the data captured in different files, each for every connection,  or displays them in the terminal in different formats (hexdump, printable charachters, raw...) Useful for picking files in a passive way. It is useful to keep track of what users of a network are doing, and is usable with textmode tools like grep, sed, awk.  Happy data hunting :-)

Base Options

-i --interface interface

listen on selected interface, (i.e. ppp0 or eth0). If option -i is omitted, tcpick is able to select the first open interface (usually a ethernet card).

-r --readfile

reads raw packets from a file written with tcpdump -w instead of using a network device.

"filter"

This is the filter for the capturer engine. You can set it in the same way of setting the tcpdump(1) filter. Read tcpdump(1) manpage for other explanations.

-a

Displays host names instead of ip addresses. Warning: for every new ip grabbed a dns query will be generated! Use it carefully on high-traffic network devices!

-C --colors

Uses terminal colors: very nice! It should help you to read the output of tcpick

-D number --dirs number

Create directories to store sniffed sessions. When a directory contains number sessions, a new one will be created.

-e count

Exits when count packets have been sniffed

-E number

Exit when number sniffed connections are detected as "CLOSED"

-Ef number

Exit when the first number connections are detected as "CLOSED"

-F1 -F2 --filenaming 1|2

Choose the filenaming system.
-F1 : tcpick_clientip_serverip.side.dat
(side means clnt, serv or both)
-F2 : tcpick_connectionnumber_clientip_serverip.side.dat

-h

Shows source and destination ip and port; shows tcp flags as letters.

--help

Displays a short help summary

-p

Don't put the network interface in promiscuous mode. Note that the interface might be in  promiscuous  mode  for  some other  reason.

-S

Suppresses the "status of the connection" banner.

--separator

Add a separator for the payloads displayed.

-t

Adds timestamp in hour:minutes:seconds:microseconds format

-td

Like -t with date timestamp in day-month-year format

-T number

Track number connections. It could be very useful on a high-traffic network device.  If number is not specified, it will be set to 1.

-Tf number

Track only the first number connections; the following will be discarded. If number is not specified, it will be set to 1.

-v verbosity

Quite unuseful, yet. Set verbosity level. Actually there are not  really many extra messages to display, this means it is enabled by default (-v1).  Set verbosity level to 0 to suppress extra messages  (-v0) except error messages.  Set verbosity level to 5 to display debug messages  (-v5). There are not other verbosity levels.

-X timeout

Connections are considered EXPIRED when there is no traffic for at least timeout seconds. Default is 600.

--version

Displays the tcpick version

Display the Data in the TCP Packets

These options are prefixed by -y and are useful to display in various ways the content of the packet sniffed (the data, called payload), once it arrives at the listening interface. In that way the tcp duplicates will be not discarded and the packets will not be reordered, but displayed "as is". If you want a fully acknowledged stream, see the -w and -b set of options.

-yH

View data in hexadecimal-spaced mode (for the hexdump see -yx and -yX options.

-yP

Shows data contained in the tcp packets. Non-printable charachters are transformed in dots: ".". Newline character is preserved. This is the best way, in my opinion to show data like HTTP requests, IRC communication, SMTP stuff and so on.

-yR

Displays all kind of charachters, printable and non printable. If something binary is transmitted, the effect will probably be like watching with "cat" at a gzipped file.

-yx

Shows all data after the header in hexadecimal dump of 16 bytes per line.

-yX

Shows all data after the header in hexadecimal and ascii dump with 16 bytes per line.

-yU

Shows all data after the header, but Unprintable charachters are displayed as hexadecimal values between a "<" and a ">" symbol.

Rebuild and Write the TCP Stream to File

The prefix for these options is -w. The TCP stream that has been sniffed with these options will be written to file named:
client_<ip_client>_<ip_server>_<port_server>.tcpick and
server_<ip_client>_<ip_server>_<port_server>.tcpick
With the u flag of the -w option (i.e. -wRu) both client and server data will be written to a unique file named in that way:
<ip_client>_<ip_server>_<port_server>.tcpick
If you use the additional flag b of the -w option  (i.e. -wPub), in the file will be written this banner:

[client|server] offset before:offset after (lenght of rebuilded segment)

to distinguish between client and server data.
The flow is rebuilded, reordered and the duplicates are dropped. In that way it is possible to sniff entire files transmitted via ftp without data corruption (you can see this with md5sum). If no argument is given to -w the data will be written like -wR You can decide to write only client or server data by setting the flag
C (output only client data) and S (output only server data) to the -w set.

-wR

This is the preferred option: data will be written without any changes. Useful for sniffing binary or compressed files.
(-wRC only the client, -wRS only the server)

-wP

Unprintable charachters are written like dots.
(-wPC only the client, -wPS only the server)

-wU

Unprintable charachters are displayed as hexadecimal values between a "<" and a ">" symbol.
(-wPC only the client, -wPS only the server)

-wH

The flow is written in hexadecimal-spaced mode.
(-wHC only the client, -wHS only the server)

Display the Rebuilded TCP Stream

The prefix for these options is -b. This set of options is very useful if you want to redirect the sniffed flow to anoter program with a pipe, and there should be no data corruption. Of course the most useful is -bR to show the data as they are (raw). A very useful feature is the flag C (output only client data) and S (output only server data). I.e.: -bRC will display only the data from the client in raw mode; in that way you can put them in a file with a pipe redirection.

The sub-options are quite the same of the -y set, so you have:

-bH hex-spaced

(-bHC only the client, -bHS only the server)

-bP unprintable displayed as dots

(-bPC only the client, -bPS only the server)

-bR raw mode

(-bRC only the client, -bRS only the server)

-bU unprintable as <hex>.

(-bUC only the client, -bUS only the server)

-bx hexdump

(-bxC only the client, -bxS only the server)

-bU hexdump + ascii

(-bXC only the client, -bXS only the server)

-PC --pipe client

This is an alias for -bRC -S -v0 -Tf1 -Ef1. With this option you are able to track only the first connection (-T1) matched by tcpick and data are displayed as raw. Only data from the client are put on stdout. All messages and banners are suppressed, except error messages (-S -v0), so this option is particulary useful to download an entire fully rebuilded and acknowledged connection.

-PS --pipe server

This is an alias for -bRS -S -v0 -Tf1 -Ef1.

Examples

how to display the connection status:

# tcpick -i eth0 -C

display the payload and packet headers:

# tcpick -i eth0 -C -yP -h -a

display client data only of the first smtp connection:

# tcpick -i eth0 -C -bCU -T1 "port 25"

download a file passively:

# tcpick -i eth0 -wR "port ftp-data"

log http data in unique files (client and server mixed together):

# tcpick -i eth0 "port 80" -wRub

redirect the first connection to a software:

# tcpick -i eth0 --pipe client "port 80" | gzip > http_response.gz
# tcpick -i eth0 --pipe server "port 25" | nc foobar.net 25

Mailing-List

Address: <tcpick-project[a]lists.sourceforge.net>
Archive: http://sourceforge.net/mailarchive/forum.php?forum=tcpick-project
Subscribe: http://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/tcpick-project
If you have new ideas, patches, feature requests or simply need help, don't wait! I will be grateful if you send a message to the mailing list (even if you want to say what you liked most on tcpick).

Tcpick Website

The tcpick website is at http://tcpick.sf.net.
You can find the project page here: http://sourceforge.net/projects/tcpick kindly hosted by the sourceforge team.

Authors

Please check AUTHORS file.

Bugs

Tcpick is an experimental software, and maybe some bugs are described in the KNOWN-BUGS  file.
On some versions of MacOSX Segmentation Fault happens and connections aren't tracked properly.
If you find any other bug, please write to the tcpick mailing list.

See Also

Other nice packet/data sniffers:
tcpdump, ngrep, tcptrack, ettercap, ethereal, snort

License

This program is  free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the  GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at you option) any later version.

This program is distributed in the hope  that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY;  without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.   See the GNU General Public License for more details.

You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330, Boston, MA  02111, USA.