I want to write a small application using Libpcap in C on Linux.

Currently, it starts to sniff and wait for the packets. But that's not what I need actually. I want it to wait for N seconds and then stop listening.

How can I achieve that?

Here is my code:

void got_packet(u_char *args, const struct pcap_pkthdr *header, const u_char *packet)
{
       printf("got packet\n);
}

int main()
{
 int ret = 0;
 char *dev = NULL;   /* capture device name */
 char errbuf[PCAP_ERRBUF_SIZE];  /* error buffer */
 pcap_t *handle;    /* packet capture handle */

 char filter_exp[] = "udp dst port 1500";  /* filter expression */
 struct bpf_program fp;   /* compiled filter program (expression) */
 bpf_u_int32 mask;   /* subnet mask */
 bpf_u_int32 net;   /* ip */
 int num_packets = 10;   /* number of packets to capture */


 /* get network number and mask associated with capture device */
 if (pcap_lookupnet(dev, &net, &mask, errbuf) == -1) {
  fprintf(stderr, "Couldn't get netmask for device %s: %s\n",
      dev, errbuf);
  net = 0;
  mask = 0;
 }


 /* print capture info */
 printf("Device: %s\n", dev);
 printf("Number of packets: %d\n", num_packets);
 printf("Filter expression: %s\n", filter_exp);




 /* open capture device */
 handle = pcap_open_live(dev, SNAP_LEN, 1, 1000, errbuf);
 if (handle == NULL) {
  fprintf(stderr, "Couldn't open device %s: %s\n", dev, errbuf);
  exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
 }



 /* compile the filter expression */
 if (pcap_compile(handle, &fp, filter_exp, 0, net) == -1) {
  fprintf(stderr, "Couldn't parse filter %s: %s\n",
      filter_exp, pcap_geterr(handle));
  exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
 }

 /* apply the compiled filter */
 if (pcap_setfilter(handle, &fp) == -1) {
  fprintf(stderr, "Couldn't install filter %s: %s\n",
      filter_exp, pcap_geterr(handle));
  exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
 }

 /* now we can set our callback function */
 pcap_loop(handle, num_packets, got_packet, NULL);

 /* cleanup */
 pcap_freecode(&fp);
 pcap_close(handle);
}
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18% accept rate
Please format the code. – Nico Huysamen Jan 3 '11 at 10:33
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1 Answer

If you look at this page from the tcpdump website, you can see the follwing:

Opening the device for sniffing

The task of creating a sniffing session is really quite simple. For this, we use pcap_open_live(). The prototype of this function (from the pcap man page) is as follows:

pcap_t *pcap_open_live(char *device, int snaplen, int promisc, int to_ms,
                       char *ebuf)

The first argument is the device that we specified in the previous section. snaplen is an integer which defines the maximum number of bytes to be captured by pcap. promisc, when set to true, brings the interface into promiscuous mode (however, even if it is set to false, it is possible under specific cases for the interface to be in promiscuous mode, anyway). to_ms is the read time out in milliseconds (a value of 0 means no time out; on at least some platforms, this means that you may wait until a sufficient number of packets arrive before seeing any packets, so you should use a non-zero timeout). Lastly, ebuf is a string we can store any error messages within (as we did above with errbuf). The function returns our session handler.

If this does not work, let us know.

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I use pcap_open_live with a time out value but it doesn't stop when 1000 ms ends: pcap_open_live(dev, SNAP_LEN, 1, 1000, errbuf); – xyzt Jan 3 '11 at 10:24
@xyzt - Please post your code. – Nico Huysamen Jan 3 '11 at 10:27
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