I am trying to send a previously recorded traffic (captured in pcap format) with scapy. Currently I am stuck at striping original Ether layer. The traffic was captured on another host and I basically need to change both IP and Ether layer src and dst. I managed to replace IP layer and recalculate checksums, but Ether layer gives me trouble.

Anyone has experience resending packets from capture file with applied changes to IP and Ether layer(src and dst)? Also, the capture is rather big couple of Gb, how about scapy performance with such amounts of traffic?

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scapy is a nice tool, but do you have to do this with scapy? There are other solutions that may be optimized for this... – Mike Pennington Jan 4 at 12:54
Mike, what "other tools" you could recommend? It seemed to me that Scapy was a natural choice for this task. – Jason Bart Jan 4 at 13:03
look at tcpreplay – Mike Pennington Jan 4 at 13:04
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2 Answers

Well, with scapy I came up with the following (sorry for my Python). Hopefully it will help someone. There was a possible simpler scenario where all packets from pcap file are read into memory, but this could lead to problems with large capture files.

from scapy.all import *
global src_ip, dst_ip
src_ip = 1.1.1.1
dst_ip = 2.2.2.2
infile = "dump.pcap"

try:
    my_reader = PcapReader(infile)
    my_send(my_reader)
except IOError:
    print "Failed reading file %s contents" % infile
    sys.exit(1)

def my_send(rd, count=100):
    pkt_cnt = 0
    p_out = []

    for p in rd:
        pkt_cnt += 1
        np = p.payload
        np[IP].dst = dst_ip
        np[IP].src = src_ip
        del np[IP].chksum
        p_out.append(np)
        if pkt_cnt % count == 0:
            send(PacketList(p_out))
            p_out = []

    # Send remaining in final batch
    send(PacketList(p_out))
    print "Total packets sent %d" % pkt_cn
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check this example

from scapy.all import *
from scapy.utils import rdpcap

pkts=rdpcap("FileName.pcap")  # could be used like this rdpcap("filename",500) fetches first 500 pkts
for pkt in pkts:
     pkt[Ether].src= new_src_mac  # i.e new_src_mac="00:11:22:33:44:55"
     pkt[Ether].dst= new_dst_mac
     pkt[IP].src= new_src_ip # i.e new_src_ip="255.255.255.255"
     pkt[IP].dst= new_dst_ip
     sendp(pkt) #sending packet at layer 2

comments:

  • use rdpcap,wrpcap scapy methods to read and write from pcap formatted file
  • you can use sniff(offline="filename") to read packets and you may use prn parameter like this sniff(offline="filename",prn=My_Function) in this case My_Functions will be applied to every pkt sniffed
  • the correct way to write your new ip or mac is to consider it as a string ex: ip="1.1.1.1" and so on as illustrated above.
  • in example: sendp method included in for loop which is slower than making other loop to send packets
  • performance tip: in python using for loops is too slow use map instead if you would like a speed like a for loop in C ,Ref
  • the rdpcap as used above reads the file at once, if the memory available at reading day say 1.5 Gb and you are reading a 2,3,.. Gb file it will fail.
  • if the performance issue is critical for you may use winpcap but you have to write more complex code in C;doing the same task using python/scapy is pretty easy an simple but it is not faster than c
  • it depends which one to use on the level of performance needed
  • if my guess is right you are sending a video stream packets in this case i would use a winpcap if i am sending an 1 mega pixel video or scapy in other cases(lower size per frame)
  • in case of using C/winpcap you will get a great performance in reading pcaps and change the data and resend but you have to be aware of the sam problem (large files) you have to create a buffer with a proper size to use it for reading sending the packets in a quite performance
  • if you packet size constant(which is rare in most cases, i guess) you nay have an advantage get the most of your available memory
  • if you want to use python/scapy for the whole "project/program" you may create the high performance functions in C/Wincap and compile as dll then you can import this dll to your python program and you can use it inside a python program. This way you get benefits of wonderful easy python/Scapy and you only write a specific functions in c so you can get your job done faster and your code to be focused and maintainable
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Thanks for tips, Abdurahman, especially those regarding performance issues! Scapy is a nice tool, but may not be suited for heavy traffic simulation (at least "out of the box"). – Jason Bart Jan 24 at 8:43
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