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DNET(8) | System Manager's Manual | DNET(8) |
NAME¶
dnet
— dumb
networking library test program
SYNOPSIS¶
dnet command
args [...] |
DESCRIPTION¶
dnet
is a simple test program for the
dnet(3) library. It can be used to compose and transmit
network datagrams as a Unix-style filter (e.g. reading from or writing to
files and pipes) or modify the local system network configuration (including
the ARP cache, firewall ruleset, network interfaces, and routing table).
Payload generation commands¶
addr
address [...]- Convert the address (specified as a hostname, IP address, or MAC address) into its binary representation on standard output.
hex
string [...]- Convert the C-style escaped string (shellcode, for instance) into its binary representation on standard output.
rand
len- Write len random bytes to standard output.
Packet encapsulation commands¶
eth
[type
type] [src
mac] [dst
mac]- Prepend the data read from standard input with an Ethernet header on
standard output. The Ethernet type may be specified
as ‘
arp
’, ‘ip
’, or as a hex, octal, or decimal number. arp
[op
op] [sha
mac] [spa
host] [tha
mac] [tpa
host]- Prepend the data read from standard input with an ARP header on standard
output. The ARP op may be specified as
‘
req
’, ‘rep
’, ‘revreq
’, ‘revrep
’, or as a hex, octal, or decimal number. ip
[tos
num] [id
num] [off
offset] [ttl
num] [proto
protocol] [src
host] [dst
dst]- Prepend the data read from standard input with an IP header on standard
output. The fragmentation offset may be specified as
a decimal number (optionally concatenated with
‘
+
’ to indicate more fragments) or as a hex number. The protocol may be specified by name, or as a hex, octal, or decimal number. icmp
[type
num] [code
num]- Prepend the data read from standard input with an ICMP header on standard output.
tcp
[sport
port] [dport
port] [flags
flags] [seq
num] [ack
num] [win
num] [urp
num]- Prepend the data read from standard input with a TCP header on standard
output. A port may be specified by name or hex,
octal, or decimal number. The TCP flags may be
specified as some combination of the characters in the set
‘
SAFRPU
’ or as a hex number. udp
[sport
port] [dport
port]- Prepend the data read from standard input with a UDP header on standard output. A port may be specified by name or hex, octal, or decimal number.
Packet transmission commands¶
send
[device]- Read a packet from standard input and send it over the network. If no device is specified, the packet is assumed to be an IP datagram and routed to its destination. Otherwise, the packet is assumed to be an Ethernet frame and is transmitted on the specified interface.
Kernel interface commands¶
arp show
- Display the kernel ARP cache.
arp get
host- Display the kernel ARP entry for host.
arp add
host mac- Add an ARP entry mapping the mac address for host.
arp delete
host- Delete the ARP entry for host.
fw show
- Display the kernel firewall ruleset.
fw add
|delete
action direction device protocol src[:port[-max]] dst[:port[-max]] [type[/code]]- Add a rule to or delete a rule from the active firewall ruleset. The
action must be either
‘
allow
’ or ‘block
’. The direction must be either ‘in
’ or ‘out
’. The device may specify an interface name, or ‘any
’. The protocol may be specified by name, or as a decimal number. For TCP and UDP protocols, a port (or range, if specified with a max value) may be specified in decimal and appended to the source and/or destination address. For ICMP, a type (and optional code) may be specified in decimal. intf show
- Display the configuration of all network interfaces.
intf get
device- Display the configuration for the interface specified by device.
intf set
device [alias
host] [dst
host] [inet
host] [link
mac] [up
|down
] [arp
|noarp
]- Configure the interface specified by device.
route show
- Display the kernel routing table.
route get
dst- Display the route for the destination dst, specified as a hostname, IP address, or network prefix in CIDR notation.
route add
dst gw- Add a route for the destination dst through the gateway gw.
route delete
dst- Delete the route for the destination dst.
EXAMPLES¶
Send a UDP datagram containing random shellcode:
dnet hex "\xeb\x1f\x5e\x89\x76\x08\x31\xc0\x88\x46\x07\x89" \ "\x46\x0c\xb0\x0b\x89\xf3\x8d\x4e\x08\x8d\x56\x0c\xcd\x80" \ "\x31\xdb\x89\xd8\x40\xcd\x80\xe8\xdc\xff\xff\xff/bin/sh" | \ dnet udp sport 555 dport 666 | \ dnet ip proto udp src 1.2.3.4 dst 5.6.7.8 | dnet send
Save an ARP request in a file and send it twice:
dnet arp op req sha 0:d:e:a:d:0 spa 10.0.0.3 tpa 10.0.0.4 | \ dnet eth type arp src 0:d:e:a:d:0 dst ff:ff:ff:ff:ff:ff > arp.pkt dnet send fxp0 < arp.pkt dnet send fxp0 < arp.pkt
Send a fragmented ping packet:
# Create ping packet with IP header, to set ICMP checksum echo "monkey monkey monkey monkey" | dnet icmp type 8 code 0 | \ dnet ip proto icmp src 1.2.3.4 dst 5.6.7.8 > ping.pkt # Chop off IP header dd if=ping.pkt of=ping.data bs=20 skip=1 # Fragment IP payload split -b 24 ping.data p. # Send fragments dnet ip id 1 off 0+ proto icmp src 1.2.3.4 dst 5.6.7.8 < p.aa | \ dnet send dnet ip id 1 off 24 proto icmp src 1.2.3.4 dst 5.6.7.8 < p.ab | \ dnet send
SEE ALSO¶
AUTHORS¶
Dug Song ⟨dugsong@monkey.org⟩
October 17, 2001 | Linux 5.14.0-427.18.1.el9_4.x86_64 |