rpc.etherd man page on BSDOS

Man page or keyword search:  
man Server   6284 pages
apropos Keyword Search (all sections)
Output format
BSDOS logo
[printable version]



RPC.ETHERD(8)					    RPC.ETHERD(8)

NAME
       rpc.etherd, etherd - network statistic server

SYNOPSIS
       rpc.etherd [ -d ] interface

DESCRIPTION
       rpc.etherd is a value added replacement for the SunOS pro-
       gram rpc.etherd which runs on DEC Ultrix, Linux	and  BSD-
       ish systems with Berkeley Packet Filter.

       The  -d option increases the debugging verbosity level, if
       the program was compiled for it.

       rpc.etherd gathers statistics about the	network	 as  seen
       from  the given network interface.  rpc.etherd must be run
       as root, as it places the interface in  promiscuous  mode.
       rpc.etherd requires a front end to display the statistics,
       such as tkined (1).

       The reporting of these statistics is via SUN remote proce-
       dure call (RPC).

       Although	 rpc.etherd  is	 designed  to  emulate	the SunOS
       rpc.etherd in every way, the exceptions are:

	      Statistics for "other" include both  IP  and  other
	      protocols not categorized by the ether.x specifica-
	      tion.

	      When the protocol filters	 are  in  operation,  the
	      "other" field still reports "other" protocols.  The
	      SunOS version does not.

	      Regardless of the IP packet type,	 host  statistics
	      are  kept	 for  each IP host.  This means that if a
	      host is sending out large amounts of IGMP messages,
	      these  will register.  The SunOS version may or may
	      not do this.  It is reasonably difficult to  verify
	      at this time.

       This  program  causes  a	 substancial  performance  impact
       because it reads ALL packets which arrive on  the  network
       interface.   A  large  queue  is allocated both within the
       kernel and in user space.  A packet filter could be  writ-
       ten  to	overcome  this	somewhat,  but	then  the network
       statistics would only report what the  packet  filter  let
       through.

       rpc.etherd  was written to provide DEC users with a proper
       back end for the ethertop program by the same author.   It
       was  written  in	 a  "clean room / black box" environment,
       meaning without knowlege	 of  SunOS  source  code.   As	a
       result,	obscure	 features and bugs may be present in both

			  5 October 1992			1

RPC.ETHERD(8)					    RPC.ETHERD(8)

       implementations.

SEE ALSO
       tcpdump (1), tkined (1)

DIAGNOSTICS
       Error messages are reported via syslog(3).

       If compiled for debugging, it will spew to stderr too many
       information to be useful.

BUGS
       A  filter  of  any  kind	 applied by a client program will
       affect all clients making  RPC  calls.	Any  client  that
       calls  the etherproc_off procedure will turn of the inter-
       face monitoring, thus rendering other clients useless.

       The ether.x protocol is flawed.	Host addresses are passed
       as int's rather than struct in_addr's.  This causes unnec-
       essary byte swapping of network addresses that are already
       in  network order. This rpc.etherd compensates for this by
       byte swapping internally.

       This version of	rpc.etherd  will  report  random  garbage
       statistics  if  invoked	on a non-ethernet interface (e.g.
       slip or loopback).

       The implementation should use  libcap(3)	 instead  of  re-
       inventing the wheel for each platform.

AUTHOR
       Originally  written  for Ultrix by Guy Cardwell, UC Irvine
       Academic Computing, gcardwel@uci.edu

       Ported to Linux,	 SunOS	and  BPF-using	systems	 (notably
       FreeBSD	2.x) by Stefan Petri <petri@ibr.cs.tu-bs.de>. The
       machine-specific device handling code was taken	from  the
       packet capture library libpcap(3).

			  5 October 1992			2

[top]
                             _         _         _ 
                            | |       | |       | |     
                            | |       | |       | |     
                         __ | | __ __ | | __ __ | | __  
                         \ \| |/ / \ \| |/ / \ \| |/ /  
                          \ \ / /   \ \ / /   \ \ / /   
                           \   /     \   /     \   /    
                            \_/       \_/       \_/ 
More information is available in HTML format for server BSDOS

List of man pages available for BSDOS

Copyright (c) for man pages and the logo by the respective OS vendor.

For those who want to learn more, the polarhome community provides shell access and support.

[legal] [privacy] [GNU] [policy] [cookies] [netiquette] [sponsors] [FAQ]
Tweet
Polarhome, production since 1999.
Member of Polarhome portal.
Based on Fawad Halim's script.
....................................................................
Vote for polarhome
Free Shell Accounts :: the biggest list on the net