Provided by: bittwist_3.8-1build2_amd64 bug

NAME

       bittwiste -- pcap capture file editor

SYNOPSIS

       bittwiste [ -I input ] [ -O output ] [ -L layer ] [ -X payload ]
                 [ -C ] [ -M linktype ] [ -D offset ] [ -R range ]
                 [ -S timeframe ] [ -N repeat ] [ -G gaprange ] [ -P seed ]
                 [ -T header ] [ header-specific-options ] [ -h ]

DESCRIPTION

       This  document describes the bittwiste program, the pcap(3) capture file editor. Bittwiste is designed to
       work only with Ethernet frame, e.g. link type DLT_EN10MB in pcap(3), with a maximum frame  size  of  1514
       bytes which is equivalent to an MTU of 1500 bytes, 14 bytes for Ethernet header.

       Bittwiste  can  currently  edit  Ethernet,  ARP,  IPv4,  IPv6, ICMPv4, ICMPv6, TCP, and UDP headers. IPv6
       packets with extension headers or next header field not matching ICMPv6, TCP, or UDP are  not  supported;
       bittwiste  will  simply  write such packets as is to output trace file as it encounters them in the input
       trace file.

       If run with the -X flag, you can append your own payload after any of the  supported  headers;  specified
       using  the  -L  and  -T  flag. Bittwiste will, if not run with the -C flag, recalculate the checksums for
       IPv4, ICMPv4, ICMPv6, TCP, and UDP headers, except for the last fragment of a fragmented  IPv4  datagram;
       bittwiste  does  not  currently  support  checksum  correction for the last fragment of a fragmented IPv4
       datagram.

       While parsing the packets in an input trace file, bittwiste will skip, i.e. write to output trace file as
       is, any truncated packet, for example, an ICMPv4 packet with a captured length of 25 bytes  (we  need  at
       least  28  bytes;  14  bytes  for Ethernet header, minimum 20 bytes for IP header, and 4 bytes for ICMPv4
       header) does not give enough information on its ICMPv4 header for bittwiste to read  and  modify  it.  In
       this  case, you can utilize the -L and -T flag to copy the original packet up to its IP header and append
       your customized ICMPv4 header and data to the packet using the -X  flag.  When  specifying  payload  that
       covers  the  ICMPv4, ICMPv6, TCP, or UDP header and its data, you can use zeros, e.g. 0000 for 2 bytes of
       zeros, for the header checksum which is then corrected automatically by bittwiste.

       In order to simplify the way options are specified, you can only edit packets of a specific type supplied
       to the -T flag per execution of bittwiste on an input trace file. In addition, the -T  flag  must  appear
       last among the general options which are the -I, -O, -L, -X, -C, -M, -D, -R, -S, -N, -G, and -P flag.

OPTIONS

       -I input
              Input  pcap  based  trace file. Typically, input should be a file path to a pcap based trace file.
              However, for convenience, the following template names are also accepted to load trace  file  from
              one of the built-in templates:

              eth    : Ethernet header
              arp    : ARP header
              ip     : IPv4 header
              ip6    : IPv6 header
              icmp   : ICMPv4 header
              icmp6  : ICMPv6 header
              tcp    : IPv4 TCP header
              ip6tcp : IPv6 TCP header
              udp    : IPv4 UDP header
              ip6udp : IPv6 UDP header

              Example: -I icmp

       -O output
              Output trace file.

       -L layer
              Copy  up  to the specified layer and discard the remaining data. Value for layer must be either 2,
              3, or 4 where 2 for Ethernet, 3 for ARP, IPv4, or IPv6, and 4 for ICMPv4, ICMPv6, TCP, or UDP.

       -X payload
              Append payload in hex digits to the end of each packet.
              Example: -X 0302aad1
              -X flag is ignored if -L and -T flag are not specified.

       -C     Specify this flag to disable checksum correction.  Checksum  correction  is  applicable  for  non-
              fragmented supported packets only.

       -M linktype
              Replace  the  linktype  stored  in  the  pcap  file header. Typically, value for linktype is 1 for
              Ethernet.
              Example: -M 12 (for raw IP), -M 51 (for PPPoE)

              For the complete list, see:
              https://www.tcpdump.org/linktypes.html

       -D offset
              Delete the specified byte offset from each packet.
              First byte (starting from link layer header) starts from 1.
              -L, -X, -C and -T flag are ignored if -D flag is specified.
              Example: -D 15-40, -D 10, or -D 18-9999

       -R range
              Save only the specified range of packets.
              Example: -R 5-21 or -R 9

       -S timeframe
              Save only the packets within the specified  timeframe  with  up  to  one-second  resolution  using
              DD/MM/YYYY,HH:MM:SS as the format for start and end time in timeframe.
              Example: -S 22/10/2006,21:47:35-24/10/2006,13:16:05
              -S flag is evaluated after -R flag.

       -N repeat
              Duplicate  packets  from  the  input  trace file repeat times. Use this flag to create a stream of
              packets, each with, for example, a random tcp sequence number, from a 1-packet trace file.
              Example: -N 100000
              -N flag is evaluated after -R and -S flag.

       -G gaprange
              Apply inter-packet gap between packets in microseconds from 1 to (2^31 - 1).  Values  in  gaprange
              are inclusive and selected randomly. A single value implies a fixed gap.
              Example: -G 1000-10000 or -G 1000
              -G flag is evaluated after -R, -S, and -N flag.

       -P seed
              Positive  integer  to seed the random number generator (RNG) used, for example, to generate random
              port number. If unset, current timestamp will be used as the RNG seed.

              bittwiste uses Mersenne Twister for high-speed uniformly distributed random number generation.

       -T header
              Edit only the specified header. Possible keywords for header are, eth, arp, ip, ip6, icmp,  icmp6,
              tcp, or udp. -T flag must appear last among the general options.

       -h     Print version information and usage.

       header-specific-options
              Each  packet  that  matches  the  type  supplied  to  the -T flag is modified based on the options
              described below:

              Options for eth (RFC 894):

              -d dmac or omac,nmac
                     Destination MAC address. If omac and nmac are specified,  any  instances  of  omac  in  the
                     destination  MAC  address  field  will  be  replaced with nmac. You can also use the string
                     'rand' for a random MAC address.

                     Examples:
                     -d 00:08:55:64:65:6a
                     -d rand
                     -d 00:08:55:64:65:6a,rand

              -s smac or omac,nmac
                     Source MAC address. If omac and nmac are specified, any instances of omac in the source MAC
                     address field will be replaced with nmac. You can also use the string 'rand' for  a  random
                     MAC address.

                     Examples:
                     -s 00:13:20:3e:ab:cf
                     -s rand
                     -s 00:13:20:3e:ab:cf,rand

              -t type
                     EtherType. Possible keywords for type are, ip, ip6, and arp only.

              Options for arp (RFC 826):

              -o opcode
                     Operation  code  in  integer value between 0 to 65535. For example, you can set opcode to 1
                     for ARP request, 2 for ARP reply.

              -s smac or omac,nmac
                     Sender MAC address. If omac and nmac are specified, any instances of omac in the sender MAC
                     address field will be replaced with nmac. You can also use the string 'rand' for  a  random
                     MAC address.

                     Examples:
                     -s 00:13:20:3e:ab:cf
                     -s rand
                     -s 00:13:20:3e:ab:cf,rand

              -p sip or oip,nip
                     Sender IP address. Example: -p 192.168.0.1
                     If  oip  and nip are specified, any instances of oip in the sender IP address field will be
                     replaced with nip.

              -t tmac or omac,nmac
                     Target MAC address. If omac and nmac are specified, any instances of omac in the target MAC
                     address field will be replaced with nmac. You can also use the string 'rand' for  a  random
                     MAC address.

                     Examples:
                     -t 00:08:55:64:65:6a
                     -t rand
                     -t 00:08:55:64:65:6a,rand

              -q tip or oip,nip
                     Target IP address. Example: -q 192.168.0.2
                     If  oip  and nip are specified, any instances of oip in the target IP address field will be
                     replaced with nip.

              Options for ip (RFC 791):

              -c ds_field
                     6-bit DS field (first 6-bit of 8-bit type of service field).

                     Some of the service class name mapping to ds_field value from RFC 4594:

                     0  : Standard (CS0)
                     8  : Low-priority data (CS1)
                     16 : OAM (CS2)
                     24 : Broadcast video (CS3)
                     32 : Real-time interactive (CS4)

                     Example: -c 16 or -c 0x10 (to classify packet for operation and management of the network)

                     For more information on DS field, see RFC 2474 and RFC 4594.

              -e ecn_field
                     2-bit ECN field (last 2-bit of 8-bit type of service field).

                     ecn_field can be set to one of the 4 values below:

                     0 : Not-ECT
                     1 : ECT(1)
                     2 : ECT(0)
                     3 : CE

                     Example: -e 3 or -e 0x03 (to indicate congestion to the end hosts)

                     For more information on ECN field, see RFC 3168.

              -i id or oi,ni
                     Identification in integer value between 0 to  65535.  If  oi  and  ni  are  specified,  any
                     instances  of oi in the identification field will be replaced with ni. You can also use the
                     string 'rand' for a random identification.

                     Example: -i 2000, -i rand, or -i 1000,rand

              -f flags
                     Control flags. Possible characters for flags are:

                     - : remove all flags
                     r : set the reserved flag
                     d : set the don't fragment flag
                     m : set the more fragment flag

                     Example: -f d
                     If any of the flags is specified, all original flags are removed automatically.

              -o offset
                     Fragment offset in integer value between 0 to 7770. Value for offset represents the  number
                     of 64-bit segments contained in earlier fragments which must not exceed 7770 (62160 bytes).

              -t ttl or ot,nt
                     Time  to live in integer value between 0 to 255 (milliseconds). If ot and nt are specified,
                     any instances of ot in the time to live field will be replaced with nt. You  can  also  use
                     the string 'rand' for a random time to live.

                     Example: -t 64, -i rand, or -i 64,rand

              -p proto or op,np
                     Protocol  number  in  integer  value  between  0  to  255.  If op and np are specified, any
                     instances of op in the protocol number field will be replaced with np. You can also use the
                     string 'rand' for a random protocol number. Some common protocol numbers are:

                     1  : Internet Control Message (ICMP)
                     6  : Transmission Control (TCP)
                     17 : User Datagram (UDP)

                     For the complete list, see:
                     https://www.iana.org/assignments/protocol-numbers

              -s sip or oip,nip
                     Source IP address. If oip and nip are specified, any instances of  oip  in  the  source  IP
                     address  field  will  be  replaced with nip. If CIDR notation (RFC 4632) is specified, e.g.
                     192.168.0.0/16, an IP address will be selected at random from the range.

                     Examples:
                     -s 192.168.0.1
                     -s 127.0.0.1,192.168.0.0/16
                     -s 0.0.0.0/0 (random IPv4 throughout the entire range)

              -d dip or oip,nip
                     Destination IP address. If oip  and  nip  are  specified,  any  instances  of  oip  in  the
                     destination  IP  address  field  will  be replaced with nip. If CIDR notation (RFC 4632) is
                     specified, e.g. 192.168.0.0/16, an IP address will be selected at random from the range.

                     Examples:
                     -d 192.168.0.2
                     -d 127.0.0.2,192.168.0.0/16
                     -d 0.0.0.0/0 (random IPv4 throughout the entire range)

              Options for ip6 (RFC 8200):

              -c ds_field
                     6-bit DS field (first 6-bit of 8-bit traffic class field).

                     Some of the service class name mapping to ds_field value from RFC 4594:

                     0  : Standard (CS0)
                     8  : Low-priority data (CS1)
                     16 : OAM (CS2)
                     24 : Broadcast video (CS3)
                     32 : Real-time interactive (CS4)

                     Example: -c 16 or -c 0x10 (to classify packet for operation and management of the network)

                     For more information on DS field, see RFC 2474 and RFC 4594.

              -e ecn_field
                     2-bit ECN field (last 2-bit of 8-bit traffic class field).

                     ecn_field can be set to one of the 4 values below:

                     0 : Not-ECT
                     1 : ECT(1)
                     2 : ECT(0)
                     3 : CE

                     Example: -e 3 or -e 0x03 (to indicate congestion to the end hosts)

                     For more information on ECN field, see RFC 3168.

              -f flow_label
                     Flow label in integer value between 0 to 1048575 or hexadecimal value  between  0x00000  to
                     0xfffff (20-bit).
                     Example: -f 0

                     Value  of  0  is  to  indicate  that  the  packet  does  not  belong  to any flow. For more
                     information, see RFC 6437.

              -n next_header or on,nn
                     Next header number in integer value between 0 to 255. If  on  and  nn  are  specified,  any
                     instances  of  on  in  the next header field will be replaced with nn. You can also use the
                     string 'rand' for a random next header number. Example of next header numbers:

                     0  : IPv6 Hop-by-Hop Option (HOPOPT)
                     6  : Transmission Control (TCP)
                     17 : User Datagram (UDP)
                     50 : Encap Security Payload (ESP)
                     51 : Authentication Header (AH)
                     58 : ICMP for IPv6 (IPv6-ICMP)

                     For the complete list, see:
                     https://www.iana.org/assignments/protocol-numbers

              -h hop_limit or oh,nh
                     Hop limit in integer value between 0 to 255. If oh and nh are specified, any  instances  of
                     oh  in the hop limit field will be replaced with nh. You can also use the string 'rand' for
                     a random hop limit. Destination host should not discard a packet with hop limit equal to 0.

              -s sip or oip,nip
                     Source IP address. If oip and nip are specified, any instances of  oip  in  the  source  IP
                     address  field  will  be  replaced with nip. If CIDR notation (RFC 4291) is specified, e.g.
                     2001:db8::/64, an IP address will be selected at random from the range.

                     Examples:
                     -s fd00::1
                     -s ::1,2001:db8::/64
                     -s ::/0 (random IPv6 throughout the entire range)

              -d dip or oip,nip
                     Destination IP address. If oip  and  nip  are  specified,  any  instances  of  oip  in  the
                     destination  IP  address  field  will  be replaced with nip. If CIDR notation (RFC 4291) is
                     specified, e.g. 2001:db8::/64, an IP address will be selected at random from the range.

                     Examples:
                     -d fd00::2
                     -d ::2,2001:db8::/64
                     -d ::/0 (random IPv6 throughout the entire range)

              Options for icmp (RFC 792):

              -t type
                     Type of message in integer value between 0 to 255. Some common messages are:

                     0  : Echo reply
                     3  : Destination unreachable
                     8  : Echo
                     11 : Time exceeded

                     For the complete list, see:
                     https://www.iana.org/assignments/icmp-parameters

              -c code
                     Error code for this ICMPv4 message in integer value between 0 to 255. For example, code for
                     time exceeded message may have one of the following values:

                     0 : transit TTL exceeded
                     1 : reassembly TTL exceeded

                     For the complete list, see:
                     https://www.iana.org/assignments/icmp-parameters

              Options for icmp6 (RFC 4443):

              -t type
                     Type of message in integer value between 0 to 255. Some common messages are:

                     3   : Time Exceeded
                     128 : Echo Request
                     129 : Echo Reply

                     For the complete list, see:
                     https://www.iana.org/assignments/icmpv6-parameters

              -c code
                     Code for this ICMPv6 message in integer value between 0 to 255. For example, code for  Time
                     Exceeded message may have one of the following values:

                     0 : hop limit exceeded in transit
                     1 : fragment reassembly time exceeded

                     For the complete list, see:
                     https://www.iana.org/assignments/icmpv6-parameters

              Options for tcp (RFC 9293):

              -s sport or op,np
                     Source  port  number  in  integer value between 0 to 65535. If op and np are specified, any
                     instances of op in the source port field will be replaced with np. You  can  also  use  the
                     string 'rand' for a random port number.

                     Example: -s 2000, -s rand, or -s 1000,rand

              -d dport or op,np
                     Destination  port  number  in integer value between 0 to 65535. If op and np are specified,
                     any instances of op in the destination port field will be replaced with np.  You  can  also
                     use the string 'rand' for a random port number.

                     Example: -d 2000, -d rand, or -d 1000,rand

              -q seq or os,ns
                     Sequence  number  in integer value between 0 to 4294967295. If SYN control bit is set, e.g.
                     character s is supplied to the -f flag, seq represents the initial  sequence  number  (ISN)
                     and  the first data byte is ISN + 1. If os and ns are specified, any instances of os in the
                     sequence number field will be replaced with ns. You can also use the string  'rand'  for  a
                     random sequence number.

                     Example: -q 100000, -q rand, or -q 100000,rand

              -a ack or oa,na
                     Acknowledgment  number in integer value between 0 to 4294967295. If ACK control bit is set,
                     e.g. character a is supplied to the -f flag, ack represents the value of the next  sequence
                     number that the receiver is expecting to receive. If oa and na are specified, any instances
                     of  oa  in  the  acknowledgment number field will be replaced with na. You can also use the
                     string 'rand' for a random acknowledgment number.

                     Example: -a 100000, -a rand, or -a 100000,rand

              -f flags
                     Control flags. Possible characters for flags are:

                     - : remove all flags
                     c : congestion window reduced
                     e : explicit congestion notification echo
                     u : urgent pointer field is significant
                     a : acknowledgment field is significant
                     p : push function
                     r : resets the connection
                     s : synchronizes the sequence numbers
                     f : no more data from sender

                     Example: -f s
                     If any of the flags is specified, all original flags are removed automatically.

              -w win
                     Window size in integer value between 0 to 65535. If ACK control bit is set, e.g.  character
                     a  is  supplied to the -f flag, win represents the number of data bytes, beginning with the
                     one indicated in the acknowledgment number field that the receiver is willing to accept.

              -u urg
                     Urgent pointer in integer value between 0 to  65535.  If  URG  control  bit  is  set,  e.g.
                     character  u  is supplied to the -f flag, urg represents a pointer that points to the first
                     data byte following the urgent data.

              Options for udp (RFC 768):

              -s sport or op,np
                     Source port number in integer value between 0 to 65535. If op and  np  are  specified,  any
                     instances  of  op  in  the source port field will be replaced with np. You can also use the
                     string 'rand' for a random port number.

                     Example: -s 2000, -s rand, or -s 1000,rand

              -d dport or op,np
                     Destination port number in integer value between 0 to 65535. If op and  np  are  specified,
                     any  instances  of  op in the destination port field will be replaced with np. You can also
                     use the string 'rand' for a random port number.

                     Example: -d 2000, -d rand, or -d 1000,rand

SEE ALSO

       bittwist(1), pcap(3), tcpdump(1)

BUGS

       File your bug report and send to:

              Addy Yeow <ayeowch@gmail.com>

       Make sure you are using the latest stable version before submitting your bug report.

       When running bittwiste with both the -N and -G flags, large inter-packet gap may  result  in  the  packet
       timestamp  beyond  Unix epoch 2147483647 (2038-01-19 03:14:07 UTC) to overflow. This is due to the use of
       signed 32-bit integer to store timestamp in pcap(3) header. Simply changing the  data  type,  e.g.  using
       unsigned 64-bit integer, would break the compatibility of the output trace file with existing systems.

       The  workaround  built  into  bittwiste  is  to use Unix epoch 946684800 (2020-01-01 00:00:00 UTC) as the
       starting reference timestamp when -G flag is specified. This translates to a maximum timespan of 38 years
       or 559165 packets in the output trace file when using the maximum inter-packet gap, i.e. -G 2147483647.

COPYRIGHT

       Copyright (C) 2006 - 2023 Addy Yeow <ayeowch@gmail.com>

       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 your 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., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA  02110-1301, USA.

AUTHORS

       Original author and current maintainer:

              Addy Yeow

       The current version is available from https://bittwist.sourceforge.io

                                                   6 July 2023                                      BITTWISTE(1)