freebsd-src/contrib/libpcap/pcap-tstamp.manmisc.in
Joseph Mingrone 6f9cba8f8b
libpcap: Update to 1.10.3
Local changes:

- In contrib/libpcap/pcap/bpf.h, do not include pcap/dlt.h.  Our system
  net/dlt.h is pulled in from net/bpf.h.
- sys/net/dlt.h: Incorporate changes from libpcap 1.10.3.
- lib/libpcap/Makefile: Update for libpcap 1.10.3.

Changelog:	https://git.tcpdump.org/libpcap/blob/95691ebe7564afa3faa5c6ba0dbd17e351be455a:/CHANGES
Reviewed by:	emaste
Obtained from:	https://www.tcpdump.org/release/libpcap-1.10.3.tar.gz
Sponsored by:	The FreeBSD Foundation
2023-03-31 16:02:22 -03:00

202 lines
9.4 KiB
Plaintext

.\"
.\" Copyright (c) 1987, 1988, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997
.\" The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved.
.\" All rights reserved.
.\"
.\" Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
.\" modification, are permitted provided that: (1) source code distributions
.\" retain the above copyright notice and this paragraph in its entirety, (2)
.\" distributions including binary code include the above copyright notice and
.\" this paragraph in its entirety in the documentation or other materials
.\" provided with the distribution, and (3) all advertising materials mentioning
.\" features or use of this software display the following acknowledgement:
.\" ``This product includes software developed by the University of California,
.\" Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory and its contributors.'' Neither the name of
.\" the University nor the names of its contributors may be used to endorse
.\" or promote products derived from this software without specific prior
.\" written permission.
.\" THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED ``AS IS'' AND WITHOUT ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED
.\" WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, WITHOUT LIMITATION, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF
.\" MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
.\"
.TH PCAP-TSTAMP @MAN_MISC_INFO@ "14 July 2020"
.SH NAME
pcap-tstamp \- packet time stamps in libpcap
.SH DESCRIPTION
When capturing traffic, each packet is given a time stamp representing,
for incoming packets, the arrival time of the packet and, for outgoing
packets, the transmission time of the packet. This time is an
approximation of the arrival or transmission time. If it is supplied by
the operating system running on the host on which the capture is being
done, there are several reasons why it might not precisely represent the
arrival or transmission time:
.IP
if the time stamp is applied to the packet when the networking stack
receives the packet, the networking stack might not see the packet until
an interrupt is delivered for the packet or a timer event causes the
networking device driver to poll for packets, and the time stamp might
not be applied until the packet has had some processing done by other
code in the networking stack, so there might be a significant delay
between the time when the last bit of the packet is received by the
capture device and when the networking stack time-stamps the packet;
.IP
the timer used to generate the time stamps might have low resolution,
for example, it might be a timer updated once per host operating system
timer tick, with the host operating system timer ticking once every few
milliseconds;
.IP
a high-resolution timer might use a counter that runs at a rate
dependent on the processor clock speed, and that clock speed might be
adjusted upwards or downwards over time and the timer might not be able
to compensate for all those adjustments;
.IP
the host operating system's clock might be adjusted over time to match a
time standard to which the host is being synchronized, which might be
done by temporarily slowing down or speeding up the clock or by making a
single adjustment;
.IP
different CPU cores on a multi-core or multi-processor system might be
running at different speeds, or might not have time counters all
synchronized, so packets time-stamped by different cores might not have
consistent time stamps;
.IP
some time sources, such as those that supply POSIX "seconds since the
Epoch" time, do not count leap seconds, meaning that the seconds
portion
.RB ( tv_sec )
of the time stamp might not be incremented for a leap second, so that
the fraction-of-a-second part of the time stamp might roll over past
zero but the second part would not change, or the clock might run
slightly more slowly for a period before the leap second.
.LP
For these reasons, time differences between packet time stamps will not
necessarily accurately reflect the time differences between the receipt
or transmission times of the packets.
.LP
In addition, packets time-stamped by different cores might be
time-stamped in one order and added to the queue of packets for libpcap
to read in another order, so time stamps might not be monotonically
increasing.
.LP
Some capture devices on some platforms can provide time stamps for
packets; those time stamps are usually high-resolution time stamps, and
are usually applied to the packet when the first or last bit of the
packet arrives, and are thus more accurate than time stamps provided by
the host operating system. Those time stamps might not, however, be
synchronized with the host operating system's clock, so that, for
example, the time stamp of a packet might not correspond to the time
stamp of an event on the host triggered by the arrival of that packet.
If they are synchronized with the host operating system's clock, some of
the issues listed above with time stamps supplied by the host operating
system may also apply to time stamps supplied by the capture device.
.LP
Depending on the capture device and the software on the host, libpcap
might allow different types of time stamp to be used. The
.BR pcap_list_tstamp_types (3PCAP)
routine provides, for a packet capture handle created by
.BR pcap_create (3PCAP)
but not yet activated by
.BR pcap_activate (3PCAP),
a list of time stamp types supported by the capture device for that
handle.
The list might be empty, in which case no choice of time stamp type is
offered for that capture device. If the list is not empty, the
.BR pcap_set_tstamp_type (3PCAP)
routine can be used after a
.BR pcap_create ()
call and before a
.BR pcap_activate ()
call to specify the type of time stamp to be used on the device.
The time stamp types are listed here; the first value is the #define to
use in code, the second value is the value returned by
.BR pcap_tstamp_type_val_to_name (3PCAP)
and accepted by
.BR pcap_tstamp_type_name_to_val (3PCAP) .
.RS 5
.TP 5
.BR PCAP_TSTAMP_HOST " - " host
Time stamp provided by the host on which the capture is being done. The
precision of this time stamp is unspecified; it might or might not be
synchronized with the host operating system's clock.
.TP 5
.BR PCAP_TSTAMP_HOST_LOWPREC " - " host_lowprec
Time stamp provided by the host on which the capture is being done.
This is a low-precision time stamp, synchronized with the host operating
system's clock.
.TP 5
.BR PCAP_TSTAMP_HOST_HIPREC " - " host_hiprec
Time stamp provided by the host on which the capture is being done.
This is a high-precision time stamp, synchronized with the host
operating system's clock. It might be more expensive to fetch than
.BR PCAP_TSTAMP_HOST_LOWPREC .
.TP 5
.BR PCAP_TSTAMP_HOST_HIPREC_UNSYNCED " - " host_hiprec_unsynced
Time stamp provided by the host on which the capture is being done.
This is a high-precision time stamp, not synchronized with the host
operating system's clock. It might be more expensive to fetch than
.BR PCAP_TSTAMP_HOST_LOWPREC .
.TP 5
.BR PCAP_TSTAMP_ADAPTER " - " adapter
Time stamp provided by the network adapter on which the capture is being
done. This is a high-precision time stamp, synchronized with the host
operating system's clock.
.TP 5
.BR PCAP_TSTAMP_ADAPTER_UNSYNCED " - " adapter_unsynced
Time stamp provided by the network adapter on which the capture is being
done. This is a high-precision time stamp; it is not synchronized with
the host operating system's clock.
.RE
.LP
Time stamps synchronized with the system clock can go backwards, as the
system clock can go backwards. If a clock is not in sync with the
system clock, that could be because the system clock isn't keeping
accurate time, because the other clock isn't keeping accurate time, or
both.
.LP
Host-provided time stamps generally correspond to the time when the
time-stamping code sees the packet; this could be some unknown amount of
time after the first or last bit of the packet is received by the
network adapter, due to batching of interrupts for packet arrival,
queueing delays, etc..
.LP
By default, when performing a live capture or reading from a savefile,
time stamps are supplied as seconds since January 1, 1970, 00:00:00 UTC,
and microseconds since that seconds value, even if higher-resolution
time stamps are available from the capture device or in the savefile.
If, when reading a savefile, the time stamps in the file have a higher
resolution than one microsecond, the additional digits of resolution are
discarded.
.LP
The
.BR pcap_set_tstamp_precision (3PCAP)
routine can be used after a
.BR pcap_create ()
call and after a
.BR pcap_activate ()
call to specify the resolution of the time stamps to get for the device.
If the hardware or software cannot supply a higher-resolution time
stamp, the
.BR pcap_set_tstamp_precision ()
call will fail, and the time stamps supplied after the
.BR pcap_activate ()
call will have microsecond resolution.
.LP
When opening a savefile, the
.BR \%pcap_open_offline_with_tstamp_precision (3PCAP)
and
.BR \%pcap_fopen_offline_with_tstamp_precision (3PCAP)
routines can be used to specify the resolution of time stamps to be read
from the file; if the time stamps in the file have a lower resolution,
the fraction-of-a-second portion of the time stamps will be scaled to
the specified resolution.
.LP
The
.BR pcap_get_tstamp_precision (3PCAP)
routine returns the resolution of time stamps that will be supplied;
when capturing packets, this does not reflect the actual precision of
the time stamp supplied by the hardware or operating system and, when
reading a savefile, this does not indicate the actual precision of time
stamps in the file.
.SH SEE ALSO
.BR pcap (3PCAP)