bionic (3) POE::Component::Pcap.3pm.gz

Provided by: libpoe-component-pcap-perl_0.04-2_all bug

NAME

       POE::Component::Pcap - POE Interface to Net::Pcap

SYNOPSIS

         use POE::Component::Pcap;

         POE::Component::Pcap->spawn(
                                     Alias => 'pcap',
                                     Device => 'eth0',
                                     Filter => 'host fooble or host blort',
                                     Dispatch => 'got_packet',
                                     Session => $my_session_id,
                                    );

         $poe_kernel->post( pcap => open_live =>
                            'eth0', 80, 1, 100 );

         $poe_kernel->post( pcap => set_filter => 'arp or host zooble' );

         $poe_kernel->post( pcap => set_dispatch => 'target_state' );

         $poe_kernel->post( pcap => 'run' );

         $poe_kernel->post( pcap => 'shutdown' );

DESCRIPTION

       POE::Component::Pcap provides a wrapper for using the Net::Pcap module from POE programs.  The component
       creates a separate session which posts events to a specified session and state when packets are
       available.

   ARGUMENTS
       Alias
           The alias for the Pcap session.  Used to post events such as "run" and "shutdown" to control the
           component.  Defaults to "pcap" if not specified.

       Device
           As a shortcut, the device for Net::Pcap to watch may be specified when creating the component.  If
           this argument is used, Net::Pcap::open_live will be called with a snaplen of 80 octets, a timeout of
           100ms, and the interface will be put in promiscuous mode.  If these values are not suitable, post an
           "open_live" event instead.

       Filter
           Another shortcut, calls Net::Pcap::compile and Net::Pcap::setfilter to set a packet filter.  This can
           only be used if the Device argument is also given; otherwise a "set_filter" event should be posted
           after an "open_live" event (since Net::Pcap must have a "pcap_t" descriptor to work with).

       Dispatch
       Session
           These specify the session and state to which events should be posted when packets are received.

   EVENTS
       The following examples assume that the component's alias has been set to the default value of pcap.

       open_live
             $_[KERNEL]->post( pcap => open_live
                               => 'device', [snaplen], [promsic?], [timeout] );

           Calls Net::Pcap::open_live.  The device name must be specified.  The snaplen, promiscuous, and
           timeout parameters default to 80, 1, and 100 respectively.  This event must be posted (or the Device
           argument must have been passed to spawn()) before anything else can be done with the component.

       set_filter
             $_[KERNEL]->post( pcap => set_filter
                               => 'host fooble or host blort' )

           Sets the Net::Pcap capture filter.  See tcpdump(8) for details on the filter language used by
           pcap(3).

       set_dispatch
             $_[KERNEL]->post( pcap => set_dispatch
                               => 'target_state', 'target_session' );

           Sets the state and session to which events are sent when packets are recevied.  The target session
           will default to the sender of the event if not specified.

           The event posted will have a single argument (available as ARG0) which will be an array reference
           containing the $hdr and $pkt parameters from Net::Pcap.  See the Net::Pcap(3) documentation for more
           details.

       run
             $_[KERNEL]->post( pcap => 'run' );

           Causes the component to register a select_read and start watching for packets.

       shutdown
             $_[KERNEL]->post( pcap => 'shutdown' );

           Shuts the component down.  Causes Net::Pcap::close to be called.

SEE ALSO

       Net::Pcap(3), pcap(3), tcpdump(8), POE(3), POE::Component(3)

AUTHOR

       Mike Fletcher, <fletch@phydeaux.org>

       Copyright 2000-2001, Mike Fletcher.  All Rights Reserved.  This is free software; you may redistribute it
       and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.