Provided by: opa-basic-tools_10.10.3.0.11-1ubuntu3_amd64 

NAME
opapacketcapture
Starts capturing packet data.
To stop capture and trigger dump, use SIGINT or SIGUSR1. Program dumps packets to file and exits.
NOTE: Using opapacketcapture with large amounts of traffic can cause performance issues on the given
host. Intel recommends you use opapacketcapture on hosts with lower packet rates and bandwidth.
Syntax
opapacketcapture [-o outfile] [-d devfile] [-f filterfile]
[-t triggerfile] [-l triggerlag][-a alarm] [-p packets] [-s maxblocks]
[-v [-v]]
Options
--help
Produces full help text.
-o outfile
Specifies the output file for captured packets.
Default is packetDump.pcap
-d devfile
Specifies the device file for capturing packets.
-f filterfile
Specifies the file used for filtering. If absent, no filtering is done.
-t triggerfile
Specifies the file used for triggering a stop capture. If absent, normal triggering is
performed.
-l triggerlag
Specifies the number of packets to collect after trigger condition is met, before dumping data
and exiting. Default is 10.
-a alarm
Specifies the number of seconds for alarm trigger to dump capture and exit.
-p packets
Specifies the number of packets for alarm trigger to dump capture and exit.
-s maxblocks
Specifies the number of blocks to allocate for ring buffer. Value is in Millions. Default is 2
which corresponds to 128 MiB because 1 block = 64 Bytes.
-v
Produces verbose output. (Use verbose Level 1+ to show levels.)
Example
# opapacketcapture
opapacketcapture: Capturing packets using 128 MiB buffer
^C
opapacketcapture: Triggered
Number of packets stored is 100
In the example above, opapacketcapture operates until CTRL+C is entered.
Copyright(C) 2015-2019 Intel Corporation opapacketcapture(1)