# RIOT Sniffer Application ## About This sniffer script can be used to sniff network traffic using RIOT based nodes. It is primarily designed for sniffing wireless data traffic, but can also well be used for wired network traffic, as long as the used network devices support promiscuous mode and output of raw data. The sniffer is based on a RIOT node running the [sniffer application](https://github.com/RIOT-OS/applications/tree/master/sniffer) application located in [RIOTs application repository](https://github.com/RIOT-OS/applications). This node outputs received network traffic via a serial port or a network socket in the Wireshark pcap format. This output is then parsed by the `sniffer.py` script included in this folder run on a host computer. The `sniffer.py` script is a modified version of [malvira's script](https://github.com/malvira/libmc1322x/blob/master/tools/rftestrx2pcap.py) for the Redbee Ecotag (https://github.com/malvira/libmc1322x/wiki/wireshark). ## Dependencies The `sniffer.py` script needs [pyserial](https://pypi.python.org/pypi/pyserial). Installing the dependencies: #### Debuntu apt-get install python-serial #### PIP pip install pyserial ## Usage General usage: 1. Flash an applicable RIOT node with the sniffer application from (https://github.com/RIOT-OS/applications/tree/master/sniffer) 2. Run the `sniffer.py` script For serial port: ``` $ ./sniffer.py serial [outfile] ``` For network socket: ``` $ ./sniffer.py socket [outfile] ``` The script has the following parameters: - **connType:** The type of connection to use. Either `serial` for serial ports or `socket` for network sockets. - **host:** The host if the `socket` connection type is in use. - **port:** The port of the host if the `socket` connection type is in use. - **tty:** The serial port the RIOT board is connected to. Under Linux, this is typically something like /dev/ttyUSB0 or /dev/ttyACM0. Under Windows, this is typically something like COM0 or COM1. This option is used for the `serial` connection type. - **baudrate:** The baudrate the serial port is configured to. The default in RIOT is 115200, though this is defined per board and some boards have some other value defined per default. NOTE: when sniffing networks where the on-air bitrate is > baudrate, it makes sense to increase the baudrate so no data is skipped when sniffing. This option is used for the `serial` connection type. - **channel:** The radio channel to use when sniffing. Possible values vary and depend on the link-layer that is sniffed. This parameter is ignored when sniffing wired networks. - **[outfile]:** When this parameter is specified, the sniffer output is saved into this file. See the examples below for alternatives to specifying this parameter. (optional) ### Examples The following examples are made when using the sniffer application together with an `iotlab-m3` node that is connected to /dev/ttyUSB1 (or COM1) (`serial` connection type) and runs per default with a baudrate of 500000. For the `socket` connection type port 20000 is used. #### Linux (serial) Dump packets to a file: ``` $ ./sniffer.py serial /dev/ttyUSB1 500000 17 > foo.pcap ``` This .pcap can then be opened in wireshark. Alternatively for live captures, you can pipe directly into wireshark with: ``` $ ./sniffer.py serial /dev/ttyUSB1 500000 17 | wireshark -k -i - ``` #### Windows (serial) For windows you can use the optional third argument to output to a .pcap: ``` $ ./sniffer.py serial COM1 500000 17 foo.pcap ``` #### IoT-Lab Testbed (socket) Start an experiment either via the website provided by the IoT-Lab testbed or by using the RIOT specific iotlab Makefile with 3 neighboring `iotlab-m3` nodes, where one of them runs the sniffer application and the others run the `gnrc_networking` application. Now you can bind the sniffer node to localhost: ssh -L 20000:_node-id_:20000 _user_@_site_.iot-lab.info Then you can dump or observe the traffic generated by the other nodes running the `gnrc_networking` application via one of the following commands: ``` $ ./sniffer.py socket localhost 20000 26 > foo.pcap $ ./sniffer.py socket localhost 20000 26 | wireshark -k -i - ```