On Jun 9, 2016, at 4:47 PM, Guenter Ebermann
wrote:
> They are only delivered to the socket on which the packet was sent, not to
> all PF_PACKET sockets.
Then Christian can't get what I think he wants with libpcap - or anything else
doing PF_PACKET socket capturing on Linux - without doing so
> Am 10.06.2016 um 01:35 schrieb Guy Harris :
>
> On Jun 9, 2016, at 4:09 PM, Guenter Ebermann
> wrote:
>
>>
>>> Am 10.06.2016 um 00:13 schrieb Guy Harris :
>>>
>>> But that doesn't mean that the packets time stamped by the hardware when
>>> transmitted will be delivered to the PF_PACKET so
On Jun 9, 2016, at 4:09 PM, Guenter Ebermann
wrote:
>
>> Am 10.06.2016 um 00:13 schrieb Guy Harris :
>>
>> But that doesn't mean that the packets time stamped by the hardware when
>> transmitted will be delivered to the PF_PACKET sockets used by libpcap *with
>> the hardware time stamp as th
> Am 10.06.2016 um 00:13 schrieb Guy Harris :
>
> But that doesn't mean that the packets time stamped by the hardware when
> transmitted will be delivered to the PF_PACKET sockets used by libpcap *with
> the hardware time stamp as the time stamp*.
>
> In order make that happen, if hardware tra
On Jun 9, 2016, at 1:19 PM, Guenter Ebermann
wrote:
>> Am 09.06.2016 um 15:47 schrieb Michael Richardson :
>>
>> Guenter Ebermann wrote:
>>> Hardware timestamping of sending/receiving buffer descriptors is done
>>> by NIC.
>>
>> Receiving I understand.
>>
>> Are you sure that the hardware is
> Am 09.06.2016 um 15:47 schrieb Michael Richardson :
>
> Guenter Ebermann wrote:
>> Hardware timestamping of sending/receiving buffer descriptors is done
>> by NIC.
>
> Receiving I understand.
>
> Are you sure that the hardware is going to timestamp sent packets, and then
> turn around and se
The experiments I made today actually suggest that in my case tcpdump
uses the hardware clock for incoming packages and the software/unix
clock for outgoing packages.
I changed the System clock of one Server with date -s and then looked at
the capture of Ping packages.
Incoming packages on the
Guenter Ebermann wrote:
> Hardware timestamping of sending/receiving buffer descriptors is done
> by NIC.
Receiving I understand.
Are you sure that the hardware is going to timestamp sent packets, and then
turn around and send the back to the kernel?
--
] Never tell me th
Yes, the exact same packet.
Am 08.06.2016 um 22:40 schrieb Guy Harris:
On Jun 8, 2016, at 1:29 PM, Christian Rupp
wrote:
The Timestamp when tcpdump grabs the package off of the receiver is 36 seconds(
+/- innaccuracy, here roughly +/- 5-10 µs) after the timestamp when tcpdump
grabs the pa