dnscap
is a network capture utility designed specifically for DNS traffic.
It produces binary data in pcap(3)
and other format. This utility is similar
to tcpdump(1)
, but has a number of features tailored to DNS transactions
and protocol options. DNS-OARC uses dnscap
for DITL data collections.
Some of its features include:
- Understands both IPv4 and IPv6
- Captures UDP, TCP, and IP fragments.
- Collect only queries, responses, or both (
-s
option) - Collect for only certain source/destination addresses (
-a
-z
-A
-Z
options) - Periodically creates new pcap files (
-t
option) - Spawns an upload script after closing a pcap file (
-k
option) - Will start and stop collecting at specific times (
-B
-E
options)
More information may be found here:
Issues should be reported here:
General support and discussion:
dnscap
requires a couple of libraries beside a normal C compiling
environment with autoconf, automake, libtool and pkgconfig.
dnscap
has a non-optional dependency on the PCAP library and LDNS.
To install the dependencies under Debian/Ubuntu:
apt-get install -y libpcap-dev libldns-dev zlib1g-dev libyaml-perl libssl-dev
To install the dependencies under CentOS (with EPEL/PowerTools enabled):
yum install -y libpcap-devel ldns-devel openssl-devel zlib-devel perl-YAML
For the following OS you will need to install some of the dependencies from source or Ports, these instructions are not included.
To install some of the dependencies under FreeBSD 10+ using pkg
:
pkg install -y libpcap ldns p5-YAML openssl-devel
To install some of the dependencies under OpenBSD 5+ using pkg_add
:
pkg_add libldns p5-YAML
NOTE: It is recommended to install the PCAP library from source/ports on OpenBSD since the bundled version is an older and modified version.
For this plugin a library call cryptopANT
is required and the original
can be found here: https://ant.isi.edu/software/cryptopANT/index.html .
For DNS-OARC packages we build our own fork, with slight modifications to
conform across distributions, of this library which is included in the same
package repository as dnscap
. The modifications and packaging files can be
found here: https://github.com/DNS-OARC/cryptopANT .
The source tarball from DNS-OARC
comes prepared with configure
:
tar zxvf dnscap-version.tar.gz
cd dnscap-version
./configure [options]
make
make install
If you are building dnscap
from it's Git repository you will first need
to initiate the Git submodules that exists and later create autoconf/automake
files, this will require a build environment with autoconf, automake, libtool
and pkg-config to be installed.
git clone https://github.com/DNS-OARC/dnscap.git
cd dnscap
git submodule update --init
./autogen.sh
./configure [options]
make
make install
If you need to link against 64-bit libraries found in non-standard locations, provide the location by setting LDFLAGS before running configure:
$ env LDFLAGS=-L/usr/lib64 ./configure
For OpenBSD you probably installed libpcap in /usr/local
so you will need
to tell configure
where to find the libraries and header files:
$ env CFLAGS="-I/usr/local/include" LDFLAGS="-L/usr/local/lib" ./configure
dnscap
comes bundled with a set of plugins, see -P
option.
anonaes128.so
: Anonymize IP addresses using AES128anonmask.so
: Pseudo-anonymize IP addresses by masking themcryptopan.so
: Anonymize IP addresses using an extension to Crypto-PAn (College of Computing, Georgia Tech) made by David Stott (Lucent)cryptopant.so
: Anonymize IP addresses using cryptopANT, a different implementation of Crypto-PAn made by the ANT project at USC/ISIipcrypt.so
: Anonymize IP addresses using ipcrypt create by Jean-Philippe Aumassonpcapdump.so
: Dump DNS into a PCAP with some filtering optionsroyparse.so
: Splits a PCAP into two streams; queries in PCAP format and responses in ASCII formatrssm.so
: Root Server Scaling Measurement plugin, see it's README.md for more informationrzkeychange.so
: RFC8145 key tag signal collection and reporting plugintxtout.so
: Dump DNS as one-line texteventlog.so
: Syslog style output for easy parsing, use with a SIEM, etc.
There is also a template
plugin in the source repository to help others
develop new plugins.
This is an experimental format for representing DNS information in CBOR with the goals to:
- Be able to stream the information
- Support incomplete, broken and/or invalid DNS
- Have close to no data quality and signature degradation
- Support additional non-DNS meta data (such as ICMP/TCP attributes)
Read CBOR_DNS_STREAM.md for more information.
To enable this output please follow the instructions below for Enabling CBOR Output, note that this only requires Tinycbor.
To output to the CDS format you tell dnscap
to write to a file and set
the format to CDS. CDS is a stream of CBOR objects and you can control how
many objects are kept in memory until flushed to the file by setting
cds_cbor_size
, note that this is bytes of memory and not number of objects.
When it reaches this limit it will write the output and start on a new file.
Read dnscap
's man page for all CDS extended options.
src/dnscap [...] -w <file> -F cds [ -o cds_cbor_size=<bytes> ]
There is experimental support for CBOR output using LDNS and Tinycbor with a data structure described in the DNS-in-JSON draft.
https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/draft-hoffman-dns-in-json/
To enable the CBOR output support you will need to install it's dependencies
before running configure
, LDNS exists for most distributions but Tinycbor
is new so you need to download and compile it, you do not necessary need to
install it as shown in the example below.
git clone https://github.com/DNS-OARC/dnscap.git
cd dnscap
git submodule update --init
git clone https://github.com/01org/tinycbor.git
cd tinycbor
git checkout v0.4.2
make
cd ..
sh autogen.sh
CFLAGS="-I$PWD/tinycbor/src" LDFLAGS="-L$PWD/tinycbor/lib" LIBS="-ltinycbor" ./configure
make
NOTE: Paths in CFLAGS
and LDFLAGS
must be absolute.
Tinycbor comes with a tool to convert CBOR to JSON, check bin/cbordump -h
in the Tinycbor directory after having compiled it.
To output to the CBOR format you tell dnscap
to write to a file and set
the format to CBOR. Since Tinycbor constructs everything in memory there
is a limit and when it is reached it will write the output and start on a
new file. You can control the number of bytes with the extended option
cbor_chunk_size
.
src/dnscap [...] -w <file> -F cbor [ -o cbor_chunk_size=<bytes> ]
There is currently an additional attribute added to the CBOR object which contains the IP information as following:
"ip": [
<proto>,
"<source ip address>",
<source port>
"<destination ip address>",
<destination port>
]
Example:
"ip": [
17,
"127.0.0.1",
34856,
"127.0.0.1",
53
]
Since this is still experimental there are of course some issues:
- RDATA is in binary format
- DNS packet are parsed by LDNS which can fail if malformed packets
dateSeconds
is added as a Cdouble
which might loose some of the time precision