=============================================================================== LIBNET 1.0 (c) 1998 - 2001 Mike D. Schiffman http://www.packetfactory.net/libnet =============================================================================== etherspoof kernel patch OpenBSD 2.7 If you don't like messing with lkm's (see below), you can use this kernel patch to enable your OpenBSD 2.7 box to forge Ethernet frames. etherspoof lkm module OpenBSD 2.4/2.5/2.6/2.7 Etherspoof is an lkm module that allows a bpf device to specify (forge) arbitrary ethernet MAC addresses. OpenBSD 2.4/2.5 port by route; originally written by Thomas Ptacek. His original readme contents follow. 1997 Thomas H. Ptacek The 4.4BSD machine-independant ethernet driver does not allow upper layers to forge the ethernet source address; all ethernet outputs cause the output routine to build a new ethernet header, and the process that does this explicitly copies the MAC address registered to the interface into this header. This is odd, because the bpf writing convention asserts that writes to bpf must include a link-level header; it's intuitive to assume that this header is, along with the rest of the packet data, written to the wire. This is not the case, though. The link-layer header is used solely by the bpf code, in order to build a sockaddr structure that is passed to the generic ethernet output routine; the header is then effectively stripped off the packet. The ethernet output routine consults this sockaddr to obtain the ethernet type and destination address, but not the source address. This code is a slightly modified version of FreeBSD 3.0's original ethernet output routine. The sole difference is that this output routine retrieves the source ethernet address from the sockaddr, and uses it as the source address for the header written the wire. This allows bpf to be used to seamlessly forge ethernet packets in their entirety, which has applications in address management. The modload glue provided traverses the global list of system interfaces, and replaces any pointer to the original ethernet output routine with the new one we've provided. The unload glue undoes this. The effect of loading this module will be that all ethernet interfaces on the system will support source address forging. EOF