A Network Packet Sniffer developed in Python 3. Packets are disassembled as they arrive at a given network interface controller and their information is displayed on the screen.
This application depends exclusively on the NETProtocols library (also developed and maintained by EONRaider) from version 2.0.0 and above and can be run by any Python 3.8+ interpreter.
Simply clone this repository with git clone
, install the dependencies and execute the
sniffer.py
file.
user@host:~$ git clone https://github.com/EONRaider/Packet-Sniffer.git
user@host:~$ cd Packet-Sniffer
user@host:~/packet-sniffer$ pip install -r requirements.txt <--or--> poetry install
user@host:~/packet-sniffer$ sudo python3 packet_sniffer/sniffer.py
The sudo
command is required due to the use of socket.SOCK_RAW
,
which needs administrative privileges to run on GNU/Linux. Notice
that the existence of dependencies may require the execution of the interpreter contained in
the virtual environment in which the dependencies have been installed (if you use one),
instead of just using the system interpreter.
Use the build.py
file to compile your own binary with the PyInstaller
package. You just need to install all dependencies and build.
Dependency management works with both Poetry (recommended) and Virtualenv.
<-- Install dependencies as shown above in Step I -->
user@host:~/packet-sniffer$ python3 build.py
sniffer.py [-h] [-i INTERFACE] [-d]
Network Packet Sniffer
optional arguments:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
-i INTERFACE, --interface INTERFACE
Interface from which packets will be captured (monitors
all available interfaces by default).
-d, --data Output packet data during capture.
The use of code contained in this repository, either in part or in its totality, for engaging targets without prior mutual consent is illegal. It is the end user's responsibility to obey all applicable local, state and federal laws.
Developers assume no liability and are not responsible for misuses or damages caused by any code contained in this repository in any event that, accidentally or otherwise, it comes to be utilized by a threat agent or unauthorized entity as a means to compromise the security, privacy, confidentiality, integrity, and/or availability of systems and their associated resources. In this context the term "compromise" is henceforth understood as the leverage of exploitation of known or unknown vulnerabilities present in said systems, including, but not limited to, the implementation of security controls, human- or electronically-enabled.
The use of this code is only endorsed by the developers in those circumstances directly related to educational environments or authorized penetration testing engagements whose declared purpose is that of finding and mitigating vulnerabilities in systems, limiting their exposure to compromises and exploits employed by malicious agents as defined in their respective threat models.