Time-based Packet Capture with tcpdump: Difference between revisions
Created page with "Category:General Linux = Time-based Packet Capture with tcpdump = Efficiently capture network traffic for a specific time interval using tcpdump's built-in file rotation. This method is ideal for monitoring a container's network interface without needing external scripts or cron jobs, and it automatically resets the capture file. == Command == This command captures traffic on the `vethec9ed9c` interface, saving it to a single file that is overwritten every 10 minute..." |
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Revision as of 09:05, 27 August 2025
Time-based Packet Capture with tcpdump
Efficiently capture network traffic for a specific time interval using tcpdump's built-in file rotation. This method is ideal for monitoring a container's network interface without needing external scripts or cron jobs, and it automatically resets the capture file.
Command
This command captures traffic on the `vethec9ed9c` interface, saving it to a single file that is overwritten every 10 minutes.
sudo tcpdump -i vethec9ed9c -w /tmp/capture.pcap -G 600 -W 1
Parameter Breakdown
-i vethec9ed9c: Specifies the network interface to monitor.-w /tmp/capture.pcap: Writes the raw packet output to a file. This is required for the rotation feature.-G 600: Sets the rotation interval. It creates a new savefile every 600 seconds (10 minutes).-W 1: Limits the number of capture files to one. When the 10-minute interval from-Gelapses, tcpdump overwrites this file.
Background Process
To run the capture continuously in the background, use nohup and &.
nohup sudo tcpdump -i vethec9ed9c -w /tmp/capture.pcap -G 600 -W 1 &
To stop the capture, find its process ID with pgrep tcpdump and then use sudo kill <PID>.