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Security with Go

You're reading from   Security with Go Explore the power of Golang to secure host, web, and cloud services

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jan 2018
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781788627917
Length 340 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Authors (2):
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Karthik Gaekwad Karthik Gaekwad
Author Profile Icon Karthik Gaekwad
Karthik Gaekwad
John Daniel Leon John Daniel Leon
Author Profile Icon John Daniel Leon
John Daniel Leon
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Toc

Table of Contents (15) Chapters Close

1. Introduction to Security with Go FREE CHAPTER 2. The Go Programming Language 3. Working with Files 4. Forensics 5. Packet Capturing and Injection 6. Cryptography 7. Secure Shell (SSH) 8. Brute Force 9. Web Applications 10. Web Scraping 11. Host Discovery and Enumeration 12. Social Engineering 13. Post Exploitation 14. Conclusions 15. Another Book You May Enjoy

Saving to the pcap file

This program will perform a packet capture and store the results in a file. The important step in this example is the call to the pcapgo package—the WriteFileHeader() function of Writer. After that, the WritePacket() function can be used to write the desired packets to a file. You can capture all the traffic and choose to write only specific packets based on your own filtering criteria, if desired. Perhaps you only want to write odd or malformed packets to log anomalies.

To do the equivalent with tcpdump, just pass it the -w flag with a filename, as shown in the following command:

tcpdump -i eth0 -w my_capture.pcap

The pcap files created with this example can be opened with Wireshark and viewed just like files created with tcpdump.

This example creates an output file named test.pcap and opens a network device for live capture. It captures 100 packets...

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