113 lines
3.8 KiB
Plaintext
113 lines
3.8 KiB
Plaintext
General Information
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Ethereal is a network traffic analyzer for Unix and Unix-like operating
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systems. It uses GTK+, a graphical user interface library,
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and libpcap, a packet capture and filtering library.
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The official home of Ethereal is
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http://ethereal.zing.org
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The latest distribution can be found in the subdirectory
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http://ethereal.zing.org/distribution
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Interesting and exotic packet traces can be found at
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http://ethereal.zing.org/~gram/sample.html
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Installation
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------------
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Ethereal is known to compile and run on the following systems:
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- Linux (2.0.x, 2.1.x, 2.2.x)
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- Solaris (2.5.1, 2.6)
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- FreeBSD (2.2.5, 2.2.6)
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- Sequent PTX v4.4.5 (Nick Williams <njw@sequent.com>)
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- Tru64 UNIX (formerly Digital UNIX) (3.2, 4.0)
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It should run on other systems without too much trouble.
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NOTE: the Makefile appears to depend on GNU "make"; it doesn't appear to
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work with the "make" that comes with Solaris 7 nor the BSD "make".
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In addition, ethereal requires "flex" - it cannot be built
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with vanilla "lex" - and either "bison" or the Berkeley "yacc". Your flex
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version must be 2.5.1 or greater. Check this with 'flex -V'.
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You must therefore install GNU "make", "flex", and either "bison" or
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Berkeley "yacc" on systems that lack them.
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Full installation instructions can be found in the INSTALL file.
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See also the appropriate README.<OS> files for OS-specific installation
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instructions.
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Usage
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-----
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In order to capture packets from the network, you need to be running
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as root, or have access to the appropriate entry under /dev if your
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system is so inclined (BSD-derived systems and Solaris typically fall
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into this category. Although it might be tempting to make the
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Ethereal executable setuid root, please don't - alpha code is by nature
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not very robust, and liable to contain security holes.
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Please consult the man page for a description of each command-line
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option and interface feature.
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Multiple File Types
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-------------------
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The wiretap library is a packet-capture library currently under
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development parallel to ethereal. In the future it is hoped that
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wiretap will have more features than libpcap, but wiretap is still in
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its infancy. However, wiretap is used in ethereal for its ability
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to read multiple file types. You can read the following file
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formats, and create display filters for them as well:
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libpcap, Sniffer (uncompresed), NetXray, Sniffer Pro, snoop,
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Shomiti, LANalyzer, Network Monitor, iptrace 2.0 (AIX), and
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RADCOM's WAN/LAN Analyzer
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IPv6
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----
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If your operating system includes IPv6 support, ethereal will attempt to
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use reverse name resolution capabilities when decoding IPv6 packets. If
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you want to turn off name resolution while using ethereal, start ethereal
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with the "-n" option. If you would like to compile ethereal without
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support for IPv6 name resolution, use the "--disable-ipv6" option with
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"./configure". If you compile ethereal without IPv6 name resolution,
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you will still be able to decode IPv6 packets, but you'll only see IPv6
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addresses, not host names.
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The "Follow TCP Stream" feature only supports TCP over IPv4. Support for TCP
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over IPv6 is planned.
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SNMP
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----
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Ethereal can do some basic decoding of SNMP packets, but it relies on an
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external SNMP library to do this. You can use either the UCD or the CMU
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SNMP libraries. The configure script will automatically determine which
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library you have on your system and will use it. If you have an SNMP
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library but _do not_ want to have ethereal use it, you can run configure
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with the "--disable-snmp" option. No SNMP support will be compiled into
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ethereal with this option.
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Disclaimer
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----------
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There is no warranty, expressed or implied, associated with this product.
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Use at your own risk.
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Gerald Combs <gerald@zing.org>
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Gilbert Ramirez <gram@verdict.uthscsa.edu>
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