Sunday 25 March 2012

Wireshark 1.6.2


*JV*
Wireshark protocol analyzer is a very reliable and you can use to control the data traffic on the network that you manage.

Wireshark, an icon in the form of software that has a shark fin, is a network protocol analyzer software free for Windows and UNIX platforms. Wireshark network protocol analyzer has become very popular and has become standard in many industries, and is an advanced project that began in 1998.

Hundreds of developers around the world have contributed to develop this software, and to this day still remains active in the development stage. With all the capabilities it has, Wireshark is used by network professionals around the world for purposes of analysis, troubleshooting, software and protocol development, and is used also for educational purposes alias education.

This software has all the standard features you might expect from a network protocol analyzer software, and some other features not found in similar products.

What are its features? Here are some key features of which are owned by the software that has nothing to do with sharks (shark) is:

- Data can be captured "off the wire" of a connection network (live network connection), or read from a file (capture file).

- Read or write various capture file formats, including: tcpdump (libpcap), Catapult DCT2000, Cisco Secure IDS iplog, Microsoft Network Monitor, NAI Sniffer (compressed and uncompressed), Sniffer Pro, and NetXray, Network Instruments Observer, Novell LANalyzer, RADCOM WAN or LAN Analyzer, Shomiti or Finisar Surveyor, Tektronix K12xx, Visual Networks Visual Uptime, and Wildpackets Etherpeek, TokenPeek, AiroPeek, and many more.

- Live data can be read from Ethernet, FDDI, PPP, Token-Ring, IEEE 802.11, Classical IP over ATM, and loopback interfaces.

- Capture files can be engineered to be edited or dikoversi via command-line switch.

- Output can be saved or printed as plain text or PostScript document.

- Data display can be refined using a display filter.

- Display filters can also be used to highlight (highlight) and selectively to give color packet summary information.
 

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