Chapter 1. Introducing Wireshark

In this chapter you will learn:

  • Locating Wireshark
  • Starting the capture of data
  • Configuring the start window
  • Using time values and summaries
  • Configuring coloring rules and navigation techniques
  • Saving, printing, and exporting data
  • Configuring the user interface in the Preferences menu
  • Configuring protocols preferences

Introduction

In this chapter, we will cover the basic tasks related to Wireshark. In the Preface of this book, we discussed network troubleshooting and the various tools that can help us in the process. After reaching the conclusion that we need to use the Wireshark protocol analyzer, it's time to locate it for testing in the network, to configure it with basic configurations, and to adapt it to be user friendly.

While setting Wireshark for basic data capture is considered to be very simple and intuitive, there are many options that we can use in special cases; for example, when we capture data continuously over a connection and we want to split the capture file into small files, when we want to see names of the devices participating in the connection and not only IP addresses, and so on. In this chapter we will learn how to configure Wireshark for these special cases.

Another important issue is where to locate Wireshark to capture data. Will it be before a firewall or after it? On which side of the router should we connect it? On the LAN side or on the WAN side? What should we expect to receive in each one of them? All these issues and more will be covered in the Locating Wireshark recipe in this chapter, along with recommendations on how to do it.

Another important issue that will be covered in this chapter is how to configure time values, that is, how you would like Wireshark to present the arrival time of captured packets. This is significantly important when we capture data of time-sensitive applications, when it is important to see the timing of packets inside a TCP connection or a UDP flow.

The next recipe will be on file manipulations, that is, how to save the captured data, whether we want to save the whole of it or part of it, save only filtered data, export that data into various formats, merge files (for example, when you want to merge captured files on two different router interfaces), and so on.

One more issue that will be discussed in this chapter is how to configure coloring rules. That is, how to configure Wireshark to present different packets and protocols in different colors. While Wireshark by default has its coloring scheme, we might want to configure it for special cases, for example, to give a special color to a specific protocol that we monitor or to a specific error or event that we expect. The Configuring coloring rules and navigation techniques recipe discusses these issues.

The last two recipes of the chapter will cover the configuration of the Wireshark preferences. These recipes discuss how to configure the user interface, that is, to configure the Wireshark windows, the columns and what to see in each one of them, text formats, and so on, along with specific protocol configurations; for example, which TCP ports should be resolved by default as a proxy service, whether or not to validate a protocol checksum, whether or not to calculate TCP timestamps, how to decode fields in the protocol header, and so on.

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