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Network Analysis using Wireshark Cookbook

You're reading from   Network Analysis using Wireshark Cookbook This book will be a massive ally in troubleshooting your network using Wireshark, the world's most popular analyzer. Over 100 practical recipes provide a focus on real-life situations, helping you resolve your own individual issues.

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Product type Paperback
Published in Dec 2013
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781849517645
Length 452 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Yoram Orzach Yoram Orzach
Author Profile Icon Yoram Orzach
Yoram Orzach
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Table of Contents (17) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Introducing Wireshark FREE CHAPTER 2. Using Capture Filters 3. Using Display Filters 4. Using Basic Statistics Tools 5. Using Advanced Statistics Tools 6. Using the Expert Infos Window 7. Ethernet, LAN Switching, and Wireless LAN 8. ARP and IP Analysis 9. UDP/TCP Analysis 10. HTTP and DNS 11. Analyzing Enterprise Applications' Behavior 12. SIP, Multimedia, and IP Telephony 13. Troubleshooting Bandwidth and Delay Problems 14. Understanding Network Security A. Links, Tools, and Reading Index

Configuring the user interface in the Preferences menu

There are a large number of parameters you can change in the Preferences window, including what data is presented, where files are saved by default, what is the default interface that Wireshark captures data from, and many more.

What we will refer to in this chapter are the common parameters that when changed will help us with various capture scenarios.

Getting ready

For configuring User Interface, we will choose the Preferences option from the Edit menu. You will get the following window:

Getting ready

We will look at the configuration of the following parameters:

  • Columns
  • Capture
  • Name Resolution

How to do it...

In this section we will see how to change parameters that will help in working with Wireshark.

Changing and adding columns

The default columns that we see in the packet pane are the number, time, source and destination addresses, protocol, length, and information columns, as shown in the following screenshot:

Changing and adding columns

To add a new column to the packet pane:

  1. You can choose one of the predefined parameters to be added as a new column from the Field type. Among these parameters are time delta, IP DSCP value, port numbers, and others.
  2. A very important feature comes up when you fill in Custom in the field type. In this case, you can fill in any filter string for Field name. You can, for example, add the following:
    1. Add the string tcp.window_size to view the TCP window size (that influences performance).
    2. Add the string ip.ttl to view the IP TTL (Time-To-Live) parameter of every packet.
    3. Add rtp.marker to view every instance of a marker set in an RTP packet.
    4. As we will see in the later chapters, this feature will assist us a lot for fast resolutions of network problems.

Changing the capture configuration

There are some parameters that can be configured before capturing data. In the Preferences window choose the Capture menu, and the following window will come up:

Changing the capture configuration

For changing the default interface that the capture will start from, just click on the Edit button, and mark the interface you would like to be the default. Of course you can change it every time you start a new capture, this is only the default.

Configuring the name resolution

Wireshark supports Name Resolution in three layers:

  • Layer 2: by resolving the first part of the MAC addresses to the vendor name. For example, 14:da:e9 will be presented as AsusTeckC (ASUSTeK Computer Inc.).
  • Layer 3: by resolving IP addresses to the DNS names. For example, 157.166.226.46 will be resolved to www.edition.cnn.com.
  • Layer 4: by resolving TCP/UDP port numbers to port names. For example, port 80 will be resolved as HTTP, and port 53 as DNS.
Configuring the name resolution

Tip

In TCP and UDP, there is a meaning only to the destination port that the client initially opens the session to. The source port that the connection is opened from is a random number (higher than 1024), and therefore there is no meaning to its translation to a port name.

The Wireshark default is to resolve layer-2 MAC addresses and layer-4 TCP/UDP port numbers. Resolving IP addresses can slow down Wireshark due to a large amount of DNS queries that it uses; therefore, use it carefully.

How it works...

Very simple. This is the configuration menu for the Wireshark. Here you can configure parameters as described in this recipe, along with some other parameters. You can refer to Wireshark manuals at www.wireshark.org for further information.

You have been reading a chapter from
Network Analysis using Wireshark Cookbook
Published in: Dec 2013
Publisher: Packt
ISBN-13: 9781849517645
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