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Network Analysis using Wireshark 2 Cookbook

You're reading from   Network Analysis using Wireshark 2 Cookbook Practical recipes to analyze and secure your network using Wireshark 2

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Product type Paperback
Published in Mar 2018
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781786461674
Length 626 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
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Authors (3):
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Nagendra Kumar Nainar Nagendra Kumar Nainar
Author Profile Icon Nagendra Kumar Nainar
Nagendra Kumar Nainar
Yoram Orzach Yoram Orzach
Author Profile Icon Yoram Orzach
Yoram Orzach
Yogesh Ramdoss Yogesh Ramdoss
Author Profile Icon Yogesh Ramdoss
Yogesh Ramdoss
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Toc

Table of Contents (20) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Introduction to Wireshark Version 2 FREE CHAPTER 2. Mastering Wireshark for Network Troubleshooting 3. Using Capture Filters 4. Using Display Filters 5. Using Basic Statistics Tools 6. Using Advanced Statistics Tools 7. Using the Expert System 8. Ethernet and LAN Switching 9. Wireless LAN 10. Network Layer Protocols and Operations 11. Transport Layer Protocol Analysis 12. FTP, HTTP/1, and HTTP/2 13. DNS Protocol Analysis 14. Analyzing Mail Protocols 15. NetBIOS and SMB Protocol Analysis 16. Analyzing Enterprise Applications' Behavior 17. Troubleshooting SIP, Multimedia, and IP Telephony 18. Troubleshooting Bandwidth and Delay Issues 19. Security and Network Forensics

Finding out what is running over your network

The first thing to do when monitoring a new network is to find out what is running over it. There are various types of applications and network protocols, and they can influence and interfere with each other when all of them are running over the network.

In some cases, you will have different VLANs, different Virtual Routing and Forwardings (VRFs), or servers that are connected to virtual ports in a blade server. Eventually, everything is running on the same infrastructure, and they can influence each other.

There is a common confusion between VRFs and VLANs. Even though their purpose is quite the same, they are configured in different places. While VLANs are configured in the LAN in order to provide network separation in the OSI layers 1 and 2, VRFs are multiple instances of routing tables to make them coexist in the same router....
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