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Updated: Wednesday, July 27, 2022
 
 

wireshark (1)

Name

wireshark - Interactively dump and analyze network traffic

Synopsis

wireshark [ -i <capture interface>|- ] [ -f <capture filter> ]
[ -Y <display filter> ] [ -w <outfile> ] [ options ] [ <infile> ]

Description

WIRESHARK(1)                                                      WIRESHARK(1)



NAME
       wireshark - Interactively dump and analyze network traffic

SYNOPSIS
       wireshark [ -i <capture interface>|- ] [ -f <capture filter> ]
       [ -Y <display filter> ] [ -w <outfile> ] [ options ] [ <infile> ]

DESCRIPTION
       Wireshark is a GUI network protocol analyzer. It lets you interactively
       browse packet data from a live network or from a previously saved
       capture file. Wireshark's native capture file formats are pcapng format
       and pcap format; it can read and write both formats.. pcap format is
       also the format used by tcpdump and various other tools; tcpdump, when
       using newer verions of the libpcap library, can also read some pcapng
       files, and, on newer versions of macOS, can read all pcapng files and
       can write them as well.

       Wireshark can also read / import the following file formats:

       o   Oracle (previously Sun) snoop and atmsnoop captures

       o   Finisar (previously Shomiti) Surveyor captures

       o   Microsoft Network Monitor captures

       o   Novell LANalyzer captures

       o   AIX's iptrace captures

       o   Cinco Networks NetXRay captures

       o   NETSCOUT (previously Network Associates/Network General)
           Windows-based Sniffer captures

       o   Network General/Network Associates DOS-based Sniffer captures
           (compressed or uncompressed)

       o   LiveAction (previously WildPackets/Savvius)
           *Peek/EtherHelp/PacketGrabber captures

       o   RADCOM's WAN/LAN analyzer captures

       o   Viavi (previously Network Instruments) Observer captures

       o   Lucent/Ascend router debug output

       o   captures from HP-UX nettl

       o   Toshiba's ISDN routers dump output

       o   the output from i4btrace from the ISDN4BSD project

       o   traces from the EyeSDN USB S0

       o   the IPLog format output from the Cisco Secure Intrusion Detection
           System

       o   pppd logs (pppdump format)

       o   the output from VMS's TCPIPtrace/TCPtrace/UCX$TRACE utilities

       o   the text output from the DBS Etherwatch VMS utility

       o   Visual Networks' Visual UpTime traffic capture

       o   the output from CoSine L2 debug

       o   the output from InfoVista (previously Accellent) 5View LAN agents

       o   Endace Measurement Systems' ERF format captures

       o   Linux Bluez Bluetooth stack hcidump -w traces

       o   Catapult DCT2000 .out files

       o   Gammu generated text output from Nokia DCT3 phones in Netmonitor
           mode

       o   IBM Series (OS/400) Comm traces (ASCII & UNICODE)

       o   Juniper Netscreen snoop files

       o   Symbian OS btsnoop files

       o   TamoSoft CommView files

       o   Tektronix K12xx 32bit .rf5 format files

       o   Tektronix K12 text file format captures

       o   Apple PacketLogger files

       o   Captures from Aethra Telecommunications' PC108 software for their
           test instruments

       o   Citrix NetScaler Trace files

       o   Android Logcat binary and text format logs

       o   Colasoft Capsa and PacketBuilder captures

       o   Micropross mplog files

       o   Unigraf DPA-400 DisplayPort AUX channel monitor traces

       o   802.15.4 traces from Daintree's Sensor Network Analyzer

       o   MPEG-2 Transport Streams as defined in ISO/IEC 13818-1

       o   Log files from the candump utility

       o   Logs from the BUSMASTER tool

       o   Ixia IxVeriWave raw captures

       o   Rabbit Labs CAM Inspector files

       o   systemd journal files

       o   3GPP TS 32.423 trace files

       There is no need to tell Wireshark what type of file you are reading;
       it will determine the file type by itself. Wireshark is also capable of
       reading any of these file formats if they are compressed using gzip.
       Wireshark recognizes this directly from the file; the '.gz' extension
       is not required for this purpose.

       Like other protocol analyzers, Wireshark's main window shows 3 views of
       a packet. It shows a summary line, briefly describing what the packet
       is. A packet details display is shown, allowing you to drill down to
       exact protocol or field that you interested in. Finally, a hex dump
       shows you exactly what the packet looks like when it goes over the
       wire.

       In addition, Wireshark has some features that make it unique. It can
       assemble all the packets in a TCP conversation and show you the ASCII
       (or EBCDIC, or hex) data in that conversation. Display filters in
       Wireshark are very powerful; more fields are filterable in Wireshark
       than in other protocol analyzers, and the syntax you can use to create
       your filters is richer. As Wireshark progresses, expect more and more
       protocol fields to be allowed in display filters.

       Packet capturing is performed with the pcap library. The capture filter
       syntax follows the rules of the pcap library. This syntax is different
       from the display filter syntax.

       Compressed file support uses (and therefore requires) the zlib library.
       If the zlib library is not present, Wireshark will compile, but will be
       unable to read compressed files.

       The pathname of a capture file to be read can be specified with the -r
       option or can be specified as a command-line argument.

OPTIONS
       Most users will want to start Wireshark without options and configure
       it from the menus instead. Those users may just skip this section.

       -a|--autostop  <capture autostop condition>

           Specify a criterion that specifies when Wireshark is to stop
           writing to a capture file. The criterion is of the form test:value,
           where test is one of:

           duration:value Stop writing to a capture file after value seconds
           have elapsed. Floating point values (e.g. 0.5) are allowed.

           files:value Stop writing to capture files after value number of
           files were written.

           filesize:value Stop writing to a capture file after it reaches a
           size of value kB. If this option is used together with the -b
           option, Wireshark will stop writing to the current capture file and
           switch to the next one if filesize is reached. Note that the
           filesize is limited to a maximum value of 2 GiB.

           packets:value Stop writing to a capture file after it contains
           value packets. Same as -c<capture packet count>.

       -b|--ring-buffer  <capture ring buffer option>

           Cause Wireshark to run in "multiple files" mode. In "multiple
           files" mode, Wireshark will write to several capture files. When
           the first capture file fills up, Wireshark will switch writing to
           the next file and so on.

           The created filenames are based on the filename given with the -w
           flag, the number of the file and on the creation date and time,
           e.g. outfile_00001_20220714120117.pcap,
           outfile_00002_20220714120523.pcap, ...

           With the files option it's also possible to form a "ring buffer".
           This will fill up new files until the number of files specified, at
           which point Wireshark will discard the data in the first file and
           start writing to that file and so on. If the files option is not
           set, new files filled up until one of the capture stop conditions
           match (or until the disk is full).

           The criterion is of the form key:value, where key is one of:

           duration:value switch to the next file after value seconds have
           elapsed, even if the current file is not completely filled up.
           Floating point values (e.g. 0.5) are allowed.

           files:value begin again with the first file after value number of
           files were written (form a ring buffer). This value must be less
           than 100000. Caution should be used when using large numbers of
           files: some filesystems do not handle many files in a single
           directory well. The files criterion requires one of the other
           criteria to be specified to control when to go to the next file. It
           should be noted that each -b parameter takes exactly one criterion;
           to specify two criteria, each must be preceded by the -b option.

           filesize:value switch to the next file after it reaches a size of
           value kB. Note that the filesize is limited to a maximum value of 2
           GiB.

           interval:value switch to the next file when the time is an exact
           multiple of value seconds.

           packets:value switch to the next file after it contains value
           packets.

           Example: -b filesize:1000 -b files:5 results in a ring buffer of
           five files of size one megabyte each.

       -B|--buffer-size  <capture buffer size>

           Set capture buffer size (in MiB, default is 2 MiB). This is used by
           the capture driver to buffer packet data until that data can be
           written to disk. If you encounter packet drops while capturing, try
           to increase this size. Note that, while Wireshark attempts to set
           the buffer size to 2 MiB by default, and can be told to set it to a
           larger value, the system or interface on which you're capturing
           might silently limit the capture buffer size to a lower value or
           raise it to a higher value.

           This is available on UNIX systems with libpcap 1.0.0 or later and
           on Windows. It is not available on UNIX systems with earlier
           versions of libpcap.

           This option can occur multiple times. If used before the first
           occurrence of the -i option, it sets the default capture buffer
           size. If used after an -i option, it sets the capture buffer size
           for the interface specified by the last -i option occurring before
           this option. If the capture buffer size is not set specifically,
           the default capture buffer size is used instead.

       -c  <capture packet count>

           Set the maximum number of packets to read when capturing live data.
           Same as -a packets:<capture packet count>.

       -C  <configuration profile>

           Start with the given configuration profile.

       --capture-comment <comment>

           When performing a capture file from the command line, with the -k
           flag, add a capture comment to the output file, if supported by the
           capture format.

           This option may be specified multiple times. Note that Wireshark
           currently only displays the first comment of a capture file.

       -d  <layer type>==<selector>,<decode-as protocol>

           Like Wireshark's Decode As... feature, this lets you specify how a
           layer type should be dissected. If the layer type in question (for
           example, tcp.port or udp.port for a TCP or UDP port number) has the
           specified selector value, packets should be dissected as the
           specified protocol.

           Example: -d tcp.port==8888,http will decode any traffic running
           over TCP port 8888 as HTTP.

           See the tshark(1) manual page for more examples.

       -D|--list-interfaces

           Print a list of the interfaces on which Wireshark can capture, and
           exit. For each network interface, a number and an interface name,
           possibly followed by a text description of the interface, is
           printed. The interface name or the number can be supplied to the -i
           flag to specify an interface on which to capture.

           This can be useful on systems that don't have a command to list
           them (UNIX systems lacking ifconfig -a or Linux systems lacking ip
           link show). The number can be useful on Windows systems, where the
           interface name might be a long name or a GUID.

           Note that "can capture" means that Wireshark was able to open that
           device to do a live capture; if, on your system, a program doing a
           network capture must be run from an account with special privileges
           (for example, as root), then, if Wireshark is run with the -D flag
           and is not run from such an account, it will not list any
           interfaces.

       --display <X display to use>

           Specifies the X display to use. A hostname and screen
           (otherhost:0.0) or just a screen (:0.0) can be specified. This
           option is not available under Windows.

       --disable-protocol <proto_name>

           Disable dissection of proto_name.

       --disable-heuristic <short_name>

           Disable dissection of heuristic protocol.

       --enable-protocol <proto_name>

           Enable dissection of proto_name.

       --enable-heuristic <short_name>

           Enable dissection of heuristic protocol.

       -f  <capture filter>

           Set the capture filter expression.

           This option can occur multiple times. If used before the first
           occurrence of the -i option, it sets the default capture filter
           expression. If used after an -i option, it sets the capture filter
           expression for the interface specified by the last -i option
           occurring before this option. If the capture filter expression is
           not set specifically, the default capture filter expression is used
           if provided.

           Pre-defined capture filter names, as shown in the GUI menu item
           Capture->Capture Filters, can be used by prefixing the argument
           with "predef:". Example: -f "predef:MyPredefinedHostOnlyFilter"

       --fullscreen

           Start Wireshark in full screen mode (kiosk mode). To exit from
           fullscreen mode, open the View menu and select the Full Screen
           option. Alternatively, press the F11 key (or Ctrl + Cmd + F for
           macOS).

       -g  <packet number>

           After reading in a capture file using the -r flag, go to the given
           packet number.

       -h|--help

           Print the version number and options and exit.

       -H

           Hide the capture info dialog during live packet capture.

       -i|--interface  <capture interface>|-

           Set the name of the network interface or pipe to use for live
           packet capture.

           Network interface names should match one of the names listed in
           "wireshark -D" (described above); a number, as reported by
           "wireshark -D", can also be used. On Solaris, all network
           interfaces that are displayed with the command "dladm show-link" or
           "ipadm show-if" can be used with the -i command line option.

           If no interface is specified, Wireshark searches the list of
           interfaces, choosing the first non-loopback interface if there are
           any non-loopback interfaces, and choosing the first loopback
           interface if there are no non-loopback interfaces. If there are no
           interfaces at all, Wireshark reports an error and doesn't start the
           capture.

           Pipe names should be either the name of a FIFO (named pipe) or "-"
           to read data from the standard input. On Windows systems, pipe
           names must be of the form "\\pipe\.*pipename*". Data read from
           pipes must be in standard pcapng or pcap format. Pcapng data must
           have the same endianness as the capturing host.

           "TCP@<host>:<port>" causes Wireshark to attempt to connect to the
           specified port on the specified host and read pcapng or pcap data.

           This option can occur multiple times. When capturing from multiple
           interfaces, the capture file will be saved in pcapng format.

       -I|--monitor-mode

           Put the interface in "monitor mode"; this is supported only on IEEE
           802.11 Wi-Fi interfaces, and supported only on some operating
           systems.

           Note that in monitor mode the adapter might disassociate from the
           network with which it's associated, so that you will not be able to
           use any wireless networks with that adapter. This could prevent
           accessing files on a network server, or resolving host names or
           network addresses, if you are capturing in monitor mode and are not
           connected to another network with another adapter.

           This option can occur multiple times. If used before the first
           occurrence of the -i option, it enables the monitor mode for all
           interfaces. If used after an -i option, it enables the monitor mode
           for the interface specified by the last -i option occurring before
           this option.

       -j

           Use after -J to change the behavior when no exact match is found
           for the filter. With this option select the first packet before.

       -J  <jump filter>

           After reading in a capture file using the -r flag, jump to the
           packet matching the filter (display filter syntax). If no exact
           match is found the first packet after that is selected.

       -k

           Start the capture session immediately. If the -i flag was
           specified, the capture uses the specified interface. Otherwise,
           Wireshark searches the list of interfaces, choosing the first
           non-loopback interface if there are any non-loopback interfaces,
           and choosing the first loopback interface if there are no
           non-loopback interfaces; if there are no interfaces, Wireshark
           reports an error and doesn't start the capture.

       -K  <keytab>

           Load kerberos crypto keys from the specified keytab file. This
           option can be used multiple times to load keys from several files.

           Example: -K krb5.keytab

       -l

           Turn on automatic scrolling if the packet display is being updated
           automatically as packets arrive during a capture (as specified by
           the -S flag).

       -L|--list-data-link-types

           List the data link types supported by the interface and exit.

       --list-time-stamp-types

           List time stamp types supported for the interface. If no time stamp
           type can be set, no time stamp types are listed.

       -n

           Disable network object name resolution (such as hostname, TCP and
           UDP port names), the -N flag might override this one.

       -N  <name resolving flags>

           Turn on name resolving only for particular types of addresses and
           port numbers, with name resolving for other types of addresses and
           port numbers turned off. This flag overrides -n if both -N and -n
           are present. If both -N and -n flags are not present, all name
           resolutions are turned on.

           The argument is a string that may contain the letters:

           m to enable MAC address resolution

           n to enable network address resolution

           N to enable using external resolvers (e.g., DNS) for network
           address resolution

           t to enable transport-layer port number resolution

           d to enable resolution from captured DNS packets

           v to enable VLAN IDs to names resolution

       -o  <preference/recent setting>

           Set a preference or recent value, overriding the default value and
           any value read from a preference/recent file. The argument to the
           flag is a string of the form prefname:value, where prefname is the
           name of the preference/recent value (which is the same name that
           would appear in the preference/recent file), and value is the value
           to which it should be set. Since Ethereal 0.10.12, the recent
           settings replaces the formerly used -B, -P and -T flags to
           manipulate the GUI dimensions.

           If prefname is "uat", you can override settings in various user
           access tables using the form uat*:*uat filename:uat record. uat
           filename must be the name of a UAT file, e.g. user_dlts. uat_record
           must be in the form of a valid record for that file, including
           quotes. For instance, to specify a user DLT from the command line,
           you would use

               -o "uat:user_dlts:\"User 0 (DLT=147)\",\"cops\",\"0\",\"\",\"0\",\"\""

       -p|--no-promiscuous-mode

           Don't put the interface into promiscuous mode. Note that the
           interface might be in promiscuous mode for some other reason;
           hence, -p cannot be used to ensure that the only traffic that is
           captured is traffic sent to or from the machine on which Wireshark
           is running, broadcast traffic, and multicast traffic to addresses
           received by that machine.

           This option can occur multiple times. If used before the first
           occurrence of the -i option, no interface will be put into the
           promiscuous mode. If used after an -i option, the interface
           specified by the last -i option occurring before this option will
           not be put into the promiscuous mode.

       -P <path setting>

           Special path settings usually detected automatically. This is used
           for special cases, e.g. starting Wireshark from a known location on
           an USB stick.

           The criterion is of the form key:path, where key is one of:

           persconf:path path of personal configuration files, like the
           preferences files.

           persdata:path path of personal data files, it's the folder
           initially opened. After the very first initialization, the recent
           file will keep the folder last used.

       -r|--read-file  <infile>

           Read packet data from infile, can be any supported capture file
           format (including gzipped files). It's not possible to use named
           pipes or stdin here! To capture from a pipe or from stdin use -i -

       -R|--read-filter  <read (display) filter>

           When reading a capture file specified with the -r flag, causes the
           specified filter (which uses the syntax of display filters, rather
           than that of capture filters) to be applied to all packets read
           from the capture file; packets not matching the filter are
           discarded.

       -s|--snapshot-length  <capture snaplen>

           Set the default snapshot length to use when capturing live data. No
           more than snaplen bytes of each network packet will be read into
           memory, or saved to disk. A value of 0 specifies a snapshot length
           of 262144, so that the full packet is captured; this is the
           default.

           This option can occur multiple times. If used before the first
           occurrence of the -i option, it sets the default snapshot length.
           If used after an -i option, it sets the snapshot length for the
           interface specified by the last -i option occurring before this
           option. If the snapshot length is not set specifically, the default
           snapshot length is used if provided.

       -S

           Automatically update the packet display as packets are coming in.

       -t  a|ad|adoy|d|dd|e|r|u|ud|udoy

           Set the format of the packet timestamp displayed in the packet list
           window. The format can be one of:

           a absolute: The absolute time, as local time in your time zone, is
           the actual time the packet was captured, with no date displayed

           ad absolute with date: The absolute date, displayed as YYYY-MM-DD,
           and time, as local time in your time zone, is the actual time and
           date the packet was captured

           adoy absolute with date using day of year: The absolute date,
           displayed as YYYY/DOY, and time, as local time in your time zone,
           is the actual time and date the packet was captured

           d delta: The delta time is the time since the previous packet was
           captured

           dd delta_displayed: The delta_displayed time is the time since the
           previous displayed packet was captured

           e epoch: The time in seconds since epoch (Jan 1, 1970 00:00:00)

           r relative: The relative time is the time elapsed between the first
           packet and the current packet

           u UTC: The absolute time, as UTC, is the actual time the packet was
           captured, with no date displayed

           ud UTC with date: The absolute date, displayed as YYYY-MM-DD, and
           time, as UTC, is the actual time and date the packet was captured

           udoy UTC with date using day of year: The absolute date, displayed
           as YYYY/DOY, and time, as UTC, is the actual time and date the
           packet was captured

           The default format is relative.

       --time-stamp-type <type>

           Change the interface's timestamp method. See
           --list-time-stamp-types.

       -u <s|hms>

           Output format of seconds (def: s: seconds)

       -v|--version

           Print the full version information and exit.

       -w  <outfile>

           Set the default capture file name, or '-' for standard output.

       -X <eXtension options>

           Specify an option to be passed to an Wireshark module. The
           eXtension option is in the form extension_key:value, where
           extension_key can be:

           lua_script:lua_script_filename tells Wireshark to load the given
           script in addition to the default Lua scripts.

           lua_scriptnum:argument tells Wireshark to pass the given argument
           to the lua script identified by 'num', which is the number indexed
           order of the 'lua_script' command. For example, if only one script
           was loaded with '-X lua_script:my.lua', then '-X lua_script1:foo'
           will pass the string 'foo' to the 'my.lua' script. If two scripts
           were loaded, such as '-X lua_script:my.lua' and '-X
           lua_script:other.lua' in that order, then a '-X lua_script2:bar'
           would pass the string 'bar' to the second lua script, namely
           'other.lua'.

           read_format:file_format tells Wireshark to use the given file
           format to read in the file (the file given in the -r command
           option).

           stdin_descr:description tells Wireshark to use the given
           description when capturing from standard input (-i -).

       -y|--linktype  <capture link type>

           If a capture is started from the command line with -k, set the data
           link type to use while capturing packets. The values reported by -L
           are the values that can be used.

           This option can occur multiple times. If used before the first
           occurrence of the -i option, it sets the default capture link type.
           If used after an -i option, it sets the capture link type for the
           interface specified by the last -i option occurring before this
           option. If the capture link type is not set specifically, the
           default capture link type is used if provided.

       -Y|--display-filter  <displaY filter>

           Start with the given display filter.

       -z  <statistics>

           Get Wireshark to collect various types of statistics and display
           the result in a window that updates in semi-real time.

           Some of the currently implemented statistics are:

       -z help

           Display all possible values for -z.

       -z afp,srt[,filter]

           Show Apple Filing Protocol service response time statistics.

       -z conv,type[,filter]

           Create a table that lists all conversations that could be seen in
           the capture. type specifies the conversation endpoint types for
           which we want to generate the statistics; currently the supported
           ones are:

               "eth"   Ethernet addresses
               "fc"    Fibre Channel addresses
               "fddi"  FDDI addresses
               "ip"    IPv4 addresses
               "ipv6"  IPv6 addresses
               "ipx"   IPX addresses
               "tcp"   TCP/IP socket pairs   Both IPv4 and IPv6 are supported
               "tr"    Token Ring addresses
               "udp"   UDP/IP socket pairs   Both IPv4 and IPv6 are supported

           If the optional filter is specified, only those packets that match
           the filter will be used in the calculations.

           The table is presented with one line for each conversation and
           displays the number of packets/bytes in each direction as well as
           the total number of packets/bytes. By default, the table is sorted
           according to the total number of packets.

           These tables can also be generated at runtime by selecting the
           appropriate conversation type from the menu
           "Tools/Statistics/Conversation List/".

       -z dcerpc,srt,name-or-uuid,major.minor[,filter]

           Collect call/reply SRT (Service Response Time) data for DCERPC
           interface name or uuid, version major.minor. Data collected is the
           number of calls for each procedure, MinSRT, MaxSRT and AvgSRT.
           Interface name and uuid are case-insensitive.

           Example: -z dcerpc,srt,12345778-1234-abcd-ef00-0123456789ac,1.0
           will collect data for the CIFS SAMR Interface.

           This option can be used multiple times on the command line.

           If the optional filter  is provided, the stats will only be
           calculated on those calls that match that filter.

           Example: -z
           dcerpc,srt,12345778-1234-abcd-ef00-0123456789ac,1.0,ip.addr==1.2.3.4
           will collect SAMR SRT statistics for a specific host.

       -z dhcp,stat[,filter]

           Show DHCP (BOOTP) statistics.

       -z expert

           Show expert information.

       -z fc,srt[,filter]

           Collect call/reply SRT (Service Response Time) data for FC. Data
           collected is the number of calls for each Fibre Channel command,
           MinSRT, MaxSRT and AvgSRT.

           Example: -z fc,srt will calculate the Service Response Time as the
           time delta between the First packet of the exchange and the Last
           packet of the exchange.

           The data will be presented as separate tables for all normal FC
           commands, Only those commands that are seen in the capture will
           have its stats displayed.

           This option can be used multiple times on the command line.

           If the optional filter is provided, the stats will only be
           calculated on those calls that match that filter.

           Example: -z "fc,srt,fc.id==01.02.03" will collect stats only for FC
           packets exchanged by the host at FC address 01.02.03 .

       -z h225,counter[,filter]

           Count ITU-T H.225 messages and their reasons. In the first column
           you get a list of H.225 messages and H.225 message reasons which
           occur in the current capture file. The number of occurrences of
           each message or reason is displayed in the second column.

           Example: -z h225,counter

           This option can be used multiple times on the command line.

           If the optional filter is provided, the stats will only be
           calculated on those calls that match that filter.

           Example: -z "h225,counter,ip.addr==1.2.3.4" will collect stats only
           for H.225 packets exchanged by the host at IP address 1.2.3.4 .

       -z h225,srt[,filter]

           Collect request/response SRT (Service Response Time) data for ITU-T
           H.225 RAS. Data collected is the number of calls of each ITU-T
           H.225 RAS Message Type, Minimum SRT, Maximum SRT, Average SRT,
           Minimum in Packet, and Maximum in Packet. You will also get the
           number of Open Requests (Unresponded Requests), Discarded Responses
           (Responses without matching request) and Duplicate Messages.

           Example: -z h225,srt

           This option can be used multiple times on the command line.

           If the optional filter is provided, the stats will only be
           calculated on those calls that match that filter.

           Example: -z "h225,srt,ip.addr==1.2.3.4" will collect stats only for
           ITU-T H.225 RAS packets exchanged by the host at IP address 1.2.3.4
           .

       -z io,stat

           Collect packet/bytes statistics for the capture in intervals of 1
           second. This option will open a window with up to 5 color-coded
           graphs where number-of-packets-per-second or
           number-of-bytes-per-second statistics can be calculated and
           displayed.

           This option can be used multiple times on the command line.

           This graph window can also be opened from the
           Analyze:Statistics:Traffic:IO-Stat menu item.

       -z ldap,srt[,filter]

           Collect call/reply SRT (Service Response Time) data for LDAP. Data
           collected is the number of calls for each implemented LDAP command,
           MinSRT, MaxSRT and AvgSRT.

           Example: -z ldap,srt will calculate the Service Response Time as
           the time delta between the Request and the Response.

           The data will be presented as separate tables for all implemented
           LDAP commands, Only those commands that are seen in the capture
           will have its stats displayed.

           This option can be used multiple times on the command line.

           If the optional filter is provided, the stats will only be
           calculated on those calls that match that filter.

           Example: use -z "ldap,srt,ip.addr==10.1.1.1" will collect stats
           only for LDAP packets exchanged by the host at IP address 10.1.1.1
           .

           The only LDAP commands that are currently implemented and for which
           the stats will be available are: BIND SEARCH MODIFY ADD DELETE
           MODRDN COMPARE EXTENDED

       -z megaco,srt[,filter]

           Collect request/response SRT (Service Response Time) data for
           MEGACO. (This is similar to -z smb,srt). Data collected is the
           number of calls for each known MEGACO Command, Minimum SRT, Maximum
           SRT and Average SRT.

           Example: -z megaco,srt

           This option can be used multiple times on the command line.

           If the optional filter is provided, the stats will only be
           calculated on those calls that match that filter.

           Example: -z "megaco,srt,ip.addr==1.2.3.4" will collect stats only
           for MEGACO packets exchanged by the host at IP address 1.2.3.4 .

       -z mgcp,srt[,filter]

           Collect request/response SRT (Service Response Time) data for MGCP.
           (This is similar to -z smb,srt). Data collected is the number of
           calls for each known MGCP Type, Minimum SRT, Maximum SRT and
           Average SRT.

           Example: -z mgcp,srt

           This option can be used multiple times on the command line.

           If the optional filter is provided, the stats will only be
           calculated on those calls that match that filter.

           Example: -z "mgcp,srt,ip.addr==1.2.3.4" will collect stats only for
           MGCP packets exchanged by the host at IP address 1.2.3.4 .

       -z mtp3,msus[,<filter>]

           Show MTP3 MSU statistics.

       -z multicast,stat[,<filter>]

           Show UDP multicast stream statistics.

       -z rpc,programs

           Collect call/reply SRT data for all known ONC-RPC
           programs/versions. Data collected is the number of calls for each
           protocol/version, MinSRT, MaxSRT and AvgSRT.

       -z rpc,srt,name-or-number,version[,<filter>]

           Collect call/reply SRT (Service Response Time) data for program
           name/version or number/version. Data collected is the number of
           calls for each procedure, MinSRT, MaxSRT and AvgSRT. Program name
           is case-insensitive.

           Example: -z rpc,srt,100003,3 will collect data for NFS v3.

           This option can be used multiple times on the command line.

           If the optional filter is provided, the stats will only be
           calculated on those calls that match that filter.

           Example: -z rpc,srt,nfs,3,nfs.fh.hash==0x12345678 will collect NFS
           v3 SRT statistics for a specific file.

       -z scsi,srt,cmdset[,<filter>]

           Collect call/reply SRT (Service Response Time) data for SCSI
           commandset <cmdset>.

           Commandsets are 0:SBC   1:SSC  5:MMC

           Data collected is the number of calls for each procedure, MinSRT,
           MaxSRT and AvgSRT.

           Example: -z scsi,srt,0 will collect data for SCSI BLOCK COMMANDS
           (SBC).

           This option can be used multiple times on the command line.

           If the optional filter is provided, the stats will only be
           calculated on those calls that match that filter.

           Example: -z scsi,srt,0,ip.addr==1.2.3.4 will collect SCSI SBC SRT
           statistics for a specific iscsi/ifcp/fcip host.

       -z sip,stat[,filter]

           This option will activate a counter for SIP messages. You will get
           the number of occurrences of each SIP Method and of each SIP
           Status-Code. Additionally you also get the number of resent SIP
           Messages (only for SIP over UDP).

           Example: -z sip,stat

           This option can be used multiple times on the command line.

           If the optional filter is provided, the stats will only be
           calculated on those calls that match that filter.

           Example: -z "sip,stat,ip.addr==1.2.3.4" will collect stats only for
           SIP packets exchanged by the host at IP address 1.2.3.4 .

       -z smb,srt[,filter]

           Collect call/reply SRT (Service Response Time) data for SMB. Data
           collected is the number of calls for each SMB command, MinSRT,
           MaxSRT and AvgSRT.

           Example: -z smb,srt

           The data will be presented as separate tables for all normal SMB
           commands, all Transaction2 commands and all NT Transaction
           commands. Only those commands that are seen in the capture will
           have their stats displayed. Only the first command in a xAndX
           command chain will be used in the calculation. So for common
           SessionSetupAndX + TreeConnectAndX chains, only the
           SessionSetupAndX call will be used in the statistics. This is a
           flaw that might be fixed in the future.

           This option can be used multiple times on the command line.

           If the optional filter is provided, the stats will only be
           calculated on those calls that match that filter.

           Example: -z "smb,srt,ip.addr==1.2.3.4" will collect stats only for
           SMB packets exchanged by the host at IP address 1.2.3.4 .

       -z voip,calls

           This option will show a window that shows VoIP calls found in the
           capture file. This is the same window shown as when you go to the
           Statistics Menu and choose VoIP Calls.

           Example: -z voip,calls

       -z wlan,stat[,<filter>]

           Show IEEE 802.11 network and station statistics.

       -z wsp,stat[,<filter>]

           Show WSP packet counters.

INTERFACE
   MENU ITEMS
       File > Open


       File > Open Recent


       File > Merge

           Merge another capture file to the currently loaded one. The
           File:Merge dialog box allows the merge "Prepended",
           "Chronologically" or "Appended", relative to the already loaded
           one.

       File > Close

           Open or close a capture file. The File:Open dialog box allows a
           filter to be specified; when the capture file is read, the filter
           is applied to all packets read from the file, and packets not
           matching the filter are discarded. The File:Open Recent is a
           submenu and will show a list of previously opened files.

       File > Save


       File > Save As

           Save the current capture, or the packets currently displayed from
           that capture, to a file. Check boxes let you select whether to save
           all packets, or just those that have passed the current display
           filter and/or those that are currently marked, and an option menu
           lets you select (from a list of file formats in which at particular
           capture, or the packets currently displayed from that capture, can
           be saved), a file format in which to save it.

       File > File Set > List Files

           Show a dialog box that lists all files of the file set matching the
           currently loaded file. A file set is a compound of files resulting
           from a capture using the "multiple files" / "ringbuffer" mode,
           recognizable by the filename pattern, e.g.:
           Filename_00001_20220714101530.pcap.

       File > File Set > Next File


       File > File Set > Previous File

           If the currently loaded file is part of a file set (see above),
           open the next / previous file in that set.

       File > Export

           Export captured data into an external format. Note: the data cannot
           be imported back into Wireshark, so be sure to keep the capture
           file.

       File > Print

           Print packet data from the current capture. You can select the
           range of packets to be printed (which packets are printed), and the
           output format of each packet (how each packet is printed). The
           output format will be similar to the displayed values, so a summary
           line, the packet details view, and/or the hex dump of the packet
           can be printed.

           Printing options can be set with the Edit:Preferences menu item, or
           in the dialog box popped up by this menu item.

       File > Quit

           Exit the application.

       Edit > Copy > Description

           Copies the description of the selected field in the protocol tree
           to the clipboard.

       Edit > Copy > Fieldname

           Copies the fieldname of the selected field in the protocol tree to
           the clipboard.

       Edit > Copy > Value

           Copies the value of the selected field in the protocol tree to the
           clipboard.

       Edit > Copy > As Filter

           Create a display filter based on the data currently highlighted in
           the packet details and copy that filter to the clipboard.

           If that data is a field that can be tested in a display filter
           expression, the display filter will test that field; otherwise, the
           display filter will be based on the absolute offset within the
           packet. Therefore it could be unreliable if the packet contains
           protocols with variable-length headers, such as a source-routed
           token-ring packet.

       Edit > Find Packet

           Search forward or backward, starting with the currently selected
           packet (or the most recently selected packet, if no packet is
           selected). Search criteria can be a display filter expression, a
           string of hexadecimal digits, or a text string.

           When searching for a text string, you can search the packet data,
           or you can search the text in the Info column in the packet list
           pane or in the packet details pane.

           Hexadecimal digits can be separated by colons, periods, or dashes.
           Text string searches can be ASCII or Unicode (or both), and may be
           case insensitive.

       Edit > Find Next


       Edit > Find Previous

           Search forward / backward for a packet matching the filter from the
           previous search, starting with the currently selected packet (or
           the most recently selected packet, if no packet is selected).

       Edit > Mark Packet (toggle)

           Mark (or unmark if currently marked) the selected packet. The field
           "frame.marked" is set for packets that are marked, so that, for
           example, a display filters can be used to display only marked
           packets, and so that the /"Edit:Find Packet" dialog can be used to
           find the next or previous marked packet.

       Edit > Find Next Mark


       Edit > Find Previous Mark

           Find next/previous marked packet.

       Edit > Mark All Packets


       Edit > Unmark All Packets

           Mark / Unmark all packets that are currently displayed.

       Edit > Time Reference > Set Time Reference (toggle)

           Set (or unset if currently set) the selected packet as a Time
           Reference packet. When a packet is set as a Time Reference packet,
           the timestamps in the packet list pane will be replaced with the
           string "REF". The relative time timestamp in later packets will
           then be calculated relative to the timestamp of this Time Reference
           packet and not the first packet in the capture.

           Packets that have been selected as Time Reference packets will
           always be displayed in the packet list pane. Display filters will
           not affect or hide these packets.

           If there is a column displayed for "Cumulative Bytes" this counter
           will be reset at every Time Reference packet.

       Edit > Time Reference > Find Next


       Edit > Time Reference > Find Previous

           Search forward / backward for a time referenced packet.

       Edit > Configuration Profiles

           Manage configuration profiles to be able to use more than one set
           of preferences and configurations.

       Edit > Preferences

           Set the GUI, capture, printing and protocol options (see
           /Preferences dialog below).

       View > Main Toolbar


       View > Filter Toolbar


       View > Statusbar

           Show or hide the main window controls.

       View > Packet List


       View > Packet Details


       View > Packet Bytes

           Show or hide the main window panes.

       View > Time Display Format

           Set the format of the packet timestamp displayed in the packet list
           window.

       View > Name Resolution > Resolve Name

           Try to resolve a name for the currently selected item.

       View > Name Resolution > Enable for ... Layer

           Enable or disable translation of addresses to names in the display.

       View > Colorize Packet List

           Enable or disable the coloring rules. Disabling will improve
           performance.

       View > Auto Scroll in Live Capture

           Enable or disable the automatic scrolling of the packet list while
           a live capture is in progress.

       View > Zoom In


       View > Zoom Out

           Zoom into / out of the main window data (by changing the font
           size).

       View > Normal Size

           Reset the zoom factor of zoom in / zoom out back to normal font
           size.

       View > Resize All Columns

           Resize all columns to best fit the current packet display.

       View > Expand / Collapse Subtrees

           Expands / Collapses the currently selected item and it's subtrees
           in the packet details.

       View > Expand All


       View > Collapse All

           Expand / Collapse all branches of the packet details.

       View > Colorize Conversation

           Select color for a conversation.

       View > Reset Coloring 1-10

           Reset Color for a conversation.

       View > Coloring Rules

           Change the foreground and background colors of the packet
           information in the list of packets, based upon display filters. The
           list of display filters is applied to each packet sequentially.
           After the first display filter matches a packet, any additional
           display filters in the list are ignored. Therefore, if you are
           filtering on the existence of protocols, you should list the
           higher-level protocols first, and the lower-level protocols last.

       How Colorization Works

           Packets are colored according to a list of color filters. Each
           filter consists of a name, a filter expression and a coloration. A
           packet is colored according to the first filter that it matches.
           Color filter expressions use exactly the same syntax as display
           filter expressions.

           When Wireshark starts, the color filters are loaded from:

            1. The user's personal color filters file or, if that does not
               exist,

            2. The global color filters file.

           If neither of these exist then the packets will not be colored.

       View > Show Packet In New Window

           Create a new window containing a packet details view and a hex dump
           window of the currently selected packet; this window will continue
           to display that packet's details and data even if another packet is
           selected.

       View > Reload

           Reload a capture file. Same as File:Close and File:Open the same
           file again.

       Go > Back

           Go back in previously visited packets history.

       Go > Forward

           Go forward in previously visited packets history.

       Go > Go To Packet

           Go to a particular numbered packet.

       Go > Go To Corresponding Packet

           If a field in the packet details pane containing a packet number is
           selected, go to the packet number specified by that field. (This
           works only if the dissector that put that entry into the packet
           details put it into the details as a filterable field rather than
           just as text.) This can be used, for example, to go to the packet
           for the request corresponding to a reply, or the reply
           corresponding to a request, if that packet number has been put into
           the packet details.

       Go > Previous Packet


       Go > Next Packet


       Go > First Packet


       Go > Last Packet

           Go to the previous / next / first / last packet in the capture.

       Go > Previous Packet In Conversation


       Go > Next Packet In Conversation

           Go to the previous / next packet of the conversation (TCP, UDP or
           IP)

       Capture > Interfaces

           Shows a dialog box with all currently known interfaces and
           displaying the current network traffic amount. Capture sessions can
           be started from here. Beware: keeping this box open results in high
           system load!

       Capture > Options

           Initiate a live packet capture (see /"Capture Options Dialog"
           below). If no filename is specified, a temporary file will be
           created to hold the capture. The location of the file can be chosen
           by setting your TMPDIR environment variable before starting
           Wireshark. Otherwise, the default TMPDIR location is
           system-dependent, but is likely either /var/tmp or /tmp.

       Capture > Start

           Start a live packet capture with the previously selected options.
           This won't open the options dialog box, and can be convenient for
           repeatedly capturing with the same options.

       Capture > Stop

           Stop a running live capture.

       Capture > Restart

           While a live capture is running, stop it and restart with the same
           options again. This can be convenient to remove irrelevant packets,
           if no valuable packets were captured so far.

       Capture > Capture Filters

           Edit the saved list of capture filters, allowing filters to be
           added, changed, or deleted.

       Analyze > Display Filters

           Edit the saved list of display filters, allowing filters to be
           added, changed, or deleted.

       Analyze > Display Filter Macros

           Create shortcuts for complex macros

       Analyze > Apply as Filter

           Create a display filter based on the data currently highlighted in
           the packet details and apply the filter.

           If that data is a field that can be tested in a display filter
           expression, the display filter will test that field; otherwise, the
           display filter will be based on the absolute offset within the
           packet. Therefore it could be unreliable if the packet contains
           protocols with variable-length headers, such as a source-routed
           token-ring packet.

           The Selected option creates a display filter that tests for a match
           of the data; the Not Selected option creates a display filter that
           tests for a non-match of the data. The And Selected, Or Selected,
           And Not Selected, and Or Not Selected options add to the end of the
           display filter in the strip at the top (or bottom) an AND or OR
           operator followed by the new display filter expression.

       Analyze > Prepare as Filter

           Create a display filter based on the data currently highlighted in
           the packet details. The filter strip at the top (or bottom) is
           updated but it is not yet applied.

       Analyze > Enabled Protocols

           Allow protocol dissection to be enabled or disabled for a specific
           protocol. Individual protocols can be enabled or disabled by
           clicking on them in the list or by highlighting them and pressing
           the space bar. The entire list can be enabled, disabled, or
           inverted using the buttons below the list.

           When a protocol is disabled, dissection in a particular packet
           stops when that protocol is reached, and Wireshark moves on to the
           next packet. Any higher-layer protocols that would otherwise have
           been processed will not be displayed. For example, disabling TCP
           will prevent the dissection and display of TCP, HTTP, SMTP, Telnet,
           and any other protocol exclusively dependent on TCP.

           The list of protocols can be saved, so that Wireshark will start up
           with the protocols in that list disabled.

       Analyze > Decode As

           If you have a packet selected, present a dialog allowing you to
           change which dissectors are used to decode this packet. The dialog
           has one panel each for the link layer, network layer and transport
           layer protocol/port numbers, and will allow each of these to be
           changed independently. For example, if the selected packet is a TCP
           packet to port 12345, using this dialog you can instruct Wireshark
           to decode all packets to or from that TCP port as HTTP packets.

       Analyze > User Specified Decodes

           Create a new window showing whether any protocol ID to dissector
           mappings have been changed by the user. This window also allows the
           user to reset all decodes to their default values.

       Analyze > Follow TCP Stream

           If you have a TCP packet selected, display the contents of the data
           stream for the TCP connection to which that packet belongs, as
           text, in a separate window, and leave the list of packets in a
           filtered state, with only those packets that are part of that TCP
           connection being displayed. You can revert to your old view by
           pressing ENTER in the display filter text box, thereby invoking
           your old display filter (or resetting it back to no display
           filter).

           The window in which the data stream is displayed lets you select:

           o   whether to display the entire conversation, or one or the other
               side of it;

           o   whether the data being displayed is to be treated as ASCII or
               EBCDIC text or as raw hex data;

           and lets you print what's currently being displayed, using the same
           print options that are used for the File:Print Packet menu item, or
           save it as text to a file.

       Analyze > Follow UDP Stream


       Analyze > Follow TLS Stream

           (Similar to Analyze:Follow TCP Stream)

       Analyze > Expert Info


       Analyze > Expert Info Composite

           (Kind of) a log of anomalies found by Wireshark in a capture file.

       Analyze > Conversation Filter


       Statistics > Summary

           Show summary information about the capture, including elapsed time,
           packet counts, byte counts, and the like. If a display filter is in
           effect, summary information will be shown about the capture and
           about the packets currently being displayed.

       Statistics > Protocol Hierarchy

           Show the number of packets, and the number of bytes in those
           packets, for each protocol in the trace. It organizes the protocols
           in the same hierarchy in which they were found in the trace.
           Besides counting the packets in which the protocol exists, a count
           is also made for packets in which the protocol is the last protocol
           in the stack. These last-protocol counts show you how many packets
           (and the byte count associated with those packets) ended in a
           particular protocol. In the table, they are listed under "End
           Packets" and "End Bytes".

       Statistics > Conversations

           Lists of conversations; selectable by protocol. See
           Statistics:Conversation List below.

       Statistics > End Points

           List of End Point Addresses by protocol with packets/bytes/....
           counts.

       Statistics > Packet Lengths

           Grouped counts of packet lengths (0-19 bytes, 20-39 bytes, ...)

       Statistics > I/O Graphs

           Open a window where up to 5 graphs in different colors can be
           displayed to indicate number of packets or number of bytes per
           second for all packets matching the specified filter. By default
           only one graph will be displayed showing number of packets per
           second.

           The top part of the window contains the graphs and scales for the X
           and Y axis. If the graph is too long to fit inside the window there
           is a horizontal scrollbar below the drawing area that can scroll
           the graphs to the left or the right. The horizontal axis displays
           the time into the capture and the vertical axis will display the
           measured quantity at that time.

           Below the drawing area and the scrollbar are the controls. On the
           bottom left there will be five similar sets of controls to control
           each individual graph such as "Display:<button>" which button will
           toggle that individual graph on/off. If <button> is ticked, the
           graph will be displayed. "Color:<color>" which is just a button to
           show which color will be used to draw that graph. Finally
           "Filter:<filter-text>" which can be used to specify a display
           filter for that particular graph.

           If filter-text is empty then all packets will be used to calculate
           the quantity for that graph. If filter-text is specified only those
           packets that match that display filter will be considered in the
           calculation of quantity.

           To the right of the 5 graph controls there are four menus to
           control global aspects of the draw area and graphs. The "Unit:"
           menu is used to control what to measure; "packets/tick",
           "bytes/tick" or "advanced..."

           packets/tick will measure the number of packets matching the (if
           specified) display filter for the graph in each measurement
           interval.

           bytes/tick will measure the total number of bytes in all packets
           matching the (if specified) display filter for the graph in each
           measurement interval.

           advanced... see below

           "Tick interval:" specifies what measurement intervals to use. The
           default is 1 second and means that the data will be counted over 1
           second intervals.

           "Pixels per tick:" specifies how many pixels wide each measurement
           interval will be in the drawing area. The default is 5 pixels per
           tick.

           "Y-scale:" controls the max value for the y-axis. Default value is
           "auto" which means that Wireshark will try to adjust the maxvalue
           automatically.

           "advanced..." If Unit:advanced... is selected the window will
           display two more controls for each of the five graphs. One control
           will be a menu where the type of calculation can be selected from
           SUM,COUNT,MAX,MIN,AVG and LOAD, and one control, textbox, where the
           name of a single display filter field can be specified.

           The following restrictions apply to type and field combinations:

           SUM: available for all types of integers and will calculate the SUM
           of all occurrences of this field in the measurement interval. Note
           that some field can occur multiple times in the same packet and
           then all instances will be summed up. Example: 'tcp.len' which will
           count the amount of payload data transferred across TCP in each
           interval.

           COUNT: available for all field types. This will COUNT the number of
           times certain field occurs in each interval. Note that some fields
           may occur multiple times in each packet and if that is the case
           then each instance will be counted independently and COUNT will be
           greater than the number of packets.

           MAX: available for all integer and relative time fields. This will
           calculate the max seen integer/time value seen for the field during
           the interval. Example: 'smb.time' which will plot the maximum SMB
           response time.

           MIN: available for all integer and relative time fields. This will
           calculate the min seen integer/time value seen for the field during
           the interval. Example: 'smb.time' which will plot the minimum SMB
           response time.

           AVG: available for all integer and relative time fields.This will
           calculate the average seen integer/time value seen for the field
           during the interval. Example: 'smb.time' which will plot the
           average SMB response time.

           LOAD: available only for relative time fields (response times).

           Example of advanced: Display how NFS response time MAX/MIN/AVG
           changes over time:

           Set first graph to:

               filter:nfs&&rpc.time
               Calc:MAX rpc.time

           Set second graph to

               filter:nfs&&rpc.time
               Calc:AVG rpc.time

           Set third graph to

               filter:nfs&&rpc.time
               Calc:MIN rpc.time

           Example of advanced: Display how the average packet size from host
           a.b.c.d changes over time.

           Set first graph to

               filter:ip.addr==a.b.c.d&&frame.pkt_len
               Calc:AVG frame.pkt_len

           LOAD: The LOAD io-stat type is very different from anything you
           have ever seen before! While the response times themselves as
           plotted by MIN,MAX,AVG are indications on the Server load (which
           affects the Server response time), the LOAD measurement measures
           the Client LOAD. What this measures is how much workload the client
           generates, i.e. how fast will the client issue new commands when
           the previous ones completed. i.e. the level of concurrency the
           client can maintain. The higher the number, the more and faster is
           the client issuing new commands. When the LOAD goes down, it may be
           due to client load making the client slower in issuing new commands
           (there may be other reasons as well, maybe the client just doesn't
           have any commands it wants to issue right then).

           Load is measured in concurrency/number of overlapping i/o and the
           value 1000 means there is a constant load of one i/o.

           In each tick interval the amount of overlap is measured. See the
           graph below containing three commands: Below the graph are the LOAD
           values for each interval that would be calculated.

               |     |     |     |     |     |     |     |     |
               |     |     |     |     |     |     |     |     |
               |     |  o=====*  |     |     |     |     |     |
               |     |     |     |     |     |     |     |     |
               |  o========*     | o============*  |     |     |
               |     |     |     |     |     |     |     |     |
               --------------------------------------------------> Time
                500   1500   500  750   1000   500    0     0

       Statistics > Conversation List

           This option will open a new window that displays a list of all
           conversations between two endpoints. The list has one row for each
           unique conversation and displays total number of packets/bytes seen
           as well as number of packets/bytes in each direction.

           By default the list is sorted according to the number of packets
           but by clicking on the column header; it is possible to re-sort the
           list in ascending or descending order by any column.

           By first selecting a conversation by clicking on it and then using
           the right mouse button (on those platforms that have a right mouse
           button) Wireshark will display a popup menu offering several
           different filter operations to apply to the capture.

           These statistics windows can also be invoked from the Wireshark
           command line using the -z conv argument.

       Statistics > Service Response Time

           o   AFP

           o   CAMEL

           o   DCE-RPC

           Open a window to display Service Response Time statistics for an
           arbitrary DCE-RPC program interface and display Procedure, Number
           of Calls, Minimum SRT, Maximum SRT and Average SRT for all
           procedures for that program/version. These windows opened will
           update in semi-real time to reflect changes when doing live
           captures or when reading new capture files into Wireshark.

           This dialog will also allow an optional filter string to be used.
           If an optional filter string is used only such DCE-RPC
           request/response pairs that match that filter will be used to
           calculate the statistics. If no filter string is specified all
           request/response pairs will be used.

           o   Diameter

           o   Fibre Channel

           Open a window to display Service Response Time statistics for Fibre
           Channel and display FC Type, Number of Calls, Minimum SRT, Maximum
           SRT and Average SRT for all FC types. These windows opened will
           update in semi-real time to reflect changes when doing live
           captures or when reading new capture files into Wireshark. The
           Service Response Time is calculated as the time delta between the
           First packet of the exchange and the Last packet of the exchange.

           This dialog will also allow an optional filter string to be used.
           If an optional filter string is used only such FC first/last
           exchange pairs that match that filter will be used to calculate the
           statistics. If no filter string is specified all request/response
           pairs will be used.

           o   GTP

           o   H.225 RAS

           Collect requests/response SRT (Service Response Time) data for
           ITU-T H.225 RAS. Data collected is number of calls for each known
           ITU-T H.225 RAS Message Type, Minimum SRT, Maximum SRT, Average
           SRT, Minimum in Packet, and Maximum in Packet. You will also get
           the number of Open Requests (Unresponded Requests), Discarded
           Responses (Responses without matching request) and Duplicate
           Messages. These windows opened will update in semi-real time to
           reflect changes when doing live captures or when reading new
           capture files into Wireshark.

           You can apply an optional filter string in a dialog box, before
           starting the calculation. The statistics will only be calculated on
           those calls matching that filter.

           o   LDAP

           o   MEGACO

           o   MGCP

           Collect requests/response SRT (Service Response Time) data for
           MGCP. Data collected is number of calls for each known MGCP Type,
           Minimum SRT, Maximum SRT, Average SRT, Minimum in Packet, and
           Maximum in Packet. These windows opened will update in semi-real
           time to reflect changes when doing live captures or when reading
           new capture files into Wireshark.

           You can apply an optional filter string in a dialog box, before
           starting the calculation. The statistics will only be calculated on
           those calls matching that filter.

           o   NCP

           o   ONC-RPC

           Open a window to display statistics for an arbitrary ONC-RPC
           program interface and display Procedure, Number of Calls, Minimum
           SRT, Maximum SRT and Average SRT for all procedures for that
           program/version. These windows opened will update in semi-real time
           to reflect changes when doing live captures or when reading new
           capture files into Wireshark.

           This dialog will also allow an optional filter string to be used.
           If an optional filter string is used only such ONC-RPC
           request/response pairs that match that filter will be used to
           calculate the statistics. If no filter string is specified all
           request/response pairs will be used.

           By first selecting a conversation by clicking on it and then using
           the right mouse button (on those platforms that have a right mouse
           button) Wireshark will display a popup menu offering several
           different filter operations to apply to the capture.

           o   RADIUS

           o   SCSI

           o   SMB

           Collect call/reply SRT (Service Response Time) data for SMB. Data
           collected is the number of calls for each SMB command, MinSRT,
           MaxSRT and AvgSRT.

           The data will be presented as separate tables for all normal SMB
           commands, all Transaction2 commands and all NT Transaction
           commands. Only those commands that are seen in the capture will
           have its stats displayed. Only the first command in a xAndX command
           chain will be used in the calculation. So for common
           SessionSetupAndX + TreeConnectAndX chains, only the
           SessionSetupAndX call will be used in the statistics. This is a
           flaw that might be fixed in the future.

           You can apply an optional filter string in a dialog box, before
           starting the calculation. The stats will only be calculated on
           those calls matching that filter.

           By first selecting a conversation by clicking on it and then using
           the right mouse button (on those platforms that have a right mouse
           button) Wireshark will display a popup menu offering several
           different filter operations to apply to the capture.

           o   SMB2

       Statistics > BOOTP-DHCP


       Statistics > Compare

           Compare two Capture Files

       Statistics > Flow Graph

           Flow Graph: General/TCP

       Statistics > HTTP

           HTTP Load Distribution, Packet Counter & Requests

       Statistics > IP Addresses

           Count/Rate/Percent by IP Address

       Statistics > IP Destinations

           Count/Rate/Percent by IP Address/protocol/port

       Statistics > IP Protocol Types

           Count/Rate/Percent by IP Protocol Types

       Statistics > ONC-RPC Programs

           This dialog will open a window showing aggregated SRT statistics
           for all ONC-RPC Programs/versions that exist in the capture file.

       Statistics > TCP Stream Graph

           Graphs: Round Trip; Throughput; Time-Sequence (Stevens);
           Time-Sequence (tcptrace)

       Statistics > UDP Multicast streams

           Multicast Streams Counts/Rates/... by Source/Destination
           Address/Port pairs

       Statistics > WLAN Traffic

           WLAN Traffic Statistics

       Telephony > ITU-T H.225

           Count ITU-T H.225 messages and their reasons. In the first column
           you get a list of H.225 messages and H.225 message reasons, which
           occur in the current capture file. The number of occurrences of
           each message or reason will be displayed in the second column. This
           window opened will update in semi-real time to reflect changes when
           doing live captures or when reading new capture files into
           Wireshark.

           You can apply an optional filter string in a dialog box, before
           starting the counter. The statistics will only be calculated on
           those calls matching that filter.

       Telephony > SIP

           Activate a counter for SIP messages. You will get the number of
           occurrences of each SIP Method and of each SIP Status-Code.
           Additionally you also get the number of resent SIP Messages (only
           for SIP over UDP).

           This window opened will update in semi-real time to reflect changes
           when doing live captures or when reading new capture files into
           Wireshark.

           You can apply an optional filter string in a dialog box, before
           starting the counter. The statistics will only be calculated on
           those calls matching that filter.

       Tools > Firewall ACL Rules


       Help > Contents

           Some help texts.

       Help > Supported Protocols

           List of supported protocols and display filter protocol fields.

       Help > Manual Pages

           Display locally installed HTML versions of these manual pages in a
           web browser.

       Help > Wireshark Online

           Various links to online resources to be open in a web browser, like
           https://www.wireshark.org.

       Help > About Wireshark

           See various information about Wireshark (see /About dialog below),
           like the version, the folders used, the available plugins, ...

   WINDOWS
       Main Window

           The main window contains the usual things like the menu, some
           toolbars, the main area and a statusbar. The main area is split
           into three panes, you can resize each pane using a "thumb" at the
           right end of each divider line.

           The main window is much more flexible than before. The layout of
           the main window can be customized by the Layout page in the dialog
           box popped up by Edit:Preferences, the following will describe the
           layout with the default settings.

       Main Toolbar

           Some menu items are available for quick access here. There is no
           way to customize the items in the toolbar, however the toolbar can
           be hidden by View:Main Toolbar.

       Filter Toolbar

           A display filter can be entered into the filter toolbar. A filter
           for HTTP, HTTPS, and DNS traffic might look like this:

               tcp.port in {80 443 53}

           Selecting the Filter: button lets you choose from a list of named
           filters that you can optionally save. Pressing the Return or Enter
           keys, or selecting the Apply button, will cause the filter to be
           applied to the current list of packets. Selecting the Reset button
           clears the display filter so that all packets are displayed
           (again).

           There is no way to customize the items in the toolbar, however the
           toolbar can be hidden by View:Filter Toolbar.

       Packet List Pane

           The top pane contains the list of network packets that you can
           scroll through and select. By default, the packet number, packet
           timestamp, source and destination addresses, protocol, and
           description are displayed for each packet; the Columns page in the
           dialog box popped up by Edit:Preferences lets you change this
           (although, unfortunately, you currently have to save the
           preferences, and exit and restart Wireshark, for those changes to
           take effect).

           If you click on the heading for a column, the display will be
           sorted by that column; clicking on the heading again will reverse
           the sort order for that column.

           An effort is made to display information as high up the protocol
           stack as possible, e.g. IP addresses are displayed for IP packets,
           but the MAC layer address is displayed for unknown packet types.

           The right mouse button can be used to pop up a menu of operations.

           The middle mouse button can be used to mark a packet.

       Packet Details Pane

           The middle pane contains a display of the details of the
           currently-selected packet. The display shows each field and its
           value in each protocol header in the stack. The right mouse button
           can be used to pop up a menu of operations.

       Packet Bytes Pane

           The lowest pane contains a hex and ASCII dump of the actual packet
           data. Selecting a field in the packet details highlights the
           corresponding bytes in this section.

           The right mouse button can be used to pop up a menu of operations.

       Statusbar

           The statusbar is divided into three parts, on the left some context
           dependent things are shown, like information about the loaded file,
           in the center the number of packets are displayed, and on the right
           the current configuration profile.

           The statusbar can be hidden by View:Statusbar.

       Preferences

           The Preferences dialog lets you control various personal
           preferences for the behavior of Wireshark.

       User Interface Preferences

           The User Interface page is used to modify small aspects of the GUI
           to your own personal taste:

       Selection Bars

           The selection bar in the packet list and packet details can have
           either a "browse" or "select" behavior. If the selection bar has a
           "browse" behavior, the arrow keys will move an outline of the
           selection bar, allowing you to browse the rest of the list or
           details without changing the selection until you press the space
           bar. If the selection bar has a "select" behavior, the arrow keys
           will move the selection bar and change the selection to the new
           item in the packet list or packet details.

       Save Window Position

           If this item is selected, the position of the main Wireshark window
           will be saved when Wireshark exits, and used when Wireshark is
           started again.

       Save Window Size

           If this item is selected, the size of the main Wireshark window
           will be saved when Wireshark exits, and used when Wireshark is
           started again.

       Save Window Maximized state

           If this item is selected the maximize state of the main Wireshark
           window will be saved when Wireshark exists, and used when Wireshark
           is started again.

       File Open Dialog Behavior

           This item allows the user to select how Wireshark handles the
           listing of the "File Open" Dialog when opening trace files.
           "Remember Last Directory" causes Wireshark to automatically
           position the dialog in the directory of the most recently opened
           file, even between launches of Wireshark. "Always Open in
           Directory" allows the user to define a persistent directory that
           the dialog will always default to.

       Directory

           Allows the user to specify a persistent File Open directory.
           Trailing slashes or backslashes will automatically be added.

       File Open Preview timeout

           This items allows the user to define how much time is spend reading
           the capture file to present preview data in the File Open dialog.

       Open Recent maximum list entries

           The File menu supports a recent file list. This items allows the
           user to specify how many files are kept track of in this list.

       Ask for unsaved capture files

           When closing a capture file or Wireshark itself if the file isn't
           saved yet the user is presented the option to save the file when
           this item is set.

       Wrap during find

           This items determines the behavior when reaching the beginning or
           the end of a capture file. When set the search wraps around and
           continues, otherwise it stops.

       Settings dialogs show a save button

           This item determines if the various dialogs sport an explicit Save
           button or that save is implicit in OK / Apply.

       Web browser command

           This entry specifies the command line to launch a web browser. It
           is used to access online content, like the Wiki and user guide. Use
           '%s' to place the request URL in the command line.

       Layout Preferences

           The Layout page lets you specify the general layout of the main
           window. You can choose from six different layouts and fill the
           three panes with the contents you like.

       Scrollbars

           The vertical scrollbars in the three panes can be set to be either
           on the left or the right.

       Alternating row colors


       Hex Display

           The highlight method in the hex dump display for the selected
           protocol item can be set to use either inverse video, or bold
           characters.

       Toolbar style


       Filter toolbar placement


       Custom window title


       Column Preferences

           The Columns page lets you specify the number, title, and format of
           each column in the packet list.

           The Column title entry is used to specify the title of the column
           displayed at the top of the packet list. The type of data that the
           column displays can be specified using the Column format option
           menu. The row of buttons on the left perform the following actions:

       New

           Adds a new column to the list.

       Delete

           Deletes the currently selected list item.

       Up / Down

           Moves the selected list item up or down one position.

       Font Preferences

           The Font page lets you select the font to be used for most text.

       Color Preferences

           The Colors page can be used to change the color of the text
           displayed in the TCP stream window and for marked packets. To
           change a color, simply select an attribute from the "Set:" menu and
           use the color selector to get the desired color. The new text
           colors are displayed as a sample text.

       Capture Preferences

           The Capture page lets you specify various parameters for capturing
           live packet data; these are used the first time a capture is
           started.

           The Interface: combo box lets you specify the interface from which
           to capture packet data, or the name of a FIFO from which to get the
           packet data.

           The Data link type: option menu lets you, for some interfaces,
           select the data link header you want to see on the packets you
           capture. For example, in some OSes and with some versions of
           libpcap, you can choose, on an 802.11 interface, whether the
           packets should appear as Ethernet packets (with a fake Ethernet
           header) or as 802.11 packets.

           The Limit each packet to ... bytes check box lets you set the
           snapshot length to use when capturing live data; turn on the check
           box, and then set the number of bytes to use as the snapshot
           length.

           The Filter: text entry lets you set a capture filter expression to
           be used when capturing.

           If any of the environment variables SSH_CONNECTION, SSH_CLIENT,
           REMOTEHOST, DISPLAY, or SESSIONNAME are set, Wireshark will create
           a default capture filter that excludes traffic from the hosts and
           ports defined in those variables.

           The Capture packets in promiscuous mode check box lets you specify
           whether to put the interface in promiscuous mode when capturing.

           The Update list of packets in real time check box lets you specify
           that the display should be updated as packets are seen.

           The Automatic scrolling in live capture check box lets you specify
           whether, in an "Update list of packets in real time" capture, the
           packet list pane should automatically scroll to show the most
           recently captured packets.

       Printing Preferences

           The radio buttons at the top of the Printing page allow you choose
           between printing packets with the File:Print Packet menu item as
           text or PostScript, and sending the output directly to a command or
           saving it to a file. The Command: text entry box, on
           UNIX-compatible systems, is the command to send files to (usually
           lpr), and the File: entry box lets you enter the name of the file
           you wish to save to. Additionally, you can select the File: button
           to browse the file system for a particular save file.

       Name Resolution Preferences

           The Enable MAC name resolution, Enable network name resolution and
           Enable transport name resolution check boxes let you specify
           whether MAC addresses, network addresses, and transport-layer port
           numbers should be translated to names.

           The Enable concurrent DNS name resolution allows Wireshark to send
           out multiple name resolution requests and not wait for the result
           before continuing dissection. This speeds up dissection with
           network name resolution but initially may miss resolutions. The
           number of concurrent requests can be set here as well.

           SMI paths

           SMI modules

       RTP Player Preferences

           This page allows you to select the number of channels visible in
           the RTP player window. It determines the height of the window, more
           channels are possible and visible by means of a scroll bar.

       Protocol Preferences

           There are also pages for various protocols that Wireshark dissects,
           controlling the way Wireshark handles those protocols.

       Edit Capture Filter List


       Edit Display Filter List


       Capture Filter


       Display Filter


       Read Filter


       Search Filter

           The Edit Capture Filter List dialog lets you create, modify, and
           delete capture filters, and the Edit Display Filter List dialog
           lets you create, modify, and delete display filters.

           The Capture Filter dialog lets you do all of the editing operations
           listed, and also lets you choose or construct a filter to be used
           when capturing packets.

           The Display Filter dialog lets you do all of the editing operations
           listed, and also lets you choose or construct a filter to be used
           to filter the current capture being viewed.

           The Read Filter dialog lets you do all of the editing operations
           listed, and also lets you choose or construct a filter to be used
           to as a read filter for a capture file you open.

           The Search Filter dialog lets you do all of the editing operations
           listed, and also lets you choose or construct a filter expression
           to be used in a find operation.

           In all of those dialogs, the Filter name entry specifies a
           descriptive name for a filter, e.g. Web and DNS traffic. The Filter
           string entry is the text that actually describes the filtering
           action to take, as described above.The dialog buttons perform the
           following actions:

       New

           If there is text in the two entry boxes, creates a new associated
           list item.

       Edit

           Modifies the currently selected list item to match what's in the
           entry boxes.

       Delete

           Deletes the currently selected list item.

       Add Expression...

           For display filter expressions, pops up a dialog box to allow you
           to construct a filter expression to test a particular field; it
           offers lists of field names, and, when appropriate, lists from
           which to select tests to perform on the field and values with which
           to compare it. In that dialog box, the OK button will cause the
           filter expression you constructed to be entered into the Filter
           string entry at the current cursor position.

       OK

           In the Capture Filter dialog, closes the dialog box and makes the
           filter in the Filter string entry the filter in the Capture
           Preferences dialog. In the Display Filter dialog, closes the dialog
           box and makes the filter in the Filter string entry the current
           display filter, and applies it to the current capture. In the Read
           Filter dialog, closes the dialog box and makes the filter in the
           Filter string entry the filter in the Open Capture File dialog. In
           the Search Filter dialog, closes the dialog box and makes the
           filter in the Filter string entry the filter in the Find Packet
           dialog.

       Apply

           Makes the filter in the Filter string entry the current display
           filter, and applies it to the current capture.

       Save

           If the list of filters being edited is the list of capture filters,
           saves the current filter list to the personal capture filters file,
           and if the list of filters being edited is the list of display
           filters, saves the current filter list to the personal display
           filters file.

       Close

           Closes the dialog without doing anything with the filter in the
           Filter string entry.

       The Color Filters Dialog

           This dialog displays a list of color filters and allows it to be
           modified.

       THE FILTER LIST

           Single rows may be selected by clicking. Multiple rows may be
           selected by using the ctrl and shift keys in combination with the
           mouse button.

       NEW

           Adds a new filter at the bottom of the list and opens the Edit
           Color Filter dialog box. You will have to alter the filter
           expression at least before the filter will be accepted. The format
           of color filter expressions is identical to that of display
           filters. The new filter is selected, so it may immediately be moved
           up and down, deleted or edited. To avoid confusion all filters are
           unselected before the new filter is created.

       EDIT

           Opens the Edit Color Filter dialog box for the selected filter. (If
           this button is disabled you may have more than one filter selected,
           making it ambiguous which is to be edited.)

       ENABLE

           Enables the selected color filter(s).

       DISABLE

           Disables the selected color filter(s).

       DELETE

           Deletes the selected color filter(s).

       EXPORT

           Allows you to choose a file in which to save the current list of
           color filters. You may also choose to save only the selected
           filters. A button is provided to save the filters in the global
           color filters file (you must have sufficient permissions to write
           this file, of course).

       IMPORT

           Allows you to choose a file containing color filters which are then
           added to the bottom of the current list. All the added filters are
           selected, so they may be moved to the correct position in the list
           as a group. To avoid confusion, all filters are unselected before
           the new filters are imported. A button is provided to load the
           filters from the global color filters file.

       CLEAR

           Deletes your personal color filters file, reloads the global color
           filters file, if any, and closes the dialog.

       UP

           Moves the selected filter(s) up the list, making it more likely
           that they will be used to color packets.

       DOWN

           Moves the selected filter(s) down the list, making it less likely
           that they will be used to color packets.

       OK

           Closes the dialog and uses the color filters as they stand.

       APPLY

           Colors the packets according to the current list of color filters,
           but does not close the dialog.

       SAVE

           Saves the current list of color filters in your personal color
           filters file. Unless you do this they will not be used the next
           time you start Wireshark.

       CLOSE

           Closes the dialog without changing the coloration of the packets.
           Note that changes you have made to the current list of color
           filters are not undone.

       Capture Options Dialog

           The Capture Options Dialog lets you specify various parameters for
           capturing live packet data.

           The Interface: field lets you specify the interface from which to
           capture packet data or a command from which to get the packet data
           via a pipe.

           The Link layer header type: field lets you specify the interfaces
           link layer header type. This field is usually disabled, as most
           interface have only one header type.

           The Capture packets in promiscuous mode check box lets you specify
           whether the interface should be put into promiscuous mode when
           capturing.

           The Limit each packet to ... bytes check box and field lets you
           specify a maximum number of bytes per packet to capture and save;
           if the check box is not checked, the limit will be 262144 bytes.

           The Capture Filter: entry lets you specify the capture filter using
           a tcpdump-style filter string as described above.

           The File: entry lets you specify the file into which captured
           packets should be saved, as in the Printer Options dialog above. If
           not specified, the captured packets will be saved in a temporary
           file; you can save those packets to a file with the File:Save As
           menu item.

           The Use multiple files check box lets you specify that the capture
           should be done in "multiple files" mode. This option is disabled,
           if the Update list of packets in real time option is checked.

           The Next file every ... megabyte(s) check box and fields lets you
           specify that a switch to a next file should be done if the
           specified filesize is reached. You can also select the appropriate
           unit, but beware that the filesize has a maximum of 2 GiB. The
           check box is forced to be checked, as "multiple files" mode
           requires a file size to be specified.

           The Next file every ... minute(s) check box and fields lets you
           specify that the switch to a next file should be done after the
           specified time has elapsed, even if the specified capture size is
           not reached.

           The Ring buffer with ... files field lets you specify the number of
           files of a ring buffer. This feature will capture into the first
           file again, after the specified number of files have been used.

           The Stop capture after ... files field lets you specify the number
           of capture files used, until the capture is stopped.

           The Stop capture after ... packet(s) check box and field let you
           specify that Wireshark should stop capturing after having captured
           some number of packets; if the check box is not checked, Wireshark
           will not stop capturing at some fixed number of captured packets.

           The Stop capture after ... megabyte(s) check box and field lets you
           specify that Wireshark should stop capturing after the file to
           which captured packets are being saved grows as large as or larger
           than some specified number of megabytes. If the check box is not
           checked, Wireshark will not stop capturing at some capture file
           size (although the operating system on which Wireshark is running,
           or the available disk space, may still limit the maximum size of a
           capture file). This option is disabled, if "multiple files" mode is
           used,

           The Stop capture after ... second(s) check box and field let you
           specify that Wireshark should stop capturing after it has been
           capturing for some number of seconds; if the check box is not
           checked, Wireshark will not stop capturing after some fixed time
           has elapsed.

           The Update list of packets in real time check box lets you specify
           whether the display should be updated as packets are captured and,
           if you specify that, the Automatic scrolling in live capture check
           box lets you specify the packet list pane should automatically
           scroll to show the most recently captured packets as new packets
           arrive.

           The Enable MAC name resolution, Enable network name resolution and
           Enable transport name resolution check boxes let you specify
           whether MAC addresses, network addresses, and transport-layer port
           numbers should be translated to names.

       About

           The About dialog lets you view various information about Wireshark.

       About > Wireshark

           The Wireshark page lets you view general information about
           Wireshark, like the installed version, licensing information and
           such.

       About > Authors

           The Authors page shows the author and all contributors.

       About > Folders

           The Folders page lets you view the directory names where Wireshark
           is searching it's various configuration and other files.

       About > Plugins

           The Plugins page lets you view the dissector plugin modules
           available on your system.

           The Plugins List shows the name and version of each dissector
           plugin module found on your system.

           On Unix-compatible systems, the plugins are looked for in the
           following directories: the lib/wireshark/plugins/$VERSION directory
           under the main installation directory (for example,
           /usr/local/lib/wireshark/plugins/$VERSION), and then
           $HOME/.wireshark/plugins.

           On Windows systems, the plugins are looked for in the following
           directories: plugins\$VERSION directory under the main installation
           directory (for example, C:\Program
           Files\Wireshark\plugins\$VERSION), and then
           %APPDATA%\Wireshark\plugins\$VERSION (or, if %APPDATA% isn't
           defined, %USERPROFILE%\Application
           Data\Wireshark\plugins\$VERSION).

           $VERSION is the version number of the plugin interface, which is
           typically the version number of Wireshark. Note that a dissector
           plugin module may support more than one protocol; there is not
           necessarily a one-to-one correspondence between dissector plugin
           modules and protocols. Protocols supported by a dissector plugin
           module are enabled and disabled using the Edit:Protocols dialog
           box, just as protocols built into Wireshark are.

CAPTURE FILTER SYNTAX
       See the manual page of pcap-filter(7) or, if that doesn't exist,
       tcpdump(8), or, if that doesn't exist,
       https://gitlab.com/wireshark/wireshark/-/wikis/CaptureFilters.

DISPLAY FILTER SYNTAX
       For a complete table of protocol and protocol fields that are
       filterable in Wireshark see the wireshark-filter(4) manual page.

FILES
       These files contains various Wireshark configuration settings.

       Preferences

           The preferences files contain global (system-wide) and personal
           preference settings. If the system-wide preference file exists, it
           is read first, overriding the default settings. If the personal
           preferences file exists, it is read next, overriding any previous
           values. Note: If the command line flag -o is used (possibly more
           than once), it will in turn override values from the preferences
           files.

           The preferences settings are in the form prefname:value, one per
           line, where prefname is the name of the preference and value is the
           value to which it should be set; white space is allowed between :
           and value. A preference setting can be continued on subsequent
           lines by indenting the continuation lines with white space. A #
           character starts a comment that runs to the end of the line:

               # Vertical scrollbars should be on right side?
               # TRUE or FALSE (case-insensitive).
               gui.scrollbar_on_right: TRUE

           The global preferences file is looked for in the wireshark
           directory under the share subdirectory of the main installation
           directory (for example, /usr/local/share/wireshark/preferences) on
           UNIX-compatible systems, and in the main installation directory
           (for example, C:\Program Files\Wireshark\preferences) on Windows
           systems.

           The personal preferences file is looked for in
           $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/wireshark/preferences (or, if
           $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/wireshark does not exist while $HOME/.wireshark is
           present, $HOME/.wireshark/preferences) on UNIX-compatible systems
           and %APPDATA%\Wireshark\preferences (or, if %APPDATA% isn't
           defined, %USERPROFILE%\Application Data\Wireshark\preferences) on
           Windows systems.

           Note: Whenever the preferences are saved by using the Save button
           in the Edit:Preferences dialog box, your personal preferences file
           will be overwritten with the new settings, destroying any comments
           and unknown/obsolete settings that were in the file.

       Recent

           The recent file contains personal settings (mostly GUI related)
           such as the current Wireshark window size. The file is saved at
           program exit and read in at program start automatically. Note: The
           command line flag -o may be used to override settings from this
           file.

           The settings in this file have the same format as in the
           preferences files, and the same directory as for the personal
           preferences file is used.

           Note: Whenever Wireshark is closed, your recent file will be
           overwritten with the new settings, destroying any comments and
           unknown/obsolete settings that were in the file.

       Disabled (Enabled) Protocols

           The disabled_protos files contain system-wide and personal lists of
           protocols that have been disabled, so that their dissectors are
           never called. The files contain protocol names, one per line, where
           the protocol name is the same name that would be used in a display
           filter for the protocol:

               http
               tcp     # a comment

           If a protocol is listed in the global disabled_protos file, it is
           not displayed in the Analyze:Enabled Protocols dialog box, and so
           cannot be enabled by the user.

           The global disabled_protos file uses the same directory as the
           global preferences file.

           The personal disabled_protos file uses the same directory as the
           personal preferences file.

           Note: Whenever the disabled protocols list is saved by using the
           Save button in the Analyze:Enabled Protocols dialog box, your
           personal disabled protocols file will be overwritten with the new
           settings, destroying any comments that were in the file.

       Name Resolution (hosts)

           If the personal hosts file exists, it is used to resolve IPv4 and
           IPv6 addresses before any other attempts are made to resolve them.
           The file has the standard hosts file syntax; each line contains one
           IP address and name, separated by whitespace. The same directory as
           for the personal preferences file is used.

           Capture filter name resolution is handled by libpcap on
           UNIX-compatible systems and WinPcap on Windows. As such the
           Wireshark personal hosts file will not be consulted for capture
           filter name resolution.

       Name Resolution (subnets)

           If an IPv4 address cannot be translated via name resolution (no
           exact match is found) then a partial match is attempted via the
           subnets file. Both the global subnets file and personal subnets
           files are used if they exist.

           Each line of this file consists of an IPv4 address, a subnet mask
           length separated only by a / and a name separated by whitespace.
           While the address must be a full IPv4 address, any values beyond
           the mask length are subsequently ignored.

           An example is:

           # Comments must be prepended by the # sign! 192.168.0.0/24
           ws_test_network

           A partially matched name will be printed as
           "subnet-name.remaining-address". For example, "192.168.0.1" under
           the subnet above would be printed as "ws_test_network.1"; if the
           mask length above had been 16 rather than 24, the printed address
           would be "ws_test_network.0.1".

       Name Resolution (ethers)

           The ethers files are consulted to correlate 6-byte hardware
           addresses to names. First the personal ethers file is tried and if
           an address is not found there the global ethers file is tried next.

           Each line contains one hardware address and name, separated by
           whitespace. The digits of the hardware address are separated by
           colons (:), dashes (-) or periods (.). The same separator character
           must be used consistently in an address. The following three lines
           are valid lines of an ethers file:

               ff:ff:ff:ff:ff:ff          Broadcast
               c0-00-ff-ff-ff-ff          TR_broadcast
               00.00.00.00.00.00          Zero_broadcast

           The global ethers file is looked for in the /etc directory on
           UNIX-compatible systems, and in the main installation directory
           (for example, C:\Program Files\Wireshark) on Windows systems.

           The personal ethers file is looked for in the same directory as the
           personal preferences file.

           Capture filter name resolution is handled by libpcap on
           UNIX-compatible systems and WinPcap on Windows. As such the
           Wireshark personal ethers file will not be consulted for capture
           filter name resolution.

       Name Resolution (manuf)

           The manuf file is used to match the 3-byte vendor portion of a
           6-byte hardware address with the manufacturer's name; it can also
           contain well-known MAC addresses and address ranges specified with
           a netmask. The format of the file is the same as the ethers files,
           except that entries such as:

               00:00:0C      Cisco

           can be provided, with the 3-byte OUI and the name for a vendor, and
           entries such as:

               00-00-0C-07-AC/40     All-HSRP-routers

           can be specified, with a MAC address and a mask indicating how many
           bits of the address must match. The above entry, for example, has
           40 significant bits, or 5 bytes, and would match addresses from
           00-00-0C-07-AC-00 through 00-00-0C-07-AC-FF. The mask need not be a
           multiple of 8.

           The manuf file is looked for in the same directory as the global
           preferences file.

       Name Resolution (services)

           The services file is used to translate port numbers into names.
           Both the global services file and personal services files are used
           if they exist.

           The file has the standard services file syntax; each line contains
           one (service) name and one transport identifier separated by white
           space. The transport identifier includes one port number and one
           transport protocol name (typically tcp, udp, or sctp) separated by
           a /.

           An example is:

           mydns       5045/udp     # My own Domain Name Server mydns
           5045/tcp     # My own Domain Name Server

       Name Resolution (ipxnets)

           The ipxnets files are used to correlate 4-byte IPX network numbers
           to names. First the global ipxnets file is tried and if that
           address is not found there the personal one is tried next.

           The format is the same as the ethers file, except that each address
           is four bytes instead of six. Additionally, the address can be
           represented as a single hexadecimal number, as is more common in
           the IPX world, rather than four hex octets. For example, these four
           lines are valid lines of an ipxnets file:

               C0.A8.2C.00              HR
               c0-a8-1c-00              CEO
               00:00:BE:EF              IT_Server1
               110f                     FileServer3

           The global ipxnets file is looked for in the /etc directory on
           UNIX-compatible systems, and in the main installation directory
           (for example, C:\Program Files\Wireshark) on Windows systems.

           The personal ipxnets file is looked for in the same directory as
           the personal preferences file.

       Capture Filters

           The cfilters files contain system-wide and personal capture
           filters. Each line contains one filter, starting with the string
           displayed in the dialog box in quotation marks, followed by the
           filter string itself:

               "HTTP" port 80
               "DCERPC" port 135

           The global cfilters file uses the same directory as the global
           preferences file.

           The personal cfilters file uses the same directory as the personal
           preferences file. It is written through the Capture:Capture Filters
           dialog.

           If the global cfilters file exists, it is used only if the personal
           cfilters file does not exist; global and personal capture filters
           are not merged.

       Display Filters

           The dfilters files contain system-wide and personal display
           filters. Each line contains one filter, starting with the string
           displayed in the dialog box in quotation marks, followed by the
           filter string itself:

               "HTTP" http
               "DCERPC" dcerpc

           The global dfilters file uses the same directory as the global
           preferences file.

           The personal dfilters file uses the same directory as the personal
           preferences file. It is written through the Analyze:Display Filters
           dialog.

           If the global dfilters file exists, it is used only if the personal
           dfilters file does not exist; global and personal display filters
           are not merged.

       Color Filters (Coloring Rules)

           The colorfilters files contain system-wide and personal color
           filters. Each line contains one filter, starting with the string
           displayed in the dialog box, followed by the corresponding display
           filter. Then the background and foreground colors are appended:

               # a comment
               @tcp@tcp@[59345,58980,65534][0,0,0]
               @udp@udp@[28834,57427,65533][0,0,0]

           The global colorfilters file uses the same directory as the global
           preferences file.

           The personal colorfilters file uses the same directory as the
           personal preferences file. It is written through the View:Coloring
           Rules dialog.

           If the global colorfilters file exists, it is used only if the
           personal colorfilters file does not exist; global and personal
           color filters are not merged.

       Plugins

           See above in the description of the About:Plugins page.

ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
       WIRESHARK_CONFIG_DIR

           This environment variable overrides the location of personal
           configuration files. It defaults to $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/wireshark (or
           $HOME/.wireshark if the former is missing while the latter exists).
           On Windows, %APPDATA%\Wireshark is used instead. Available since
           Wireshark 3.0.

       WIRESHARK_DEBUG_WMEM_OVERRIDE

           Setting this environment variable forces the wmem framework to use
           the specified allocator backend for all allocations, regardless of
           which backend is normally specified by the code. This is mainly
           useful to developers when testing or debugging. See README.wmem in
           the source distribution for details.

       WIRESHARK_RUN_FROM_BUILD_DIRECTORY

           This environment variable causes the plugins and other data files
           to be loaded from the build directory (where the program was
           compiled) rather than from the standard locations. It has no effect
           when the program in question is running with root (or setuid)
           permissions on *NIX.

       WIRESHARK_DATA_DIR

           This environment variable causes the various data files to be
           loaded from a directory other than the standard locations. It has
           no effect when the program in question is running with root (or
           setuid) permissions on *NIX.

       ERF_RECORDS_TO_CHECK

           This environment variable controls the number of ERF records
           checked when deciding if a file really is in the ERF format.
           Setting this environment variable a number higher than the default
           (20) would make false positives less likely.

       IPFIX_RECORDS_TO_CHECK

           This environment variable controls the number of IPFIX records
           checked when deciding if a file really is in the IPFIX format.
           Setting this environment variable a number higher than the default
           (20) would make false positives less likely.

       WIRESHARK_ABORT_ON_DISSECTOR_BUG

           If this environment variable is set, Wireshark will call abort(3)
           when a dissector bug is encountered. abort(3) will cause the
           program to exit abnormally; if you are running Wireshark in a
           debugger, it should halt in the debugger and allow inspection of
           the process, and, if you are not running it in a debugger, it will,
           on some OSes, assuming your environment is configured correctly,
           generate a core dump file. This can be useful to developers
           attempting to troubleshoot a problem with a protocol dissector.

       WIRESHARK_ABORT_ON_TOO_MANY_ITEMS

           If this environment variable is set, Wireshark will call abort(3)
           if a dissector tries to add too many items to a tree (generally
           this is an indication of the dissector not breaking out of a loop
           soon enough). abort(3) will cause the program to exit abnormally;
           if you are running Wireshark in a debugger, it should halt in the
           debugger and allow inspection of the process, and, if you are not
           running it in a debugger, it will, on some OSes, assuming your
           environment is configured correctly, generate a core dump file.
           This can be useful to developers attempting to troubleshoot a
           problem with a protocol dissector.

       WIRESHARK_QUIT_AFTER_CAPTURE

           Cause Wireshark to exit after the end of the capture session. This
           doesn't automatically start a capture; you must still use -k to do
           that. You must also specify an autostop condition, e.g. -c or -a
           duration:.... This means that you will not be able to see the
           results of the capture after it stops; it's primarily useful for
           testing.

       WIRESHARK_LOG_LEVEL

           This environment variable controls the verbosity of diagnostic
           messages to the console. From less verbose to most verbose levels
           can be critical, warning, message, info, debug or noisy. Levels
           above the current level are also active. Levels critical and error
           are always active.

       WIRESHARK_LOG_FATAL

           Sets the fatal log level. Fatal log levels cause the program to
           abort. This level can be set to Error, critical or warning. Error
           is always fatal and is the default.

       WIRESHARK_LOG_DOMAINS

           This environment variable selects which log domains are active. The
           filter is given as a case-insensitive comma separated list. If set
           only the included domains will be enabled. The default domain is
           always considered to be enabled. Domain filter lists can be
           preceded by '!' to invert the sense of the match.

       WIRESHARK_LOG_DEBUG

           List of domains with debug log level. This sets the level of the
           provided log domains and takes precedence over the active domains
           filter. If preceded by '!' this disables the debug level instead.

       WIRESHARK_LOG_NOISY

           Same as above but for noisy log level instead.

AUTHORS
       Wireshark would not be the powerful, featureful application it is
       without the generous contributions of hundreds of developers.

       A complete list of authors can be found in the AUTHORS file in
       Wireshark's source code repository and at
       https://www.wireshark.org/about.html#authors.


ATTRIBUTES
       See attributes(7) for descriptions of the following attributes:


       +---------------+----------------------+
       |ATTRIBUTE TYPE |   ATTRIBUTE VALUE    |
       +---------------+----------------------+
       |Availability   | diagnostic/wireshark |
       +---------------+----------------------+
       |Stability      | Uncommitted          |
       +---------------+----------------------+

SEE ALSO
       wireshark-filter(4), tshark(1), editcap(1), pcap(3), dumpcap(1),
       mergecap(1), text2pcap(1), pcap-filter(7) or tcpdump(8)

NOTES
       This is the manual page for Wireshark 3.6.6. The latest version of
       Wireshark can be found at https://www.wireshark.org.

       HTML versions of the Wireshark project man pages are available at
       https://www.wireshark.org/docs/man-pages.

       Source code for open source software components in Oracle Solaris can
       be found at https://www.oracle.com/downloads/opensource/solaris-source-
       code-downloads.html.

       This software was built from source available at
       https://github.com/oracle/solaris-userland. The original community
       source was downloaded from  http://www.wireshark.org/download/src/all-
       versions/wireshark-3.6.6.tar.xz.

       Further information about this software can be found on the open source
       community website at http://www.wireshark.org/.



                                                                  WIRESHARK(1)