Book Image

Learn Wireshark, - Second Edition

By : Lisa Bock
5 (1)
Book Image

Learn Wireshark, - Second Edition

5 (1)
By: Lisa Bock

Overview of this book

Wireshark is a popular and powerful packet analysis tool that helps network administrators investigate latency issues and potential attacks. Over the years, there have been many enhancements to Wireshark’s functionality. This book will guide you through essential features so you can capture, display, and filter data with ease. In addition to this, you’ll gain valuable tips on lesser-known configuration options, which will allow you to complete your analysis in an environment customized to suit your needs. This updated second edition of Learn Wireshark starts by outlining the benefits of traffic analysis. You’ll discover the process of installing Wireshark and become more familiar with the interface. Next, you’ll focus on the Internet Suite and then explore deep packet analysis of common protocols such as DNS, DHCP, HTTP, and ARP. The book also guides you through working with the expert system to detect network latency issues, create I/O and stream graphs, subset traffic, and save and export captures. Finally, you’ll understand how to share captures using CloudShark, a browser-based solution for analyzing packet captures. By the end of this Wireshark book, you’ll have the skills and hands-on experience you need to conduct deep packet analysis of common protocols and network troubleshooting as well as identify security issues.
Table of Contents (28 chapters)
1
Part 1 Traffic Capture Overview
6
Part 2 Getting Started with Wireshark
11
Part 3 The Internet Suite TCP/IP
16
Part 4 Deep Packet Analysis of Common Protocols
21
Part 5 Working with Packet Captures

Tapping into the stream

While tapping into a LAN with the Network Interface Card (NIC) in promiscuous mode, the adapter captures the traffic and sends the packets up through the Enhanced Packet Analyzer (EPAN) for dissection and decoding, and then on to the Wireshark interface.

You'll then see the packets filling the screen. If you are on an end device and communicating with another host, you will most likely see three types of packets – namely, broadcast, multicast, and unicast:

  • Broadcast: Packets are sent from one host to everyone on a network – for example, an ARP broadcast.
  • Multicast: Packets are sent from one host to many hosts – for example, using Enhanced Interior Gateway Routing Protocol (EIGRP) multicasts.
  • Unicast: This sends packets from one host to another host– for example, from your computer to a web server.

In a normal conversation with another host, once you have a connection, the OS will create a socket, which...