Wireshark
Wireshark is a free and open-source packet analyzer. It is used for network troubleshooting, analysis, software and communications protocol development, and education.
Installation
Install the wireshark-qt package for the Wireshark GUI or wireshark-cli for just the tshark(1) CLI.
termshark is an alternative terminal UI.
Capturing privileges
Do not run Wireshark as root, it is insecure. Wireshark has implemented privilege separation, which means that the Wireshark GUI (or the tshark CLI) can run as a normal user while the dumpcap capture utility runs as root[1].
The wireshark-cli install script sets packet capturing capabilities on the /usr/bin/dumpcap
executable.
/usr/bin/dumpcap
can only be executed by root and members of the wireshark
group, therefore to use Wireshark as a normal user you have to add your user to the wireshark
user group.
A few capturing techniques
There are a number of different ways to capture exactly what you are looking for in Wireshark, by applying capture filters or display filters.
Filtering TCP packets
If you want to see all the current TCP packets, type tcp
into the Filter bar or in the CLI, enter:
$ tshark -f "tcp"
Filtering UDP packets
If you want to see all the current UDP packets, type udp
into the Filter bar or in the CLI, enter:
$ tshark -f "udp"
Filter packets to a specific IP address
- If you would like to see all the traffic going to a specific address, enter display filter
ip.dst == 1.2.3.4
, replacing1.2.3.4
with the IP address the outgoing traffic is being sent to. - If you would like to see all the incoming traffic for a specific address, enter display filter
ip.src == 1.2.3.4
, replacing1.2.3.4
with the IP address the incoming traffic is being sent to. - If you would like to see all the incoming and outgoing traffic for a specific address, enter display filter
ip.addr == 1.2.3.4
, replacing1.2.3.4
with the relevant IP address.
Exclude packets from a specific IP address
ip.addr != 1.2.3.4
Filter packets to LAN
To only see LAN traffic and no internet traffic, run
(ip.src==10.0.0/8 AND ip.dst==10.0.0/8) OR (ip.src==172.16.0.0/12 AND ip.dst==172.16.0.0/12) OR (ip.src==192.168.0.0/16 and ip.dst==192.168.0.0/16)
This will filter traffic within any of the private network spaces.
Filter packets by port
See all traffic on two ports or more:
tcp.port==80||tcp.port==3306 tcp.port==80||tcp.port==3306||tcp.port==443