General Information ------- ----------- Ethereal is a network traffic analyzer for Unix-ish operating systems. It is based on GTK+, a graphical user interface library, and libpcap, a packet capture and filtering library. The official home of Ethereal is http://ethereal.zing.org The latest distribution can be found in the subdirectory http://ethereal.zing.org/distribution Installation ------------ Ethereal is known to compile and run under Linux (2.0.35) and Solaris (2.6). It should run on other systems without too much trouble. Installation Checklist (Short): [ ] 1. Unpack the archive. [ ] 2. Run './configure; make; make install; make install-man'. If there are any problems, read on: Installation Checklist (Long): [ ] 0. This is alpha software. Beware. [ ] 1. Make sure you have GTK+ installed. Try running 'gtk-config --version'. If you need to install/reinstall GTK, you can find it at http://www.gtk.org . Ethereal should work with the latest stable (1.0.x) version, but I've had reports that it doesn't compile with the development (1.1.x) tree. [ ] 2. Make sure you have libpcap installed. The latest version can be found at ftp://ftp.ee.lbl.gov . Make sure you install the headers ('make install-incl') when you install the library. [ ] 3. Run './configure' in the Ethereal distribution directory. Running './configure --help' displays a list of options. The file 'INSTALL' contains general instructions for running 'configure'. [ ] 4. Run 'make'. Hopefully, you won't run into any problems. [ ] 5. Run './ethereal', and make sure things are working. You must have root privileges in order to capture live data. [ ] 6. Run 'make install'. If you wish to install the man page, run 'make install-man'. You're done. Usage ----- In order to capture packets from the network, you need to be running as root. Although it might be tempting to make the Ethereal executable setuid root, please don't - alpha code is by nature not very robust, and liable to contain security holes. The filtering mechanism is far from complete. Until the interface solidifies, here's a description of what each component of the filter dialog: - 'Filter name' entry: Gives a name to the filter you are about to create or modify, e.g. 'Web and DNS traffic' - 'Filter string' entry: The text describing the filtering action to take. It must have the same format as tcpdump filter strings (both programs use the same underlying library), e.g. 'tcp port 80 or tcp port 443 or port 53' - 'New' button: If there is text in the two entry boxes, adds it to the list. - 'Change' button: Modifies the currently selected list item to match what's in the two entry boxes. - 'Copy' button: Makes a copy of the currently-selected list item. - 'Delete' button: Deletes the currently-selected list item. - 'OK' button: Sets the selected list item as the active filter. If nothing is selected, turns filtering off. - 'Save' button: Saves the current filter list in $HOME/.ethereal/filters. - 'Cancel' button: Closes the window without making changes. Disclaimer ---------- There is no warranty, expressed or implied, associated with this product. Use at your own risk.