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tcpflow is a program that captures data transmitted as part of TCP
connections (flows), and stores it in a way that is convenient for
protocol analysis or debugging. A program like 'tcpdump' only shows a
summary of packets seen on the wire, but usually doesn't store the
data that's actually being transmitted. In contrast, tcpflow
reconstructs the actual data streams and stores each flow in a
separate file for later analysis.
tcpflow understands sequence numbers and will correctly reconstruct
data streams regardless of retransmissions or out-of-order delivery.
However, it currently does not understand IP fragments; flows
containing IP fragments will not be recorded properly.
Note: this port includes a small patch that adds the capability of
reading the packets from a tcpdump(1) capture file, using
a new option (-r).
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tcptrace is a TCP dump file analysis tool written by Shawn Ostermann
at Ohio University. It is NOT a packet capture program. It reads
output dump files in the formats of several popular packet capturing
programs: tcpdump, snoop, etherpeek, and netm
For each connection, it keeps track of elapsed time, bytes/segments
sent and received, retransmissions, round trip times, window
advertisements, throughput, etc. Its output format ranges from
Simple to Long to Very Detailed.
someone is expecting substitution here.
tar: Unable to access bin/%%DISTNAME%% <No such file or directory>
tar: Unable to access lib/%%DISTNAME%%-lib/CHANGES <No such file or directory>
tar: Unable to access lib/%%DISTNAME%%-lib/README <No such file or directory>
tar: Unable to access lib/%%DISTNAME%%-lib/alias.tf <No such file or directory>