openbsd-ports/net/tcptrace/pkg/DESCR
brad 9a0776e343 add tcptrace port; jethro@dqc.org
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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.
1999-11-12 14:14:52 +00:00

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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.
It can also produce three different types of graphs, as follows:
Time Sequence Graph
This is the format that Tim Shepard started using at MIT some
years ago. It shows segments sent and ACKs returned as a
function of time.
Instantaneous Throughput
This format shows the instantaneous (averaged over a few
segments) throughput of the connection as a function of time.
Round Trip Times
This format shows the round trip times for the ACKs as a
function of time.
The graphs produced are viewable only by Tim Shepard's wonderful
xplot program (in math/xplot).