text2pcap

2.6.5-2.fc30.x86_64 : Network traffic analyzer

Install

All systems
curl cmd.cat/text2pcap.sh
Debian Debian
apt-get install wireshark-common
Ubuntu
apt-get install wireshark-common
Alpine
apk add wireshark
Arch Arch Linux
pacman -S wireshark-cli
image/svg+xml Kali Linux
apt-get install wireshark-common
CentOS
yum install wireshark
Fedora
dnf install wireshark-cli
Windows (WSL2)
sudo apt-get update sudo apt-get install wireshark-common
OS X
brew install wireshark
Raspbian
apt-get install wireshark-common
Docker
docker run cmd.cat/text2pcap text2pcap powered by Commando

wireshark-cli-1

2.6.5-2.fc30.x86_64 : Network traffic analyzer

wireshark-common

network traffic analyzer - common files

Wireshark is a network "sniffer" - a tool that captures and analyzes packets off the wire. Wireshark can decode too many protocols to list here. This package provides files common to both wireshark (the GTK+ version) and tshark (the console version).

wireshark-cli

Wireshark allows you to examine protocol data stored in files or

as it is captured from wired or wireless (WiFi or Bluetooth) networks, USB devices, and many other sources. It supports dozens of protocol capture file formats and understands more than a thousand protocols. It has many powerful features including a rich display filter language and the ability to reassemble multiple protocol packets in order to, for example, view a complete TCP stream, save the contents of a file which was transferred over HTTP or CIFS, or play back an RTP audio stream. This package contains command-line utilities, plugins, and documentation for Wireshark.

wireshark

Wireshark allows you to examine protocol data stored in files or

as it is captured from wired or wireless (WiFi or Bluetooth) networks, USB devices, and many other sources. It supports dozens of protocol capture file formats and understands more than a thousand protocols. It has many powerful features including a rich display filter language and the ability to reassemble multiple protocol packets in order to, for example, view a complete TCP stream, save the contents of a file which was transferred over HTTP or CIFS, or play back an RTP audio stream.