Wireshark v1.11.3 - The world’s foremost network protocol analyzer
Wireshark is the world’s foremost network protocol analyzer. It lets you capture and interactively browse the traffic running on a computer network. It is the de facto (and often de jure) standard across many industries and educational institutions.
Wireshark development thrives thanks to the contributions of networking experts across the globe. It is the continuation of a project that started in 1998.
Changelog v1.11.3
New and Updated Features
The following features are new (or have been significantly updated) since version 1.11.1:
- Qt port:
- The About dialog has been added
- The Capture Interfaces dialog has been added.
- The Decode As dialog has been added. It managed to swallow up the User Specified Decodes dialog as well.
- The Export PDU dialog has been added.
- Several SCTP dialogs have been added.
- The statistics tree (the backend for many Statistics and Telephony menu items) dialog has been added.
- The I/O Graph dialog has been added.
- French translation has updated.
The following features are new (or have been significantly updated) since version 1.11.1:
- Mac OS X packaging has been improved.
The following features are new (or have been significantly updated) since version 1.11.0:
- Dissector output may be encoded as UTF-8. This includes TShark output.
- Qt port:
- The Follow Stream dialog now supports packet and TCP stream selection.
- A Flow Graph (sequence diagram) dialog has been added.
- The main window now respects geometry preferences.
The following features are new (or have been significantly updated) since version 1.10:
- Wireshark now uses the Qt application framework. The new UI should provide a significantly better user experience, particularly on Mac OS X and Windows.
- The Windows installer now uninstalls the previous version of Wireshark silently. You can still run the uninstaller manually beforehand if you wish to run it interactively.
- Expert information is now filterable when the new API is in use.
- The “Number” column shows related packets and protocol conversation spans (Qt only).
- When manipulating packets with editcap using the -C
and/or -s options, it is now possible to also adjust the original frame length using the -L option. - You can now pass the -C
option to editcap multiple times, which allows you to chop bytes from the beginning of a packet as well as at the end of a packet in a single step. - You can now specify an optional offset to the -C option for editcap, which allows you to start chopping from that offset instead of from the absolute packet beginning or end.
- “malformed” display filter has been renamed to “_ws.malformed”. A handful of other filters have been given the “_ws.” prefix to note they are Wireshark application specific filters and not dissector filters.