Hal Vaughan schreef:
I have a workstation and several other computers on my LAN, all running
Linux -- either Debian or Ubuntu (Kubuntu for the workstation, Sarge on
the rest -- please don't start on the version, I'll be updating it in
my copious amounts of free time one year).
I am connecting to a computer through ssh and running some Perl programs
on it. I need to be able to see what is going out from that computer
to a web site so I can verify the HTTP headers and data going both
ways. If this were on the workstation, I'd use Wireshark, but this
system is console only and I'm not about to install X on it and deal
with switching monitors for this one issue.
Is there any program (I couldn't find one) that I can run on this
computer, via SSH, that will give me packet info I can scan in the same
way I do with Wireshark when I've got X on a system?
And if that doesn't work, is there a way to get Wireshark to read what
goes between other NICs?
The workstation is the only computer on the LAN with X, so I can't run
Wireshark on any server or firewall system.
Thanks!
Hal
I use tcpdump in an situation like that. With the option -w filename
-s0, you capture all of the packets in an file. With scp i copy the file
to the local machine, en use wireshare to analise the file.
Regards,
Michiel Piscaer
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