Provided by: wireshark-common_4.2.6-1_amd64 bug

NAME

       rawshark - Dump and analyze raw pcap data

SYNOPSIS

       rawshark [ -d <encap:linktype>|<proto:protoname> ] [ -F <field to display> ] [ -l ] [ -m <bytes> ]
       [ -o <preference setting> ] ... [ -p ] [ -r <pipe>|- ] [ -R <read (display) filter> ] [ -s ]
       [ -S <field format> ] [ options ]

       rawshark -h|--help

       rawshark -v|--version

DESCRIPTION

       Rawshark reads a stream of packets from a file or pipe, and prints a line describing its output, followed
       by a set of matching fields for each packet on stdout.

INPUT

       Unlike TShark, Rawshark makes no assumptions about encapsulation or input. The -d and -r flags must be
       specified in order for it to run. One or more -F flags should be specified in order for the output to be
       useful. The other flags listed above follow the same conventions as Wireshark and TShark.

       Rawshark expects input records with the following format by default. This matches the format of the
       packet header and packet data in a pcap-formatted file on disk.

           struct rawshark_rec_s {
               uint32_t ts_sec;      /* Time stamp (seconds) */
               uint32_t ts_usec;     /* Time stamp (microseconds) */
               uint32_t caplen;      /* Length of the packet buffer */
               uint32_t len;         /* "On the wire" length of the packet */
               uint8_t data[caplen]; /* Packet data */
           };

       If -p is supplied rawshark expects the following format. This matches the struct pcap_pkthdr structure
       and packet data used in libpcap, Npcap, or WinPcap. This structure’s format is platform-dependent; the
       size of the tv_sec field in the struct timeval structure could be 32 bits or 64 bits. For rawshark to
       work, the layout of the structure in the input must match the layout of the structure in rawshark. Note
       that this format will probably be the same as the previous format if rawshark is a 32-bit program, but
       will not necessarily be the same if rawshark is a 64-bit program.

           struct rawshark_rec_s {
               struct timeval ts;    /* Time stamp */
               uint32_t caplen;      /* Length of the packet buffer */
               uint32_t len;         /* "On the wire" length of the packet */
               uint8_t data[caplen]; /* Packet data */
           };

       In either case, the endianness (byte ordering) of each integer must match the system on which rawshark is
       running.

OUTPUT

       If one or more fields are specified via the -F flag, Rawshark prints the number, field type, and display
       format for each field on the first line as "packet number" 0. For each record, the packet number,
       matching fields, and a "1" or "0" are printed to indicate if the field matched any supplied display
       filter. A "-" is used to signal the end of a field description and at the end of each packet line. For
       example, the flags -F ip.src -F dns.qry.type might generate the following output:

           0 FT_IPv4 BASE_NONE - 1 FT_UINT16 BASE_HEX -
           1 1="1" 0="192.168.77.10" 1 -
           2 1="1" 0="192.168.77.250" 1 -
           3 0="192.168.77.10" 1 -
           4 0="74.125.19.104" 1 -

       Note that packets 1 and 2 are DNS queries, and 3 and 4 are not. Adding -R "not dns" still prints each
       line, but there’s an indication that packets 1 and 2 didn’t pass the filter:

           0 FT_IPv4 BASE_NONE - 1 FT_UINT16 BASE_HEX -
           1 1="1" 0="192.168.77.10" 0 -
           2 1="1" 0="192.168.77.250" 0 -
           3 0="192.168.77.10" 1 -
           4 0="74.125.19.104" 1 -

       Also note that the output may be in any order, and that multiple matching fields might be displayed.

OPTIONS

       -d  <encapsulation>

           Specify how the packet data should be dissected. The encapsulation is of the form type:value, where
           type is one of:

           encap:name Packet data should be dissected using the libpcap/Npcap/WinPcap data link type (DLT) name,
           e.g. encap:EN10MB for Ethernet. Names are converted using pcap_datalink_name_to_val(). A complete
           list of DLTs can be found at https://www.tcpdump.org/linktypes.html.

           encap:number Packet data should be dissected using the libpcap/Npcap/WinPcap LINKTYPE_ number, e.g.
           encap:105 for raw IEEE 802.11 or encap:101 for raw IP.

           proto:protocol Packet data should be passed to the specified Wireshark protocol dissector, e.g.
           proto:http for HTTP data.

       -F  <field to display>

           Add the matching field to the output. Fields are any valid display filter field. More than one -F
           flag may be specified, and each field can match multiple times in a given packet. A single field may
           be specified per -F flag. If you want to apply a display filter, use the -R flag.

       -h|--help
           Print the version number and options and exit.

       -l

           Flush the standard output after the information for each packet is printed. (This is not, strictly
           speaking, line-buffered if -V was specified; however, it is the same as line-buffered if -V wasn’t
           specified, as only one line is printed for each packet, and, as -l is normally used when piping a
           live capture to a program or script, so that output for a packet shows up as soon as the packet is
           seen and dissected, it should work just as well as true line-buffering. We do this as a workaround
           for a deficiency in the Microsoft Visual C++ C library.)

           This may be useful when piping the output of TShark to another program, as it means that the program
           to which the output is piped will see the dissected data for a packet as soon as TShark sees the
           packet and generates that output, rather than seeing it only when the standard output buffer
           containing that data fills up.

       -m  <memory limit bytes>
           Limit rawshark’s memory usage to the specified number of bytes. POSIX (non-Windows) only.

       -o  <preference>:<value>

           Set a preference value, overriding the default value and any value read from a preference file. The
           argument to the option is a string of the form prefname:value, where prefname is the name of the
           preference (which is the same name that would appear in the preference file), and value is the value
           to which it should be set.

       -p

           Assume that packet data is preceded by a pcap_pkthdr struct as defined in pcap.h. On some systems the
           size of the timestamp data will be different from the data written to disk. On other systems they are
           identical and this flag has no effect.

       -r  <pipe>|-

           Read packet data from input source. It can be either the name of a FIFO (named pipe) or ``-'' to read
           data from the standard input, and must have the record format specified above.

           If you are sending data to rawshark from a parent process on Windows you should not close rawshark’s
           standard input handle prematurely, otherwise the C runtime might trigger an exception.

       -R  <read (display) filter>

           Cause the specified filter (which uses the syntax of read/display filters, rather than that of
           capture filters) to be applied before printing the output.

       -s
           Allows standard pcap files to be used as input, by skipping over the 24 byte pcap file header.

       -S

           Use the specified format string to print each field. The following formats are supported:

           %D Field name or description, e.g. "Type" for dns.qry.type

           %N Base 10 numeric value of the field.

           %S String value of the field.

           For something similar to Wireshark’s standard display ("Type: A (1)") you could use %D: %S (%N).

       -v|--version
           Print the full version information and exit.

DISSECTION OPTIONS

       --disable-all-protocols
           Disable dissection of all protocols.

       --disable-protocol <proto_name>[,<proto_name>,...]
           Disable dissection of proto_name. Use a proto_name of ALL to override your chosen profile’s default
           enabled protocol list and temporarily disable all protocols.

       --disable-heuristic <short_name>
           Disable dissection of heuristic protocol.

       --enable-protocol <proto_name>[,<proto_name>,...]

           Enable dissection of proto_name. Use a proto_name of ALL to override your chosen profile’s default
           disabled protocol list and temporarily enable all protocols which are enabled by default.

           If a protocol is implicated in both --disable-protocol and --enable-protocol, the protocol is
           enabled. This allows you to temporarily disable all protocols but a list of exceptions. Example:
           --disable-protocol ALL --enable-protocol eth,ip

       --enable-heuristic <short_name>
           Enable dissection of heuristic protocol.

       -K  <keytab>

           Load kerberos crypto keys from the specified keytab file. This option can be used multiple times to
           load keys from several files.

           Example: -K krb5.keytab

       -n
           Disable network object name resolution (such as hostname, TCP and UDP port names); the -N option
           might override this one.

       -N  <name resolving flags>

           Turn on name resolving only for particular types of addresses and port numbers, with name resolving
           for other types of addresses and port numbers turned off. This option (along with -n) can be
           specified multiple times; the last value given overrides earlier ones. This option and -n override
           the options from the preferences, including preferences set via the -o option. If both -N and -n
           options are not present, the values from the preferences are used, which default to -N dmN.

           The argument is a string that may contain the letters:

           d to enable resolution from captured DNS packets

           g to enable IP address geolocation information lookup from configured MaxMind databases

           m to enable MAC address resolution

           n to enable network address resolution

           N to enable using external resolvers (e.g., DNS) for network address resolution; no effect without n
           also enabled.

           t to enable transport-layer port number resolution

           v to enable VLAN IDs to names resolution

       --only-protocols <protocols>
           Only enable dissection of these protocols, comma separated. Disable everything else.

       -t  (a|ad|adoy|d|dd|e|r|u|ud|udoy)[.[N]]|.[N]

           Set the format of the packet timestamp displayed in the default time column. The format can be one
           of:

           a absolute: The absolute time, as local time in your time zone, is the actual time the packet was
           captured, with no date displayed

           ad absolute with date: The absolute date, displayed as YYYY-MM-DD, and time, as local time in your
           time zone, is the actual time and date the packet was captured

           adoy absolute with date using day of year: The absolute date, displayed as YYYY/DOY, and time, as
           local time in your time zone, is the actual time and date the packet was captured

           d delta: The delta time is the time since the previous packet was captured

           dd delta_displayed: The delta_displayed time is the time since the previous displayed packet was
           captured

           e epoch: The time in seconds since epoch (Jan 1, 1970 00:00:00)

           r relative: The relative time is the time elapsed between the first packet and the current packet

           u UTC: The absolute time, as UTC, is the actual time the packet was captured, with no date displayed

           ud UTC with date: The absolute date, displayed as YYYY-MM-DD, and time, as UTC, is the actual time
           and date the packet was captured

           udoy UTC with date using day of year: The absolute date, displayed as YYYY/DOY, and time, as UTC, is
           the actual time and date the packet was captured

           .[N] Set the precision: N is the number of decimals (0 through 9). If using "." without N,
           automatically determine precision from trace.

           The default format is relative with precision based on capture format.

       -u <s|hms>

           Specifies how packet timestamp formats in -t which are relative times (i.e. relative, delta, and
           delta_displayed) are displayed. Valid choices are:

           s for seconds

           hms for hours, minutes, and seconds

           The default format is seconds.

DIAGNOSTIC OPTIONS

       --log-level <level>
           Set the active log level. Supported levels in lowest to highest order are "noisy", "debug", "info",
           "message", "warning", "critical", and "error". Messages at each level and higher will be printed, for
           example "warning" prints "warning", "critical", and "error" messages and "noisy" prints all messages.
           Levels are case insensitive.

       --log-fatal <level>
           Abort the program if any messages are logged at the specified level or higher. For example, "warning"
           aborts on any "warning", "critical", or "error" messages.

       --log-domains <list>
           Only print messages for the specified log domains, e.g. "GUI,Epan,sshdump". List of domains must be
           comma-separated. Can be negated with "!" as the first character (inverts the match).

       --log-debug <list>
           Force the specified domains to log at the "debug" level. List of domains must be comma-separated. Can
           be negated with "!" as the first character (inverts the match).

       --log-noisy <list>
           Force the specified domains to log at the "noisy" level. List of domains must be comma-separated. Can
           be negated with "!" as the first character (inverts the match).

       --log-fatal-domains <list>
           Abort the program if any messages are logged for the specified log domains. List of domains must be
           comma-separated.

       --log-file <path>
           Write log messages and stderr output to the specified file.

READ FILTER SYNTAX

       For a complete table of protocol and protocol fields that are filterable in TShark see the
       wireshark-filter(4) manual page.

FILES

       These files contains various Wireshark configuration values.

       Preferences

           The preferences files contain global (system-wide) and personal preference settings. If the
           system-wide preference file exists, it is read first, overriding the default settings. If the
           personal preferences file exists, it is read next, overriding any previous values. Note: If the
           command line option -o is used (possibly more than once), it will in turn override values from the
           preferences files.

           The preferences settings are in the form prefname:value, one per line, where prefname is the name of
           the preference and value is the value to which it should be set; white space is allowed between : and
           value. A preference setting can be continued on subsequent lines by indenting the continuation lines
           with white space. A # character starts a comment that runs to the end of the line:

               # Capture in promiscuous mode?
               # TRUE or FALSE (case-insensitive).
               capture.prom_mode: TRUE

           The global preferences file is looked for in the wireshark directory under the share subdirectory of
           the main installation directory. On macOS, this would typically be
           /Application/Wireshark.app/Contents/Resources/share; on other UNIX-compatible systems, such as Linux,
           \*BSD, Solaris, and AIX, this would typically be /usr/share/wireshark/preferences for
           system-installed packages and /usr/local/share/wireshark/preferences for locally-installed packages;
           on Windows, this would typically be C:\Program Files\Wireshark\preferences.

           On UNIX-compatible systems, the personal preferences file is looked for in
           $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/wireshark/preferences, (or, if $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/wireshark does not exist while
           $HOME/.wireshark does exist, $HOME/.wireshark/preferences); this is typically
           $HOME/.config/wireshark/preferences. On Windows, the personal preferences file is looked for in
           %APPDATA%\Wireshark\preferences (or, if %APPDATA% isn’t defined, %USERPROFILE%\Application
           Data\Wireshark\preferences).

       Disabled (Enabled) Protocols

           The disabled_protos files contain system-wide and personal lists of protocols that have been
           disabled, so that their dissectors are never called. The files contain protocol names, one per line,
           where the protocol name is the same name that would be used in a display filter for the protocol:

               http
               tcp     # a comment

           The global disabled_protos file uses the same directory as the global preferences file.

           The personal disabled_protos file uses the same directory as the personal preferences file.

       Name Resolution (hosts)

           If the personal hosts file exists, it is used to resolve IPv4 and IPv6 addresses before any other
           attempts are made to resolve them. The file has the standard hosts file syntax; each line contains
           one IP address and name, separated by whitespace. The same directory as for the personal preferences
           file is used.

           Capture filter name resolution is handled by libpcap on UNIX-compatible systems, such as Linux,
           macOS, \*BSD, Solaris, and AIX, and by Npcap or WinPcap on Windows. As such the Wireshark personal
           hosts file will not be consulted for capture filter name resolution.

       Name Resolution (subnets)

           If an IPv4 address cannot be translated via name resolution (no exact match is found) then a partial
           match is attempted via the subnets file.

           Each line of this file consists of an IPv4 address, a subnet mask length separated only by a / and a
           name separated by whitespace. While the address must be a full IPv4 address, any values beyond the
           mask length are subsequently ignored.

           An example is:

           # Comments must be prepended by the # sign! 192.168.0.0/24 ws_test_network

           A partially matched name will be printed as "subnet-name.remaining-address". For example,
           "192.168.0.1" under the subnet above would be printed as "ws_test_network.1"; if the mask length
           above had been 16 rather than 24, the printed address would be ``ws_test_network.0.1".

       Name Resolution (ethers)

           The ethers files are consulted to correlate 6-byte hardware addresses to names. First the personal
           ethers file is tried and if an address is not found there the global ethers file is tried next.

           Each line contains one hardware address and name, separated by whitespace. The digits of the hardware
           address are separated by colons (:), dashes (-) or periods (.). The same separator character must be
           used consistently in an address. The following three lines are valid lines of an ethers file:

               ff:ff:ff:ff:ff:ff          Broadcast
               c0-00-ff-ff-ff-ff          TR_broadcast
               00.00.00.00.00.00          Zero_broadcast

           The global ethers file is looked for in the /etc directory on UNIX-compatible systems, such as Linux,
           macOS, \*BSD, Solaris, and AIX, and in the main installation directory (for example, C:\Program
           Files\Wireshark) on Windows systems.

           The personal ethers file is looked for in the same directory as the personal preferences file.

           Capture filter name resolution is handled by libpcap on UNIX-compatible systems and Npcap or WinPcap
           on Windows. As such the Wireshark personal ethers file will not be consulted for capture filter name
           resolution.

       Name Resolution (manuf)

           The manuf file is used to match the 3-byte vendor portion of a 6-byte hardware address with the
           manufacturer’s name; it can also contain well-known MAC addresses and address ranges specified with a
           netmask. The format of the file is the same as the ethers files, except that entries of the form:

               00:00:0C      Cisco

           can be provided, with the 3-byte OUI and the name for a vendor, and entries such as:

               00-00-0C-07-AC/40     All-HSRP-routers

           can be specified, with a MAC address and a mask indicating how many bits of the address must match.
           The above entry, for example, has 40 significant bits, or 5 bytes, and would match addresses from
           00-00-0C-07-AC-00 through 00-00-0C-07-AC-FF. The mask need not be a multiple of 8.

           The manuf file is looked for in the same directory as the global preferences file.

       Name Resolution (services)

           The services file is used to translate port numbers into names.

           The file has the standard services file syntax; each line contains one (service) name and one
           transport identifier separated by white space. The transport identifier includes one port number and
           one transport protocol name (typically tcp, udp, or sctp) separated by a /.

           An example is:

               mydns       5045/udp     # My own Domain Name Server
               mydns       5045/tcp     # My own Domain Name Server

       Name Resolution (ipxnets)

           The ipxnets files are used to correlate 4-byte IPX network numbers to names. First the global ipxnets
           file is tried and if that address is not found there the personal one is tried next.

           The format is the same as the ethers file, except that each address is four bytes instead of six.
           Additionally, the address can be represented as a single hexadecimal number, as is more common in the
           IPX world, rather than four hex octets. For example, these four lines are valid lines of an ipxnets
           file:

               C0.A8.2C.00              HR
               c0-a8-1c-00              CEO
               00:00:BE:EF              IT_Server1
               110f                     FileServer3

           The global ipxnets file is looked for in the /etc directory on UNIX-compatible systems, such as
           Linux, macOS, \*BSD, Solaris, and AIX, and in the main installation directory (for example,
           C:\Program Files\Wireshark) on Windows systems.

           The personal ipxnets file is looked for in the same directory as the personal preferences file.

ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES

       WIRESHARK_CONFIG_DIR

           This environment variable overrides the location of personal configuration files. On UNIX-compatible
           systems, such as Linux, macOS, \*BSD, Solaris, and AIX, it defaults to $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/wireshark
           (or, if that directory doesn’t exist but $HOME/.wireshark does exist, $HOME/.wireshark); this is
           typically $HOME/.config/wireshark. On Windows, it defaults to %APPDATA%\Wireshark (or, if %APPDATA%
           isn’t defined, %USERPROFILE%\Application Data\Wireshark). Available since Wireshark 3.0.

       WIRESHARK_DEBUG_WMEM_OVERRIDE

           Setting this environment variable forces the wmem framework to use the specified allocator backend
           for all allocations, regardless of which backend is normally specified by the code. This is mainly
           useful to developers when testing or debugging. See README.wmem in the source distribution for
           details.

       WIRESHARK_RUN_FROM_BUILD_DIRECTORY

           This environment variable causes the plugins and other data files to be loaded from the build
           directory (where the program was compiled) rather than from the standard locations. It has no effect
           when the program in question is running with root (or setuid) permissions on UNIX-compatible systems,
           such as Linux, macOS, \*BSD, Solaris, and AIX.

       WIRESHARK_DATA_DIR

           This environment variable causes the various data files to be loaded from a directory other than the
           standard locations. It has no effect when the program in question is running with root (or setuid)
           permissions on UNIX-compatible systems.

       ERF_RECORDS_TO_CHECK

           This environment variable controls the number of ERF records checked when deciding if a file really
           is in the ERF format. Setting this environment variable a number higher than the default (20) would
           make false positives less likely.

       IPFIX_RECORDS_TO_CHECK

           This environment variable controls the number of IPFIX records checked when deciding if a file really
           is in the IPFIX format. Setting this environment variable a number higher than the default (20) would
           make false positives less likely.

       WIRESHARK_ABORT_ON_DISSECTOR_BUG

           If this environment variable is set, Rawshark will call abort(3) when a dissector bug is encountered.
           abort(3) will cause the program to exit abnormally; if you are running Rawshark in a debugger, it
           should halt in the debugger and allow inspection of the process, and, if you are not running it in a
           debugger, it will, on some OSes, assuming your environment is configured correctly, generate a core
           dump file. This can be useful to developers attempting to troubleshoot a problem with a protocol
           dissector.

       WIRESHARK_ABORT_ON_TOO_MANY_ITEMS

           If this environment variable is set, Rawshark will call abort(3) if a dissector tries to add too many
           items to a tree (generally this is an indication of the dissector not breaking out of a loop soon
           enough). abort(3) will cause the program to exit abnormally; if you are running Rawshark in a
           debugger, it should halt in the debugger and allow inspection of the process, and, if you are not
           running it in a debugger, it will, on some OSes, assuming your environment is configured correctly,
           generate a core dump file. This can be useful to developers attempting to troubleshoot a problem with
           a protocol dissector.

SEE ALSO

       wireshark-filter(4), wireshark(1), tshark(1), editcap(1), pcap(3), dumpcap(1), text2pcap(1),
       pcap-filter(7) or tcpdump(8)

NOTES

       This is the manual page for Rawshark 4.2.6. Rawshark is part of the Wireshark distribution. The latest
       version of Wireshark can be found at https://www.wireshark.org.

       HTML versions of the Wireshark project man pages are available at
       https://www.wireshark.org/docs/man-pages.

AUTHORS

       Rawshark uses the same packet dissection code that Wireshark does, as well as using many other modules
       from Wireshark; see the list of authors in the Wireshark man page for a list of authors of that code.

                                                   2024-07-11                                        RAWSHARK(1)