The beauty about tethereal -t is that it is plain text output. Something
simple like :-
"tethereal -R rip -V | egrep "(Source:)|(IP Address:.*Metric.*)"
produces output like this :-
Source: aa:00:04:00:5a:ec (DEC_00:5a:ec)
Source: snox02.pc.sno.dec.com (16.172.144.82)
IP Address: 0.0.0.0, Metric: 2
IP Address: 16.153.0.0, Metric: 1
IP Address: 16.153.1.0, Metric: 3
IP Address: 16.153.2.0, Metric: 3
IP Address: 16.153.4.0, Metric: 3
IP Address: 16.153.6.0, Metric: 3
IP Address: 16.153.7.0, Metric: 3
IP Address: 16.153.9.0, Metric: 3
IP Address: 16.153.10.0, Metric: 3
IP Address: 16.153.11.0, Metric: 3
IP Address: 16.153.12.0, Metric: 3
IP Address: 16.153.13.0, Metric: 3
I think this would do most of what you need
Martin Visser
Technology Consultant - Compaq Global Services
Compaq Computer Australia
410 Concord Road
Rhodes, Sydney NSW 2138
Australia
Phone: +61-2-9022-5630
Mobile: +61-411-254-513
Fax:+61-2-9022-7001
Email:martin.visser@xxxxxxxxxx
> -----Original Message-----
> From: James A. Crippen [mailto:james@xxxxxxxxxxxx]
> Sent: Tuesday, 9 January 2001 12:16 PM
> To: Ethereal Users Mailing List
> Subject: [Ethereal-users] Partial packet data display
>
>
> Is there any way I can get a partial display of packet data with
> tethereal? I'm looking for something vaguely akin to how tcpdump will
> list routes in a RIP message in a compact one-line form. I like the
> comprehensive information that tethereal provides with '-v'
> but it's hard
> to see multiple packets at once.
>
> advTHANKSance
> 'james
>
> --
> James A. Crippen <james@xxxxxxxxxxxx> ,-./-. Anchorage, Alaska,
> Lambda Unlimited: Recursion 'R' Us | |/ | USA, 61.2069 N,
> 149.766 W,
> Y = \f.(\x.f(xx)) (\x.f(xx)) | |\ | Earth, Sol System,
> Y(F) = F(Y(F)) \_,-_/ Milky Way.
>
>
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