I open two command prompt windows, in 1 I start tshark in
the other I type "ping 192.168.0.1". tshark shows the ARP request and reply and
the ping replies but not the ping requests (see the following trace). Wireshark
shows the same thing. I am running Windows Vista 64 bit Home Premium.
Is this a know bug/feature? Have I missed a configuration
step?
C:\Program Files (x86)\Wireshark>tshark Capturing on
NVIDIA nForce MCP Networking Adapter Driver 0.000000 AsustekC_8a:9a:b9
-> Broadcast ARP Who has 192.168.0.1? Tell
192. 168.0.9 0.001204 Netgear_74:8a:68 -> AsustekC_8a:9a:b9 ARP
192.168.0.1 is at 00:1f:33: 74:8a:68 0.002298 192.168.0.1
-> 192.168.0.9 ICMP Echo (ping) reply 0.999176
192.168.0.1 -> 192.168.0.9 ICMP Echo (ping) reply
2.013454 192.168.0.1 -> 192.168.0.9 ICMP Echo (ping)
reply 3.027077 192.168.0.1 -> 192.168.0.9 ICMP Echo
(ping) reply
C:\Program Files (x86)\Wireshark>tshark -v TShark
1.0.5 (SVN Rev 26954)
Copyright 1998-2008 Gerald Combs <gerald@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> and
contributors. This is free software; see the source for copying conditions.
There is NO warranty; not even for MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A
PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
Compiled with GLib 2.14.6, with WinPcap (version unknown),
with libz 1.2.3, without POSIX capabilities, with libpcre 7.0, with SMI
0.4.8, with ADNS, with Lua 5.1, with GnuTLS 2.3.8, with Gcrypt 1.4.1, with
MIT Kerberos.
Running on Windows Vista Service Pack 1, build 6001, with
WinPcap version 4.0.2 (packet.dll version 4.0.0.1040), based on libpcap
version 0.9.5.
Built using Microsoft Visual C++ 6.0 build
8804
Noah Davids =+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+ Serendipity
is a function of bandwidth
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