When I start Wireshark, all is fine. But when I start capturing, this creates a steady stream of UDP packets. As soon as I stop the capture, the stream stops. I've never noticed this before.
The UDP stream is one directional, going to multicast address 232.9.3.115, port 6288. Each packet is 1328 or 1332 bytes of binary payload. The packets are sent at a steady rate of 5.3Mbps. The following options are
disabled in wireshark:
- resolve mac address
- resolve network names
- resolve transport names
- promiscuous mode
This is my normal local desktop, running 16.04, kernel 4.4.0.22-generic. Local, not a remote desktop. Wireshark is installed from the normal Ubuntu repo:
> dpkg -l | egrep "wireshark|pcap" | grep -v "rc "
ii libpcap0.8:amd64 1.7.4-2 amd64 system interface for user-level packet capture
ii libwireshark-data 2.0.2+ga16e22e-1 all network packet dissection library -- data files
ii libwireshark6:amd64 2.0.2+ga16e22e-1 amd64 network packet dissection library -- shared library
ii wireshark 2.0.2+ga16e22e-1 amd64 network traffic analyzer - meta-package
ii wireshark-common 2.0.2+ga16e22e-1 amd64 network traffic analyzer - common files
ii wireshark-qt 2.0.2+ga16e22e-1 amd64 network traffic analyzer - Qt version
I'm at a complete loss as to why starting a packet capture on my local desktop is causing this mystery stream of UDP packets. I'm hoping someone can tell me either why, how to stop this, or can confirm the same strange behaviour.
Stéphane