From: David H. Lipman on 9 Jun 2010 20:27 -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 Wireshark 1.2.9 is now available What is Wireshark? Wireshark is the world's most popular network protocol analyzer. It is used for troubleshooting, analysis, development, and education. What's New Bug Fixes The following vulnerabilities have been fixed. See the security advisory for details and a workaround. o The SMB dissector could dereference a NULL pointer. (Bug 4734) Versions affected: 0.99.6 to 1.0.13, 1.2.0 to 1.2.8 o J. Oquendo discovered that the ASN.1 BER dissector could overrun the stack. Versions affected: 0.10.13 to 1.0.13, 1.2.0 to 1.2.8 o The SMB PIPE dissector could dereference a NULL pointer on some platforms. Versions affected: 0.8.20 to 1.0.13, 1.2.0 to 1.2.8 o The SigComp Universal Decompressor Virtual Machine could go into an infinite loop. (Bug 4826) Versions affected: 0.10.7 to 1.0.13, 1.2.0 to 1.2.8 o The SigComp Universal Decompressor Virtual Machine could overrun a buffer. (Bug 4837) Versions affected: 0.10.8 to 1.0.13, 1.2.0 to 1.2.8 The following bugs have been fixed: o Cannot open file with File -> Open. (Bug 1791) o Application crash when changing real-time option. (Bug 4035) o Crash in filter autocompletion. (Bug 4306) o The XML dissector doesn't allow dots (".") in tags. (Bug 4405) o Live capture stops when using zlib 1.2.5. (Bug 4708) o Want to be able to apply decode as to Data Portion of Lan Trace. (Bug 4721) o SABP short pdu (packet_per.c). (Bug 4743) o Kerberos pre-auth type constants - MS extensions are wrong. (Bug 4752) o Check HTTP Content-Length parsing for overflow. (Bug 4758) o Wrong variable used for proto_tree_add_text() in ptp dissector. (Bug 4773) o Crash when close window frame of gtk file chooser. (Bug 4778) o text2pcap expects \n delimited text (instead of \r\n) on win32. (Bug 4780) o Wrong decoding for BGP ORF. (Bug 4782) o Crash when Ctrl-Backspacing the display filter. (Bug 4797) o Acker AFI field incorrect size in PGM dissector. (Bug 4798) o Fedora 13: wireshark fails to build (linking problem). (Bug 4815) o The NFS FH hash (nfs.fh.hash) incorrectly matches multiple filehandles. (Bug 4839) o AES-CTR decoding not working, (dissectors/packet_ipsec.c using gcrypt). (Bug 4838) New and Updated Features There are no new features in this release. New Protocol Support There are no new protocols in this release. Updated Protocol Support ASN.1 BER, BGP, HTTP, IGMP, IPsec, Kerberos, NFS, PGM, PTP, SABP, SigComp, SMB, TCAP, XML, Updated Capture File Support ERF, PacketLogger. Getting Wireshark Wireshark source code and installation packages are available from http://www.wireshark.org/download.html. Vendor-supplied Packages Most Linux and Unix vendors supply their own Wireshark packages. You can usually install or upgrade Wireshark using the package management system specific to that platform. A list of third-party packages can be found on the download page on the Wireshark web site. File Locations Wireshark and TShark look in several different locations for preference files, plugins, SNMP MIBS, and RADIUS dictionaries. These locations vary from platform to platform. You can use About->Folders to find the default locations on your system. Known Problems Wireshark may appear offscreen on multi-monitor Windows systems. (Bug 553) Wireshark might make your system disassociate from a wireless network on OS X. (Bug 1315) Dumpcap might not quit if Wireshark or TShark crashes. (Bug 1419) The BER dissector might infinitely loop. (Bug 1516) Capture filters aren't applied when capturing from named pipes. (Bug 1814) Wireshark might freeze when reading from a pipe. (Bug 2082) Filtering tshark captures with display filters (-R) no longer works. (Bug 2234) The 64-bit Windows installer does not ship with the same libraries as the 32-bit installer. (Bug 3610) Getting Help Community support is available on the wireshark-users mailing list. Subscription information and archives for all of Wireshark's mailing lists can be found on the web site. Commercial support, training, and development services are available from CACE Technologies. Frequently Asked Questions A complete FAQ is available on the Wireshark web site. Digests wireshark-1.2.9.tar.bz2: 15405506 bytes MD5(wireshark-1.2.9.tar.bz2)=a4240c36f1e668d85b703eacb7c0a95e SHA1(wireshark-1.2.9.tar.bz2)=6b31173a34c0050035516958e0b3ae83e83eac2c RIPEMD160(wireshark-1.2.9.tar.bz2)=d93be031cf01922dd1b23151f9a4c2581a99b1bf wireshark-1.2.9.tar.gz: 19444904 bytes MD5(wireshark-1.2.9.tar.gz)=582fe8d14a6e7c66851e5148a2f6e5d8 SHA1(wireshark-1.2.9.tar.gz)=e8a09c1cf432e88ec444afe7886bd2bfd56cfaa6 RIPEMD160(wireshark-1.2.9.tar.gz)=f4c149a9160f9e9dffd74c0d143afd94d1bc784c wireshark-win32-1.2.9.exe: 18125552 bytes MD5(wireshark-win32-1.2.9.exe)=e3509d380fa668f389fb77c428e31f42 SHA1(wireshark-win32-1.2.9.exe)=ebe858c301d05058c61954c3a0f302be6b34b29c RIPEMD160(wireshark-win32-1.2.9.exe)=2bb77cebefdb96ef73e28b4ad70cbf2426f122ad wireshark-win64-1.2.9.exe: 20395542 bytes MD5(wireshark-win64-1.2.9.exe)=5f73c50e153189857bb888d2da6fb643 SHA1(wireshark-win64-1.2.9.exe)=5ceab1c2c8bcb2a71938e128ef17a68d293ceb11 RIPEMD160(wireshark-win64-1.2.9.exe)=84011e462d2a69b9b0c69cc42c3abc9a3cb8d095 wireshark-1.2.9.u3p: 21149351 bytes MD5(wireshark-1.2.9.u3p)=2e1e0336a3a8e22eb74dd4035545a0bc SHA1(wireshark-1.2.9.u3p)=f11b721020f134beac74afa541cc9efe75baa4a1 RIPEMD160(wireshark-1.2.9.u3p)=f6a541043d47229888de8ba7cf744a8119341aa9 WiresharkPortable-1.2.9.paf.exe: 18769651 bytes MD5(WiresharkPortable-1.2.9.paf.exe)=88a8f982bd6ebfc1aaf1e4634e1216d4 SHA1(WiresharkPortable-1.2.9.paf.exe)=e5d4a37f5a5d518be10d932d66f66bcffc458745 RIPEMD160(WiresharkPortable-1.2.9.paf.exe)=1e14b65c15b1bbc085ee7d17c35ebabc5ca5f4f1 Wireshark 1.2.9 Intel.dmg: 42501517 bytes MD5(Wireshark 1.2.9 Intel.dmg)=cf3f36137a1994ca7dbc87fef9a7bada SHA1(Wireshark 1.2.9 Intel.dmg)=e515921a6b22a667f5a95b114d7dbe66ad3cca7f RIPEMD160(Wireshark 1.2.9 Intel.dmg)=3e7ec1813a52d0d7113ae7858d9065043a443f81 Wireshark 1.2.9 PPC.dmg: 44670445 bytes MD5(Wireshark 1.2.9 PPC.dmg)=6fcde457d4f128713728c7b5538ce7c7 SHA1(Wireshark 1.2.9 PPC.dmg)=5872fd84ca144d69790e5ef628291491196d25f4 RIPEMD160(Wireshark 1.2.9 PPC.dmg)=0f3e8c8e7d800ca08c2f2df6ecd81eaffc23b658 patch-wireshark-1.2.8-to-1.2.9.diff.bz2: 83882 bytes MD5(patch-wireshark-1.2.8-to-1.2.9.diff.bz2)=8d12da3fe432b3328c7d0deec850421c SHA1(patch-wireshark-1.2.8-to-1.2.9.diff.bz2)=8dcd8486d4a090426fb371b9128502141c6af37a RIPEMD160(patch-wireshark-1.2.8-to-1.2.9.diff.bz2)=98801439e7f94571c009bfeae05ae4d07da8c20f -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.4.10 (Darwin) Comment: Using GnuPG with Mozilla - http://enigmail.mozdev.org/ iEYEARECAAYFAkwQCKEACgkQpw8IXSHylJrM4gCfYYD7200fRyrBtdczlTl+VGYx uzgAoNNdpbscfVnHIWmr54uYyd4kmhGA =lX9o -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- ___________________________________________________________________________ -- Dave http://www.claymania.com/removal-trojan-adware.html Multi-AV - http://www.pctipp.ch/downloads/dl/35905.asp
From: za kAT on 9 Jun 2010 22:12 On Thu, 10 Jun 2010 01:32:30 +0000 (UTC), Bear Bottoms wrote: > "David H. Lipman" <DLipman~nospam~@Verizon.Net> wrote in news:hupbga02cg3 > @news4.newsguy.com: > >> Wireshark 1.2.9 is now available > > I tried for a long time to get behind Wireshark and just can't do it. It is > just so grotesque. I've found other similar programs just much easier and > more enjoyable to use. Pick one. Do tell us which one you used to divine my IP address... Wireshark isn't grotesque. Just not pointy, clicky enough for you then... Do you seriously expect to understand the output from a program like this without doing at least some serious study on how networking works? Research isn't just a word, newbie. -- zakAT(a)pooh.the.cat - Sergeant Tech-Com, DN38416. Assigned to protect you. You've been targeted for denigration!
From: Bob Villa on 10 Jun 2010 06:50 On Jun 9, 9:12 pm, za kAT <za...(a)super-secret-IPaddress.invalid> wrote: > On Thu, 10 Jun 2010 01:32:30 +0000 (UTC), Bear Bottoms wrote: > > "David H. Lipman" <DLipman~nosp...(a)Verizon.Net> wrote in news:hupbga02cg3 > > @news4.newsguy.com: > > >> Wireshark 1.2.9 is now available > > > I tried for a long time to get behind Wireshark and just can't do it. It is > > just so grotesque. I've found other similar programs just much easier and > > more enjoyable to use. Pick one. > > Do tell us which one you used to divine my IP address... > > Wireshark isn't grotesque. Just not pointy, clicky enough for you then... > Do you seriously expect to understand the output from a program like this > without doing at least some serious study on how networking works? > > Research isn't just a word, newbie. > > -- > za...(a)pooh.the.cat - Sergeant Tech-Com, DN38416. > Assigned to protect you. You've been targeted for denigration! Is it JUST popular to attack BB? Yes, he is opinionated...but who isn't? (BTW, this is NOT BB!) bob
From: za kAT on 10 Jun 2010 07:08 On Thu, 10 Jun 2010 03:50:02 -0700 (PDT), Bob Villa wrote: > On Jun 9, 9:12�pm, za kAT <za...(a)super-secret-IPaddress.invalid> > wrote: >> On Thu, 10 Jun 2010 01:32:30 +0000 (UTC), Bear Bottoms wrote: >>> "David H. Lipman" <DLipman~nosp...(a)Verizon.Net> wrote in news:hupbga02cg3 >>> @news4.newsguy.com: >> >>>> Wireshark 1.2.9 is now available >> >>> I tried for a long time to get behind Wireshark and just can't do it. It is >>> just so grotesque. I've found other similar programs just much easier and >>> more enjoyable to use. Pick one. >> >> Do tell us which one you used to divine my IP address... >> >> Wireshark isn't grotesque. Just not pointy, clicky enough for you then... >> Do you seriously expect to understand the output from a program like this >> without doing at least some serious study on how networking works? >> >> Research isn't just a word, newbie. >> >> -- >> za...(a)pooh.the.cat - Sergeant Tech-Com, DN38416. >> Assigned to protect you. You've been targeted for denigration! > > Is it JUST popular to attack BB? Yes, he is opinionated...but who > isn't? (BTW, this is NOT BB!) Wireshark is a class act. Cross platform. I don't find it that difficult to use, but since when was analysing network traffic easy. The header is of the albasani BB, that's been posting for ages. If you think that's not BB, then please explain why? -- zakAT(a)pooh.the.cat - Sergeant Tech-Com, DN38416. Assigned to protect you. You've been targeted for denigration!
From: observer on 10 Jun 2010 16:42 bob wrote: >Is it JUST popular to attack BB? Yes, he is opinionated...but who >isn't? (BTW, this is NOT BB!) "za kAT" (aka John Stubbings) is a pseudo-geek who thinks that his own standing can be improved by slagging down everybody else. He usually does it thru socks/forgeries. He's a very sad case and lives on Welfare. [observer]
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