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I'm officially killing flowreplay as a future feature of tcpreplay. After giving more thought to this problem and where protocols and applications are going, it's become clear to me that the goals of flowreplay are unobtainable.
Just a little update on Tcpreplay & Cabernet. Tcpreplay is still currently mostly on hold as I'm spending most of my free coding time working on Cabernet, my wine management application. Cabernet is definitely getting close to a beta.
Recently I was asked how to take a pcap and replay it through a firewall doing NAT. This is actually quite complicated since you've got to keep in your head about 4 different variables as well as a complicated test bed configuration.
I just made a number of small tweaks to the site layout and format which I think cleans things up a bit. The biggest change is the new Archives widget which makes organization a lot cleaner.
On a side note, I've switched gears a little and put tcpreplay on hold ...
Just released tcpreplay 3.1. Mostly a bug fix release, but there are some minor enhancements including support for 802.11 and Radiotap DLT types. As always, check out the changelog for a specific list of changes.
Update: 3.1.1 was just released which fixes a serious compile issue for most ...
Not sure what's up with python, but it's not able to find all the libraries anymore, hence the tcpreplay website is down until I get things back together... [Update] Well DarwinPorts completely screwed things up and had two different versions of python installed with mod_python built against one version ...
Not sure what's up with python, but it's not able to find all the libraries anymore, hence the tcpreplay website is down until I get things back together...
So I was looking at the tcpreplay download statistics and I made a very unexpected realization: roughly 30% of the downloads in the last 12 months were for the Windows version.
I'm happy to announce that I've used tcpreplay to send packets under WinXP/Cygwin. I have to say, the port has gone a lot smoother then I expected. I'd guess that getting basic functionality working was probably about 25-50 lines of code (most of that GNU Autoconf). While ...
I'm not sure what happened last week, but it seems that the difficult users all decided to come out of the woodwork all at once. Maybe it had something to do with the phase of the moon or the change in daylight savings time?
For those of you not paying ...