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| | + | == Options == |
| | + | <nowiki>-i any : Listen on all interfaces just to see if you’re seeing any traffic. |
| | + | -i eth0 : Listen on the eth0 interface. |
| | + | -D : Show the list of available interfaces |
| | + | -l : Line-readable output (for viewing as you save, or sending to other commands) |
| | + | -A : Display output in ASCII. |
| | + | -n : Don’t resolve hostnames. |
| | + | -nn : Don’t resolve hostnames or port names. |
| | + | -q : Be less verbose (more quiet) with your output. |
| | + | -t : Give human-readable timestamp output. |
| | + | -tttt : Give maximally human-readable timestamp output. |
| | + | -X : Show the packet’s contents in both hex and ascii. |
| | + | -XX : Same as -X, but also shows the ethernet header. |
| | + | -v, -vv, -vvv : Increase the amount of packet information you get back. |
| | + | -c : Only get x number of packets and then stop. |
| | + | -s : Define the snaplength (size) of the capture in bytes. Use -s0 to get everything, unless you are intentionally capturing less. |
| | + | -S : Print absolute sequence numbers. |
| | + | -e : Get the ethernet header as well. |
| | + | -q : Show less protocol information. |
| | + | -E : Decrypt IPSEC traffic by providing an encryption key.</nowiki> |
| | + | |
| | tcpdump -i eth1 -s 1500 port not 22 | | tcpdump -i eth1 -s 1500 port not 22 |
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