On 07.01.2016 08:05, gowrishankar wrote:
Hi Michal,
Thank you for your suggestion. My apologies that I took sometime to get
back
on further confirmation. Regrettably, my tshark is still unable to find
libvirt payload
inside packet capture, though it lists libvirt as a possible filter.
# rpm -ql libvirt-wireshark-1.2.9.3-2.fc21.x86_64
/usr/lib64/wireshark/plugins/1.12.5/libvirt.so
As I used wireshark 1.12.6 version, I created 1.12.6 directory
under plugins and copied above .so.
/usr/lib64/wireshark/plugins/1.12.6/libvirt.so
# tshark -G protocols | grep -i libvirt
Libvirt libvirt libvirt
# tshark -r libvirt.pcap libvirt
#
Interesting. This indeed may be that your pcap file does not contain any
libvirt packets. Esp. if you tested it locally - if you haven't
specified to use TCP stack, UNIX socket is used by default.
Are there any dependency between libvirt and wireshark dissector
mechanism to co-exist and
work together (ie. whether the above libvirt-wireshark missing some
changes that dissector
expecting ??). If you have sample pcap to recheck my wireshark/tshark,
could you please
share with me ?
Sure:
https://mprivozn.fedorapeople.org/libvirt.pcap
$ tshark -r libvirt.pcap libvirt | tail -n1
89 29.520014062 ::1 -> ::1 Libvirt 114 Prog=REMOTE
Proc=CONNECT_CLOSE Type=REPLY Serial=32 Status=OK
So I can get 89 libvirt packets from the dump.
Michal