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TSHARK(1)							     TSHARK(1)

NAME
       tshark -	Dump and analyze network traffic

SYNOPSIS
       tshark [	-i <capture interface>|- ] [ -f	<capture filter> ] [ -2	]
       [ -r <infile> ] [ -w <outfile>|-	] [ options ] [	<filter> ]

       tshark -G [ <report type> ] [ --elastic-mapping-filter <protocols> ]

DESCRIPTION
       TShark is a network protocol analyzer. It lets you capture packet data
       from a live network, or read packets from a previously saved capture
       file, either printing a decoded form of those packets to	the standard
       output or writing the packets to	a file.	TShark's native	capture	file
       format is pcapng	format,	which is also the format used by Wireshark and
       various other tools.

       Without any options set,	TShark will work much like tcpdump. It will
       use the pcap library to capture traffic from the	first available
       network interface and displays a	summary	line on	the standard output
       for each	received packet.

       When run	with the -r option, specifying a capture file from which to
       read, TShark will again work much like tcpdump, reading packets from
       the file	and displaying a summary line on the standard output for each
       packet read. TShark is able to detect, read and write the same capture
       files that are supported	by Wireshark. The input	file doesn't need a
       specific	filename extension; the	file format and	an optional gzip, zstd
       or lz4 compression will be automatically	detected. Near the beginning
       of the DESCRIPTION section of wireshark(1) or
       https://www.wireshark.org/docs/man-pages/wireshark.html is a detailed
       description of the way Wireshark	handles	this, which is the same	way
       TShark handles this.

       Compressed file support uses (and therefore requires) the zlib library.
       If the zlib library is not present when compiling TShark, it will be
       possible	to compile it, but the resulting program will be unable	to
       read compressed files.

       When displaying packets on the standard output, TShark writes, by
       default,	a summary line containing the fields specified by the
       preferences file	(which are also	the fields displayed in	the packet
       list pane in Wireshark),	although if it's writing packets as it
       captures	them, rather than writing packets from a saved capture file,
       it won't	show the "frame	number"	field. If the -V option	is specified,
       it instead writes a view	of the details of the packet, showing all the
       fields of all protocols in the packet. If the -O	option is specified,
       it will only show the full details for the protocols specified, and
       show only the top-level detail line for all other protocols. Use	the
       output of "tshark -G protocols" to find the abbreviations of the
       protocols you can specify. If the -P option is specified	with either
       the -V or -O options, both the summary line for the entire packet and
       the details will	be displayed.

       Packet capturing	is performed with the pcap library. That library
       supports	specifying a filter expression;	packets	that don't match that
       filter are discarded. The -f option is used to specify a	capture
       filter. The syntax of a capture filter is defined by the	pcap library;
       this syntax is different	from the display filter	syntax described
       below, and the filtering	mechanism is limited in	its abilities.

       Display filters in TShark, which	allow you to select which packets are
       to be decoded or	written	to a file, are very powerful; more fields are
       filterable in TShark than in other protocol analyzers, and the syntax
       you can use to create your filters is richer. As	TShark progresses,
       expect more and more protocol fields to be allowed in display filters.
       Display filters use the same syntax as display and color	filters	in
       Wireshark; a display filter is specified	with the -Y option.

       Display filters can be specified	when capturing or when reading from a
       capture file. Note that capture filters are much	more efficient than
       display filters,	and it may be more difficult for TShark	to keep	up
       with a busy network if a	display	filter is specified for	a live
       capture,	so you might be	more likely to lose packets if you're using a
       display filter.

       A capture or display filter can either be specified with	the -f or -Y
       option, respectively, in	which case the entire filter expression	must
       be specified as a single	argument (which	means that if it contains
       spaces, it must be quoted), or can be specified with command-line
       arguments after the option arguments, in	which case all the arguments
       after the filter	arguments are treated as a filter expression. If the
       filter is specified with	command-line arguments after the option
       arguments, it's a capture filter	if a capture is	being done (i.e., if
       no -r option was	specified) and a display filter	if a capture file is
       being read (i.e., if a -r option	was specified).

       If the -w option	is specified when capturing packets or reading from a
       capture file, TShark does not display packets on	the standard output.
       Instead,	it writes the packets to a capture file	with the name
       specified by the	-w option. Note	that display filters are currently not
       supported when capturing	and saving the captured	packets.

       If you want to write the	decoded	form of	packets	to a file, run TShark
       without the -w option, and redirect its standard	output to the file (do
       not use the -w option).

       If you want the packets to be displayed to the standard output and also
       saved to	a file,	specify	the -P option in addition to the -w option to
       have the	summary	line displayed,	specify	the -V option in addition to
       the -w option to	have the details of the	packet displayed, and specify
       the -O option, with a list of protocols,	to have	the full details of
       the specified protocols and the top-level detail	line for all other
       protocols to be displayed. If the -P option is used together with the
       -V or -O	option,	the summary line will be displayed along with the
       detail lines.

       When writing packets to a file, TShark, by default, writes the file in
       pcapng format, and writes all of	the packets it sees to the output
       file. The -F option can be used to specify the format in	which to write
       the file. This list of available	file formats is	displayed by the -F
       option without a	value. However,	you can't specify a file format	for a
       live capture.

       When capturing packets, TShark writes to	the standard error an initial
       line listing the	interfaces from	which packets are being	captured and,
       if packet information isn't being displayed to the terminal, writes a
       continuous count	of packets captured to the standard output. If the -q
       option is specified, neither the	continuous count nor the packet
       information will	be displayed; instead, at the end of the capture, a
       count of	packets	captured will be displayed. If the -Q option is
       specified, neither the initial line, nor	the packet information,	nor
       any packet counts will be displayed. If the -q or -Q option is used,
       the -P, -V, or -O option	can be used to cause the corresponding output
       to be displayed even though other output	is suppressed.

       When reading packets, the -q and	-Q option will suppress	the display of
       the packet summary or details; this would be used if -z options are
       specified in order to display statistics, so that only the statistics,
       not the packet information, is displayed.

       The -G option is	a special mode that simply causes TShark to dump one
       of several types	of internal glossaries and then	exit.

OPTIONS
       -2

	   Perform a two-pass analysis.	This causes TShark to buffer output
	   until the entire first pass is done,	but allows it to fill in
	   fields that require future knowledge, such as 'response in frame #'
	   fields. Also	permits	reassembly frame dependencies to be calculated
	   correctly.

       -a|--autostop  <capture autostop	condition>

	   Specify a criterion that specifies when TShark is to	stop writing
	   to a	capture	file. The criterion is of the form test:value, where
	   test	is one of:

	   duration:value Stop writing to a capture file after value seconds
	   have	elapsed. Floating point	values (e.g. 0.5) are allowed.

	   files:value Stop writing to capture files after value number	of
	   files were written.

	   filesize:value Stop writing to a capture file after it reaches a
	   size	of value kB. If	this option is used together with the -b
	   option, TShark will stop writing to the current capture file	and
	   switch to the next one if filesize is reached. When reading a
	   capture file, TShark	will stop reading the file after the number of
	   bytes read exceeds this number (the complete	packet	will be	read,
	   so more bytes than this number may be read).	Note that the filesize
	   is limited to a maximum value of 2 GiB.

	   packets:value switch	to the next file after it contains value
	   packets. This does not include any packets that do not pass the
	   display filter, so it may differ from -c<capture packet count>.

       -A  <user>:<password>

	   Specify a user and a	password when TShark captures from a rpcap://
	   interface where authentication is required.

	   This	option is available with libpcap with enabled remote support.

       -b|--ring-buffer	 <capture ring buffer option>

	   Cause TShark	to run in "multiple files" mode. In "multiple files"
	   mode, TShark	will write to several capture files. When the first
	   capture file	fills up, TShark will switch writing to	the next file
	   and so on.

	   The created filenames are based on the filename given with the -w
	   option, the number of the file and on the creation date and time,
	   e.g.	outfile_00001_20220714120117.pcap,
	   outfile_00002_20220714120523.pcap, ...

	   With	the files option it's also possible to form a "ring buffer".
	   This	will fill up new files until the number	of files specified, at
	   which point TShark will discard the data in the first file and
	   start writing to that file and so on. If the	files option is	not
	   set,	new files filled up until one of the capture stop conditions
	   match (or until the disk is full).

	   The criterion is of the form	key:value, where key is	one of:

	   duration:value switch to the	next file after	value seconds have
	   elapsed, even if the	current	file is	not completely filled up.
	   Floating point values (e.g. 0.5) are	allowed.

	   files:value begin again with	the first file after value number of
	   files were written (form a ring buffer). This value must be less
	   than	100000.	Caution	should be used when using large	numbers	of
	   files: some filesystems do not handle many files in a single
	   directory well. The files criterion requires	either duration,
	   interval or filesize	to be specified	to control when	to go to the
	   next	file. It should	be noted that each -b parameter	takes exactly
	   one criterion; to specify two criterion, each must be preceded by
	   the -b option.

	   filesize:value switch to the	next file after	it reaches a size of
	   value kB. Note that the filesize is limited to a maximum value of 2
	   GiB.

	   interval:value switch to the	next file when the time	is an exact
	   multiple of value seconds. For example, use 3600 to switch to a new
	   file	every hour on the hour.

	   packets:value switch	to the next file after it contains value
	   packets.

	   nametimenum:value Choose between two	save filename templates. If
	   value is 1, make running file number	part before start time part;
	   this	is the original	and default behaviour (e.g.
	   log_00001_20220714164426.pcap). If value is greater than 1, make
	   start time part before running number part (e.g.
	   log_20210828164426_00001.pcap). The latter makes alphabetical
	   sorting order equal to creation time	order, and keeps related
	   multiple file sets in same directory	close to each other.

	   Example: tshark -b filesize:1000 -b files:5 results in a ring
	   buffer of five files	of size	one megabyte each.

       -B|--buffer-size	 <capture buffer size>

	   Set capture buffer size (in MiB, default is 2 MiB). This is used by
	   the capture driver to buffer	packet data until that data can	be
	   written to disk. If you encounter packet drops while	capturing, try
	   to increase this size. Note that, while TShark attempts to set the
	   buffer size to 2 MiB	by default, and	can be told to set it to a
	   larger value, the system or interface on which you're capturing
	   might silently limit	the capture buffer size	to a lower value or
	   raise it to a higher	value.

	   This	is available on	UNIX systems with libpcap 1.0.0	or later and
	   on Windows. It is not available on UNIX systems with	earlier
	   versions of libpcap.

	   This	option can occur multiple times. If used before	the first
	   occurrence of the -i	option,	it sets	the default capture buffer
	   size. If used after an -i option, it	sets the capture buffer	size
	   for the interface specified by the last -i option occurring before
	   this	option.	If the capture buffer size is not set specifically,
	   the default capture buffer size is used instead.

       -c  <capture packet count>

	   Set the maximum number of packets to	read when capturing live data.
	   If reading a	capture	file, set the maximum number of	packets	to
	   read. This includes any packets that	do not pass the	display
	   filter, so it may differ from -a packets:<capture packet count>.

       -C  <configuration profile>

	   Run with the	given configuration profile.

       -d  <layer type>==<selector>,<decode-as protocol>

	   Like	Wireshark's Decode As... feature, this lets you	specify	how a
	   layer type should be	dissected. If the layer	type in	question (for
	   example, tcp.port or	udp.port for a TCP or UDP port number) has the
	   specified selector value, packets should be dissected as the
	   specified protocol.

	   Example: tshark -d tcp.port==8888,http will decode any traffic
	   running over	TCP port 8888 as HTTP.

	   Example: tshark -d tcp.port==8888:3,http will decode	any traffic
	   running over	TCP ports 8888,	8889 or	8890 as	HTTP.

	   Example: tshark -d tcp.port==8888-8890,http will decode any traffic
	   running over	TCP ports 8888,	8889 or	8890 as	HTTP.

	   Using an invalid selector or	protocol will print out	a list of
	   valid selectors and protocol	names, respectively.

	   Example: tshark -d .	is a quick way to get a	list of	valid
	   selectors.

	   Example: tshark -d ethertype==0x0800. is a quick way	to get a list
	   of protocols	that can be selected with an ethertype.

       -D|--list-interfaces

	   Print a list	of the interfaces on which TShark can capture, and
	   exit. For each network interface, a number and an interface name,
	   possibly followed by	a text description of the interface, is
	   printed. The	interface name or the number can be supplied to	the -i
	   option to specify an	interface on which to capture.

	   This	can be useful on systems that don't have a command to list
	   them	(UNIX systems lacking ifconfig -a or Linux systems lacking ip
	   link	show). The number can be useful	on Windows systems, where the
	   interface name might	be a long name or a GUID.

	   Note	that "can capture" means that TShark was able to open that
	   device to do	a live capture.	Depending on your system you may need
	   to run TShark from an account with special privileges (for example,
	   as root) to be able to capture network traffic. If tshark -D	is not
	   run from such an account, it	will not list any interfaces.

       -e  <field>

	   Add a field to the list of fields to	display	if -T
	   ek|fields|json|pdml is selected. This option	can be used multiple
	   times on the	command	line. At least one field must be provided if
	   the -T fields option	is selected. Column names may be used prefixed
	   with	"_ws.col."

	   Example: tshark -e frame.number -e ip.addr -e udp -e	_ws.col.Info

	   Fields are separated	by tab characters by default. -E controls the
	   format of the printed fields. Giving	a protocol rather than a
	   single field	will print the protocol	summary	(subtree label)	from
	   the packet details as a single field. If the	protocol summary
	   contains only the protocol name (e.g. "Hypertext Transfer
	   Protocol") then the protocol	filter name ("http") will be printed.

       -E  <field print	option>

	   Set an option controlling the printing of fields when -T fields is
	   selected.

	   Options are:

	   bom=y|n If y, prepend output	with the UTF-8 byte order mark
	   (hexadecimal	ef, bb,	bf). Defaults to n.

	   header=y|n If y, print a list of the	field names given using	-e as
	   the first line of the output; the field name	will be	separated
	   using the same character as the field values. Defaults to n.

	   separator=/t|/s|<character> Set the separator character to use for
	   fields. If /t tab will be used (this	is the default), if /s,	a
	   single space	will be	used. Otherwise	any character that can be
	   accepted by the command line	as part	of the option may be used.

	   occurrence=f|l|a Select which occurrence to use for fields that
	   have	multiple occurrences. If f the first occurrence	will be	used,
	   if l	the last occurrence will be used and if	a all occurrences will
	   be used (this is the	default).

	   aggregator=,|/s|<character> Set the aggregator character to use for
	   fields that have multiple occurrences. If , a comma will be used
	   (this is the	default), if /s, a single space	will be	used.
	   Otherwise any character that	can be accepted	by the command line as
	   part	of the option may be used.

	   quote=d|s|n Set the quote character to use to surround fields. d
	   uses	double-quotes, s single-quotes,	n no quotes (the default).

       -f  <capture filter>

	   Set the capture filter expression.

	   This	option can occur multiple times. If used before	the first
	   occurrence of the -i	option,	it sets	the default capture filter
	   expression. If used after an	-i option, it sets the capture filter
	   expression for the interface	specified by the last -i option
	   occurring before this option. If the	capture	filter expression is
	   not set specifically, the default capture filter expression is used
	   if provided.

	   Pre-defined capture filter names, as	shown in the GUI menu item
	   Capture->Capture Filters, can be used by prefixing the argument
	   with	"predef:". Example: tshark -f
	   "predef:MyPredefinedHostOnlyFilter"

       -F  <file format>

	   Set the file	format of the output capture file written using	the -w
	   option. The output written with the -w option is raw	packet data,
	   not text, so	there is no -F option to request text output. The
	   option -F without a value will list the available formats.

       -g

	   This	option causes the output file(s) to be created with group-read
	   permission (meaning that the	output file(s) can be read by other
	   members of the calling user's group).

       -G  [ <report type> ]

	   The -G option will cause TShark to dump one of several types	of
	   glossaries and then exit. If	no specific glossary type is
	   specified, then the fields report will be generated by default.
	   Using the report type of help lists all the current report types.

	   The available report	types include:

	   column-formats Dumps	the column formats understood by TShark. There
	   is one record per line. The fields are tab-delimited.

	   Field 1
	       format string (e.g. "%rD")

	   Field 2
	       text description	of format string (e.g. "Dest port (resolved)")

	   currentprefs	 Dumps a copy of the current preferences file to
	   stdout.

	   decodes Dumps the "layer type"/"decode as" associations to stdout.
	   There is one	record per line. The fields are	tab-delimited.

	   Field 1
	       layer type, e.g.	"tcp.port"

	   Field 2
	       selector	in decimal

	   Field 3
	       "decode as" name, e.g. "http"

	   defaultprefs	 Dumps a default preferences file to stdout.

	   dissector-tables  Dumps a list of dissector tables to stdout. There
	   is one record per line. The fields are tab-delimited.

	   Field 1
	       dissector table name, e.g. "tcp.port"

	   Field 2
	       name used for the dissector table in the	GUI

	   Field 3
	       type (textual representation of the ftenum type)

	   Field 4
	       base for	display	(for integer types)

	   Field 5
	       protocol	name

	   Field 6
	       "decode as" support

	   elastic-mapping  Dumps the ElasticSearch mapping file to stdout.

	   fieldcount  Dumps the number	of header fields to stdout.

	   fields  Dumps the contents of the registration database to stdout.
	   An independent program can take this	output and format it into nice
	   tables or HTML or whatever. There is	one record per line. Each
	   record is either a protocol or a header field, differentiated by
	   the first field. The	fields are tab-delimited.

	   Protocols

	   Field 1
	       'P'

	   Field 2
	       descriptive protocol name

	   Field 3
	       protocol	abbreviation

	   Header Fields

	   Field 1
	       'F'

	   Field 2
	       descriptive field name

	   Field 3
	       field abbreviation

	   Field 4
	       type (textual representation of the ftenum type)

	   Field 5
	       parent protocol abbreviation

	   Field 6
	       base for	display	(for integer types); "parent bitfield width"
	       for FT_BOOLEAN

	   Field 7
	       bitmask:	format:	hex: 0x....

	   Field 8
	       blurb describing	field

	   folders Dumps various folders used by TShark. This is essentially
	   the same data reported in Wireshark's About | Folders tab. There is
	   one record per line.	The fields are tab-delimited.

	   Field 1
	       Folder type (e.g	"Personal configuration:")

	   Field 2
	       Folder location (e.g. "/home/vagrant/.config/wireshark/")

	   ftypes Dumps	the "ftypes" (fundamental types) understood by TShark.
	   There is one	record per line. The fields are	tab-delimited.

	   Field 1
	       FTYPE (e.g "FT_IPv6")

	   Field 2
	       text description	of type	(e.g. "IPv6 address")

	   heuristic-decodes Dumps the heuristic decodes currently installed.
	   There is one	record per line. The fields are	tab-delimited.

	   Field 1
	       underlying dissector (e.g. "tcp")

	   Field 2
	       name of heuristic decoder (e.g. ucp")

	   Field 3
	       heuristic enabled (e.g. "T" or "F")

	   help	Displays the available report types.

	   plugins Dumps the plugins currently installed. There	is one record
	   per line. The fields	are tab-delimited.

	   Field 1
	       plugin library/Lua script/extcap	executable (e.g. "gryphon.so")

	   Field 2
	       plugin version (e.g. 0.0.4)

	   Field 3
	       plugin type ("dissector", "tap",	"file type", etc.)

	   Field 4
	       full path to plugin file

	   protocols Dumps the protocols in the	registration database to
	   stdout. An independent program can take this	output and format it
	   into	nice tables or HTML or whatever. There is one record per line.
	   The fields are tab-delimited.

	   Field 1
	       protocol	name

	   Field 2
	       protocol	short name

	   Field 3
	       protocol	filter name

	   values Dumps	the value_strings, range_strings or true/false strings
	   for fields that have	them. There is one record per line. Fields are
	   tab-delimited. There	are three types	of records: Value String,
	   Range String	and True/False String. The first field,	'V', 'R' or
	   'T',	indicates the type of record.

	   Value Strings

	   Field 1
	       'V'

	   Field 2
	       field abbreviation to which this	value string corresponds

	   Field 3
	       Integer value

	   Field 4
	       String

	   Range Strings

	   Field 1
	       'R'

	   Field 2
	       field abbreviation to which this	range string corresponds

	   Field 3
	       Integer value: lower bound

	   Field 4
	       Integer value: upper bound

	   Field 5
	       String

	   True/False Strings

	   Field 1
	       'T'

	   Field 2
	       field abbreviation to which this	true/false string corresponds

	   Field 3
	       True String

	   Field 4
	       False String

       -h|--help

	   Print the version and options and exit.

       -H  <input hosts	file>

	   Read	a list of entries from a "hosts" file, which will then be
	   written to a	capture	file. Implies -W n. Can	be called multiple
	   times.

	   The "hosts" file format is documented at
	   https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hosts_(file).

       -i|--interface  <capture	interface> | -

	   Set the name	of the network interface or pipe to use	for live
	   packet capture.

	   Network interface names should match	one of the names listed	in
	   "tshark -D" (described above); a number, as reported	by "tshark
	   -D",	can also be used. If you're using UNIX,	"netstat -i",
	   "ifconfig -a" or "ip	link" might also work to list interface	names,
	   although not	all versions of	UNIX support the -a option to
	   ifconfig.

	   If no interface is specified, TShark	searches the list of
	   interfaces, choosing	the first non-loopback interface if there are
	   any non-loopback interfaces,	and choosing the first loopback
	   interface if	there are no non-loopback interfaces. If there are no
	   interfaces at all, TShark reports an	error and doesn't start	the
	   capture.

	   Pipe	names should be	either the name	of a FIFO (named pipe) or "-"
	   to read data	from the standard input. On Windows systems, pipe
	   names must be of the	form "\\.\pipe\pipename". Data read from pipes
	   must	be in standard pcapng or pcap format. Pcapng data must have
	   the same endianness as the capturing	host.

	   "TCP@<host>:<port>" causes TShark to	attempt	to connect to the
	   specified port on the specified host	and read pcapng	or pcap	data.

	   This	option can occur multiple times. When capturing	from multiple
	   interfaces, the capture file	will be	saved in pcapng	format.

       -I|--monitor-mode

	   Put the interface in	"monitor mode";	this is	supported only on IEEE
	   802.11 Wi-Fi	interfaces, and	supported only on some operating
	   systems.

	   Note	that in	monitor	mode the adapter might disassociate from the
	   network with	which it's associated, so that you will	not be able to
	   use any wireless networks with that adapter.	This could prevent
	   accessing files on a	network	server,	or resolving host names	or
	   network addresses, if you are capturing in monitor mode and are not
	   connected to	another	network	with another adapter.

	   This	option can occur multiple times. If used before	the first
	   occurrence of the -i	option,	it enables the monitor mode for	all
	   interfaces. If used after an	-i option, it enables the monitor mode
	   for the interface specified by the last -i option occurring before
	   this	option.

       -j  <protocol match filter>

	   Protocol match filter used for ek|json|jsonraw|pdml output file
	   types. Only the protocol's parent node is included. Child nodes are
	   only	included if explicitly specified in the	filter.

	   Example: tshark -j "ip ip.flags http"

       -J  <protocol match filter>

	   Protocol top	level filter used for ek|json|jsonraw|pdml output file
	   types. The protocol's parent	node and all child nodes are included.
	   Lower-level protocols must be explicitly specified in the filter.

	   Example: tshark -J "tcp http"

       -K  <keytab>

	   Load	kerberos crypto	keys from the specified	keytab file. This
	   option can be used multiple times to	load keys from several files.

	   Example: tshark -K krb5.keytab

       -l

	   Flush the standard output after the information for each packet is
	   printed. (This is not, strictly speaking, line-buffered if -V was
	   specified; however, it is the same as line-buffered if -V wasn't
	   specified, as only one line is printed for each packet, and,	as -l
	   is normally used when piping	a live capture to a program or script,
	   so that output for a	packet shows up	as soon	as the packet is seen
	   and dissected, it should work just as well as true line-buffering.
	   We do this as a workaround for a deficiency in the Microsoft	Visual
	   C++ C library.)

	   This	may be useful when piping the output of	TShark to another
	   program, as it means	that the program to which the output is	piped
	   will	see the	dissected data for a packet as soon as TShark sees the
	   packet and generates	that output, rather than seeing	it only	when
	   the standard	output buffer containing that data fills up.

       -L|--list-data-link-types

	   List	the data link types supported by the interface and exit. The
	   reported link types can be used for the -y option.

       -n

	   Disable network object name resolution (such	as hostname, TCP and
	   UDP port names); the	-N option might	override this one.

       -N  <name resolving flags>

	   Turn	on name	resolving only for particular types of addresses and
	   port	numbers, with name resolving for other types of	addresses and
	   port	numbers	turned off. This option	overrides -n if	both -N	and -n
	   are present.	This option and	-n override the	options	from the
	   preferences,	including preferences set via the -o option. If	both
	   -N and -n options are not present, the values from the preferences
	   are used, which default to d, m, and	N turned on and	the other
	   options turned off. (NB, N does not actually	do anything without n
	   enabled as well.)

	   The argument	is a string that may contain the letters:

	   d to	enable resolution from captured	DNS packets

	   m to	enable MAC address resolution

	   n to	enable network address resolution

	   N to	enable using external resolvers	(e.g., DNS) for	network
	   address resolution; no effect without n also	enabled

	   t to	enable transport-layer port number resolution

	   v to	enable VLAN IDs	to names resolution

       -o  <preference>:<value>

	   Set a preference value, overriding the default value	and any	value
	   read	from a preference file.	The argument to	the option is a	string
	   of the form prefname:value, where prefname is the name of the
	   preference (which is	the same name that would appear	in the
	   preference file), and value is the value to which it	should be set.

       -O  <protocols>

	   Similar to the -V option, but causes	TShark to only show a detailed
	   view	of the comma-separated list of protocols specified, and	show
	   only	the top-level detail line for all other	protocols, rather than
	   a detailed view of all protocols. Use the output of "tshark -G
	   protocols" to find the abbreviations	of the protocols you can
	   specify.

       -p|--no-promiscuous-mode

	   Don't put the interface into	promiscuous mode. Note that the
	   interface might be in promiscuous mode for some other reason;
	   hence, -p cannot be used to ensure that the only traffic that is
	   captured is traffic sent to or from the machine on which TShark is
	   running, broadcast traffic, and multicast traffic to	addresses
	   received by that machine.

	   This	option can occur multiple times. If used before	the first
	   occurrence of the -i	option,	no interface will be put into the
	   promiscuous mode. If	used after an -i option, the interface
	   specified by	the last -i option occurring before this option	will
	   not be put into the promiscuous mode.

       -P|--print

	   Decode and display the packet summary or details, even if writing
	   raw packet data using the -w	option,	and even if packet output is
	   otherwise suppressed	with -Q.

       -q

	   When	capturing packets, don't display the continuous	count of
	   packets captured that is normally shown when	saving a capture to a
	   file; instead, just display,	at the end of the capture, a count of
	   packets captured. On	systems	that support the SIGINFO signal, such
	   as various BSDs, you	can cause the current count to be displayed by
	   typing your "status"	character (typically control-T,	although it
	   might be set	to "disabled" by default on at least some BSDs,	so
	   you'd have to explicitly set	it to use it).

	   When	reading	a capture file,	or when	capturing and not saving to a
	   file, don't print packet information; this is useful	if you're
	   using a -z option to	calculate statistics and don't want the	packet
	   information printed,	just the statistics.

       -Q

	   When	capturing packets, don't display, on the standard error, the
	   initial message indicating on which interfaces the capture is being
	   done, the continuous	count of packets captured shown	when saving a
	   capture to a	file, and the final message giving the count of
	   packets captured. Only true errors are displayed on the standard
	   error.

	   only	display	true errors; don't display the initial message
	   indicating the. This	outputs	less than the -q option, so the
	   interface name and total packet count and the end of	a capture are
	   not sent to stderr.

	   When	reading	a capture file,	or when	capturing and not saving to a
	   file, don't print packet information; this is useful	if you're
	   using a -z option to	calculate statistics and don't want the	packet
	   information printed,	just the statistics.

       -r|--read-file  <infile>

	   Read	packet data from infile, can be	any supported capture file
	   format (including gzipped files). It	is possible to use named pipes
	   or stdin (-)	here but only with certain (not	compressed) capture
	   file	formats	(in particular:	those that can be read without seeking
	   backwards).

       -R|--read-filter	 <Read filter>

	   Cause the specified filter (which uses the syntax of	read/display
	   filters, rather than	that of	capture	filters) to be applied during
	   the first pass of analysis. Packets not matching the	filter are not
	   considered for future passes. Only makes sense with multiple
	   passes, see -2. For regular filtering on single-pass	dissect	see -Y
	   instead.

	   Note	that forward-looking fields such as 'response in frame #'
	   cannot be used with this filter, since they will not	have been
	   calculate when this filter is applied.

       -s|--snapshot-length  <capture snaplen>

	   Set the default snapshot length to use when capturing live data. No
	   more	than snaplen bytes of each network packet will be read into
	   memory, or saved to disk. A value of	0 specifies a snapshot length
	   of 262144, so that the full packet is captured; this	is the
	   default.

	   This	option can occur multiple times. If used before	the first
	   occurrence of the -i	option,	it sets	the default snapshot length.
	   If used after an -i option, it sets the snapshot length for the
	   interface specified by the last -i option occurring before this
	   option. If the snapshot length is not set specifically, the default
	   snapshot length is used if provided.

       -S  <separator>

	   Set the line	separator to be	printed	between	packets.

       -t  a|ad|adoy|d|dd|e|r|u|ud|udoy

	   Set the format of the packet	timestamp printed in summary lines.
	   The format can be one of:

	   a absolute: The absolute time, as local time	in your	time zone, is
	   the actual time the packet was captured, with no date displayed

	   ad absolute with date: The absolute date, displayed as YYYY-MM-DD,
	   and time, as	local time in your time	zone, is the actual time and
	   date	the packet was captured

	   adoy	absolute with date using day of	year: The absolute date,
	   displayed as	YYYY/DOY, and time, as local time in your time zone,
	   is the actual time and date the packet was captured

	   d delta: The	delta time is the time since the previous packet was
	   captured

	   dd delta_displayed: The delta_displayed time	is the time since the
	   previous displayed packet was captured

	   e epoch: The	time in	seconds	since epoch (Jan 1, 1970 00:00:00)

	   r relative: The relative time is the	time elapsed between the first
	   packet and the current packet

	   u UTC: The absolute time, as	UTC, is	the actual time	the packet was
	   captured, with no date displayed

	   ud UTC with date: The absolute date,	displayed as YYYY-MM-DD, and
	   time, as UTC, is the	actual time and	date the packet	was captured

	   udoy	UTC with date using day	of year: The absolute date, displayed
	   as YYYY/DOY,	and time, as UTC, is the actual	time and date the
	   packet was captured

	   The default format is relative.

       -T  ek|fields|json|jsonraw|pdml|ps|psml|tabs|text

	   Set the format of the output	when viewing decoded packet data. The
	   options are one of:

	   ek Newline delimited	JSON format for	bulk import into
	   Elasticsearch. It can be used with -j or -J to specify which
	   protocols to	include	or with	-x to include raw hex-encoded packet
	   data. If -P is specified it will print the packet summary only,
	   with	both -P	and -V it will print the packet	summary	and packet
	   details. If neither -P or -V	are used it will print the packet
	   details only. Example of usage to import data into Elasticsearch:

	       tshark -T ek -j "http tcp ip" -P	-V -x -r file.pcap > file.json
	       curl -H "Content-Type: application/x-ndjson" -XPOST http://elasticsearch:9200/_bulk --data-binary "@file.json"

	   Elastic requires a mapping file to be loaded	as template for
	   packets-* index in order to convert Wireshark types to elastic
	   types. This file can	be auto-generated with the command "tshark -G
	   elastic-mapping". Since the mapping file can	be huge, protocols can
	   be selected by using	the option --elastic-mapping-filter:

	       tshark -G elastic-mapping --elastic-mapping-filter ip,udp,dns

	   fields The values of	fields specified with the -e option, in	a form
	   specified by	the -E option. For example,

	       tshark -T fields	-E separator=, -E quote=d

	   would generate comma-separated values (CSV) output suitable for
	   importing into your favorite	spreadsheet program.

	   json	JSON file format. It can be used with -j or -J to specify
	   which protocols to include or with -x option	to include raw
	   hex-encoded packet data. Example of usage:

	       tshark -T json -r file.pcap
	       tshark -T json -j "http tcp ip" -x -r file.pcap

	   jsonraw JSON	file format including only raw hex-encoded packet
	   data. It can	be used	with -j	or -J to specify which protocols to
	   include. Example of usage:

	       tshark -T jsonraw -r file.pcap
	       tshark -T jsonraw -j "http tcp ip" -x -r	file.pcap

	   pdml	Packet Details Markup Language,	an XML-based format for	the
	   details of a	decoded	packet.	This information is equivalent to the
	   packet details printed with the -V option. Using the	--color	option
	   will	add color attributes to	pdml output. These attributes are
	   nonstandard.

	   ps PostScript for a human-readable one-line summary of each of the
	   packets, or a multi-line view of the	details	of each	of the
	   packets, depending on whether the -V	option was specified.

	   psml	Packet Summary Markup Language,	an XML-based format for	the
	   summary information of a decoded packet. This information is
	   equivalent to the information shown in the one-line summary printed
	   by default. Using the --color option	will add color attributes to
	   pdml	output.	These attributes are nonstandard.

	   tabs	Similar	to the default text report except the human-readable
	   one-line summary of each packet will	include	an ASCII horizontal
	   tab (0x09) character	as a delimiter between each column.

	   text	Text of	a human-readable one-line summary of each of the
	   packets, or a multi-line view of the	details	of each	of the
	   packets, depending on whether the -V	option was specified. This is
	   the default.

       --temp-dir <directory>

	   Specifies the directory into	which temporary	files (including
	   capture files) are to be written. The default behaviour is to use
	   your	system's temporary directory (typically	/tmp on	Linux, and
	   C:\\Temp on Windows).

       -u <seconds type>

	   Specifies the seconds type. Valid choices are:

	   s for seconds

	   hms for hours, minutes and seconds

       -U <tap name>

	   PDUs	export,	exports	PDUs from infile to outfile according to the
	   tap name given. Use -Y to filter.

	   Enter an empty tap name "" or a tap name of ? to get	a list of
	   available names.

       -v|--version

	   Print the version and exit.

       -V

	   Cause TShark	to print a view	of the packet details.

       -w  <outfile> | -

	   Write raw packet data to outfile or to the standard output if
	   outfile is '-'.

	       Note
	       -w provides raw packet data, not	text. If you want text output
	       you need	to redirect stdout (e.g. using '>'), don't use the -w
	       option for this.

       -W  <file format	option>

	   Save	extra information in the file if the format supports it. For
	   example,

	       tshark -F pcapng	-W n

	   will	save host name resolution records along	with captured packets.

	   Future versions of TShark may automatically change the capture
	   format to pcapng as needed.

	   The argument	is a string that may contain the following letter:

	   n write network address resolution information (pcapng only)

       -x

	   Cause TShark	to print a hex and ASCII dump of the packet data after
	   printing the	summary	and/or details,	if either are also being
	   displayed.

       --hexdump <hexoption>

	   Cause TShark	to print a hex and ASCII dump of the packet data with
	   the ability to select which data sources to dump and	how to format
	   or exclude the ASCII	dump text.

	   This	option can be used multiple times where	the data source
	   <hexoption> is all or frames	and the	ASCII dump text	<hexoption> is
	   ascii, delimit, noascii.

	       Example:	 tshark	... --hexdump frames --hexdump delimit ...

	   all
	       Enable hexdump, generate	hexdump	blocks for all data sources
	       associated with each frame. Used	to negate earlier use of
	       --hexdump frames. The -x	option displays	all data sources by
	       default.

	   frames
	       Enable hexdump, generate	hexdump	blocks only for	the frame
	       data. Use this option to	exclude, from hexdump output, any
	       hexdump blocks for secondary data sources such as 'Bitstring
	       tvb', 'Reassembled TCP',	'De-chunked entity body', etc.

	   ascii
	       Enable hexdump, with undelimited	ASCII dump text. Used to
	       negate earlier use of --hexdump delimit or --hexdump noascii.
	       The -x option displays undelimited ASCII	dump text by default.

	   delimit
	       Enable hexdump with the ASCII dump text delimited with '|'
	       characters. This	is useful to unambiguously determine the last
	       of the hex byte text and	start of the ASCII dump	text.

	   noascii
	       Enable hexdump without printing any ASCII dump text.

	   help
	       Display --hexdump specific help then exit.

	   The use of --hexdump	<hexoption> is particularly useful to generate
	   output that can be used to create a pcap or pcapng file from	a
	   capture file	type such as Microsoft NetMon 2.x which	TShark and
	   Wireshark can read but can not directly do a	"Save as" nor export
	   packets from.

	   Examples:

	   Generate hexdump output, with only the frame	data source, with
	   delimited ASCII dump	text, with each	frame hex block	preceeded by a
	   human readable timestamp that is directly usable by the text2pcap
	   utility:

	       tshark ... --hexdump frames --hexdump delimit \
		   -P -t ad -o gui.column.format:"Time","%t" \
		   | text2pcap -n -t '%F %T.%f'	- MYNEWPCAPNG

	   Generate hexdump output, with only the frame	data source, with no
	   ASCII dump text, with each frame hex	block preceeded	by an epoch
	   timestamp that is directly usable by	the text2pcap utility:

	       tshark ... --hexdump frames --hexdump noascii \
		   -P -t e -o gui.column.format:"Time","%t" \
		   | text2pcap -n -t %s.%f - MYNEWPCAPNG

       -X <eXtension options>

	   Specify an option to	be passed to a TShark module. The eXtension
	   option is in	the form extension_key:value, where extension_key can
	   be:

	   lua_script:lua_script_filename tells	TShark to load the given
	   script in addition to the default Lua scripts.

	   lua_scriptnum:argument tells	TShark to pass the given argument to
	   the lua script identified by	'num', which is	the number indexed
	   order of the	'lua_script' command. For example, if only one script
	   was loaded with '-X lua_script:my.lua', then	'-X lua_script1:foo'
	   will	pass the string	'foo' to the 'my.lua' script. If two scripts
	   were	loaded,	such as	'-X lua_script:my.lua' and '-X
	   lua_script:other.lua' in that order,	then a '-X lua_script2:bar'
	   would pass the string 'bar' to the second lua script, namely
	   'other.lua'.

	   read_format:file_format tells TShark	to use the given file format
	   to read in the file (the file given in the -r command option).
	   Providing no	file_format argument, or an invalid one, will produce
	   a list of available file formats to use. For	example,

	       tshark -r rtcp_broken.pcapng -X read_format:"MIME Files Format" -V

	   will	display	the internal file structure  and allow access to the
	   file-pcapng fields.

       -y|--linktype  <capture link type>

	   Set the data	link type to use while capturing packets. The values
	   reported by -L are the values that can be used.

	   This	option can occur multiple times. If used before	the first
	   occurrence of the -i	option,	it sets	the default capture link type.
	   If used after an -i option, it sets the capture link	type for the
	   interface specified by the last -i option occurring before this
	   option. If the capture link type is not set specifically, the
	   default capture link	type is	used if	provided.

       -Y|--display-filter  <displaY filter>

	   Cause the specified filter (which uses the syntax of	read/display
	   filters, rather than	that of	capture	filters) to be applied before
	   printing a decoded form of packets or writing packets to a file.
	   Packets matching the	filter are printed or written to file; packets
	   that	the matching packets depend upon (e.g.,	fragments), are	not
	   printed but are written to file; packets not	matching the filter
	   nor depended	upon are discarded rather than being printed or
	   written.

	   Use this instead of -R for filtering	using single-pass analysis. If
	   doing two-pass analysis (see	-2) then only packets matching the
	   read	filter (if there is one) will be checked against this filter.

       -M  <auto session reset>

	   Automatically reset internal	session	when reached to	specified
	   number of packets. For example,

	       tshark -M 100000

	   will	reset session every 100000 packets.

	   This	feature	does not support -2 two-pass analysis

       -z  <statistics>

	   Get TShark to collect various types of statistics and display the
	   result after	finishing reading the capture file. Use	the -q option
	   if you're reading a capture file and	only want the statistics
	   printed, not	any per-packet information.

	   Statistics are calculated independently of the normal per-packet
	   output, unaffected by the main display filter. However, most	have
	   their own optional filter parameter,	and only packets that match
	   that	filter (and any	capture	filter or read filter) will be used in
	   the calculations.

	   Note	that the -z proto option is different -	it doesn't cause
	   statistics to be gathered and printed when the capture is complete,
	   it modifies the regular packet summary output to include the	values
	   of fields specified with the	option.	Therefore you must not use the
	   -q option, as that option would suppress the	printing of the
	   regular packet summary output, and must also	not use	the -V option,
	   as that would cause packet detail information rather	than packet
	   summary information to be printed.

	   Some	of the currently implemented statistics	are:

       -z help

	   Display all possible	values for -z.

       -z afp,srt[,filter]

	   Show	Apple Filing Protocol service response time statistics.

       -z ancp,tree[,filter]

	   Calculate statistics	on Access Node Control Protocol	message	types
	   and adjacency packet	codes.

       -z ansi_a,bsmap[,filter]

	   Count the number of ANSI A-I/F BSMAP	messages of each type.

       -z ansi_a,dtap[,filter]

	   Count the number of ANSI A-I/F DTAP messages	of each	type.

       -z ansi_map[,filter]

	   Count the number of ANSI MAP	messages of each type, and calculate
	   the total number of bytes and average bytes of each message type.

       -z asap,stat[,filter]

	   Calculate statistics	on Aggregate Service Access Protocol (ASAP).
	   For each ASAP message type, displays	the number, rate, and share
	   among all ASAP message types	of both	packets	and bytes, and the
	   first and last time that it is seen.

       -z bacapp_instanceid,tree[,filter]

	   Calculate statistics	on BACnet APDUs, collated by instance ID.
	   Displayed information includes source and destination address and
	   service type.

       -z bacapp_ip,tree[,filter]

	   Calculate statistics	on BACnet APDUs, collated by source and
	   destination address.	Displayed information includes service type,
	   object ID, and instance ID.

       -z bacapp_objectid,tree[,filter]

	   Calculate statistics	on BACnet APDUs, collated by object ID.
	   Displayed information includes source and destination address,
	   service type, and instance ID.

       -z bacapp_service,tree[,filter]

	   Calculate statistics	on BACnet APDUs, collated by service type.
	   Displayed information includes source and destination address,
	   object ID, and instance ID.

       -z calcappprotocol,stat[,filter]

	   Calculate statistics	on the Calculation Application Protocol	of
	   Reliable Server Pooling. For	each message type, displays the
	   number, rate, and share among all message types of both packets and
	   bytes, and the first	and last time that it is seen.

       -z camel,counter[,filter]

	   Count the number of CAMEL messages for each opcode.

       -z camel,srt[,filter]

	   Collect requests/response SRT (Service Response Time) data for
	   CAMEL. Data collected is number of request messages with
	   corresponding response of each CAMEL	message	type, along with the
	   minimum, maximum, and average response time.

       -z collectd,tree[,filter]

	   Calculate statistics	for collectd. The gathered statistics are the
	   number of collectd packets and the total number of value segments,
	   along with the host,	plugin,	and type of the	values.

       -z componentstatusprotocol,stat[,filter]

	   Calculate statistics	on the Calculation Status Protocol of Reliable
	   Server Pooling. For each message type, displays the number, rate
	   and share among all message types of	both packets and bytes,	and
	   the first and last time that	it is seen.

       -z conv,type[,filter]

	   Create a table that lists all conversations that could be seen in
	   the capture.	type specifies the conversation	endpoint type for
	   which we want to generate the statistics; currently the supported
	   ones	are:

	       "bluetooth" Bluetooth addresses
	       "dccp"	   DCCP/IP socket pairs	Both IPv4 and IPv6 are supported
	       "eth"	   Ethernet addresses
	       "fc"	   Fibre Channel addresses
	       "fddi"	   FDDI	addresses
	       "ip"	   IPv4	addresses
	       "ipv6"	   IPv6	addresses
	       "ipx"	   IPX addresses
	       "jxta"	   JXTA	message	addresses
	       "mptcp"	   Multipath TCP connections
	       "ncp"	   NCP connections
	       "rsvp"	   RSVP	connections
	       "sctp"	   SCTP/IP socket pairs	Both IPv4 and IPv6 are supported
	       "sll"	   Linux "cooked mode" capture addresses
	       "tcp"	   TCP/IP socket pairs	Both IPv4 and IPv6 are supported
	       "tr"	   Token Ring addresses
	       "udp"	   UDP/IP socket pairs	Both IPv4 and IPv6 are supported
	       "usb"	   USB addresses
	       "wlan"	   IEEE	802.11 addresses
	       "wpan"	   IEEE	802.15.4 addresses
	       "zbee_nwk"  ZigBee Network Layer	addresses

	   The table is	presented with one line	for each conversation which
	   displays the	number of frames/bytes in each direction, the total
	   number of frames/bytes, relative start time and duration. The table
	   is sorted according to the total number of frames.

       -z credentials

	   Collect credentials (username/passwords) from packets. The report
	   includes the	packet number, the protocol that had that credential,
	   the username	and the	password. For protocols	just using one single
	   field as authentication, this is provided as	a password and a
	   placeholder in place	of the user. Currently implemented protocols
	   include FTP,	HTTP, IMAP, POP, and SMTP.

       -z dcerpc,srt,uuid,major.minor[,filter]

	   Collect call/reply SRT (Service Response Time) data for DCERPC
	   interface uuid, version major.minor.	Data collected is the number
	   of calls for	each procedure,	MinSRT,	MaxSRT and AvgSRT.

	   Example: -z dcerpc,srt,12345778-1234-abcd-ef00-0123456789ac,1.0
	   will	collect	data for the CIFS SAMR Interface.

	   This	option can be used multiple times on the command line.

	   Example: -z
	   dcerpc,srt,12345778-1234-abcd-ef00-0123456789ac,1.0,ip.addr==1.2.3.4
	   will	collect	SAMR SRT statistics for	a specific host.

       -z dests,tree[,filter]

	   Calculate statistics	on IPv4	destination addresses and the
	   protocols and ports appearing on each address.

       -z dhcp,stat[,filter]

	   Show	DHCP (BOOTP) statistics.

       -z diameter,avp[,cmd.code,field,field,...]

	   This	option enables extraction of most important diameter fields
	   from	large capture files. Exactly one text line for each diameter
	   message with	matched	diameter.cmd.code will be printed.

	   Empty diameter command code or '*' can be specified to match	any
	   diameter.cmd.code

	   Example: -z diameter,avp  extract default field set from diameter
	   messages.

	   Example: -z diameter,avp,280	 extract default field set from
	   diameter DWR	messages.

	   Example: -z diameter,avp,272	 extract default field set from
	   diameter CC messages.

	   Extract most	important fields from diameter CC messages:

	   tshark -r file.cap.gz -q -z
	   diameter,avp,272,CC-Request-Type,CC-Request-Number,Session-Id,Subscription-Id-Data,Rating-Group,Result-Code

	   Following fields will be printed out	for each diameter message:

	       "frame"	      Frame number.
	       "time"	      Unix time	of the frame arrival.
	       "src"	      Source address.
	       "srcport"      Source port.
	       "dst"	      Destination address.
	       "dstport"      Destination port.
	       "proto"	      Constant string 'diameter', which	can be used for	post processing	of tshark output. E.g. grep/sed/awk.
	       "msgnr"	      seq. number of diameter message within the frame.	E.g. '2' for the third diameter	message	in the same frame.
	       "is_request"   '0' if message is	a request, '1' if message is an	answer.
	       "cmd"	      diameter.cmd_code, E.g. '272' for	credit control messages.
	       "req_frame"    Number of	frame where matched request was	found or '0'.
	       "ans_frame"    Number of	frame where matched answer was found or	'0'.
	       "resp_time"    response time in seconds,	'0' in case if matched Request/Answer is not found in trace. E.g. in the begin or end of capture.

	   -z diameter,avp option is much faster than -V -T text or -T pdml
	   options.

	   -z diameter,avp option is more powerful than	-T field and -z
	   proto,colinfo options.

	   Multiple diameter messages in one frame are supported.

	   Several fields with same name within	one diameter message are
	   supported, e.g. diameter.Subscription-Id-Data or
	   diameter.Rating-Group.

	   Note: tshark	-q option is recommended to suppress default TShark
	   output.

       -z diameter,srt[,filter]

	   Collect requests/response SRT (Service Response Time) data for
	   Diameter. Data collected is number of request and response pairs of
	   each	Diameter command code, Minimum SRT, Maximum SRT, Average SRT,
	   and Sum SRT.	Currently no statistics	are gathered on	unpaired
	   messages.

       -z dns,tree[,filter]

	   Create a summary of the captured DNS	packets. General information
	   are collected such as qtype and qclass distribution.	For some data
	   (as qname length or DNS payload) max, min and average values	are
	   also	displayed.

       -z endpoints,type[,filter]

	   Create a table that lists all endpoints that	could be seen in the
	   capture. type specifies the endpoint	type for which we want to
	   generate the	statistics; currently the supported ones are:

	       "bluetooth" Bluetooth addresses
	       "dccp"	   DCCP/IP socket pairs	Both IPv4 and IPv6 are supported
	       "eth"	   Ethernet addresses
	       "fc"	   Fibre Channel addresses
	       "fddi"	   FDDI	addresses
	       "ip"	   IPv4	addresses
	       "ipv6"	   IPv6	addresses
	       "ipx"	   IPX addresses
	       "jxta"	   JXTA	message	addresses
	       "mptcp"	   Multipath TCP connections
	       "ncp"	   NCP connections
	       "rsvp"	   RSVP	connections
	       "sctp"	   SCTP/IP socket pairs	Both IPv4 and IPv6 are supported
	       "sll"	   Linux "cooked mode" capture addresses
	       "tcp"	   TCP/IP socket pairs	Both IPv4 and IPv6 are supported
	       "tr"	   Token Ring addresses
	       "udp"	   UDP/IP socket pairs	Both IPv4 and IPv6 are supported
	       "usb"	   USB addresses
	       "wlan"	   IEEE	802.11 addresses
	       "wpan"	   IEEE	802.15.4 addresses
	       "zbee_nwk"  ZigBee Network Layer	addresses

	   The table is	presented with one line	for each endpoint which
	   displays the	total number of	packets/bytes and the number of
	   packets/bytes in each direction. The	table is sorted	according to
	   the total number of packets.

       -z enrp,stat[,filter]

	   Calculate statistics	on Endpoint Handlespace	Redundancy Protocol
	   (ENRP). For each message type, displays the number, rate, and share
	   among all message types of both packets and bytes, and the first
	   and last time that it is seen.

       -z expert[,error|,warn|,note|,chat|,comment][,filter]

	   Collects information	about all expert info, and will	display	them
	   in order, grouped by	severity.

	   Example: -z expert,sip will show expert items of all	severity for
	   frames that match the sip protocol.

	   This	option can be used multiple times on the command line.

	   Example: -z "expert,note,tcp" will only collect expert items	for
	   frames that include the tcp protocol, with a	severity of note or
	   higher.

       -z f1ap,tree[,filter]

	   Calculate the distribution of F1AP packets, grouped by packet
	   types.

       -z f5_tmm_dist,tree[,filter]

	   Calculate the F5 Ethernet trailer Traffic Managment Microkernel
	   distribution. Displayed information is the number of	packets	and
	   bytes, grouped by the TMM slot and number, whether packets are
	   ingress or egress, and whether there	is a flow ID and virtual
	   server name,	a flow ID without virtual server name, or no flow ID,
	   along with total for	all packets with F5 trailers.

       -z f5_virt_dist,tree[,filter]

	   Calculate F5	Ethernet trailer Virtual Server	distribution.
	   Displayed information is the	number of packets and bytes, grouped
	   by the virtual server name if it exists, or by whether there	is a
	   flow	ID or not if there is no virtual server	name, as well as
	   totals for all packets with F5 trailers.

       -z fc,srt[,filter]

	   Collect requests/response SRT (Service Response Time) data for GTP.
	   Data	collected is the number	of request/response pairs, mimimum
	   SRT,	maximum	SRT, average SRT, and sum SRT for each value of	the
	   Type	field (next protocol). No statistics are gathered on unpaired
	   messages.

       -z flow,name,mode[,filter]

	   Displays the	flow of	data between two nodes.	Output is the same as
	   ASCII format	saved from GUI.

	   name	specifies the flow name. It can	be one of:

	       any	All frames
	       icmp	ICMP
	       icmpv6	ICMPv6
	       lbm_uim	UIM
	       tcp	TCP

	   mode	specifies the address type. It can be one of:

	       standard	  Any address
	       network	  Network address

	   Example: -z flow,tcp,network	will show data flow for	all TCP	frames

       -z follow,prot,mode,filter[,range]

	   Displays the	contents of a TCP or UDP stream	between	two nodes. The
	   data	sent by	the second node	is prefixed with a tab to
	   differentiate it from the data sent by the first node.

	   prot	specifies the transport	protocol. It can be one	of:

	       tcp   TCP
	       udp   UDP
	       dccp  DCCP
	       tls   TLS or SSL
	       http  HTTP streams
	       http2 HTTP/2 streams
	       quic  QUIC streams

	       Note
	       While the usage help presents sip as an option, the proper
	       stream filters are not implemented so SIP calls cannot be
	       followed	in TShark, only	in Wireshark.

	   mode	specifies the output mode. It can be one of:

	       ascii  ASCII output with	dots for non-printable characters
	       ebcdic EBCDIC output with dots for non-printable	characters
	       hex    Hexadecimal and ASCII data with offsets
	       raw    Hexadecimal data
	       yaml   YAML format

	   Since the output in ascii or	ebcdic mode may	contain	newlines, the
	   length of each section of output plus a newline precedes each
	   section of output.

	   filter specifies the	stream to be displayed.	There are three
	   formats:

	       ip-addr0:port0,ip-addr1:port1
	       stream-index
	       stream-index,substream-index

	   The first format specifies IP addresses and TCP, UDP, or DCCP port
	   pairs. (TCP ports are used for TLS, HTTP, and HTTP2;	QUIC does not
	   support address and port matching because of	connection migration.)

	   The second format specifies stream indices, and is used for TCP,
	   UDP,	DCCP, TLS, and HTTP. (TLS and HTTP use TCP stream indices.)

	   The third format, specifying	streams	and substreams,	is used	for
	   HTTP/2 and QUIC due to their	use of multiplexing. (TCP stream and
	   HTTP/2 stream indices for HTTP/2, QUIC connection number and	stream
	   ID for QUIC.)

	   range optionally specifies which "chunks" of	the stream should be
	   displayed.

	   Example: -z "follow,tcp,hex,1" will display the contents of the
	   second TCP stream (the first	is stream 0) in	"hex" format.

	       ===================================================================
	       Follow: tcp,hex
	       Filter: tcp.stream eq 1
	       Node 0: 200.57.7.197:32891
	       Node 1: 200.57.7.198:2906
	       00000000	 00 00 00 22 00	00 00 07  00 0a	85 02 07 e9 00 02  ...".... ........
	       00000010	 07 e9 06 0f 00	0d 00 04  00 00	00 01 00 03 00 06  ........ ........
	       00000020	 1f 00 06 04 00	00				   ......
	       00000000	 00 01 00 00					   ....
	       00000026	 00 02 00 00

	   Example: -z "follow,tcp,ascii,200.57.7.197:32891,200.57.7.198:2906"
	   will	display	the contents of	a TCP stream between 200.57.7.197 port
	   32891 and 200.57.7.98 port 2906.

	       ===================================================================
	       Follow: tcp,ascii
	       Filter: (omitted	for readability)
	       Node 0: 200.57.7.197:32891
	       Node 1: 200.57.7.198:2906
	       38
	       ...".....
	       ................
	       4
	       ....

	   Example: -z "follow,http2,hex,0,1" will display the contents	of a
	   HTTP/2 stream on the	first TCP session (index 0) with HTTP/2	Stream
	   ID 1.

	       ===================================================================
	       Follow: http2,hex
	       Filter: tcp.stream eq 0 and http2.streamid eq 1
	       Node 0: 172.16.5.1:49178
	       Node 1: 172.16.5.10:8443
	       00000000	 00 00 2c 01 05	00 00 00  01 82	04 8b 63 c1 ac 2a  ..,..... ....c..*
	       00000010	 27 1d 9d 57 ae	a9 bf 87  41 8c	0b a2 5c 2e 2e da  '..W.... A...\...
	       00000020	 e1 05 c7 9a 69	9f 7a 88  25 b6	50 c3 ab b6 25 c3  ....i.z. %.P...%.
	       00000030	 53 03 2a 2f 2a					   S.*/*
		   00000000  00	00 22 01 04 00 00 00  01 88 5f 87 35 23	98 ac  ..".....	.._.5#..
		   00000010  57	54 df 61 96 c3 61 be  94 03 8a 61 2c 6a	08 2f  WT.a..a.	...a,j./
		   00000020  34	a0 5b b8 21 5c 0b ea  62 d1 bf		       4.[.!\..	b..
		   0000002B  00	40 00 00 00 00 00 00  01 89 50 4e 47 0d	0a 1a  .@......	..PNG...

       -z fractalgeneratorprotocol,stat[,filter]

	   Calculate statistics	on the Fractal Generator Protocol of Reliable
	   Server Pooling. For each message type, displays the number, rate
	   and share among all message types of	both packets and bytes,	and
	   the first and last time that	it is seen.

       -z gsm_a

	   Count the number of GSM A-I/F messages of each type within the
	   following categories: BSSMAP, DTAP Mobility Management, DTAP	Radio
	   Resource Management,	DTAP Call Control, DTAP	GPRS Mobility
	   Management, DTAP SMS	messages, DTAP GPRS Session Management,	DTAP
	   Supplementary Services, DTAP	Special	Conformance Testing Functions,
	   and SACCH Radio Resource Management.

	   Unlike the individual statistics for	each category that follow,
	   this	only prints a line for each message type that appears, instead
	   of including	lines for message types	with a count of	zero.

       -z gsm_a,category[,filter]

	   Count the number of messages	of each	type in	GSM A-I/F category,
	   which can be	one of:

	       bssmap	  BSSMAP
	       dtap_cc	  DTAP Call Control
	       dtap_gmm	  DTAP GPRS Mobility Management
	       dtap_mm	  DTAP Mobility	Management
	       dtap_rr	  DTAP Radio Resource Management
	       dtap_sacch SACCH	Radio Resource Management
	       dtap_sm	  DTAP GPRS Session Managment
	       dtap_sms	  DTAP Short Message Service
	       dtap_ss	  DTAP Supplementary Services
	       dtap_tp	  DTAP Special Conformance Testing Functions

       -z gsm_map,operation[,filter]

	   Calculate statistics	on GSM MAP. For	each op	code, the total	number
	   of invokes and results, along with the average and total bytes for
	   invokes and results separately and combined is displayed.

       -z gtp,srt[,filter]

	   Collect requests/response SRT (Service Response Time) data for GTP.
	   Data	collected is the number	of calls, mimimum SRT, maximum SRT,
	   average SRT,	and sum	SRT for	Echo and Create/Update/Delete PDP
	   context commands only. Currently no statistics are gathered on
	   unpaired messages.

       -z h225,counter[,filter]

	   Count ITU-T H.225 messages and their	reasons. In the	first column
	   you get a list of H.225 messages and	H.225 message reasons, which
	   occur in the	current	capture	file. The number of occurrences	of
	   each	message	or reason is displayed in the second column.

	   Example: -z h225,counter.

	   Example: use	-z "h225,counter,ip.addr==1.2.3.4" to only collect
	   stats for H.225 packets exchanged by	the host at IP address 1.2.3.4
	   .

	   This	option can be used multiple times on the command line.

       -z h225_ras,rtd[,filter]

	   Collect requests/response RTD (Response Time	Delay) data for	ITU-T
	   H.225 RAS. Data collected is	number of calls	of each	ITU-T H.225
	   RAS Message Type, Minimum RTD, Maximum RTD, Average RTD, Minimum in
	   Frame, and Maximum in Frame.	You will also get the number of	Open
	   Requests (Unresponded Requests), Discarded Responses	(Responses
	   without matching request) and Duplicate Messages.

	   Example: tshark -z h225_ras,rtd

	   This	option can be used multiple times on the command line.

	   Example: -z "h225_ras,rtd,ip.addr==1.2.3.4" will only collect stats
	   for ITU-T H.225 RAS packets exchanged by the	host at	IP address
	   1.2.3.4 .

       -z hart_ip,tree[,filter]

	   Calculate statistics	on HART-IP packets, grouping by	message	types
	   and message IDs within types.

       -z hosts[,ip][,ipv4][,ipv6]

	   Dump	any collected resolved IPv4 and/or IPv6	addresses in "hosts"
	   format. Both	IPv4 and IPv6 addresses	are dumped by default. "ip"
	   argument will dump only IPv4	addresses.

	   Addresses are collected from	a number of sources, including
	   standard "hosts" files and captured traffic.	Resolution must	be
	   enabled, e.g. through the -n	option.

       -z hpfeeds,tree[,filter]

	   Calculate statistics	for HPFEEDS traffic such as publish per
	   channel, and	opcode distribution.

       -z http,stat[,filter]

	   Count the HTTP response status codes	and the	HTTP request methods.

       -z http,tree[,filter]

	   Calculate the HTTP packet distribution. Displayed values are	the
	   response status codes and request methods.

       -z http_req,tree[,filter]

	   Calculate the HTTP requests by server. Displayed values are the
	   server name and the URI path.

       -z http_seq,tree[,filter]

	   Calculate the HTTP request sequence statistics, which correlate
	   referring URIs with request URIs.

       -z http_srv,tree[,filter]

	   Calculate the HTTP requests and responses by	server.	For the	HTTP
	   requests, displayed values are the server IP	address	and server
	   hostname. For the HTTP responses, displayed values are the server
	   IP address and status.

       -z http2,tree[,filter]

	   Calculate the HTTP/2	packet distribution. Displayed values are the
	   frame types.

       -z icmp,srt[,filter]

	   Compute total ICMP echo requests, replies, loss, and	percent	loss,
	   as well as minimum, maximum,	mean, median and sample	standard
	   deviation SRT statistics typical of what ping provides.

	   Example: -z icmp,srt,ip.src==1.2.3.4	will collect ICMP SRT
	   statistics for ICMP echo request packets originating	from a
	   specific host.

	   This	option can be used multiple times on the command line.

       -z icmpv6,srt[,filter]

	   Compute total ICMPv6	echo requests, replies,	loss, and percent
	   loss, as well as minimum, maximum, mean, median and sample standard
	   deviation SRT statistics typical of what ping provides.

	   Example: -z icmpv6,srt,ipv6.src==fe80::1 will collect ICMPv6	SRT
	   statistics for ICMPv6 echo request packets originating from a
	   specific host.

	   This	option can be used multiple times on the command line.

       -z io,phs[,filter]

	   Create Protocol Hierarchy Statistics	listing	both number of packets
	   and bytes.

	   This	option can be used multiple times on the command line.

       -z io,stat,interval[,filter][,filter][,filter]...

	   Collect packet/bytes	statistics for the capture in intervals	of
	   interval seconds. Interval can be specified either as a whole or
	   fractional second and can be	specified with microsecond (us)
	   resolution. If interval is 0, the statistics	will be	calculated
	   over	all packets.

	   If one or more filters are specified	statistics will	be calculated
	   for all filters and presented with one column of statistics for
	   each	filter.

	   This	option can be used multiple times on the command line.

	   Example: -z io,stat,1,ip.addr==1.2.3.4 will generate	1 second
	   statistics for all traffic to/from host 1.2.3.4.

	   Example: -z "io,stat,0.001,smb&&ip.addr==1.2.3.4" will generate 1ms
	   statistics for all SMB packets to/from host 1.2.3.4.

	   The examples	above all use the standard syntax for generating
	   statistics which only calculates the	number of packets and bytes in
	   each	interval.

	   io,stat can also do much more statistics and	calculate COUNT(),
	   SUM(), MIN(), MAX(),	AVG() and LOAD() using a slightly different
	   filter syntax:

       -z io,stat,interval,"COUNT|SUM|MIN|MAX|AVG|LOAD(field)filter"

	       Note
	       One important thing to note here	is that	the filter is not
	       optional	and that the field that	the calculation	is based on
	       MUST be part of the filter string or the	calculation will fail.

	   So: -z io,stat,0.010,AVG(smb.time) does not work. Use -z
	   io,stat,0.010,AVG(smb.time)smb.time instead.	Also be	aware that a
	   field can exist multiple times inside the same packet and will then
	   be counted multiple times in	those packets.

	       Note
	       A second	important thing	to note	is that	the system setting for
	       decimal separator must be set to	"."! If	it is set to "," the
	       statistics will not be displayed	per filter.

	   COUNT - Calculates the number of times that the field name (not its
	   value) appears per interval in the filtered packet list. ''field''
	   can be any display filter name.

	   Example: -z io,stat,0.010,"COUNT(smb.sid)smb.sid"

	   This	will count the total number of SIDs seen in each 10ms
	   interval.

	   SUM - Unlike	COUNT, the values of the specified field are summed
	   per time interval. ''field''	can only be a named integer, float,
	   double or relative time field.

	   Example: tshark -z io,stat,0.010,"SUM(frame.len)frame.len"

	   Reports the total number of bytes that were transmitted
	   bidirectionally in all the packets within a 10 millisecond
	   interval.

	   MIN/MAX/AVG - The minimum, maximum, or average field	value in each
	   interval is calculated. The specified field must be a named
	   integer, float, double or relative time field. For relative time
	   fields, the output is presented in seconds with six decimal digits
	   of precision	rounded	to the nearest microsecond.

	   In the following example, the time of the first Read_AndX call, the
	   last	Read_AndX response values are displayed	and the	minimum,
	   maximum, and	average	Read response times (SRTs) are calculated.
	   NOTE: If the	DOS command shell line continuation character, ''^''
	   is used, each line cannot end in a comma so it is placed at the
	   beginning of	each continuation line:

	       tshark -o tcp.desegment_tcp_streams:FALSE -n -q -r smb_reads.cap	-z io,stat,0,
	       "MIN(frame.time_relative)frame.time_relative and	smb.cmd==0x2e and smb.flags.response==0",
	       "MAX(frame.time_relative)frame.time_relative and	smb.cmd==0x2e and smb.flags.response==1",
	       "MIN(smb.time)smb.time and smb.cmd==0x2e",
	       "MAX(smb.time)smb.time and smb.cmd==0x2e",
	       "AVG(smb.time)smb.time and smb.cmd==0x2e"

	       ======================================================================================================
	       IO Statistics
	       Column #0: MIN(frame.time_relative)frame.time_relative and smb.cmd==0x2e	and smb.flags.response==0
	       Column #1: MAX(frame.time_relative)frame.time_relative and smb.cmd==0x2e	and smb.flags.response==1
	       Column #2: MIN(smb.time)smb.time	and smb.cmd==0x2e
	       Column #3: MAX(smb.time)smb.time	and smb.cmd==0x2e
	       Column #4: AVG(smb.time)smb.time	and smb.cmd==0x2e
			       |    Column #0	|    Column #1	 |    Column #2	  |    Column #3   |	Column #4   |
	       Time	       |       MIN	|	MAX	 |	 MIN	  |	  MAX	   |	   AVG	    |
	       000.000-			0.000000	 7.704054	  0.000072	   0.005539	    0.000295
	       ======================================================================================================

	   The following command displays the average SMB Read response	PDU
	   size, the total number of read PDU bytes, the average SMB Write
	   request PDU size, and the total number of bytes transferred in SMB
	   Write PDUs:

	       tshark -n -q -r smb_reads_writes.cap -z io,stat,0,
	       "AVG(smb.file.rw.length)smb.file.rw.length and smb.cmd==0x2e and	smb.response_to",
	       "SUM(smb.file.rw.length)smb.file.rw.length and smb.cmd==0x2e and	smb.response_to",
	       "AVG(smb.file.rw.length)smb.file.rw.length and smb.cmd==0x2f and	not smb.response_to",
	       "SUM(smb.file.rw.length)smb.file.rw.length and smb.cmd==0x2f and	not smb.response_to"

	       =====================================================================================
	       IO Statistics
	       Column #0: AVG(smb.file.rw.length)smb.file.rw.length and	smb.cmd==0x2e and smb.response_to
	       Column #1: SUM(smb.file.rw.length)smb.file.rw.length and	smb.cmd==0x2e and smb.response_to
	       Column #2: AVG(smb.file.rw.length)smb.file.rw.length and	smb.cmd==0x2f and not smb.response_to
	       Column #3: SUM(smb.file.rw.length)smb.file.rw.length and	smb.cmd==0x2f and not smb.response_to
			       |    Column #0	|    Column #1	 |    Column #2	  |    Column #3   |
	       Time	       |       AVG	|	SUM	 |	 AVG	  |	  SUM	   |
	       000.000-			   30018	 28067522		72	       3240
	       =====================================================================================

	   LOAD	- The LOAD/Queue-Depth in each interval	is calculated. The
	   specified field must	be a relative time field that represents a
	   response time. For example smb.time.	For each interval the
	   Queue-Depth for the specified protocol is calculated.

	   The following command displays the average SMB LOAD.	A value	of 1.0
	   represents one I/O in flight.

	       tshark -n -q -r smb_reads_writes.cap
	       -z "io,stat,0.001,LOAD(smb.time)smb.time"

	       ============================================================================
	       IO Statistics
	       Interval:   0.001000 secs
	       Column #0: LOAD(smb.time)smb.time
				       |    Column #0	|
	       Time		       |       LOAD	|
	       0000.000000-0000.001000	       1.000000
	       0000.001000-0000.002000	       0.741000
	       0000.002000-0000.003000	       0.000000
	       0000.003000-0000.004000	       1.000000

	   FRAMES | BYTES[()filter] - Displays the total number	of frames or
	   bytes. The filter field is optional but if included it must be
	   prepended with ''()''.

	   The following command displays five columns:	the total number of
	   frames and bytes (transferred bidirectionally) using	a single
	   comma, the same two stats using the FRAMES and BYTES	subcommands,
	   the total number of frames containing at least one SMB Read
	   response, and the total number of bytes transmitted to the client
	   (unidirectionally) at IP address 10.1.0.64.

	       tshark -o tcp.desegment_tcp_streams:FALSE -n -q -r smb_reads.cap	-z io,stat,0,,FRAMES,BYTES,
	       "FRAMES()smb.cmd==0x2e and smb.response_to","BYTES()ip.dst==10.1.0.64"

	       =======================================================================================================================
	       IO Statistics
	       Column #0:
	       Column #1: FRAMES
	       Column #2: BYTES
	       Column #3: FRAMES()smb.cmd==0x2e	and smb.response_to
	       Column #4: BYTES()ip.dst==10.1.0.64
			       |	    Column #0		 |    Column #1	  |    Column #2   |	Column #3   |	 Column	#4   |
	       Time	       |     Frames	|      Bytes	 |     FRAMES	  |	BYTES	   |	 FRAMES	    |	  BYTES	     |
	       000.000-			   33576	 29721685	     33576	   29721685		 870	     29004801
	       =======================================================================================================================

       -z ip_hosts,tree[,filter]

	   Calculate statistics	on IPv4	addresses, with	source and destination
	   addresses all grouped together.

       -z ip_srcdst,tree[,filter]

	   Calculate statistics	on IPv4	addresses, with	source and destination
	   addresses separated into separate categories.

       -z ip6_dests,tree[,filter]

	   Calculate statistics	on IPv6	destination addresses and the
	   protocols and ports appearing on each address.

       -z ip6_hosts,tree[,filter]

	   Calculate statistics	on IPv6	addresses, with	source and destination
	   addresses all grouped together.

       -z ip6_ptype,tree[,filter]

	   Calculate statistics	on port	types that occur on IPv6 packets.

       -z ip6_srcdst,tree[,filter]

	   Calculate statistics	on IPv6	addresses, with	source and destination
	   addresses separated into separate categories.

       -z isup_msg,tree[,filter]

	   Calculate statistics	on ISUP	messages. Displayed information	is
	   message types and direction (originating point code and destination
	   point code.)

       -z lbmr_queue_ads_queue,tree[,filter]

	   Calculate statistics	on LBM Topic Resolution	Packets. Displays
	   queue advertisements	collated by queue name and then	source
	   addresses and port.

       -z lbmr_queue_ads_source,tree[,filter]

	   Calculate statistics	on LBM Topic Resolution	Packets. Displays
	   queue advertisements	collated by source address and then queue and
	   port.

       -z lbmr_queue_queries_queue,tree[,filter]

	   Calculate statistics	on LBM Topic Resolution	Packets. Displays
	   queue queries collated by queue name	and then receiver addresses.

       -z lbmr_queue_queries_receiver,tree[,filter]

	   Calculate statistics	on LBM Topic Resolution	Packets. Displays
	   queue queries collated by receiver address and then queue.

       -z lbmr_topic_ads_source,tree[,filter]

	   Calculate statistics	on LBM Topic Resolution	Packets. Displays
	   topic advertisements	collated by source address and then topic name
	   and source string.

       -z lbmr_topic_ads_topic,tree[,filter]

	   Calculate statistics	on LBM Topic Resolution	Packets. Displays
	   topic advertisements	collated by topic name and then	source address
	   and source string.

       -z lbmr_topic_ads_transport,tree[,filter]

	   Calculate statistics	on LBM Topic Resolution	Packets. Displays
	   topic advertisements	collated by source string and then topic name.

       -z lbmr_topic_queries_pattern,tree[,filter]

	   Calculate statistics	on LBM Topic Resolution	Packets. Displays
	   topic queries collated by pattern and then receiver address.

       -z lbmr_topic_queries_pattern_receiver,tree[,filter]

	   Calculate statistics	on LBM Topic Resolution	Packets. Displays
	   topic queries collated by receiver address and then pattern.

       -z lbmr_topic_queries_receiver,tree[,filter]

	   Calculate statistics	on LBM Topic Resolution	Packets. Displays
	   topic queries collated by receiver address and then topic name.

       -z lbmr_topic_queries_topic,tree[,filter]

	   Calculate statistics	on LBM Topic Resolution	Packets. Displays
	   topic queries collated by topic name	and then receiver address.

       -z mac-lte,stat[,filter]

	   This	option will activate a counter for LTE MAC messages. You will
	   get information about the maximum number of UEs/TTI,	common
	   messages and	various	counters for each UE that appears in the log.

	   Example: tshark -z mac-lte,stat.

	   This	option can be used multiple times on the command line.

	   Example: -z "mac-lte,stat,mac-lte.rnti>3000"	will only collect
	   stats for UEs with an assigned RNTI whose value is more than	3000.

       -z megaco,rtd[,filter]

	   Collect requests/response RTD (Response Time	Delay) data for
	   MEGACO. (This is similar to -z smb,srt). Data collected is the
	   number of calls for each known MEGACO Type, MinRTD, MaxRTD and
	   AvgRTD. Additionally	you get	the number of duplicate
	   requests/responses, unresponded requests, responses,	which don't
	   match with any request. Example: -z megaco,rtd.

	   Example: -z "megaco,rtd,ip.addr==1.2.3.4" will only collect stats
	   for MEGACO packets exchanged	by the host at IP address 1.2.3.4 .

	   This	option can be used multiple times on the command line.

       -z mgcp,rtd[,filter]

	   Collect requests/response RTD (Response Time	Delay) data for	MGCP.
	   (This is similar to -z smb,srt). Data collected is the number of
	   calls for each known	MGCP Type, MinRTD, MaxRTD and AvgRTD.
	   Additionally	you get	the number of duplicate	requests/responses,
	   unresponded requests, responses, which don't	match with any
	   request. Example: -z	mgcp,rtd.

	   This	option can be used multiple times on the command line.

	   Example: -z "mgcp,rtd,ip.addr==1.2.3.4" will	only collect stats for
	   MGCP	packets	exchanged by the host at IP address 1.2.3.4 .

       -z mtp3,msus[,filter]

	   Calculate statisics on MTP3 MSUs. For each combination of
	   originating point code, destination point code, and service
	   indicator, calculates the total number of MSUs, the total bytes,
	   and the average bytes per MSU.

       -z ncp,srt[,filter]

	   Collect requests/response SRT (Service Response Time) data for
	   Netware Core	Protocol. Minimum SRT, maximum SRT, average SRT, and
	   sum SRT is displayed	for request/response pairs, organized by
	   group, function and subfunction, and	verb. No statistics are
	   gathered on unpaired	messages.

       -z osmux,tree[,filter]

	   Calculate statistics	for the	OSmux voice/signaling multiplex
	   protocol. Displays the total	number of OSmux	packets, and displays
	   for each stream the number of packets, number of packets with the
	   RTP market bit set, number of AMR frames, jitter analysis, and
	   sequence number analysis.

       -z pingpongprotocol,stat[,filter]

	   Calculate statistics	on the Ping Pong Protocol of Reliable Server
	   Pooling. For	each message type, displays the	number,	rate and share
	   among all message types of both packets and bytes, and the first
	   and last time that it is seen.

       -z plen,tree[,filter]

	   Calculate statistics	on packet lengths. Packets are grouped into
	   buckets that	grow exponentially with	powers of two.

       -z proto,colinfo,filter,field

	   Append all field values for the packet to the Info column of	the
	   one-line summary output. This feature can be	used to	append
	   arbitrary fields to the Info	column in addition to the normal
	   content of that column. field is the	display-filter name of a field
	   which value should be placed	in the Info column. filter is a	filter
	   string that controls	for which packets the field value will be
	   presented in	the info column. field will only be presented in the
	   Info	column for the packets which match filter.

	       Note
	       In order	for TShark to be able to extract the field value from
	       the packet, field MUST be part of the filter string. If not,
	       TShark will not be able to extract its value.

	   For a simple	example	to add the "nfs.fh.hash" field to the Info
	   column for all packets containing the "nfs.fh.hash" field, use

	   -z proto,colinfo,nfs.fh.hash,nfs.fh.hash

	   To put "nfs.fh.hash"	in the Info column but only for	packets	coming
	   from	host 1.2.3.4 use:

	   -z "proto,colinfo,nfs.fh.hash && ip.src==1.2.3.4,nfs.fh.hash"

	   This	option can be used multiple times on the command line.

       -z ptype,tree[,filter]

	   Calculate statistics	on port	types that occur on IPv4 packets.

       -z radius,rtd[,filter]

	   Collect requests/response RTD (Response Time	Delay) data for
	   RAIDUS. The data collected for each RADIUS code is the number of
	   calls, Minimum RTD, Maximum RTD, Average RTD, Minimum in Frame, and
	   Maximum in Frame, along with	the number of Open Requests
	   (Unresponded	Requests), Discarded Responses (Responses without
	   matching request) and Duplicate Messages.

       -z rlc-lte,stat[,filter]

	   This	option will activate a counter for LTE RLC messages. You will
	   get information about common	messages and various counters for each
	   UE that appears in the log.

	   Example: tshark -z rlc-lte,stat.

	   This	option can be used multiple times on the command line.

	   Example: -z "rlc-lte,stat,rlc-lte.ueid>3000"	will only collect
	   stats for UEs with a	UEId of	more than 3000.

       -z rpc,programs

	   Collect call/reply SRT data for all known ONC-RPC
	   programs/versions. Data collected is	number of calls	for each
	   protocol/version, MinSRT, MaxSRT and	AvgSRT.	This option can	only
	   be used once	on the command line.

       -z rpc,srt,program,version[,filter]

	   Collect call/reply SRT (Service Response Time) data for
	   program/version. Data collected is the number of calls for each
	   procedure, MinSRT, MaxSRT, AvgSRT, and the total time taken for
	   each	procedure.

	   Example: tshark -z rpc,srt,100003,3 will collect data for NFS v3.

	   This	option can be used multiple times on the command line.

	   Example: -z rpc,srt,100003,3,nfs.fh.hash==0x12345678	will collect
	   NFS v3 SRT statistics for a specific	file.

       -z rtp,streams

	   Collect statistics for all RTP streams and calculate	max. delta,
	   max.	and mean jitter	and packet loss	percentages.

       -z rtsp,stat[,filter]

	   Count the RTSP response status codes	and the	RSTP request methods.

       -z rtsp,tree[,filter]

	   Calculate the RTSP packet distribution. Displayed values are	the
	   response status codes and request methods.

       -z sametime,tree[,filter]

	   Calculate statistics	on SAMETIME messages. Displayed	values are the
	   messages type, send type, and user status.

       -z scsi,srt,cmdset[,filter]

	   Collect call/reply SRT (Service Response Time) data for SCSI
	   commandset cmdset.

	   Commandsets are 0:SBC   1:SSC  5:MMC

	   Data	collected is the number	of calls for each procedure, MinSRT,
	   MaxSRT and AvgSRT.

	   Example: -z scsi,srt,0 will collect data for	SCSI BLOCK COMMANDS
	   (SBC).

	   This	option can be used multiple times on the command line.

	   Example: -z scsi,srt,0,ip.addr==1.2.3.4 will	collect	SCSI SBC SRT
	   statistics for a specific iscsi/ifcp/fcip host.

       -z sctp,stat

	   Activate a counter for SCTP chunks. In addition to the total	number
	   of SCTP packets, for	each source and	destination address and	port
	   combination the number of chunks of the most	common types (DATA,
	   SACK, HEARTBEAT, HEARTBEAT ACK, INIT, INIT ACK, COOKIE ECHO,	COOKIE
	   ACK,	ABORT, and ERROR) are displayed.

       -z sip,stat[,filter]

	   This	option will activate a counter for SIP messages. You will get
	   the number of occurrences of	each SIP Method	and of each SIP
	   Status-Code.	Additionally you also get the number of	resent SIP
	   Messages (only for SIP over UDP).

	   Example: -z sip,stat.

	   This	option can be used multiple times on the command line.

	   Example: -z "sip,stat,ip.addr==1.2.3.4" will	only collect stats for
	   SIP packets exchanged by the	host at	IP address 1.2.3.4 .

       -z smb,sids

	   When	this feature is	used TShark will print a report	with all the
	   discovered SID and account name mappings. Only those	SIDs where the
	   account name	is known will be presented in the table.

	   For this feature to work you	will need to either to enable
	   "Edit/Preferences/Protocols/SMB/Snoop SID to	name mappings" in the
	   preferences or you can override the preferences by specifying -o
	   "smb.sid_name_snooping:TRUE"	on the TShark command line.

	   The current method used by TShark to	find the SID->name mapping is
	   relatively restricted with a	hope of	future expansion.

       -z smb,srt[,filter]

	   Collect call/reply SRT (Service Response Time) data for SMB.	Data
	   collected is	number of calls	for each SMB command, MinSRT, MaxSRT
	   and AvgSRT.

	   Example: -z smb,srt

	   The data will be presented as separate tables for all normal	SMB
	   commands, all Transaction2 commands and all NT Transaction
	   commands. Only those	commands that are seen in the capture will
	   have	its stats displayed. Only the first command in a xAndX command
	   chain will be used in the calculation. So for common
	   SessionSetupAndX + TreeConnectAndX chains, only the
	   SessionSetupAndX call will be used in the statistics. This is a
	   flaw	that might be fixed in the future.

	   This	option can be used multiple times on the command line.

	   Example: -z "smb,srt,ip.addr==1.2.3.4" will only collect stats for
	   SMB packets exchanged by the	host at	IP address 1.2.3.4 .

       -z smb2,srt[,filter]

	   Collect call/reply SRT (Service Response Time) data for SMB
	   versions 2 and 3. The data collected	for each normal	command	type
	   is the number of calls, MinSRT, MaxSRT, AvgSRT, and SumSRT. No data
	   is collected	on cancel or oplock break requests, or on unpaired
	   commands. Only the first response to	a given	request	is used;
	   retransmissions are not included in the calculation.

       -z smpp_commands,tree[,filter]

	   Calculate the SMPP command distribution. Displayed values are
	   command IDs for both	requests and responses,	and status for
	   responses.

       -z snmp,srt[,filter]

	   Collect call/reply SRT (Service Response Time) data for SNMP. The
	   data	collected for each PDU type is the number of request/response
	   pairs, MinSRT, MaxSRT, AvgSRT, and SumSRT. No data is collected on
	   unpaired messages.

       -z  someip_messages,tree[,filter]

	   Create statistic of SOME/IP messages. Messages are counted and
	   displayed as	Messages grouped by sender/receiver.

       -z  someipsd_entries,tree[,filter]

	   Create statistic of SOME/IP-SD entries. Entries are counted and
	   displayed as	Entries	grouped	by sender/receiver.

       -z sv

	   Print out the time since the	start of the capture and sample	count
	   for each IEC	61850 Sampled Values packet.

       -z ucp_messages,tree[,filter]

	   Calculate the message distribution of UCP packets. Displayed	values
	   are operation types for both	operations and results,	and whether
	   results are positive	or negative, with error	codes displayed	for
	   negative results.

       -z wsp,stat[,filter]

	   Count the PDU types and the status codes of reply packets for WSP
	   packets.

       --capture-comment <comment>

	   Add a capture comment to the	output file, if	supported by the
	   output file format.

	   This	option may be specified	multiple times.	Note that Wireshark
	   currently only displays the first comment of	a capture file.

       --list-time-stamp-types

	   List	time stamp types supported for the interface. If no time stamp
	   type	can be set, no time stamp types	are listed.

       --time-stamp-type <type>

	   Change the interface's timestamp method.

       --color

	   Enable coloring of packets according	to standard Wireshark color
	   filters. On Windows colors are limited to the standard console
	   character attribute colors. Other platforms require a terminal that
	   handles 24-bit "true	color" terminal	escape sequences. See
	   https://gitlab.com/wireshark/wireshark/-/wikis/ColoringRules	for
	   more	information on configuring color filters.

       --no-duplicate-keys

	   If a	key appears multiple times in an object, only write it a
	   single time with as value a json array containing all the separate
	   values. (Only works with -T json)

       --elastic-mapping-filter	<protocol>,<protocol>,...

	   When	generating the ElasticSearch mapping file, only	put the
	   specified protocols in it, to avoid a huge mapping file that	can
	   choke some software (such as	Kibana). The option takes a list of
	   wanted protocol abbreviations, separated by comma.

	   Example: ip,udp,dns puts only those three protocols in the mapping
	   file.

       --export-objects	<protocol>,<destdir>

	   Export all objects within a protocol	into directory destdir.	The
	   available values for	protocol can be	listed with --export-objects
	   help.

	   The objects are directly saved in the given directory. Filenames
	   are dependent on the	dissector, but typically it is named after the
	   basename of a file. Duplicate files are not overwritten, instead an
	   increasing number is	appended before	the file extension.

	   This	interface is subject to	change,	adding the possibility to
	   filter on files.

       --enable-protocol <proto_name>

	   Enable dissection of	proto_name.

       --disable-protocol <proto_name>

	   Disable dissection of proto_name.

       --enable-heuristic <short_name>

	   Enable dissection of	heuristic protocol.

       --disable-heuristic <short_name>

	   Disable dissection of heuristic protocol.

DIAGNOSTIC OPTIONS
       --log-level <level>
	   Set the active log level. Supported levels in lowest	to highest
	   order are "noisy", "debug", "info", "message", "warning",
	   "critical", and "error". Messages at	each level and higher will be
	   printed, for	example	"warning" prints "warning", "critical",	and
	   "error" messages and	"noisy"	prints all messages. Levels are	case
	   insensitive.

       --log-fatal <level>
	   Abort the program if	any messages are logged	at the specified level
	   or higher. For example, "warning" aborts on any "warning",
	   "critical", or "error" messages.

       --log-domains <list>
	   Only	print messages for the specified log domains, e.g.
	   "GUI,Epan,sshdump". List of domains must be comma-separated.

       --log-debug <list>
	   Force the specified domains to log at the "debug" level. List of
	   domains must	be comma-separated.

       --log-noisy <list>
	   Force the specified domains to log at the "noisy" level. List of
	   domains must	be comma-separated.

       --log-file <path>
	   Write log messages and stderr output	to the specified file.

CAPTURE	FILTER SYNTAX
       See the manual page of pcap-filter(7) or, if that doesn't exist,
       tcpdump(8), or, if that doesn't exist,
       https://gitlab.com/wireshark/wireshark/-/wikis/CaptureFilters.

READ FILTER SYNTAX
       For a complete table of protocol	and protocol fields that are
       filterable in TShark see	the wireshark-filter(4)	manual page.

FILES
       These files contains various Wireshark configuration values.

       Preferences

	   The preferences files contain global	(system-wide) and personal
	   preference settings.	If the system-wide preference file exists, it
	   is read first, overriding the default settings. If the personal
	   preferences file exists, it is read next, overriding	any previous
	   values. Note: If the	command	line option -o is used (possibly more
	   than	once), it will in turn override	values from the	preferences
	   files.

	   The preferences settings are	in the form prefname:value, one	per
	   line, where prefname	is the name of the preference and value	is the
	   value to which it should be set; white space	is allowed between :
	   and value. A	preference setting can be continued on subsequent
	   lines by indenting the continuation lines with white	space. A #
	   character starts a comment that runs	to the end of the line:

	       # Capture in promiscuous	mode?
	       # TRUE or FALSE (case-insensitive).
	       capture.prom_mode: TRUE

	   The global preferences file is looked for in	the wireshark
	   directory under the share subdirectory of the main installation
	   directory (for example, /usr/local/share/wireshark/preferences) on
	   UNIX-compatible systems, and	in the main installation directory
	   (for	example, C:\Program Files\Wireshark\preferences) on Windows
	   systems.

	   The personal	preferences file is looked for in
	   $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/wireshark/preferences (or, if
	   $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/wireshark does not exist while $HOME/.wireshark is
	   present, $HOME/.wireshark/preferences) on UNIX-compatible systems
	   and %APPDATA%\Wireshark\preferences (or, if %APPDATA% isn't
	   defined, %USERPROFILE%\Application Data\Wireshark\preferences) on
	   Windows systems.

       Disabled	(Enabled) Protocols

	   The disabled_protos files contain system-wide and personal lists of
	   protocols that have been disabled, so that their dissectors are
	   never called. The files contain protocol names, one per line, where
	   the protocol	name is	the same name that would be used in a display
	   filter for the protocol:

	       http
	       tcp     # a comment

	   The global disabled_protos file uses	the same directory as the
	   global preferences file.

	   The personal	disabled_protos	file uses the same directory as	the
	   personal preferences	file.

       Name Resolution (hosts)

	   If the personal hosts file exists, it is used to resolve IPv4 and
	   IPv6	addresses before any other attempts are	made to	resolve	them.
	   The file has	the standard hosts file	syntax;	each line contains one
	   IP address and name,	separated by whitespace. The same directory as
	   for the personal preferences	file is	used.

	   Capture filter name resolution is handled by	libpcap	on
	   UNIX-compatible systems and Npcap or	WinPcap	on Windows. As such
	   the Wireshark personal hosts	file will not be consulted for capture
	   filter name resolution.

       Name Resolution (subnets)

	   If an IPv4 address cannot be	translated via name resolution (no
	   exact match is found) then a	partial	match is attempted via the
	   subnets file.

	   Each	line of	this file consists of an IPv4 address, a subnet	mask
	   length separated only by a /	and a name separated by	whitespace.
	   While the address must be a full IPv4 address, any values beyond
	   the mask length are subsequently ignored.

	   An example is:

	   # Comments must be prepended	by the # sign! 192.168.0.0/24
	   ws_test_network

	   A partially matched name will be printed as
	   "subnet-name.remaining-address". For	example, "192.168.0.1" under
	   the subnet above would be printed as	"ws_test_network.1"; if	the
	   mask	length above had been 16 rather	than 24, the printed address
	   would be ``ws_test_network.0.1".

       Name Resolution (ethers)

	   The ethers files are	consulted to correlate 6-byte hardware
	   addresses to	names. First the personal ethers file is tried and if
	   an address is not found there the global ethers file	is tried next.

	   Each	line contains one hardware address and name, separated by
	   whitespace. The digits of the hardware address are separated	by
	   colons (:), dashes (-) or periods (.). The same separator character
	   must	be used	consistently in	an address. The	following three	lines
	   are valid lines of an ethers	file:

	       ff:ff:ff:ff:ff:ff	  Broadcast
	       c0-00-ff-ff-ff-ff	  TR_broadcast
	       00.00.00.00.00.00	  Zero_broadcast

	   The global ethers file is looked for	in the /etc directory on
	   UNIX-compatible systems, and	in the main installation directory
	   (for	example, C:\Program Files\Wireshark) on	Windows	systems.

	   The personal	ethers file is looked for in the same directory	as the
	   personal preferences	file.

	   Capture filter name resolution is handled by	libpcap	on
	   UNIX-compatible systems and Npcap or	WinPcap	on Windows. As such
	   the Wireshark personal ethers file will not be consulted for
	   capture filter name resolution.

       Name Resolution (manuf)

	   The manuf file is used to match the 3-byte vendor portion of	a
	   6-byte hardware address with	the manufacturer's name; it can	also
	   contain well-known MAC addresses and	address	ranges specified with
	   a netmask. The format of the	file is	the same as the	ethers files,
	   except that entries of the form:

	       00:00:0C	     Cisco

	   can be provided, with the 3-byte OUI	and the	name for a vendor, and
	   entries such	as:

	       00-00-0C-07-AC/40     All-HSRP-routers

	   can be specified, with a MAC	address	and a mask indicating how many
	   bits	of the address must match. The above entry, for	example, has
	   40 significant bits,	or 5 bytes, and	would match addresses from
	   00-00-0C-07-AC-00 through 00-00-0C-07-AC-FF.	The mask need not be a
	   multiple of 8.

	   The manuf file is looked for	in the same directory as the global
	   preferences file.

       Name Resolution (services)

	   The services	file is	used to	translate port numbers into names.

	   The file has	the standard services file syntax; each	line contains
	   one (service) name and one transport	identifier separated by	white
	   space. The transport	identifier includes one	port number and	one
	   transport protocol name (typically tcp, udp,	or sctp) separated by
	   a /.

	   An example is:

	       mydns	   5045/udp	# My own Domain	Name Server
	       mydns	   5045/tcp	# My own Domain	Name Server

       Name Resolution (ipxnets)

	   The ipxnets files are used to correlate 4-byte IPX network numbers
	   to names. First the global ipxnets file is tried and	if that
	   address is not found	there the personal one is tried	next.

	   The format is the same as the ethers	file, except that each address
	   is four bytes instead of six. Additionally, the address can be
	   represented as a single hexadecimal number, as is more common in
	   the IPX world, rather than four hex octets. For example, these four
	   lines are valid lines of an ipxnets file:

	       C0.A8.2C.00		HR
	       c0-a8-1c-00		CEO
	       00:00:BE:EF		IT_Server1
	       110f			FileServer3

	   The global ipxnets file is looked for in the	/etc directory on
	   UNIX-compatible systems, and	in the main installation directory
	   (for	example, C:\Program Files\Wireshark) on	Windows	systems.

	   The personal	ipxnets	file is	looked for in the same directory as
	   the personal	preferences file.

OUTPUT
       TShark uses UTF-8 to represent strings internally. In some cases	the
       output might not	be valid. For example, a dissector might generate
       invalid UTF-8 character sequences. Programs reading TShark output
       should expect UTF-8 and be prepared for invalid output.

       If TShark detects that it is writing to a TTY on	UNIX or	Linux and the
       locale does not support UTF-8, output will be re-encoded	to match the
       current locale.

       If TShark detects that it is writing to the console on Windows,
       dissection output will be encoded as UTF-16LE. Other output will	be
       UTF-8. If extended characters don't display properly in your terminal
       you might try setting your console code page to UTF-8 (chcp 65001) and
       using a modern terminal application if possible.

ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
       WIRESHARK_CONFIG_DIR

	   This	environment variable overrides the location of personal
	   configuration files.	It defaults to $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/wireshark (or
	   $HOME/.wireshark if the former is missing while the latter exists).
	   On Windows, %APPDATA%\Wireshark is used instead. Available since
	   Wireshark 3.0.

       WIRESHARK_DEBUG_WMEM_OVERRIDE

	   Setting this	environment variable forces the	wmem framework to use
	   the specified allocator backend for all allocations,	regardless of
	   which backend is normally specified by the code. This is mainly
	   useful to developers	when testing or	debugging. See README.wmem in
	   the source distribution for details.

       WIRESHARK_RUN_FROM_BUILD_DIRECTORY

	   This	environment variable causes the	plugins	and other data files
	   to be loaded	from the build directory (where	the program was
	   compiled) rather than from the standard locations. It has no	effect
	   when	the program in question	is running with	root (or setuid)
	   permissions on *NIX.

       WIRESHARK_DATA_DIR

	   This	environment variable causes the	various	data files to be
	   loaded from a directory other than the standard locations. It has
	   no effect when the program in question is running with root (or
	   setuid) permissions on *NIX.

       ERF_RECORDS_TO_CHECK

	   This	environment variable controls the number of ERF	records
	   checked when	deciding if a file really is in	the ERF	format.
	   Setting this	environment variable a number higher than the default
	   (20)	would make false positives less	likely.

       IPFIX_RECORDS_TO_CHECK

	   This	environment variable controls the number of IPFIX records
	   checked when	deciding if a file really is in	the IPFIX format.
	   Setting this	environment variable a number higher than the default
	   (20)	would make false positives less	likely.

       WIRESHARK_ABORT_ON_DISSECTOR_BUG

	   If this environment variable	is set,	TShark will call abort(3) when
	   a dissector bug is encountered. abort(3) will cause the program to
	   exit	abnormally; if you are running TShark in a debugger, it	should
	   halt	in the debugger	and allow inspection of	the process, and, if
	   you are not running it in a debugger, it will, on some OSes,
	   assuming your environment is	configured correctly, generate a core
	   dump	file. This can be useful to developers attempting to
	   troubleshoot	a problem with a protocol dissector.

       WIRESHARK_ABORT_ON_TOO_MANY_ITEMS

	   If this environment variable	is set,	TShark will call abort(3) if a
	   dissector tries to add too many items to a tree (generally this is
	   an indication of the	dissector not breaking out of a	loop soon
	   enough). abort(3) will cause	the program to exit abnormally;	if you
	   are running TShark in a debugger, it	should halt in the debugger
	   and allow inspection	of the process,	and, if	you are	not running it
	   in a	debugger, it will, on some OSes, assuming your environment is
	   configured correctly, generate a core dump file. This can be	useful
	   to developers attempting to troubleshoot a problem with a protocol
	   dissector.

       WIRESHARK_LOG_LEVEL

	   This	environment variable controls the verbosity of diagnostic
	   messages to the console. From less verbose to most verbose levels
	   can be critical, warning, message, info, debug or noisy. Levels
	   above the current level are also active. Levels critical and	error
	   are always active.

       WIRESHARK_LOG_FATAL

	   Sets	the fatal log level. Fatal log levels cause the	program	to
	   abort. This level can be set	to Error, critical or warning. Error
	   is always fatal and is the default.

       WIRESHARK_LOG_DOMAINS

	   This	environment variable selects which log domains are active. The
	   filter is given as a	case-insensitive comma separated list. If set
	   only	the included domains will be enabled. The default domain is
	   always considered to	be enabled. Domain filter lists	can be
	   preceded by '!' to invert the sense of the match.

       WIRESHARK_LOG_DEBUG

	   List	of domains with	debug log level. This sets the level of	the
	   provided log	domains	and takes precedence over the active domains
	   filter. If preceded by '!' this disables the	debug level instead.

       WIRESHARK_LOG_NOISY

	   Same	as above but for noisy log level instead.

SEE ALSO
       wireshark-filter(4), wireshark(1), editcap(1), pcap(3), dumpcap(1),
       text2pcap(1), mergecap(1), pcap-filter(7) or tcpdump(8)

NOTES
       This is the manual page for TShark 4.0.1. TShark	is part	of the
       Wireshark distribution. The latest version of Wireshark can be found at
       https://www.wireshark.org.

       HTML versions of	the Wireshark project man pages	are available at
       https://www.wireshark.org/docs/man-pages.

AUTHORS
       TShark uses the same packet dissection code that	Wireshark does,	as
       well as using many other	modules	from Wireshark;	see the	list of
       authors in the Wireshark	man page for a list of authors of that code.

				  2022-10-26			     TSHARK(1)

NAME | SYNOPSIS | DESCRIPTION | OPTIONS | DIAGNOSTIC OPTIONS | CAPTURE FILTER SYNTAX | READ FILTER SYNTAX | FILES | OUTPUT | ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES | SEE ALSO | NOTES | AUTHORS

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