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WIRESHARK(1)		The Wireshark Network Analyzer		  WIRESHARK(1)

NAME
       wireshark - Interactively dump and analyze network traffic

SYNOPSIS
       wireshark [ -i <capture interface>|- ] [	-f <capture filter> ]
       [ -Y <displaY filter> ] [ -w <outfile> ]	[ options ] [ <infile> ]

DESCRIPTION
       Wireshark is a GUI network protocol analyzer.  It lets you
       interactively browse packet data	from a live network or from a
       previously saved	capture	file.  Wireshark's native capture file format
       is pcapng format, or pcap which is also the format used by tcpdump and
       various other tools.

       Wireshark can read / import the following file formats:

       o   pcap	- captures from	Wireshark/TShark/dumpcap, tcpdump, and various
	   other tools using libpcap's/Npcap's/WinPcap's/tcpdump's/WinDump's
	   capture format

       o   pcapng - "next-generation" successor	to pcap	format

       o   snoop and atmsnoop captures

       o   Shomiti/Finisar Surveyor captures

       o   Novell LANalyzer captures

       o   Microsoft Network Monitor captures

       o   AIX's iptrace captures

       o   Cinco Networks NetXRay captures

       o   Network Associates Windows-based Sniffer captures

       o   Network General/Network Associates DOS-based	Sniffer	(compressed or
	   uncompressed) captures

       o   AG Group/WildPackets/Savvius
	   EtherPeek/TokenPeek/AiroPeek/EtherHelp/PacketGrabber	captures

       o   RADCOM's WAN/LAN analyzer captures

       o   Network Instruments Observer	version	9 captures

       o   Lucent/Ascend router	debug output

       o   files from HP-UX's nettl

       o   Toshiba's ISDN routers dump output

       o   the output from i4btrace from the ISDN4BSD project

       o   traces from the EyeSDN USB S0.

       o   the output in IPLog format from the Cisco Secure Intrusion
	   Detection System

       o   pppd	logs (pppdump format)

       o   the output from VMS's TCPIPtrace/TCPtrace/UCX$TRACE utilities

       o   the text output from	the DBS	Etherwatch VMS utility

       o   Visual Networks' Visual UpTime traffic capture

       o   the output from CoSine L2 debug

       o   the output from InfoVista's 5View LAN agents

       o   Endace Measurement Systems' ERF format captures

       o   Linux Bluez Bluetooth stack hcidump -w traces

       o   Catapult DCT2000 .out files

       o   Gammu generated text	output from Nokia DCT3 phones in Netmonitor
	   mode

       o   IBM Series (OS/400) Comm traces (ASCII & UNICODE)

       o   Juniper Netscreen snoop files

       o   Symbian OS btsnoop files

       o   TamoSoft CommView files

       o   Textronix K12xx 32bit .rf5 format files

       o   Textronix K12 text file format captures

       o   Apple PacketLogger files

       o   Files from Aethra Telecommunications' PC108 software	for their test
	   instruments

       o   MPEG-2 Transport Streams as defined in ISO/IEC 13818-1

       o   Rabbit Labs CAM Inspector files

       o   Colasoft Capsa files

       There is	no need	to tell	Wireshark what type of file you	are reading;
       it will determine the file type by itself.  Wireshark is	also capable
       of reading any of these file formats if they are	compressed using gzip.
       Wireshark recognizes this directly from the file; the '.gz' extension
       is not required for this	purpose.

       Like other protocol analyzers, Wireshark's main window shows 3 views of
       a packet.  It shows a summary line, briefly describing what the packet
       is.  A packet details display is	shown, allowing	you to drill down to
       exact protocol or field that you	interested in.	Finally, a hex dump
       shows you exactly what the packet looks like when it goes over the
       wire.

       In addition, Wireshark has some features	that make it unique.  It can
       assemble	all the	packets	in a TCP conversation and show you the ASCII
       (or EBCDIC, or hex) data	in that	conversation.  Display filters in
       Wireshark are very powerful; more fields	are filterable in Wireshark
       than in other protocol analyzers, and the syntax	you can	use to create
       your filters is richer.	As Wireshark progresses, expect	more and more
       protocol	fields to be allowed in	display	filters.

       Packet capturing	is performed with the pcap library.  The capture
       filter syntax follows the rules of the pcap library.  This syntax is
       different from the display filter syntax.

       Compressed file support uses (and therefore requires) the zlib library.
       If the zlib library is not present, Wireshark will compile, but will be
       unable to read compressed files.

       The pathname of a capture file to be read can be	specified with the -r
       option or can be	specified as a command-line argument.

OPTIONS
       Most users will want to start Wireshark without options and configure
       it from the menus instead.  Those users may just	skip this section.

       -a|--autostop  <capture autostop	condition>
	   Specify a criterion that specifies when Wireshark 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, Wireshark will stop writing to the current capture file and
	   switch to the next one if filesize is reached.  Note	that the
	   filesize is limited to a maximum value of 2 GiB.

	   packets:value Stop writing to a capture file	after it contains
	   value packets. Same as -c<capture packet count>.

       -b|--ring-buffer	 <capture ring buffer option>
	   Cause Wireshark to run in "multiple files" mode.  In	"multiple
	   files" mode,	Wireshark will write to	several	capture	files.	When
	   the first capture file fills	up, Wireshark will switch writing to
	   the next file and so	on.

	   The created filenames are based on the filename given with the -w
	   flag, the number of the file	and on the creation date and time,
	   e.g.	outfile_00001_20200714120117.pcap,
	   outfile_00002_20200714120523.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 Wireshark 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 one of	the other
	   criteria 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 criteria, 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.

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

	   Example: -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	Wireshark 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.
	   Same	as -a packets:<capture packet count>.

       -C  <configuration profile>
	   Start with the given	configuration profile.

       --capture-comment <comment>
	   Set the capture file	comment, if supported by the capture format.

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

	   See the tshark(1) manual page for more examples.

       -D|--list-interfaces
	   Print a list	of the interfaces on which Wireshark 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 flag 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 Wireshark	was able to open that
	   device to do	a live capture;	if, on your system, a program doing a
	   network capture must	be run from an account with special privileges
	   (for	example, as root), then, if Wireshark is run with the -D flag
	   and is not run from such an account,	it will	not list any
	   interfaces.

       --display <X display to use>
	   Specifies the X display to use.  A hostname and screen
	   (otherhost:0.0) or just a screen (:0.0) can be specified.  This
	   option is not available under Windows.

       --disable-protocol <proto_name>
	   Disable dissection of proto_name.

       --disable-heuristic <short_name>
	   Disable dissection of heuristic protocol.

       --enable-protocol <proto_name>
	   Enable dissection of	proto_name.

       --enable-heuristic <short_name>
	   Enable dissection of	heuristic protocol.

       -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: -f	"predef:MyPredefinedHostOnlyFilter"

       --fullscreen
	   Start Wireshark in full screen mode (kiosk mode). To	exit from
	   fullscreen mode, open the View menu and select the Full Screen
	   option. Alternatively, press	the F11	key (or	Ctrl + Cmd + F for
	   macOS).

       -g  <packet number>
	   After reading in a capture file using the -r	flag, go to the	given
	   packet number.

       -h|--help
	   Print the version number and	options	and exit.

       -H  Hide	the capture info dialog	during live packet capture.

       -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
	   "wireshark -D" (described above); a number, as reported by
	   "wireshark -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 flag	to
	   ifconfig.

	   If no interface is specified, Wireshark 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, Wireshark	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.

	   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  Use after -J	to change the behavior when no exact match is found
	   for the filter.  With this option select the	first packet before.

       -J  <jump filter>
	   After reading in a capture file using the -r	flag, jump to the
	   packet matching the filter (display filter syntax).	If no exact
	   match is found the first packet after that is selected.

       -k  Start the capture session immediately.  If the -i flag was
	   specified, the capture uses the specified interface.	 Otherwise,
	   Wireshark 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, Wireshark reports an	error
	   and doesn't start the capture.

       -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: -K krb5.keytab

       -l  Turn	on automatic scrolling if the packet display is	being updated
	   automatically as packets arrive during a capture (as	specified by
	   the -S flag).

       -L|--list-data-link-types
	   List	the data link types supported by the interface and exit.

       --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.

       -n  Disable network object name resolution (such	as hostname, TCP and
	   UDP port names), the	-N flag	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 flag overrides -n if both -N and -n
	   are present.	 If both -N and	-n flags are not present, all name
	   resolutions are turned on.

	   The argument	is a string that may contain the letters:

	   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

	   t to	enable transport-layer port number resolution

	   d to	enable resolution from captured	DNS packets

	   v to	enable VLAN IDs	to names resolution

       -o  <preference/recent setting>
	   Set a preference or recent value, overriding	the default value and
	   any value read from a preference/recent file.  The argument to the
	   flag	is a string of the form	prefname:value,	where prefname is the
	   name	of the preference/recent value (which is the same name that
	   would appear	in the preference/recent file),	and value is the value
	   to which it should be set.  Since Ethereal 0.10.12, the recent
	   settings replaces the formerly used -B, -P and -T flags to
	   manipulate the GUI dimensions.

	   If prefname is "uat", you can override settings in various user
	   access tables using the form	uat:uat	filename:uat record.  uat
	   filename must be the	name of	a UAT file, e.g. user_dlts.
	   uat_record must be in the form of a valid record for	that file,
	   including quotes.  For instance, to specify a user DLT from the
	   command line, you would use

	       -o "uat:user_dlts:\"User	0 (DLT=147)\",\"cops\",\"0\",\"\",\"0\",\"\""

       -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 Wireshark
	   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 <path	setting>
	   Special path	settings usually detected automatically.  This is used
	   for special cases, e.g. starting Wireshark from a known location on
	   an USB stick.

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

	   persconf:path path of personal configuration	files, like the
	   preferences files.

	   persdata:path path of personal data files, it's the folder
	   initially opened.  After the	very first initialization, the recent
	   file	will keep the folder last used.

       -r|--read-file  <infile>
	   Read	packet data from infile, can be	any supported capture file
	   format (including gzipped files).  It's not possible	to use named
	   pipes or stdin here!	To capture from	a pipe or from stdin use -i -

       -R|--read-filter	 <read (display) filter>
	   When	reading	a capture file specified with the -r flag, causes the
	   specified filter (which uses	the syntax of display filters, rather
	   than	that of	capture	filters) to be applied to all packets read
	   from	the capture file; packets not matching the filter are
	   discarded.

       -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  Automatically update	the packet display as packets are coming in.

       -t  a|ad|adoy|d|dd|e|r|u|ud|udoy
	   Set the format of the packet	timestamp displayed in the packet list
	   window.  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.

       --time-stamp-type <type>
	   Change the interface's timestamp method. See
	   --list-time-stamp-types.

       -u <s|hms>
	   Output format of seconds (def: s: seconds)

       -v|--version
	   Print the full version information and exit.

       -w  <outfile>
	   Set the default capture file	name, or '-' for standard output.

       -X <eXtension options>
	   Specify an option to	be passed to an	Wireshark module.  The
	   eXtension option is in the form extension_key:value,	where
	   extension_key can be:

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

	   lua_scriptnum:argument tells	Wireshark 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 Wireshark to use the given file
	   format to read in the file (the file	given in the -r	command
	   option).

	   stdin_descr:description tells Wireshark to use the given
	   description when capturing from standard input (-i -).

       -y|--linktype  <capture link type>
	   If a	capture	is started from	the command line with -k, 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>
	   Start with the given	display	filter.

       -z  <statistics>
	   Get Wireshark to collect various types of statistics	and display
	   the result in a window that updates in semi-real time.

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

		 "eth"	 Ethernet addresses
		 "fc"	 Fibre Channel addresses
		 "fddi"	 FDDI addresses
		 "ip"	 IPv4 addresses
		 "ipv6"	 IPv6 addresses
		 "ipx"	 IPX 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

	       If the optional filter is specified, only those packets that
	       match the filter	will be	used in	the calculations.

	       The table is presented with one line for	each conversation and
	       displays	the number of packets/bytes in each direction as well
	       as the total number of packets/bytes.  By default, the table is
	       sorted according	to the total number of packets.

	       These tables can	also be	generated at runtime by	selecting the
	       appropriate conversation	type from the menu
	       "Tools/Statistics/Conversation List/".

	   -z dcerpc,srt,name-or-uuid,major.minor[,filter]
	       Collect call/reply SRT (Service Response	Time) data for DCERPC
	       interface name or uuid, version major.minor.  Data collected is
	       the number of calls for each procedure, MinSRT, MaxSRT and
	       AvgSRT.	Interface name and uuid	are case-insensitive.

	       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.

	       If the optional filter  is provided, the	stats will only	be
	       calculated on those calls that match that filter.

	       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 bootp,stat[,filter]
	       Show DHCP (BOOTP) statistics.

	   -z expert
	       Show expert information.

	   -z fc,srt[,filter]
	       Collect call/reply SRT (Service Response	Time) data for FC.
	       Data collected is the number of calls for each Fibre Channel
	       command,	MinSRT,	MaxSRT and AvgSRT.

	       Example:	-z fc,srt will calculate the Service Response Time as
	       the time	delta between the First	packet of the exchange and the
	       Last packet of the exchange.

	       The data	will be	presented as separate tables for all normal FC
	       commands, Only those commands that are seen in the capture will
	       have its	stats displayed.

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

	       If the optional filter is provided, the stats will only be
	       calculated on those calls that match that filter.

	       Example:	-z "fc,srt,fc.id==01.02.03" will collect stats only
	       for FC packets exchanged	by the host at FC address 01.02.03 .

	   -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

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

	       If the optional filter is provided, the stats will only be
	       calculated on those calls that match that filter.

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

	   -z h225,srt[,filter]
	       Collect request/response	SRT (Service Response Time) data for
	       ITU-T H.225 RAS.	 Data collected	is the number of calls of each
	       ITU-T H.225 RAS Message Type, Minimum SRT, Maximum SRT, Average
	       SRT, Minimum in Packet, and Maximum in Packet.  You will	also
	       get the number of Open Requests (Unresponded Requests),
	       Discarded Responses (Responses without matching request)	and
	       Duplicate Messages.

	       Example:	-z h225,srt

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

	       If the optional filter is provided, the stats will only be
	       calculated on those calls that match that filter.

	       Example:	-z "h225,srt,ip.addr==1.2.3.4" will collect stats only
	       for ITU-T H.225 RAS packets exchanged by	the host at IP address
	       1.2.3.4 .

	   -z io,stat
	       Collect packet/bytes statistics for the capture in intervals of
	       1 second.  This option will open	a window with up to 5 color-
	       coded graphs where number-of-packets-per-second or number-of-
	       bytes-per-second	statistics can be calculated and displayed.

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

	       This graph window can also be opened from the
	       Analyze:Statistics:Traffic:IO-Stat menu item.

	   -z ldap,srt[,filter]
	       Collect call/reply SRT (Service Response	Time) data for LDAP.
	       Data collected is the number of calls for each implemented LDAP
	       command,	MinSRT,	MaxSRT and AvgSRT.

	       Example:	-z ldap,srt will calculate the Service Response	Time
	       as the time delta between the Request and the Response.

	       The data	will be	presented as separate tables for all
	       implemented LDAP	commands, Only those commands that are seen in
	       the capture will	have its stats displayed.

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

	       If the optional filter is provided, the stats will only be
	       calculated on those calls that match that filter.

	       Example:	use -z "ldap,srt,ip.addr==10.1.1.1" will collect stats
	       only for	LDAP packets exchanged by the host at IP address
	       10.1.1.1	.

	       The only	LDAP commands that are currently implemented and for
	       which the stats will be available are: BIND SEARCH MODIFY ADD
	       DELETE MODRDN COMPARE EXTENDED

	   -z megaco,srt[,filter]
	       Collect request/response	SRT (Service Response Time) data for
	       MEGACO.	(This is similar to -z smb,srt).  Data collected is
	       the number of calls for each known MEGACO Command, Minimum SRT,
	       Maximum SRT and Average SRT.

	       Example:	-z megaco,srt

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

	       If the optional filter is provided, the stats will only be
	       calculated on those calls that match that filter.

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

	   -z mgcp,srt[,filter]
	       Collect request/response	SRT (Service Response Time) data for
	       MGCP.  (This is similar to -z smb,srt).	Data collected is the
	       number of calls for each	known MGCP Type, Minimum SRT, Maximum
	       SRT and Average SRT.

	       Example:	-z mgcp,srt

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

	       If the optional filter is provided, the stats will only be
	       calculated on those calls that match that filter.

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

	   -z mtp3,msus[,<filter>]
	       Show MTP3 MSU statistics.

	   -z multicast,stat[,<filter>]
	       Show UDP	multicast stream statistics.

	   -z rpc,programs
	       Collect call/reply SRT data for all known ONC-RPC
	       programs/versions.  Data	collected is the number	of calls for
	       each protocol/version, MinSRT, MaxSRT and AvgSRT.

	   -z rpc,srt,name-or-number,version[,<filter>]
	       Collect call/reply SRT (Service Response	Time) data for program
	       name/version or number/version.	Data collected is the number
	       of calls	for each procedure, MinSRT, MaxSRT and AvgSRT.
	       Program name is case-insensitive.

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

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

	       If the optional filter is provided, the stats will only be
	       calculated on those calls that match that filter.

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

	   -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.

	       If the optional filter is provided, the stats will only be
	       calculated on those calls that match that filter.

	       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 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.

	       If the optional filter is provided, the stats will only be
	       calculated on those calls that match that filter.

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

	   -z smb,srt[,filter]
	       Collect call/reply SRT (Service Response	Time) data for SMB.
	       Data collected is the 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 their 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.

	       If the optional filter is provided, the stats will only be
	       calculated on those calls that match that filter.

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

	   -z voip,calls
	       This option will	show a window that shows VoIP calls found in
	       the capture file.  This is the same window shown	as when	you go
	       to the Statistics Menu and choose VoIP Calls.

	       Example:	-z voip,calls

	   -z wlan,stat[,<filter>]
	       Show IEEE 802.11	network	and station statistics.

	   -z wsp,stat[,<filter>]
	       Show WSP	packet counters.

INTERFACE
   MENU	ITEMS
       File:Open
       File:Open Recent
       File:Merge
	   Merge another capture file to the currently loaded one.  The
	   File:Merge dialog box allows	the merge "Prepended",
	   "Chronologically" or	"Appended", relative to	the already loaded
	   one.

       File:Close
	   Open	or close a capture file.  The File:Open	dialog box allows a
	   filter to be	specified; when	the capture file is read, the filter
	   is applied to all packets read from the file, and packets not
	   matching the	filter are discarded.  The File:Open Recent is a
	   submenu and will show a list	of previously opened files.

       File:Save
       File:Save As
	   Save	the current capture, or	the packets currently displayed	from
	   that	capture, to a file.  Check boxes let you select	whether	to
	   save	all packets, or	just those that	have passed the	current
	   display filter and/or those that are	currently marked, and an
	   option menu lets you	select (from a list of file formats in which
	   at particular capture, or the packets currently displayed from that
	   capture, can	be saved), a file format in which to save it.

       File:File Set:List Files
	   Show	a dialog box that lists	all files of the file set matching the
	   currently loaded file.  A file set is a compound of files resulting
	   from	a capture using	the "multiple files" / "ringbuffer" mode,
	   recognizable	by the filename	pattern, e.g.:
	   Filename_00001_20200714101530.pcap.

       File:File Set:Next File
       File:File Set:Previous File
	   If the currently loaded file	is part	of a file set (see above),
	   open	the next / previous file in that set.

       File:Export
	   Export captured data	into an	external format.  Note:	the data
	   cannot be imported back into	Wireshark, so be sure to keep the
	   capture file.

       File:Print
	   Print packet	data from the current capture.	You can	select the
	   range of packets to be printed (which packets are printed), and the
	   output format of each packet	(how each packet is printed).  The
	   output format will be similar to the	displayed values, so a summary
	   line, the packet details view, and/or the hex dump of the packet
	   can be printed.

	   Printing options can	be set with the	Edit:Preferences menu item, or
	   in the dialog box popped up by this menu item.

       File:Quit
	   Exit	the application.

       Edit:Copy:Description
	   Copies the description of the selected field	in the protocol	tree
	   to the clipboard.

       Edit:Copy:Fieldname
	   Copies the fieldname	of the selected	field in the protocol tree to
	   the clipboard.

       Edit:Copy:Value
	   Copies the value of the selected field in the protocol tree to the
	   clipboard.

       Edit:Copy:As Filter
	   Create a display filter based on the	data currently highlighted in
	   the packet details and copy that filter to the clipboard.

	   If that data	is a field that	can be tested in a display filter
	   expression, the display filter will test that field;	otherwise, the
	   display filter will be based	on the absolute	offset within the
	   packet.  Therefore it could be unreliable if	the packet contains
	   protocols with variable-length headers, such	as a source-routed
	   token-ring packet.

       Edit:Find Packet
	   Search forward or backward, starting	with the currently selected
	   packet (or the most recently	selected packet, if no packet is
	   selected).  Search criteria can be a	display	filter expression, a
	   string of hexadecimal digits, or a text string.

	   When	searching for a	text string, you can search the	packet data,
	   or you can search the text in the Info column in the	packet list
	   pane	or in the packet details pane.

	   Hexadecimal digits can be separated by colons, periods, or dashes.
	   Text	string searches	can be ASCII or	Unicode	(or both), and may be
	   case	insensitive.

       Edit:Find Next
       Edit:Find Previous
	   Search forward / backward for a packet matching the filter from the
	   previous search, starting with the currently	selected packet	(or
	   the most recently selected packet, if no packet is selected).

       Edit:Mark Packet	(toggle)
	   Mark	(or unmark if currently	marked)	the selected packet.  The
	   field "frame.marked"	is set for packets that	are marked, so that,
	   for example,	a display filters can be used to display only marked
	   packets, and	so that	the "Edit:Find Packet" dialog can be used to
	   find	the next or previous marked packet.

       Edit:Find Next Mark
       Edit:Find Previous Mark
	   Find	next/previous marked packet.

       Edit:Mark All Packets
       Edit:Unmark All Packets
	   Mark	/ Unmark all packets that are currently	displayed.

       Edit:Time Reference:Set Time Reference (toggle)
	   Set (or unset if currently set) the selected	packet as a Time
	   Reference packet.  When a packet is set as a	Time Reference packet,
	   the timestamps in the packet	list pane will be replaced with	the
	   string "*REF*".  The	relative time timestamp	in later packets will
	   then	be calculated relative to the timestamp	of this	Time Reference
	   packet and not the first packet in the capture.

	   Packets that	have been selected as Time Reference packets will
	   always be displayed in the packet list pane.	 Display filters will
	   not affect or hide these packets.

	   If there is a column	displayed for "Cumulative Bytes" this counter
	   will	be reset at every Time Reference packet.

       Edit:Time Reference:Find	Next
       Edit:Time Reference:Find	Previous
	   Search forward / backward for a time	referenced packet.

       Edit:Configuration Profiles
	   Manage configuration	profiles to be able to use more	than one set
	   of preferences and configurations.

       Edit:Preferences
	   Set the GUI,	capture, printing and protocol options (see
	   "Preferences" dialog	below).

       View:Main Toolbar
       View:Filter Toolbar
       View:Statusbar
	   Show	or hide	the main window	controls.

       View:Packet List
       View:Packet Details
       View:Packet Bytes
	   Show	or hide	the main window	panes.

       View:Time Display Format
	   Set the format of the packet	timestamp displayed in the packet list
	   window.

       View:Name Resolution:Resolve Name
	   Try to resolve a name for the currently selected item.

       View:Name Resolution:Enable for ... Layer
	   Enable or disable translation of addresses to names in the display.

       View:Colorize Packet List
	   Enable or disable the coloring rules.  Disabling will improve
	   performance.

       View:Auto Scroll	in Live	Capture
	   Enable or disable the automatic scrolling of	the packet list	while
	   a live capture is in	progress.

       View:Zoom In
       View:Zoom Out
	   Zoom	into / out of the main window data (by changing	the font
	   size).

       View:Normal Size
	   Reset the zoom factor of zoom in / zoom out back to normal font
	   size.

       View:Resize All Columns
	   Resize all columns to best fit the current packet display.

       View:Expand / Collapse Subtrees
	   Expands / Collapses the currently selected item and it's subtrees
	   in the packet details.

       View:Expand All
       View:Collapse All
	   Expand / Collapse all branches of the packet	details.

       View:Colorize Conversation
	   Select color	for a conversation.

       View:Reset Coloring 1-10
	   Reset Color for a conversation.

       View:Coloring Rules
	   Change the foreground and background	colors of the packet
	   information in the list of packets, based upon display filters.
	   The list of display filters is applied to each packet sequentially.
	   After the first display filter matches a packet, any	additional
	   display filters in the list are ignored.  Therefore,	if you are
	   filtering on	the existence of protocols, you	should list the
	   higher-level	protocols first, and the lower-level protocols last.

	   How Colorization Works
	       Packets are colored according to	a list of color	filters.  Each
	       filter consists of a name, a filter expression and a
	       coloration.  A packet is	colored	according to the first filter
	       that it matches.	 Color filter expressions use exactly the same
	       syntax as display filter	expressions.

	       When Wireshark starts, the color	filters	are loaded from:

	       1.  The user's personal color filters file or, if that does not
		   exist,

	       2.  The global color filters file.

	       If neither of these exist then the packets will not be colored.

       View:Show Packet	In New Window
	   Create a new	window containing a packet details view	and a hex dump
	   window of the currently selected packet; this window	will continue
	   to display that packet's details and	data even if another packet is
	   selected.

       View:Reload
	   Reload a capture file.  Same	as File:Close and File:Open the	same
	   file	again.

       Go:Back
	   Go back in previously visited packets history.

       Go:Forward
	   Go forward in previously visited packets history.

       Go:Go To	Packet
	   Go to a particular numbered packet.

       Go:Go To	Corresponding Packet
	   If a	field in the packet details pane containing a packet number is
	   selected, go	to the packet number specified by that field.  (This
	   works only if the dissector that put	that entry into	the packet
	   details put it into the details as a	filterable field rather	than
	   just	as text.) This can be used, for	example, to go to the packet
	   for the request corresponding to a reply, or	the reply
	   corresponding to a request, if that packet number has been put into
	   the packet details.

       Go:Previous Packet
       Go:Next Packet
       Go:First	Packet
       Go:Last Packet
	   Go to the previous /	next / first / last packet in the capture.

       Go:Previous Packet In Conversation
       Go:Next Packet In Conversation
	   Go to the previous /	next packet of the conversation	(TCP, UDP or
	   IP)

       Capture:Interfaces
	   Shows a dialog box with all currently known interfaces and
	   displaying the current network traffic amount.  Capture sessions
	   can be started from here.  Beware: keeping this box open results in
	   high	system load!

       Capture:Options
	   Initiate a live packet capture (see "Capture	Options	Dialog"
	   below).  If no filename is specified, a temporary file will be
	   created to hold the capture.	 The location of the file can be
	   chosen by setting your TMPDIR environment variable before starting
	   Wireshark.  Otherwise, the default TMPDIR location is system-
	   dependent, but is likely either /var/tmp or /tmp.

       Capture:Start
	   Start a live	packet capture with the	previously selected options.
	   This	won't open the options dialog box, and can be convenient for
	   repeatedly capturing	with the same options.

       Capture:Stop
	   Stop	a running live capture.

       Capture:Restart
	   While a live	capture	is running, stop it and	restart	with the same
	   options again.  This	can be convenient to remove irrelevant
	   packets, if no valuable packets were	captured so far.

       Capture:Capture Filters
	   Edit	the saved list of capture filters, allowing filters to be
	   added, changed, or deleted.

       Analyze:Display Filters
	   Edit	the saved list of display filters, allowing filters to be
	   added, changed, or deleted.

       Analyze:Display Filter Macros
	   Create shortcuts for	complex	macros

       Analyze:Apply as	Filter
	   Create a display filter based on the	data currently highlighted in
	   the packet details and apply	the filter.

	   If that data	is a field that	can be tested in a display filter
	   expression, the display filter will test that field;	otherwise, the
	   display filter will be based	on the absolute	offset within the
	   packet.  Therefore it could be unreliable if	the packet contains
	   protocols with variable-length headers, such	as a source-routed
	   token-ring packet.

	   The Selected	option creates a display filter	that tests for a match
	   of the data;	the Not	Selected option	creates	a display filter that
	   tests for a non-match of the	data.  The And Selected, Or Selected,
	   And Not Selected, and Or Not	Selected options add to	the end	of the
	   display filter in the strip at the top (or bottom) an AND or	OR
	   operator followed by	the new	display	filter expression.

       Analyze:Prepare as Filter
	   Create a display filter based on the	data currently highlighted in
	   the packet details.	The filter strip at the	top (or	bottom)	is
	   updated but it is not yet applied.

       Analyze:Enabled Protocols
	   Allow protocol dissection to	be enabled or disabled for a specific
	   protocol.  Individual protocols can be enabled or disabled by
	   clicking on them in the list	or by highlighting them	and pressing
	   the space bar.  The entire list can be enabled, disabled, or
	   inverted using the buttons below the	list.

	   When	a protocol is disabled,	dissection in a	particular packet
	   stops when that protocol is reached,	and Wireshark moves on to the
	   next	packet.	 Any higher-layer protocols that would otherwise have
	   been	processed will not be displayed.  For example, disabling TCP
	   will	prevent	the dissection and display of TCP, HTTP, SMTP, Telnet,
	   and any other protocol exclusively dependent	on TCP.

	   The list of protocols can be	saved, so that Wireshark will start up
	   with	the protocols in that list disabled.

       Analyze:Decode As
	   If you have a packet	selected, present a dialog allowing you	to
	   change which	dissectors are used to decode this packet.  The	dialog
	   has one panel each for the link layer, network layer	and transport
	   layer protocol/port numbers,	and will allow each of these to	be
	   changed independently.  For example,	if the selected	packet is a
	   TCP packet to port 12345, using this	dialog you can instruct
	   Wireshark to	decode all packets to or from that TCP port as HTTP
	   packets.

       Analyze:User Specified Decodes
	   Create a new	window showing whether any protocol ID to dissector
	   mappings have been changed by the user.  This window	also allows
	   the user to reset all decodes to their default values.

       Analyze:Follow TCP Stream
	   If you have a TCP packet selected, display the contents of the data
	   stream for the TCP connection to which that packet belongs, as
	   text, in a separate window, and leave the list of packets in	a
	   filtered state, with	only those packets that	are part of that TCP
	   connection being displayed.	You can	revert to your old view	by
	   pressing ENTER in the display filter	text box, thereby invoking
	   your	old display filter (or resetting it back to no display
	   filter).

	   The window in which the data	stream is displayed lets you select:

	   o	   whether to display the entire conversation, or one or the
		   other side of it;

	   o	   whether the data being displayed is to be treated as	ASCII
		   or EBCDIC text or as	raw hex	data;

	   and lets you	print what's currently being displayed,	using the same
	   print options that are used for the File:Print Packet menu item, or
	   save	it as text to a	file.

       Analyze:Follow UDP Stream
       Analyze:Follow TLS Stream
	   (Similar to Analyze:Follow TCP Stream)

       Analyze:Expert Info
       Analyze:Expert Info Composite
	   (Kind of) a log of anomalies	found by Wireshark in a	capture	file.

       Analyze:Conversation Filter
       Statistics:Summary
	   Show	summary	information about the capture, including elapsed time,
	   packet counts, byte counts, and the like.  If a display filter is
	   in effect, summary information will be shown	about the capture and
	   about the packets currently being displayed.

       Statistics:Protocol Hierarchy
	   Show	the number of packets, and the number of bytes in those
	   packets, for	each protocol in the trace.  It	organizes the
	   protocols in	the same hierarchy in which they were found in the
	   trace.  Besides counting the	packets	in which the protocol exists,
	   a count is also made	for packets in which the protocol is the last
	   protocol in the stack.  These last-protocol counts show you how
	   many	packets	(and the byte count associated with those packets)
	   ended in a particular protocol.  In the table, they are listed
	   under "End Packets" and "End	Bytes".

       Statistics:Conversations
	   Lists of conversations; selectable by protocol.  See
	   Statistics:Conversation List	below.

       Statistics:End Points
	   List	of End Point Addresses by protocol with	packets/bytes/....
	   counts.

       Statistics:Packet Lengths
	   Grouped counts of packet lengths (0-19 bytes, 20-39 bytes, ...)

       Statistics:I/O Graphs
	   Open	a window where up to 5 graphs in different colors can be
	   displayed to	indicate number	of packets or number of	bytes per
	   second for all packets matching the specified filter.  By default
	   only	one graph will be displayed showing number of packets per
	   second.

	   The top part	of the window contains the graphs and scales for the X
	   and Y axis.	If the graph is	too long to fit	inside the window
	   there is a horizontal scrollbar below the drawing area that can
	   scroll the graphs to	the left or the	right.	The horizontal axis
	   displays the	time into the capture and the vertical axis will
	   display the measured	quantity at that time.

	   Below the drawing area and the scrollbar are	the controls.  On the
	   bottom left there will be five similar sets of controls to control
	   each	individual graph such as "Display:<button>" which button will
	   toggle that individual graph	on/off.	 If <button> is	ticked,	the
	   graph will be displayed. "Color:<color>" which is just a button to
	   show	which color will be used to draw that graph. Finally
	   "Filter:<filter-text>" which	can be used to specify a display
	   filter for that particular graph.

	   If filter-text is empty then	all packets will be used to calculate
	   the quantity	for that graph.	 If filter-text	is specified only
	   those packets that match that display filter	will be	considered in
	   the calculation of quantity.

	   To the right	of the 5 graph controls	there are four menus to
	   control global aspects of the draw area and graphs.	The "Unit:"
	   menu	is used	to control what	to measure; "packets/tick",
	   "bytes/tick"	or "advanced..."

	   packets/tick	will measure the number	of packets matching the	(if
	   specified) display filter for the graph in each measurement
	   interval.

	   bytes/tick will measure the total number of bytes in	all packets
	   matching the	(if specified) display filter for the graph in each
	   measurement interval.

	   advanced... see below

	   "Tick interval:" specifies what measurement intervals to use.  The
	   default is 1	second and means that the data will be counted over 1
	   second intervals.

	   "Pixels per tick:" specifies	how many pixels	wide each measurement
	   interval will be in the drawing area.  The default is 5 pixels per
	   tick.

	   "Y-scale:" controls the max value for the y-axis.  Default value is
	   "auto" which	means that Wireshark will try to adjust	the maxvalue
	   automatically.

	   "advanced..." If Unit:advanced...  is selected the window will
	   display two more controls for each of the five graphs.  One control
	   will	be a menu where	the type of calculation	can be selected	from
	   SUM,COUNT,MAX,MIN,AVG and LOAD, and one control, textbox, where the
	   name	of a single display filter field can be	specified.

	   The following restrictions apply to type and	field combinations:

	   SUM:	available for all types	of integers and	will calculate the SUM
	   of all occurrences of this field in the measurement interval.  Note
	   that	some field can occur multiple times in the same	packet and
	   then	all instances will be summed up.  Example: 'tcp.len' which
	   will	count the amount of payload data transferred across TCP	in
	   each	interval.

	   COUNT: available for	all field types.  This will COUNT the number
	   of times certain field occurs in each interval.  Note that some
	   fields may occur multiple times in each packet and if that is the
	   case	then each instance will	be counted independently and COUNT
	   will	be greater than	the number of packets.

	   MAX:	available for all integer and relative time fields.  This will
	   calculate the max seen integer/time value seen for the field	during
	   the interval.  Example: 'smb.time' which will plot the maximum SMB
	   response time.

	   MIN:	available for all integer and relative time fields.  This will
	   calculate the min seen integer/time value seen for the field	during
	   the interval.  Example: 'smb.time' which will plot the minimum SMB
	   response time.

	   AVG:	available for all integer and relative time fields.This	will
	   calculate the average seen integer/time value seen for the field
	   during the interval.	 Example: 'smb.time' which will	plot the
	   average SMB response	time.

	   LOAD: available only	for relative time fields (response times).

	   Example of advanced:	Display	how NFS	response time MAX/MIN/AVG
	   changes over	time:

	   Set first graph to:

	      filter:nfs&&rpc.time
	      Calc:MAX rpc.time

	   Set second graph to

	      filter:nfs&&rpc.time
	      Calc:AVG rpc.time

	   Set third graph to

	      filter:nfs&&rpc.time
	      Calc:MIN rpc.time

	   Example of advanced:	Display	how the	average	packet size from host
	   a.b.c.d changes over	time.

	   Set first graph to

	      filter:ip.addr==a.b.c.d&&frame.pkt_len
	      Calc:AVG frame.pkt_len

	   LOAD: The LOAD io-stat type is very different from anything you
	   have	ever seen before! While	the response times themselves as
	   plotted by MIN,MAX,AVG are indications on the Server	load (which
	   affects the Server response time), the LOAD measurement measures
	   the Client LOAD.  What this measures	is how much workload the
	   client generates, i.e. how fast will	the client issue new commands
	   when	the previous ones completed.  i.e. the level of	concurrency
	   the client can maintain.  The higher	the number, the	more and
	   faster is the client	issuing	new commands.  When the	LOAD goes
	   down, it may	be due to client load making the client	slower in
	   issuing new commands	(there may be other reasons as well, maybe the
	   client just doesn't have any	commands it wants to issue right
	   then).

	   Load	is measured in concurrency/number of overlapping i/o and the
	   value 1000 means there is a constant	load of	one i/o.

	   In each tick	interval the amount of overlap is measured.  See the
	   graph below containing three	commands: Below	the graph are the LOAD
	   values for each interval that would be calculated.

	     |	   |	 |     |     |	   |	 |     |     |
	     |	   |	 |     |     |	   |	 |     |     |
	     |	   |  o=====*  |     |	   |	 |     |     |
	     |	   |	 |     |     |	   |	 |     |     |
	     |	o========*     | o============*	 |     |     |
	     |	   |	 |     |     |	   |	 |     |     |
	     --------------------------------------------------> Time
	      500   1500   500	750   1000   500    0	  0

       Statistics:Conversation List
	   This	option will open a new window that displays a list of all
	   conversations between two endpoints.	 The list has one row for each
	   unique conversation and displays total number of packets/bytes seen
	   as well as number of	packets/bytes in each direction.

	   By default the list is sorted according to the number of packets
	   but by clicking on the column header; it is possible	to re-sort the
	   list	in ascending or	descending order by any	column.

	   By first selecting a	conversation by	clicking on it and then	using
	   the right mouse button (on those platforms that have	a right	mouse
	   button) Wireshark will display a popup menu offering	several
	   different filter operations to apply	to the capture.

	   These statistics windows can	also be	invoked	from the Wireshark
	   command line	using the -z conv argument.

       Statistics:Service Response Time
	   o   AFP

	   o   CAMEL

	   o   DCE-RPC

	       Open a window to	display	Service	Response Time statistics for
	       an arbitrary DCE-RPC program interface and display Procedure,
	       Number of Calls,	Minimum	SRT, Maximum SRT and Average SRT for
	       all procedures for that program/version.	 These windows opened
	       will update in semi-real	time to	reflect	changes	when doing
	       live captures or	when reading new capture files into Wireshark.

	       This dialog will	also allow an optional filter string to	be
	       used.  If an optional filter string is used only	such DCE-RPC
	       request/response	pairs that match that filter will be used to
	       calculate the statistics.  If no	filter string is specified all
	       request/response	pairs will be used.

	   o   Diameter

	   o   Fibre Channel

	       Open a window to	display	Service	Response Time statistics for
	       Fibre Channel and display FC Type, Number of Calls, Minimum
	       SRT, Maximum SRT	and Average SRT	for all	FC types.  These
	       windows opened will update in semi-real time to reflect changes
	       when doing live captures	or when	reading	new capture files into
	       Wireshark.  The Service Response	Time is	calculated as the time
	       delta between the First packet of the exchange and the Last
	       packet of the exchange.

	       This dialog will	also allow an optional filter string to	be
	       used.  If an optional filter string is used only	such FC
	       first/last exchange pairs that match that filter	will be	used
	       to calculate the	statistics.  If	no filter string is specified
	       all request/response pairs will be used.

	   o   GTP

	   o   H.225 RAS

	       Collect requests/response SRT (Service Response Time) data for
	       ITU-T H.225 RAS.	 Data collected	is number of calls for each
	       known ITU-T H.225 RAS Message Type, Minimum SRT,	Maximum	SRT,
	       Average SRT, Minimum in Packet, and Maximum in Packet.  You
	       will also get the number	of Open	Requests (Unresponded
	       Requests), Discarded Responses (Responses without matching
	       request)	and Duplicate Messages.	 These windows opened will
	       update in semi-real time	to reflect changes when	doing live
	       captures	or when	reading	new capture files into Wireshark.

	       You can apply an	optional filter	string in a dialog box,	before
	       starting	the calculation.  The statistics will only be
	       calculated on those calls matching that filter.

	   o   LDAP

	   o   MEGACO

	   o   MGCP

	       Collect requests/response SRT (Service Response Time) data for
	       MGCP.  Data collected is	number of calls	for each known MGCP
	       Type, Minimum SRT, Maximum SRT, Average SRT, Minimum in Packet,
	       and Maximum in Packet.  These windows opened will update	in
	       semi-real time to reflect changes when doing live captures or
	       when reading new	capture	files into Wireshark.

	       You can apply an	optional filter	string in a dialog box,	before
	       starting	the calculation.  The statistics will only be
	       calculated on those calls matching that filter.

	   o   NCP

	   o   ONC-RPC

	       Open a window to	display	statistics for an arbitrary ONC-RPC
	       program interface and display Procedure,	Number of Calls,
	       Minimum SRT, Maximum SRT	and Average SRT	for all	procedures for
	       that program/version.  These windows opened will	update in
	       semi-real time to reflect changes when doing live captures or
	       when reading new	capture	files into Wireshark.

	       This dialog will	also allow an optional filter string to	be
	       used.  If an optional filter string is used only	such ONC-RPC
	       request/response	pairs that match that filter will be used to
	       calculate the statistics.  If no	filter string is specified all
	       request/response	pairs will be used.

	       By first	selecting a conversation by clicking on	it and then
	       using the right mouse button (on	those platforms	that have a
	       right mouse button) Wireshark will display a popup menu
	       offering	several	different filter operations to apply to	the
	       capture.

	   o   RADIUS

	   o   SCSI

	   o   SMB

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

	       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.

	       You can apply an	optional filter	string in a dialog box,	before
	       starting	the calculation.  The stats will only be calculated on
	       those calls matching that filter.

	       By first	selecting a conversation by clicking on	it and then
	       using the right mouse button (on	those platforms	that have a
	       right mouse button) Wireshark will display a popup menu
	       offering	several	different filter operations to apply to	the
	       capture.

	   o   SMB2

       Statistics:BOOTP-DHCP
       Statistics:Compare
	   Compare two Capture Files

       Statistics:Flow Graph
	   Flow	Graph: General/TCP

       Statistics:HTTP
	   HTTP	Load Distribution, Packet Counter & Requests

       Statistics:IP Addresses
	   Count/Rate/Percent by IP Address

       Statistics:IP Destinations
	   Count/Rate/Percent by IP Address/protocol/port

       Statistics:IP Protocol Types
	   Count/Rate/Percent by IP Protocol Types

       Statistics:ONC-RPC Programs
	   This	dialog will open a window showing aggregated SRT statistics
	   for all ONC-RPC Programs/versions that exist	in the capture file.

       Statistics:TCP Stream Graph
	   Graphs: Round Trip; Throughput; Time-Sequence (Stevens); Time-
	   Sequence (tcptrace)

       Statistics:UDP Multicast	streams
	   Multicast Streams Counts/Rates/... by Source/Destination
	   Address/Port	pairs

       Statistics:WLAN Traffic
	   WLAN	Traffic	Statistics

       Telephony:ITU-T H.225
	   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 will be displayed in the second column.
	   This	window opened will update in semi-real time to reflect changes
	   when	doing live captures or when reading new	capture	files into
	   Wireshark.

	   You can apply an optional filter string in a	dialog box, before
	   starting the	counter.  The statistics will only be calculated on
	   those calls matching	that filter.

       Telephony:SIP
	   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).

	   This	window opened will update in semi-real time to reflect changes
	   when	doing live captures or when reading new	capture	files into
	   Wireshark.

	   You can apply an optional filter string in a	dialog box, before
	   starting the	counter.  The statistics will only be calculated on
	   those calls matching	that filter.

       Tools:Firewall ACL Rules
       Help:Contents
	   Some	help texts.

       Help:Supported Protocols
	   List	of supported protocols and display filter protocol fields.

       Help:Manual Pages
	   Display locally installed HTML versions of these manual pages in a
	   web browser.

       Help:Wireshark Online
	   Various links to online resources to	be open	in a web browser, like
	   <https://www.wireshark.org>.

       Help:About Wireshark
	   See various information about Wireshark (see	"About"	dialog below),
	   like	the version, the folders used, the available plugins, ...

   WINDOWS
       Main Window
	   The main window contains the	usual things like the menu, some
	   toolbars, the main area and a statusbar.  The main area is split
	   into	three panes, you can resize each pane using a "thumb" at the
	   right end of	each divider line.

	   The main window is much more	flexible than before.  The layout of
	   the main window can be customized by	the Layout page	in the dialog
	   box popped up by Edit:Preferences, the following will describe the
	   layout with the default settings.

	   Main	Toolbar
		 Some menu items are available for quick access	here.  There
		 is no way to customize	the items in the toolbar, however the
		 toolbar can be	hidden by View:Main Toolbar.

	   Filter Toolbar
		 A display filter can be entered into the filter toolbar.  A
		 filter	for HTTP, HTTPS, and DNS traffic might look like this:

		   tcp.port in {80 443 53}

		 Selecting the Filter: button lets you choose from a list of
		 named filters that you	can optionally save.  Pressing the
		 Return	or Enter keys, or selecting the	Apply button, will
		 cause the filter to be	applied	to the current list of
		 packets.  Selecting the Reset button clears the display
		 filter	so that	all packets are	displayed (again).

		 There is no way to customize the items	in the toolbar,
		 however the toolbar can be hidden by View:Filter Toolbar.

	   Packet List Pane
		 The top pane contains the list	of network packets that	you
		 can scroll through and	select.	 By default, the packet
		 number, packet	timestamp, source and destination addresses,
		 protocol, and description are displayed for each packet; the
		 Columns page in the dialog box	popped up by Edit:Preferences
		 lets you change this (although, unfortunately,	you currently
		 have to save the preferences, and exit	and restart Wireshark,
		 for those changes to take effect).

		 If you	click on the heading for a column, the display will be
		 sorted	by that	column;	clicking on the	heading	again will
		 reverse the sort order	for that column.

		 An effort is made to display information as high up the
		 protocol stack	as possible, e.g. IP addresses are displayed
		 for IP	packets, but the MAC layer address is displayed	for
		 unknown packet	types.

		 The right mouse button	can be used to pop up a	menu of
		 operations.

		 The middle mouse button can be	used to	mark a packet.

	   Packet Details Pane
		 The middle pane contains a display of the details of the
		 currently-selected packet.  The display shows each field and
		 its value in each protocol header in the stack.  The right
		 mouse button can be used to pop up a menu of operations.

	   Packet Bytes	Pane
		 The lowest pane contains a hex	and ASCII dump of the actual
		 packet	data.  Selecting a field in the	packet details
		 highlights the	corresponding bytes in this section.

		 The right mouse button	can be used to pop up a	menu of
		 operations.

	   Statusbar
		 The statusbar is divided into three parts, on the left	some
		 context dependent things are shown, like information about
		 the loaded file, in the center	the number of packets are
		 displayed, and	on the right the current configuration
		 profile.

		 The statusbar can be hidden by	View:Statusbar.

       Preferences
	   The Preferences dialog lets you control various personal
	   preferences for the behavior	of Wireshark.

	   User	Interface Preferences
		 The User Interface page is used to modify small aspects of
		 the GUI to your own personal taste:

		 Selection Bars
		       The selection bar in the	packet list and	packet details
		       can have	either a "browse" or "select" behavior.	 If
		       the selection bar has a "browse"	behavior, the arrow
		       keys will move an outline of the	selection bar,
		       allowing	you to browse the rest of the list or details
		       without changing	the selection until you	press the
		       space bar.  If the selection bar	has a "select"
		       behavior, the arrow keys	will move the selection	bar
		       and change the selection	to the new item	in the packet
		       list or packet details.

		 Save Window Position
		       If this item is selected, the position of the main
		       Wireshark window	will be	saved when Wireshark exits,
		       and used	when Wireshark is started again.

		 Save Window Size
		       If this item is selected, the size of the main
		       Wireshark window	will be	saved when Wireshark exits,
		       and used	when Wireshark is started again.

		 Save Window Maximized state
		       If this item is selected	the maximize state of the main
		       Wireshark window	will be	saved when Wireshark exists,
		       and used	when Wireshark is started again.

		 File Open Dialog Behavior
		       This item allows	the user to select how Wireshark
		       handles the listing of the "File	Open" Dialog when
		       opening trace files.  "Remember Last Directory" causes
		       Wireshark to automatically position the dialog in the
		       directory of the	most recently opened file, even
		       between launches	of Wireshark.  "Always Open in
		       Directory" allows the user to define a persistent
		       directory that the dialog will always default to.

		 Directory
		       Allows the user to specify a persistent File Open
		       directory.  Trailing slashes or backslashes will
		       automatically be	added.

		 File Open Preview timeout
		       This items allows the user to define how	much time is
		       spend reading the capture file to present preview data
		       in the File Open	dialog.

		 Open Recent maximum list entries
		       The File	menu supports a	recent file list.  This	items
		       allows the user to specify how many files are kept
		       track of	in this	list.

		 Ask for unsaved capture files
		       When closing a capture file or Wireshark	itself if the
		       file isn't saved	yet the	user is	presented the option
		       to save the file	when this item is set.

		 Wrap during find
		       This items determines the behavior when reaching	the
		       beginning or the	end of a capture file.	When set the
		       search wraps around and continues, otherwise it stops.

		 Settings dialogs show a save button
		       This item determines if the various dialogs sport an
		       explicit	Save button or that save is implicit in	OK /
		       Apply.

		 Web browser command
		       This entry specifies the	command	line to	launch a web
		       browser.	 It is used to access online content, like the
		       Wiki and	user guide.  Use '%s' to place the request URL
		       in the command line.

	   Layout Preferences
		 The Layout page lets you specify the general layout of	the
		 main window.  You can choose from six different layouts and
		 fill the three	panes with the contents	you like.

		 Scrollbars
		       The vertical scrollbars in the three panes can be set
		       to be either on the left	or the right.

		 Alternating row colors
		 Hex Display
		       The highlight method in the hex dump display for	the
		       selected	protocol item can be set to use	either inverse
		       video, or bold characters.

		 Toolbar style
		 Filter	toolbar	placement
		 Custom	window title
	   Column Preferences
		 The Columns page lets you specify the number, title, and
		 format	of each	column in the packet list.

		 The Column title entry	is used	to specify the title of	the
		 column	displayed at the top of	the packet list.  The type of
		 data that the column displays can be specified	using the
		 Column	format option menu.  The row of	buttons	on the left
		 perform the following actions:

		 New   Adds a new column to the	list.

		 Delete
		       Deletes the currently selected list item.

		 Up / Down
		       Moves the selected list item up or down one position.

	   Font	Preferences
		 The Font page lets you	select the font	to be used for most
		 text.

	   Color Preferences
		 The Colors page can be	used to	change the color of the	text
		 displayed in the TCP stream window and	for marked packets.
		 To change a color, simply select an attribute from the	"Set:"
		 menu and use the color	selector to get	the desired color.
		 The new text colors are displayed as a	sample text.

	   Capture Preferences
		 The Capture page lets you specify various parameters for
		 capturing live	packet data; these are used the	first time a
		 capture is started.

		 The Interface:	combo box lets you specify the interface from
		 which to capture packet data, or the name of a	FIFO from
		 which to get the packet data.

		 The Data link type: option menu lets you, for some
		 interfaces, select the	data link header you want to see on
		 the packets you capture.  For example,	in some	OSes and with
		 some versions of libpcap, you can choose, on an 802.11
		 interface, whether the	packets	should appear as Ethernet
		 packets (with a fake Ethernet header) or as 802.11 packets.

		 The Limit each	packet to ... bytes check box lets you set the
		 snapshot length to use	when capturing live data; turn on the
		 check box, and	then set the number of bytes to	use as the
		 snapshot length.

		 The Filter: text entry	lets you set a capture filter
		 expression to be used when capturing.

		 If any	of the environment variables SSH_CONNECTION,
		 SSH_CLIENT, REMOTEHOST, DISPLAY, or SESSIONNAME are set,
		 Wireshark will	create a default capture filter	that excludes
		 traffic from the hosts	and ports defined in those variables.

		 The Capture packets in	promiscuous mode check box lets	you
		 specify whether to put	the interface in promiscuous mode when
		 capturing.

		 The Update list of packets in real time check box lets	you
		 specify that the display should be updated as packets are
		 seen.

		 The Automatic scrolling in live capture check box lets	you
		 specify whether, in an	"Update	list of	packets	in real	time"
		 capture, the packet list pane should automatically scroll to
		 show the most recently	captured packets.

	   Printing Preferences
		 The radio buttons at the top of the Printing page allow you
		 choose	between	printing packets with the File:Print Packet
		 menu item as text or PostScript, and sending the output
		 directly to a command or saving it to a file.	The Command:
		 text entry box, on UNIX-compatible systems, is	the command to
		 send files to (usually	lpr), and the File: entry box lets you
		 enter the name	of the file you	wish to	save to.
		 Additionally, you can select the File:	button to browse the
		 file system for a particular save file.

	   Name	Resolution Preferences
		 The Enable MAC	name resolution, Enable	network	name
		 resolution and	Enable transport name resolution check boxes
		 let you specify whether MAC addresses,	network	addresses, and
		 transport-layer port numbers should be	translated to names.

		 The Enable concurrent DNS name	resolution allows Wireshark to
		 send out multiple name	resolution requests and	not wait for
		 the result before continuing dissection.  This	speeds up
		 dissection with network name resolution but initially may
		 miss resolutions.  The	number of concurrent requests can be
		 set here as well.

		 SMI paths

		 SMI modules

	   RTP Player Preferences
		 This page allows you to select	the number of channels visible
		 in the	RTP player window.  It determines the height of	the
		 window, more channels are possible and	visible	by means of a
		 scroll	bar.

	   Protocol Preferences
		 There are also	pages for various protocols that Wireshark
		 dissects, controlling the way Wireshark handles those
		 protocols.

       Edit Capture Filter List
       Edit Display Filter List
       Capture Filter
       Display Filter
       Read Filter
       Search Filter
	   The Edit Capture Filter List	dialog lets you	create,	modify,	and
	   delete capture filters, and the Edit	Display	Filter List dialog
	   lets	you create, modify, and	delete display filters.

	   The Capture Filter dialog lets you do all of	the editing operations
	   listed, and also lets you choose or construct a filter to be	used
	   when	capturing packets.

	   The Display Filter dialog lets you do all of	the editing operations
	   listed, and also lets you choose or construct a filter to be	used
	   to filter the current capture being viewed.

	   The Read Filter dialog lets you do all of the editing operations
	   listed, and also lets you choose or construct a filter to be	used
	   to as a read	filter for a capture file you open.

	   The Search Filter dialog lets you do	all of the editing operations
	   listed, and also lets you choose or construct a filter expression
	   to be used in a find	operation.

	   In all of those dialogs, the	Filter name entry specifies a
	   descriptive name for	a filter, e.g.	Web and	DNS traffic.  The
	   Filter string entry is the text that	actually describes the
	   filtering action to take, as	described above.The dialog buttons
	   perform the following actions:

	   New	 If there is text in the two entry boxes, creates a new
		 associated list item.

	   Edit	 Modifies the currently	selected list item to match what's in
		 the entry boxes.

	   Delete
		 Deletes the currently selected	list item.

	   Add Expression...
		 For display filter expressions, pops up a dialog box to allow
		 you to	construct a filter expression to test a	particular
		 field;	it offers lists	of field names,	and, when appropriate,
		 lists from which to select tests to perform on	the field and
		 values	with which to compare it.  In that dialog box, the OK
		 button	will cause the filter expression you constructed to be
		 entered into the Filter string	entry at the current cursor
		 position.

	   OK	 In the	Capture	Filter dialog, closes the dialog box and makes
		 the filter in the Filter string entry the filter in the
		 Capture Preferences dialog.  In the Display Filter dialog,
		 closes	the dialog box and makes the filter in the Filter
		 string	entry the current display filter, and applies it to
		 the current capture.  In the Read Filter dialog, closes the
		 dialog	box and	makes the filter in the	Filter string entry
		 the filter in the Open	Capture	File dialog.  In the Search
		 Filter	dialog,	closes the dialog box and makes	the filter in
		 the Filter string entry the filter in the Find	Packet dialog.

	   Apply Makes the filter in the Filter	string entry the current
		 display filter, and applies it	to the current capture.

	   Save	 If the	list of	filters	being edited is	the list of capture
		 filters, saves	the current filter list	to the personal
		 capture filters file, and if the list of filters being	edited
		 is the	list of	display	filters, saves the current filter list
		 to the	personal display filters file.

	   Close Closes	the dialog without doing anything with the filter in
		 the Filter string entry.

       The Color Filters Dialog
	   This	dialog displays	a list of color	filters	and allows it to be
	   modified.

	   THE FILTER LIST
	       Single rows may be selected by clicking.	 Multiple rows may be
	       selected	by using the ctrl and shift keys in combination	with
	       the mouse button.

	   NEW Adds a new filter at the	bottom of the list and opens the Edit
	       Color Filter dialog box.	 You will have to alter	the filter
	       expression at least before the filter will be accepted.	The
	       format of color filter expressions is identical to that of
	       display filters.	 The new filter	is selected, so	it may
	       immediately be moved up and down, deleted or edited.  To	avoid
	       confusion all filters are unselected before the new filter is
	       created.

	   EDIT
	       Opens the Edit Color Filter dialog box for the selected filter.
	       (If this	button is disabled you may have	more than one filter
	       selected, making	it ambiguous which is to be edited.)

	   ENABLE
	       Enables the selected color filter(s).

	   DISABLE
	       Disables	the selected color filter(s).

	   DELETE
	       Deletes the selected color filter(s).

	   EXPORT
	       Allows you to choose a file in which to save the	current	list
	       of color	filters.  You may also choose to save only the
	       selected	filters.  A button is provided to save the filters in
	       the global color	filters	file (you must have sufficient
	       permissions to write this file, of course).

	   IMPORT
	       Allows you to choose a file containing color filters which are
	       then added to the bottom	of the current list.  All the added
	       filters are selected, so	they may be moved to the correct
	       position	in the list as a group.	 To avoid confusion, all
	       filters are unselected before the new filters are imported.  A
	       button is provided to load the filters from the global color
	       filters file.

	   CLEAR
	       Deletes your personal color filters file, reloads the global
	       color filters file, if any, and closes the dialog.

	   UP  Moves the selected filter(s) up the list, making	it more	likely
	       that they will be used to color packets.

	   DOWN
	       Moves the selected filter(s) down the list, making it less
	       likely that they	will be	used to	color packets.

	   OK  Closes the dialog and uses the color filters as they stand.

	   APPLY
	       Colors the packets according to the current list	of color
	       filters,	but does not close the dialog.

	   SAVE
	       Saves the current list of color filters in your personal	color
	       filters file.  Unless you do this they will not be used the
	       next time you start Wireshark.

	   CLOSE
	       Closes the dialog without changing the coloration of the
	       packets.	 Note that changes you have made to the	current	list
	       of color	filters	are not	undone.

       Capture Options Dialog
	   The Capture Options Dialog lets you specify various parameters for
	   capturing live packet data.

	   The Interface: field	lets you specify the interface from which to
	   capture packet data or a command from which to get the packet data
	   via a pipe.

	   The Link layer header type: field lets you specify the interfaces
	   link	layer header type.  This field is usually disabled, as most
	   interface have only one header type.

	   The Capture packets in promiscuous mode check box lets you specify
	   whether the interface should	be put into promiscuous	mode when
	   capturing.

	   The Limit each packet to ...	bytes check box	and field lets you
	   specify a maximum number of bytes per packet	to capture and save;
	   if the check	box is not checked, the	limit will be 262144 bytes.

	   The Capture Filter: entry lets you specify the capture filter using
	   a tcpdump-style filter string as described above.

	   The File: entry lets	you specify the	file into which	captured
	   packets should be saved, as in the Printer Options dialog above.
	   If not specified, the captured packets will be saved	in a temporary
	   file; you can save those packets to a file with the File:Save As
	   menu	item.

	   The Use multiple files check	box lets you specify that the capture
	   should be done in "multiple files" mode.  This option is disabled,
	   if the Update list of packets in real time option is	checked.

	   The Next file every ...  megabyte(s)	check box and fields lets you
	   specify that	a switch to a next file	should be done if the
	   specified filesize is reached.  You can also	select the appropriate
	   unit, but beware that the filesize has a maximum of 2 GiB.  The
	   check box is	forced to be checked, as "multiple files" mode
	   requires a file size	to be specified.

	   The Next file every ... minute(s) check box and fields lets you
	   specify that	the switch to a	next file should be done after the
	   specified time has elapsed, even if the specified capture size is
	   not reached.

	   The Ring buffer with	... files field	lets you specify the number of
	   files of a ring buffer.  This feature will capture into the first
	   file	again, after the specified number of files have	been used.

	   The Stop capture after ... files field lets you specify the number
	   of capture files used, until	the capture is stopped.

	   The Stop capture after ... packet(s)	check box and field let	you
	   specify that	Wireshark should stop capturing	after having captured
	   some	number of packets; if the check	box is not checked, Wireshark
	   will	not stop capturing at some fixed number	of captured packets.

	   The Stop capture after ... megabyte(s) check	box and	field lets you
	   specify that	Wireshark should stop capturing	after the file to
	   which captured packets are being saved grows	as large as or larger
	   than	some specified number of megabytes.  If	the check box is not
	   checked, Wireshark will not stop capturing at some capture file
	   size	(although the operating	system on which	Wireshark is running,
	   or the available disk space,	may still limit	the maximum size of a
	   capture file).  This	option is disabled, if "multiple files"	mode
	   is used,

	   The Stop capture after ...  second(s) check box and field let you
	   specify that	Wireshark should stop capturing	after it has been
	   capturing for some number of	seconds; if the	check box is not
	   checked, Wireshark will not stop capturing after some fixed time
	   has elapsed.

	   The Update list of packets in real time check box lets you specify
	   whether the display should be updated as packets are	captured and,
	   if you specify that,	the Automatic scrolling	in live	capture	check
	   box lets you	specify	the packet list	pane should automatically
	   scroll to show the most recently captured packets as	new packets
	   arrive.

	   The Enable MAC name resolution, Enable network name resolution and
	   Enable transport name resolution check boxes	let you	specify
	   whether MAC addresses, network addresses, and transport-layer port
	   numbers should be translated	to names.

       About
	   The About dialog lets you view various information about Wireshark.

       About:Wireshark
	   The Wireshark page lets you view general information	about
	   Wireshark, like the installed version, licensing information	and
	   such.

       About:Authors
	   The Authors page shows the author and all contributors.

       About:Folders
	   The Folders page lets you view the directory	names where Wireshark
	   is searching	it's various configuration and other files.

       About:Plugins
	   The Plugins page lets you view the dissector	plugin modules
	   available on	your system.

	   The Plugins List shows the name and version of each dissector
	   plugin module found on your system.

	   On Unix-compatible systems, the plugins are looked for in the
	   following directories: the lib/wireshark/plugins/$VERSION directory
	   under the main installation directory (for example,
	   /usr/local/lib/wireshark/plugins/$VERSION), and then
	   $HOME/.wireshark/plugins.

	   On Windows systems, the plugins are looked for in the following
	   directories:	plugins\$VERSION directory under the main installation
	   directory (for example, C:\Program
	   Files\Wireshark\plugins\$VERSION), and then
	   %APPDATA%\Wireshark\plugins\$VERSION	(or, if	%APPDATA% isn't
	   defined, %USERPROFILE%\Application
	   Data\Wireshark\plugins\$VERSION).

	   $VERSION is the version number of the plugin	interface, which is
	   typically the version number	of Wireshark.  Note that a dissector
	   plugin module may support more than one protocol; there is not
	   necessarily a one-to-one correspondence between dissector plugin
	   modules and protocols.  Protocols supported by a dissector plugin
	   module are enabled and disabled using the Edit:Protocols dialog
	   box,	just as	protocols built	into Wireshark are.

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>.

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

FILES
       These files contains various Wireshark configuration settings.

       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 flag -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:

	     # Vertical	scrollbars should be on	right side?
	     # TRUE or FALSE (case-insensitive).
	     gui.scrollbar_on_right: 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.

	   Note: Whenever the preferences are saved by using the Save button
	   in the Edit:Preferences dialog box, your personal preferences file
	   will	be overwritten with the	new settings, destroying any comments
	   and unknown/obsolete	settings that were in the file.

       Recent
	   The recent file contains personal settings (mostly GUI related)
	   such	as the current Wireshark window	size.  The file	is saved at
	   program exit	and read in at program start automatically.  Note: The
	   command line	flag -o	may be used to override	settings from this
	   file.

	   The settings	in this	file have the same format as in	the
	   preferences files, and the same directory as	for the	personal
	   preferences file is used.

	   Note: Whenever Wireshark is closed, your recent file	will be
	   overwritten with the	new settings, destroying any comments and
	   unknown/obsolete settings that were in the file.

       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

	   If a	protocol is listed in the global disabled_protos file, it is
	   not displayed in the	Analyze:Enabled	Protocols dialog box, and so
	   cannot be enabled by	the user.

	   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.

	   Note: Whenever the disabled protocols list is saved by using	the
	   Save	button in the Analyze:Enabled Protocols	dialog box, your
	   personal disabled protocols file will be overwritten	with the new
	   settings, destroying	any comments that were in the 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 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.  Both the global subnets file and personal subnets
	   files are used if they exist.

	   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 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 such as:

	     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.
	   Both	the global services file and personal services files are used
	   if they exist.

	   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.

       Capture Filters
	   The cfilters	files contain system-wide and personal capture
	   filters.  Each line contains	one filter, starting with the string
	   displayed in	the dialog box in quotation marks, followed by the
	   filter string itself:

	     "HTTP" port 80
	     "DCERPC" port 135

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

	   The personal	cfilters file uses the same directory as the personal
	   preferences file.  It is written through the	Capture:Capture
	   Filters dialog.

	   If the global cfilters file exists, it is used only if the personal
	   cfilters file does not exist; global	and personal capture filters
	   are not merged.

       Display Filters
	   The dfilters	files contain system-wide and personal display
	   filters.  Each line contains	one filter, starting with the string
	   displayed in	the dialog box in quotation marks, followed by the
	   filter string itself:

	     "HTTP" http
	     "DCERPC" dcerpc

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

	   The personal	dfilters file uses the same directory as the personal
	   preferences file.  It is written through the	Analyze:Display
	   Filters dialog.

	   If the global dfilters file exists, it is used only if the personal
	   dfilters file does not exist; global	and personal display filters
	   are not merged.

       Color Filters (Coloring Rules)
	   The colorfilters files contain system-wide and personal color
	   filters.  Each line contains	one filter, starting with the string
	   displayed in	the dialog box,	followed by the	corresponding display
	   filter.  Then the background	and foreground colors are appended:

	     # a comment
	     @tcp@tcp@[59345,58980,65534][0,0,0]
	     @udp@udp@[28834,57427,65533][0,0,0]

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

	   The personal	colorfilters file uses the same	directory as the
	   personal preferences	file.  It is written through the View:Coloring
	   Rules dialog.

	   If the global colorfilters file exists, it is used only if the
	   personal colorfilters file does not exist; global and personal
	   color filters are not merged.

       Plugins
	   See above in	the description	of the About:Plugins page.

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,	Wireshark will call abort(3)
	   when	a dissector bug	is encountered.	 abort(3) will cause the
	   program to exit abnormally; if you are running Wireshark 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,	Wireshark 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 Wireshark	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_QUIT_AFTER_CAPTURE
	   Cause Wireshark to exit after the end of the	capture	session.  This
	   doesn't automatically start a capture; you must still use -k	to do
	   that.  You must also	specify	an autostop condition, e.g.  -c	or -a
	   duration:....  This means that you will not be able to see the
	   results of the capture after	it stops; it's primarily useful	for
	   testing.

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

NOTES
       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
   Original Author
	   Gerald Combs		   <gerald[AT]wireshark.org>

   Contributors
	   Gilbert Ramirez	   <gram[AT]alumni.rice.edu>
	   Thomas Bottom	   <tom.bottom[AT]labxtechnologies.com>
	   Chris Pane		   <chris.pane[AT]labxtechnologies.com>
	   Hannes R. Boehm	   <hannes[AT]boehm.org>
	   Mike	Hall		   <mike[AT]hallzone.net>
	   Bobo	Rajec		   <bobo[AT]bsp-consulting.sk>
	   Laurent Deniel	   <laurent.deniel[AT]free.fr>
	   Don Lafontaine	   <lafont02[AT]cn.ca>
	   Guy Harris		   <guy[AT]alum.mit.edu>
	   Simon Wilkinson	   <sxw[AT]dcs.ed.ac.uk>
	   Joerg Mayer		    <jmayer[AT]loplof.de>
	   Martin Maciaszek	   <fastjack[AT]i-s-o.net>
	   Didier Jorand	   <Didier.Jorand[AT]alcatel.fr>
	   Jun-ichiro itojun Hagino <itojun[AT]itojun.org>
	   Richard Sharpe	   <realrichardsharpe[AT]gmail.com>
	   John	McDermott	   <jjm[AT]jkintl.com>
	   Jeff	Jahr		   <jjahr[AT]shastanets.com>
	   Brad	Robel-Forrest	   <bradr[AT]watchguard.com>
	   Ashok Narayanan	   <ashokn[AT]cisco.com>
	   Aaron Hillegass	   <aaron[AT]classmax.com>
	   Jason Lango		   <jal[AT]netapp.com>
	   Johan Feyaerts	   <Johan.Feyaerts[AT]siemens.com>
	   Olivier Abad		   <oabad[AT]noos.fr>
	   Thierry Andry	   <Thierry.Andry[AT]advalvas.be>
	   Jeff	Foster		   <jfoste[AT]woodward.com>
	   Peter Torvals	   <petertv[AT]xoommail.com>
	   Christophe Tronche	   <ch.tronche[AT]computer.org>
	   Nathan Neulinger	   <nneul[AT]umr.edu>
	   Tomislav Vujec	   <tvujec[AT]carnet.hr>
	   Kojak		   <kojak[AT]bigwig.net>
	   Uwe Girlich		   <Uwe.Girlich[AT]philosys.de>
	   Warren Young		   <tangent[AT]mail.com>
	   Heikki Vatiainen	   <hessu[AT]cs.tut.fi>
	   Greg	Hankins		   <gregh[AT]twoguys.org>
	   Jerry Talkington	   <jtalkington[AT]users.sourceforge.net>
	   Dave	Chapeskie	   <dchapes[AT]ddm.on.ca>
	   James Coe		   <jammer[AT]cin.net>
	   Bert	Driehuis	   <driehuis[AT]playbeing.org>
	   Stuart Stanley	   <stuarts[AT]mxmail.net>
	   John	Thomes		   <john[AT]ensemblecom.com>
	   Laurent Cazalet	   <laurent.cazalet[AT]mailclub.net>
	   Thomas Parvais	   <thomas.parvais[AT]advalvas.be>
	   Gerrit Gehnen	   <G.Gehnen[AT]atrie.de>
	   Craig Newell		   <craign[AT]cheque.uq.edu.au>
	   Ed Meaney		   <emeaney[AT]cisco.com>
	   Dietmar Petras	   <DPetras[AT]ELSA.de>
	   Fred	Reimer		   <fwr[AT]ga.prestige.net>
	   Florian Lohoff	   <flo[AT]rfc822.org>
	   Jochen Friedrich	   <jochen+ethereal[AT]scram.de>
	   Paul	Welchinski	   <paul.welchinski[AT]telusplanet.net>
	   Doug	Nazar		   <nazard[AT]dragoninc.on.ca>
	   Andreas Sikkema	   <h323[AT]ramdyne.nl>
	   Mark	Muhlestein	   <mmm[AT]netapp.com>
	   Graham Bloice	   <graham.bloice[AT]trihedral.com>
	   Ralf	Schneider	   <ralf.schneider[AT]alcatel.se>
	   Yaniv Kaul		   <mykaul[AT]gmail.com>
	   Paul	Ionescu		   <paul[AT]acorp.ro>
	   Mark	Burton		   <markb[AT]ordern.com>
	   Stefan Raab		   <sraab[AT]cisco.com>
	   Mark	Clayton		   <clayton[AT]shore.net>
	   Michael Rozhavsky	   <mike[AT]tochna.technion.ac.il>
	   Dug Song		   <dugsong[AT]monkey.org>
	   Michael Tuexen	    <tuexen[AT]wireshark.org>
	   Bruce Korb		   <bkorb[AT]sco.com>
	   Jose	Pedro Oliveira	   <jpo[AT]di.uminho.pt>
	   David Frascone	   <dave[AT]frascone.com>
	   Peter Kjellerstedt	   <pkj[AT]axis.com>
	   Phil	Techau		   <phil_t[AT]altavista.net>
	   Wes Hardaker		   <hardaker[AT]users.sourceforge.net>
	   Robert Tsai		   <rtsai[AT]netapp.com>
	   Craig Metz		   <cmetz[AT]inner.net>
	   Per Flock		   <per.flock[AT]axis.com>
	   Jack	Keane		   <jkeane[AT]OpenReach.com>
	   Brian Wellington	   <bwelling[AT]xbill.org>
	   Santeri Paavolainen	   <santtu[AT]ssh.com>
	   Ulrich Kiermayr	   <uk[AT]ap.univie.ac.at>
	   Neil	Hunter		   <neil.hunter[AT]energis-squared.com>
	   Ralf	Holzer		   <ralf[AT]well.com>
	   Craig Rodrigues	   <rodrigc[AT]attbi.com>
	   Ed Warnicke		   <hagbard[AT]physics.rutgers.edu>
	   Johan Jorgensen	   <johan.jorgensen[AT]axis.com>
	   Frank Singleton	   <frank.singleton[AT]ericsson.com>
	   Kevin Shi		   <techishi[AT]ms22.hinet.net>
	   Mike	Frisch		   <mfrisch[AT]isurfer.ca>
	   Burke Lau		   <burke_lau[AT]agilent.com>
	   Martti Kuparinen	   <martti.kuparinen[AT]iki.fi>
	   David Hampton	   <dhampton[AT]mac.com>
	   Kent	Engstroem	    <kent[AT]unit.liu.se>
	   Ronnie Sahlberg	   <ronniesahlberg[AT]gmail.com>
	   Borosa Tomislav	   <tomislav.borosa[AT]SIEMENS.HR>
	   Alexandre P.	Ferreira   <alexandref[AT]tcoip.com.br>
	   Simharajan Srishylam	   <Simharajan.Srishylam[AT]netapp.com>
	   Greg	Kilfoyle	   <gregk[AT]redback.com>
	   James E. Flemer	   <jflemer[AT]acm.jhu.edu>
	   Peter Lei		   <peterlei[AT]cisco.com>
	   Thomas Gimpel	   <thomas.gimpel[AT]ferrari.de>
	   Albert Chin		   <china[AT]thewrittenword.com>
	   Charles Levert	   <charles[AT]comm.polymtl.ca>
	   Todd	Sabin		   <tas[AT]webspan.net>
	   Eduardo Perez Ureta	   <eperez[AT]dei.inf.uc3m.es>
	   Martin Thomas	   <martin_a_thomas[AT]yahoo.com>
	   Hartmut Mueller	   <hartmut[AT]wendolene.ping.de>
	   Michal Melerowicz	   <Michal.Melerowicz[AT]nokia.com>
	   Hannes Gredler	   <hannes[AT]juniper.net>
	   Inoue		   <inoue[AT]ainet.or.jp>
	   Olivier Biot		   <obiot.ethereal[AT]gmail.com>
	   Patrick Wolfe	   <pjw[AT]zocalo.cellular.ameritech.com>
	   Martin Held		   <Martin.Held[AT]icn.siemens.de>
	   Riaan Swart		   <rswart[AT]cs.sun.ac.za>
	   Christian Lacunza	   <celacunza[AT]gmx.net>
	   Scott Renfro		   <scott[AT]renfro.org>
	   Juan	Toledo		   <toledo[AT]users.sourceforge.net>
	   Jean-Christian Pennetier <jeanchristian.pennetier[AT]rd.francetelecom.fr>
	   Jian	Yu		   <bgp4news[AT]yahoo.com>
	   Eran	Mann		   <emann[AT]opticalaccess.com>
	   Andy	Hood		   <ajhood[AT]fl.net.au>
	   Randy McEoin		   <rmceoin[AT]ahbelo.com>
	   Edgar Iglesias	   <edgar.iglesias[AT]axis.com>
	   Martina Obermeier	   <Martina.Obermeier[AT]icn.siemens.de>
	   Javier Achirica	   <achirica[AT]ttd.net>
	   B. Johannessen	   <bob[AT]havoq.com>
	   Thierry Pelle	   <thierry.pelle[AT]laposte.net>
	   Francisco Javier Cabello <fjcabello[AT]vtools.es>
	   Laurent Rabret	   <laurent.rabret[AT]rd.francetelecom.fr>
	   nuf si		   <gnippiks[AT]yahoo.com>
	   Jeff	Morriss		   <jeff.morriss.ws[AT]gmail.com>
	   Aamer Akhter		   <aakhter[AT]cisco.com>
	   Pekka Savola		   <pekkas[AT]netcore.fi>
	   David Eisner		   <deisner[AT]gmail.com>
	   Steve Dickson	   <steved[AT]talarian.com>
	   Markus Seehofer	   <Markus.Seehofer[AT]hirschmann.de>
	   Lee Berger		   <lberger[AT]roy.org>
	   Motonori Shindo	   <motonori[AT]shin.do>
	   Terje Krogdahl	   <tekr[AT]nextra.com>
	   Jean-Francois Mule	   <jfm[AT]cablelabs.com>
	   Thomas Wittwer	   <thomas.wittwer[AT]iclip.ch>
	   Matthias Nyffenegger	   <matthias.nyffenegger[AT]iclip.ch>
	   Palle Lyckegaard	   <Palle[AT]lyckegaard.dk>
	   Nicolas Balkota	   <balkota[AT]mac.com>
	   Tom Uijldert		   <Tom.Uijldert[AT]cmg.nl>
	   Akira Endoh		   <endoh[AT]netmarks.co.jp>
	   Graeme Hewson	   <ghewson[AT]wormhole.me.uk>
	   Pasi	Eronen		   <pe[AT]iki.fi>
	   Georg von Zezschwitz	   <gvz[AT]2scale.net>
	   Steffen Weinreich	   <steve[AT]weinreich.org>
	   Marc	Milgram		   <ethereal[AT]mmilgram.NOSPAMmail.net>
	   Gordon McKinney	   <gordon[AT]night-ray.com>
	   Pavel Novotny	   <Pavel.Novotny[AT]icn.siemens.de>
	   Shinsuke Suzuki	   <suz[AT]kame.net>
	   Andrew C. Feren	   <acferen[AT]yahoo.com>
	   Tomas Kukosa		   <tomas.kukosa[AT]siemens.com>
	   Andreas Stockmeier	   <a.stockmeier[AT]avm.de>
	   Pekka Nikander	   <pekka.nikander[AT]nomadiclab.com>
	   Hamish Moffatt	   <hamish[AT]cloud.net.au>
	   Kazushi Sugyo	   <k-sugyou[AT]nwsl.mesh.ad.jp>
	   Tim Potter		   <tpot[AT]samba.org>
	   Raghu Angadi		   <rangadi[AT]inktomi.com>
	   Taisuke Sasaki	   <sasaki[AT]soft.net.fujitsu.co.jp>
	   Tim Newsham		   <newsham[AT]lava.net>
	   Tom Nisbet		   <Tnisbet[AT]VisualNetworks.com>
	   Darren New		   <dnew[AT]san.rr.com>
	   Pavel Mores		   <pvl[AT]uh.cz>
	   Bernd Becker		   <bb[AT]bernd-becker.de>
	   Heinz Prantner	   <Heinz.Prantner[AT]radisys.com>
	   Irfan Khan		   <ikhan[AT]qualcomm.com>
	   Jayaram V.R		   <vjayar[AT]cisco.com>
	   Dinesh Dutt		   <ddutt[AT]cisco.com>
	   Nagarjuna Venna	   <nvenna[AT]Brixnet.com>
	   Jirka Novak		   <j.novak[AT]netsystem.cz>
	   Ricardo Barroetaven~a    <rbarroetavena[AT]veufort.com>
	   Alan	Harrison	   <alanharrison[AT]mail.com>
	   Mike	Frantzen	   <frantzen[AT]w4g.org>
	   Charlie Duke		   <cduke[AT]fvc.com>
	   Alfred Arnold	   <Alfred.Arnold[AT]elsa.de>
	   Dermot Bradley	   <dermot.bradley[AT]openwave.com>
	   Adam	Sulmicki	   <adam[AT]cfar.umd.edu>
	   Kari	Tiirikainen	   <kari.tiirikainen[AT]nokia.com>
	   John	Mackenzie	   <John.A.Mackenzie[AT]t-online.de>
	   Peter Valchev	   <pvalchev[AT]openbsd.org>
	   Alex	Rozin		   <Arozin[AT]mrv.com>
	   Jouni Malinen	   <jkmaline[AT]cc.hut.fi>
	   Paul	E. Erkkila	   <pee[AT]erkkila.org>
	   Jakob Schlyter	   <jakob[AT]openbsd.org>
	   Jim Sienicki		   <sienicki[AT]issanni.com>
	   Steven French	   <sfrench[AT]us.ibm.com>
	   Diana Eichert	   <deicher[AT]sandia.gov>
	   Blair Cooper		   <blair[AT]teamon.com>
	   Kikuchi Ayamura	   <ayamura[AT]ayamura.org>
	   Didier Gautheron	   <dgautheron[AT]magic.fr>
	   Phil	Williams	   <csypbw[AT]comp.leeds.ac.uk>
	   Kevin Humphries	   <khumphries[AT]networld.com>
	   Erik	Nordstroem	    <erik.nordstrom[AT]it.uu.se>
	   Devin Heitmueller	   <dheitmueller[AT]netilla.com>
	   Chenjiang Hu		   <chu[AT]chiaro.com>
	   Kan Sasaki		   <sasaki[AT]fcc.ad.jp>
	   Stefan Wenk		   <stefan.wenk[AT]gmx.at>
	   Ruud	Linders		   <ruud[AT]lucent.com>
	   Andrew Esh		   <Andrew.Esh[AT]tricord.com>
	   Greg	Morris		   <GMORRIS[AT]novell.com>
	   Dirk	Steinberg	   <dws[AT]dirksteinberg.de>
	   Kari	Heikkila	   <kari.o.heikkila[AT]nokia.com>
	   Olivier Dreux	   <Olivier.Dreux[AT]alcatel.fr>
	   Michael Stiller	   <ms[AT]2scale.net>
	   Antti Tuominen	   <ajtuomin[AT]tml.hut.fi>
	   Martin Gignac	   <lmcgign[AT]mobilitylab.net>
	   John	Wells		   <wells[AT]ieee.org>
	   Loic	Tortay		   <tortay[AT]cc.in2p3.fr>
	   Steve Housley	   <Steve_Housley[AT]eur.3com.com>
	   Peter Hawkins	   <peter[AT]hawkins.emu.id.au>
	   Bill	Fumerola	   <billf[AT]FreeBSD.org>
	   Chris Waters		   <chris[AT]waters.co.nz>
	   Solomon Peachy	   <pizza[AT]shaftnet.org>
	   Jaime Fournier	   <Jaime.Fournier[AT]hush.com>
	   Markus Steinmann	   <ms[AT]seh.de>
	   Tsutomu Mieno	   <iitom[AT]utouto.com>
	   Yasuhiro Shirasaki	   <yasuhiro[AT]gnome.gr.jp>
	   Anand V. Narwani	   <anand[AT]narwani.org>
	   Christopher K. St. John <cks[AT]distributopia.com>
	   Nix			   <nix[AT]esperi.demon.co.uk>
	   Liviu Daia		   <Liviu.Daia[AT]imar.ro>
	   Richard Urwin	   <richard[AT]soronlin.org.uk>
	   Prabhakar Krishnan	   <Prabhakar.Krishnan[AT]netapp.com>
	   Jim McDonough	   <jmcd[AT]us.ibm.com>
	   Sergei Shokhor	   <sshokhor[AT]uroam.com>
	   Hidetaka Ogawa	   <ogawa[AT]bs2.qnes.nec.co.jp>
	   Jan Kratochvil	   <short[AT]ucw.cz>
	   Alfred Koebler	   <ak[AT]icon-sult.de>
	   Vassilii Khachaturov	   <Vassilii.Khachaturov[AT]comverse.com>
	   Bill	Studenmund	   <wrstuden[AT]wasabisystems.com>
	   Brian Bruns		   <camber[AT]ais.org>
	   Flavio Poletti	   <flavio[AT]polettix.it>
	   Marcus Haebler	   <haeblerm[AT]yahoo.com>
	   Ulf Lamping		   <ulf.lamping[AT]web.de>
	   Matthew Smart	   <smart[AT]monkey.org>
	   Luke	Howard		   <lukeh[AT]au.padl.com>
	   PC Drew		   <drewpc[AT]ibsncentral.com>
	   Renzo Tomas		   <renzo.toma[AT]xs4all.nl>
	   Clive A. Stubbings	   <eth[AT]vjet.demon.co.uk>
	   Steve Langasek	   <vorlon[AT]netexpress.net>
	   Brad	Hards		   <bhards[AT]bigpond.net.au>
	   cjs 2895		   <cjs2895[AT]hotmail.com>
	   Lutz	Jaenicke	   <Lutz.Jaenicke[AT]aet.TU-Cottbus.DE>
	   Senthil Kumar Nagappan  <sknagappan[AT]yahoo.com>
	   Jason House		   <jhouse[AT]mitre.org>
	   Peter Fales		   <psfales[AT]lucent.com>
	   Fritz Budiyanto	   <fritzb88[AT]yahoo.com>
	   Jean-Baptiste Marchand  <Jean-Baptiste.Marchand[AT]hsc.fr>
	   Andreas Trauer	   <andreas.trauer[AT]siemens.com>
	   Ronald Henderson	   <Ronald.Henderson[AT]CognicaseUSA.com>
	   Brian Ginsbach	   <ginsbach[AT]cray.com>
	   Dave	Richards	   <d_m_richards[AT]comcast.net>
	   Martin Regner	   <martin.regner[AT]chello.se>
	   Jason Greene		   <jason[AT]inetgurus.net>
	   Marco Molteni	   <mmolteni[AT]cisco.com>
	   James Harris		   <jharris[AT]fourhorsemen.org>
	   rmkml		   <rmkml[AT]wanadoo.fr>
	   Anders Broman	   <anders.broman[AT]ericsson.com>
	   Christian Falckenberg   <christian.falckenberg[AT]nortelnetworks.com>
	   Huagang Xie		   <xie[AT]lids.org>
	   Pasi	Kovanen		   <Pasi.Kovanen[AT]tahoenetworks.fi>
	   Teemu Rinta-aho	   <teemu.rinta-aho[AT]nomadiclab.com>
	   Martijn Schipper	   <mschipper[AT]globespanvirata.com>
	   Wayne Parrott	   <wayne_p[AT]pacific.net.au>
	   Laurent Meyer	   <laurent.meyer6[AT]wanadoo.fr>
	   Lars	Roland		   <Lars.Roland[AT]gmx.net>
	   Miha	Jemec		   <m.jemec[AT]iskratel.si>
	   Markus Friedl	   <markus[AT]openbsd.org>
	   Todd	Montgomery	   <tmontgom[AT]tibco.com>
	   emre			   <emre[AT]flash.net>
	   Stephen Shelley	   <steve.shelley[AT]attbi.com>
	   Erwin Rol		   <erwin[AT]erwinrol.com>
	   Duncan Laurie	   <duncan[AT]sun.com>
	   Tony	Schene		   <schene[AT]pcisys.net>
	   Matthijs Melchior	   <mmelchior[AT]xs4all.nl>
	   Garth Bushell	   <gbushell[AT]elipsan.com>
	   Mark	C. Brown	   <mbrown[AT]hp.com>
	   Can Erkin Acar	   <canacar[AT]eee.metu.edu.tr>
	   Martin Warnes	   <martin.warnes[AT]ntlworld.com>
	   J Bruce Fields	   <bfields[AT]fieldses.org>
	   tz			   <tz1[AT]mac.com>
	   Jeff	Liu		   <jqliu[AT]broadcom.com>
	   Niels Koot		   <Niels.Koot[AT]logicacmg.com>
	   Lionel Ains		   <lains[AT]gmx.net>
	   Joakim Wiberg	   <jow[AT]hms-networks.com>
	   Jeff	Rizzo		   <riz[AT]boogers.sf.ca.us>
	   Christoph Wiest	   <ch.wiest[AT]tesionmail.de>
	   Xuan	Zhang		   <xz[AT]aemail4u.com>
	   Thierry Martin	   <thierry.martin[AT]accellent-group.com>
	   Oleg	Terletsky	   <oleg.terletsky[AT]comverse.com>
	   Michael Lum		   <mlum[AT]telostech.com>
	   Shiang-Ming Huang	   <smhuang[AT]pcs.csie.nctu.edu.tw>
	   Tony	Lindstrom	   <tony.lindstrom[AT]ericsson.com>
	   Niklas Ogren		   <niklas.ogren[AT]71.se>
	   Jesper Peterson	   <jesper[AT]endace.com>
	   Giles Scott		   <gscott[AT]arubanetworks.com>
	   Vincent Jardin	   <vincent.jardin[AT]6wind.com>
	   Jean-Michel Fayard	   <jean-michel.fayard[AT]moufrei.de>
	   Josef Korelus	   <jkor[AT]quick.cz>
	   Brian K. Teravskis	   <Brian_Teravskis[AT]Cargill.com>
	   Nathan Jennings	   <natej.git[AT]gmail.com>
	   Hans	Viens		   <hviens[AT]mediatrix.com>
	   Kevin A. Noll	   <kevin.noll[AT]versatile.com>
	   Emanuele Caratti	   <wiz[AT]libero.it>
	   Graeme Reid		   <graeme.reid[AT]norwoodsystems.com>
	   Lars	Ruoff		   <lars.ruoff[AT]sxb.bsf.alcatel.fr>
	   Samuel Qu		   <samuel.qu[AT]utstar.com>
	   Baktha Muralitharan	   <muralidb[AT]cisco.com>
	   Loiec Minier		    <lool[AT]dooz.org>
	   Marcel Holtmann	   <marcel[AT]holtmann.org>
	   Scott Emberley	   <scotte[AT]netinst.com>
	   Brian Fundakowski Feldman <bfeldman[AT]fla.fujitsu.com>
	   Yuriy Sidelnikov	   <ysidelnikov[AT]hotmail.com>
	   Matthias Drochner	   <M.Drochner[AT]fz-juelich.de>
	   Dave	Sclarsky	   <dave_sclarsky[AT]cnt.com>
	   Scott Hovis		   <scott.hovis[AT]ums.msfc.nasa.gov>
	   David Fort		   <david.fort[AT]irisa.fr>
	   Felix Fei		   <felix.fei[AT]utstar.com>
	   Christoph Neusch	   <christoph.neusch[AT]nortelnetworks.com>
	   Jan Kiszka		   <jan.kiszka[AT]web.de>
	   Joshua Craig	Douglas	   <jdouglas[AT]enterasys.com>
	   Dick	Gooris		   <gooris[AT]alcatel-lucent.com>
	   Michael Shuldman	   <michaels[AT]inet.no>
	   Tadaaki Nagao	   <nagao[AT]iij.ad.jp>
	   Aaron Woo		   <woo[AT]itd.nrl.navy.mil>
	   Chris Wilson		   <chris[AT]mxtelecom.com>
	   Rolf	Fiedler		   <Rolf.Fiedler[AT]Innoventif.com>
	   Alastair Maw		   <ethereal[AT]almaw.com>
	   Sam Leffler		   <sam[AT]errno.com>
	   Martin Mathieson	   <martin.r.mathieson[AT]googlemail.com>
	   Christian Wagner	   <Christian.Wagner[AT]stud.uni-karlsruhe.de>
	   Edwin Calo		   <calo[AT]fusemail.com>
	   Ian Schorr		   <ischorr[AT]comcast.net>
	   Rowan McFarland	   <rmcfarla[AT]cisco.com>
	   John	Engelhart	   <johne[AT]zang.com>
	   Ryuji Somegawa	   <ryuji-so[AT]is.aist-nara.ac.jp>
	   metatech		   <metatechbe[AT]gmail.com>
	   Brian Wheeler	   <Brian.Wheeler[AT]arrisi.com>
	   Josh	Bailey		   <joshbailey[AT]lucent.com>
	   Jelmer Vernooij	   <jelmer[AT]samba.org>
	   Duncan Sargeant	   <dunc-ethereal-dev[AT]rcpt.to>
	   Love	Hoernquist Aastrand  <lha[AT]it.su.se>
	   Lukas Pokorny	   <maskis[AT]seznam.cz>
	   Carlos Pignataro	   <cpignata[AT]cisco.com>
	   Thomas Anders	   <thomas.anders[AT]blue-cable.de>
	   Rich	Coe		   <Richard.Coe[AT]med.ge.com>
	   Dominic Bechaz	   <bdo[AT]zhwin.ch>
	   Richard van der Hoff	       <richardv[AT]mxtelecom.com>
	   Shaun Jackman	       <sjackman[AT]gmail.com>
	   Jon Oberheide	   <jon[AT]oberheide.org>
	   Henry Ptasinski	       <henryp[AT]broadcom.com>
	   Roberto Morro	       <roberto.morro[AT]telecomitalia.it>
	   Chris Maynard	       <Christopher.Maynard[AT]GTECH.COM>
	   SEKINE Hideki	       <sekineh[AT]gf7.so-net.ne.jp>
	   Jeff	Connelly	       <shellreef+mp2p[AT]gmail.com>
	   Irene Ruengeler		<ruengeler[AT]wireshark.org>
	   M. Ortega y Strupp  <moys[AT]loplof.de>
	   Kelly Byrd	       <kbyrd-ethereal[AT]memcpy.com>
	   Luis	Ontanon		       <luis.ontanon[AT]gmail.com>
	   Luca	Deri	       <deri[AT]ntop.org>
	   Viorel Suman		       <vsuman[AT]avmob.ro>
	   Alejandro Vaquero   <alejandro.vaquero[AT]verso.com>
	   Francesco Fondelli  <francesco.fondelli[AT]gmail.com>
	   Artem Tamazov	   <artem.tamazov[AT]tellabs.com>
	   Dmitry Trebich	   <dmitry.trebich[AT]gmail.com>
	   Bill	Meier	       <wmeier[AT]newsguy.com>
	   Susanne Edlund	       <Susanne.Edlund[AT]ericsson.com>
	   Victor Stratan	       <hidralisk[AT]yahoo.com>
	   Peter Johansson	       <PeterJohansson73[AT]gmail.com>
	   Stefan Metzmacher   <metze[AT]samba.org>
	   Abhijit Menon-Sen   <ams[AT]oryx.com>
	   James Fields		       <jvfields[AT]tds.net>
	   Kevin Johnson	       <kjohnson[AT]secureideas.net>
	   Mike	Duigou	       <bondolo[AT]dev.java.net>
	   Deepak Jain	       <jain1971[AT]yahoo.com>
	   Stefano Pettini	       <spettini[AT]users.sourceforge.net>
	   Jon Ringle	       <ml-ethereal[AT]ringle.org>
	   Tim Endean	       <endeant[AT]hotmail.com>
	   Charlie Lenahan	       <clenahan[AT]fortresstech.com>
	   Takeshi Nakashima   <T.Nakashima[AT]jp.yokogawa.com>
	   Shoichi Sakane	       <sakane[AT]tanu.org>
	   Michael Richardson  <Michael.Richardson[AT]protiviti.com>
	   Olivier Jacques	       <olivier.jacques[AT]hp.com>
	   Francisco Alcoba    <francisco.alcoba[AT]ericsson.com>
	   Nils	O. Selaasdal	<noselasd[AT]asgaard.homelinux.org>
	   Guillaume Chazarain	       <guichaz[AT]yahoo.fr>
	   Angelo Bannack	       <angelo.bannack[AT]siemens.com>
	   Paolo Frigo	       <paolofrigo[AT]gmail.com>
	   Jeremy J Ouellette  <jouellet[AT]scires.com>
	   Aboo	Valappil	       <valappil_aboo[AT]emc.com>
	   Fred	Hoekstra	       <fred.hoekstra[AT]philips.com>
	   Ankur Aggarwal	       <ankur[AT]in.athenasemi.com>
	   Lucian Piros		       <lpiros[AT]avmob.ro>
	   Juan	Gonzalez	       <juan.gonzalez[AT]pikatech.com>
	   Brian Bogora		       <brian_bogora[AT]mitel.com>
	   Jim Young	       <sysjhy[AT]langate.gsu.edu>
	   Jeff	Snyder	       <jeff[AT]mxtelecom.com>
	   William Fiveash	       <William.Fiveash[AT]sun.com>
	   Graeme Lunt	       <graeme.lunt[AT]smhs.co.uk>
	   Menno Andriesse	       <s5066[AT]nc3a.nato.int>
	   Stig	Bjorlykke	       <stig[AT]bjorlykke.org>
	   Kyle	J. Harms	       <kyle.j.harms[AT]boeing.com>
	   Eric	Wedel	       <ewedel[AT]bluearc.com>
	   Secfire		       <secfire[AT]gmail.com>
	   Eric	Hultin	       <Eric.Hultin[AT]arrisi.com>
	   Paolo Abeni	       <paolo.abeni[AT]email.it>
	   W. Borgert	       <debacle[AT]debian.org>
	   Frederic Roudaut    <frederic.roudaut[AT]irisa.fr>
	   Christoph Scholz    <scholz_ch[AT]web.de>
	   Wolfgang Hansmann   <hansmann[AT]cs.uni-bonn.de>
	   Kees	Cook	       <kees[AT]outflux.net>
	   Thomas Dreibholz    <dreibh[AT]iem.uni-due.de>
	   Authesserre Samuel  <sauthess[AT]gmail.com>
	   Balint Reczey	       <balint[AT]balintreczey.hu>
	   Stephen Fisher	       <stephenfisher[AT]centurylink.net>
	   Krzysztof Burghardt <krzysztof[AT]burghardt.pl>
	   Peter Racz	       <racz[AT]ifi.unizh.ch>
	   Jakob Bratkovic	       <j.bratkovic[AT]iskratel.si>
	   Mark	Lewis	       <mlewis[AT]altera.com>
	   David Buechi		       <bhd[AT]zhwin.ch>
	   Bill	Florac	       <bill.florac[AT]etcconnect.com>
	   Alex	Burlyga		       <Alex.Burlyga[AT]netapp.com>
	   Douglas Pratley	       <Douglas.pratley[AT]detica.com>
	   Giorgio Tino		       <giorgio.tino[AT]cacetech.com>
	   Davide Schiera	       <davide.schiera[AT]riverbed.com>
	   Sebastien Tandel    <sebastien[AT]tandel.be>
	   Clay	Jones	       <clay.jones[AT]email.com>
	   Kriang Lerdsuwanakij	       <lerdsuwa[AT]users.sourceforge.net>
	   Abhik Sarkar		       <sarkar.abhik[AT]gmail.com>
	   Robin Seggelmann    <seggelmann[AT]fh-muenster.de>
	   Chris Bontje		       <cbontje[AT]gmail.com>
	   Ryan	Wamsley		       <wamslers[AT]sbcglobal.net>
	   Dave	Butt	       <davidbutt[AT]mxtelecom.com>
	   Julian Cable		       <julian_cable[AT]yahoo.com>
	   Joost Yervante Damad	       <joost[AT]teluna.org>
	   Martin Sustrik	       <sustrik[AT]imatix.com>
	   Jon Smirl	       <jonsmirl[AT]gmail.com>
	   David Kennedy	       <sgsguy[AT]gmail.com>
	   Matthijs Mekking    <matthijs[AT]mlnetlabs.nl>
	   Dustin Johnson	       <dustin[AT]dustinj.us>
	   Victor Fajardo	       <vfajardo[AT]tari.toshiba.com>
	   Tamas Regos	       <tamas.regos[AT]ericsson.com>
	   Moshe van der Sterre	       <moshevds[AT]gmail.com>
	   Rob Casey	       <rcasey[AT]gmail.com>
	   Ted Percival		       <ted[AT]midg3t.net>
	   Marc	Petit-Huguenin <marc[AT]petit-huguenin.org>
	   Florent Drouin	       <florent.drouin[AT]alcatel-lucent.fr>
	   Karen Feng	       <kfeng[AT]fas.harvard.edu>
	   Stephen Croll	       <croll[AT]mobilemetrics.net>
	   Jens	Braeuer		<jensb[AT]cs.tu-berlin.de>
	   Sake	Blok	       <sake[AT]euronet.nl>
	   Fulko Hew	       <fulko.hew[AT]gmail.com>
	   Yukiyo Akisada	       <Yukiyo.Akisada[AT]jp.yokogawa.com>
	   Andy	Chu	       <chu.dev[AT]gmail.com>
	   Shane Kearns		       <shane.kearns[AT]symbian.com>
	   Loris Degioanni	       <loris.degioanni[AT]riverbed.com>
	   Sven	Meier	       <msv[AT]zhwin.ch>
	   Holger Pfrommer	       <hpfrommer[AT]hilscher.com>
	   Hariharan Ananthakrishnan <hariharan.a[AT]gmail.com>
	   Hannes Kaelber		<hannes.kaelber--wireshark[AT]x2e.de>
	   Stephen Donnelly    <stephen[AT]endace.com>
	   Philip Frey	       <frey.philip[AT]gmail.com>
	   Yves	Geissbuehler   <yves.geissbuehler[AT]gmail.com>
	   Shigeo Nakamura	       <naka_shigeo[AT]yahoo.co.jp>
	   Sven	Eckelmann	       <sven[AT]narfation.org>
	   Edward J. Paradise  <pdice[AT]cisco.com>
	   Brian Stormont	       <nospam[AT]stormyprods.com>
	   Vincent Helfre	       <vincent.helfre[AT]ericsson.com>
	   Brooss		       <brooss.teambb[AT]gmail.com>
	   Joan	Ramio	       <joan[AT]ramio.cat>
	   David Castleford    <david.castleford[AT]orange-ftgroup.com>
	   Peter Harris		       <pharris[AT]opentext.com>
	   Martin Lutz	       <MartinL[AT]copadata.at>
	   Johnny Mitrevski    <mitrevj[AT]hotmail.com>
	   Neil	Horman	       <nhorman[AT]tuxdriver.com>
	   Andreas Schuler	       <krater[AT]badterrorist.com>
	   Matthias Wenzel	       <dect[AT]mazzoo.de>
	   Christian Durrer    <christian.durrer[AT]sensemail.ch>
	   Naoyoshi Ueda	       <piyomaru3141[AT]gmail.com>
	   Javier Cardona	       <javier[AT]cozybit.com>
	   Jens	Steinhauser    <jens.steinhauser[AT]omicron.at>
	   Julien Kerihuel	       <j.kerihuel[AT]openchange.org>
	   Vincenzo Condoleo   <vcondole[AT]hsr.ch>
	   Mohammad Ebrahim Mohammadi Panah <mebrahim[AT]gmail.com>
	   Greg	Schwendimann   <gregs[AT]iol.unh.edu>
	   Nick	Lewis	       <nick.lewis[AT]atltelecom.com>
	   Fred	Fierling	       <fff[AT]exegin.com>
	   Samu	Varjonen	       <samu.varjonen[AT]hiit.fi>
	   Alexis La Goutte    <alexis.lagoutte[AT]gmail.com>
	   Varun Notibala	       <nbvarun[AT]gmail.com>
	   Nathan Hartwell	       <nhartwell[AT]gmail.com>
	   Don Chirieleison    <donc[AT]mitre.org>
	   Harald Welte		       <laforge[AT]gnumonks.org>
	   Chris Costa	       <chcosta75[AT]hotmail.com>
	   Bruno Premont	       <bonbons[AT]linux-vserver.org>
	   Florian Forster	       <octo[AT]verplant.org>
	   Ivan	Sy Jr.	       <ivan_jr[AT]yahoo.com>
	   Matthieu Patou	       <mat[AT]matws.net>
	   Kovarththanan Rajaratnam <kovarththanan.rajaratnam[AT]gmail.com>
	   Matt	Watchinski	       <mwatchinski[AT]sourcefire.com>
	   Ravi	Kondamuru	       <Ravi.Kondamuru[AT]citrix.com>
	   Jan Gerbecks		       <jan.gerbecks[AT]stud.uni-due.de>
	   Vladimir Smrekar    <vladimir.smrekar[AT]gmail.com>
	   Tobias Erichsen     <t.erichsen[AT]gmx.de>
	   Erwin van Eijk	       <erwin.vaneijk[AT]gmail.com>
	   Venkateshwaran Dorai	       <venkateshwaran.d[AT]gmail.com>
	   Ben Greear	       <greearb[AT]candelatech.com>
	   Richard Kuemmel		<r.kuemmel[AT]beckhoff.de>
	   Yi Yu		       <yiyu.inbox[AT]gmail.com>
	   Aniruddha A	       <aniruddha.a[AT]gmail.com>
	   David Aggeler	       <david_aggeler[AT]hispeed.ch>
	   Jens	Kilian	       <jjk[AT]acm.org>
	   David Bond	       <mokon[AT]mokon.net>
	   Paul	J. Metzger	       <pjm[AT]ll.mit.edu>
	   Robert Hogan		       <robert[AT]roberthogan.net>
	   Torrey Atcitty	       <torrey.atcitty[AT]harman.com>
	   Dave	Olsen	       <dave.olsen[AT]harman.com>
	   Craig Gunther	       <craig.gunther[AT]harman.com>
	   Levi	Pearson		       <levi.pearson[AT]harman.com>
	   Allan M. Madsen	       <allan.m[AT]madsen.dk>
	   Slava		       <slavak[AT]gmail.com>
	   H.sivank	       <hsivank[AT]gmail.com>
	   Edgar Gladkich	       <edgar.gladkich[AT]inacon.de>
	   Michael Bernhard    <michael.bernhard[AT]bfh.ch>
	   Holger Hans Peter Freyther <zecke[AT]selfish.org>
	   Jose	Pico	       <jose[AT]taddong.com>
	   David Perez	       <david[AT]taddong.com>
	   Haakon Nessjoen		<haakon.nessjoen[AT]gmail.com>
	   Herbert Lischka	       <herbert[AT]lischka-berlin.de>
	   Felix Kraemer		<sauter-cumulus[AT]de.sauter-bc.com>
	   Tom Hughes	       <tom[AT]compton.nu>
	   Owen	Kirby	       <osk[AT]exegin.com>
	   Colin O'Flynn	       <coflynn[AT]newae.com>
	   Juha	Siltanen	       <juha.siltanen[AT]nsn.com>
	   Cal Turney	       <cturney[AT]charter.net>
	   Lukasz Kotasa	       <lukasz.kotasa[AT]tieto.com>
	   Jason Masker		       <jason[AT]masker.net>
	   Giuliano Fabris	       <giuliano.fabris[AT]appeartv.com>
	   Alexander Koeppe    <format_c[AT]online.de>
	   Holger Grandy	       <Holger.Grandy[AT]bmw-carit.de>
	   Hadriel Kaplan	       <hadrielk[AT]yahoo.com>
	   Srinivasa Pradeep   <sippyemail-wireshark[AT]yahoo.com>
	   Lori	Tribble		       <ljtconsulting[AT]gmail.com>
	   Thomas Boehne	       <TBoehne[AT]ADwin.de>
	   Gerhard Gappmeier   <gerhard.gappmeier[AT]ascolab.com>
	   Hannes Mezger	       <hannes.mezger[AT]ascolab.com>
	   David Katz	       <dkatz[AT]airspan.com>
	   Toralf Foerster		<toralf.foerster[AT]gmx.de>
	   Stephane Bryant	       <stephane[AT]glycon.org>
	   Emil	Wojak	       <emil[AT]wojak.eu>
	   Steve Huston		       <shuston[AT]riverace.com>
	   Lorand Jakab		       <ljakab[AT]ac.upc.edu>
	   Grzegorz Szczytowski	       <Grzegorz.Szczytowski[AT]gmail.com>
	   Martin Kaiser	       <wireshark[AT]kaiser.cx>
	   Jakub Zawadzki	       <darkjames-ws[AT]darkjames.pl>
	   Roland Knall		       <roland.knall[AT]br-automation.com>
	   Xiao	Xiangquan	       <xiaoxiangquan[AT]gmail.com>
	   Hans-Christoph Schemmel     <hans-christoph.schemmel[AT]cinterion.com>
	   Tyson Key	       <tyson.key[AT]gmail.com>
	   Johannes Jochen	       <johannes.jochen[AT]belden.com>
	   Florian Fainelli    <florian[AT]openwrt.org>
	   Daniel Willmann	       <daniel[AT]totalueberwachung.de>
	   Brian Cavagnolo	       <brian[AT]cozybit.com>
	   Allison		       <aobourn[AT]isilon.com>
	   Edwin Groothuis	       <wireshark[AT]mavetju.org>
	   Andrew Kampjes	       <andrew.kampjes[AT]endace.com>
	   Kurnia Hendrawan    <kurnia.hendrawan[AT]consistec.de>
	   Leonard Tracy	       <letracy[AT]cisco.com>
	   Elliott Aldrich	       <elliott[AT]aldrichart.com>
	   Glenn Matthews	       <glenn.matthews[AT]cisco.com>
	   Donnie Savage	       <dsavage[AT]cisco.com>
	   Spenser Sheng	       <spenser.sheng[AT]ericsson.com>
	   Benjamin Stocks	       <bmstocks[AT]ra.rockwell.com>
	   Florian Reichert    <refl[AT]zhaw.ch>
	   Martin Renold	       <reld[AT]zhaw.ch>
	   Iain	Arnell	       <iarnell[AT]epo.org>
	   Mariusz Okroj	       <okrojmariusz[AT]gmail.com>
	   Ivan	Lawrow	       <ivan.lawrow[AT]jennic.com>
	   Kari	Vatjus-Anttila <kari.vatjus-anttila[AT]cie.fi>
	   Shobhank Sharma	       <ssharma5[AT]ncsu.edu>
	   Salil Kanitkar	       <sskanitk[AT]ncsu.edu>
	   Michael Sakaluk	       <mdsakalu[AT]ncsu.edu>
	   Mayuresh Raut	       <msraut[AT]ncsu.edu>
	   Sheetal Kshirsagar  <sdkshirs[AT]ncsu.edu>
	   Andrew Williams	       <anwilli5[AT]ncsu.edu>
	   Per Liedberg		       <per.liedberg[AT]ericsson.com>
	   Gaurav Tungatkar    <gauravstt[AT]gmail.com>
	   Bill	Schiller	       <bill.schiller[AT]emerson.com>
	   Aditya Ambadkar	       <arambadk[AT]ncsu.edu>
	   Diana Chris	       <dvchris[AT]ncsu.edu>
	   Guy Martin	       <gmsoft[AT]tuxicoman.be>
	   Deepti Ragha		       <dlragha[AT]ncsu.edu>
	   Niels de Vos		       <ndevos[AT]redhat.com>
	   Clement Marrast	       <clement.marrast[AT]molex.com>
	   Jacob Nordgren	       <jnordgren[AT]gmail.com>
	   Rishie Sharma	       <rishie[AT]kth.se>
	   Richard Stearn	       <richard[AT]rns-stearn.demon.co.uk>
	   Tobias Rutz	       <tobias.rutz[AT]work-microwave.de>
	   MichaX XabXdzki	       <michal.labedzki[AT]wireshark.org>
	   MichaX Orynicz	       <michal.orynicz[AT]tieto.com>
	   Wido	Kelling		       <kellingwido[AT]aol.com>
	   Kaushal Shah		       <kshah3[AT]ncsu.edu>
	   Subramanian Ramachandran <sramach6[AT]ncsu.edu>
	   Manuel Hofer		       <manuel[AT]mnlhfr.at>
	   Gaurav Patwardhan   <gspatwar[AT]ncsu.edu>
	   Peter Hatina		       <phatina[AT]redhat.com>
	   Tomasz MoX	       <desowin[AT]gmail.com>
	   Uli Heilmeier	       <uh[AT]heilmeier.eu>
	   Rupesh Patro		       <rbpatro[AT]ncsu.edu>
	   Vaibhav Katkade	       <katkade_v[AT]yahoo.com>
	   Allan W. Nielsen    <anielsen[AT]vitesse.com>
	   Ishraq Ibne Ashraf  <ishraq[AT]tinkerforge.com>
	   Robert Grange	       <robionekenobi[AT]bluewin.ch>
	   Zoltan Lajos	Kis    <zoltan.lajos.kis[AT]ericsson.com>
	   Juan	Antonio	Montesinos <juan.mondl[AT]gmail.com>
	   Anish Bhatt	       <anish[AT]chelsio.com>
	   Dmitry Bazhenov	       <dima_b[AT]pigeonpoint.com>
	   Masatake Yamato	       <yamato[AT]redhat.com>
	   John	Miner	       <wiresharkdissectorcoder[AT]gmail.com>
	   XX X	(Megumi	Takeshita) <megumi[AT]ikeriri.ne.jp>
	   Remi	Vichery		       <remi.vichery[AT]gmail.com>
	   Kevin Cox	       <kevincox[AT]kevincox.ca>
	   David Ameiss		       <dameiss[AT]29west.com>
	   Sean	O. Stalley	       <sean.stalley[AT]intel.com>
	   Qiaoyin Yang		       <qiaoyin.yang[AT]gmail.com>
	   Thomas Wiens		       <th.wiens[AT]gmx.de>
	   Gilles Roudiere	       <gilles[AT]roudiere.net>
	   Alexander Gaertner  <gaertner.alex[AT]gmx.de>
	   Raphaeel Doursenaud	<rdoursenaud[AT]free.fr>
	   Ryan	Doyle	       <ryan[AT]doylenet.net>
	   Jesse Gross	       <jesse[AT]nicira.com>
	   Joe Fowler	       <fowlerja[AT]us.ibm.com>
	   Enrico Jorns		       <ejo[AT]pengutronix.de>
	   Hitesh K Maisheri   <maisheri.hitesh[AT]gmail.com>
	   Dario Lombardo	       <lomato[AT]gmail.com>
	   Pratik Yeole		       <pyeole[AT]ncsu.edu>
	   Guillaume Autran    <gautran[AT]clearpath.ai>
	   Barbu Paul -	Gheorghe       <barbu.paul.gheorghe[AT]gmail.com>
	   Martin Kacer	       <kacer.martin[AT]gmail.com>
	   Ben Stewart	       <bst[AT]google.com>
	   Sumit Kumar Jha	       <sjha3[AT]ncsu.edu>
	   Kim Kempf	       <kim.kempf[AT]apcon.com>
	   S. Shapira	       <sswsdev[AT]gmail.com>
	   Lazar Sumar	       <bugzilla[AT]lazar.co.nz>
	   Kingson Chan	       <k.chan[AT]samsung.com>
	   Ege Elgun	       <e.elgun[AT]samsung.com>
	   Connor Newton   <c.newton[AT]samsung.com>
	   Huang Qiangxiong	   <qiangxiong.huang[AT]qq.com>
	   Jeffrey Nichols	       <jsnichols[AT]suprocktech.com>

       and by:

	   Georgi Guninski	       <guninski[AT]guninski.com>
	   Jason Copenhaver    <jcopenha[AT]typedef.org>
	   Eric	Perie	       <eric.perie[AT]colubris.com>
	   David Yon	       <yon[AT]tacticalsoftware.com>
	   Marcio Franco	       <franco.marcio[AT]rd.francetelecom.fr>
	   Kaloian Stoilov	       <kalkata[AT]yahoo.com>
	   Steven Lass	       <stevenlass[AT]mail.com>
	   Gregory Stark	       <gsstark[AT]mit.edu>
	   Darren Steele	       <steeley[AT]steeley.co.uk>
	   Michael Kopp		       <michael.kopp[AT]isarnet.de>
	   Bernd Leibing	       <bernd.leibing[AT]kiz.uni-ulm.de>
	   Chris Heath	       <chris[AT]heathens.co.nz>
	   Gisle Vanem	       <gvanem[AT]broadpark.no>
	   Ritchie		       <ritchie[AT]tipsybottle.com>
	   Aki Immonen	       <aki.immonen[AT]golftalma.fi>
	   David E. Weekly	       <david[AT]weekly.org>
	   Steve Ford	       <sford[AT]geeky-boy.com>
	   Masaki Chikama	       <masaki-c[AT]is.aist-nara.ac.jp>
	   Mohammad Hanif	       <mhanif[AT]nexthop.com>
	   Reinhard Speyerer   <rspmn[AT]arcor.de>
	   Patrick Kursawe	       <phosphan[AT]gentoo.org>
	   Arsen Chaloyan	       <achaloyan[AT]yahoo.com>
	   Arnaud Jacques	       <webmaster[AT]securiteinfo.com>
	   D. Manzella	       <manzella[AT]lucent.com>
	   Jari	Mustajarvi	       <jari.mustajarvi[AT]nokia.com>
	   Pierre Juhen		       <pierre.juhen[AT]wanadoo.fr>
	   David Richards	       <drichards[AT]alum.mit.edu>
	   Shusaku Ueda		       <ueda[AT]sra.co.jp>
	   Jonathan Perkins    <jonathan.perkins[AT]ipaccess.com>
	   Holger Schurig	       <h.schurig[AT]mn-logistik.de>
	   Peter J. Creath	       <peter-ethereal[AT]creath.net>
	   Magnus Hansson	       <mah[AT]hms.se>
	   Pavel Kankovsky	       <kan[AT]dcit.cz>
	   Nick	Black	       <dank[AT]reflexsecurity.com>
	   Bill	Guyton	       <guyton[AT]bguyton.com>
	   Chernishov Yury	       <Chernishov[AT]iskrauraltel.ru>
	   Thomas Palmer	       <Thomas.Palmer[AT]Gunter.AF.mil>
	   Clinton Work		       <clinton[AT]scripty.com>
	   Joe Marcus Clarke   <marcus[AT]marcuscom.com>
	   Kendy Kutzner	       <kutzner[AT]tm.uka.de>
	   James H. Cloos Jr.  <cloos[AT]jhcloos.com>
	   Tim Farley	       <tfarley[AT]iss.net>
	   Daniel Thompson	       <daniel.thompson[AT]st.com>
	   Chris Jepeway	       <thai-dragon[AT]eleven29.com>
	   Matthew Bradley	       <matthew.bradley[AT]cnsonline.net>
	   Nathan Alger		       <nathan[AT]wasted.com>
	   Stas	Grabois		       <sagig[AT]radware.com>
	   Ainsley Pereira	       <APereira[AT]Witness.com>
	   Philippe Mazeau	       <philippe.mazeau[AT]swissvoice.net>
	   Carles Kishimoto    <ckishimo[AT]ac.upc.es>
	   Dennis Lim	       <postadal[AT]suse.cz>
	   Dennis Lim	       <Dennis.Lim[AT]motorola.com>
	   Martin van der Werff	       <martin[AT]vanderwerff.org>
	   Marco van den Bovenkamp     <marco[AT]linuxgoeroe.dhs.org>
	   Ming	Zhang	       <mingz[AT]ele.uri.edu>
	   Neil	Piercy	       <Neil.Piercy[AT]ipaccess.com>
	   Remi	Denis-Courmont <courmisch[AT]via.ecp.fr>
	   Thomas Palmer	       <tpalmer[AT]elmore.rr.com>
	   Maarten Svantesson	<f95-msv[AT]f.kth.se>
	   Steve Sommars	       (e-mail address removed at contributor's	request)
	   Kestutis Kupciunas  <kesha[AT]soften.ktu.lt>
	   Rene	Pilz	       <rene.pilz[AT]ftw.at>
	   Laurent Constantin  <laurent.constantin[AT]aql.fr>
	   Martin Pichlmaier   <martin.pichlmaier[AT]siemens.com>
	   Mark	Phillips	       <msp[AT]nortelnetworks.com>
	   Nils	Ohlmeier	       <lists[AT]ohlmeier.org>
	   Ignacio Goyret	       <igoyret[AT]lucent.com>
	   Bart	Braem	       <bart.braem[AT]gmail.com>
	   Shingo Horisawa	       <name4n5[AT]hotmail.com>
	   Lane	Hu		       <lane.hu[AT]utstar.com>
	   Marc	Poulhies	       <marc.poulhies[AT]epfl.ch>
	   Tomasz Mrugalski    <thomson[AT]klub.com.pl>
	   Brett Kuskie		       <mstrprgmmr[AT]chek.com>
	   Brian Caswell	       <bmc[AT]sourcefire.com>
	   Yann			       <yann_eads[AT]hotmail.com>
	   Julien Leproust	       <julien[AT]via.ecp.fr>
	   Mutsuya Irie		       <irie[AT]sakura-catv.ne.jp>
	   Yoshihiro Oyama	       <y.oyama[AT]netagent.co.jp>
	   Chris Eagle	       <cseagle[AT]nps.edu>
	   Dominique Bastien   <dbastien[AT]accedian.com>
	   Nicolas Dichtel	       <nicolas.dichtel[AT]6wind.com>
	   Ricardo Muggli	       <ricardo.muggli[AT]mnsu.edu>
	   Vladimir Kondratiev <vladimir.kondratiev[AT]gmail.com>
	   Jaap	Keuter	       <jaap.keuter[AT]xs4all.nl>
	   Frederic Peters	       <fpeters[AT]debian.org>
	   Anton Ivanov		       <anthony_johnson[AT]mail.ru>
	   Ilya	Konstantinov   <future[AT]shiny.co.il>
	   Neil	Kettle		       <mu-b[AT]65535.com>
	   Steve Karg	       <skarg[AT]users.sourceforge.net>
	   Javier Acuna		       <javier.acuna[AT]sixbell.cl>
	   Miklos Szurdi	       <szurdimiklos[AT]yahoo.com>
	   Cvetan Ivanov	       <zezo[AT]spnet.net>
	   Vasanth Manickam    <vasanth.manickam[AT]bt.com>
	   Julian Onions	       <julian.onions[AT]gmail.com>
	   Samuel Thibault	       <samuel.thibault[AT]ens-lyon.org>
	   Peter KovaX	       <peter.kovar[AT]gmail.com>
	   Paul	Ollis	       <paul.ollis[AT]roke.co.uk>
	   Dominik Kuhlen	       <dkuhlen[AT]gmx.net>
	   Karl	Knoebl	       <karl.knoebl[AT]siemens.com>
	   Maria-Luiza Crivat  <luizacri[AT]gmail.com>
	   Brice Augustin	       <bricecotte[AT]gmail.com>
	   Matt	Thornton	       <MATT_THORNTON[AT]appsig.com>
	   Timo	Metsala		       <timo.metsala[AT]gmail.com>
	   Tomer Shani	       <thetour[AT]japan.com>
	   Manu	Pathak	       <mapathak[AT]cisco.com>
	   John	Sullivan	       <john[AT]kanargh.force9.co.uk>
	   Martin Andre		       <andre[AT]clarinet.u-strasbg.fr>
	   Andrei Emeltchenko  <Andrei.Emeltchenko[AT]nokia.com>
	   Kirby Files	       <kfiles[AT]masergy.com>
	   Ravi	Valmikam	       <rvalmikam[AT]airvananet.com>
	   Diego Petteno	       <flameeyes[AT]gentoo.org>
	   Daniel Black		       <dragonheart[AT]gentoo.org>
	   Christoph Werle	       <Christoph.Werle[AT]ira.uka.de>
	   Aaron Christensen   <aaronmf[AT]gmail.com>
	   Ian Abel	       <ianabel[AT]mxtelecom.com>
	   Bryant Eastham	       <beastham[AT]slc.mew.com>
	   Taner Kurtulus	       <taner.kurtulus[AT]tubitak.gov.tr>
	   Joe Breher	       <linux[AT]q-music.com>
	   Patrick vd Lageweg  <patrick[AT]bitwizard.nl>
	   Thomas Sillaber	       <Thomas.Sillaber[AT]gmx.de>
	   Mike	Davies	       <m.davies[AT]btinternet.com>
	   Boris Misenov	       <Boris.Misenov[AT]oktelabs.ru>
	   Joe McEachern	       <joe[AT]qacafe.com>
	   Charles Lepple	       <clepple[AT]gmail.com>
	   Tuomas Maattanen    <maattanen[AT]iki.fi>
	   Joe Eykholt	       <joe[AT]nuovasystems.com>
	   Ian Brumby	       <ian.brumby[AT]baesystems.com>
	   Todd	J Martin	       <todd.martin[AT]acm.org>
	   Scott Robinson	       <scott.robinson[AT]flukenetworks.com>
	   Martin Peylo		       <wireshark[AT]izac.de>
	   Stephane Loeuillet  <leroutier[AT]gmail.com>
	   Andrei Rubaniuk	       <rubaniuk[AT]mail.ru>
	   Mikael Magnusson    <mikma264[AT]gmail.com>
	   Timo	Teraes		<timo.teras[AT]iki.fi>
	   Marton Nemeth	       <nm127[AT]freemail.hu>
	   Kai Blin	       <kai[AT]samba.org>
	   Olivier Montanuy    <olivier.montanuy[AT]orange-ftgroup.com>
	   Thomas Morin		       <thomas.morin[AT]orange-ftgroup.com>
	   Jesus Roman	       <jroman[AT]teldat.com>
	   Giodi Giorgi		       <g.giorgi[AT]gmail.com>
	   Peter Hertting	       <Peter.Hertting[AT]gmx.net>
	   Jess	Balint	       <jbalint[AT]gmail.com>
	   Bahaa Naamneh	       <b.naamneh[AT]gmail.com>
	   Magnus Soerman		<magnus.sorman[AT]ericsson.com>
	   Pascal Quantin	       <pascal.quantin[AT]gmail.com>
	   Roy Marples	       <roy[AT]marples.name>
	   Ward	van Wanrooij   <ward[AT]ward.nu>
	   Federico Mena Quintero      <federico[AT]novell.com>
	   Andreas Heise	       <andreas.heise[AT]nextiraone.de>
	   Alex	Lindberg	       <alindber[AT]yahoo.com>
	   Rama	Chitta	       <rama[AT]gear6.com>
	   Roberto Mariani	       <jelot-wireshark[AT]jelot.it>
	   Sandhya Gopinath    <Sandhya.Gopinath[AT]citrix.com>
	   Raghav SN	       <Raghav.SN[AT]citrix.com>
	   Murali Raja	       <Murali.Raja[AT]citrix.com>
	   Devesh Prakash	       <Devesh.Prakash[AT]citrix.com>
	   Darryl Champagne    <dchampagne[AT]sta.samsung.com>
	   Michael Speck	       <Michael.Speck[AT]avl.com>
	   Gerasimos Dimitriadis       <dimeg[AT]intracom.gr>
	   Robert Simac		       <rsimac[AT]cronsult.com>
	   Johanna Sochos	       <johanna.sochos[AT]swissqual.com>
	   Felix Obenhuber	       <felix[AT]obenhuber.de>
	   Hilko Bengen		       <bengen--wireshark[AT]hilluzination.de>
	   Hadar Shoham		       <hadar.shoham[AT]gmail.com>
	   Robert Bullen	       <robert[AT]robertbullen.com>
	   Chuck Kristofek	       <chuck.kristofek[AT]ngc.com>
	   Markus Renz	       <Markus.Renz[AT]hirschmann.de>
	   Toshihiro Kataoka   <kataoka.toshihiro[AT]gmail.com>
	   Petr	Lautrbach	       <plautrba[AT]redhat.com>
	   Frank Lahm	       <franklahm[AT]googlemail.com>
	   Jon Ellch	       <jellch[AT]harris.com>
	   Alex	Badea	       <vamposdecampos[AT]gmail.com>
	   Dirk	Jagdmann	       <doj[AT]cubic.org>
	   RSA			       <ryazanov.s.a[AT]gmail.com>
	   Juliusz Chroboczek  <jch[AT]pps.jussieu.fr>
	   Vladimir Kazansky   <vovjo[AT]yandex.ru>
	   Peter Paluch		       <peter.paluch[AT]fri.uniza.sk>
	   Tom Brezinski	       <tombr[AT]netinst.com>
	   Nick	Glass	       <nick.glass[AT]lycos.com>
	   Michael Mann		       <mmann78[AT]netscape.net>
	   Romain Fliedel	       <romain.fliedel+wireshark[AT]gmail.com>
	   Michael Chen		       <michaelc[AT]idssoftware.com>
	   Paul	Stath	       <pstath[AT]axxcelera.com>
	   DeCount		       <aatrade[AT]libero.it>
	   Andras Veres-Szentkiralyi <vsza[AT]vsza.hu>
	   Jakob Hirsch		       <jh.wireshark-bugzilla[AT]plonk.de>
	   XXXXX XXXXXXXX	       <dpb[AT]corrigendum.ru>
	   XXXXX XXXXXXXX	       <billyjeans[AT]gmail.com>
	   Evan	Huus	       <eapache[AT]gmail.com>
	   Tom Cook	       <tcook[AT]ixiacom.com>
	   Tom Alexander	       <talexander[AT]ixiacom.com>
	   Klaus Heckelmann    <klaus.heckelmann[AT]nashtech.com>
	   Ben Bowen	       <bbowen[AT]godaddy.com>
	   Bodo	Petermann	       <bp245[AT]hotmail.com>
	   Martin Kupec		       <martin.kupec[AT]kupson.cz>
	   Litao Gao	       <ltgao[AT]juniper.net>
	   Niels Widger		       <niels[AT]qacafe.com>
	   Pontus Fuchs		       <pontus.fuchs[AT]gmail.com>
	   Bill	Parker	       <wp02855[AT]gmail.com>
	   Tomofumi Hayashi    <s1061123[AT]gmail.com>
	   Tim Hentenaar	       <tim.hentenaar[AT]gmail.com>
	   Krishnamurthy Mayya <krishnamurthymayya[AT]gmail.com>
	   Nikitha Malgi	       <nikitha01[AT]gmail.com>
	   Adam	Butcher		       <adam[AT]jessamine.co.uk>
	   Hendrik Uhlmann	       <Hendrik.Uhlmann[AT]rheinmetall.com>
	   Sebastiano Di Paola <sebastiano.dipaola[AT]gmail.com>
	   Steven J. Magnani   <steve[AT]digidescorp.com>
	   David Arnold		       <davida[AT]pobox.com>
	   Alexander Chemeris  <alexander.chemeris[AT]gmail.com>
	   Ivan	Klyuchnikov    <kluchnikovi[AT]gmail.com>
	   Max Baker	       <max[AT]warped.org>
	   Diederik de Groot   <dkgroot[AT]talon.nl>
	   Hauke Mehrtens	       <hauke[AT]hauke-m.de>
	   0xBismarck	       <0xbismarck[AT]gmail.com>
	   Peter Van Eynde	       <pevaneyn[AT]cisco.com>
	   Marko Hrastovec	       <marko.hrastovec[AT]sloveniacontrol.si>
	   Mike	Garratt		       <mg.wireshark[AT]evn.co.nz>
	   Fabio Tarabelloni   <fabio.tarabelloni[AT]reloc.it>
	   Chas	Williams	       <chas[AT]cmf.nrl.navy.mil>
	   Javier Godoy		       <uce[AT]rjgodoy.com.ar>
	   Matt	Texier	       <matthieu[AT]texier.tv>
	   Linas Vepstas	       <linasvepstas[AT]gmail.com>
	   Simon Zhong	       <szhong[AT]juniper.net>
	   Bart	Van Assche	       <bvanassche[AT]acm.org>
	   Peter Lemenkov	       <lemenkov[AT]gmail.com>
	   Karl	Beldan	       <karl.beldan[AT]gmail.com>
	   Jiri	Engelthaler    <engycz[AT]gmail.com>
	   Stephen Ludin	       <sludin[AT]ludin.org>
	   Andreas Urke		       <andurke[AT]gmail.com>
	   Patrik Lundquist    <patrik.lundquist[AT]gmail.com>
	   Mark	Vitale	       <mvitale[AT]sinenomine.net>
	   Peter Wu	       <peter[AT]lekensteyn.nl>
	   Jerry Negele		       <jerry.negele[AT]arrisi.com>
	   Hannes Hofer		       <hhofer[AT]barracuda.com>
	   Luca	Coelho	       <luca[AT]coelho.fi>
	   Masayuki Takemura   <masayuki.takemura[AT]gmail.com>
	   Ed Beroset	       <beroset[AT]mindspring.com>
	   e.yimjia	       <jy.m12.0[AT]gmail.com>
	   Jonathon Jongsma    <jjongsma[AT]redhat.com>
	   Zeljko Ancimer	       <zancimer[AT]gmail.com>
	   Deon	van der	Westhuysen     <deonvdw[AT]gmail.com>
	   Ibrahim Can Yuce    <canyuce[AT]gmail.com>
	   Robert Jongbloed    <robertj[AT]voxlucida.com.au>
	   Pavel Moravec	       <pmoravec[AT]redhat.com>
	   Robert Long	       <rlong[AT]sandia.gov>
	   James Lynch	       <lynch007[AT]gmail.com>
	   Chidambaram Arunachalam     <carunach[AT]cisco.com>
	   Joa~o Valverde		<joao.valverde[AT]tecnico.ulisboa.pt>
	   Benoit Canet		       <benoit[AT]scylladb.com>
	   Haakon Oye Amundsen	    <haakon.amundsen[AT]nordicsemi.no>
       Jeffrey Wildman	       <jeffrey.wildman@ll.mit.edu>

   From	git log
	   Achuthan Paramanathan       <acp[AT]kamstrup.com>
	   Adam	Goldman		       <adam.goldman[AT]intel.com>
	   Adam	Mitz	       <mitza[AT]objectcomputing.com>
	   Adam	Mitz	       <mitza[AT]ociweb.com>
	   Adam	Morrison	       <adammo[AT]extrahop.com>
	   Adam	Pridgen		       <adam.pridgen[AT]thecoverofnight.com>
	   Adam	Schwalm		       <adam.schwalm[AT]dynetics.com>
	   Adam	Wujek	       <adam.wujek[AT]cern.ch>
	   Aditya Jain	       <aditya.jain[AT]samsung.com>
	   Adrian Granados	       <adrian[AT]adriangranados.com>
	   Adrian Simionov	       <daniel.simionov[AT]gmail.com>
	   Adrian-Ken Rueegsegger      <ken[AT]codelabs.ch>
	   Adrien Aubry		       <adraub[AT]gmail.com>
	   Adrien Destugues    <adestugues[AT]toulouse.viveris.com>
	   Adrien Destugues    <adrien.destugues[AT]opensource.viveris.fr>
	   Ahmad Fatoum		       <ahmad[AT]a3f.at>
	   Ajay	Panicker	       <apanicke[AT]google.com>
	   Alan	Birtles		       <alan.birtles[AT]eu.sony.com>
	   Alan	Partis	       <alpartis[AT]thundernet.com>
	   Aleksej Matis	       <amat[AT]magure.de>
	   Alex	Badea	       <abadea[AT]ixiacom.com>
	   Alex	Nik	       <rage.iz.me[AT]gmail.com>
	   Alex	Sirr	       <alexsirruw[AT]gmail.com>
	   Alex	Tessmer		       <dev[AT]tessmer.me>
	   AlexL		       <loginov.alex.valer[AT]gmail.com>
	   Alexander Couzens   <lynxis[AT]fe80.eu>
	   Alexander Dahl	       <ada[AT]thorsis.com>
	   Alexander Gryanko   <xpahos[AT]gmail.com>
	   Alexander Gaertner	<sphinxs1988[AT]googlemail.com>
	   Alexander Meier	       <MeierAPunkt[AT]googlemail.com>
	   Alexander Nogikh    <wp32pw[AT]gmail.com>
	   Alexander Stein	       <alexanders83[AT]web.de>
	   Alexander Wetzel    <alexander.wetzel[AT]web.de>
	   Alexandr Savca	       <alexandr.savca89[AT]gmail.com>
	   Alexis Green		       <alexis.green[AT]nokia.com>
	   Alfred Koebler	       <alfred.koebler[AT]gmx.de>
	   Ali Sabil	       <ali.sabil[AT]koperadev.com>
	   Alistair Leslie-Hughes      <leslie_alistair[AT]hotmail.com>
	   Allan Moller	Madsen <almomadk[AT]gmail.com>
	   Ambarish Malpani    <ambarish[AT]defend7.com>
	   Ameya Deshpande	       <ameya.181co205[AT]nitk.edu.in>
	   Ameya Deshpande	       <ameyanrd[AT]gmail.com>
	   Ameya Deshpande	       <ameyanrd[AT]outlook.com>
	   Amine Kherbouche    <amine.kherbouche[AT]6wind.com>
	   Amit	Khatri	       <amit7861234[AT]gmail.com>
	   Amitoj Setia		       <asetia[AT]juniper.net>
	   Ana Pantar	       <ana.pantar[AT]gmail.com>
	   Anaeel Fiaux		<anael[AT]fiaux.org>
	   Anders Esbensen	       <Anders.Esbensen[AT]silabs.com>
	   Andre Luyer	       <andre[AT]luyer.nl>
	   Andre Puschmann	       <andre[AT]softwareradiosystems.com>
	   Andreas Gruenbacher <andreas.gruenbacher[AT]gmail.com>
	   Andreas Karlsson    <se.nakarlsson[AT]gmail.com>
	   Andreas Leibold	       <andreas.leibold[AT]harman.com>
	   Andreas Schultz	       <andreas.schultz[AT]travelping.com>
	   Andreas Stieger	       <andreas.stieger[AT]gmx.de>
	   Andreas Urke		       <arurke[AT]netwurke.com>
	   Andrei Cipu	       <acipu[AT]ixiacom.com>
	   Andrew Chernyh	       <andrew.chernyh[AT]gmail.com>
	   Andrew Hoag	       <Andrew.Hoag[AT]aireon.com>
	   Andrey Kulikov	       <amdei[AT]cryptopro.ru>
	   Andrey Tverd		       <andr.tverd[AT]gmail.com>
	   Andrii Vladyka	       <a.vladyka[AT]ukr.net>
	   Andy	Ling	       <Andy.Ling[AT]quantel.com>
	   Andy	Ling	       <andy.ling[AT]s-a-m.com>
	   Andy	Zhao	       <jinhzhx[AT]gmail.com>
	   Angelos Drossos	       <wireshark.develangel[AT]mail.drossos.de>
	   Anil	Kumar	       <anilkumar911[AT]gmail.com>
	   Anndy Ke	       <anndymaktub[AT]yahoo.com.tw>
	   Anthony Coddington  <anthony.coddington[AT]endace.com>
	   Anthony Crawford    <anthony.r.crawford[AT]charter.com>
	   Anton Butenko	       <ant.butenko[AT]gmail.com>
	   Anton Glukhov	       <anton.a.glukhov[AT]gmail.com>
	   Anton Kharchenko    <astotal[AT]gmail.com>
	   Anton Thomasson	       <anton.thomasson[AT]ericsson.com>
	   Antony Bridle	       <ant.bridle[AT]gmail.com>
	   Apeksha Singhal	       <apeksha.singhal[AT]gmail.com>
	   Arjen Zonneveld	       <arjen[AT]bz2.nl>
	   Arnd	Hannemann	       <arnd[AT]arndnet.de>
	   Artem Mygaiev	       <joculator[AT]gmail.com>
	   Artur Nowosielski   <artnowo[AT]gmail.com>
	   Arvind Dalvi		       <ardalvi[AT]outlook.in>
	   Asaf	Kave	       <kaveasaf[AT]gmail.com>
	   Ashish Shukla	       <shukla.a[AT]gmail.com>
	   Atli	Gu`mundsson    <atli[AT]tern.is>
	   Audric Schiltknecht <audric.schiltknecht[AT]external.thalesaleniaspace.com>
	   Aurelien Aptel	       <aaptel[AT]suse.com>
	   Aymeric Moizard	       <amoizard[AT]gmail.com>
	   Babak Farrokhi	       <babak[AT]farrokhi.net>
	   Balint Reczey	       <rbalint[AT]ubuntu.com>
	   Bartolo Otrit	       <bartolootrit[AT]gmail.com>
	   Baruch Siach		       <baruch[AT]tkos.co.il>
	   Basil		       <addremover[AT]gmail.com>
	   Bastien Bailly	       <babassbailly[AT]free.fr>
	   BaXak Kalfa	       <basakkalfa[AT]gmail.com>
	   Ben Bass	       <ben.bass[AT]metaswitch.com>
	   Ben Burwell	       <bburwell[AT]lutron.com>
	   Ben Fox-Moore	       <ben.foxmoore[AT]accelleran.com>
	   Ben Huddleston	       <ben.huddleston[AT]couchbase.com>
	   Benjamin Aschenbrenner      <benjamin.aschenbrenner[AT]gmail.com>
	   Benjamin Coddington <bcodding[AT]redhat.com>
	   Benjamin Hesmans    <benjamin.hesmans[AT]uclouvain.be>
	   Benjamin Parzella   <bparzella[AT]gmail.com>
	   Benjamin Roch	       <benjamin.roch[AT]tttech.com>
	   Benoit Grange	       <benoit.grange[AT]gmail.com>
	   Bert	van Leeuwen    <bert.vanleeuwen[AT]gmail.com>
	   Bertrand Bonnefoy-Claudet <bertrandbc[AT]gmail.com>
	   Bharath Ravindranath	       <bravindranath[AT]arista.com>
	   Binh	Trinh	       <beango[AT]gmail.com>
	   Birol Capa	       <birol.capa[AT]siemens.com>
	   Bjoern Riemer	       <bjoern.riemer[AT]fokus.fraunhofer.de>
	   Bjoern Ruytenberg	<bjorn[AT]bjornweb.nl>
	   Bob Hinden	       <bob.hinden[AT]gmail.com>
	   Bob Kuo		       <bobjkuo[AT]gmail.com>
	   Boris Bochkarev	       <Boris-Bochkaryov[AT]yandex.ru>
	   Bradford Boyle	       <bradford.d.boyle[AT]gmail.com>
	   Brandon Enochs	       <enochs.brandon[AT]gmail.com>
	   Branislav Makan	       <branislav.makan1994[AT]gmail.com>
	   Brendan O'Connor    <brendan[AT]leviathansecurity.com>
	   Brenton Rothchild   <brentonr[AT]dorm.org>
	   Brian Whitney	       <brian.m.whitney[AT]outlook.com>
	   Britt McKinley	       <bmckinley[AT]sonusnet.com>
	   Bruno Verstuyft	       <bruno.verstuyft[AT]excentis.com>
	   Camille Guerin	       <guerincamille56[AT]gmail.com>
	   Carlo Carraro	       <colrack[AT]gmail.com>
	   Carlos Velasco	       <carlos.velasco[AT]nimastelecom.com>
	   Cathy Yang	       <cathy.y.yang[AT]ericsson.com>
	   Cedric Izoard	       <cedric.izoard[AT]ceva-dsp.com>
	   Cenk	GuendoXan		<cnkgndgn[AT]gmail.com>
	   Cenk	GuendoXan		<mail+dev[AT]gundogan.net>
	   Chaitanya T K	       <chaitanya.mgit[AT]gmail.com>
	   Chaoyong Zhou	       <bgnvendor[AT]163.com>
	   Charles Nepveu	       <charles.nepveu[AT]verint.com>
	   Charlie Lenahan	       <clenahan[AT]sonicbison.com>
	   Chema Gonzalez	       <chemag[AT]gmail.com>
	   Chris Brandson	       <chris.brandson[AT]gmail.com>
	   Chris Dunlop		       <chris.dunlop3[AT]gmail.com>
	   Chris Wills	       <xenkrs[AT]outlook.com>
	   Christian Ambach    <ambi[AT]samba.org>
	   Christian Kreibich  <christian[AT]corelight.com>
	   Christian Krump	       <christian.krump[AT]br-automation.com>
	   Christian Lamparter <chunkeey[AT]googlemail.com>
	   Christian M.	Amsuess	<chrysn[AT]fsfe.org>
	   Christian Tellefsen <chris-git[AT]tellefsen.net>
	   Christian Ullrich   <chris[AT]chrullrich.net>
	   Christoph Burger-Scheidlin <mail[AT]christoph.burger-scheidlin.name>
	   Christoph Jaehnigen	<nuabaranda[AT]web.de>
	   Christoph Portner   <christoph.portner[AT]gmail.com>
	   Christoph Schlosser <christoph[AT]schlosser.xyz>
	   Christoph Wurm	       <wurm[AT]elastic.co>
	   Christophe GUERBER  <christophe.guerber[AT]gmail.com>
	   Christopher Farman  <christopher.farman[AT]couchbase.com>
	   Christopher Kilgour <techie[AT]whiterocker.com>
	   Chuan He	       <bupthc[AT]gmail.com>
	   Chuck Craft	       <bubbasnmp[AT]gmail.com>
	   Chuck Lever	       <chuck.lever[AT]oracle.com>
	   Chugzilla	       <chugzilla77[AT]gmail.com>
	   Chun-Yeow Yeoh	       <yeohchunyeow[AT]gmail.com>
	   Claudius Zingerli   <czingerl[AT]gmail.com>
	   Cody	Doucette	       <doucette[AT]bu.edu>
	   Colin Foster		       <colin.foster[AT]in-advantage.com>
	   Colin Sames	       <sames.colin[AT]gmail.com>
	   Craig Jackson	       <cejackson51[AT]gmail.com>
	   Cedric Delmas	       <cedricde[AT]outlook.fr>
	   D. W. Poon	       <dwpoon[AT]mail.ubc.ca>
	   Daan	De Meyer	       <daan.j.demeyer[AT]gmail.com>
	   Damir Franusic	       <damir.franusic[AT]gmail.com>
	   Dan Robertson	       <danlrobertson89[AT]gmail.com>
	   Dana	Sy		       <dana.hayden.sy[AT]gmail.com>
	   Daniel Hirschberger <daniel.hirschberger+wireshark[AT]rub.de>
	   Daniel Kamil	Kozar  <dkk089[AT]gmail.com>
	   Daniel Mack	       <daniel[AT]zonque.org>
	   Daniel McLean	       <maczor[AT]gmail.com>
	   Daniel Mouscher	       <dmouscher[AT]gmail.com>
	   Daniel Stenberg	       <daniel[AT]haxx.se>
	   Daniel Tan	       <BACdaBASpert[AT]optigo.net>
	   Daniel Willmann	       <dwillmann[AT]sysmocom.de>
	   Daniele Lacamera    <daniele.lacamera[AT]technicolor.com>
	   Danieel van Eeden	<wireshark[AT]myname.nl>
	   Darien Spencer	       <cusneud[AT]mail.com>
	   Darius Davis		       <darius[AT]vmware.com>
	   Darshan Nevgi	       <darshan.sn[AT]samsung.com>
	   Dave	Barach	       <dave[AT]barachs.net>
	   Dave	Goodell		       <dave[AT]goodell.io>
	   Dave	Pifke	       <dave[AT]pifke.org>
	   Dave	Rigby	       <daver[AT]couchbase.com>
	   Dave	Tapuska		       <dtapuska[AT]google.com>
	   David Aggeler	       <david_aggeler[AT]yahoo.com>
	   David Ameiss		       <david[AT]ameissnet.com>
	   David Arnold		       <d[AT]0x1.org>
	   David Barrera	       <davidbb[AT]gmail.com>
	   David Bastiani	       <daveb64[AT]yahoo.com>
	   David Creswick	       <dcrewi[AT]gyrae.net>
	   David Kreitschmann  <dkreitschmann[AT]seemoo.tu-darmstadt.de>
	   David McKay	       <mckay.david[AT]gmail.com>
	   David Morsberger    <dave[AT]morsberger.com>
	   David Perry	       <boolean263[AT]protonmail.com>
	   David Perry	       <d.perry[AT]utoronto.ca>
	   David Snowdon	       <daves[AT]metamako.com>
	   David Tapuska	       <dave[AT]tapuska.com>
	   David Zoller		       <zollerd[AT]gmail.com>
	   Davide Caratti	       <davide.caratti[AT]gmail.com>
	   Deep	Datta	       <ddatta[AT]ixiacom.com>
	   Deep	Datta	       <deep.datta[AT]keysight.com>
	   Denis Janssen	       <janssend[AT]gmail.com>
	   Dennis Bush	       <bush[AT]tcnj.edu>
	   Dennis Lanov		       <dennis.lanov[AT]gmail.com>
	   Derick Rethans	       <github[AT]derickrethans.nl>
	   Devan Lai	       <devanl[AT]davisinstruments.com>
	   Devin Heitmueller   <dheitmueller[AT]kernellabs.com>
	   Dhananjay Patki	       <dhpatki[AT]cisco.com>
	   Dhiru Kholia		       <kholia[AT]kth.se>
	   DiablosOffens	       <DiablosOffens[AT]gmx.de>
	   Didier Arenzana	       <darenzana[AT]yahoo.fr>
	   Didier Barvaux	       <didier.barvaux[AT]toulouse.viveris.com>
	   Diederik de Groot   <ddegroot[AT]talon.nl>
	   Dieter Dobbelaere   <dieter.dobbelaere[AT]excentis.com>
	   Dirk	Eibach	       <dirk.eibach[AT]gdsys.cc>
	   Dirk	Roemmen		<dirk.roemmen[AT]cslab.de>
	   Dirk	Weise	       <code[AT]dirk-weise.de>
	   Disha Daniel		       <ddaniel[AT]empirix.com>
	   Dmitriy Eliseev	       <eliseev_d[AT]ntcees.ru>
	   Dmitry Bravikov	       <dmitry[AT]bravikov.pro>
	   Dmitry Lazurkin	       <dilaz03[AT]gmail.com>
	   Dmitry Linikov	       <linikov[AT]arrival.com>
	   Dmitry Radivonchik  <mitya[AT]oktetlabs.ru>
	   Dom Gifford	       <Dominic.Gifford[AT]atmel.com>
	   Dominic Chen		       <d.c.ddcc[AT]gmail.com>
	   Dongle Su	       <agdsdl[AT]sina.com.cn>
	   Doug	Brown	       <doug[AT]downtowndougbrown.com>
	   Dr. Lars Voelker    <lars-github[AT]larsvoelker.de>
	   Dr. Lars Voelker		<lars.voelker[AT]bmw.de>
	   Dr. Lars Voelker		<lars.voelker[AT]technica-engineering.de>
	   Dwayne Rich	       <dwayne_rich[AT]selinc.com>
	   Dylan Ulis	       <daulis0[AT]gmail.com>
	   Daniel Bakai		       <bakaidl[AT]gmail.com>
	   Ebben Aries	       <exa[AT]fb.com>
	   Ed Beroset	       <beroset[AT]ieee.org>
	   Ederson de Souza    <ederson.desouza[AT]intel.com>
	   Edward Dao	       <edmailbox[AT]gmail.com>
	   Edward Smith		       <edward.smith[AT]nowlegent.com>
	   Edwin Groothuis	       <edwin[AT]mavetju.org>
	   Eelco Chaudron	       <echaudro[AT]redhat.com>
	   Eldon Stegall	       <wireshark-gerrit[AT]eldondev.com>
	   Eliot Lear	       <lear[AT]cisco.com>
	   Emery Hemingway	       <emery[AT]vfemail.net>
	   Emmanuel Grumbach   <emmanuel.grumbach[AT]intel.com>
	   Enrique Giraldo	       <enrique.giraldo[AT]wslw.es>
	   Eric	Anderson	       <andersoe[AT]cs.cmu.edu>
	   Eric	Wang	       <terminal_0[AT]aol.com>
	   Eric	Wetzel	       <thewetzel[AT]gmail.com>
	   Eric	Wild	       <ewild[AT]sysmocom.de>
	   Erik	de Jong		       <erikdejong[AT]gmail.com>
	   Erika Szelleova	       <szelleerika[AT]gmail.com>
	   Ethan Everett	       <ethan.everett[AT]meraki.net>
	   Ethan Young	       <imfargo[AT]gmail.com>
	   Etienne Dechamps    <etienne[AT]edechamps.fr>
	   Etienne MARAIS	       <etienne[AT]marais.green>
	   Etienne Millon	       <etienne[AT]cryptosense.com>
	   Eugene Adell		       <eugene.adell[AT]gmail.com>
	   Eugene Exarevsky    <eugene.exarevsky[AT]dsr-company.com>
	   Eugene Sukhodolin   <eugene[AT]sukhodolin.com>
	   Evan	Welsh	       <noreply[AT]evanwelsh.com>
	   Evelio Vila	       <eveliovila[AT]gmail.com>
	   Fabian Raetz		       <fabian.raetz[AT]gmail.com>
	   Fabrice Fontaine    <fontaine.fabrice[AT]gmail.com>
	   Fabrizio Demaria    <fabrizio.demaria[AT]intel.com>
	   Felix Ruess	       <felix.ruess[AT]roboception.de>
	   Filip Sohajek	       <filip.sohajek[AT]gmail.com>
	   Filipe Lains		       <lains[AT]archlinux.org>
	   Flavio Santes	       <flavio.santes[AT]1byt3.com>
	   Florian Adamsky	       <fa-git[AT]haktar.org>
	   Florian Bezold	       <florian.bezold[AT]esrlabs.com>
	   Florian Lohoff	       <f[AT]zz.de>
	   Francisco Javier Sanchez-Roselly <franciscojavier.sanchezroselly[AT]ujaen.es>
	   Francisco Jose Alvarez      <francisco.alvarez[AT]galgus.net>
	   Francois Nguyen	       <francois[AT]daily-prophet.org>
	   Francois Schneider  <francois.schneider[AT]airbus.com>
	   Francois-Xavier Le Bail     <fx.lebail[AT]yahoo.com>
	   Frank Carpenter	       <frank.carpenter[AT]spectralink.com>
	   Franklin Mathieu    <franklinmathieu[AT]gmail.com>
	   Gabor Vaszkun	       <vaszkun[AT]gmail.com>
	   Gabriel Ganne	       <gabriel.ganne[AT]enea.com>
	   Gandharav Katyal    <gandharav4ever[AT]gmail.com>
	   Ganesh Nawsupe	       <ganesh991[AT]gmail.com>
	   Garming Sam	       <garming[AT]catalyst.net.nz>
	   Gene	Cumm	       <gene.cumm[AT]gmail.com>
	   Georg Brandl		       <georg[AT]python.org>
	   Georg Richter	       <georg[AT]mariadb.org>
	   George Hopkins	       <george-hopkins[AT]null.net>
	   George Powers	       <gpowers[AT]google.com>
	   Gerard Garcia	       <ggarcia[AT]deic.uab.cat>
	   Gergely Nagy		       <ngg[AT]ngg.hu>
	   Gerhard KHUENY	       <Gerhard.KHUENY[AT]bachmann.info>
	   Gianluca Borello    <g.borello[AT]gmail.com>
	   Gilles Dufour	       <dufour.gilles[AT]gmail.com>
	   Gizem Yurdagul	       <gizemnuryurdagul[AT]gmail.com>
	   Glenden Lee	       <thornhillextreme[AT]gmail.com>
	   Gloria Pozuelo	       <gloria.pozuelo[AT]bics.com>
	   Gordon Ross	       <gordon.w.ross[AT]gmail.com>
	   Graham Shanks	       <graham.shanks[AT]blueyonder.co.uk>
	   Greg	Morris	       <greg.morris[AT]microfocus.com>
	   Gregor Beck	       <gbeck[AT]sernet.de>
	   Gregor Jasny		       <gjasny[AT]googlemail.com>
	   Gregor Jasny		       <gregor.jasny[AT]logmein.com>
	   Gregor Miernik	       <gregor.miernik[AT]hytec.de>
	   Guillaume Autran    <gautran[AT]clearpathrobotics.com>
	   Guy Davies	       <aguydavies[AT]gmail.com>
	   Guy Harris	       <gharris[AT]sonic.net>
	   Guenther Deschner	<gd[AT]samba.org>
	   Hal Rosenstock	       <hal.rosenstock[AT]gmail.com>
	   Hanspeter Portner   <dev[AT]open-music-kontrollers.ch>
	   Harald Welte		       <laforge[AT]osmocom.org>
	   Hassan Sultan	       <sultah[AT]amazon.com>
	   Hauke Mehrtens	       <hauke.mehrtens[AT]intel.com>
	   Helmut Buchsbaum    <helmut.buchsbaum[AT]gmail.com>
	   Herwin Weststrate   <herwin[AT]quarantainenet.nl>
	   Hessam Jalali	       <hessam.jalali[AT]gmail.com>
	   Hiroaki KAWAI	       <hiroaki.kawai[AT]gmail.com>
	   Hiroshi Ioka		       <hirochachacha[AT]gmail.com>
	   Hitoshi Irino	       <irino[AT]sfc.wide.ad.jp>
	   Holger Hans Peter Freyther <holger[AT]moiji-mobile.com>
	   IWASE Yusuke		       <iwase.yusuke0[AT]gmail.com>
	   Iain	R. Learmonth   <irl[AT]fsfe.org>
	   Ian Chard	       <ian[AT]chard.org>
	   Ido Schimmel		       <idosch[AT]mellanox.com>
	   Ignacio Martinez    <ignacio.martinez.rivera[AT]gmail.com>
	   Igor	Passchier	       <igor.passchier[AT]tassinternational.com>
	   Ike Gilbert	       <ike[AT]imgilbert.com>
	   Ilya	Gavrilov	       <ilya.dev[AT]gmail.com>
	   Indraneel Guha	       <indraneelg[AT]gmail.com>
	   Ionut Ceausu		       <ionut.ceausu[AT]gmail.com>
	   Isaac Boukris	       <iboukris[AT]gmail.com>
	   Ismael Mendez Matamoros     <ismael[AT]rti.com>
	   Ivan	Ermakov		       <iermakov[AT]yahoo.com>
	   Ivan	Nardi	       <nardi.ivan[AT]gmail.com>
	   Ivan	Quach	       <ivan.quach[AT]aireon.com>
	   Ivan	Secerin		       <ivan.severin.m[AT]gmail.com>
	   J. Bruce Fields	       <bfields[AT]redhat.com>
	   JC Wren		       <jcwren[AT]jcwren.com>
	   Jack	Culhane		       <jackculhane[AT]gmail.com>
	   Jaime Caaman~o Ruiz	<jcaamano[AT]suse.com>
	   Jakub Adam	       <jakub.adam[AT]collabora.com>
	   Jakub Pawlowski	       <jpawlowski[AT]google.com>
	   Jambukumar Kulandaivel      <jambukumar[AT]codeaurora.org>
	   James Coleman	       <jamesc[AT]dspsrv.com>
	   James Ko	       <jck[AT]exegin.com>
	   Jamie Hare	       <jamie.n.hare[AT]gmail.com>
	   Jamil Nimeh	       <jnimeh[AT]gmail.com>
	   Jan Holthuis		       <jan.holthuis[AT]ruhr-uni-bochum.de>
	   Jan Kaisrlik		       <j.kaisrlik[AT]seznam.cz>
	   Jan Seda	       <hodor[AT]hodor.cz>
	   Jan Spevak	       <jan.spevak[AT]nokia.com>
	   Jan-Hendrik Bolte   <jabolte[AT]uos.de>
	   Jano	Svitok	       <jsv[AT]whitestein.com>
	   Jared Rittle		       <jrittle[AT]cisco.com>
	   Jason Cohen	       <j.cohen[AT]f5.com>
	   Jason Cohen	       <kryojenik2[AT]gmail.com>
	   Jason Heimann	       <jheimann[AT]pertino.com>
	   Jason Uher	       <jason.uher[AT]jhuapl.edu>
	   Jason Zhekov		       <jasssonpet[AT]gmail.com>
	   Javier Cardona	       <jcardona[AT]fb.com>
	   Jean	Thomas	       <jeanthomas[AT]sierrawireless.com>
	   Jean-Philippe Lebel <jpl[AT]ds.tools>
	   Jeff	Dyer	       <jmasterfunk[AT]gmail.com>
	   Jeff	Layton	       <jlayton[AT]redhat.com>
	   Jeff	Oconnell	       <jeffo[AT]rulez.com>
	   Jeff	Widman	       <jeff[AT]jeffwidman.com>
	   Jeffrey Forhan	       <jforhan[AT]cisco.com>
	   Jeffrey Goff		       <jgoff[AT]arubanetworks.com>
	   Jeffrey Smith	       <whydoubt[AT]gmail.com>
	   Jens	Kilian	       <jens.kilian[AT]advantest.com>
	   Jeremiejig	       <me[AT]jeremiejig.fr>
	   Jeremy Browne	       <jer[AT]ifni.ca>
	   Jeremy Hitt	       <jeremy.hitt[AT]isilon.com>
	   Jeremy Kerr	       <jk[AT]ozlabs.org>
	   Jeremy Martin	       <boardermartin[AT]gmail.com>
	   Jeroen Roovers	       <jer[AT]gentoo.org>
	   Jeroen Sack	       <jeroen[AT]jeroensack.nl>
	   Jesse Gross	       <jesse[AT]kernel.org>
	   Jiajun Wang	       <me[AT]jiajunw.com>
	   Jim Borden	       <jim.borden[AT]couchbase.com>
	   Jim Schaettle	       <jimschaettle[AT]gmail.com>
	   Jim Walker	       <jim[AT]couchbase.com>
	   Jim Young	       <jim.young.ws[AT]gmail.com>
	   Jim Young	       <jyoung[AT]gsu.edu>
	   Jiri	Pirko	       <jiri[AT]resnulli.us>
	   Jo Rueschel	       <wireshark[AT]rueschel.de>
	   Joakim Andersson    <joakim.andersson[AT]nordicsemi.no>
	   Joakim Karlsson	       <oakimk[AT]gmail.com>
	   Joakim Karlsson A   <joakim.a.karlsson[AT]ericsson.com>
	   Joel	Colledge	       <joel.colledge[AT]linbit.com>
	   Joeri de Ruiter	       <joeri[AT]cypherpunk.nl>
	   Johan Wahl	       <johan.wahl[AT]ericsson.com>
	   Johannes Altmanninger       <aclopte[AT]gmail.com>
	   Johannes Singler    <johannes[AT]singler.name>
	   John	A. Thacker	       <johnthacker[AT]gmail.com>
	   John	Bankier		       <opensource.jbankier[AT]gmail.com>
	   John	Keeping		       <john[AT]metanate.com>
	   John	Miner	       <optommp[AT]gmail.com>
	   John	Serock	       <serock-wireshark-dev[AT]outlook.com>
	   John	Tapparo		       <j.tapparo[AT]f5.com>
	   John	Viklund		       <john.viklund[AT]effnet.com>
	   Jon DeVree	       <nuxi[AT]vault24.org>
	   Jon Dennis	       <j.dennis[AT]cablelabs.com>
	   Jonas Falkevik	       <jonas.falkevik[AT]gmail.com>
	   Jonas Jonsson	       <jonas[AT]ludd.ltu.se>
	   Jonathan Brucker    <jonathan.brucke[AT]gmail.com>
	   Jonathan Fleming    <jonathan[AT]optigo.net>
	   Jonathan Mun~oz		<jonathan.munoz[AT]inria.fr>
	   Jordan Keister	       <grokspawn[AT]gmail.com>
	   Jorge Mora	       <jmora1300[AT]gmail.com>
	   Jorge Power	       <jpower[AT]rsscorp.org>
	   Jose	Rubio	       <joserubiovidales[AT]gmail.com>
	   Josef Baumgartner   <josef.baumgartner[AT]br-automation.com>
	   Joseph Huffman	       <jhuffman[AT]codeaurora.org>
	   Josip Medved		       <jmedved[AT]jmedved.com>
	   Josselin VALLET	       <josselin.vallet[AT]toulouse.viveris.com>
	   Juan	Jose Martin Carrascosa <juanjo[AT]rti.com>
	   Juan	Matias	       <jmrepetti[AT]gmail.com>
	   Juan	Pablo Mendoza  <jpablo[AT]gmail.com>
	   Juergen Kosel	       <juergen.kosel[AT]gmx.de>
	   Juhani Puurula	       <juhani.puurula[AT]arm.com>
	   Julian Cable		       <julian.cable[AT]yahoo.com>
	   Julian Renz	       <julian[AT]renz.cloud>
	   Julien STAUB		       <atsju2[AT]yahoo.fr>
	   Jun Wang	       <sdn_app[AT]163.com>
	   Junpei Yoshino	       <junpei.yoshino[AT]gmail.com>
	   Justin Dailey	       <justin[AT]mti-systems.com>
	   Justin Helgesen	       <justinhelgesen[AT]gmail.com>
	   Justin J. Novack    <jnovack[AT]gmail.com>
	   JustinKu	       <jiunrong[AT]gmail.com>
	   Jerome LAFORGE	       <jerome.laforge[AT]gmail.com>
	   Ka-Shu Wong	       <kswong[AT]exablaze.com>
	   Karl	Knoebl	       <karl.knoebl[AT]technikum-wien.at>
	   Kary	Rogers	       <kary.rogers[AT]gmail.com>
	   Kasper Deng	       <kasper.deng[AT]ericsson.com>
	   Keith Scott	       <keithlscott[AT]gmail.com>
	   Ken Aaker	       <kenaaker[AT]gmail.com>
	   Kenneth Soerensen   <knnthsrnsn[AT]gmail.com>
	   Kenny Root	       <kenny[AT]the-b.org>
	   Kevin A. Noll	       <kevinanoll[AT]gmail.com>
	   Kevin Bracey		       <kevin.bracey[AT]arm.com>
	   Kevin Cernekee	       <cernekee[AT]chromium.org>
	   Kevin Grigorenko    <kevin.grigorenko[AT]us.ibm.com>
	   Kevin Hausman	       <kevin.hausman[AT]sentaca.com>
	   Kevin Herron		       <kevinherron[AT]gmail.com>
	   Kevin Hogan	       <kwabena[AT]google.com>
	   Khalifa NDIAYE	       <khalifa.ndiaye[AT]orange.com>
	   Kim Baeckstroem		 <kim.backstrom[AT]gmail.com>
	   Kirill Chernyshov   <nideff.ru[AT]gmail.com>
	   Krunal Soni	       <krunaldsoni[AT]gmail.com>
	   Krzysztof Opasiak   <k.opasiak[AT]samsung.com>
	   Lajos Olah	       <lajos.olah.jr[AT]gmail.com>
	   Lars	Christensen    <larsch[AT]belunktum.dk>
	   Lars	Sundstroem		<lars.x.sundstrom[AT]ericsson.com>
	   Lasse Luttermann Poulsen <lasse.luttermann[AT]gmail.com>
	   Laszlo Papp	       <laszlo.papp[AT]hubersuhner.com>
	   Laurenz Kamp		       <laurenz.kamp[AT]gmx.de>
	   Lee Mitchell		       <lee[AT]indigopepper.com>
	   Lee Serin	       <serinee95[AT]gmail.com>
	   Lev Stipakov		       <lstipakov[AT]gmail.com>
	   Lichen Liu	       <llc123456a[AT]gmail.com>
	   Lin Sun		       <lin.sun[AT]zoom.us>
	   Loganaden Velvindron	       <logan[AT]cyberstorm.mu>
	   Lorenzo Vannucci    <vannucci[AT]ntop.org>
	   Lotte Steenbrink    <lotte[AT]zombietetris.de>
	   Luca	Melette		       <luca[AT]srlabs.de>
	   Lucas Simopoulos    <lsimopoulos[AT]gmail.com>
	   Ludovic Cintrat	       <l.cintrat[AT]traxens.com>
	   Luis	Rosa	       <lmrosa[AT]dei.uc.pt>
	   Lukas Emersberger   <lukas.emersberger[AT]gmail.com>
	   Luke	Chou	       <luke.chou[AT]gmail.com>
	   Luke	Lynch	       <llynch2017[AT]my.fit.edu>
	   Luke	Mewburn		       <luke[AT]mewburn.net>
	   Lutz	Kresge	       <LutzKr[AT]protonmail.ch>
	   Leo Gaspard	       <leo[AT]gaspard.io>
	   Maarten Bezemer	       <maarten.bezemer[AT]gmail.com>
	   Magnus Henoch	       <magnus.henoch[AT]gmail.com>
	   Maka0		       <Maka0[AT]yurei.net>
	   Makoto Shimamura    <makoto.shimamura[AT]toshiba.co.jp>
	   Maksim Salau		       <maksim.salau[AT]gmail.com>
	   Malcolm Walters	       <malcolm.walters[AT]acano.com>
	   MaliXa VuXiniX	       <malishav[AT]gmail.com>
	   Manfred		       <mx2927[AT]gmail.com>
	   Marc	Bevand	       <mbevand[AT]google.com>
	   Marc	Fournier	       <marc.fournier[AT]camptocamp.com>
	   Marcel Essig		       <marcel.essig[AT]gmx.de>
	   Marcelo Ricardo Leitner     <marcelo.leitner[AT]gmail.com>
	   Marcin Rokicki	       <marcin.rokicki[AT]gmail.com>
	   Marcus Sundberg	       <marcus.sundberg[AT]aptilo.com>
	   Marian XurkoviX	       <md[AT]bts.sk>
	   Marie Janssen	       <jamuraa[AT]google.com>
	   Marios Makassikis   <mmakassikis[AT]gmail.com>
	   Marius Paliga	       <marius.paliga[AT]gmail.com>
	   Mariusz Zaborski    <oshogbo[AT]vexillium.org>
	   Mark	Ciechanowski   <markciechanowski[AT]gmail.com>
	   Mark	Cunningham	       <launchpad[AT]markcunningham.ie>
	   Mark	Phillips	       <mark.s.phillips[AT]outlook.com>
	   Mark	Weel	       <markweel[AT]hotmail.com>
	   Markku Leinioe		<markku[AT]iki.fi>
	   Marko Hrastovec	       <marko.hrastovec[AT]gmail.com>
	   Markus Becker	       <markus.becker[AT]tridonic.com>
	   Marouen Ghodhbane   <marouen.ghodhbane[AT]nxp.com>
	   Martin		       <martin.lutz[AT]gmail.com>
	   Martin Boye Petersen	       <martinboyepetersen[AT]gmail.com>
	   Martin Fesser	       <martin.fesser[AT]allegro-packets.com>
	   Martin Heusse	       <martin.heusse[AT]imag.fr>
	   Martin Mathieson    <martin.mathieson[AT]keysight.com>
	   Martin Sehnoutka    <msehnout[AT]redhat.com>
	   Martin Tibensky	       <martin.tibensky[AT]alcatel-lucent.com>
	   Martin Vit	       <martin[AT]voipmonitor.org>
	   Masashi Honma	       <masashi.honma[AT]gmail.com>
	   Matej KoXik	       <5764c029b688c1c0d24a2e97cd764f[AT]gmail.com>
	   Matej Tkac	       <matej.tkac.mt[AT]gmail.com>
	   Mathias Kurth	       <mathias.kurth[AT]commsolid.com>
	   Mathy Vanhoef	       <Mathy.Vanhoef[AT]nyu.edu>
	   Matt	Carabine	       <matt.carabine[AT]hotmail.co.uk>
	   Matt	Lawrence	       <bugzilla.wireshark[AT]erisa.co.uk>
	   Matt	Parker	       <matt.parker[AT]poly.com>
	   Matt	Porter	       <mporter[AT]konsulko.com>
	   Matthew Weant	       <msweant[AT]gmail.com>
	   Matthias Lang	       <matthias[AT]corelatus.com>
	   Matthieu Coudron    <matthieu.coudron[AT]lip6.fr>
	   Max Dmitrichenko    <dmitrmax[AT]gmail.com>
	   Maxim Kropp	       <maxim.kropp[AT]hotmail.de>
	   Maxim Sharabayko    <maxim.sharabayko[AT]gmail.com>
	   Maximilian Kohler   <maximilian.kohler[AT]viavisolutions.com>
	   Mehmet Oguz Sakaoglu	       <mehmet.oguz.mnz[AT]gmail.com>
	   Merlin Chlosta	       <merlin.chlosta+gnuradio[AT]ruhr-uni-bochum.de>
       Micha Reiser	       <michafamreiser.ch>
	   Michael Adam		       <obnox[AT]samba.org>
	   Michael Bouchaud (yoz)      <michael.bouchaud[AT]toulouse.viveris.com>
	   Michael Cistera	       <michael.cistera[AT]netscout.com>
	   Michael Honsel	       <lesnoh[AT]gmx.de>
	   Michael Mann		       <Michael.Mann[AT]jbtc.com>
	   Michael McConville  <mmcco[AT]mykolab.com>
	   Michael McTernan    <mike.mcternan[AT]wavemobile.com>
	   Michael Oed	       <michael.oed[AT]gmail.com>
	   Michael Penick	       <penick[AT]gmail.com>
	   Michael Pergament   <mpergament[AT]googlemail.com>
	   Michael Schmitt	       <mschmitt[AT]fastmail.net>
	   Michael Sweet	       <michael.r.sweet[AT]gmail.com>
	   Michael Vigovsky    <upliner[AT]gmail.com>
	   Michail Koreshkov   <drkor[AT]hotbox.ru>
	   Michal Kubecek	       <mkubecek[AT]suse.cz>
	   Michal Pazdera	       <michal.pazdera[AT]gmail.com>
	   Michal Privoznik    <mprivozn[AT]redhat.com>
	   Michal Ruprich	       <michalruprich[AT]gmail.com>
	   Michal Slavka	       <slavka.michal[AT]gmail.com>
	   Michalis Kapsalakis <kapsalis1989[AT]gmail.com>
	   Michaeel Bouchaud	<michael.bouchaud[AT]external.thalesaleniaspace.com>
	   Michaeel Bouchaud	<michael.bouchaud[AT]gmail.com>
	   MichaX Skalski	       <mskalski13[AT]gmail.com>
	   Michele Baldessari  <michele[AT]acksyn.org>
	   Miguel Company	       <MiguelCompany[AT]eprosima.com>
	   Mihai Codrean	       <mihaicodrean[AT]gmail.com>
	   Mikael Kanstrup	       <mikael.kanstrup[AT]gmail.com>
	   Mike	Frysinger	       <vapier[AT]chromium.org>
	   Mike	Gerschefske    <msgersch2[AT]gmail.com>
	   Mike	Lugo	       <mlugo.apx[AT]gmail.com>
	   Mike	Morrin	       <morrinmike[AT]gmail.com>
	   Mike	Ryan	       <mikeryan[AT]lacklustre.net>
	   Mikhail Gusarov	       <dottedmag[AT]dottedmag.net>
	   Milan Stute	       <mstute[AT]seemoo.tu-darmstadt.de>
	   Milos Jovanovic	       <jeyem815[AT]gmail.com>
	   Miltos Patsiouras   <mipatsio[AT]gmail.com>
	   Minh	Phan	       <phanducnhatminh[AT]gmail.com>
	   Mirko Parthey	       <mirko.parthey[AT]web.de>
	   Moraney Jalil	       <moraney.jalil[AT]outlook.com>
	   Morten Tryfoss	       <morten[AT]tryfoss.no>
	   Moshe Kaplan		       <me[AT]moshekaplan.com>
	   Nathan Cole	       <nath[AT]thecoleresidence.co.uk>
	   Nathan Houghton	       <nathan[AT]brainwerk.org>
	   Nathaniel Clark	       <Nathaniel.Clark[AT]misrule.us>
	   Nathaniel Clark	       <nathaniel.l.clark[AT]intel.com>
	   Neels Hofmeyr	       <neels[AT]hofmeyr.de>
	   Neil	Ostroff		       <neil[AT]mangosoup.com>
	   Niall Dugera		       <niall.dugera[AT]anam.com>
	   Nick	Bedbury		       <npbedbur[AT]syr.edu>
	   Nick	Calus	       <ncalus[AT]nalys-group.com>
	   Nick	Carter	       <ncarter100[AT]gmail.com>
	   Nick	James	       <mookito[AT]tuta.io>
	   Nick	Lowe	       <nick.lowe[AT]gmail.com>
	   Nicolas BERTIN	       <nicolas.bertin[AT]al-enterprise.com>
	   Nicolas Cavallari   <nicolas.cavallari[AT]green-communications.fr>
	   Nicolas Darchis	       <ndarchis[AT]cisco.com>
	   Nicolas S. Dade	       <nic.dade[AT]gmail.com>
	   Nikhil Acharya Prakash      <nikhilap[AT]arista.com>
	   Nikita Ryaskin	       <nikita.ryaskin[AT]dsr-corporation.com>
	   Nikolai Ipatyev	       <wallprime[AT]yandex.com>
	   Nikolay Kovtun	       <nikolay.kovtun[AT]dsr-corporation.com>
	   Nils	Bjoerklund		<nils.bjorklund[AT]effnet.com>
	   Nils	Ohlmeier	       <github[AT]ohlmeier.org>
	   Nitzan Carmi		       <nitzanc[AT]mellanox.com>
	   Noel	Power	       <noel.power[AT]suse.com>
	   Nora	Sandler		       <nsandler[AT]securityinnovation.com>
	   Odysseus Yang	       <wiresharkyyh[AT]outlook.com>
	   Olaf	Bergmann	       <bergmann[AT]tzi.org>
	   Olaf	Flaschel	       <olaf.flaschel[AT]vestifi.de>
	   Olga	Kornievskaia   <kolga[AT]netapp.com>
	   Oliver		       <cellotape[AT]gmail.com>
	   Oliver Downard	       <oliver.downard[AT]couchbase.com>
	   Oliver Smith		       <osmith[AT]sysmocom.de>
	   Olivier Verriest    <verri[AT]x25.pm>
	   Oren	Koler	       <clicker78[AT]gmail.com>
	   Orgad Shaneh		       <orgad.shaneh[AT]audiocodes.com>
	   Orgad Shaneh		       <orgads[AT]gmail.com>
	   Oscar Gonzalez de Dios      <oscar.gonzalezdedios[AT]telefonica.com>
	   Osman Sakalla	       <osman.sakalla[AT]ericsson.com>
	   Owen	Williams	       <williams.owen[AT]gmail.com>
	   PHO		       <pho[AT]cielonegro.org>
	   Paolo Abeni	       <pabeni[AT]redhat.com>
	   Paolo Abeni	       <paolo.abeni[AT]gmail.com>
	   Parav Pandit		       <paravpandit[AT]yahoo.com>
	   Pascal Artho		       <pascalartho[AT]gmail.com>
	   Pascal Quantin	       <pascal[AT]wireshark.org>
	   Pascal S. de	Kloe   <pascal[AT]quies.net>
	   Patrice Fournier    <patrice.fournier[AT]ifax.com>
	   Patricia Lindner    <plindner6912[AT]gmail.com>
	   Patrick MacArthur   <pmacarth[AT]iol.unh.edu>
	   Patrick Servello    <patrick.servello[AT]gmail.com>
	   Patrik MoXko		       <patrikmosko95[AT]gmail.com>
	   Patryk Nowak		       <patryk.nowak[AT]tieto.com>
	   Pau Espin Pedrol    <pespin[AT]sysmocom.de>
	   Paul	Aurich	       <paul[AT]darkrain42.org>
	   Paul	Chambon		       <pchambon[AT]toulouse.viveris.com>
	   Paul	Emge	       <paul.emge[AT]digidescorp.com>
	   Paul	Offord	       <paul.offord[AT]advance7.com>
	   Paul	Thomas	       <pthomas8589[AT]gmail.com>
	   Paul	Williamson	       <paul[AT]mustbeart.com>
	   Paul	Zander	       <p.j.zander[AT]lighting.com>
	   PaulThompson		       <lankygitster[AT]gmail.com>
	   Paulo Roberto Branda~o	<betobrandao[AT]gmail.com>
	   Pavel Karneliuk	       <pavel_karneliuk[AT]epam.com>
	   Pavel Moravec	       <mgr.pavel[AT]gmail.com>
	   Pavel Odintsov	       <pavel.odintsov[AT]gmail.com>
	   Pavel Strnad		       <strnadp[AT]tiscali.cz>
	   Pavlos Antoniou	       <pant[AT]intracom-telecom.com>
	   Pedro Jose Marron   <pjmarron[AT]locoslab.com>
	   Pedro Malagon	       <malagon[AT]die.upm.es>
	   Peng	Li		       <seudut[AT]gmail.com>
	   Peng	Tao	       <tao.peng[AT]primarydata.com>
	   Peter Hamilton	       <qmear55[AT]protonmail.com>
	   Peter Krystad	       <peter.krystad[AT]linux.intel.com>
	   Peter Membrey	       <peter[AT]membrey.hk>
	   Peter Oettig		       <peter.oettig[AT]1und1.de>
	   Peter Ross	       <peter.ross[AT]dsto.defence.gov.au>
	   Petr	Gotthard	       <petr.gotthard[AT]honeywell.com>
	   Petr	Janecek		       <janecek[AT]ucw.cz>
	   Petr	Stuchlik	       <stuchl4n3k[AT]gmail.com>
	   Petr	Sumbera		       <petr.sumbera[AT]oracle.com>
	   Petr	Xtetiar		       <petr.stetiar[AT]gaben.cz>
	   Phil	Beeson	       <bugzilla[AT]philbeeson.com>
	   Philip Rosenberg-Watt       <p.rosenberg-watt[AT]cablelabs.com>
	   Philipp Hancke	       <fippo[AT]andyet.net>
	   Pino	Toscano		       <pino[AT]debian.org>
	   Piotr PawXowski	       <ppiotru[AT]gmail.com>
	   Piotr Sarna	       <sarna[AT]scylladb.com>
	   Piotr Smolinski	       <piotr.smolinski[AT]confluent.io>
	   Piotr Tulpan		       <piotr.tulpan[AT]netscan.pl>
	   Piotr Winiarczyk    <wino45[AT]gmail.com>
	   Poornima G	       <pgurusid[AT]redhat.com>
	   Prashanth Pai	       <ppai[AT]redhat.com>
	   Prerit Jain	       <prerit.jain[AT]gmail.com>
	   Prerit Jain	       <prerit.jain[AT]samsung.com>
	   Prince Paul	       <prince.paul.k[AT]gmail.com>
	   Priyanka Mondal	       <priyanka02010[AT]gmail.com>
	   Radhashyam Behera   <radhashyambehera[AT]gmail.com>
	   Rado	Radoulov	       <rad0x6f[AT]gmail.com>
	   RafaX KuXnia		       <rafal.kuznia[AT]protonmail.com>
	   Rainer Keller	       <Rainer.Keller[AT]qt.io>
	   Ralf	Nasilowski	       <Ralf.Nasilowski[AT]ise.de>
	   Ralph Boehme		       <slow[AT]samba.org>
	   Rasmus Jonsson	       <wasmus[AT]zom.bi>
	   Ray Gomez	       <rayvincent.gomez[AT]gmail.com>
	   Rediet		       <getachew.redieteab[AT]orange.com>
	   Remi	Gacogne		       <remi.gacogne[AT]powerdns.com>
	   Remous-Aris Koutsiamanis <aris[AT]ariskou.com>
	   Rene	Nielsen		       <rene.nielsen[AT]microchip.com>
	   Ricardo Cristian Ramirez <r.cristian.ramirez[AT]gmail.com>
	   Rich	Coe	       <richcoe2[AT]gmail.com>
	   Richard Kuemmel	       <kuemmel.ric[AT]googlemail.com>
	   Richard Laager	       <rlaager[AT]wiktel.com>
	   Richard Smith	       <pcy190[AT]126.com>
	   Rickard Holmberg    <rickard[AT]avkrok.net>
	   Rishi Dev Singh	       <rishi.dev[AT]samsung.com>
	   Robert Beardsworth  <rob_beardsworth[AT]hotmail.com>
	   Robert Cragie	       <robert.cragie[AT]gmail.com>
	   Robert P	       <tehownt[AT]gmail.com>
	   Robert Sauter	       <sauter[AT]locoslab.com>
	   Rody	Liu	       <rody.liu[AT]ericsson.com>
	   Roger Light	       <roger[AT]atchoo.org>
	   Rohan Saini	       <rohan.saini[AT]nokia.com>
	   Roland Haenel	       <roland[AT]haenel.me>
	   Roland Knall		       <rknall[AT]gmail.com>
	   Romain Tartiere	       <romain[AT]blogreen.org>
	   Roman Koshelev	       <roman.koshelev[AT]bk.ru>
	   Roman Leonhartsberger       <ro.leonhartsberger[AT]gmail.com>
	   Roman Volkov		       <volkoff_roman[AT]ukr.net>
	   Ronen Boazi	       <ronen.boazi[AT]intel.com>
	   Ross	Jacobs	       <rossbjacobs[AT]gmail.com>
	   Roy Chateau	       <chateau.royw[AT]gmail.com>
	   Rudra Rugge	       <rrugge[AT]juniper.net>
	   Rui ZHANG	       <rzhang[AT]grandstream.cn>
	   Russel Howe	       <russel[AT]appliedinvention.com>
	   Russell Lowes	       <russelll[AT]metamako.com>
	   Rustam Safargalin   <rustam.safargalin[AT]sifox.ru>
	   Ryan	Mullen	       <rmmullen[AT]gmail.com>
	   Remy	Leone	       <remy.leone[AT]gmail.com>
	   Saku	Ytti	       <saku[AT]ytti.fi>
	   Sam Cisneros		       <Sam.Cisneros15[AT]protonmail.com>
	   Samiran Saha		       <ssahasamiran[AT]gmail.com>
	   Sandeep Dahiya	       <sdahiya[AT]gmail.com>
	   Sander Steffann	       <sander[AT]steffann.nl>
	   Sanket Godbole	       <sanket.godbole[AT]spirent.com>
	   Sawssen Hadded	       <saw.hadded[AT]gmail.com>
	   Sayuri Mizushima    <yamaguchi55[AT]protonmail.ch>
	   Scott Deandrea	       <sdeandrea[AT]apple.com>
	   Sebastian Kloeppel  <sk[AT]nakedape.net>
	   Sebastian Schildt   <sebastian[AT]frozenlight.de>
	   Selva Kumar	       <v.selvamuthukumar[AT]gmail.com>
	   Selvamegala	       <sselvamegala[AT]gmail.com>
	   Sergey Avseyev	       <sergey.avseyev[AT]gmail.com>
	   Sergey Bogdanov	       <Sergey.Bogdanov[AT]astrosoft.ru>
	   Sergey Rak	       <sergrak[AT]iotecha.com>
	   Sergio Moreno Mozota	       <sergio.morenomozota[AT]telefonica.com>
	   Seth	Alexander	       <seth.alexander[AT]cosmicaes.com>
	   Sharvil Nanavati    <sharvil[AT]playground.global>
	   Shekhar Chandra	       <ranushekhar[AT]gmail.com>
	   Shinjo Park	       <peremen[AT]gmail.com>
	   Shoichi Sakane	       <wireshark-shoichi[AT]tanu.org>
	   Shu Shen	       <shu.shen[AT]gmail.com>
	   Shuai Xiao	       <iamhihi[AT]gmail.com>
	   Shudong Zhou		       <shudongzhou[AT]gmail.com>
	   Signat Sibirskiy    <ord.blant[AT]gmail.com>
	   Silvio Gissi		       <silvio.gissi[AT]gmail.com>
	   Simon Barber		       <simon.barber[AT]meraki.net>
	   Simon Graham		       <simgrxp[AT]gmail.com>
	   Simon Long	       <hobei[AT]whitedoor.plus.com>
	   Simon Vans-Colina   <simon[AT]monzo.com>
	   Simon Zhong	       <szhong.jnpr[AT]gmail.com>
	   Slava Bacherikov    <slava[AT]bacher09.org>
	   Slava Shwartsman    <slavash[AT]mellanox.com>
	   Solganik Alexander  <solganik[AT]gmail.com>
	   Sontol Bonggol	       <sonbonggol[AT]gmail.com>
	   Soumya Koduri	       <skoduri[AT]redhat.com>
	   Steev Klimaszewski  <threeway[AT]gmail.com>
	   Stefan Battmer	       <stefan.battmer[AT]matrix-vision.de>
	   Stefan Doehla	       <stefan.doehla[AT]iis.fraunhofer.de>
	   Stefan Hajnoczi	       <stefanha[AT]redhat.com>
	   Stefan Poeschel		<github[AT]basicmaster.de>
	   Stefan Tatschner    <stefan[AT]rumpelsepp.org>
	   Stefan Voelkel		<sv[AT]its-v.de>
	   Stella Randall	       <stella.randall[AT]emeerson.com>
	   Stephan Kappertz    <octopus.sk[AT]googlemail.com>
	   Stephane Bryant	       <stephane.ml.bryant[AT]gmail.com>
	   Stephen Donnelly    <stephen.donnelly[AT]endace.com>
	   Steve Osselton	       <steve.osselton[AT]gmail.com>
	   Sultan Qasim	Khan   <sultan.qasimkhan[AT]nccgroup.com>
	   Sunil Mushran	       <sunil.mushran[AT]oracle.com>
	   Sven	Eckelmann	       <sven[AT]open-mesh.com>
	   Sven	Schnelle	       <svens[AT]stackframe.org>
	   Swapnil Roy	       <swapnil.advent[AT]gmail.com>
	   Sylvain Munaut	       <tnt[AT]246tNt.com>
	   Sebastien Deronne   <sebastien.deronne[AT]gmail.com>
	   Sebastien RAILLARD  <sr[AT]coexsi.fr>
	   T. Scholz	       <scholzt234[AT]googlemail.com>
	   Tadeusz Struk	       <tadeusz.struk[AT]intel.com>
	   Tadeusz Struk	       <tstruk[AT]gmail.com>
	   Taisuke Sasaki	       <taisasak[AT]cisco.com>
	   Tamir Duberstein    <tamird[AT]google.com>
	   Tatsuhiro Tsujikawa <tatsuhiro.t[AT]gmail.com>
	   Tengfei Chang	       <tengfei.chang[AT]inria.fr>
	   Teyut		       <teyut[AT]free.fr>
	   Thibault Gerondal   <github[AT]tycale.be>
	   Thies Moeller	       <thies.moeller[AT]baslerweb.com>
	   Thiyagarajan	P	       <psvthiyagarajan[AT]gmail.com>
	   Thomas Chen	       <funorpain[AT]gmail.com>
	   Thomas Klausner	       <tk[AT]giga.or.at>
	   Thomas Portassau    <thomas.portassau[AT]hotmail.fr>
	   Thomas Shen	       <thomashen[AT]gmail.com>
	   Thomas Vogt	       <gitwiresharktv[AT]ist-einmalig.de>
	   Thomas d'Otreppe    <tdotreppe[AT]aircrack-ng.org>
	   Tigran Mkrtchyan    <tigran.mkrtchyan[AT]desy.de>
	   Tim (Thanh) Nguyen  <tnnguyen[AT]broadcom.com>
	   Tim Cuthbertson	       <tim[AT]gfxmonk.net>
	   Tim Furlong	       <tim.furlong[AT]gmail.com>
	   Timo	Warns	       <timow+github[AT]DiningPhilosopher.DE>
	   Timothy Geiser	       <slimshady007[AT]inbox.lv>
	   Tobias Brunner	       <tobias[AT]strongswan.org>
	   Tobias Mueller	       <muelli[AT]cryptobitch.de>
	   Tobias Rasmusson    <tobias.rasmusson[AT]gmail.com>
	   Tobias Stoeckmann   <tobias[AT]stoeckmann.org>
	   Tom		       <tom916[AT]qq.com>
	   Tom Haynes	       <loghyr[AT]hammerspace.com>
	   Tom Haynes	       <loghyr[AT]primarydata.com>
	   Tom Nisbet	       <t.talk[AT]nisbethome.com>
	   Tom Yan		       <tom.yan[AT]nokia-sbell.com>
	   Tomas Konecny	       <tomas.konecny[AT]eldis.cz>
	   Tomas Kukosa		       <kukosa[AT]herman.cz>
	   Tomas Kukosa		       <tkeksa[AT]gmail.com>
	   Tomas Kukosa		       <tomas.kukosa[AT]ixperta.com>
	   Tomas Liscak		       <tomas.liscak[AT]nokia.com>
	   Tony	Ciavarella	       <tony.ciavarella[AT]squalllinesoftware.com>
	   Topi	Miettinen	       <toiwoton[AT]gmail.com>
	   Trond Myklebust	       <trond.myklebust[AT]primarydata.com>
	   Trond Norbye		       <trond[AT]couchbase.com>
	   Ulf		       <ulf33286[AT]gmail.com>
	   Uli Schlachter	       <psychon[AT]znc.in>
	   Umberto Corponi	       <umberto.corponi[AT]athonet.com>
	   Uri Simchoni		       <urisimchoni[AT]gmail.com>
	   Uwe Kleine-Koenig	<uwe[AT]kleine-koenig.org>
	   Vadim Fedorenko	       <vadimjunk[AT]gmail.com>
	   Vadim Yanitskiy	       <axilirator[AT]gmail.com>
	   Vadim Yanitskiy	       <vyanitskiy[AT]sysmocom.de>
	   ValdikSS	       <iam[AT]valdikss.org.ru>
	   Valentin Vidic	       <Valentin.Vidic[AT]CARNet.hr>
	   Vanson Lim	       <vlim[AT]cisco.com>
	   Vasil Velichkov	       <vvvelichkov[AT]gmail.com>
	   Victor Barratault   <victor.barratault[AT]gmail.com>
	   Victor Dodon		       <dodonvictor[AT]gmail.com>
	   Victor Voronkov	       <victor.voronkov[AT]gmail.com>
	   Vidar Madsen		       <vidarino[AT]gmail.com>
	   Vik		       <vkp129+ubuntu[AT]gmail.com>
	   Vikhyat Umrao	       <vumrao[AT]redhat.com>
	   Vikram Hegde		       <vikram.h[AT]samsung.com>
	   Ville Skyttae		<ville.skytta[AT]iki.fi>
	   Vincent Helfre	       <vincent.helfre[AT]gmx.net>
	   Vincenzo Reale	       <smart2128[AT]baslug.org>
	   Vivek Pandey		       <vivek_pandey[AT]comcast.com>
	   Vladimir Kondratiev <qca_vkondrat[AT]qca.qualcomm.com>
	   Vladimir Rutsky	       <rutsky[AT]google.com>
	   Vladislav Grishenko <themiron[AT]mail.ru>
	   Vladlen Popov	       <vladlen.popov[AT]yahoo.com>
	   Volker Lendecke	       <vl[AT]samba.org>
	   Volodymyr Khomenko  <Khomenko.Volodymyr[AT]gmail.com>
	   Volodymyr Khomenko  <volodymyr[AT]vastdata.com>
	   Volodymyr Veskera   <volodymyrv[AT]interfacemasters.com>
	   Warren Moxam		       <warrenmptgrey[AT]gmail.com>
	   Wasim Abu Moch	       <wasim[AT]mellanox.com>
	   Weston Andros Adamson       <dros[AT]primarydata.com>
	   Weston Schmidt	       <weston_schmidt[AT]alumni.purdue.edu>
	   Will	Glynn	       <will[AT]willglynn.com>
	   Will	Robertson	       <aliask[AT]gmail.com>
	   William Tu	       <u9012063[AT]gmail.com>
	   Xavier Brouckaert   <xabrouck[AT]cisco.com>
	   Xiaochuan Sun	       <linuxvxworks[AT]gmail.com>
	   Xiaoxia Lang		       <xxlang[AT]grandstream.cn>
	   Xu		       <alvin.xu[AT]nokia-sbell.com>
	   XuNiu		       <993273596[AT]qq.com>
	   YFdyh000	       <yfdyh000[AT]gmail.com>
	   Yan Burman	       <yanb[AT]mellanox.com>
	   Yang	Luo	       <hsluoyz[AT]qq.com>
	   Yann	Diorcet		       <yann[AT]diorcet.fr>
	   Yann	Garcia	       <yann.garcia[AT]fscom.frSkype>
	   Yann	Lejeune		       <ylejeune[AT]netyl.org>
	   Yann	Pomarede	       <yann.pomarede[AT]gmail.com>
	   Yannik Enss	       <Yannik.Enss[AT]rohde-schwarz.com>
	   Yasuyuki Tanaka	       <yasuyuki.tanaka[AT]inria.fr>
	   Yehonatan Zecharia  <yonti95[AT]gmail.com>
	   Yoshihiro Ueda	       <uyoshihiro[AT]users.noreply.gitlab.com>
	   Yoshiyuki Kurauchi  <ahochauwaaaaa[AT]gmail.com>
	   Yuri	Chislov		       <yuri.chislov[AT]gmail.com>
	   Yurii Lysyi	       <yurii.lysyi[AT]ericsson.com>
	   Yury	Gargay	       <yury.gargay[AT]gmail.com>
	   Zachary Holcomb	       <zholcomb2017[AT]my.fit.edu>
	   ZdenXk Xambersky    <zzdevel[AT]seznam.cz>
	   Zhao	Lin	       <zlbinghamton[AT]gmail.com>
	   Zhenhua Hu	       <fattiger1102[AT]gmail.com>
	   akuchekar	       <akuchekar[AT]empirix.com>
	   anonsvn		       <anonsvn[AT]localhost>
	   atul358		       <atul358[AT]gmail.com>
	   cff339		       <cff339[AT]gmail.com>
	   cheloftus	       <cheloftus[AT]gmail.com>
	   dennisschagt		       <dennisschagt[AT]gmail.com>
	   eckart haug	       <wireshark[AT]syntacs.com>
	   ishaangandhi		       <ishaangandhi[AT]gmail.com>
	   jfp_martin	       <john[AT]purplemeanie.co.uk>
	   kardam		       <netkardam[AT]gmail.com>
	   kkoizumi	       <kkoizumi46[AT]gmail.com>
	   liningjie	       <1350445139[AT]qq.com>
	   mkg20001	       <mkg20001[AT]gmail.com>
	   nickvsnetworking    <nick[AT]nickvsnetworking.com>
	   pegah hajiani	       <pegah_haj[AT]yahoo.com>
	   rbroker		       <rstbroker[AT]gmail.com>
	   shqking		       <shqking[AT]gmail.com>
	   subhav8		       <subhadevi88[AT]gmail.com>
	   vahapemin	       <vahapemin44[AT]gmail.com>
	   zhongweisitu		       <zsitu[AT]extremenetworks.com>
	   zhudewen	       <zhudewen[AT]iauto.com>
	   Emilio Gonzalez	       <egg997[AT]gmail.com>
	   Eric	Piel	       <piel[AT]delmic.com>
	   Oyvind Ronningstad  <ronningstad[AT]gmail.com>
	   XXXXXXX XXXXXXX	       <dmitrycvet[AT]gmail.com>

   Acknowledgements
       Dan Lasley <dlasley[AT]promus.com> gave permission for his dumpit()
       hex-dump	routine	to be used.

       Mattia Cazzola <mattiac[AT]alinet.it> provided a	patch to the hex dump
       display routine.

       We use the exception module from	Kazlib,	a C library written by Kaz
       Kylheku <kaz[AT]kylheku.com>. Thanks go to him for his well-written
       library.	The Kazlib home	page can be found at
       http://www.kylheku.com/~kaz/kazlib.html

       We use Lua BitOp, written by Mike Pall, for bitwise operations on
       numbers in Lua. The Lua BitOp home page can be found at
       https://bitop.luajit.org

       snax <snax[AT]shmoo.com>	gave permission	to use his(?) weak key
       detection code from Airsnort.

       IANA gave permission for	their port-numbers file	to be used.

       We use the natural order	string comparison algorithm, written by	Martin
       Pool <mbp[AT]sourcefrog.net>.

       Emanuel Eichhammer <support[AT]qcustomplot.com> granted permission to
       use QCustomPlot.

       Insecure.Com LLC	("The Nmap Project") has granted the Wireshark
       Foundation permission to	distribute Npcap with our Windows installers.

3.4.2				  2021-03-01			  WIRESHARK(1)

NAME | SYNOPSIS | DESCRIPTION | OPTIONS | INTERFACE | CAPTURE FILTER SYNTAX | DISPLAY FILTER SYNTAX | FILES | ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES | SEE ALSO | NOTES | AUTHORS

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