Assignment 1 W
Assignment 1 W
Assignment 1 W
” Chinese proverb
Wireshark Lab:
Assignment 1w (Optional)
One’s understanding of network protocols can often be greatly deepened by “seeing protocols in
action” and by “playing around with protocols” – observing the sequence of messages exchanged
between two protocol entities, delving down into the details of protocol operation, and causing
protocols to perform certain actions and then observing these actions and their consequences. This can
be done in simulated scenarios or in a “real” network environment such as the Internet. In the
Wireshark labs you’ll be doing in this course, you’ll be running various network applications in
different scenarios using your own computer (or you can borrow a friends; let me know if you don’t
have access to a computer where you can install/run Wireshark). You’ll observe the network protocols
in your computer “in action,” interacting and exchanging messages with protocol entities executing
elsewhere in the Internet. Thus, you and your computer will be an integral part of these “live” labs.
You’ll observe, and you’ll learn, by doing.
In this first Wireshark lab, you’ll get acquainted with Wireshark, and make some simple packet
captures and observations.
The basic tool for observing the messages exchanged between executing protocol entities is called a
packet sniffer. As the name suggests, a packet sniffer captures (“sniffs”) messages being
sent/received from/by your computer; it will also typically store and/or display the contents of the
various protocol fields in these captured messages. A packet sniffer itself is passive. It observes
messages being sent and received by applications and protocols running on your computer, but never
sends packets itself. Similarly, received packets are never explicitly addressed to the packet sniffer.
Instead, a packet sniffer receives a copy of packets that are sent/received from/by application and
protocols executing on your machine.
Figure 1 shows the structure of a packet sniffer. At the right of Figure 1 are the protocols (in this
case, Internet protocols) and applications (such as a web browser or ftp client) that normally run
on your computer. The packet sniffer, shown within the dashed rectangle in Figure 1 is an
addition to the usual software in your computer, and consists
of two parts. The packet capture library receives a copy of every link-layer frame that is sent from
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or received by your computer. Recall from the discussion from section 1.5 in the text (Figure 1.24 )
that messages exchanged by higher layer protocols such as HTTP, FTP, TCP, UDP, DNS, or IP all are
eventually encapsulated in link-layer frames that are transmitted over physical media such as an
Ethernet cable. In Figure 1, the assumed physical media is an Ethernet, and so all upper-layer
protocols are eventually encapsulated within an Ethernet frame. Capturing all link-layer frames thus
gives you all messages sent/received from/by all protocols and applications executing in your
computer.
packet
sniffer
to/from network to/from network
Figure 1: Packet sniffer structure
The second component of a packet sniffer is the packet analyzer, which displays the contents of all
fields within a protocol message. In order to do so, the packet analyzer must “understand” the
structure of all messages exchanged by protocols. For example, suppose we are interested in
displaying the various fields in messages exchanged by the HTTP protocol in Figure 1. The packet
analyzer understands the format of Ethernet frames, and so can identify the IP datagram within an
Ethernet frame. It also understands the IP datagram format, so that it can extract the TCP segment
within the IP datagram. Finally, it understands the TCP segment structure, so it can extract the HTTP
message contained in the TCP segment. Finally, it understands the HTTP protocol and so, for
example, knows that the first bytes of an HTTP message will contain the string “GET,” “POST,” or
“HEAD,” as shown in Figure 2.8 in the text.
We will be using the Wireshark packet sniffer [http://www.wireshark.org/] for these labs, allowing us
to display the contents of messages being sent/received from/by protocols at different levels of the
protocol stack. (Technically speaking, Wireshark is a packet analyzer that uses a packet capture library
in your computer). Wireshark is a free network protocol analyzer that runs on Windows, Linux/Unix,
and Mac computers. It’s an ideal packet analyzer for our labs – it is stable, has a large user base and
well-documented support that includes a user-guide
(http://www.wireshark.org/docs/wsug_html_chunked/),
1 th
References to figures and sections are for the 6 edition of our text, Computer Networks, A Top-down
th
Approach, 6 ed., J.F. Kurose and K.W. Ross, Addison-Wesley/Pearson, 2012.
man pages (http://www.wireshark.org/docs/man-pages/), and a detailed FAQ
(http://www.wireshark.org/faq.html), rich functionality that includes the capability to analyze
hundreds of protocols, and a well-designed user interface. It operates in computers using Ethernet,
serial (PPP and SLIP), 802.11 wireless LANs, and many other link-layer technologies (if the OS on
which it's running allows Wireshark to do so).
Getting Wireshark
In order to run Wireshark, you will need to have access to a computer that supports both Wireshark
and the libpcap or WinPCap packet capture library. The libpcap software will be installed for you, if
it is not installed within your operating system, when you install Wireshark. See
http://www.wireshark.org/download.html for a list of supported operating systems and download sites
Running Wireshark
When you run the Wireshark program, you’ll get a startup screen, as shown below:
If you click on one of these interfaces to start packet capture (i.e., for Wireshark to begin capturing all
packets being sent to/from that interface), a screen like the one below will be displayed, showing
information about the packets being captured. Once you start packet capture, you can stop it by using
the Capture pull down menu and selecting Stop.
Figure 3: Wireshark Graphical User Interface, during packet capture and analysis
1. Start up your favorite web browser, which will display your selected homepage.
2. Start up the Wireshark software. You will initially see a window similar to that shown
in Figure 2. Wireshark has not yet begun capturing packets.
3. To begin packet capture, select the Capture pull down menu and select Interfaces. This
will cause the “Wireshark: Capture Interfaces” window to be displayed, as shown in
Figure 4.
Figure 4: Wireshark Capture Interface Window
4. You’ll see a list of the interfaces on your computer as well as a count of the packets
that have been observed on that interface so far. Click on Start for the interface on
which you want to begin packet capture (in the case, the Gigabit network
Connection). Packet capture will now begin -Wireshark is now capturing all packets
being sent/received from/by your computer!
5. Once you begin packet capture, a window similar to that shown in Figure 3 will appear.
This window shows the packets being captured. By selecting Capture pulldown menu
and selecting Stop, you can stop packet capture. But don’t stop packet capture yet.
Let’s capture some interesting packets first. To do so, we’ll need to generate some
network traffic. Let’s do so using a web browser, which will use the HTTP protocol
that we will study in detail in class to download content from a website.
9. Find the HTTP GET message that was sent from your computer to the gaia.cs.umass.edu
HTTP server. (Look for an HTTP GET message in the “listing of captured packets”
portion of the Wireshark window (see Figure 3) that shows “GET” followed by the
gaia.cs.umass.edu URL that you entered. When you select the HTTP GET message, the
Ethernet frame, IP datagram, TCP segment, and HTTP message header information will
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be displayed in the packet-header window . By clicking on ‘+’ and ‘-‘ right-pointing and
down-pointing arrowheads to the left side of the packet details window, minimize the
amount of Frame, Ethernet, Internet Protocol, and Transmission Control Protocol
information displayed. Maximize the amount information displayed about the HTTP
protocol. Your Wireshark display should now look roughly as shown in Figure 5. (Note,
in particular, the minimized amount of protocol information for all protocols except
HTTP, and the maximized amount of protocol information for HTTP in the packet-header
window).
10. Exit Wireshark
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Recall that the HTTP GET message that is sent to the gaia.cs.umass.edu web server is contained
within a TCP segment, which is contained (encapsulated) in an IP datagram, which is encapsulated in
an Ethernet frame. If this process of encapsulation isn’t quite clear yet, review section 1.5 in the text
Figure 5: Wireshark window after step 9
What to hand in
The goal of this first lab was primarily to introduce you to Wireshark. The following questions will
demonstrate that you’ve been able to get Wireshark up and running, and have explored some of its
capabilities. Answer the following questions, based on your Wireshark experimentation:
1. List 3 different protocols that appear in the protocol column in the unfiltered packet-listing
window in step 7 above. Support your answer with an appropriate screenshot from your
computer.
2. How long did it take from when the HTTP GET message was sent until the HTTP OK reply
was received? (By default, the value of the Time column in the packet-listing window is the
amount of time, in seconds, since Wireshark tracing began. To display the Time field in
time-of-day format, select the Wireshark View pull down menu, then select Time Display
Format, then select Time-of-day.)
3. What is the Internet address of the gaia.cs.umass.edu? What is the Internet address of your
computer? Support your answer with an appropriate screenshot from your computer.
4. Print the two HTTP messages (GET and OK) referred to in question 2 above. To do so, select
Print from the Wireshark File command menu, and select the “Selected Packet Only” and
“Print as displayed” radial buttons, and then click OK.