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Wireshark 4.1.0 Release Notes
This is an experimental release intended to test new features for
Wireshark 4.2.
What is Wireshark?
Wireshark is the world’s most popular network protocol analyzer. It is
used for troubleshooting, analysis, development and education.
What’s New
Wireshark is now better about generating valid UTF-8 output.
A new display filter feature for filtering raw bytes has been added.
Display filter autocomplete is smarter about not suggesting invalid
syntax.
The Windows build has a new SpeexDSP external dependency
(https://www.speex.org). The speex code that was previously bundled
has been removed.
The personal extcap plugin folder location on Unix has been changed to
follow existing conventions for architecture-dependent files. The
extcap personal folder is now `$HOME/.local/lib/wireshark/extcap`.
Previously it was `$XDG_CONFIG_HOME/wireshark/extcap`.
The installation target no longer installs development headers by
default. That must be done explicitly using `cmake --install
<builddir> --component Development`.
The Wireshark installation is relocatable on Linux (and other ELF
platforms with support for relative RPATHs).
Many other improvements have been made. See the “New and Updated
Features” section below for more details.
Bug Fixes
The following bugs have been fixed:
• Issue 18413[1] - RTP player do not play audio frequently on Win32
builds with Qt6
• Issue 18510[2] - Playback marker do not move after unpause with
Qt6
New and Updated Features
The following features are new (or have been significantly updated)
since version 4.0.0:
• The API has been updated to ensure that the dissection engine
produces valid UTF-8 strings.
• Wireshark now builds with Qt6 by default. To use Qt5 instead pass
USE_qt6=OFF to CMake.
• It is now possible to filter on raw packet data for any field by
using the syntax `@some.field == <bytes…>`. This can be useful
to filter on malformed UTF-8 strings, among other use cases where
it is necessary to look at the field’s raw data.
• Negation (unary minus) now works with any display filter
arithmetic expression.
• ciscodump support Cisco IOS XE 17.x
• The default interval between GUI updates when capturing has been
decreased from 500ms to 100ms, and is now configurable.
• The -n option also now disables IP address geolocation
information lookup in configured MaxMind databases (and
geolocation lookup can be enabled with -Ng.) This is most
relevant for tshark, where geolocation lookups are synchronous.
• Implement built-in dissector for FiRa UWB Controller Interface
(UCI) protocol. Recognizes PCAP traces with the link type
LINKTYPE_FIRA_UCI=299.
• The reassemble_streaming_data_and_call_subdissector() API has
been added to provide a simpler way to reassemble the streaming
data of a high level protocol that is not on top of TCP.
• The display filter drop-down list is now sorted by "most recently
used" instead of "most recently created".
New Protocol Support
DECT DLC protocol layer (DECT-DLC), DECT NWK protocol layer
(DECT-NWK), DECT proprietary Mitel OMM/RFP Protocol (also named
AaMiDe), FiRa UWB Controller Interface (UCI), Low Level Signalling
(ATSC3 LLS), Management Component Transport Protocol (MCTP),
Management Component Transport Protocol - Control Protocol (MCTP CP),
Matter home automation protocol, Non-volatile Memory Express -
Management Interface (NVMe-MI) over MCTP, SAP Enqueue Server
(SAPEnqueue), SAP GUI (SAPDiag), SAP HANA SQL Command Network
Protocol (SAPHDB), SAP Internet Graphic Server (SAP IGS), SAP Message
Server (SAPMS), SAP Network Interface (SAPNI), SAP Router
(SAPROUTER), SAP Secure Network Connection (SNC), Support for almost
all WoW 1.12 messages has been added., Train Real-Time Data Protocol
(TRDP), UBX protocol of u-blox GNSS receivers (UBX), Windows Delivery
Optimization (MS-DO), and World of Warcraft World (WOWW) display
filters have been changed to be more internally consistent.
Updated Protocol Support
• The JSON dissector now has a preference to enable/disable
"unescaping" of string values. By default it is off. Previously
it was always on.
• The JSON dissector now supports "Display JSON in raw form".
• The IPv6 dissector has a new preference to show some semantic
details about addresses (default off).
• The XML dissector now supports display character according to the
"encoding" attribute of the XML declaration, and has a new
preference to set default character encoding for some XML
document without "encoding" attribute.
• The SIP dissector now has a new preference to set default charset
for displaying the body of SIP messages in raw text view.
• The HTTP dissector now supports dissecting chunked data in
streaming reassembly mode. Subdissectors of HTTP can register
itself in "streaming_content_type" subdissector table for
enabling streaming reassembly mode while transferring in chunked
encoding. This feature ensures the server stream messages of
GRPC-Web over HTTP/1.1 can be dissected even if the last chunk is
absent.
Too many other protocols have been updated to list them all here.
New and Updated Capture File Support
Getting Wireshark
Wireshark source code and installation packages are available from
https://www.wireshark.org/download.html.
Vendor-supplied Packages
Most Linux and Unix vendors supply their own Wireshark packages. You
can usually install or upgrade Wireshark using the package management
system specific to that platform. A list of third-party packages can
be found on the download page[3] on the Wireshark web site.
File Locations
Wireshark and TShark look in several different locations for
preference files, plugins, SNMP MIBS, and RADIUS dictionaries. These
locations vary from platform to platform. You can use "Help › About
Wireshark › Folders" or `tshark -G folders` to find the default
locations on your system.
Getting Help
The User’s Guide, manual pages and various other documentation can be
found at https://www.wireshark.org/docs/
Community support is available on Wireshark’s Q&A site[4] and on the
wireshark-users mailing list. Subscription information and archives
for all of Wireshark’s mailing lists can be found on the web site[5].
Bugs and feature requests can be reported on the issue tracker[6].
You can learn protocol analysis and meet Wireshark’s developers at
SharkFest[7].
How You Can Help
The Wireshark Foundation helps as many people as possible understand
their networks as much as possible. You can find out more and donate
at wiresharkfoundation.org[8].
Frequently Asked Questions
A complete FAQ is available on the Wireshark web site[9].
References
1. https://gitlab.com/wireshark/wireshark/-/issues/18413
2. https://gitlab.com/wireshark/wireshark/-/issues/18510
3. https://www.wireshark.org/download.html
4. https://ask.wireshark.org/
5. https://www.wireshark.org/lists/
6. https://gitlab.com/wireshark/wireshark/-/issues
7. https://sharkfest.wireshark.org
8. https://wiresharkfoundation.org
9. https://www.wireshark.org/faq.html
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