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Administration Guide

Using the packet capture tool

Using the packet capture tool

Administrators can use the packet capture tool to select a packet and view its header and payload information in real-time. Once completed, packets can be filtered by various fields or through the search bar. The capture can be saved as a PCAP file that you can use with a third-party application, such as Wireshark, for further analysis.

Packet capture criteria can be stored for the re-initiation of packet captures multiple times using the same parameters, such as interface, filters, and so on.

Packet capture criteria can be created and stored in order to re-initiate packet captures in the GUI with the same parameters. Capture cards in the Network > Diagnostics page are sorted in alphabetical order of the configured name and colored depending on state:

  • Green: The packet capture is running.

  • Gray: The packet capture has not started yet, has completed, or the capture files have been deleted.

When creating the packet capture:

  • The Name field must be a unique name for the packet capture criteria being configured.

  • Enabling Include non-IP packets allows non-IP address packets to be captured when enabled. Supported non-IP address packet types include ARP, RARP, LLC, LLDP, VLAN, and LACPDU. When the packet capture is complete, non-IP address packets will include header information, however, unsupported types will display as Unknown.

  • After configuring the packet capture criteria, you can choose to Start capture, Save settings for later, or Close. Starting a packet capture or saving the configured settings will both store criteria for future use.

To use the packet capture tool in the GUI:
  1. Go to Network > Diagnostics and select the Packet Capture tab.

  2. Optionally, select an Interface (any is the default).

  3. Optionally, enable Filters and select a Filtering syntax:

    1. Basic: enter criteria for the Host, Port, and Protocol number.

    2. Advanced: enter a string, such as src host 172.16.200.254 and dst host 172.16.200.1 and dst port 443.

  4. Click Start capture. The capture is visible in real-time.

  5. While the capture is running, select a packet, then click the Headers or Packet data tabs to view more information.

    Note

    When the packet capture is running, disable Auto-scroll to stop automatic scrolling behavior when new packets arrive.

  6. When the capture is finished, click Save as pcap. The PCAP file is automatically downloaded.

  7. Optionally, use the Search bar or the column headers to filter the results further.

Multiple packet captures

Multiple packet captures can be run simultaneously for when many packet captures are needed for one situation. For example, ingress and egress interfaces can be captured at the same time to compare traffic or the physical interface and VPN interface can be captured using different filters to see if packets are leaving the VPN.

The packet capture dialog can be docked and minimized to run in the background. The minimized dialog aligns with other CLI terminals that are minimized.

To run multiple packet captures at the same time:
  1. Go to Network > Diagnostics.

  2. Configure the first packet capture:

    1. Click New packet capture.

    2. Select the Interface and configure other settings as needed.

    3. Click Start capture. The first packet capture begins.

  3. Minimize the packet capture. The packet capture continues to run.

  4. Configure the second packet capture:

    1. Click New packet capture.

    2. Select the Interface and configure other settings as needed.

    3. Click Start capture. The second packet capture begins.

  5. When the captures are complete, expand the dialog and select Save as pcap for each packet capture.

Controlling GUI packet captures in the CLI

GUI packet captures can be controlled in the CLI using the on-demand-sniffer commands.

To control GUI packet captures in the CLI:
  1. Add a new firewall on-demand sniffer table to store the GUI packet capture settings and filters:

    config firewall on-demand-sniffer
        edit "port1 Capture"
            set interface "port1"
            set max-packet-count 10000
            set advanced-filter "net 172.16.200.0/24 and port 443 and port 49257"
        next
    end
  2. Run packet capture commands:

    1. List all of the packet captures:

      # diagnose on-demand-sniffer list 
      mkey: port1 Capture
      interface: port1
      status: not_started
      start time: 
      end time:
    2. Start a packet capture:

      # diagnose on-demand-sniffer start "port1 Capture"
    3. Stop a packet capture:

      # diagnose on-demand-sniffer stop "port1 Capture" 
    4. Delete the result of a packet capture:

      # diagnose on-demand-sniffer delete-results "port1 Capture"

For more information about running a packet capture in the CLI, see Performing a sniffer trace or packet capture.

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Using the packet capture tool

Using the packet capture tool

Administrators can use the packet capture tool to select a packet and view its header and payload information in real-time. Once completed, packets can be filtered by various fields or through the search bar. The capture can be saved as a PCAP file that you can use with a third-party application, such as Wireshark, for further analysis.

Packet capture criteria can be stored for the re-initiation of packet captures multiple times using the same parameters, such as interface, filters, and so on.

Packet capture criteria can be created and stored in order to re-initiate packet captures in the GUI with the same parameters. Capture cards in the Network > Diagnostics page are sorted in alphabetical order of the configured name and colored depending on state:

  • Green: The packet capture is running.

  • Gray: The packet capture has not started yet, has completed, or the capture files have been deleted.

When creating the packet capture:

  • The Name field must be a unique name for the packet capture criteria being configured.

  • Enabling Include non-IP packets allows non-IP address packets to be captured when enabled. Supported non-IP address packet types include ARP, RARP, LLC, LLDP, VLAN, and LACPDU. When the packet capture is complete, non-IP address packets will include header information, however, unsupported types will display as Unknown.

  • After configuring the packet capture criteria, you can choose to Start capture, Save settings for later, or Close. Starting a packet capture or saving the configured settings will both store criteria for future use.

To use the packet capture tool in the GUI:
  1. Go to Network > Diagnostics and select the Packet Capture tab.

  2. Optionally, select an Interface (any is the default).

  3. Optionally, enable Filters and select a Filtering syntax:

    1. Basic: enter criteria for the Host, Port, and Protocol number.

    2. Advanced: enter a string, such as src host 172.16.200.254 and dst host 172.16.200.1 and dst port 443.

  4. Click Start capture. The capture is visible in real-time.

  5. While the capture is running, select a packet, then click the Headers or Packet data tabs to view more information.

    Note

    When the packet capture is running, disable Auto-scroll to stop automatic scrolling behavior when new packets arrive.

  6. When the capture is finished, click Save as pcap. The PCAP file is automatically downloaded.

  7. Optionally, use the Search bar or the column headers to filter the results further.

Multiple packet captures

Multiple packet captures can be run simultaneously for when many packet captures are needed for one situation. For example, ingress and egress interfaces can be captured at the same time to compare traffic or the physical interface and VPN interface can be captured using different filters to see if packets are leaving the VPN.

The packet capture dialog can be docked and minimized to run in the background. The minimized dialog aligns with other CLI terminals that are minimized.

To run multiple packet captures at the same time:
  1. Go to Network > Diagnostics.

  2. Configure the first packet capture:

    1. Click New packet capture.

    2. Select the Interface and configure other settings as needed.

    3. Click Start capture. The first packet capture begins.

  3. Minimize the packet capture. The packet capture continues to run.

  4. Configure the second packet capture:

    1. Click New packet capture.

    2. Select the Interface and configure other settings as needed.

    3. Click Start capture. The second packet capture begins.

  5. When the captures are complete, expand the dialog and select Save as pcap for each packet capture.

Controlling GUI packet captures in the CLI

GUI packet captures can be controlled in the CLI using the on-demand-sniffer commands.

To control GUI packet captures in the CLI:
  1. Add a new firewall on-demand sniffer table to store the GUI packet capture settings and filters:

    config firewall on-demand-sniffer
        edit "port1 Capture"
            set interface "port1"
            set max-packet-count 10000
            set advanced-filter "net 172.16.200.0/24 and port 443 and port 49257"
        next
    end
  2. Run packet capture commands:

    1. List all of the packet captures:

      # diagnose on-demand-sniffer list 
      mkey: port1 Capture
      interface: port1
      status: not_started
      start time: 
      end time:
    2. Start a packet capture:

      # diagnose on-demand-sniffer start "port1 Capture"
    3. Stop a packet capture:

      # diagnose on-demand-sniffer stop "port1 Capture" 
    4. Delete the result of a packet capture:

      # diagnose on-demand-sniffer delete-results "port1 Capture"

For more information about running a packet capture in the CLI, see Performing a sniffer trace or packet capture.