1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165 166 167 168 169 170 171 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 179 180 181 182 183 184 185 186 187 188 189 190 191 192 193 194 195 196 197 198 199 200 201 202 203 204 205 206 207 208 209 210 211 212 213 214 215 216 217 218 219 220 221 222 223 224 225 226 227 228 229 230 231 232 233 234 235 236 237 238 239 240 241 242 243 244 245 246 247 248 249 250 251 252 253 254 255 256 257 258 259 260 261 262 263 264 265 266 267 268 269 270 271 272 273 274 275 276 277 278 279 280 281 282 283 284 285 286 287 288 289 290 291 292 293 294 295 296 297 298 299 300 301 302 303 304 305 306 307 308 309 310 311 312 313 314 315 316 317 318 319 320 321 322 323 324 325 326 327 328 329 330 331 332 333 334 335 336 337 338 339 340 341 342 343 344 345 346 347 348 349 350 351 352 353 354 355 356 357 358 359 360 361 362 363 364 365 366 367 368 369 370 371 372 373 374 375 376 377 378 379 380 381 382 383 384 385 386 387 388 389 390 391 392 393 394 395 396 397 398 399 400 401 402 403 404 405 406 407 408 409 410 411 412 413 414 415 416 417 418 419 420 421 422 423 424 425 426 427 428 429 430 431 432 433 434 435 436 437 438 439 440 441 442 443 444 445 446 447 448 449 450 451 452 453 454 455 456 457 458 459 460 461 462 463 464 465 466 467 468 469 470 471 472 473 474 475 476 477 478 479 480 481 482 483 484 485 486 487 488 489 490 491 492 493 494 495 496 497 498 499 500 501 502 503 504 505 506 507 508 509 510 511 512 513 514 515 516 517 518 519 520 521 522 523 524 525 526 527 528 529 530 531 532 533 534 535 536 537 538 539 540 541 542 543 544 545 546 547 548 549 550 551 552 553 554 555 556 557 558 559 560 561 562 563 564 565 566 567 568 569 570 571 572 573 574 575 576 577 578 579 580 581 582 583 584 585 586 587 588 589 590 591 592 593 594 595 596 597 598 599 600 601 602 603 604 605 606 607 608 609 610 611 612 613 614 615 616 617 618 619 620 621 622 623 624 625 626 627 628 629 630 631 632 633 634 635 636 637 638 639 640 641 642 643 644 645 646 647 648 649 650 651 652 653 654 655 656 657 658 659 660 661 662 663 664 665 666 667 668 669 670 671 672 673 674 675 676 677 678 679 680 681 682 683 684 685 686 687 688 689 690 691 692 693 694 695 696 697 698 699 700 701 702 703 704 705 706 707 708 709 710 711 712 713 714 715 716 717 718 719 720 721 722 723 724 725 726 727 728 729 730 731 732 733 734 735 736 737 738 739 740 741 742 743 744 745 746 747 748 749 750 751 752 753 754 755 756 757 758 759 760 761
|
include::../attributes.adoc[]
= wireshark-filter(4)
:doctype: manpage
:stylesheet: ws.css
:linkcss:
:copycss: {css_dir}/{stylesheet}
== NAME
wireshark-filter - Wireshark display filter syntax and reference
== SYNOPSIS
*wireshark* [other options]
[.nowrap]#[ *-Y* "display filter expression" | *--display-filter* "display filter expression" ]#
*tshark* [other options]
[.nowrap]#[ *-Y* "display filter expression" | *--display-filter* "display filter expression" ]#
== DESCRIPTION
*Wireshark* and *TShark* share a powerful filter engine that helps remove
the noise from a packet trace and lets you see only the packets that interest
you. If a packet meets the requirements expressed in your filter, then it
is displayed in the list of packets. Display filters let you compare the
fields within a protocol against a specific value, compare fields against
fields, and check the existence of specified fields or protocols.
Filters are also used by other features such as statistics generation and
packet list colorization (the latter is only available to *Wireshark*). This
manual page describes their syntax. A comprehensive reference of filter fields
can be found within Wireshark and in the display filter reference at
https://www.wireshark.org/docs/dfref/.
== FILTER SYNTAX
=== Check whether a field or protocol exists
The simplest filter allows you to check for the existence of a protocol or
field. If you want to see all packets which contain the IP protocol, the
filter would be "ip" (without the quotation marks). To see all packets
that contain a Token-Ring RIF field, use "tr.rif".
Whenever a protocol or field appears as the argument of a function in a filter,
an exists operator for that protocol or field implicitly appears.
=== Values and operators
Each field has a value, and that value can be used in operations with
comparable values (which may be literals, other fields, or function results).
The value of a field is not necessarily what appears in the *Wireshark*
display or *TShark* output. For example, a protocol is semantically
equivalent to the sequence of bytes that it spans, not its displayed text
in the protocol tree.
=== Comparison operators
The comparison operators can be expressed either through English-like
abbreviations or through C-like symbols:
eq, == Equal
ne, != Not Equal
gt, > Greater Than
lt, < Less Than
ge, >= Greater than or Equal to
le, <= Less than or Equal to
The ordering depends on the value type in the usual way (e.g., lexicographic
for strings and arithmetic for integers.) A field may appear more than once
in a given frame. In that case equality can be strict (all fields must match
the condition) or not (any field must match the condition). The inequality is
the logical negation of equality. The following table contains all equality
operators, their aliases and meaning:
eq, any_eq, == Any field must be equal
ne, all_ne, != All fields must be not equal
all_eq, === All fields must be equal
any_ne, !== Any fields must be not equal
The operators "any" or "all" can be used with any comparison operator to make
the test match any or all fields:
all tcp.port > 1024
any ip.addr != 1.1.1.1
The "any" and "all" modifiers take precedence over comparison operators such
as "===" and "any_eq".
=== Search and match operators
Additional operators exist expressed only in English, not C-like syntax:
contains Does the protocol, field or slice contain a value
matches, ~ Does the string match the given case-insensitive
Perl-compatible regular expression
The "contains" operator allows a filter to search for a sequence of
characters, expressed as a string, or bytes, expressed as a byte array.
The type of the left hand side of the "contains" operator must be comparable to
that of the right hand side after any implicit or explicit conversions.
For example, to search for a given HTTP
URL in a capture, the following filter can be used:
http contains "https://www.wireshark.org"
The "contains" operator cannot be used on atomic fields,
such as numbers or IP addresses.
The "matches" or "~" operator allows a filter to apply to a specified
Perl-compatible regular expression (PCRE2). The regular expression must
be a double quoted string. The left hand side of the "matches" operator
must be a string, which can be a non-stringlike field implicitly or
explicitly converted to a string. Matches are case-insensitive by default.
For example, to search for a given WAP WSP User-Agent, you can write:
wsp.header.user_agent matches "cldc"
This would match "cldc", "CLDC", "cLdC" or any other combination of upper
and lower case letters.
You can force case sensitivity using
wsp.header.user_agent matches "(?-i)cldc"
This is an example of PCRE2's *(?*+option+*)* construct. *(?-i)* performs a
case-sensitive pattern match but other options can be specified as well. More
information can be found in the
pcre2pattern(3)|https://www.pcre.org/current/doc/html/pcre2pattern.html man page.
=== Functions
The filter language has the following functions:
upper(string-field) - converts a string field to uppercase
lower(string-field) - converts a string field to lowercase
len(field) - returns the byte length of a string or bytes field
count(field) - returns the number of field occurrences in a frame
string(field) - converts a non-string field to string
vals(field) - converts a field value to its value string
dec(field) - converts an unsigned integer to a decimal string
hex(field) - converts an unsigned integer to a hexadecimal string
max(f1,...,fn) - return the maximum value
min(f1,...,fn) - return the minimum value
abs(field) - return the absolute value of numeric fields
upper() and lower() are useful for performing case-insensitive string
comparisons. For example:
upper(ncp.nds_stream_name) contains "MACRO"
lower(mount.dump.hostname) == "angel"
string() converts a field value to a string, suitable for use with operators like
"matches" or "contains". Integer fields are converted to their decimal representation.
It can be used with IP/Ethernet addresses (as well as others), but not with string or
byte fields. For example:
string(frame.number) matches "[13579]$"
gives you all the odd packets. Note that the "matches" operator implicitly
converts types of their value string representation; to match against the
decimal representation of an integer field use string().
vals() converts an integer or boolean field value to a string using the
field's associated value string, if it has one. This produces strings
similar to those seen in custom columns. The resultant string can also
be used with other operators. E.g.:
vals(pfcp.msg_type) contains "Request"
would match all packets which have a PFCP request, even if that request is not
matched with a response.
dec() and hex() convert unsigned integer fields to decimal or hexadecimal
representation. Currently dec() and string() give same result for an unsigned
integer, but it is possible that in the future string() will use the native
base of the field.
max() and min() take any number of arguments and returns one value, respectively
the largest/smallest. The arguments must all have the same type.
There is also a set of functions to test IP addresses:
ip_special_name(ip) - Returns the IP special-purpose block name as a string
ip_special_mask(ip) - Returns the IP special-purpose block flags as a mask. The bits are:
4 3 2 1 0
---------
S D F G R
S = Source, D = Destination, F = Forwardable, G = Globally-reachable, R = Reserved-by-protocol
ip_linklocal(ip) - true if the IPv4 or IPv6 address is link-local
ip_multicast(ip) - true if the IPv4 or IPv6 address is multicast
ip_rfc1918(ipv4) - true if the IPv4 address is private-use (from the allocation in RFC 1918)
ip_ula(ipv6) - true if the IPv6 address is unique-local (ULA) as in RFC 4193
=== Macros
It is possible to define display filter macros. Macro are names that are
replaced with the associated expression, possibly performing argument substitution.
Macro expansions are purely textual replacements and performed recursively before compilation.
They allow replacing long and often used expressions with easy to use names.
Macros are defined using the GUI or directly in the "dmacros" configuration
file. For example the definition
"addplusone" {$1 + $2 + 1}
creates a macro called `addplusone` that takes two arguments and expands to the given expression.
Arguments in the replacement expression are given using the dollar sign.
Macros are invoked like function but preceded with a dollar sign
(sometimes also called a sigil):
$addplusone(udp.src_port,udp.dst_port)
results in the expression
{udp.src_port + udp.dst_port + 1}
after argument substitution. There is an older alternative notation to invoke macros:
${addplusone:udp.src_port;udp.dst_port}
or
${addplusone;udp.src_port;udp.dst_port}
Both forms are equivalent and can be used interchangibly as a matter of
preference.
=== Protocol field types
Each protocol field is typed. The types are:
// `tshark -G ftypes | sed -e 's/.*\t/ /' | sort -f -u`, then fix up by hand
ASN.1 object identifier, plain or relative
AX.25 address
Boolean
Byte sequence
Character string
Character, 1 byte
Date and time
Ethernet or other MAC address
EUI64 address
Fibre Channel WWN
Floating point, single or double precision
Frame number
Globally Unique Identifier
IEEE-11073 floating point, 16 or 32 bits
IPv4 address
IPv6 address
IPX network number
Label
OSI System-ID
Protocol
Signed integer, 1, 2, 3, 4, or 8 bytes
Time offset
Unsigned integer, 1, 2, 3, 4, or 8 bytes
VINES address
An integer may be expressed in decimal, octal, hexadecimal or binary notation,
or as a C-style character constant. The following seven display filters
are equivalent:
frame.len > 10
frame.len > 012
frame.len > 0xa
frame.len > 0b1010
frame.len > '\n'
frame.len > '\x0a'
frame.len > '\012'
Boolean values are either true or false. In a display filter expression
testing the value of a Boolean field, true is expressed as the word `true`
(case-insensitive) or any non-zero number. False is expressed as
`false` (case-insensitive) or the number zero. For example, a token-ring packet's
source route field is Boolean. To find any source-routed packets, a display
filter would be any of the following:
tr.sr == 1
tr.sr == true
tr.sr == TRUE
Non source-routed packets can be found with:
tr.sr == 0
tr.sr == false
tr.sr == FALSE
Ethernet addresses and byte arrays are represented by hex
digits. The hex digits may be separated by colons, periods, or hyphens:
eth.dst eq ff:ff:ff:ff:ff:ff
aim.data == 0.1.0.d
fddi.src == aa-aa-aa-aa-aa-aa
echo.data == 7a
IPv4 addresses can be represented in either dotted decimal notation or
by using the hostname:
ip.src == 192.168.1.1
ip.dst eq www.mit.edu
IPv4 addresses can be compared with the same logical relations as numbers:
eq, ne, gt, ge, lt, and le. The IPv4 address is stored in host order,
so you do not have to worry about the endianness of an IPv4 address
when using it in a display filter.
Classless Inter-Domain Routing (CIDR) notation can be used to test if an
IPv4 address is in a certain subnet. For example, this display filter
will find all packets in the 129.111 network:
ip.addr == 129.111.0.0/16
Remember, the number after the slash represents the number of bits used
to represent the network. CIDR notation can also be used with
hostnames, as in this example of finding IP addresses on the same
network as 'sneezy' (requires that 'sneezy' resolve to an IP address for filter to be valid):
ip.addr eq sneezy/24
The CIDR notation can only be used on IP addresses or hostnames, not in
variable names. So, a display filter like "ip.src/24 == ip.dst/24" is
not valid (yet).
Transaction and other IDs are often represented by unsigned 16 or 32 bit integers
and formatted as a hexadecimal string with "0x" prefix:
(dhcp.id == 0xfe089c15) || (ip.id == 0x0373)
Strings are enclosed in double quotes:
http.request.method == "POST"
Inside double quotes, you may use a backslash to embed a double quote
or an arbitrary byte represented in either octal or hexadecimal.
browser.comment == "An embedded \" double-quote"
Use of hexadecimal to look for "HEAD":
http.request.method == "\x48EAD"
Use of octal to look for "HEAD":
http.request.method == "\110EAD"
This means that you must escape backslashes with backslashes inside
double quotes.
smb.path contains "\\\\SERVER\\SHARE"
looks for \\SERVER\SHARE in "smb.path". This may be more conveniently written
as
smb.path contains r"\\SERVER\SHARE"
String literals prefixed with 'r' are called "raw strings". Such strings treat
backslash as a literal character. Double quotes may still be escaped with
backslash but note that backslashes are always preserved in the result.
The following table lists all escape sequences supported with strings
and character constants:
\' single quote
\" double quote
\\ backslash
\a audible bell
\b backspace
\f form feed
\n line feed
\r carriage return
\t horizontal tab
\v vertical tab
\NNN arbitrary octal value
\xNN arbitrary hexadecimal value
\uNNNN Unicode codepoint U+NNNN
\UNNNNNNNN Unicode codepoint U+NNNNNNNN
Date and time values can be given in ISO 8601 format or using a legacy
month-year-time format:
"2020-07-04T12:34:56"
"Sep 26, 2004 23:18:04.954975"
The 'T' separator in ISO 8601 can be omitted. The timezone can be given
as "Z" or an offset from UTC.
When not using ISO 8601 the timezone can be given as the strings "UTC", "GMT"
or "UT" for UTC or also given as an offset from UTC, plus some North American and Nautical/Military
designations (https://man.netbsd.org/strptime.3[see the specification for %z in strptime(3)]).
Note that arbitrary timezone names are not supported however.
If the timezone is omitted then date and time values are interpreted as local time.
=== The slice operator
You can take a slice of a field if the field base type is a text string or a
byte array (the base type of most network address fields is bytes).
For example, you can filter on the vendor portion of an ethernet address
(the first three bytes) like this:
eth.src[0:3] == 00:00:83
Another example is:
http.content_type[0:4] == "text"
You can use the slice operator on a protocol name, too.
The "frame" protocol can be useful, encompassing all the data captured
by *Wireshark* or *TShark*.
token[0:5] ne 0.0.0.1.1
llc[0] eq aa
frame[100-199] contains "wireshark"
The following syntax governs slices:
[i:j] i = start_offset, j = length
[i-j] i = start_offset, j = end_offset, inclusive.
[i] i = start_offset, length = 1
[:j] start_offset = 0, length = j
[i:] start_offset = i, end_offset = end_of_field
Slice indexes are zero-based.
Offsets can be negative, in which case they indicate the
offset from the *end* of the field. The last byte of the field is at offset
-1, the last but one byte is at offset -2, and so on.
Here's how to check the last four bytes of a frame:
frame[-4:4] == 0.1.2.3
or
frame[-4:] == 0.1.2.3
As mentioned above the slice operator can be used on string and byte fields
and will respectively produce string or byte slices. String slices are
indexed on UTF-8 codepoint boundaries (i.e: internationalized characters),
so the following comparison is true:
"touché"[5] == "é"
The example above generates an error because the compiler rejects constant
expressions but is otherwise syntactically correct and exemplifies the
behaviour of string slices.
To obtain a byte slice of the same string the raw (@) operator can be used:
@"touché"[5-6] == c3:a9
A slice can always be compared against either a string or a byte sequence.
Slices can be combined. You can concatenate them using the comma operator:
ftp[1,3-5,9:] == 01:03:04:05:09:0a:0b
This concatenates offset 1, offsets 3-5, and offset 9 to the end of the ftp
data.
=== The layer operator
A field can be restricted to a certain layer in the protocol stack using the
layer operator (#), followed by a decimal number:
ip.addr#2 == 192.168.30.40
matches only the inner (second) layer in the packet.
Layers use simple stacking semantics and protocol layers are counted sequentially starting from 1.
For example, in a packet that contains two IPv4 headers, the outer (first) source address can be matched with "ip.src#1" and the inner (second) source address can be matched with "ip.src#2".
For more complicated ranges the same syntax used with slices is valid:
tcp.port#[2-4]
means layers number 2, 3 or 4 inclusive. The hash symbol is required to
distinguish a layer range from a slice.
=== The at operator
By prefixing the field name with an at sign (@) the comparison is done against
the raw packet data for the field.
A character string must be decoded from a source encoding during dissection.
If there are decoding errors the resulting string will usually contain
replacement characters:
[subs="replacements"]
----
browser.comment == "string is ����"
----
The at operator allows testing the raw undecoded data:
@browser.comment == 73:74:72:69:6e:67:20:69:73:20:aa:aa:aa:aa
The syntactical rules for a bytes field type apply to the second example.
=== The membership operator
A field may be checked for matches against a set of values simply with the
membership operator. For instance, you may find traffic on common HTTP/HTTPS
ports with the following filter:
tcp.port in {80,443,8080}
as opposed to the more verbose:
tcp.port == 80 or tcp.port == 443 or tcp.port == 8080
To find HTTP requests using the HEAD or GET methods:
http.request.method in {"HEAD", "GET"}
The set of values can also contain ranges:
tcp.port in {443, 4430..4434}
ip.addr in {10.0.0.5 .. 10.0.0.9, 192.168.1.1..192.168.1.9}
frame.time_delta in {10 .. 10.5}
=== Implicit type conversions
Fields which are sequences of bytes, including protocols, are implicitly
converted to strings for comparisons against (double quoted) literal strings
and raw strings.
So, for instance, the following filters are equivalent:
tcp.payload contains "GET"
tcp.payload contains 47.45.54
As noted above, a slice can also be compared in either way:
frame[60:2] gt 50.51
frame[60:2] gt "PQ"
The inverse does not occur; stringlike fields are not implicitly converted to
byte arrays. (Some operators allow stringlike fields to be compared with
unquoted literals, which are then treated as strings; this is deprecated in
general and specifically disallowed by the "matches" operator.
Literal strings should be double quoted for clarity.)
A hex integer that is 0xff or less (which means it fits inside one byte)
can be implicitly converted to a byte string. This is not allowed for
hex integers greater than one byte, because then one would need to specify
the endianness of the multi-byte integer. Also, this is not allowed for
decimal or octal numbers, since they would be confused with the hex numbers
that make up byte string literals. Nevertheless, single-byte hex integers
can be convenient:
frame[4] == 0xff
frame[1:4] contains 0x02
An integer or boolean field that has a value string can be compared to
to one of the strings that corresponds with a value.
As with stringlike fields and comparisons, it is possible to perform
the comparison with an unquoted literal, though this is deprecated and
will not work if the literal contains a space (as with "Modify Bearer
Response" above). Double quotes are recommended.
If there is a unique reverse mapping from the string literal into a
numeric value, the string is converted into that number and the
comparison function is applied using arithmetic rules. If the mapping
is not unique, then equality and inequality can be tested, but not the
ordered comparisons.
This is in contrast to the `string()` and `vals()` function, which
convert the field value to a string and applies string (lexicographic)
comparisons, as well as work with all operators that take strings.
Therefore the following two filters give the same result:
gtpv2.message_type <= 35
gtpv2.message_type <= "Modify Bearer Response"
whereas
vals(gtpv2.message_type) <= "Modify Bearer Response"
matches all messages whose value string precedes "Modify Bearer Response"
in lexicographical order, and
string(gtpv2.message_type) <= "35"
matches all messages such that the message type comes before "35" in
lexicographical order, i.e. would also match "170" (the message type
for "Release Access Bearers Request.")
=== Bitwise operators
It is also possible to define tests with bitwise operations. Currently the
following bitwise operator is supported:
bitand, bitwise_and, & Bitwise AND
The bitwise AND operation allows masking bits and testing to see if one or
more bits are set. Bitwise AND operates on integer protocol fields and slices.
When testing for TCP SYN packets, you can write:
tcp.flags & 0x02
That expression will match all packets that contain a "tcp.flags" field
with the 0x02 bit, i.e. the SYN bit, set.
To match locally administered unicast ethernet addresses you can use:
eth.addr[0] & 0x0f == 2
When using slices, the bit mask must be specified as a byte string, and it must
have the same number of bytes as the slice itself, as in:
ip[42:2] & 40:ff
=== Arithmetic operators
Arithmetic expressions are supported with the usual operators:
+ Addition
- Subtraction
* Multiplication
/ Division
% Modulo (integer remainder)
Arithmetic operations can be performed on numeric types. Numeric types are
integers, floating point numbers and date and time values.
Date and time values can only be multiplied by integers or floating point
numbers (i.e: scalars) and furthermore the scalar multiplier must appear on
the right-hand side of the arithmetic operation.
For example it is possible to filter for UDP destination ports greater or
equal by one to the source port with the expression:
udp.dstport >= udp.srcport + 1
It is possible to group arithmetic expressions using curly brackets (parenthesis
will not work for this):
tcp.dstport >= 4 * {tcp.srcport + 3}
Do not confuse this usage of curly brackets with set membership.
An unfortunate quirk in the filter syntax is that the subtraction operator
must be preceded by a space character, so "A-B" must be written as "A -B"
or "A - B".
=== Protocol field references
A variable using a sigil with the form $some.proto.field or ${some.proto.field} is called a field
reference. A field reference is a field value read from the currently
selected frame in the GUI. This is useful to build dynamic filters such as,
frames since the last five minutes to the selected frame:
frame.time_relative >= ${frame.time_relative} - 300
or more simply
frame.time_relative >= $frame.time_relative - 300
Field references share a similar notation to macros but are distinct
syntactical elements in the filter language.
=== Logical expressions
Tests can be combined using logical expressions.
These too are expressible in C-like syntax or with English-like
abbreviations. The following table lists the logical operators from
highest to lowest precedence:
not, ! Logical NOT (right-associative)
and, && Logical AND (left-associative)
xor, ^^ Logical XOR (left-associative)
or, || Logical OR (left-associative)
The evaluation is always performed left to right. Expressions can be grouped
by parentheses as well. The expression "A and B or not C or D and not E or F"
is read:
(A and B) or (not C) or (D and (not E)) or F
It's usually better to be explicit about grouping using parenthesis.
The following are all valid display filter expressions:
tcp.port == 80 and ip.src == 192.168.2.1
not llc
http and frame[100-199] contains "wireshark"
(ipx.src.net == 0xbad && ipx.src.node == 0.0.0.0.0.1) || ip
Remember that whenever a protocol or field name occurs in an expression, the
"exists" operator is implicitly called. The "exists" operator has the highest
priority. This means that the first filter expression must be read as "show me
the packets for which tcp.port exists and equals 80, and ip.src exists and
equals 192.168.2.1". The second filter expression means "show me the packets
where not exists llc", or in other words "where llc does not exist" and hence
will match all packets that do not contain the llc protocol.
The third filter expression includes the constraint that offset 199 in the
frame exists, in other words the length of the frame is at least 200.
Because each comparison has an implicit exists test for field values care must
be taken when using the display filter to remove noise from
the packet trace. If, for example, you want to filter out all IP
multicast packets to address 224.1.2.3, then using:
ip.dst ne 224.1.2.3
may be too restrictive. This is the same as writing:
ip.dst and ip.dst ne 224.1.2.3
The filter selects only frames that have the "ip.dst" field. Any
other frames, including all non-IP packets, will not be displayed. To
display the non-IP packets as well, you can use one of the following
two expressions:
not ip.dst or ip.dst ne 224.1.2.3
not ip.dst eq 224.1.2.3
The first filter uses "not ip.dst" to include all non-IP packets and then
lets "ip.dst ne 224.1.2.3" filter out the unwanted IP packets. The
second filter also negates the implicit existence test and so is
a shorter way to write the first.
== FILTER FIELD REFERENCE
The entire list of display filters is too large to list here. You can
can find references and examples at the following locations:
* The online Display Filter Reference: https://www.wireshark.org/docs/dfref/
* __View:Internals:Supported Protocols__ in Wireshark
* `tshark -G fields` on the command line
* The Wireshark wiki: {wireshark-wiki-url}DisplayFilters
== NOTES
The *xref:wireshark-filter.html[wireshark-filter](4)* manpage is part of the *Wireshark* distribution.
The latest version of *Wireshark* can be found at
https://www.wireshark.org.
Regular expressions in the "matches" operator are provided by the PCRE2 library.
See https://www.pcre.org/ for more information.
This manpage does not describe the capture filter syntax, which is
different. See the manual page of xref:https://www.tcpdump.org/manpages/pcap-filter.7.html[pcap-filter](7) or, if that doesn't exist,
xref:https://www.tcpdump.org/manpages/tcpdump.1.html[tcpdump](8), or, if that doesn't exist, {wireshark-wiki-url}CaptureFilters
for a description of capture filters.
Display Filters are also described in the link:{wireshark-users-guide-url}ChWorkBuildDisplayFilterSection.html[Wireshark User's Guide].
== SEE ALSO
xref:wireshark.html[wireshark](1), xref:tshark.html[tshark](1), xref:editcap.html[editcap](1), xref:https://www.tcpdump.org/manpages/pcap.3pcap.html[pcap](3), xref:https://www.tcpdump.org/manpages/pcap-filter.7.html[pcap-filter](7) or xref:https://www.tcpdump.org/manpages/tcpdump.1.html[tcpdump](8) if it
doesn't exist.
== AUTHORS
See the list of authors in the *Wireshark* man page for a list of authors of
that code.
|