Hi list,
For a while I'd been meaning to submit a "splitcap" tool to provide 
rich command-line splitting capabilities.  I'd planned on extending 
Graeme Hewson's submitted splitcap util (and making it work), but just 
haven't had the time.
I do, however, have an extremely simple splitcap utility available now 
- it simply allows the user to split a file, either into <n> number of 
slices of equal # of packets, or to split a file into (up to, optional) 
<n> number of slices of size <p>.  Files are created in user-specified 
location (or local dir by default) in format originalfilename + 
"-splitxxxx".
Usage is as follows:
Usage: splitcap [-h] [-s <# of frames>] [-n <number of slices>] 
<capfile> [destination directory]
  where	-s <# of frames> specifies the number of frames per slice
		-h produces this help listing
		-n <number of slices> specifies the maximum number of slices to 
create.  If specified without -s, creates the specified
			number of slices, of equal number of packets each.  If specified 
with -s, creates up to the specified number of
			slices, of the specified number of packets each.
		<capfile> is the name of the file to split.
		[destination directory] is the location where split files will be 
saved.  If no directory is specified, the local directory is
			assumed.  Slices are saved with name "<capfile>-splitxxxx", where 
xxxx is the split number.
I constantly find this extremely useful, mostly since it's magnitudes 
faster than repeatedly running editcap since I only have to take one or 
possibly two read passes through the file, and with very large files 
this might mean the difference between an hour or days to split - and 
figure others might find it the same.
Since it doesn't look like the more rich splitcap is coming anytime 
soon, should I go ahead and submit this "simple" splitcap?
Ian