Wireshark-bugs: [Wireshark-bugs] [Bug 6025] New: What happened to the "-B" kernel buffer size op

Date: Wed, 15 Jun 2011 15:02:10 -0700 (PDT)
https://bugs.wireshark.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=6025

           Summary: What happened to the "-B" kernel buffer size option ?
           Product: Wireshark
           Version: 1.7.x (Experimental)
          Platform: Other
        OS/Version: Mac OS X 10.6
            Status: NEW
          Severity: Major
          Priority: Low
         Component: TShark
        AssignedTo: wireshark-bugs@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
        ReportedBy: tschardt@xxxxxxxxx


Build Information:
TShark 1.7.0-SVN-37663 (SVN Rev 37663 from /trunk)

Copyright 1998-2011 Gerald Combs <gerald@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> and contributors.
This is free software; see the source for copying conditions. There is NO
warranty; not even for MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.

Compiled (32-bit) with GLib 2.16.3, with libpcap 1.1.1, with libz 1.2.3,
without
POSIX capabilities, without libpcre, with SMI 0.4.8, with c-ares 1.5.3, with
Lua
5.1, with Python 2.5.1, with GnuTLS 2.6.2, with Gcrypt 1.4.3, with MIT
Kerberos,
without GeoIP.

Running on Mac OS 10.7.0 (Darwin 11.0.0), with libpcap version 1.1.1, with libz
1.2.5.

Built using gcc 4.0.1 (Apple Inc. build 5488).

--
Just curious if the "-B" kernel buffer space is still supported, the help page
for "1.6" version does say that the "-B" option is supported.



Here is the options for "tshark" from "1.7" version.

sudo /Applications/Wireshark.app/Contents/Resources/bin/tshark -n -i en1 -y
IEEE802_11_RADIO -w test0001.cap -S -B 300000
/Applications/Wireshark.app/Contents/Resources/bin/tshark-bin: illegal option
-- B
TShark 1.7.0-SVN-37663 (SVN Rev 37663 from /trunk)
Dump and analyze network traffic.
See http://www.wireshark.org for more information.

Copyright 1998-2011 Gerald Combs <gerald@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> and contributors.
This is free software; see the source for copying conditions. There is NO
warranty; not even for MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.

Usage: tshark [options] ...

Capture interface:
  -i <interface>           name or idx of interface (def: first non-loopback)
  -f <capture filter>      packet filter in libpcap filter syntax
  -s <snaplen>             packet snapshot length (def: 65535)
  -p                       don't capture in promiscuous mode
  -y <link type>           link layer type (def: first appropriate)
  -D                       print list of interfaces and exit
  -L                       print list of link-layer types of iface and exit

Capture stop conditions:
  -c <packet count>        stop after n packets (def: infinite)
  -a <autostop cond.> ...  duration:NUM - stop after NUM seconds
                           filesize:NUM - stop this file after NUM KB
                              files:NUM - stop after NUM files
Capture output:
  -b <ringbuffer opt.> ... duration:NUM - switch to next file after NUM secs
                           filesize:NUM - switch to next file after NUM KB
                              files:NUM - ringbuffer: replace after NUM files
Input file:
  -r <infile>              set the filename to read from (no pipes or stdin!)

Processing:
  -R <read filter>         packet filter in Wireshark display filter syntax
  -n                       disable all name resolutions (def: all enabled)
  -N <name resolve flags>  enable specific name resolution(s): "mntC"
  -d <layer_type>==<selector>,<decode_as_protocol> ...
                           "Decode As", see the man page for details
                           Example: tcp.port==8888,http
Output:
  -w <outfile|->           write packets to a pcap-format file named "outfile"
                           (or to the standard output for "-")
  -C <config profile>      start with specified configuration profile
  -F <output file type>    set the output file type, default is libpcap
                           an empty "-F" option will list the file types
  -V                       add output of packet tree        (Packet Details)
  -O <protocols>           Only show packet details of these protocols, comma
                           separated
  -S                       display packets even when writing to a file
  -x                       add output of hex and ASCII dump (Packet Bytes)
  -T pdml|ps|psml|text|fields
                           format of text output (def: text)
  -e <field>               field to print if -Tfields selected (e.g. tcp.port);
                           this option can be repeated to print multiple fields
  -E<fieldsoption>=<value> set options for output when -Tfields selected:
     header=y|n            switch headers on and off
     separator=/t|/s|<char> select tab, space, printable character as separator
     occurrence=f|l|a      print first, last or all occurrences of each field
     aggregator=,|/s|<char> select comma, space, printable character as
                           aggregator
     quote=d|s|n           select double, single, no quotes for values
  -t ad|a|r|d|dd|e         output format of time stamps (def: r: rel. to first)
  -u s|hms                 output format of seconds (def: s: seconds)
  -l                       flush standard output after each packet
  -q                       be more quiet on stdout (e.g. when using statistics)
  -X <key>:<value>         eXtension options, see the man page for details
  -z <statistics>          various statistics, see the man page for details

Miscellaneous:
  -h                       display this help and exit
  -v                       display version info and exit
  -o <name>:<value> ...    override preference setting
  -K <keytab>              keytab file to use for kerberos decryption
  -G [report]              dump one of several available reports and exit
                           default report="fields"
                           use "-G ?" for more help

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