Wireshark-dev: [Wireshark-dev] Wireshark 1.8.0rc2 is now available

From: Gerald Combs <gerald@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Date: Mon, 18 Jun 2012 14:23:51 -0700
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Hash: SHA1

I'm proud to announce the release of Wireshark 1.8.0rc2. This is the
second release candidate for Wireshark 1.8.0.

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

  New and Updated Features

   The following features are new (or have been significantly
   updated) since version 1.6:

     o Wireshark supports capturing from multiple interfaces at once.

     o You can now add, edit, and save packet annotations.

     o Wireshark, TShark, and their associated utilities now save
       files using the pcap-ng file format by default. (Your copy of
       Wireshark might still use the pcap file format if pcap-ng is
       disabled in your preferences.)

     o Decryption key management for IEEE 802.11, IPsec, and ISAKMP
       is easier.

     o OID resolution is now supported on 64-bit Windows.

     o When saving packets, the default choice is now to save only
       the displayed packets rather than all packets.

     o TCP fast retransmissions are now indicated as an expert info
       note, rather than a warning, just as TCP retransmissions are.

     o TCP window updates are no longer colorized as "Bad TCP".

     o TShark's command-line options have changed. The previously
       undocumented -P option is now -2 option for performing a
       two-pass analysis; the former -S option is now the -P option
       for printing packets even if writing to a file, and the -S
       option is now used to specify a different line separator
       between packets.

     o GeoIP IPv6 databases are now supported.


Digests

wireshark-1.8.0rc2.tar.bz2: 24420300 bytes
MD5(wireshark-1.8.0rc2.tar.bz2)=0825453dd1f40fb9a31e5a30adc7e3a5
SHA1(wireshark-1.8.0rc2.tar.bz2)=79c8d6c1eb55487efe06603d983d328f2994f3d4
RIPEMD160(wireshark-1.8.0rc2.tar.bz2)=017d2561d7fe2c7d0170ca5142cf79382d8e6555

Wireshark-win32-1.8.0rc2.exe: 20909890 bytes
MD5(Wireshark-win32-1.8.0rc2.exe)=1f52ef1f616d4f46703d0ad75a2a9b58
SHA1(Wireshark-win32-1.8.0rc2.exe)=95e0f6bf3d9552faf3ed983794236a41960a6c41
RIPEMD160(Wireshark-win32-1.8.0rc2.exe)=873453d0df6fa62e4985849fc6b6b5878db24896

Wireshark-win64-1.8.0rc2.exe: 26584247 bytes
MD5(Wireshark-win64-1.8.0rc2.exe)=b939b76c3409c9144eebaea9c1fe9c23
SHA1(Wireshark-win64-1.8.0rc2.exe)=95df489f0299074297444a3515025626663ed40d
RIPEMD160(Wireshark-win64-1.8.0rc2.exe)=de17dde21dd0e5fe8a64a82b3a05a692bc25989b

Wireshark-1.8.0rc2.u3p: 28310037 bytes
MD5(Wireshark-1.8.0rc2.u3p)=7638d48171c21fd6255e4a13111123ef
SHA1(Wireshark-1.8.0rc2.u3p)=bfbeb17e4b3987ad7d4b2c44310b07ad15606e1e
RIPEMD160(Wireshark-1.8.0rc2.u3p)=5428641806389f2817b8dde037d2e65490fff1dc

WiresharkPortable-1.8.0rc2.paf.exe: 21939790 bytes
MD5(WiresharkPortable-1.8.0rc2.paf.exe)=be749812e821a26ecb94b2178fc6add5
SHA1(WiresharkPortable-1.8.0rc2.paf.exe)=c49e9732ab1d72bb54ec550577813025023e263f
RIPEMD160(WiresharkPortable-1.8.0rc2.paf.exe)=322b247b016c5b0e5f6aacfc60bd30be84a723a3

Wireshark 1.8.0rc2 Intel 64.dmg: 21757853 bytes
MD5(Wireshark 1.8.0rc2 Intel 64.dmg)=07dc7c25df08e741b274e98fe41b160a
SHA1(Wireshark 1.8.0rc2 Intel
64.dmg)=fe72889f87262cdc5d0e19e0574cce9e321735b8
RIPEMD160(Wireshark 1.8.0rc2 Intel
64.dmg)=bfd8225d7886b924bf7a6aa157ead5e3f7a8f59e

Wireshark 1.8.0rc2 Intel 32.dmg: 22078159 bytes
MD5(Wireshark 1.8.0rc2 Intel 32.dmg)=ad91620122e29f54679a8b9949d37636
SHA1(Wireshark 1.8.0rc2 Intel
32.dmg)=1d4efa08181c955e3bee3353dd089522fb0f72e9
RIPEMD160(Wireshark 1.8.0rc2 Intel
32.dmg)=b7fbfacd552182027d8cc8f7223cee4b185b9402

Wireshark 1.8.0rc2 PPC 32.dmg: 22856306 bytes
MD5(Wireshark 1.8.0rc2 PPC 32.dmg)=e777163ae0145c509cf09b9f08dad85d
SHA1(Wireshark 1.8.0rc2 PPC
32.dmg)=cffc2b7ab5c026c1ad2b1448337c5af7bb258c1a
RIPEMD160(Wireshark 1.8.0rc2 PPC
32.dmg)=a048b20c83f50da8ee5ef448111833ff7324e84d
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