I used a mobile browser in a HTC smartphone to access some websites and I used wireshark to capture the packets between the mobile browser and the website servers.
On Wed, May 23, 2012 at 2:49 PM, Boonie
<newsboonie@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Were that packets of a cheap embeded device? Sounds
like a buggy TCP stack to me.
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Wednesday, May 23, 2012 2:13
PM
Subject: Re: [Wireshark-users] what does
the TCP stream mean in wireshark
Thanks! But previously I saw a
tcp stream where there are several TCP connections (I mean mutiple
SYN-SYN/ACK-ACK handshakes)
On Wed, May 23, 2012 at 12:48 PM, Martin Visser
<martinvisser99@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Nangergong,
A TCP stream is a single connection between two IP addresses, between
the two same ports. If you see the beginning you'll see the SYN-SYN/ACK-ACK
handshake, an will also see the sequence numbers increasing. Some protocols
like HTTP/1.1 can have multiple higher level conversations on the one
connection, so I am not sure that is what you might be seeing?
Regards, Martin
MartinVisser99@xxxxxxxxx
HI, all:
In wireshark there is an
option "Follow the TCP stream", I'm wondering what does it mean? it seems
that in such a TCP stream there are multiple TCP
connections.
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