Capinfos is a program that reads one or more capture files and
returns some or all available statistics of each <infile>.
The user specifies which statistics to report by specifying flags
corresponding to the statistic. If no flags are specified, Capinfos
will report all statistics available.
Capinfos is able to detect and read the same capture files that are
supported by Wireshark.
The input files don't need a specific filename extension; the file
format and an optional gzip compression will be automatically detected.
Near the beginning of the DESCRIPTION section of wireshark(1) or
<http://www.wireshark.org/docs/man-pages/wireshark.html>
is a detailed description of the way Wireshark handles this, which is
the same way Capinfos handles this.
OPTIONS
-t
Displays the capture type of the capture file.
-E
Displays the per-file encapsulation of the capture file.
-c
Counts the number of packets in the capture file.
-s
Displays the size of the file, in bytes. This reports
the size of the capture file itself.
-d
Displays the total length of all packets in the file, in
bytes. This counts the size of the packets as they appeared
in their original form, not as they appear in this file.
For example, if a packet was originally 1514 bytes and only
256 of those bytes were saved to the capture file (if packets
were captured with a snaplen or other slicing option),
Capinfos will consider the packet to have been 1514 bytes.
-u
Displays the capture duration, in seconds. This is the
difference in time between the earliest packet seen and
latest packet seen.
-a
Displays the start time of the capture. Capinfos considers
the earliest timestamp seen to be the start time, so the
first packet in the capture is not necessarily the earliest -
if packets exist ``out-of-order'', time-wise, in the capture,
Capinfos detects this.
-e
Displays the end time of the capture. Capinfos considers
the latest timestamp seen to be the end time, so the
last packet in the capture is not necessarily the latest -
if packets exist ``out-of-order'', time-wise, in the capture,
Capinfos detects this.