Wireshark Lab [TESTED]
Wireshark is a (often called a "packet sniffer"). It captures network traffic on a specific interface (like your Wi-Fi or Ethernet card) and displays that data in a human-readable format.
In a typical lab setting, students or professionals use to capture, inspect, and analyze packets—the small units of data that travel across a network. These labs often follow the popular "Top-Down Approach" popularized by Computer Networking: A Top-Down Approach by Jim Kurose and Keith Ross . Common lab objectives include: Portfolio Task 3 Exemplar F23.pdf - Course Hero wireshark lab
Client-3: To watch. Loopback: They will shut you down. Client-3: They will try. But first, they will see the lab. They will see the beauty. Wireshark is a (often called a "packet sniffer")
74 bytes on wire (592 bits) Ethernet II: Src: Cisco_12:ab:47, Dst: Broadcast Internet Protocol: Src: 10.0.0.25, Dst: 192.168.88.200 User Datagram Protocol: Src Port: 54321, Dst Port: 7 (Echo) Data (36 bytes): Get out. Get out. Get out. These labs often follow the popular "Top-Down Approach"
Now, let’s dig deeper into a packet.
Click on the packet. In the middle pane, expand the Internet Protocol section. Here you can see: