tcpdump 4.5.1-2ubuntu1 source package in Ubuntu

Changelog

tcpdump (4.5.1-2ubuntu1) trusty; urgency=medium

  * Resynchronize on Debian remaining differences:
  * debian/control:
    - Build-Depends on dh-apparmor.
    - Suggests apparmor
  * debian/README.Debian, debian/tcpdump.dirs, debian/usr.sbin.tcpdump,
    debian/patches/patches/90_man_apparmor.diff,
    debian/install, debian/rules:
    - Install enforcing AppArmor profile.

tcpdump (4.5.1-2) unstable; urgency=low

  * Disable nflog-e testcase, the NFLOG header length is specified in host
    byte order which makes capture files order-dependent (closes: #731031).

tcpdump (4.5.1-1) unstable; urgency=low

  * New upstream release.
  * Disable new pppoes testcase which uses a new pcap feature to avoid tying
    the two upstream versions together.
  * debian/control: Set Standards-Version to 3.9.5.
 -- Sebastien Bacher <email address hidden>   Mon, 13 Jan 2014 16:22:22 +0100

Upload details

Uploaded by:
Sebastien Bacher
Uploaded to:
Trusty
Original maintainer:
Ubuntu Developers
Architectures:
any
Section:
net
Urgency:
Medium Urgency

See full publishing history Publishing

Series Pocket Published Component Section
Trusty release main net

Downloads

File Size SHA-256 Checksum
tcpdump_4.5.1.orig.tar.gz 1000.4 KiB 14ab39657128f3a650aed4cf455f76c7590601087b6101c253d698f6e73f0b96
tcpdump_4.5.1-2ubuntu1.debian.tar.gz 15.1 KiB 87d0846d680be3b20775998b59bf21ca4029d02055cf854c5893f2e4bb65fc6a
tcpdump_4.5.1-2ubuntu1.dsc 1.4 KiB 296e2d8aa6fdfb1db395e0f8a3dee600746e5cc403250ad0dc9d4f5976f6fcd5

Available diffs

View changes file

Binary packages built by this source

tcpdump: command-line network traffic analyzer

 This program allows you to dump the traffic on a network. tcpdump
 is able to examine IPv4, ICMPv4, IPv6, ICMPv6, UDP, TCP, SNMP, AFS
 BGP, RIP, PIM, DVMRP, IGMP, SMB, OSPF, NFS and many other packet
 types.
 .
 It can be used to print out the headers of packets on a network
 interface, filter packets that match a certain expression. You can
 use this tool to track down network problems, to detect attacks
 or to monitor network activities.