On Apr 28, 2020, at 1:41 PM, Tim Higgins <tim@timhiggins.com> wrote:I'm on WS 3.2.1 and checked the "Enable Wireless Timeline (experimental) checkbox under Preferernces > Protocols > 802.11 Radio.
I don't see the timeline.
On 4/28/2020 2:33 PM, Simon Barber wrote:
Has everyone seen the wifi visualization that I added to Wireshark? It's experimental and has to be turned on in the 802.11 preferences.
https://meraki.cisco.com/blog/2019/02/wireshark-where-did-the-time-go/
Simon
On April 28, 2020 11:18:15 AM Avery Pennarun <apenwarr@gmail.com> wrote:
I'm afraid if you have to ask that, this program might not be for you :)
There's a script called './start' in the toplevel directory. It
requires you to have the appengine SDK installed (unfortunately). In
retrospect, using appengine for this was a bad idea, but we all make
mistakes in our youth. But anyway, you can download the appengine SDK
and run a local copy for free, so you don't need actual appengine.
On Tue, Apr 28, 2020 at 12:40 PM Tim Higgins <tim@timhiggins.com> wrote:
_______________________________________________
On 4/28/2020 12:30 PM, Avery Pennarun wrote:
On Tue, Apr 28, 2020 at 12:09 PM Dave Taht <dave.taht@gmail.com> wrote:
On Tue, Apr 28, 2020 at 8:59 AM Tim Higgins <tim@timhiggins.com> wrote:
So how do you use it and what's the output look like?
I downloaded it and opened the index.html file in a browser and
it doesn't appear to work.
It's been years since I had to dig this deep into the wifi stack.
Avery's group produced a lot of cool tools while
gfiber was in growth mode, he's since moved onto doing cool things
with wireguard ( https://tailscale.com/ )and I doubt he's maintaining
this anymore. We had lots and lots of other very adhoc tools lying
around... parsing wifi caps is a !@#!!
Sorry about that, wavedroplet never quite got to something like
release quality. It requires more work.
However, it shouldn't just totally fail either :) Perhaps there's an
error visible in the javascript console, or python is emitting a
problem somewhere (note that it's a python2 program, not python3).
Actually, now that I think of it, I don't know why there's an
index.html at all. You definitely need to run the python backend and
connect to that, which probably renders the index.html as a template.
Have fun,
Avery
Thanks for the reply. And how do I run the python backend?
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