Provided by: wireshark-common_3.6.2-2_amd64 bug

NAME

       sshdump - Provide interfaces to capture from a remote host through SSH using a remote
       capture binary.

SYNOPSIS

       sshdump [ --help ] [ --version ] [ --extcap-interfaces ] [ --extcap-dlts ]
       [ --extcap-interface=<interface> ] [ --extcap-config ]
       [ --extcap-capture-filter=<capture filter> ] [ --capture ]
       [ --fifo=<path to file or pipe> ] [ --remote-host=<IP address> ]
       [ --remote-port=<TCP port> ] [ --remote-username=<username> ]
       [ --remote-password=<password> ] [ --sshkey=<public key path> ]
       [ --remote-interface=<interface> ] [ --remote-capture-command=<capture command> ]
       [ --remote-sudo ]

       sshdump --extcap-interfaces

       sshdump --extcap-interface=<interface> --extcap-dlts

       sshdump --extcap-interface=<interface> --extcap-config

       sshdump --extcap-interface=<interface> --fifo=<path to file or pipe> --capture
       --remote-host=myremotehost --remote-port=22 --remote-username=user --remote-interface=eth2
       --remote-capture-command='tcpdump -U -i eth0 -w-'

DESCRIPTION

       Sshdump is an extcap tool that allows one to run a remote capture tool over a SSH
       connection. The requirement is that the capture executable must have the capabilities to
       capture from the wanted interface.

       The feature is functionally equivalent to run commands like

           $ ssh remoteuser@remotehost -p 22222 'tcpdump -U -i IFACE -w -' > FILE &
           $ wireshark FILE

           $ ssh remoteuser@remotehost '/sbin/dumpcap -i IFACE -P -w - -f "not port 22"' > FILE &
           $ wireshark FILE

           $ ssh somehost dumpcap -P -w - -f udp | tshark -i -

       Typically sshdump is not invoked directly. Instead it can be configured through the
       Wireshark graphical user interface or its command line. The following will start Wireshark
       and start capturing from host remotehost:

           $ wireshark '-oextcap.sshdump.remotehost:"remotehost"' -i sshdump -k

       To explicitly control the remote capture command:

           $ wireshark '-oextcap.sshdump.remotehost:"remotehost"' \
                       '-oextcap.sshdump.remotecapturecommand:"tcpdump -i eth0 -Uw- not port 22"' \
                       -i sshdump -k

       Supported interfaces:

        1. ssh

OPTIONS

       --help

           Print program arguments.

       --version

           Print program version.

       --extcap-interfaces

           List available interfaces.

       --extcap-interface=<interface>

           Use specified interfaces.

       --extcap-dlts

           List DLTs of specified interface.

       --extcap-config

           List configuration options of specified interface.

       --capture

           Start capturing from specified interface and write raw packet data to the location
           specified by --fifo.

       --fifo=<path to file or pipe>

           Save captured packet to file or send it through pipe.

       --remote-host=<remote host>

           The address of the remote host for capture.

       --remote-port=<remote port>

           The SSH port of the remote host.

       --remote-username=<username>

           The username for ssh authentication.

       --remote-password=<password>

           The password to use (if not ssh-agent and pubkey are used). WARNING: the passwords are
           stored in plaintext and visible to all users on this system. It is recommended to use
           keyfiles with a SSH agent.

       --sshkey=<SSH private key path>

           The path to a private key for authentication.

       --remote-interface=<remote interface>

           The remote network interface to capture from.

       --remote-capture-command=<capture command>

           A custom remote capture command that produces the remote stream that is shown in
           Wireshark. The command must be able to produce a PCAP stream written to STDOUT. See
           below for more examples.

           If using tcpdump, use the -w- option to ensure that packets are written to standard
           output (stdout). Include the -U option to write packets as soon as they are received.

           When specified, this command will be used as is, options such as the capture filter
           (--extcap-capture-filter) will not be appended.

       --extcap-capture-filter=<capture filter>

           The capture filter. It corresponds to the value provided via the tshark -f option, and
           the Capture Filter field next to the interfaces list in the Wireshark interface.

EXAMPLES

       To see program arguments:

           sshdump --help

       To see program version:

           sshdump --version

       To see interfaces:

           sshdump --extcap-interfaces

       Only one interface (sshdump) is supported.

       Example output

           interface {value=sshdump}{display=SSH remote capture}

       To see interface DLTs:

           sshdump --extcap-interface=sshdump --extcap-dlts

       Example output

           dlt {number=147}{name=sshdump}{display=Remote capture dependent DLT}

       To see interface configuration options:

           sshdump --extcap-interface=sshdump --extcap-config

       Example output

           arg {number=0}{call=--remote-host}{display=Remote SSH server address}{type=string}
               {tooltip=The remote SSH host. It can be both an IP address or a hostname}{required=true}{group=Server}
           arg {number=1}{call=--remote-port}{display=Remote SSH server port}{type=unsigned}
               {tooltip=The remote SSH host port (1-65535)}{range=1,65535}{group=Server}
           arg {number=2}{call=--remote-username}{display=Remote SSH server username}{type=string}
               {tooltip=The remote SSH username. If not provided, the current user will be used}{group=Authentication}
           arg {number=3}{call=--remote-password}{display=Remote SSH server password}{type=password}
               {tooltip=The SSH password, used when other methods (SSH agent or key files) are unavailable.}{group=Authentication}
           arg {number=4}{call=--sshkey}{display=Path to SSH private key}{type=fileselect}
               {tooltip=The path on the local filesystem of the private ssh key}{group=Authentication}
           arg {number=5}{call=--sshkey-passphrase}{display=SSH key passphrase}{type=password}
               {tooltip=Passphrase to unlock the SSH private key}{group=Authentication}
           arg {number=6}{call=--proxycommand}{display=ProxyCommand}{type=string}
               {tooltip=The command to use as proxy for the SSH connection}{group=Authentication}
           arg {number=7}{call=--remote-interface}{display=Remote interface}{type=string}
               {tooltip=The remote network interface used for capture}{group=Capture}
           arg {number=8}{call=--remote-capture-command}{display=Remote capture command}{type=string}
               {tooltip=The remote command used to capture}{group=Capture}
           arg {number=9}{call=--remote-sudo}{display=Use sudo on the remote machine}{type=boolean}
               {tooltip=Prepend the capture command with sudo on the remote machine}{group=Capture}
           arg {number=10}{call=--remote-noprom}{display=No promiscuous mode}{type=boolflag}
               {tooltip=Don't use promiscuous mode on the remote machine}{group=Capture}
           arg {number=11}{call=--remote-filter}{display=Remote capture filter}{type=string}
               {tooltip=The remote capture filter}{default=not ((host myhost) and port 22)}{group=Capture}
           arg {number=12}{call=--remote-count}{display=Packets to capture}{type=unsigned}{default=0}
               {tooltip=The number of remote packets to capture. (Default: inf)}{group=Capture}
           arg {number=13}{call=--debug}{display=Run in debug mode}{type=boolflag}{default=false}
               {tooltip=Print debug messages}{required=false}{group=Debug}
           arg {number=14}{call=--debug-file}{display=Use a file for debug}{type=string}
               {tooltip=Set a file where the debug messages are written}{required=false}{group=Debug}

       To capture:

           sshdump --extcap-interface=sshdump --fifo=/tmp/ssh.pcap --capture --remote-host 192.168.1.10
           --remote-username user --remote-filter "not port 22"

       To use different capture binaries:

           sshdump --extcap-interface=sshdump --fifo=/tmp/ssh.pcap --capture --remote-host 192.168.1.10
           --remote-capture-command='dumpcap -i eth0 -P -w -'

           sshdump --extcap-interface=sshdump --fifo=/tmp/ssh.pcap --capture --remote-host 192.168.1.10
           --remote-capture-command='sudo tcpdump -i eth0 -U -w -'

           Note
           To stop capturing CTRL+C/kill/terminate application.

       The sshdump binary can be renamed to support multiple instances. For instance if we want
       sshdump to show up twice in wireshark (for instance to handle multiple profiles), we can
       copy sshdump to sshdump-host1 and sshdump-host2. Each binary will show up an interface
       name same as the executable name. Those executables not being "sshdump" will show up as
       "custom version" in the interface description.

SEE ALSO

       wireshark(1), tshark(1), dumpcap(1), extcap(4), tcpdump(1)

NOTES

       Sshdump is part of the Wireshark distribution. The latest version of Wireshark can be
       found at https://www.wireshark.org.

       HTML versions of the Wireshark project man pages are available at
       https://www.wireshark.org/docs/man-pages.

AUTHORS

       Original Author
       Dario Lombardo <lomato[AT]gmail.com>

                                            2022-03-04                                 SSHDUMP(1)