![]() While Fedora 30 is running Wireshark 3.0.1, even Ubuntu 19.10 (Eoan) is still running Wireshark 2.6.9-1 (again at the time of writing this). If you’re doing packet analysis and run Debian/Ubuntu, you may have noticed that Wireshark is currently at version 3.0.2 (at the time of writing this), but both Debian and Ubuntu are running 2.6.x versions of Wireshark ( Debian Stretch is at 2.6.7-1, and Ubuntu 18.04 is at 2.6.8-1). Well, I’m hoping to correct the record here. Not going to say I was wrong, but perhaps you could say it was half-baked. ![]() So in other words, I didn’t compile this correctly, and even shared how to do it incorrectly. You can see all I didn’t include in the compiling here: I found out that in my compiling of Wireshark, I didn’t include the GNUTLS package - and actually, it turns out there’s a lot I didn’t include that would actually solve the bugs I mentioned in the previous post. Come Monday morning at Sharkfest 2019, during a TLS training session with I had a problem with decrypting packets (I couldn’t add RSA keys). In my previous post, I gave instructions on how to build and install Wireshark 3.0.1 for Ubuntu 18.04, which did the trick at the time, but it was a little hasty and had a few bugs that I didn’t know how to resolve at the time. (Updated 2020101 with new dependencies needed) I recommend using PPA versus compiling from source, unless you need to compile from source…or like to do it the hard way. ![]() Looks like the PPA is active again with at least 3.2.x (it was inactive and still running 2.x at the time I wrote this):
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