Great Thanks to your detail explaination!
> Date: Wed, 4 Jun 2008 09:46:53 -0700 > From: guy@xxxxxxxxxxxx > To: wireshark-users@xxxxxxxxxxxxx > Subject: Re: [Wireshark-users] How does wireshark get "Time" shown in the listview? > > Xu nanxuan wrote: > > My question is just like the title. Is the time consistent with the > > system time that is shown in the Taskbar of Windows OS? > > "Consistent" in what sense? > > If you're capturing on a regular network adapter, the time stamp comes, > as far as I know, from the same operating system timer that supplies the > current time to user-mode code such as the taskbar code, so it should be > consistent in that sense. > > For captures done by Wireshark (or tcpdump/WinDump, or any other program > using libpcap/WinPcap), the time stamp is in seconds and microseconds > since January 1, 1970, 00:00:00 UTC -
i.e., the time stamps in the > capture file are not in local time, they're in Universal Time (well, > maybe TA1, but we won't worry about leap seconds here :-)). > > If you are reading a capture that was done on a machine in a different > time zone, the time stamps will be displayed as time stamps in the time > zone of the machine on which you're reading the capture, not in the time > zone of the machine on which the capture was done. > > > And another question: Take the folollowing two lines for example: > > > > ========================== > > time1 server->client packetinfo1 > > time2 client->server packetinfo2 > > ========================== > > > > If the wireshark is installed on the client side, then it's easy to > > understand how time1 can be captured:when packet arrives at client, the > > wireshark record the time1
in some way. > > > > However, how does wireshark know time2? time2 means that the packet > > arrives at server at time2, > > No, time2 means that the host capturing the packet saw the packet at > time2. If the host sent the packet, that's the time when the packet was > sent. If Wireshark is running on a third machine capturing > promiscuously, that's the time when *it* received the packet. > > Furthermore, a time stamp isn't necessarily the time when the packet > arrives at the host; it's the time when the code doing the capturing > sees the packet. For packets that the host receives, that happens after > any interrupt latency and after any processing done by the networking > driver and networking stack before the time stamping is done. > Furthermore, note that the networking adapter and driver might be > "batching" packets, which adds an additional delay be
tween the arrival > of the packet at the adapter and the driver seeing the packet. > _______________________________________________ > Wireshark-users mailing list > Wireshark-users@xxxxxxxxxxxxx > https://wireshark.org/mailman/listinfo/wireshark-users
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