- SKILL: Traffic Analysis & PCAP — Expert Analysis Playbook
- AI LOAD INSTRUCTION
- Expert traffic analysis and PCAP forensics techniques. Covers PCAP repair, Wireshark essential filters, protocol-specific analysis (HTTP, HTTPS/TLS, DNS, FTP, SMTP, USB HID, WiFi, ICMP), data extraction (file carving, credential harvesting, covert channels), NetworkMiner, and tshark CLI analysis. Base models miss USB keyboard decode patterns, DNS tunneling detection heuristics, and TLS decryption workflows. 0. RELATED ROUTING Before going deep, consider loading: memory-forensics-volatility for correlating memory artifacts with network traffic steganography-techniques for analyzing files extracted from traffic captures network-protocol-attacks for understanding attack patterns visible in captures reverse-shell-techniques for identifying shell traffic in captures 1. PCAP REPAIR pcapfix corrupted.pcap -o fixed.pcap
repair corrupted PCAP
Magic bytes: d4c3b2a1=pcap(LE), a1b2c3d4=pcap(BE), 0a0d0d0a=pcapng
editcap -F pcap capture.pcapng capture.pcap
convert pcapng→pcap
mergecap -w merged.pcap file1.pcap file2.pcap
merge captures
- WIRESHARK ESSENTIAL FILTERS IP / Host Filters ip.addr == 10.0.0.1 # source or destination ip.src == 10.0.0.1 # source only ip.dst == 10.0.0.1 # destination only ip.addr == 10.0.0.0/24 # subnet !(ip.addr == 10.0.0.1) # exclude host Protocol Filters http # all HTTP dns # all DNS tcp # all TCP ftp # all FTP smtp # all SMTP tls # all TLS/SSL icmp # all ICMP arp # all ARP TCP / Stream tcp.stream eq 5 # follow specific TCP stream tcp.port == 80 # traffic on port 80 tcp.flags.syn == 1 && tcp.flags.ack == 0 # SYN packets (connection starts) tcp.analysis.retransmission # retransmitted packets tcp.len > 0 # packets with payload HTTP http.request.method == "POST" # POST requests http.request.method == "GET" # GET requests http.response.code == 200 # successful responses http.response.code >= 400 # error responses http.request.uri contains "login" # URI contains string http.host contains "target.com" # specific host http.content_type contains "json" # JSON responses http.cookie contains "session" # session cookies http.request.full_uri # show full URIs (column) DNS dns.qry.name contains "evil.com" # specific domain queries dns.qry.type == 1 # A records dns.qry.type == 28 # AAAA records dns.qry.type == 16 # TXT records dns.flags.response == 1 # DNS responses only dns.resp.len > 100 # large DNS responses TLS tls.handshake.type == 1 # Client Hello tls.handshake.type == 2 # Server Hello tls.handshake.extensions.server_name # SNI (hostname) tls.handshake.type == 11 # Certificate Content Search frame contains "password" # search in raw bytes frame contains "flag{" # CTF flag pattern tcp contains "admin" # search in TCP payload
- PROTOCOL ANALYSIS HTTP — Follow Stream & Extract Right-click packet → Follow → TCP Stream
Shows full HTTP request/response conversation
File extraction:
File → Export Objects → HTTP → Save All
Useful filters for credential hunting:
http.request.method == "POST" && frame contains "password" http.request.method == "POST" && frame contains "login" http.authbasic # Basic auth (base64 encoded) HTTPS / TLS Decryption
Method 1: SSLKEYLOGFILE (pre-master secrets from browser)
Set environment variable BEFORE opening browser:
export SSLKEYLOGFILE = /tmp/sslkeys.log firefox https://target.com
Wireshark: Edit → Preferences → Protocols → TLS
→ (Pre)-Master-Secret log filename: /tmp/sslkeys.log
Method 2: Server private key (for RSA key exchange only)
Wireshark: Edit → Preferences → Protocols → TLS → RSA keys list
→ Add: IP, Port, Protocol, Key file (.pem)
DNS — Tunneling Detection
Indicators of DNS tunneling:
1. Unusually long subdomain names (>30 chars)
2. High volume of TXT record queries/responses
3. Consistent query patterns to same domain
4. Base32/Base64-like subdomain strings
5. High query frequency from single host
Wireshark filter for suspicious DNS:
dns.qry.name.len
50
long query names
dns.qry.type
16
TXT records (common for tunneling)
dns.resp.len
512
large DNS responses
tshark extraction:
tshark -r capture.pcap -Y "dns.qry.type==16" -T fields -e dns.qry.name FTP — Credential & File Extraction
FTP credentials (plaintext)
Filter: ftp.request.command == "USER" || ftp.request.command == "PASS"
FTP file transfer reconstruction:
FTP uses separate data channel (usually port 20 or dynamic)
Follow TCP stream of data connection to extract file
tshark:
tshark -r capture.pcap -Y "ftp.request.command==USER || ftp.request.command==PASS" -T fields -e ftp.request.arg SMTP — Email Content Extraction
Follow TCP stream → MAIL FROM/RCPT TO/DATA sections
Attachments: base64 in MIME → decode Content-Transfer-Encoding blocks
Filters:
smtp.req.command
"AUTH"
authentication (often base64)
smtp contains "Content-Disposition: attachment"
attachments
USB — Keyboard HID Capture Decode
USB HID keyboard traffic: interrupt transfers with 8-byte data
Filter: usb.transfer_type == 0x01
Extract keystrokes:
tshark -r usb.pcap -Y "usb.capdata && usb.data_len == 8" -T fields -e usb.capdata
keystrokes.txt
HID keycode layout: byte[0]=modifier, byte[2]=keycode
0x04=a..0x1d=z, 0x1e=1..0x27=0, 0x28=Enter, 0x2c=Space
Use Python/online HID decoder to convert keycodes → text
WiFi — WPA Handshake
Capture: airodump-ng --bssid AP_MAC -w capture wlan0mon
Convert + crack: hcxpcapngtool -o hash.hc22000 capture.pcap
hashcat -m 22000 hash.hc22000 wordlist.txt
Deauth detection: wlan.fc.type_subtype == 0x0c
ICMP — Data Exfiltration
ICMP payload analysis
Normal ping: 32 or 64 bytes of pattern data
Exfiltration: meaningful data in ICMP payload
Filter:
icmp && data.len
48
unusual ICMP payload size
icmp.type
8
echo requests
Extract ICMP payloads:
tshark -r capture.pcap -Y "icmp.type==8" -T fields -e data.data 4. DATA EXTRACTION File Carving
Wireshark: File → Export Objects
Supported: HTTP, SMB, TFTP, IMF (email), DICOM
Manual from reassembled stream:
Follow TCP Stream → Show as Raw → Save As
binwalk on exported stream data
binwalk -e exported_stream.bin foremost -i exported_stream.bin -o carved/ Credential Harvesting
Plaintext: ftp || telnet || http.authbasic || smtp || pop || imap
NTLM: ntlmssp.auth.username → extract challenge/response from NTLMSSP messages
Hash format: user::domain:challenge:NTProofStr:blob → hashcat -m 5600
Covert Channel Detection Indicators: DNS with long subdomains, ICMP with large payloads, HTTP with encoded headers, regular beacon intervals (C2). Use tshark -q -z io,stat,1 and -z conv,tcp for statistical anomaly detection. 5. NETWORKMINER
Automated PCAP analysis: sudo apt install networkminer
Open PCAP → auto-extracts: Files, Images, Credentials, Sessions, DNS
Files tab: carved from HTTP/SMB/FTP | Credentials tab: plaintext creds
- TSHARK COMMAND-LINE ANALYSIS tshark -r capture.pcap -Y "http.request" -T fields -e http.host -e http.request.uri tshark -r capture.pcap -Y "dns.flags.response==0" -T fields -e dns.qry.name | sort -u tshark -r capture.pcap -Y "http.request.method==POST" -T fields -e http.file_data tshark -r capture.pcap -q -z io,stat,1
I/O graph
tshark -r capture.pcap -q -z conv,tcp
TCP conversations
tshark -r capture.pcap -q -z endpoints,ip
IP endpoints
tshark -r capture.pcap -q -z io,phs
protocol hierarchy
tshark -r capture.pcap -q -z follow,tcp,ascii,0
follow stream 0
tshark -r capture.pcap --export-objects http,/tmp/exported/ 7. DECISION TREE PCAP file for analysis │ ├── File won't open? │ ├── Check magic bytes: xxd | head (§1) │ ├── Repair: pcapfix (§1) │ └── Convert: editcap pcapng→pcap (§1) │ ├── What's in the capture? (Quick overview) │ ├── tshark -q -z io,phs (protocol hierarchy) (§6) │ ├── tshark -q -z conv,tcp (conversations) (§6) │ └── tshark -q -z endpoints,ip (endpoints) (§6) │ ├── HTTP traffic? │ ├── Export objects: File → Export Objects → HTTP (§4) │ ├── Credential hunt: POST + password/login filters (§3) │ ├── Follow streams: interesting request/response pairs (§3) │ └── Encrypted (HTTPS)? → need SSLKEYLOGFILE or RSA key (§3) │ ├── DNS traffic? │ ├── Long subdomains? → DNS tunneling (§3) │ ├── High TXT record volume? → DNS exfiltration (§3) │ ├── Extract all queries: tshark -Y dns -T fields -e dns.qry.name (§6) │ └── DNS rebinding? → check for alternating A record responses │ ├── FTP / Telnet / SMTP? │ ├── Extract credentials (plaintext) (§3) │ ├── Reconstruct file transfers (follow data stream) (§3) │ └── Email content and attachments (base64 decode) (§3) │ ├── USB traffic? │ ├── Keyboard HID → decode keystrokes (§3) │ ├── Storage → extract transferred files │ └── Check transfer_type and data_len fields │ ├── WiFi traffic? │ ├── WPA handshake → crack with hashcat (§3) │ ├── Deauth frames → detect attack (§3) │ └── Probe requests → device fingerprinting │ ├── ICMP traffic? │ ├── Large/variable payloads → data exfiltration (§3) │ ├── Regular pattern → ICMP tunnel (§3) │ └── Extract payloads: tshark -Y icmp -T fields -e data.data │ ├── Suspicious patterns? │ ├── Regular beacon interval → C2 communication (§4) │ ├── Unusual port/protocol combos → covert channel (§4) │ ├── High volume to single external IP → data exfil (§4) │ └── Encrypted traffic without SNI → suspicious tunnel │ └── Need automated extraction? ├── NetworkMiner for files/creds/images (§5) ├── tshark --export-objects for HTTP/SMB files (§6) └── binwalk/foremost on exported streams (§4)