Graphical network packet dumper

Posted by: drakino

Graphical network packet dumper - 27/08/2003 14:01

One of my coworkers and I remember some sort of Matrix screensaver like program for Linux that used tcpdump to show network activity. Anyone know what this program is? I'd love to implement it here at work to see how busy our lab network is.
Posted by: phaigh

Re: Graphical network packet dumper - 28/08/2003 02:39

Not specifically, but I do remember a piece of open source called 'Peep' a 'Network Auralizer' (!).

It looked at the network traffic and depending on what it saw it would generate sounds - so you could use hearing to determine how much traffic was going on - very cool, but also highly annoying.

I'll see if I can dig out a link..

*edit* Here it is: http://peep.sourceforge.net/doc.html

Paul
Posted by: Roger

Re: Graphical network packet dumper - 28/08/2003 04:01

It should look out for properly formatted MP3 frames going past, and then play those....
Posted by: g_attrill

Re: Graphical network packet dumper - 28/08/2003 04:26

You forgot this attachment.
Posted by: phaigh

Re: Graphical network packet dumper - 28/08/2003 06:28

Now that's a great idea! Could sound pretty horrific though..
Posted by: tman

Re: Graphical network packet dumper - 28/08/2003 07:32

It shouldn't be that hard to do actually. I'm writing a network sniffer at the moment and the IPv4 portion is pretty simple. Writing the GUI is the bit that has taken me the longest to do.
It'll probably end up sounding horrible as all of the streams will be mixed up however. But this may improve the music depending on your tastes
Posted by: Daria

Re: Graphical network packet dumper - 28/08/2003 08:21

I think I saw a paper on it at LISA. It was sort of amusing, though I could never imagine running it.
Posted by: wfaulk

Re: Graphical network packet dumper - 28/08/2003 08:49

Solaris's snoop network sniffer has had this for many years:
-a Listen to packets on /dev/audio (warning: can be noisy).
(from the snoop man page)
Posted by: genixia

Re: Graphical network packet dumper - 28/08/2003 14:48

tcpdump > /dev/dsp works nicely on linux.
Posted by: julf

Re: Graphical network packet dumper - 29/08/2003 02:19

Now when I were a lad...

There was a number of mainframes with a speaker lead tied to one of the higher address bus wires. You could hear when your program got stuck in an endless loop by the random noise changing to a steady tone.

Peter Langston's first music program, MUTRAN, actually worked by carefully timed loops that would get picked up by an AM radio next to the computer.
Posted by: Roger

Re: Graphical network packet dumper - 29/08/2003 03:14

Yeah, but it's not decoding the MP3 frames and actually giving you snatches of music, though, is it?
Posted by: andy

Re: Graphical network packet dumper - 29/08/2003 03:14

One of the mainframes my Dad worked on could be made to play tunes using it's line printer's print head.

Edit: ah look, he wasn't making it up either
http://mmd.foxtail.com/Archives/Digests/199812/1998.12.13.10.html
Posted by: julf

Re: Graphical network packet dumper - 29/08/2003 03:42

One of the mainframes my Dad worked on could be made to play tunes using it's line printer's print head.

Cool!

In the same vein - here's some more of Peter's work - this time [mis]using early-80's DecTalk speech synthesizers:
http://www.langston.com/SVM.html
Posted by: phaigh

Re: Graphical network packet dumper - 29/08/2003 11:00

Yes but Peep makes *nice* noises - listen to the sample MP3's.

I don't believe that the command you showed would sound pretty in any way.

Paul
Posted by: g_attrill

Re: Graphical network packet dumper - 29/08/2003 13:05

One of the mainframes my Dad worked on could be made to play tunes using it's line printer's print head.

Apparently The HP 5100 scanner plays "Ode to Joy" on it's scan head if you hold down the scan button while plugging it in.

Gareth
Posted by: bootsy

Re: Graphical network packet dumper - 29/08/2003 17:24

I have an HP 4c flatbed scanner that you could download a utility to compose tunes on it! I was very worried it would be bad for the scanner... ironically, my isa scsi cards went obsolete before anything went wrong with the scanner.