On Mon, 22 Sep 2003, Guy Harris wrote: > > On Sep 22, 2003, at 12:11 AM, Richard Sharpe wrote: > > > It also claims: > > > > ASN.1, H.225, H.245, H.261, H.323, G.711, G.723, G.728, > > G.729, Q.850, Q.931, Q.932, Q.952, Q.953, Q.955, Q.956, Q.957, SAP, > > SSDP, SIP > > > > Howe many of these are we handling so far? > > Whether we handle "ASN.1" depends on what you mean by "ASN.1"; we > dissect a number of protocols that use ASN.1 BER/DER and PER encodings. > > We have H.225, H.246, H.261, and H.263 dissectors, although I don't > know how much of those we dissector or, if we don't handle all of them, > what's missing. > > I think "H.323" isn't a protocol but a suite of protocols, including > the ones mentioned in the previous paragraph. > > We don't dissect G.711 except as data - I suspect it might just be a > sequence of 8-bit(?) sound samples, but perhaps not. We don't appear > to have dissectors for G.72{389}. > > I don't remember what Q.850 is, offhand; we do have a dissector for > Q.931, but not the other Q. protocols (unless there's nothing to > dissect, or if they're just small addenda to other protocols and we > already handle those addenda). > > We have a dissector for RFC 2974 SAP; we dissect the Simple Service > Discovery Protocol as HTTP; we also have a dissector for RFC 2543 SIP. > > (Is that Wildpackets' list of VoIP protocols they handle?)
Yes, it seems to be ... Regards ----- Richard Sharpe, rsharpe[at]ns.aus.com, rsharpe[at]samba.org, sharpe[at]ethereal.com, http://www.richardsharpe.com