the two switches are not forwarding packets to your PC as the
destination of the packets are not meant to receive it
You need to do the tracing on the WRTG54G itself (if it runs some
linux for example) or it should forward packets.
I dont think even without the two switches you will see the
On 13 Nov 2007 at 12:00, Andreas Fink [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
the two switches are not forwarding packets to your PC as the
destination of the packets are not meant to receive it
You need to do the tracing on the WRTG54G itself (if it runs some
linux for example) or it should forward
On Nov 13, 2007 3:21 PM, Gary Fritz [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
If none of those tricks work, then I guess the only way to do this is to run
Wireshark on my son's laptop. Not the greatest solution. Ohwell
Have you looked at linklogger or wallwatcher etc?
http://www.linklogger.com/
This may be a bit more difficult than it needs to be. Is your linksys
router actually your internet gateway? You said your internet connection
is wireless, and your drawing lists your pc as the wifi hub. So is your
outgoing internet connection your computer via the wifi, or the linksys
via
would rpcap help?
On Nov 13, 2007 7:21 AM, Gary Fritz [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On 13 Nov 2007 at 12:00, Andreas Fink [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
the two switches are not forwarding packets to your PC as the
destination of the packets are not meant to receive it
You need to do the tracing on
I installed Wireshark to use as a parenting tool. :-) We just gave my 12-yr-
old a hand-me-down laptop with wifi. We have some net-nanny-type
software on it to try to keep him on a rather short leash, but occasionally we
have to turn it off to let him do homework/etc research. I want to keep
On Mon, Nov 12, 2007 at 09:39:38AM -0600, Gary Fritz wrote:
So anyway. I've figured out how to monitor packets. If I look at my
own system, I can filter on my IP, and I can even do a Statistics
report (filtering on ip.addr == 192.168.1.106 and http) to find the
HTTP hosts I'm hitting. So