From: "Hakan" Received: from [192.168.100.201] (HELO mail.2rosenthals.com) by 2rosenthals.com (CommuniGate Pro SMTP 5.1.3) with ESMTP id 1595664 for os2-wireless_users@2rosenthals.com; Fri, 18 Jan 2008 13:03:45 -0500 Received-SPF: none (secmgr-ny.randr: 74.208.4.197 is neither permitted nor denied by domain of meddatainc.com) client-ip=74.208.4.197; envelope-from=agents@meddatainc.com; helo=mout.perfora.net; Received: from mout.perfora.net ([74.208.4.197]) by secmgr-ny.randr with esmtp (Exim 4.43) id 1JFvZ0-0003mk-8K for os2-wireless_users@2rosenthals.com; Fri, 18 Jan 2008 13:03:40 -0500 Received: from progstn (pool-70-20-217-42.phil.east.verizon.net [70.20.217.42]) by mrelay.perfora.net (node=mrus1) with ESMTP (Nemesis) id 0MKpCa-1JFvYo1oej-0008DU; Fri, 18 Jan 2008 13:03:23 -0500 To: "OS/2 Wireless Users Mailing List" Date: Fri, 18 Jan 2008 13:03:07 -0500 (EST) Reply-To: "Hakan" Priority: Normal X-Mailer: PMMail 2.20.2382 for OS/2 Warp 4.5 In-Reply-To: MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1" Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Subject: Re: [OS2Wireless] Logging network activity from VPC Message-Id: <0MKpCa-1JFvYo1oej-0008DU@mrelay.perfora.net> X-Provags-ID: V01U2FsdGVkX1+L8VApfWq6Ijmef10APmkVHex36bSOzQ4U+K9 bKzTLnOge0A1o0DJK+GeT+Bri9f6WTBLSr9BOhQ57ulh26HuRp BgNPa6Y38hvryxHxrUtew== X-Spam-Score: 0.9 (/) X-Spam-Report: 0.9 MSGID_FROM_MTA_ID Message-Id for external message added locally Hi Jan, >OK, sounds like a nice reverse-engineering project :-) It should be. There is also a problem because the Win application always crashes eventually either transferring large filesl, i.e. programs of more than 2 hours in length, or when attempting to transfer multiple files in succession. The problem is always with the pipe the program creates and uses. Further, the speed on the network is also lower than I would expect to see if I did the same natively under OS/2. >To really trace TCP/IP traffic contents you need a sniffer >program that can do that. There are quite a few for Windows >and Linux, but I am not sure there is something for OS/2. iptrace and ipformat have been suggested.