versions of Solaris.
""")
-question("""When I run Wireshark on Windows NT, why does it die with a Dr.
-Watson error, reporting an "Integer division by zero" exception, when I
-start it?""")
-
-answer("""
-In at least some case, this appears to be due to using the
-default VGA driver; if that's not the correct driver for your video
-card, try running the correct driver for your video card.
-""")
-
question("""When I try to run Wireshark, why does it complain about
<tt>sprint_realloc_objid</tt> being undefined?""")
the problem. When capturing packets, Wireshark normally writes captured
packets to a temporary file, which will probably be in <tt>/tmp</tt> or
<tt>/var/tmp</tt> on UNIX-flavored OSes, <tt>\\TEMP</tt> on the main system disk
-(normally <tt>C:</tt>) on Windows 9x/Me/NT 4.0,
-<tt>\\Documents and Settings\\</tt><var>your login name</var>
+(normally <tt>\\Documents and Settings\\</tt><var>your login name</var>
<tt>\\Local Settings\\Temp</tt> on the main system disk on Windows
-2000/Windows XP/Windows Server 2003, and
+Windows XP and Server 2003, and
<tt>\\Users\\<var>your login name</var>\\AppData\\Local\\Temp</tt> on the main
-system disk on Windows 7, so the capture file will probably be there. If you
+system disk on Windows Vista and later, so the capture file will probably be there. If you
are capturing on a single interface, it will have a name of the form,
<tt>wireshark_<fmt>_<iface>_YYYYmmddHHMMSS_XXXXXX</tt>, where
<fmt> is the capture file format (pcap or pcapng), and <iface> is
""", "capprobwin")
answer("""
-If you are running Wireshark on Windows NT 4.0, Windows 2000, Windows XP,
+If you are running Wireshark on Windows XP,
or Windows Server 2003, and this is the first time you have run a
WinPcap-based program (such as Wireshark, or TShark, or WinDump, or
Analyzer, or...) since the machine was rebooted, you need to run that
<br />
-If you are running on Windows Windows 2000/Windows XP/Windows Server
+If you are running on Windows Windows XP or Windows Server
2003 and have administrator privileges or a WinPcap-based program has
been run with those privileges since the machine rebooted, this problem
<em>might</em> clear up if you completely un-install WinPcap and then
support capturing on a particular network interface device, Wireshark
won't be able to capture on that device.
-<br />
-
-Note that:
-
-<ol>
-<li>2.02 and earlier versions of the WinPcap driver and library that
-Wireshark uses for packet capture didn't support Token Ring interfaces;
-versions 2.1 and later support Token Ring, and the current version of
-Wireshark works with (and, in fact, requires) WinPcap 2.1 or later.
-
-<br />
-
-If you are having problems capturing on Token Ring interfaces, and you
-have WinPcap 2.02 or an earlier version of WinPcap installed, you should
-uninstall WinPcap, download and install the current version of WinPcap,
-and then install the latest version of Wireshark.
-
<br >
<li>WinPcap 2.3 has problems supporting PPP WAN interfaces on Windows NT