Network Monitor 3.3 has arrived!
Guest blog by Tawanda Sibanda, Lead Program Manager for Network Monitor
Ladies and gentlemen … the Microsoft Network monitor team is excited to announce the release of Network Monitor 3.3. A record 7 months after version 3.2 this is our quickest release ever, but also one of our most functionality-rich. We have added some innovative features that will simplify your network troubleshooting needs. As always, we have also continued to fix bugs and improve the product in those little but important ways.
Let’s take a quick tour of Network Monitor 3.3.
Where are the bits?
Network Monitor 3.3 is available here https://www.microsoft.com/downloads/details.aspx?displaylang=en&FamilyID=983b941d-06cb-4658-b7f6-3088333d062f on Microsoft.com
Network Monitor 3.3 will also be offered as an optional feature package in the next few weeks via Microsoft Update if you have a previous version of Network Monitor 3.x installed. To check for updates, click on Help>Check for Updates from the product menu (versions 3.1 and higher) or visit the site https://update.microsoft.com/microsoftupdate
What’s New in Network Monitor 3.3
· Ability to capture WWAN (mobile broadband) and Tunnel traffic on Windows 7.
· Full Hyper-V support on Windows Server 2008
· Right-click-add-to-alias: Right-click a frame in the Frame Summary window with an IPv4, IPv6 or MAC address to add that address as a new alias. This is one of those little things that simplifies your work-flow.
· Right-click-go-to-definition: Have you ever wondered where and how the protocols fields you see in the Frame Details are defined in our in-built parsers? Wonder no more. Introducing right-click-go-to-definition: right-click a field in the Frame Details window and select Go To Data Field Definition or Go To Data Type Definition to see where the field is defined in the NPL parsers.
· Autoscroll: Another one of those little, but priceless things … auto-scroll. See the most recent traffic as it comes in. In a live capture, click the AutoScroll button on the main toolbar to have the Frame Summary window automatically scroll down to display the most recent frames as they come in. Click Autoscroll again to freeze the view in its present location.
· Core Parser Set: We heard your concerns about our parsing performance, and created an optimized Core parser set that only contains 32 protocol parsers for network layer and transport protocols (e.g., Ethernet, IP, and TCP). This parser set can increase your parsing performance by up to 200% depending on the data you are viewing. To enable the Core parser set, go to Tools > Options from the main menu, and click on the Parser tab. Click on the Common folder and click the stubs button to load stub parsers for this folder. Do the same thing for the Windows folder. Your final set up should be as follows:
· ETL Support: Network Monitor 3.3 can open and correlate information in ETL files generated by Network Tracing in Windows 7.
And now for the main event … two of our most exciting features that will revolutionize how you analyze your traces:
· Frame Commenting: Read all about this feature in our previous blog article. Briefly, Frame Commenting lets you attach comments to frames in a saved capture file. Select the Frame Comments tab in the lower-right window to add, view, edit, or delete comments. With this feature you can annotate a trace with your comments and observations and store that metadata directly with the capture file itself!
· Experts: Experts are stand-alone applications that analyze Network Monitor capture data. In Network Monitor 3.3 we provide a simple interface for registering experts with the product and invoking them on a saved capture file. We have made some initial experts available online at https://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkID=133950. Simply install the experts and run them directly from the UI on a capture file. Better yet, why not create your own expert! We provide a rich API that allows you to filter and parse capture data. We also have a sample SDK on the same experts portal to get you started on creating an installable expert that you can share with others. If you are interested in creating an expert we would love to hear from you. Leave a comment on the blog and Paul will get back to you.
Let us know what you think
We live for feedback, negative or positive. Go to https://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkID=142458 and let your opinion be heard. The survey requires you to log on with your Windows Live ID.
Enjoy!
Microsoft Network Monitor Team
Left->Right: Xumin Sun, Jin Feng, Darren Fisher, Jim Huang, Ralph Case, Michael Hawker, Paul Long, Saurabh Verma, Ashish Panday, Dave MacDonald, Ning Yang, Fred Wurden, Kathy Snow, Xin Shen, cow, Gi youl Kim, Sean Spratt, Lin Zhong, Tawanda Sibanda
Comments
Anonymous
January 01, 2003
NetMon 3.3 has just been released, with a number of new features. One of my favorites this time aroundAnonymous
January 01, 2003
Seit gestern Abend ist die neue Version des Network Monitor von Microsoft verfügbar. Weitere InformationenAnonymous
January 01, 2003
Network Monitor 3.3 has released and can be downloaded now! Download details: Microsoft Network MonitorAnonymous
January 01, 2003
237 Microsoft Team blogs searched, 103 blogs have new articles in the past 7 days. 273 new articles foundAnonymous
January 01, 2003
Looks like some good stuff in this latest release: Please download Network Monitor 3.3 from MicrosoftAnonymous
January 01, 2003
Проект Microsoft Network Monitor достаточно энергично развивается, создавая серьезную конкуренцию...Anonymous
January 01, 2003
thanksAnonymous
January 01, 2003
Краткая, но важная новсть. Вышла окончательная версия очень полезного инструмента Microsoft Network Monitor. Это бесплатная программа для перехвата сетевого трафика (на жаргоне — «сниффер»), которая обладает встроенными возможностями анализа большогоAnonymous
January 01, 2003
PingBack from http://microsoft.linkedz.info/2009/04/21/network-monitor-33-has-arrived/Anonymous
January 01, 2003
From: msftconn@microsoft.com [mailto:msftconn@microsoft.com] Sent: Wednesday, April 22, 2009 4:31 PMAnonymous
January 01, 2003
Can you send me a trace. Just send email to the link, I'll respond and then you can attach the trace to that link. I'd like to understand this better. PaulAnonymous
January 01, 2003
The SMBoverTCP has a Bug. It decodes TCP packages that are Part of the previous SMB package. It's easy to spot, because SMBoverTCP.ZERO ist not zero (0x00).Anonymous
January 01, 2003
Looks like some good stuff in this latest release: Please download Network Monitor 3.3 from MicrosoftAnonymous
January 01, 2003
Very Impressive, even shows traffic from NetTelescope. Will test and comment on this tool!Anonymous
January 01, 2003
thanksAnonymous
January 01, 2003
The comment has been removed