TCPWatch is a utility written in Python that lets you monitor forwarded TCP
connections or HTTP proxy connections. It displays the sessions in a window
with a history of past connections. It is useful for developing and debugging
protocol implementations and web services.
Version 1.3 is compatible with Tkinter installations that use threads. See the
change log for a list of other changes.
TCPWatch is licensed under ZPL 2.0 and requires Python 2.1 or later.
Version 1.3.1
Version 1.3
-
Made compatible with versions of tcl that have threads enabled.
-
Log file numbers are now sequential.
-
"user@host" is now accepted as a destination hostname (the user
name is ignored).
Version 1.2.1
- A typo made it impossible to use two of the command line options.
Fixed.
Version 1.2
-
Added the ability to record TCP sessions to a directory.
Use -r . Implemented by Tres Seaver.
-
Replaced the launch script with a distutils setup.py, thanks again
to Tres Seaver.
Version 1.1
-
Almost completely rewritten. The code is now more reusable and
reliable, but the user interface has not changed much.
-
8-bit clean. (You can now use TCPWatch to verify that SSH really
does encrypt data. ;-) )
-
It can now run as a simple HTTP proxy server using the "-p"
option. There are a lot of interesting ways to use this.
-
It's now easier to watch persistent HTTP connections. The "-h"
option shows each transaction in a separate entry.
-
You can turn off the Tkinter GUI using the -s option, which
outputs to stdout.
-
Colorized Tkinter output.
Version 1.0
Never released to the public.