![]() ![]() RHEL flavors are the same, you would specify rpm instead of deb. deb file, if not then build from source, or vice versa. Meaning if you’re using debian flavor, you could specify to first try and find a. When you first setup PyBombs it will ask you how you want to install your applications, and the order to use. If its not green, check it, select 'Mark for Installation' in the window that pops up, and click 'Apply' in the. ![]() Start Synaptics and look for 'tshark' if its installed, the checkbox for it should be green. What’s so great about PyBombs you ask? Everything. If so, presumably you clicked 'Apply' in the toolbar of Synaptics, so that it would install the 'tshark' package. The leading rogue access point and WiFi pentest toolkit for close access operations. ![]() Thankfully enough there were others who decided “there has to be a better, easier way”, and that way, is called PyBombs. I swear I probably spent 4 hours trying to figure out why certain dependencies wouldn’t install, then I would get one to install, and another one would come up…add to that for the testing I wanted to do I needed to install FFTW, RTL SDR, and GrOsmoSDR, which is when I finally decided to find a better way to build from source (or find latest version deb/rpm). ![]() I attempted to use the version from the standard repository, but unfortunately that version is old and out dated (I think 1.6 was in repo, but 1.7.2 is latest), so the only option was to build from source. Recently I purchased a Mini SDR (DVB-T) from NooElec to play around with some RF and do some testing, but for some reason kept running into problems while trying to build GNU Radio on Debian (Ubuntu/Linux Mint) from the git repos. ![]()
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