Sysdig announced that
Gerald Combs, the Wireshark creator and project leader, has joined the
company. Wireshark, an open source tool, is the world's foremost and
widely-used traffic protocol analyzer with more than 60 million
downloads in the last 5 years, an average of one million per month.
Loris Degioanni, CTO and Founder of Sysdig, partnered with Gerald to
launch Wireshark more than 15 years ago. Gerald joins Sysdig's open
source team, which is a significant contributor to many open source
projects, including Falco, eBPF, Sysdig open source, Sysdig Inspect, and
other tools and libraries. With Gerald joining, Sysdig assumes
responsibility for sponsoring and managing the Wireshark community and
extending Wireshark's use cases to the cloud ecosystem.
Wireshark
is an open source GUI network package capturing tool that enables teams
to monitor network traffic, learn protocols and packet basics, and
troubleshoot network problems. For network admins, Wireshark is the de
facto standard for checking health and security at a microscopic level.
Wireshark takes packet captures and saves them for later viewing. Teams
can filter through that traffic to find evidence from an incident. With
more than 1,900 contributors, the number of integrations continues to
expand. Adoption is broad as Wireshark can be used consistently across
nearly any environment, including Windows, Linux, and macOS, among
others.
"It's
amazing to see the lasting heritage of Wireshark, led by Gerald. You
can guarantee most of the Fortune 2000 are actively using Wireshark,"
said Loris Degioanni, CTO and Founder, Sysdig. "I am excited to be
reunited with Gerald and to advance the project in the same way Sysdig
supports Falco and the Sysdig open source project. This move ensures
Wireshark will continue to innovate. Our goal at Sysdig is to empower
Wireshark."
The Importance of Healthy Open Source Projects
The
Log4j and OpenSSL vulnerabilities have shown that large and small
organizations rely on open source projects and major issues arise when
critical vulnerabilities are found in these tools. Log4j spotlighted the
importance of maintaining open source projects. Continuing to maintain
the project's health is of the utmost importance considering the
widespread adoption of Wireshark.
The Wireshark Story
While
studying network analyzers and creating a popular open source tool
while working on his PhD in Italy, Loris was invited to the United
States to do research on packets, which is where he met Gerald. Gerald
joined Loris at CACE Technologies in the early 2000's, where they
collaborated and grew Wireshark. CACE Technologies was later acquired
and since that time, Gerald has focused on growing the tool and ensuring
Wireshark and its community have the resources needed to thrive.
"I
am excited to be reunited with Loris and explore the opportunity we
have to expand Wireshark to the cloud," said Gerald Combs, Director of
Open Source Projects, Sysdig. "My move to Sysdig and the subsequent move
for Wireshark will give Wireshark the corporate sponsor it needs to
continue moving forward. This is a significant milestone for Wireshark
and with Sysdig's backing, we will have the assistance we need to
continue to evolve use cases for Wireshark."
The Wireshark Future
Sysdig
will ensure the community has the backing it needs, including
supporting Gerald as the leader of the community, ensuring Wireshark has
the resources needed to operate, and sponsoring SharkFest. Sysdig has
an open source team that will contribute to Wireshark. Reunited, Gerald
and Loris will investigate new innovative ways to address challenges
with securing the cloud.
Sysdig's Commitment to Open Source
Sysdig was founded as an open source company and the Sysdig platform was
built on an open source foundation to address the security challenges
of modern cloud applications. Open source Sysdig and Falco are projects
that were created by Sysdig to leverage deep visibility as a foundation
for security, and they have become standards for container and cloud
threat detection and incident response. Falco, which was contributed to
the CNCF in 2018, is now an incubation-level hosted project with more
than 40 million downloads.