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![]() I.e., it might be something like "cisco:56:78:9a" or whatever. There is one thing to watch out for though: if your wireshark preference settings are set to enable name resolution, then the string you get back might have the OUI portion of the Ethernet MAC address replaced with the organization/company name it's assigned to. Unfortunately Address objects aren't that useful by themselves - about the only thing you could do is to call tostring(addr) to get a string representation and then compare that to what you expect it to be. ![]() Calling ether() on a TvbRange (which is what you're doing) gives you back an Address object. ![]()
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