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Capture on multiple interfaces
In order to start the capture on multiple interfaces, you simply use Windows Ctrl or Shift keys, and left-click to choose the interfaces you want to capture data from. In the following screenshot, you see that the Wireless Network Connection and the Local Area Connection are picked up:
![](https://epubservercos.yuewen.com/8EC510/19470395508896306/epubprivate/OEBPS/Images/f7fe477e-3b8b-4c80-9da8-bfd6a92898f7.png?sign=1739282257-S0MJx6LKRjJaenKLpjOvaB32HjV1NIj2-0-1c9d87ddc238dd02738b2cd4d84f9920)
And the traffic that you will get will be from the two interfaces, as you can see from the next screenshot: 10.0.0.4 on the wireless interface, and 169.254.170.91 Automatic Private IP Address (APIPA) on the LAN interface.
![](https://epubservercos.yuewen.com/8EC510/19470395508896306/epubprivate/OEBPS/Images/54508c6e-380c-49ed-8b09-36b41553e86a.png?sign=1739282257-q1Nd7bvUJY16wGEOiwAdTR18cQbHYqo8-0-2bb2ae9be5a53fafc12c53eca43e59d2)
Using capture on multiple interfaces can be helpful in many cases, for example, when you have multiple physical NICs, you can port monitor two different servers, two ports of a router or any other multiple ports at the same time. A typical configuration is seen in the following screenshot:
![](https://epubservercos.yuewen.com/8EC510/19470395508896306/epubprivate/OEBPS/Images/9142b4e8-9788-4bac-8268-fd1f56c6cf96.png?sign=1739282257-ibhwwJ1W87hE8SD4XgtDvef1cFTv6bX0-0-ee066f081b5c7afdac5b9dffb27bad41)