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Xbox Multiplayer Analysis Tool is a network traffic capturing tool to aid in the debugging of Xbox services issues and other network traffic from both a PC and Xbox development console.

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Xbox Multiplayer Analysis Tool

Current Build Status

XMAT Win64 Desktop Build

OpenSSF Best Practices

OpenSSF Best Practices

Description

Xbox Multiplayer Analysis Tool is a network traffic capturing tool to aid in the debugging of Xbox & PlayFab services issues and other network traffic from both a PC and Xbox development console. It incorporates features to proxy web and low-level network requests and responses in real-time, decrypt and view SSL traffic, modify traffic on the fly, and analyze Xbox services and network traffic for problems.

Basic Environment Requirements & Dependencies

Web Proxy Low Level Network Capture Notes
Xbox Developer Kit ✔️ ✔️ Requires an Xbox One or Xbox Series developer kit running recovery 2106 or higher.
Windows PC ✔️ ✔️ Requires a Windows machine running Windows 10 (17763 or higher) or Windows 11
Generic Device ✔️ Web proxy requires a device capable of utilizing a .cer certificate in combination with settings for the devices proxy IP and port.

Table of Contents

Web Proxying with a Device

Introduction to Web Proxying a Device

The Xbox development kit provides the developer with the capability to proxy their web service traffic leaving the box to various hosts. Searching for the keyword “Fiddler” within the GDK documentation will list pages related to this topic. However, all the steps listed within that documentation are no longer required to proxy traffic if one is using Xbox Multiplayer Analysis Tool.

Proxying a Device

We will outline in this section basic steps for using Xbox Multiplayer Analysis Tool to proxy your web service traffic coming from/to your Xbox development kit. When your kit is set to run the Dev Home experience and is not proxying, it may look like below after successful boot up. This kit is running the June 2021 recovery.

Screenshot of a kit that has not enabled proxying its web traffic.

From Xbox Multiplayer Analysis Tool, clicking on the “+” tab will inform Xbox Multiplayer Analysis Tool to add a device and capturing method to the application like so:

Screenshot of the default console being added for capturing (proxying) web traffic.

The “Default Console” is a convenience option that allows the user to not have to enter in the IP address for the designated default console. After clicking on the “Add capture” button from the selector dialog box, Xbox Multiplayer Analysis Tool will create a new tab for that combination of device and capture method, and display a blank capture data view.

The port shown below is set to 8080, and that port was chosen according to the available proxy ports that can be set within the Preferences dialog box. You can access the preferences from the Edit/Preferences menu option, and then switch to the “Web Proxy” preferences tab. Xbox Multiplayer Analysis Tool provides some defaults, but these can be altered and saved like so:

Screenshot of the ports being used for proxying web traffic.

Note that once a port has been chosen for a particular device that is being captured (proxied), changing the available proxy ports from the preferences will not alter the designated port for the already added

device proxy session.

Enabling/Starting Proxying

As mentioned previously, enabling a console kit for proxying web service traffic traditionally took many steps that are outlined within the GDK documentation, as well as other sources. With Xbox Multiplayer Analysis Tool, those steps have been drastically reduced and automated. All that is required is to hit the “Enable Xbox Proxy” button on the tool bar for the device tab. Enabling proxying for a kit requires the kit to reboot and will begin expecting successful proxying upon restart. As a result, enabling a kit for proxying implicitly starts proxying immediately.

Screenshot of Xbox Multiplayer Analysis Tool when hitting the Enable Proxy button.

A kit will remain enabled to proxy until told to disable proxying through the “Disable Xbox Proxy” tool bar option, even after successive console reboots, and restarts of the Xbox Multiplayer Analysis Tool application.

A console that has successfully enabled proxying of web service traffic will provide a notification to the kit like what is shown below. Even though the Fiddler app is not actually being executed, the words “Fiddler enabled” in the notification, and on the front of the kit, will indicate success.

Screenshot of a kit that now has proxying of web traffic enabled.

Within the Xbox Multiplayer Analysis Tool application’s device tab that was opened earlier, the user should now start to see proxied connections populate within the connections list view like so:

Screenshot of web traffic activity displayed in the connections list view.

For those that are accustomed to using previous versions of Fiddler that worked “out of the box” -- providing root certificates that are compatible with Xbox development kits, the list of connections on the left, and a display of a particular connection’s request/response data on the right pane, will be very

familiar.

The “Auto Scroll” option is enabled by default so that the app will keep pace with newer connections as

they come in, and status codes are filled in once a response for a particular request is received. One can prevent the auto scrolling behavior by unchecking it so that a connection item can be kept in view and inspected.

Viewing Request & Response Data

While proxying, we can launch an app installed on the kit – like the ATG NetRumble sample – and see the traffic created as a result of the app’s activity like below:

Screenshot of user Xbox services sign-in for the ATG NetRumble sample.

As a result of the Xbox services user signin process that happens at the start of the app, we can click on the individual user authentication request and response in Xbox Multiplayer Analysis Tool. The “Headers” and “Body” tabs show formatted text for the separate request and response. In addition, additional connection details are provided that include when the request was made, and how long the request took to complete (when the response was received).

Screenshot of viewing individual request/response data for a connection.

Filtering Displayed Requests & Responses

On the tool bar on will notice that the connections list can be filtered according to checked values found within the data for various fields. For proxied data, one can filter on a set of status codes, hosts, and methods. The drop lists show all of the possible values found within the data, and only checked values will display in the connection list. Multiple fields can be filtered at once.

Screenshot of filtering the connections list by host.

The connections list will filter in real time as connections are being received and proxied, and the filters will dynamically update. Toggling between “ALL/NONE” allows for including or excluding a small set of values in the connections list. Status codes that are equal to or above 400 are color coded (to red) as they indicate an error condition.

Screenshot of filtering also by status to further prune connections.

Stopping Proxying

Proxying may be stopped from with Xbox Multiplayer Analysis Tool for a specific device by clicking on the “Stop Capturing” button on the tool bar. Disabling proxing for a device will cause the kit to reboot and no longer route web service traffic through the Xbox Multiplayer Analysis Tool proxy, thereby implicit stopping proxying.

If proxying remains enabled, but Xbox Multiplayer Analysis Tool is not proxying web traffic for that particular device, then the kit will fail to perform Xbox services status checks, as well as successfully execute other Xbox services related APIs or REST requests. The kit will eventually show an “unknown” status like this:

Screenshot of a kit that has enabled proxying but proxying has been stopped.

If a device tab is left open within Xbox Multiplayer Analysis Tool, and the Xbox Multiplayer Analysis Tool app is terminated. Upon execution of Xbox Multiplayer Analysis Tool the next time, the opened device tab is remembered and automatically reopened like shown below. The connections list will be clear until proxying resumes for that device.

Screenshot when Xbox Multiplayer Analysis Tool is closed and reopened -- previous capture device is remembered.

Scripting & Modification of Web Proxy Traffic

The script editor allows you to write simple C# scripts to modify any or all of the HTTP(S) requests and responses that are passing through the proxy, on-the-fly. Scripts are written per client (tab) and are not global across all clients. Clicking on the Script Editor tab on the right side of the main application window will open the script editor view.

Screenshot of Xbox Multiplayer Analysis Tool Script Editor

There are three different events that are scriptable: SSL Connection Request – This script is called when a proxied client makes an HTTPS CONNECT request to a server. Web Request – This script is called after an HTTP request has left the client, but before the request is forwarded to the server. Web Response – This script is called after the HTTP response is received by the server, but before it is forwarded to the client.

Sample scripts are provided as you select each event type to get you started.

All inspectable and modifiable properties are members of the Params object. Params contains the web Request and the web Response objects, as well as a Boolean named Continue which can be set to false to cancel the request or response in progress. The right side of the script editor shows these objects and properties. Click on any item in the list to get a description of the property, and double-clicking on any item will drop the appropriate text into the script editor at the current cursor position.

For example, you could write a script on the Web Request event to redirect all calls to a certain URL to another URL. Or, you could change a Web Response which might have a 200 success status to a 500 status to determine how your client/title code behaves in the case of an error. Note that the System.Text.Json namespace is available to use in the scripting engine for easily parsing and manipulating JSON content.

To enable a script, complete your code in the text editor, then click the Enable button. If any errors are detected in the script, the Script Compilation Status window will display these errors. Double-click on any error in the list to go to the source of the error in the script window. Once the script is enabled, all future requests and responses will pass through the script silently, and any modifications you have created in the script code will be applied.

You can also use the Load and Save buttons to load scripts you have already written and save new scripts to disk for later usage. The Revert to Saved button can also be used to undo any changes since the last time the script was saved to disk.

There are several known issues and limitations with the scripting functionality:

  • The script editor does not have any syntax highlighting or IntelliSense/auto-completion – it is just a text box.
  • Not all .NET namespaces/objects are available in the scripting environment.

Live Trace Analysis

Introduction to Xbox Live Trace Analysis

The Xbox Live Trace Analyzer tool has traditionally been a standalone command line tool for performing rule- based analysis against Fiddler web service capture files with extension SAZ. It continues to be supported and is provided with the Microsoft GDK. One can also build their own tool directly from source as it is available on a public GitHub repository. Xbox Multiplayer Analysis Tool has the Xbox Live Trace Analyzer’s capabilities built directly within and are invaluable for detecting problematic Xbox services REST API calling patterns discovered amongst a title’s web service traffic.

Execution of analysis

In order to perform the analysis, one must first have web service proxy data -- which can be either a loaded Xbox Multiplayer Analysis Tool (.XMATCAP) file, an imported Fiddler (.SAZ) file, or from real-time proxied requests & responses.

Screenshot of imported Fiddler (SAZ) capture data about to be analyzed.

Clicking on the “Analyze Captures” tool button will present the list of available analyzers that can be chosen to execute on the proxied connections currently found within the visible tab.

Screenshot of the analyzer selector which allows Xbox Live Trace analysis.

Once the “Start Analyzer” button is clicked, Xbox Multiplayer Analysis Tool will display and populate a new tab within the “Capture Analysis Results” portion of the main app window found toward the bottom of the screen:

Screenshot of the Xbox Live Trace analysis in progress.

The analysis will undergo many steps which includes the export of analysis related files placed in the /AppRoaming/Microsoft/Xbox Multiplayer Analysis Tool storage directory. The folder will have a prefix of “xlca_” and contain a timestamp for the executed analysis. Analysis can occur simultaneously with other captures and analysis occurring on other devices.

Screenshot of Xbox Multiplayer Analysis Tool Xbox Live Capture Analysis result output folders.

The Per Endpoint Report

When analysis has completed, the analysis tab’s progress content is replaced with a series of result report tabs. The first and main report is the Per Endpoint report. This report contains two main sections: the summary, and the details. The summary table contains a matrix of service host against analysis rule issue counts. When there are no issues discovered, the box is green. If there are issues encountered, then the box is colored a brighter orange.

Screenshot of the Per Endpoint Report with Issue Count Summary data table.

Clicking on a box within the summary table will scroll the report view down to the expander for that host & rule combination. If the expander for the issues is opened, a table of rule related data is presented along with the list of individual warnings.

The individual warnings provide explanatory text for why the calls found within its expander invoked the rule warning. Above the rule data table, a description of what the rule searches for is given:

Screenshot of the analysis rule warning details list.

Every call pertaining to the rule warning is provided on its own line and includes the actual request number that corresponds to the request within the connections list, along with the URL for the call. Clicking on the request number button will ensure that the device tab for the analyzed captures is

opened, and will also select the corresponding request like shown:

Screenshot of one of the rule warnings’ request selected in the connections list.

In the example presented above, there exist many Xbox services APIs that can take several users as parameters for the API call. The warning notes that only one user was provided to the API as can be seen when

inspecting the actual request body JSON seen in the above screenshot.

Reducing the quantity of calls to Xbox services REST APIs is always preferable to prevent throttled call execution, reduce overall bandwidth consumption, and ease load and latency for calls.

The Statistics Report

The second report tab after the Per Endpoint report is the statistics report which serves as an auxiliary report that provides interesting data points from the analysis. The topmost graph of the report is the “Calls Per Endpoint” bar graph that indicates how many calls were made to specific endpoints:

Screenshot of the Live Trace Analysis statistics report Host call graph.

Beneath the calls bar graph, one will find the timeline graph for the various calls made over the course of all the analyzed requests & responses. The timeline graph can be zoomed in and out using the mouse wheel over a particular place within the graph to view more granular timing detail. The color key in the upper right corner of the graph indicates which hosts were called at specific points in time.

Screenshot of the statistics report calls timeline and average call times table.

Analysis report content present in its output folder within the Xbox Multiplayer Analysis Tool data storage folder can be removed if no longer needed once the Analysis results tab for that analysis run is closed.

Network Capture

Introduction to Network Capture

The network capture feature of Xbox Multiplayer Analysis Tool allows for the capture of packet-level network traffic from your Xbox development kit. It is similar in feature taking captures with xbtrace netcap and viewing them in NetMon. That process is still available and currently provides higher fidelity data. However, Xbox Multiplayer Analysis Tool can be used to capture, view console network traffic as well as perform some basic analysis and the entire process takes place inside the Xbox Multiplayer Analysis Tool UI.

Capturing Network Data

From Xbox Multiplayer Analysis Tool, clicking on the “+” tab will inform Xbox Multiplayer Analysis Tool to add a device and capturing method to the application. Select your console and choose Network Trace like so:

You will now be presented with a NetworkTrace tab and the application is ready to begin a capture.

Pressing Start Capture will begin the process of connecting to the console and starting the network capture. Xbox Multiplayer Analysis Tool will display Trace Running while the console is capturing until Stop Capture is invoked in Xbox Multiplayer Analysis Tool. Once that occurs, the console will begin to process the capture and Xbox Multiplayer Analysis Tool will then download the capture. For large captures, this can take some time.

After the capture is downloaded, the data will be presented in the UI where it can be filtered and viewed individually.

The trace data can be saved for later viewing and analysis by using the Load and Save Captures items in the File menu.

Invoking Clear Captures will remove the current data set, Start Capture will clear the data and start a new capture, and Analyze Capture will open a new Analysis Results tab below.

Network Capture Analysis

Introduction to Network Capture Analysis

Xbox Multiplayer Analysis Tool has the ability to gather some general statistics and perform a basic analysis. This includes packet send statistics by source.

Running Analysis

To start the analysis, first set any filters in order to reduce the data to the relevant packets and then select Analyze Capture. The results will open in a new tab below as seen here:

The analysis checks for UDP packets sent in excess of the recommended Xbox MTU (1384), sending more than (20) packets in a second and sending duplicate packets within a second. If any of these are detected, the report will show a red background in the list.

Known Issues

Enabling Proxying on a Device twice with a different port the second time will fail to proxy. Workaround: Make sure to disable proxying first, before re-enabling to ensure the port setting is correct.

Proxying with the same header spanned across multiple lines fails to proxy correctly. Workaround: None currently. Apps like Outlook may fail to function properly when proxying PC.

Enabling proxying does not confirm settings with user, nor allow cancellation of the process. Workaround: Be sure to double check that your console device is ready to reboot when enabling.

Potential Future Improvements:

  • Keep alive handling needs further improvement.
  • Web sockets are not supported yet.
  • Root certificate(s) and analysis output(s) are not stored in a user specified location.
  • Additional Localization

Support

If you run into issues using the application, please select the Help > Collect Debug Logs menu which will zip up application logs and place them on your Desktop. Once complete, please send these logs to [email protected] with a description of the problem so that we may review. Additionally, if the application encounters an unknown error, logs will automatically be placed on your desktop. Please note that contents of web requests and responses may be included in this log data.

If an error occurs during network capture it is highly recommended that you reboot the console you were utilizing as the trace may still be running and the capture service will likely continue to fail if not restarted.

Trademarks

This project may contain trademarks or logos for projects, products, or services. Authorized use of Microsoft trademarks or logos is subject to and must follow Microsoft’s Trademark & Brand Guidelines. Use of Microsoft trademarks or logos in modified versions of this project must not cause confusion or imply Microsoft sponsorship. Any use of third-party trademarks or logos are subject to those third-party’s policies.

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Xbox Multiplayer Analysis Tool is a network traffic capturing tool to aid in the debugging of Xbox services issues and other network traffic from both a PC and Xbox development console.

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