A few of them just needed scratch memory, so allocate and free it
manually after doing any exception-raising checks.
A few others were returning memory, and needed conversion to accept a
wmem scope argument.
Without that, you could add a comment to a record in a file format the
reading code for which doesn't allocate blocks, but the comment doesn't
get saved, as there's no block in which to save the comment option.
This simplifies some code paths, as we're either using the record's
modified block or we're using the block as read from the file, there's
no third possibility.
If we attempt to read a record, and we get an error, and a block was
allocated for the record, unreference it, so the individual file readers
don't have to worry about it.
DCP Frames with Reserved Option dissection changed
short time ago. There isn't a predefined suboption
for Reserved option in the standard. But in this
implementation it dissected like control suboption.
This is not true and creates malformed frames in some
dcp pcaps. This implementation is reverted.
Wireshark will dissect undefined bytes as paddings
just like before.
This header was installed incorrectly to epan/wmem_scopes.h.
Instead of creating additional installation rules for a single
header in a subfolder (kept for backward compatibility) just
rename the standard "epan/wmem/wmem.h" include to
"epan/wmem_scopes.h" and fix the documentation.
Now the header is installed *correctly* to epan/wmem_scopes.h.
Automated find/replace of wmem_packet_scope() with pinfo->pool in all
files where it didn't cause a build failure.
I also tweaked a few of the docs which got caught up.
Fixes pre-commit warning
"wimax.dcd.dl_burst_profile_multiple_fec_types doesn't match PROTOABBREV"
All the other fields of this dissector use `wmx` not `wimax`.
Mark wsutil's includes SYSTEM PRIVATE. This exposed a lot of targets
that were indirectly picking up include paths via the wsutil target, so
add direct includes where needed. The G.722 and G.726 codecs were
implicilty including tiffio.h; find it explicitly instead.
Mark some of wsutil's libraries PRIVATE, but leave commonly-used ones
PUBLIC.
Ping #17477.
GSML parsing has a bug related to multiple submodules,
such that, the first submodule found in the GSDML needs
to be the PROFIsafe element, otherwise the description
is not parsed.
If there is DCP SET block with 0 block length, it is dissected
as erroneous block since DCP SET block can not have 0 block
length. Moreover, DCPBlockLength is not decoded if DCP option
and suboption is 0. However, each DCP block must have
Option/Suboption/DCPBlockLength. This is also fixed.
Replace most instances of ws_debug_printf() except in
epan/dissectors and dissector plugins.
Some replacements use printf(), some use ws_debug(), and
some were removed because they were dead or judged to be
temporary.
When dissecting messages with multiple API types
within the same message, the parsing of the connect
request fails to take all elements into account.
This results in only partial parsing of the elements.
This fix ensures that all parts of the message are taken
into account and dissected correctly.
Most of the time, the return value tells us nothing useful, as we've
already decided that we're perfectly willing to live with string
truncation. Hopefully this keeps Coverity from whining that those
routines could return an error code (NARRATOR: They don't) and thus that
we're ignoring the possibility of failure (as indicated, we've already
decided that we can live with string truncation, so truncation is *NOT*
a failure).
According to specification, size of PROFINETIOServiceResPDU
is calculated and checked under dissect_RSI_RSP_block
function. Moreover, dissect_rsi_blocks function is added and
type of PDU and operation number (Opnum) are checked before
dissection starts.
The '/codecs' dir was removed in g63af1da7e7.
Avoid using include_directories(), prefer target_include_directories().
Remove some unnecessary CMAKE_CURRENT_*_DIR includes and some other
small cleanups while at it.
I believe this was the original intention, to use these API restricitons
with dissectors only (not that I necessarily agree with that policy either),
and through copy-paste and lack of clear guidelines it spread to other
parts of the build.
Rename the checkAPI groups to make it very clear that this is dissector-only.
This doesn't mean, of course, that good programming practices shouldn't be
followed everywhere. In particular assertions need to be used properly.
Don't use them to catch runtime errors or validate input data.
This commit will be followed by another removing the various ugly hacks
people have been using to get around the checkAPI hammer.
COContainerContent dissects PDInterfaceMrpDataAdjust and
PDInterfaceMrpDataAdjust dissects remaining COContainerContent
because of offset problem. Offset problem is fixed.
It only registers one file type/subtype, so rename it to
wtap_register_file_type_subtype().
That will also force plugins to be recompiled; that will produce compile
errors for some plugins that didn't change to match the new contents of
the file_type_subtype_info structure.
Also check to make sure that the registered file type/subtype supports
at least one type of block; a file type/subtype that doesn't return
*any* blocks and doesn't permit *any* block types to be written is not
very useful. That should also catch most if not all other plugins that
didn't change to match the new contents of the file_type_subtype_info
structure.
Don't make errors registering a file type/subtype fatal; just complain,
don't register the bogus file type/subtype, and drive on.
Provide a wiretap routine to get an array of all savable file
type/subtypes, sorted with pcap and pcapng at the top, followed by the
other types, sorted either by the name or the description.
Use that routine to list options for the -F flag for various commands
Rename wtap_get_savable_file_types_subtypes() to
wtap_get_savable_file_types_subtypes_for_file(), to indicate that it
provides an array of all file type/subtypes in which a given file can be
saved. Have it sort all types, other than the default type/subtype and,
if there is one, the "other" type (both of which are put at the top), by
the name or the description.
Don't allow wtap_register_file_type_subtypes() to override any existing
registrations; have them always register a new type. In that routine,
if there are any emply slots in the table, due to an entry being
unregistered, use it rather than allocating a new slot.
Don't allow unregistration of built-in types.
Rename the "dump open table" to the "file type/subtype table", as it has
entries for all types/subtypes, even if we can't write them.
Initialize that table in a routine that pre-allocates the GArray before
filling it with built-in types/subtypes, so it doesn't keep getting
reallocated.
Get rid of wtap_num_file_types_subtypes - it's just a copy of the size
of the GArray.
Don't have wtap_file_type_subtype_description() crash if handed an
file type/subtype that isn't a valid array index - just return NULL, as
we do with wtap_file_type_subtype_name().
In wtap_name_to_file_type_subtype(), don't use WTAP_FILE_TYPE_SUBTYPE_
names for the backwards-compatibility names - map those names to the
current names, and then look them up. This reduces the number of
uses of hardwired WTAP_FILE_TYPE_SUBTYPE_ values.
Clean up the type of wtap_module_count - it has no need to be a gulong.
Have built-in wiretap file handlers register names to be used for their
file type/subtypes, rather than building the table in init.lua.
Add a new Lua C function get_wtap_filetypes() to construct the
wtap_filetypes table, based on the registered names, and use it in
init.lua.
Add a #define WSLUA_INTERNAL_FUNCTION to register functions intended
only for internal use in init.lua, so they can be made available from
Lua without being documented.
Get rid of WTAP_NUM_FILE_TYPES_SUBTYPES - most code has no need to use
it, as it can just request arrays of types, and the space of
type/subtype codes can be sparse due to registration in any case, so
code has to be careful using it.
wtap_get_num_file_types_subtypes() is no longer used, so remove it. It
returns the number of elements in the file type/subtype array, which is
not necessarily the name of known file type/subtypes, as there may have
been some deregistered types, and those types do *not* get removed from
the array, they just get cleared so that they're available for future
allocation (we don't want the indices of any registered types to changes
if another type is deregistered, as those indicates are the type/subtype
values, so we can't shrink the array).
Clean up white space and remove some comments that shouldn't have been
added.
Instead of having the source file containing the top-level registration
routine for the pinfo_stats_tree plugin checked into our repository,
generate it with tools/make-plugin-reg.py, as we do with other plugins.
While we're at it, fix a comment - "DLL" is a Windows term; the
equivalent term in UN*Xes would be "shared object" ("so" or ".so") or
"dynamic library" ("dylib" or ".dylib").
Current Profinet Spec includes additional RSI features.
As a result, new file is added for PN-RSI protocol.
DCP substitutions related to RSI are added under PN-DCP.
PDRsiInstances record is added under PN-IO.