Besides the obvious limitation of being unavailable on Windows,
the standard is vague about getopt() and getopt_long() has many
non-portable pitfalls and buggy implementations, that increase
the maintainance cost a lot. Also the GNU libc code currently
in the tree is not suited for embedding and is unmaintainable.
Own maintainership for getopt_long() and use the musl implementation
everywhere. This way we don't need to worry if optreset is available,
or if the $OPERATING_SYSTEM version behaves in subtly different ways.
The API is under the Wireshark namespace to avoid conflicts with
system headers.
Side-note, the Mingw-w64 9.0 getopt_long() implementation is buggy
with opterr and known to crash. In my experience it's a headache to
use the embedded getopt implementation if the system provides one.
This utility function is useful outside of epan. Move it to wsutil
and export the interface.
The move isn't completely clean as it requires duplicating two small
inline functions but that was necessary to avoiding moving too much at
once.
We have two format_size()s, with and without wmem scoped memory.
Move the wmem version to wsutil and add a convenience macro to
use g_malloc()ed memory.
This allows wmem to be used from other libraries, namely wsutil.
It is often the case that a funtion exists in wsutil and cannot
be used with a wmem scope, requiring some code duplication or
extra memory allocations, or vice-versa, code in epan cannot be
moved to wsutil because it has a wmem dependency.
To this end wmem is moved to wsutil. Scope management remains part
of epan because those scope semantics are specific to dissection.
This includes as little as possible in the assertion header, so
that it can be included globally in every file without pulling
any unwanted definitions. In particular pulling stdlib.h is
avoided because that can have side effects if it wants to
include non-portable extensions.
It is possible to have side-effects from include glib.h too, for
example because of G_LOG_DOMAIN.
These side-effects are usually avoidable with careful ordering
of pre-processor directives but with multiple levels of indirections
it can be hard to track. Better to make it robust to these kinds
of failures in the first place.
Also integrate with our logger for a cohesive experience (but
keep it a private dependency).
The --log-debug and --log-noisy now accepts a '!' to invert the
match and disable the debug (noisy respectively) log level for
the listed domains.
Note this is different from --log-domains, that option
enables/disables the entire log domain itself, regardless of log
level.
This is intended to replace logging in dissectors that has a
debug level with #ifdef DEBUG_foo and an extra level guarded
by a #ifdef DEBUG_EXTRA_foo.
But generally it can be used as another level of granularity
for debugging output, to avoid flooding the log with too
much information with typical usage.
Rename the filter functions without the unnecessary 'str'
suffix.
Option --log-debug or WIRESHARK_LOG_DEBUG is a list
of domains that are set to a "debug" log level. This
takes precedence over the normal log level and domain
filter options.
Enviroment variable WIRESHARK_LOG_FATAL and command line
option --log-fatal set the fatal log level. Messages with
fatal or highr priority cause the program to abort. By
default the fatal level is "error", but it can be set to
"critical" or "warning" with this option.
A domain filter can be given in the environment variable
'WS_LOG_DOMAINS' or in a command-line options "--log-domains".
The filter is specified as a comma separated case insensitive list,
for example:
./tshark --log-domains=main,capture
Domain data type switches from an enum to a string. There is no
constaint on adding new domains, neither in code or at runtime.
The string format is arbitrary, only positive matches will produce
output.
Experience has shown that:
1. The current logging methods are not very reliable or practical.
A logging bitmask makes little sense as the user-facing interface (who
would want debug but not crtical messages for example?); it's
computer-friendly and user-unfriendly. More importantly the console
log level preference is initialized too late in the startup process
to be used for the logging subsystem and that fact raises a number
of annoying and hard-to-fix usability issues.
2. Coding around G_MESSAGES_DEBUG to comply with our log level mask
and not clobber the user's settings or not create unexpected log misses
is unworkable and generally follows the principle of most surprise.
The fact that G_MESSAGES_DEBUG="all" can leak to other programs using
GLib is also annoying.
3. The non-structured GLib logging API is very opinionated and lacks
configurability beyond replacing the log handler.
4. Windows GUI has some special code to attach to a console,
but it would be nice to abstract away the rest under a single
interface.
5. Using this logger seems to be noticeably faster.
Deprecate the console log level preference and extend our API to
implement a log handler in wsutil/wslog.h to provide easy-to-use,
flexible and dependable logging during all execution phases.
Log levels have a hierarchy, from most verbose to least verbose
(debug to error). When a given level is set everything above that
is also enabled.
The log level can be set with an environment variable or a command
line option (parsed as soon as possible but still later than the
environment). The default log level is "message".
Dissector logging is not included because it is not clear what log
domain they should use. An explosion to thousands of domains is
not desirable and putting everything in a single domain is probably
too coarse and noisy. For now I think it makes sense to let them do
their own thing using g_log_default_handler() and continue using the
G_MESSAGES_DEBUG mechanism with specific domains for each individual
dissector.
In the future a mechanism may be added to selectively enable these
domains at runtime while trying to avoid the problems introduced
by G_MESSAGES_DEBUG.
Add a generic function to write content to file. Use this on write
TLS session keys from UI and tshark, and for export objects.
Remove the now unused export_object_ui.[ch].
The GLib documentation says G_STRLOC includes the function name
but that is a lie[1]. Change ws_debug() to not use G_STRLOC and receive
__FILE__, __LINE__ and G_STRFUNC separately instead.
[1]https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=69097
Have routines to report capture-file errors, using libwireshark error
codes and strings, that call through a pointer, so they can pop up
dialogs in GUI apps, print a message to the standard error on
command-line apps, and possibly do something different on server
programs.
Have init_report_message() take a pointer to structure containing those
function pointers, rather than the function pointers themselves, as
arguments.
Make other API changes to make that work.
This adds a function to parse a string date-time in ISO 8601 format into
a `nstime_t` structure. It's based on code from epan/tvbuff.c and
wiretap/nettrace_3gpp_32_423.c and meant to eventually replace both.
(Currently only replaces the latter.)
Since most of Wireshark expects ISO 8601 date-times to fit a fairly
strict pattern, iso8601_to_nstime() currently rejects date-times without
separators between the components, even though ISO 8601 actually permits
this. This could be revisited later.
Also uses iso8601_to_nstime in editcap to parse the -A/-B options,
thus allowing the user to specify a time zone if desired. (See #17110)
Those fetch gint and guint values, respectively, rather than values with
specified sizes in bits.
This should squelch Coverity CID 1457357.
Change-Id: Ia8f100bd3fe90c266e24a4346f80b2667c653b93
Reviewed-on: https://code.wireshark.org/review/36177
Petri-Dish: Guy Harris <guy@alum.mit.edu>
Tested-by: Petri Dish Buildbot
Reviewed-by: Guy Harris <guy@alum.mit.edu>
Much better to use a known library than create it ourselves.
Also remove get_tempfile_path as it's not used.
Bug: 15992
Change-Id: I17b9bd879e8bdb540f79db83c6c138f8ee724764
Reviewed-on: https://code.wireshark.org/review/34420
Reviewed-by: Tomasz Moń <desowin@gmail.com>
Petri-Dish: Tomasz Moń <desowin@gmail.com>
Tested-by: Petri Dish Buildbot
Reviewed-by: Roland Knall <rknall@gmail.com>
This reverts commit f1285fcf06.
NSIS package is broken with this commit.
Change-Id: Ief22a308edad188fa2d5fab79355f19493359fa6
Reviewed-on: https://code.wireshark.org/review/34758
Petri-Dish: João Valverde <j@v6e.pt>
Tested-by: Petri Dish Buildbot
Reviewed-by: João Valverde <j@v6e.pt>
HTML docs are installed to both $docdir and $pkgdatadir. Fix that
to install to $docdir only.
Change-Id: I115158585b6df9170d9a01249adbc8548df91f14
Reviewed-on: https://code.wireshark.org/review/34640
Petri-Dish: João Valverde <j@v6e.pt>
Tested-by: Petri Dish Buildbot
Reviewed-by: João Valverde <j@v6e.pt>
On Windows, fstat() and stat() sets st_dev to different value depending
on whether it was called with file handle or file path. If file handle
was used, the st_dev is simply the file handle casted to unsigned.
If file path was used, then st_dev corresponds to drive letter
(A=0, B=1, C=2, ...).
Compare the files using the file index information retrieved by
GetFileInformationByHandle(). When compiled in configuration that
supports FILE_ID_INFO, the code first tries to obtain 128-bit FILE_ID_INFO
and if that fails, fallback to GetFileInformationByHandle().
Bug: 16059
Change-Id: I5f8d8d8127337891ef9907c291e550b1d17aabbb
Reviewed-on: https://code.wireshark.org/review/34573
Reviewed-by: Peter Wu <peter@lekensteyn.nl>
Petri-Dish: Peter Wu <peter@lekensteyn.nl>
Tested-by: Petri Dish Buildbot
Reviewed-by: Anders Broman <a.broman58@gmail.com>
Before the unzipped files are being copied from the temp directory,
they are checked against the stored list of profile names, to ensure,
that only allowed files are being imported.
Also ensures, that no empty directory exists for the skipped one
Bug: 15969
Change-Id: I6ae8c9fb5f63d089d42fc0ef18dbe84baec515a2
Reviewed-on: https://code.wireshark.org/review/34184
Petri-Dish: Roland Knall <rknall@gmail.com>
Tested-by: Petri Dish Buildbot
Reviewed-by: Stig Bjørlykke <stig@bjorlykke.org>
Reviewed-by: Roland Knall <rknall@gmail.com>
Change the Profile types from User/System to Personal/Global in UI
to match the terminology used in About Wireshark -> Folders.
This reverts commit 40af4aa93e.
This reverts commit f0cde7ca34.
This reverts commit c37cabe900.
Change-Id: I9012db6385707754e26a2dadb57f6003f8112f9b
Reviewed-on: https://code.wireshark.org/review/34134
Petri-Dish: Stig Bjørlykke <stig@bjorlykke.org>
Tested-by: Petri Dish Buildbot
Reviewed-by: Roland Knall <rknall@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Stig Bjørlykke <stig@bjorlykke.org>
It's called system profiles in UI so update function names and
variables to use the same name. This will increase code readability.
Change-Id: I048e9ea85bd6ebab4a2c3ed1c685487ac8f7e40e
Reviewed-on: https://code.wireshark.org/review/34116
Reviewed-by: Stig Bjørlykke <stig@bjorlykke.org>
Petri-Dish: Stig Bjørlykke <stig@bjorlykke.org>
Tested-by: Petri Dish Buildbot
Reviewed-by: Roland Knall <rknall@gmail.com>
Those routines exist on both Windows and UN*X, but they don't do
anything on UN*X (they could if it were ever necessary).
That eliminates some #ifdefs, and also means that the gory details of
initializing Winsock, including the Winsock version being requested,
are buried in one routine.
The initialization routine returns NULL on success and a pointer to a
g_malloc()ated error message on failure; report the error to the user,
along with a "report this to the Wireshark developers" suggestion.
That means including wsutil/socket.h, which obviates the need to include
some headers for socket APIs, as it includes them for you.
Change-Id: I9327bbf25effbb441e4217edc5354a4d5ab07186
Reviewed-on: https://code.wireshark.org/review/33045
Petri-Dish: Guy Harris <guy@alum.mit.edu>
Tested-by: Petri Dish Buildbot
Reviewed-by: Guy Harris <guy@alum.mit.edu>