which could use lseek() and were thus expensive due to system call
overhead. To avoid making a system call for every packet on a
sequential read, we maintained a data_offset field in the wtap structure
for sequential reads.
It's now a routine that just returns information from the FILE_T data
structure, so it's cheap. Use it, rather than maintaining the data_offset
field.
Readers for some file formats need to maintain file offset themselves;
have them do so in their private data structures.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=42423
by Wiretap, to indicate whether certain fields in that structure
actually have data in them.
Use the "time stamp present" flag to omit showing time stamp information
for packets (and "packets") that don't have time stamps; don't bother
working very hard to "fake" a time stamp for data files.
Use the "interface ID present" flag to omit the interface ID for packets
that don't have an interface ID.
We don't use the "captured length, separate from packet length, present"
flag to omit the captured length; that flag might be present but equal
to the packet length, and if you want to know if a packet was cut short
by a snapshot length, comparing the values would be the way to do that.
More work is needed to have wiretap/pcapng.c properly report the flags,
e.g. reporting no time stamp being present for a Simple Packet Block.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=41185
form of corruption/bogosity in a file, including in a file header as
well as in records in the file. Change the error message
wtap_strerror() returns for it to reflect that.
Use it for some file header problems for which it wasn't already being
used - WTAP_ERR_UNSUPPORTED shouldn't be used for that, it should only
be used for files that we have no reason to believe are invalid but that
have a version number we don't know about or some other
non-link-layer-encapsulation-type value we don't know about.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=40175
same.
Add to wiretap/pcap-common.c a routine to fill in the pseudo-header for
ATM (by looking at the VPI, VCI, and packet data, and guessing) and
Ethernet (setting the FCS length appropriately). Use it for both pcap
and pcap-ng files.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=38840
by the gunzipping code. Have it also supply a err_info string, and
report it. Have file_error() supply an err_info string.
Put "the file" - or, for WTAP_ERR_DECOMPRESS, "the compressed file", to
suggest a decompression error - into the rawshark and tshark errors,
along the lines of what other programs print.
Fix a case in the Netscaler code where we weren't fetching the error
code on a read failure.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=36748
can't be saved in compress form" are both equivalent to "this file file
format requires seeking when writing it". Change the "can compress"
Boolean in the file format table to "writing requires seeking", give all
the entries the proper value, and do the checks for attempting to write
a file format to a pipe or write it in compressed format to common code.
This means we don't need to pass the "can't seek" flag to the dump open
routines.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=36575
file_read(buf, bsize, count, file) macro is compilant with fread
function and takes elements count+ size of each element, however to make
it compilant with gzread() it always returns number of bytes.
In wiretap file_read() this is not really used, file_read is called
either with bsize set to 1 or count to 1.
Attached patch remove bsize argument from macro.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=36491
pseudo-header, and hence there's no direction indication. Don't set
pinfo->p2p_dir for it. Use WTAP_ENCAP_BLUETOOTH_H4_WITH_PHDR, not
WTAP_ENCAP_BLUETOOTH_H4, for capture files where we have the direction.
Don't assume pinfo->p2p_dir is either P2P_DIR_SENT or P2P_DIR_RECV when
setting the info column in various Bluetooth dissectors; it might be
unknown.
In the HCI H4 dissector, put the direction into the info column
regardless of whether we have a type match or not; the dissectors for
HCI packet types appear to assume it's been set (as they put a blank at
the beginning of the stuff they append to the direction).
svn path=/trunk/; revision=35933
everybody use it; the places using the old wtap_dump_file_write() were
using it in the same way the old wtap_dump_file_write_all() did.
That also lets us get rid of wtap_dump_file_ferror().
Also, have the new wtap_dump_file_write() check for errors from
gzwrite() and fwrite() differently - the former returns 0 on error, the
latter can return a short write on error.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=33113
KHciLoggerDatalinkTypeBCSP and KHciLoggerDatalinkTypeH5 aren't supported
- just explicitly say "BSCP" or "H5".
For unknown link-layer types, say "unknown or unsupported", as other
Wiretap modules do.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=28925
any case, the detailed error string is supposed to be g_malloced....)
Fix some "snoop" to be "btsnoop", and note that this is Symbian btsnoop,
not regular snoop.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=25580
Added support for Symbian OS btsnoop.
The bluetooth HCI layer in Symbian OS can be configured to log all packets to a
file. The log format, "btsnoop" is based on the RFC1761 "snoop" format - but
differences in the header make it incompatible.
The btsnoop format supports logging of these formats:
"H1" (raw HCI packets without framing)
"H4" (HCI UART packets including packet type header)
"H5" (HCI 3 wire UART packets including framing)
"BCSP" (HCI bluecore serial protocol including framing)
"H1" and "H4" are section numbers in the original v1 bluetooth specifications,
but still used colloquially - wireshark's existing support for Linux bluez HCI
logs uses the "H4" name.
In practice, the "H1" format is used for H5,BCSP and USB HCI logs, as the HCI
packet logs are mainly useful for debugging higher layers, bluetooth profiles
and bluetooth applications.
From me:
Deleted some unused prototypes.
Mark an unused parameter.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=24263