(Using sed : sed -i '/^ \* \$Id\$/,+1 d')
Fix manually some typo (in export_object_dicom.c and crc16-plain.c)
Change-Id: I4c1ae68d1c4afeace8cb195b53c715cf9e1227a8
Reviewed-on: https://code.wireshark.org/review/497
Reviewed-by: Anders Broman <a.broman58@gmail.com>
- when the text parameter is constant col_add_str() and col_set_str() are equivalent but col_set_str() is faster.
- same for replace col_append_fstr and col_append_str
- remove col_clear() when it's redundant:
+ before a col_set/col_add if the dissector can't throw an exception.
- replace col_append() after a col_clear() with faster col_add... or col_set
https://bugs.wireshark.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=9344
svn path=/trunk/; revision=52948
The script didn't catch as many as I would have liked, but it's a start.
The most common (ab)use of proto_tree_add_uint_format was for appending strings to CRC/checksum values to note good or bad CRC/checksum.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=52045
be done on flows from one address to another; reassembly for protocols
running atop TCP should be done on flows from one TCP endpoint to
another.
We do this by:
adding "reassembly table" as a data structure;
associating hash tables for both in-progress reassemblies and
completed reassemblies with that data structure (currently, not
all reassemblies use the latter; they might keep completed
reassemblies in the first table);
having functions to create and destroy keys in that table;
offering standard routines for doing address-based and
address-and-port-based flow processing, so that dissectors not
needing their own specialized flow processing can just use them.
This fixes some mis-reassemblies of NIS YPSERV YPALL responses (where
the second YPALL response is processed as if it were a continuation of
a previous response between different endpoints, even though said
response is already reassembled), and also allows the DCE RPC-specific
stuff to be moved out of epan/reassembly.c into the DCE RPC dissector.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=48491
Cast away some implicit 64-bit-to-32-bit conversion errors due to use of
sizeof.
Cast away some implicit 64-bit-to-32-bit conversion errors due to use of
strtol() and strtoul().
Change some data types to avoid those implicit conversion warnings.
When assigning a constant to a float, make sure the constant isn't a
double, by appending "f" to the constant.
Constify a bunch of variables, parameters, and return values to
eliminate warnings due to strings being given const qualifiers. Cast
away those warnings in some cases where an API we don't control forces
us to do so.
Enable a bunch of additional warnings by default. Note why at least
some of the other warnings aren't enabled.
randpkt.c and text2pcap.c are used to build programs, so they don't need
to be in EXTRA_DIST.
If the user specifies --enable-warnings-as-errors, add -Werror *even if
the user specified --enable-extra-gcc-flags; assume they know what
they're doing and are willing to have the compile fail due to the extra
GCC warnings being treated as errors.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=46748
The reassembled fragments tree in the Packet Details view is awesome, but it
lacks one thing: a field that exposes the reassembled data.
tcp.data already exists for exposing a single TCP segment's payload as a byte
array. It would be handy to have something similar for a single application
layer PDU when TCP segment reassembly is involved. I propose
tcp.reassembled.data, named and placed after the already existing field
tcp.reassembled.length.
My primary use case for this feature is outputting tcp.reassembled.data with
tshark for further processing with a script.
The attached patch implements this very feature. Because the reassembled
fragment tree code is general purpose, i.e. not specific to just TCP, any
dissector that relies upon it can add a similar field very cheaply. In that
vein I've also implemented ip.reassembled.data and ipv6.reassembled.data, which
expose reassembled fragment data as a single byte stream for IPv4 and IPv6,
respectively. All other protocols that use the reassembly code have been left
alone, other than inserting NULL into their initializer lists for the newly
introduced struct field reassemble.h:fragment_items.hf_reassembled_data.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=44802
Specifically: Replace FALSE|0 and TRUE|1 by ENC_BIG_ENDIAN|ENC_LITTLE_ENDIAN as
the encoding parameter for proto_tree_add_item() calls which directly reference
an item in hf[] which has a type of:
FT_UINT8
FT_UINT16
FT_UINT24
FT_UINT32
FT_UINT64
FT_INT8
FT_INT16
FT_INT24
FT_INT32
FT_INT64
FT_FLOAT
FT_DOUBLE
svn path=/trunk/; revision=39288
so that if the start_ptr is NULL the bytes are extracted from the given TVB
using the given offset and length.
Replace a bunch of:
proto_tree_add_bytes_format*(tree, hf, tvb, offset, length, tvb_get_ptr(tvb, offset, length), [...])
with:
proto_tree_add_bytes_format*(tree, hf, tvb, offset, length, NULL, [...])
svn path=/trunk/; revision=35896
Found by reviewing msvc level 4 warnings "assignment within conditional expression".
(Unfortunately most of the warnings are false positives so this warning can't be enabled)
svn path=/trunk/; revision=35726
of going through a temporary variable). This just makes it more obvious which
add_bytes_format() calls are or are not being given pointers into the TVB.
Use tvb_ip_to_str() and tvb_ip6_to_str() in a couple spots.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=35593
Use tvb_ip_to_str() and tvb_ip6_to_str().
There's no need to pass the result of tvb_get_ptr() as the 'value' in
proto_tree_add_*(): just use proto_tree_add_item().
Replace some tvb_get_ptr()s with tvb_get_ephemeral_string()s to ensure the
return string is NULL terminated.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=35546
keys to have _uint in their names, to match the routines that handle
dissector tables with string keys. (Using _port can confuse people into
thinking they're intended solely for use with TCP/UDP/etc. ports when,
in fact, they work better for things such as Ethernet types, where the
binding of particular values to particular protocols are a lot
stronger.)
svn path=/trunk/; revision=35224
- Finally, better reassembly using fragment_add_seq_next().
The previous mode is still supported.
- Fixed sporadic decoding and export issues. Always decode
association negotiation, since performance check (tree==NULL)
is now only in dissect_dcm_pdv_fragmented().
- Added one more PDV length check
- Show Association Headers as individual items
- Code cleanup. i.e. moved a few lookup functions to be closer
to the dissection.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=33751
- Fixed HF to separate signed & unsigned values and to have BASE_DEC all signed
- Fixed private sequences with undefined length in ILE
- Fixed some spellings in comments
svn path=/trunk/; revision=32815