This fix does change the format printed for values using bitmasks
(because the bit values are printed first) and is not always wanted
in this dissectors (because of readability).
We should have a better way of doing what I want in this dissectors,
so I'll have a look at this later.
Change-Id: I2477aa6b1d0c42a7ad5848bba3cb74dce3bba1f0
Reviewed-on: https://code.wireshark.org/review/2485
Reviewed-by: Stig Bjørlykke <stig@bjorlykke.org>
Change-Id: I24fe3cc4a3589dadc4528a77fe7ff13d06b1a983
Reviewed-on: https://code.wireshark.org/review/2245
Reviewed-by: Michael Mann <mmann78@netscape.net>
tvb_new_subset -> tvb_new_subset_remaining it appears that's what the intention is.
Change-Id: I2334bbf3f10475b3c22391392fc8b6864454de2d
Reviewed-on: https://code.wireshark.org/review/1999
Reviewed-by: Pascal Quantin <pascal.quantin@gmail.com>
(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>
The majority of the fixes are for calls to uat_new(). Instead of
having each caller cast its private data to (void**), we use void*
in the uat_new() API itself. Inside uat_new(), we cast the void*
to void**.
Some dissectors use val64_string arrays, so a VALS64() macro was
added for those, to avoid using VALS(), which is useful only for
value_string arrays.
packet-mq.c was changed because dissect_nt_sid() requires
a char**, not a guint**. All other callers of dissect_nt_sid() use
char*'s (and take the address of it) for their local storage. So,
this was changed to follow the other practices.
A confusion between gint and absolute_time_display_e in packet-time.c
was cleared up.
The ugliest fix is the addition of ip6_guint8_to_str(), for exactly
one caller. The caller uses one type of ip6 address byte array,
while ip6_to_str() expects another. This new function is in place
until the various address implementations can be consolidated.
Add VALS64() to the developer documentation.
Change-Id: If93ff5c6c8c7cc3c9510d7fb78fa9108e4552805
Reviewed-on: https://code.wireshark.org/review/48
Reviewed-by: Evan Huus <eapache@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Stig Bjørlykke <stig@bjorlykke.org>
Reviewed-by: Alexis La Goutte <alexis.lagoutte@gmail.com>
Tested-by: Alexis La Goutte <alexis.lagoutte@gmail.com>
obvious that the returned string is ephemeral, and opens up the original names
in the API for versions that take a wmem pool (and thus can work in any scope).
svn path=/trunk/; revision=54249
I'm not sold on the name or module the proto_data functions live in, but I believe the function arguments are solid and gives us the most flexibility for the future. And search/replace of a function name is easy enough to do.
The big driving force for getting this in sooner rather than later is the saved memory on ethernet packets (and IP packets soon), that used to have file_scope() proto data when all it needed was packet_scope() data (technically packet_info->pool scoped), strictly for Decode As.
All dissectors that use p_add_proto_data() only for Decode As functionality have been converted to using packet_scope(). All other dissectors were converted to using file_scope() which was the original scope for "proto" data.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=53520
There seem to be several cases of proto_tree_add_string_format where a "string" value/filter doesn't really make sense because it's always empty, and is just being used as a "filterable subtree header (placeholder)". They appear to be more for "presense" than "value" and should probably be FT_NONE, although I'd almost argue for removing the filter in favor of proto_tree_add_text.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=52296
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
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 changes fix definite problems or
are done "just in case" for cases not esily determined
to be a problem by quick inspection.
Note: in some cases for loop index variables have been renamed
to ensure all required codes changes detected.
##backport
svn path=/trunk/; revision=45477
Also (for a few files):
- create/use some extended value strings;
- remove unneeded #include files;
- remove unneeded variable initialization;
- re-order fcns slightly so prefs_reg_handoff...() at end, etc
svn path=/trunk/; revision=44438
implicitly by the #define name and string they were defined to; not all
UATs neatly fit into any of the categories, so some of them were put
into categories that weren't obviously correct for them, and one - the
display filter macro UAT - wasn't put into any category at all (which
caused crashes when editing them, as the GUI code that handled UAT
changes from a dialog assumed the category field was non-null).
The category was, in practice, used only to decide, in the
aforementioned GUI code, whether the packet summary pane needed to be
updated or not. It also offered no option of "don't update the packet
summary pane *and* don't redissect anything", which is what would be
appropriate for the display filter macro UAT.
Replace the category with a set of fields indicating what the UAT
affects; we currently offer "dissection", which applies to most UATs
(any UAT in libwireshark presumably affects dissection at a minimum) and
"the set of named fields that exist". Changing any UAT that affects
dissection requires a redissection; changing any UAT that affects the
set of named fields that exist requires a redissection *and* rebuilding
the packet summary pane.
Perhaps we also need "filtering", so that if you change a display filter
macro, we re-filter, in case the display is currently filtered with a
display filter that uses a macro that changed.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=43603
In some cases:
Use val_to_str_const() instead of val_to_str();
Reformat long lines;
Do some general whitespace changes.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=41587
1. If there's no character encoding (ENC_ASCII, ...) specified
then use ENC_ASCII.
2. For all but FT_UINT_STRING, always use ENC_NA
(replacing any existing True/1/FALSE/0
/ENC_BIG_ENDIAN/ENC_LITTLE_ENDIAN).
svn path=/trunk/; revision=39426