In particular, epan/wslua/lrexlib.c has its own buffer_ routines,
causing some linker warnings on some platforms, as reported in bug
10332.
(Not to be backported to 1.12, as that would change the API and ABI of
libwsutil and libwiretap. We should also make the buffer_ routines in
epan/wslua/lrexlib.c static, which should also address this problem, but
the name change avoids other potential namespace collisions.)
Change-Id: I1d42c7d1778c7e4c019deb2608d476c52001ce28
Reviewed-on: https://code.wireshark.org/review/3351
Reviewed-by: Guy Harris <guy@alum.mit.edu>
Otherwise, if you link with both libwiretap and libfiletap, it's
anybody's guess which one you get. That means you're wasting memory
with two copies of its routines if they're identical, and means
surprising behavior if they're not (which showed up when I was debugging
a double-free crash - fixing libwiretap's buffer_free() didn't fix the
problem, because Wireshark happened to be calling libfiletap' unfixed
buffer_free()).
There's nothing *tap-specific about Buffers, anyway, so it really
belongs in wsutil.
Change-Id: I91537e46917e91277981f8f3365a2c0873152870
Reviewed-on: https://code.wireshark.org/review/3066
Reviewed-by: Guy Harris <guy@alum.mit.edu>
(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>
as the "where to put the packet data" argument.
This lets more of the libwiretap code be common between the read and
seek-read code paths, and also allows for more flexibility in the "fill
in the data" path - we can expand the buffer as needed in both cases.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=49949
PARSED_RECORD if we got a packet;
PARSED_NONRECORD if the parser succeeded but didn't see a packet;
PARSE_FAILED if the parser failed.
Treat anything other than PARSED_RECORD as a failure, for now; I'm not
sure why we were treating "parser succeeded but didn't see a packet" as
success, as that was causing us to recognize some non-Ascend-output text
files as Ascend files and to return "records" with bogus caplen and len
values.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=32009
Because Lucent/Ascend equipment will sometimes omit the hex dump for a packet
or send two headers followed by two hex dumps, Wireshark needs to be very
lenient when parsing a Lucent/Ascend trace. On a busy access server, a packet
like this is pretty likely to appear within a few minutes.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=28749
That way we hopefully won't need the runlex.sh hack any
more. Also the ylwrap stuff is (hopefully) obsolete.
ascend.[hc] -> ascendtext.[hc]
ascend-scanner.l -> ascend_scanner.l
ascend-grammar.y -> ascend.y
svn path=/trunk/; revision=28744