Clean up some things we ran across while making those changes.
Change-Id: Ic0d8943d36e6e120d7af0a6148fad98015d1e83e
Reviewed-on: https://code.wireshark.org/review/4581
Reviewed-by: Guy Harris <guy@alum.mit.edu>
Unlike the standard I/O routines, the code we introduced that supports
fast random seeking on gzipped files will always supply some specific
error code for read errors, so we don't need WTAP_ERR_CANT_READ.
Add WTAP_ERR_CANT_WRITE for writing, as we're still using the standard
I/O routines for that. Set errno to WTAP_ERR_CANT_WRITE before calling
fwrite() in wtap_dump_file_write(), so that it's used if fwrite() fails
without setting errno.
Change-Id: I6bf066a6838284a532737aa65fd0c9bb3639ad63
Reviewed-on: https://code.wireshark.org/review/4540
Reviewed-by: Guy Harris <guy@alum.mit.edu>
Add wtap_read_bytes(), which takes a FILE_T, a pointer, a byte count, an
error number pointer, and an error string pointer as arguments, and that
treats a short read of any sort, including a read that returns 0 bytes,
as a WTAP_ERR_SHORT_READ error, and that returns the error number and
string through its last two arguments.
Add wtap_read_bytes_or_eof(), which is similar, but that treats a read
that returns 0 bytes as an EOF, supplying an error number of 0 as an EOF
indication.
Use those in file readers; that simplifies the code and makes it less
likely that somebody will fail to supply the error number and error
string on a file read error.
Change-Id: Ia5dba2a6f81151e87b614461349d611cffc16210
Reviewed-on: https://code.wireshark.org/review/4512
Reviewed-by: Guy Harris <guy@alum.mit.edu>
Pcap-ng files don't have a per-file time stamp resolution, they have a
per-interface time stamp resolution. Add new time stamp resolution
types of "unknown" and "per-packet", add the time stamp resolution to
struct wtap_pkthdr, have the libwiretap core initialize it to the
per-file time stamp resolution, and have pcap-ng do the same thing with
the resolution that it does with the packet encapsulation.
Get rid of the TS_PREC_AUTO_XXX values; just have TS_PREC_AUTO, which
means "use the packet's resolution to determine how many significant
digits to display". Rename all the WTAP_FILE_TSPREC_XXX values to
WTAP_TSPREC_XXX, as they're also used for per-packet values.
Change-Id: If9fd8f799b19836a5104aaa0870a951498886c69
Reviewed-on: https://code.wireshark.org/review/4349
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>
Applying part of Bug 7825
Change-Id: I460b5c61b04d793ccc27c25debbd5e8f08bc6974
Reviewed-on: https://code.wireshark.org/review/2280
Reviewed-by: Anders Broman <a.broman58@gmail.com>
Add a "record type" field to "struct wtap_pkthdr"; currently, it can be
REC_TYPE_PACKET, for a record containing a packet, or
REC_TYPE_FILE_TYPE_SPECIFIC, for records containing file-type-specific
data.
Modify code that reads packets to be able to handle non-packet records,
even if that just means ignoring them.
Rename some routines to indicate that they handle more than just
packets.
We don't yet have any libwiretap code that supplies records other than
REC_TYPE_PACKET or that supporting writing records other than
REC_TYPE_PACKET, or any code to support plugins for handling
REC_TYPE_FILE_TYPE_SPECIFIC records; this is just the first step for bug
8590.
Change-Id: Idb40b78f17c2c3aea72031bcd252abf9bc11c813
Reviewed-on: https://code.wireshark.org/review/1773
Reviewed-by: Guy Harris <guy@alum.mit.edu>
This reverts commit c0c480d08c.
A better way to do this is to have the record type be part of struct wtap_pkthdr; that keeps the metadata for the record together and requires fewer API changes. That is in-progress.
Change-Id: Ic558f163a48e2c6d0df7f55e81a35a5e24b53bc6
Reviewed-on: https://code.wireshark.org/review/1741
Reviewed-by: Guy Harris <guy@alum.mit.edu>
This is the first step towards implementing the mechanisms requestd in
bug 8590; currently, we don't return any records other than packet
records from libwiretap, and just ignore non-packet records in the rest
of Wireshark, but this at least gets the ball rolling.
Change-Id: I34a45b54dd361f69fdad1a758d8ca4f42d67d574
Reviewed-on: https://code.wireshark.org/review/1736
Reviewed-by: Guy Harris <guy@alum.mit.edu>
This reverts commit 1abeb277f5.
This isn't building, and looks as if it requires significant work to fix.
Change-Id: I622b1bb243e353e874883a302ab419532b7601f2
Reviewed-on: https://code.wireshark.org/review/1568
Reviewed-by: Guy Harris <guy@alum.mit.edu>
Start of refactoring Wiretap and breaking structures down into "generally useful fields for dissection" and "capture specific". Since this in intended as a "base" for Wiretap and Filetap, the "wft" prefix is used for "common" functionality.
The "architectural" changes can be found in cfile.h, wtap.h, wtap-int.h and (new file) wftap-int.h. Most of the other (painstaking) changes were really just the result of compiling those new architecture changes.
bug:9607
Change-Id: Ife858a61760d7a8a03be073546c0e7e582cab2ae
Reviewed-on: https://code.wireshark.org/review/1485
Reviewed-by: Michael Mann <mmann78@netscape.net>
(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>
XXX, people are not aware that expression of this macros might be evaluated multiple times, like:
- BSWAP16(tvb_get_letohs(tvb, off)) : \
+ GUINT16_SWAP_LE_BE(tvb_get_letohs(tvb, off)) : \
Should be tvb_get_ntohs() called?
svn path=/trunk/; revision=53653
subtypes, e.g. Network Monitor version 1 and Network Monitor version 2
are separate "file types", even though they both come from Network
Monitor.
Rename various functions, #defines, and variables appropriately.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=53166
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
wtap_file_read_expected_bytes() from an open routine - open routines are
supposed to return -1 on error, 0 if the file doesn't appear to be a
file of the specified type, or 1 if the file does appear to be a file of
the specified type, but those macros will cause the caller to return
FALSE on errors (so that, even if there's an I/O error, it reports "the
file isn't a file of the specified type" rather than "we got an error
trying to read the file").
When doing reads in an open routine before we've concluded that the file
is probably of the right type, return 0, rather than -1, if we get
WTAP_ERR_SHORT_READ - if we don't have enough data to check whether a
file is of a given type, we should keep trying other types, not give up.
For reads done *after* we've concluded the file is probably of the right
type, if a read doesn't return the number of bytes we asked for, but
returns an error of 0, return WTAP_ERR_SHORT_READ - the file is
apparently cut short.
For NetMon and NetXRay/Windows Sniffer files, use a #define for the
magic number size, and use that for both magic numbers.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=46803
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
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
wtap-int.h, and change the unions of pointers to those private data
structures into just void *'s.
Have the generic wtap close routine free up the private data, rather
than the type-specific close routine, just as the wtap_dumper close
routine does for its private data. Get rid of close routines that don't
do anything any more.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=32015
- automatic adjustment depending on file format
- manual adjustment through menu items
save the setting in the recent file
svn path=/trunk/; revision=15534
I've done more than a day to change the timestamp resolution from microseconds to nanoseconds. As I really don't want to loose those changes, I'm going to check in the changes I've done so far. Hopefully someone else will give me a helping hand with the things left ...
What's done: I've changed the timestamp resolution from usec to nsec in almost any place in the sources. I've changed parts of the implementation in nstime.s/.h and a lot of places elsewhere.
As I don't understand the editcap source (well, I'm maybe just too tired right now), hopefully someone else might be able to fix this soon.
Doing all those changes, we get native nanosecond timestamp resolution in Ethereal. After fixing all the remaining issues, I'll take a look how to display this in a convenient way...
As I've also changed the wiretap timestamp resolution from usec to nsec we might want to change the wiretap version number...
svn path=/trunk/; revision=15520
a) get rid of warnings of type "no previous declaration" and
b) make sure that declaration and implementation are in sync.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=15168
they have LF at the end of the line on UN*X and CR/LF on Windows;
hopefully this means that if a CR/LF version is checked in on Windows,
the CRs will be stripped so that they show up only when checked out on
Windows, not on UN*X.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=11400
addition to an error code, an error info string, for
WTAP_ERR_UNSUPPORTED, WTAP_ERR_UNSUPPORTED_ENCAP, and
WTAP_ERR_BAD_RECORD errors. Replace the error messages logged with
"g_message()" for those errors with g_strdup()ed or g_strdup_printf()ed
strings returned as the error info string, and change the callers of
those routines to, for those errors, put the info string into the
printed message or alert box for the error.
Add messages for cases where those errors were returned without printing
an additional message.
Nobody uses the error code from "cf_read()" - "cf_read()" puts up the
alert box itself for failures; get rid of the error code, so it just
returns a success/failure indication.
Rename "file_read_error_message()" to "cf_read_error_message()", as it
handles read errors from Wiretap, and have it take an error info string
as an argument. (That handles a lot of the work of putting the info
string into the error message.)
Make some variables in "ascend-grammar.y" static.
Check the return value of "erf_read_header()" in "erf_seek_read()".
Get rid of an unused #define in "i4btrace.c".
svn path=/trunk/; revision=9852
WTAP_ENCAP_ISDN encapsulation type, which includes a pseudo-header
giving the direction (user-to-network or network-to-user) and the
channel number.
Add a new circuit type, using the ISDN channel number as the circuit ID.
Add an ISDN dissector to put the direction and channel number into the
protocol tree and to call the appropriate dissector for the payload
based on the channel (LAPD for the D channel; V.120, PPP, or data for B
channels, based on some heuristics).
svn path=/trunk/; revision=6521
All files:
- Replace types from sys/types.h by those from glib.h
- Replace ntoh family of macros from netinet/in.h and winsock2.h
by g_ntoh family from glib.h
- Remove now unneeded includes of sys/types.h, netinet/in.h and
winsock2.h
wtap.h
Move includes to the top
svn path=/trunk/; revision=5909
the internal z_err value for the stream if an "fseek()" call it makes
fails, so that if "gzerror()" is subsequently called, it returns Z_OK
rather than an error.
To work around this, we pass "file_seek()" an "int *err", and have the
with-zlib version of "file_seek()" check, if "gzseek()" fails, whether
the return value of "file_error()" is 0 and, if so, have it return
"errno" instead.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=5642
"struct x25_phdr" to "wiretap/wtap.h".
Have two X.25 dissectors, one of which assumes that there's a "struct
x25_phdr" pseudo-header and one of which doesn't; the former uses the
information in that pseudo-header to determine whether the packet is
DTE->DCE or DCE->DTE, and the latter assumes it has no clue whether the
packet is DTE->DCE or DCE->TDE. Use the former one in the LAPB
dissector, and the latter one in the XOT dissector and in the LLC
dissector table.
In the X.25-over-TCP dissector, handle multiple X.25 packets per TCP
segment, and handle X.25 packets split across TCP segments.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=5134
an "err" argument that points to an "int" into which to put an error
code if it fails.
Check for errors in one call to it, and note that we should do so in
other places.
In the "wtap_seek_read()" call in the TCP graphing code, don't overwrite
"cfile.pseudo_header", and make the buffer into which we read the data
WTAP_MAX_PACKET_SIZE bytes, as it should be.
In some of the file readers for text files, check for errors from the
"parse the record header" and "parse the hex dump" routines when reading
sequentially.
In "csids_seek_read()", fix some calls to "file_error()" to check the
error on the random stream (that being what we're reading).
svn path=/trunk/; revision=4874
For file types where we allocate private data, add "close" routines
where they were missing, to free the private data. Also fix up the code
to clean up after some errors by freeing private data where that wasn't
being done.
Get rid of unused arguments to "wtap_dump_open_finish()".
Fix indentation.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=4857
reading the capture file. Have callers of "wtap_snapshot_length()"
treat a value of 0 as "unknown", and default to WTAP_MAX_PACKET_SIZE (so
that, when writing a capture file in a format that *does* store the
snapshot length, we can at least put *something* in the file).
If we don't know the snapshot length of the current capture file, don't
display a value in the summary window.
Don't use "cfile.snap" as the snapshot length option when capturing -
doing so causes Ethereal to default, when capturing, to the snapshot
length of the last capture file that you read in, rather than to the
snapshot length of the last capture you did (or the initial default of
"no snapshot length").
Redo the "Capture Options" dialog box to group options into sections
with frames around them, and add units to the snapshot length, maximum
file size, and capture duration options, as per a suggestion by Ulf
Lamping. Also add units to the capture count option.
Make the snapshot length, capture count, maximum file size, and capture
duration options into a combination of a check box and a spin button.
If the check box is not checked, the limit in question is inactive
(snapshot length of 65535, no max packet count, no max file size, no max
capture duration); if it's checked, the spinbox specifies the limit.
Default all of the check boxes to "not checked" and all of the spin
boxes to small values.
Use "gtk_toggle_button_get_active()" rather than directly fetching the
state of a check box.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=4709