A gtk tree view version of service response time.
Tested with AFP and SMB, variable size columns don't look great with SMB though.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=30227
routines and routines using those routines. GLib might use different
modifiers for 64-bit quantities than the platform's C library does.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=21990
Fix compilation failures when building wireshark-0.99.6-SVN-21916 on an
x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu target with gcc version 4.1.2 20070403 (Red Hat
4.1.2-8).
The failures fall into two categories:
(1) Casts between pointers and 32-bit integers without an intermediary cast
via 'long' or 'unsigned long'. This results in a compiler warning complaining
about casts between a pointer and an integer of a different size.
(2) Passing values to "%lld" or similar printf-style format options that the
compiler thinks are a different size. Such values need to be cast to 'long
long' or 'unsigned long long'.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=21975
epan/dissectors/ncp2222.py - Fixes the NCP group values for all NCP's. Also fixes some additional return values and cleanup.
gtk/ncp_stat.c - Fixes the NCP group values for SRT.
gtk/service_response_time_table.c:
The SRT is broken if you hit the reload button or apply a filter. The table isn't cleared so each item in the list is duplicated and the second entries remain with initial values. This patch clears the GTK_CLIST so that the redundant entries no longer appear.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=17139
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
"timestat_t".
Move "nstime_to_msec()" to "epan/nstime.c", as it has nothing to do with
a "timestat_t".
Use structure assignment when possible.
Fix the "addtime()" macro and use it in "time_stat_update()".
Use "timestat_t"s, and the routines to manipulate them, in the service
response time table code.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=15509
buffer and "g_strdup()"ing it.
Use the nstime.c routines to compute time deltas and to add up times.
Don't add rows to the CList until a procedure gets a non-zero call
count, so only the ones with non-zero call counts are displayed (and
especially so that procedure numbers not corresponding to real
procedures aren't displayed!).
Ethereal requires 64-bit integer support, so don't bother checking
whether we have it.
Use the right format for 64-bit integers.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=15506
const pointer (so that we don't get complaints when we make the
tap-specific data argument to "tap_queue_packet()" a const pointer,
allowing dissectors to hand const data to a tap without a complaint), we
should make the tap per-packet function take a const pointer as an
argument as well. Do so.
In some taps, use _U_, or actually use the argument, rather than
sticking in dummy "X = X" assignments to fake use of parameters. (This
means that the tap functions in question no longer have the notion that
they act on a particular static structure wired in.)
svn path=/trunk/; revision=12910
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
"main_filter_packets()", to force the filtering to be done even if the
filter is the same as the current one; this is necessary in order to
make sure "Follow TCP Stream" gets the packets processed even if you're
filtering the stream that's currently filtered in.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=10209
scrolled_window_new().
added gtk_scrolled_window_set_policy(AUTOMATIC,AUTOMATIC) to
scrolled_window_new()
added GTK2's gtk_scrolled_window_set_shadow(GTK_SHADOW_IN)
to every place needed
svn path=/trunk/; revision=9999
"simple_dialog()"; NULL might be #defined to be a pointer expression on
some platforms, causing compiler warnings (and, on platforms where a
null pointer doesn't have all its bits 0, possibly causing misbehavior,
although I don't think there are any such platforms on which Ethereal
runs).
Don't allow 0 as button mask argument to "simple_dialog()".
Squelch a compiler warning.
Report fatal problems as errors, not warnings.
Report file I/O errors with "file_open_error_message()".
Report file write errors (including those reported by "close()", e.g.
some errors writing to an NFS server) when saving raw packet data to a
file.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=9915
e.g. when applying a "Follow TCP stream",
fix a bug in the recent function, discarding the newest entries when
saving a full list (now discarding the oldest).
svn path=/trunk/; revision=9849