master-branch libpcap now generates a reentrant Flex scanner and
Bison/Berkeley YACC parser for capture filter expressions, so it
requires versions of Flex and Bison/Berkeley YACC that support that.
We might as well do the same. For libwiretap, it means we could
actually have multiple K12 text or Ascend/Lucent text files open at the
same time. For libwireshark, it might not be as useful, as we only read
configuration files at startup (which should only happen once, in one
thread) or on demand (in which case, if we ever support multiple threads
running libwireshark, we'd need a mutex to ensure that only one file
reads it), but it's still the right thing to do.
We also require a version of Flex that can write out a header file, so
we change the runlex script to generate the header file ourselves. This
means we require a version of Flex new enough to support --header-file.
Clean up some other stuff encountered in the process.
Change-Id: Id23078c6acea549a52fc687779bb55d715b55c16
Reviewed-on: https://code.wireshark.org/review/14719
Reviewed-by: Guy Harris <guy@alum.mit.edu>
(Using sed : sed -i '/^\* \$Id\$/,+1 d') (no space before star)
Change-Id: I318968db2b8512ba1303b5fc5c624c66441658f0
Reviewed-on: https://code.wireshark.org/review/879
Reviewed-by: Anders Broman <a.broman58@gmail.com>
- Change ugly GLIB version checking statements to GLIB_CHECK_VERSION
- Remove ws_strsplit files because we no longer need to borrow GLIB2's
g_strsplit code for the no longer supported GLIB1 builds
svn path=/trunk/; revision=24829