Commit Graph

5 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Dario Lombardo fe71e26af2 spdx: more licenses converted.
Change-Id: I3861061ec261e63b23621799e020e811ed78a343
Reviewed-on: https://code.wireshark.org/review/26333
Petri-Dish: Dario Lombardo <lomato@gmail.com>
Tested-by: Petri Dish Buildbot
Reviewed-by: Anders Broman <a.broman58@gmail.com>
2018-03-07 15:56:44 +00:00
Evan Huus f2f2d0e888 Add license header to colorfilters2js.pl as per email from Dirk.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=52028
2013-09-13 23:02:39 +00:00
Gerald Combs 75c8dbff83 Use the first matched color instead of the last one, which is what
Wireshark does.

svn path=/trunk/; revision=43391
2012-06-19 23:01:21 +00:00
Bill Meier c2030be97b Add svn:executable property
svn path=/trunk/; revision=40310
2011-12-28 15:23:56 +00:00
Gerald Combs 99d4de66e5 From Dirk Jagdmann via bug 5875:
My attachment adds a link to a XSLT file to the preamble of the PDML.
The XSLT will transform the PDML to a HTML page, and the HTML page
features a look similar to Wireshark. See
http://cubic.org/~doj/ebay/a.pdml for an example.

The patch also contains a small perl program which converts the
Wireshark colortable into javascript code which is used in the XSLT
file. If you want to use a different color scheme you would execute the
perl program and insert the generated javascript function into your XSLT
file.

To view the HTML you could either place the PDML and XSLT file on your
webserver and verify that your webserver sends the PDML file as
"text/xml".  Then your webbrowser will find the linked XSLT file,
download that as well and convert the PDML to HTML on the fly.

You could also use an XSLT processor like xsltproc to convert the PDML
and XSLT into a static HTML file.


From me:

Minor fixups.

svn path=/trunk/; revision=37298
2011-05-19 18:10:21 +00:00