than the standard error.
In Wireshark on Windows, create a console before doing so and destroy it
before exiting. Don't do that in TShark or dumpcap, as those are
console-mode programs on Windows.
This should fix bug 8609 and still allow "wireshark -D" and "wireshark
-L" to work when the standard output isn't redirected.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=49025
that directory since 2001 and reading from that directory was only left in for
backwards compatibility with versions prior to r4702. I think it's now safe
to remove that backwards compatibility.
This eliminates the last argument of get_persconffile_path().
https://bugs.wireshark.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=8437
svn path=/trunk/; revision=48797
at least on OS X, to set the "proxy icon" - we need to clear the window
title *and* the file path before we set it, otherwise the set doesn't
happen.
While we're at it, clear the file path whenever we're *not* using a
path. For temporary files, don't set the file path.
The file path is, in fact, the *full path*, not just the last component.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=48715
indicates. (Note: "unsaved data" is more than just "unsaved changes";
it could also mean "temporary file that hasn't been saved anywhere".)
svn path=/trunk/; revision=48709
a save can be done ("can" in the sense of "there's something to
save" and in the sense of "we can write that something out");
a "save as" can be done (in the sense of "we can write what we
have out");
there's unsaved data to save (which might be unsaved changes or
might be a temporary file full of packets);
and use them as appropriate. This means that the "unsaved data"
indicator in the UI will be turned on for temporary files full of
packets as well as for files with unsaved changes; that's what we want.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=48693
supports writing files with a given set of encapsulations and comment
types. Use it, rather than asking for a list of file formats that
support the given set of encapsulation and comment types and checking
whether we got back such a list, or duplicating its logic.
Having file.c use it means that nobody's using
wtap_dump_can_write_encaps() any more; get rid of it. Instead, have a
private routine that checks whether a given file format supports a given
set of encapsulations *and* comment types, and use that internally.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=48690
For each capture file type, have a bitset of comment types supported by
that capture file type.
Add a Wiretap routine that, for a given file type, returns the bitset of
comment types it supports.
Have wtap_get_savable_file_types() take a bitset of comment types that
need to be supported by the file types it returns.
Replace cf_has_comments() with a routine that returns a bitset of
capture file comment types in the capture file.
Use those routines in the capture file dialogs; don't wire in the notion
that pcap-NG supports all comment types and no other file formats
support any comment types. (That's currently true, but we don't want to
wire that in as being forever true.)
svn path=/trunk/; revision=48689
it affects more than just the file name, it also affects whatever "you
have unsaved changes" indicator the UI provides.
Put a comment in the Qt code as a reminder of how to set the "you have
unsaved changes" indicator.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=48680
Hex Dump", to clarify that it's not some sort of "generic" import
function, just one that can read a hex dump file. ("Import from Hex
Dump Text" is another possibility.) Use that string in the dialog title
as well.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=48665
Use the PNG versions of the new application icons.
Remove the XPM versions of the Wireshark application and capture icons.
To paraphrase Zoidberg, XPMs are bad and we should feel bad. Remove
xpm_to_widget_from_parent (which we weren't using and likely won't use
in the future).
Replace wiki_24.xpm (which was a GNOME or GTK+ stock icon IIRC) with the
16x16 and 24x24 versions emblem-web.png from GNOME icon theme 2.30.3.
This version was used specifically because it's GPLv2 and later versions
are GPLv3.
Update image/README.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=48565
is running" mutex. Have the NSIS installer check for this mutex and ask
the user to close Wireshark if it's found. While not perfect this makes
the WinSparkle update process much less annoying.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=47758
routine (prefs_register_directory_preference). Add PREF_FILENAME and
PREF_DIRNAME support to the Qt module preferences. Change a couple of
preferences to directory names.
Clean up some names and default settings.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=47573
for a preferences module. Use it to fill in the remaining preferences.
Don't show the printing preferences since they're not used here.
Change the titles and tooltips for some of the name resolution
preferences.
Disable the capture preferences if we can't capture. This is different
from the GTK+ version which hides it completely.
Thus concludes the preferences dialog (for the time being).
svn path=/trunk/; revision=47545
Add comments noting that
- We might want to do something different when the bookmark button is
pressed.
- The display filters (dfilters file) and gui.filter_expressions
preferences should be merged.
- Many buttons on Qt4 + OS X + unifiedTitleAndToolBarOnMac makes the
main window really wide.
Add a qstring_strdup convenience routine. Add "disabled" display filter
edit icons. Fix up whitespace and descriptions in a couple of places.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=47522
converted to QStrings, and, to get them to be treated as UTF-8, you need
to call the setCodecForCStrings method of the QTextCodec class to set
the codec to a UTF-8 codec.
In Qt 5, C strings are treated always as UTF-8 when converted to
QStrings, and there's no setCodecForCStrings method for the QTextCodec
class.
In addition, there's also no setCodecForTr method for the QTextCodec
class - and QObject isn't documented as even *having* a tr method, so I
don't know what to do there.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=47436