forked from osmocom/wireshark
27db7b5c30
svn path=/trunk/; revision=12870 |
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acn | ||
artnet | ||
asn1 | ||
ciscosm | ||
docsis | ||
enttec | ||
giop | ||
gryphon | ||
irda | ||
lwres | ||
mate | ||
megaco | ||
mgcp | ||
opsi | ||
pcli | ||
rdm | ||
rlm | ||
rtnet | ||
rudp | ||
v5ua | ||
Makefile.am | ||
Makefile.nmake | ||
plugin_api.c | ||
plugin_api.h | ||
plugin_api_decls.h | ||
plugin_api_defs.h | ||
plugin_api_list.c | ||
plugin_gen.py | ||
plugin_table.h | ||
README.interface | ||
Xass-list | ||
Xplugin_api.c | ||
Xplugin_api.h | ||
Xplugin_api_decls.h | ||
Xplugin_table.h |
README.interface When developing a plugin in the Win32 world, it is nessecary to explicitly export addresses from the main process to the plugin. ethereal does have a mechanism for this, and it uses the file 'plugin_api_list.c' to list declarations for everything that needs to be exported. The build process of ethereal needs this list in 5 different forms. These are generated by a Python script and saved in the X* files in this directory. I do not have a real C parser in Python to read the input file..., so I have used 'gcc -aux-info xyzzy ...' to clean up any formatting preferences in the input file and create the file named 'xyzzy' that contains a neatly formatted list of declarations. This list can be parsed with a regular expression to extract the required info. Use the following procedure when updateing the plugin_api_list.c file: nmake -f Makefile.nmake xyzzy nmake -f Makefile.nmake The 'xyzzy' makefile target is the only target that depends on gcc. This can be done on a Unix machine or you can use cygwin gcc.