NULL-return check.
Use val_to_str_const instead of val_to_str() in a couple places where the string
is constant.
Use val_to_str() instead of blindly passing the return value from match_strval()
into a format routine (to ensure a non-NULL string pointer). A couple of these
were cases where it could not actually return NULL, but I changed it for
consistency.
Store the return value of match_strval() rather than calling it repeatedly.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=37204
keys to have _uint in their names, to match the routines that handle
dissector tables with string keys. (Using _port can confuse people into
thinking they're intended solely for use with TCP/UDP/etc. ports when,
in fact, they work better for things such as Ethernet types, where the
binding of particular values to particular protocols are a lot
stronger.)
svn path=/trunk/; revision=35224
(1) Trailing/leading spaces are removed from 'name's/'blurb's
(2) Duplicate 'blurb's are replaced with NULL
(3) Empty ("") 'blurb's are replaced with NULL
(4) BASE_NONE, NULL, 0x0 are used for 'display', 'strings' and 'bitmask' fields
for FT_NONE, FT_BYTES, FT_IPv4, FT_IPv6, FT_ABSOLUTE_TIME, FT_RELATIVE_TIME,
FT_PROTOCOL, FT_STRING and FT_STRINGZ field types
(5) Only allow non-zero value for 'display' if 'bitmask' is non-zero
svn path=/trunk/; revision=28770
wiretap. Modify various other locations to accommodate the fact that
PacketLogger files do not specify the direction of packets.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=27463
Added support for Symbian OS btsnoop.
The bluetooth HCI layer in Symbian OS can be configured to log all packets to a
file. The log format, "btsnoop" is based on the RFC1761 "snoop" format - but
differences in the header make it incompatible.
The btsnoop format supports logging of these formats:
"H1" (raw HCI packets without framing)
"H4" (HCI UART packets including packet type header)
"H5" (HCI 3 wire UART packets including framing)
"BCSP" (HCI bluecore serial protocol including framing)
"H1" and "H4" are section numbers in the original v1 bluetooth specifications,
but still used colloquially - wireshark's existing support for Linux bluez HCI
logs uses the "H4" name.
In practice, the "H1" format is used for H5,BCSP and USB HCI logs, as the HCI
packet logs are mainly useful for debugging higher layers, bluetooth profiles
and bluetooth applications.
From me:
Deleted some unused prototypes.
Mark an unused parameter.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=24263