In sync mode, if the capture file written by the child can't be
opened by the parent, ethereal will write two identical popup
error messages.
This patch fixes the problem.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=5883
having two different versions, both broken in different ways.
Bump the count of total packets in the capture-from-pipe routine.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=5647
working on MacOS X.
It appears that the underlying problem with the timeout was that we
weren't treating MacOS X as a BSD, and the "select()" we were doing
presumably wasn't working as it doesn't work on BPF devices on many
BSDs; the workaround no longer appears to be necessary, with Michael's
fix to treat MacOS X as BSD.
(Presumably a select timeout with "tv_usec" set to 1000*1000
microseconds was treated as an error, or otherwise treated in such a way
that it didn't block waiting for the BPF device to say it could be
read.)
svn path=/trunk/; revision=5637
BPF, in at least some OS versions, acts like the other BPFs in some
versions of other BSDs, and doesn't work with "select()".
svn path=/trunk/; revision=5620
This fixes some bugs:
1. With the -S option under Linux, Capture/Stop or ^E was
ignored until the next packet was read. This is because
capture.c wasn't checking for EINTR from select(), which is
returned when the child receives SIGUSR1 from the parent.
2. When reading from a pipe, a spurious error message from
pcap_open_live() was written to stderr.
3. Error messages from the child in Sync mode were displayed in
a Warning alert box.
Also, there's a new subroutine, popup_errmsg(), to replace
several instances of duplicate code.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=5616
unused.
Put in a comment to note that if we fail to open the interface either as
a device or as a pipe, we report the error from the failed
"pcap_open_live()" (which explains why "pipe_open_live()" doesn't return
an error string).
svn path=/trunk/; revision=5381
returns radio information such as signal strength, channel, and data
rate in a pseudo-header. Add that pseudo-header.
Use the "802.11 with radio information" encapsulation type for Wireless
Sniffer files; extract the radio information from where it appears to be
in the header.
Add dissector code for that encapsulation type.
Fix an error in the code to put radio information into the AiroPeek
tree.
Make the "wrapped" flag for NetXRay/Windows Sniffer captures a
"gboolean".
svn path=/trunk/; revision=5122
Move the ringbuffer capture options from the "capture_file" structure to
the structure for capture options, as they're a property of an
in-progress capture, not a property of a particular capture file.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=4799
"capture_file" structure - they're a property of an in-progress capture,
not a property of an open capture file. Make them just variables.
The maximum number of packets to be captured should be a variable
separate from the "count" field in the "capture_file" structure - the
latter is a count of the packets in the capture file in question.
Have Boolean variables indicating whether a maximum packet count,
maximum capture file size, and maximum capture duration were specified.
If an option isn't set, and we're doing an "update list of packets in
real time" capture, don't pass the option to the child process with a
command-line argument.
Don't create "stop when the capture file reaches this size" or "stop
when the capture's run for this long" conditions if a maximum capture
file size or a maximum capture duration, respectively, haven't been
specified. Don't test or free a condition if it wasn't created.
Don't allow a 0 argument to the "-c" flag - the absence of a "-c" flag
is the way you specify "no limit on the number of packets".
Initialize the check boxes and spin buttons for the "maximum packets to
capture", "maximum capture size", and "maximum capture duration" options
to the values they had in the last capture. If an option wasn't
specified, don't read its value from the dialog box and set the
variable.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=4795
reading the capture file. Have callers of "wtap_snapshot_length()"
treat a value of 0 as "unknown", and default to WTAP_MAX_PACKET_SIZE (so
that, when writing a capture file in a format that *does* store the
snapshot length, we can at least put *something* in the file).
If we don't know the snapshot length of the current capture file, don't
display a value in the summary window.
Don't use "cfile.snap" as the snapshot length option when capturing -
doing so causes Ethereal to default, when capturing, to the snapshot
length of the last capture file that you read in, rather than to the
snapshot length of the last capture you did (or the initial default of
"no snapshot length").
Redo the "Capture Options" dialog box to group options into sections
with frames around them, and add units to the snapshot length, maximum
file size, and capture duration options, as per a suggestion by Ulf
Lamping. Also add units to the capture count option.
Make the snapshot length, capture count, maximum file size, and capture
duration options into a combination of a check box and a spin button.
If the check box is not checked, the limit in question is inactive
(snapshot length of 65535, no max packet count, no max file size, no max
capture duration); if it's checked, the spinbox specifies the limit.
Default all of the check boxes to "not checked" and all of the spin
boxes to small values.
Use "gtk_toggle_button_get_active()" rather than directly fetching the
state of a check box.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=4709
"epan/..." pathnames, so as to avoid collisions with header files in any
of the directories in which we look (e.g., "proto.h", as some other
package has its own "proto.h" file which it installs in the top-level
include directory).
Don't add "-I" flags to search "epan", as that's no longer necessary
(and we want includes of "epan" headers to fail if the "epan/" is left
out, so that we don't re-introduce includes lacking "epan/").
svn path=/trunk/; revision=4586
and "Automatic scrolling in live capture" options from the preference
settings for them, so that the preference settings affect the initial
values of those options, but changing those values in a capture don't
affect the preferences, and don't automatically get saved when you save
the preferences.
If we're building without libpcap, don't have an "Automatic scrolling in
live capture" option anywhere.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=4514
(by deleting the main window or selecting File->Quit or typing ^Q) while
an "Update list of packets in real time" capture is in progress, we can
abort the capture.
Arrange that "fork_child" is -1 when there is no capture child, so said
routine knows when it can kill the child.
When we exit, kill off any capture child, using that routine, and, if
we're exiting due to a request to delete the main window and, if a read
is in progress (from an "Update list of packets in real time" capture),
don't delete the main window - just set the "Read aborted" flag, so that
the code doing the read will see that flag (it will be called because
the pipe to the capture child is closed due to the child exiting) will
see that and clean up and exit itself.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=4498
"gboolean", as it's a Boolean value, and move it to the beginning of the
structure in Tethereal, as it is in Ethereal.
From Graeme Hewson:
Check for "pcap_dispatch()" returning -1, meaning an error
occurred; if it does, stop capturing, and report the error.
If we get a signal in tethereal, stop the capture with a
"longjmp()", rather than by clearning the "go" flag;
"pcap_dispatch()", on many platforms, keeps reading rather than
returning a captured packet count of 0 if the system call to
read packets returns -1 with an errno of EINTR, so the
"pcap_dispatch()" won't be broken out of if the signal handler
returns.
Fix a typo in an error message.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=4471
files to get that big.
From Thomas Wittwer and Matthias Nyffenegger:
Support for "ring buffer mode", wherein there's a ring buffer of N
capture files; as each capture file reaches its maximum size (the ring
buffer works only with a maximum capture file size specified), Ethereal
rolls over to the next capture file in the ring buffer, replacing
whatever packets might be in it with new packets.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=4323
Rename WTAP_ENCAP_PRISM to WTAP_ENCAP_PRISM_HEADER, to match
DLT_PRISM_HEADER.
Add in missing capture support for WTAP_ENCAP_PRISM_HEADER when
capturing with "pcap_open_live()" rather than reading the capture from a
pipe.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=4299
of packet data captured.
Make the "BYTES_ARE_IN_FRAME()" macro take a "captured length of the
packet" argument.
Add some length checks to capture routines.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=4235
for AIX 5.x's non-standard libpcap, where "pcap_datalink()" doesn't
return DLT_ values, it returns RFC 1573 ifType values.
Put that wrapper, and the routine to get the interface list, in a
separate file, for packet-capture utility routines, so not everybody who
includes "util.h" needs to include <pcap.h>.
Fix up the Wiretap hack for dealing with said incompatibility to use the
correct ifType value for Token Ring.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=4184
byte count of zero, don't bother allocating a buffer for that message,
as we wouldn't do anything with that buffer.
Null-terminate the error message once we read it, before using it as a
string.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=3551
a "Match Selected" on it - we can't do a "Match Selected" if the field
has no value (e.g., FT_NULL) and has a length of 0.
If we unselect the current packet, we don't have a protocol tree, so we
don't have a currently selected field - clear the "Match Selected" menu
item and the display in the status line of information about the
currently selected field.
Move the low-level statusbar manipulation into "gtk/main.c", in routines
whose API doesn't expose anything GTK+-ish.
"close_cap_file()" calls one of those routines to clear out the status
bar, so it doesn't need to take a pointer to the statusbar widget as an
argument.
"clear_tree_and_hex_views()" is purely a display-manipulating routine;
move it to "gtk/proto_draw.c".
Extract from "tree_view_unselect_row_cb()" an "unselect_field()" routine
to do all the work that needs to be done if the currently selected
protocol tree row is unselected, and call it if the currently selected
packet list row is unselected (if it's unselected, there *is* no
protocol tree, so no row can be selected), as well as from
"tree_view_unselect_row_cb()".
Before pushing a new field-description message onto the statusbar, pop
the old one off.
Get rid of an unused variable (set, but not used).
svn path=/trunk/; revision=3513
control whether we have a child process do the capturing; a user might
want the packet list to be updated as packets arrive but *not* want it
to scroll so that the most recently arrived packets are shown.
"prefs.capture_auto_scroll", not "auto_scroll_live", should control
whether we scroll a real-time-update capture's packet list;
"auto_scroll_live" isn't set by the capture dialog box,
"prefs_capture_auto_scroll" is.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=3388
binaries, so users only need to make sure they have that version
installed in order to have Ethereal (and tcpdump, and snort, and so on)
accept "lanN"-style names (i.e., names of the sort reported by lanscan
and handled by ifconfig), rather than "dlpiN".
Get rid of the patches to update libpcap, get rid of the discussion in
"README.hpux" of patching libpcap and just say "get 0.6.2", and make the
notes on HP-UX kernel patches to fix problems with capturing outgoing
packets a separate item in the list of items in "README.hpux".
Also update the error messages Ethereal and Tethereal display if they
can't open a device and the error is "can't find PPA for XXX" to say
"get 0.6.2" rather than "patch libpcap and recompile.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=3288
DLT_HDLC to it.
Make a separate dissector for Cisco HDLC, and add a dissector for Cisco
SLARP. Have the PPP dissector call the Cisco HDLC dissector if the
address field is the Cisco HDLC unicast or multicast address. Use the
Cisco HDLC dissector for the Cisco HDLC Wiretap encapsulation type.
Add a new dissector table "chdlctype", for Cisco HDLC packet types
(they're *almost* the same as Ethernet types, but 0x8035 is SLARP, not
Reverse ARP, and 0x2000 is the Cisco Discovery protocol, for example),
replacing "fr.chdlc".
Have a "chdlctype()" routine, similar to "ethertype()", used both by the
Cisco HDLC and Frame Relay dissectors. Have a "chdlc_vals[]"
"value_string" table for Cisco HDLC types and protocol names. Split the
packet type field in the Frame Relay dissector into separate SNAP and
Cisco HDLC fields, and give them the Ethernet type and Cisco HDLC type
"value_string" tables, respectively.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=3133
list of packets in real time" capture so that "!" always indicates an
error, with the "!" preceded by a count of characters in the error
message and followed by the text of the error, and so that those error
messages can be sent after the capture has started.
Use that to report capture errors, and errors writing to the capture
file, while the capture is under way.
Use #defines for the message type characters in that protocol.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=3018
Print the "Capturing on <interface>" message, the running count of
packets captured, and error messages to the standard error in Tethereal,
so that you can pipe the output of a live capture that's printing
packets to a program or script without that script having to worry about
parsing stuff other than dissected packet summaries or details (tcpdump
does the same).
svn path=/trunk/; revision=3017
capturing; if we succeed, display the packet drops count as the "Drops"
value in the status line and as the "Dropped packets" statistics in the
summary dialog box, otherwise don't display it at all.
In Tethereal, attempt to get the packet statistics from libpcap when
capturing; if we succeed, and if there were any dropped packets, print
out the count of dropped packets when the capture finishes.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=3016
compiled capture filter program, so remove it, and remove the include of
<pcap.h> from "file.h"; instead, have local "struct bpf_program"
structures where needed, and have those files that need stuff from
<pcap.h> include it.
This cleans stuff up a bit, and should eliminate a pile of compile
warnings with Visual C++ due to <pcap.h> and some GTK+/GLib header file
(or files they include) both defining "inline".
svn path=/trunk/; revision=2954
doesn't work like the read timeout in BPF - the timer doesn't start
until at least one packet has arrived.
I think that's the way read timeouts should work on *all* packet capture
mechanisms, but it does mean that Solaris will, on a quiet net, exhibit
the same symptoms that Linux used to exhibit before we put in a
"select()" call to wait until either packets arrive or a timer expires -
the "pcap_dispatch()" call blocks until a packet arrives, so the display
doesn't get updated and Ethereal doesn't respond to user input until a
packet arrives.
Furthermore, Linux isn't the only OS that lacks any read timeout
on its packet capture mechanism; the others will also have that problem.
We therefore do the "select()" on *all* platforms other than the BSDs
(where the timer starts when the read is done, and can be used for
polling); I don't know whether it's necessary on Digital UNIX, but I
suspect it's necessary on SunOS 4.x (as the 5.x "bufmod" is probably
derived from the 4.x one, and the 5.x one, as per the above, starts the
timer when a packet arrives), and it may even be necessary on 3.x, those
(BSD, SunOS including 5.x, and Digital UNIX) apparently being the only
UNIXes that appear to have such a read timeout.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=2790
on it, such as the exit status if it exited "normally" but unexpectedly.
On UNIX systems, #define the various POSIX <sys/wait.h> macros (and the
non-POSIX WCOREDUMP()" macro) if they're not defined by <sys/wait.h> (or
if we don't have <sys/wait.h>), and use them to dissect the exit status.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=2788
Add in stuff for a bunch of libpcap formats either in libpcap 0.5.2 or
in the current CVS version; we don't implement all of them in
Ethereal/Wiretap (those are "#if 0"ed out), but we do implement the IEEE
802.11 stuff (which isn't yet in libpcap or tcpdump, but the CVS version
of libpcap *does* reserve 105 as the encapsulation type number for
802.11).
svn path=/trunk/; revision=2646
we're capturing, just use a netmask of 0, and warn the user in Tethereal
(doing it in Ethereal would be more disruptive, and doing so only once
per interface in a session is a bit of work, as, in an "Update list of
packets in real time" capture the child process would have to tell the
parent that it couldn't get the netmask).
svn path=/trunk/; revision=2546
you stop an "Update list of packets in real time" capture from the main
window as well as from the capture statistics dialog.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=2487
pseudo_header.
Use generic "p2p_phdr" instead of "lapd_phdr". Modify toshiba.c and
packet-lapd.c to take that into account.
Add frame.p2p_dir, a filterable field, 0=sent, 1=recvd
Make p2p_dir available in packe_info, as I think it will be needed
in VJ COMP and UNCOMP dissection.
Rename WTAP_ENCAP_TR to WTAP_ENCAP_TOKEN_RING.
Mention pppd-log support in man page.
Mention atmsnoop in README.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=2455
as far as I know, the only way to get IFF_UP, IFF_LOOPBACK, "struct
ifreq", and "struct ifconf" defined, and those are required in order to
get, via SIOCGIFCONF, the interface list, and to exclude interfaces that
aren't up and handle loopback interfaces differently from other
interfaces.
If we're on UNIX and have libpcap, we should do the same; that way, if
the system doesn't have <net/if.h> installed, the compile will fail with
an "I can't find <net/if.h>" error, rather than the configure indicating
that <net/if.h> can't be found, causing "util.c" not to include it,
causing it to fail with complaints about IFF_UP, IFF_LOOPBACK, and
various structures not being defined - the former tells you the root
cause, the latter doesn't.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=2442
Preferences" dialog box, to control whether to put the interface in
promiscuous mode or not; Debian bug #34376 asked for this.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=2439
the influenza virus, if "wtap_pcap_encap_to_wtap_encap()" returns
WTAP_ENCAP_UNKNOWN, indicating that the libpcap encapsulation type can't
be mapped to a Wiretap encapsulation type, include the data link type in
the message, so the user can at least give us a clue as to what type it
is that we don't support (or, at least, the DLT_ value for that type -
it could well be some standard type whose value just got gratuitously
changed).
svn path=/trunk/; revision=2333
generate the name of the boldface font from the Roman font; if the two
fonts don't have the same widths, the display will look weird when a
field is selected, and it's a bit of a pain for the user to have to
select *two* fonts.
On UNIX/X, default to
"-*-fixed-medium-r-semicondensed-*-*-120-*-*-*-*-*-" rather than to
"-*-lucidatypewriter-medium-r-normal-*-*-120-*-*-*-*-iso8859-1" - some
Linux distributions appear to lack the Lucida typewriter font.
Add a "gui.font_name" preference to the preferences file, specifying the
normal-weight font to use. Have it settable from the "GUI" tab in the
Preferences dialog box - the "Font..." button, when clicked, pops up a
font selection dialog box.
If we either can't open the selected font or the boldfaced version of
the font, default to "6x13" and "6x13bold" as fallbacks - the former
will probably be "fixed", and the latter would be "fixedbold" if X
actually created such an alias, but it doesn't so we use "6x13bold"
instead.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=2304
about checking permissions, as the capture devices are probably
available to all users, and talking about permissions will only confuse
the user. Do, however, warn that Ethereal can't capture on Token Ring
or PPP/WAN interfaces.
On UNIX, if the attempt to open the capture device fails, and the error
message starts with "can't find PPA for ", they are probably running on
HP-UX with a version of libpcap not patched to properly look up PPAs for
network interfaces given the interface name; give them a detailed
warning about this, telling them that they'll have to fix libpcap and
build Ethereal from source, and pointing them at the "README.hpux" file.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=2265
- add <stdarg.h> or <varargs.h> in snprintf.h
and remove those inclusions in the other #ifdef NEED_SNPRINTF_H codes
- remove the check of multiple inclusions in source (.c) code
(there is a bit loss of _cpp_ performance, but I prefer the gain of
code reading and maintenance; and nowadays, disk caches and VM are
correctly optimized ;-).
- protect all (well almost) header files against multiple inclusions
- add header (i.e. GPL license) in some include files
- reorganize a bit the way header files are included:
First:
#include <system_include_files>
#include <external_package_include_files (e.g. gtk, glib etc.)>
Then
#include "ethereal_include_files"
with the correct HAVE_XXX or NEED_XXX protections.
- add some HAVE_XXX checks before including some system header files
- add the same HAVE_XXX in wiretap as in ethereal
Please forgive me, if I break something (I've only compiled and regression
tested on Linux).
svn path=/trunk/; revision=2254
capture.c :
- modified capture() to try to open an interface as a pipe if pcap_open_live()
failed, and then read data in libpcap format from this pipe ;
- add new functions used by capture() : pipe_open_live() and pipe_dispatch()
which are equivalents to the pcap_ functions.
libpcap.[ch] :
- moved the MAGIC and headers definitions from libpcap.c to libpcap.h
because capture() now needs it.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=2181
to use "warning" dialog boxes only to warn the user "if you do that, bad
things may happen" *and* to offer them the option either to drive on or
quit, so perhaps ESD_TYPE_CRIT should be used for all errors).
However, put "Ethereal: Error" rather than "Ethereal: Critical" in the
title bar, in the hopes that it'll make it clearer that Something Bad
Happened.
If the user specifies that captures should be saved to a user-specified
file rather than a temporary file, report errors trying to create that
file with "file_open_error_message()".
Make the "for_writing" argument to "file_open_error_message()" a
"gboolean", as it's either TRUE (if the file is being opened for
writing) or FALSE (if it's being opened for reading).
Report EISDIR as "XXX is a directory (folder), not a file.".
svn path=/trunk/; revision=2143
"gtk_grab_add()"; the former makes it a bit clearer what's being done,
and I think it may be considered the right way to do it (GTK+ remembers
the state of the window and appears to add and remove the grab as
appropriate).
svn path=/trunk/; revision=2113
a pointer to the "wtap_pkthdr" structure for an open capture
file;
a pointer to the "wtap_pseudo_header" union for an open capture
file;
a pointer to the packet buffer for an open capture file;
so that a program using "wtap_read()" in a loop can get at those items.
Keep, in a "capture_file" structure, an indicator of whether:
no file is open;
a file is open, and being read;
a file is open, and is being read, but the user tried to quit
out of reading the file (e.g., by doing "File/Quit");
a file is open, and has been completely read.
Abort if we try to close a capture that's being read if the user hasn't
tried to quit out of the read.
Have "File/Quit" check if a file is being read; if so, just set the
state indicator to "user tried to quit out of it", so that the code
reading the file can do what's appropriate to clean up, rather than
closing the file out from under that code and causing crashes.
Have "read_cap_file()" read the capture file with a loop using
"wtap_read()", rather than by using "wtap_loop()"; have it check after
reading each packet whether the user tried to abort the read and, if so,
close the capture and return an indication that the read was aborted by
the user. Otherwise, return an indication of whether the read
completely succeeded or failed in the middle (and, if it failed, return
the error code through a pointer).
Have "continue_tail_cap_file()" read the capture file with a loop using
"wtap_read()", rather than by using "wtap_loop()"; have it check after
reading each packet whether the user tried to abort the read and, if so,
quit the loop, and after the loop finishes (even if it read no packets),
return an indication that the read was aborted by the user if that
happened. Otherwise, return an indication of whether the read
completely succeeded or failed in the middle (and, if it failed, return
the error code through a pointer).
Have "finish_tail_cap_file()" read the capture file with a loop using
"wtap_read()", rather than by using "wtap_loop()"; have it check after
reading each packet whether the user tried to abort the read and, if so,
quit the loop, and after the loop finishes (even if it read no packets),
close the capture and return an indication that the read was aborted by
the user if that happened. Otherwise, return an indication of whether
the read completely succeeded or failed in the middle (and, if it
failed, return the error code through a pointer).
Have their callers check whether the read was aborted or not and, if it
was, bail out in the appropriate fashion (exit if it's reading a file
specified by "-r" on the command line; exit the main loop if it's
reading a file specified with File->Open; kill the capture child if it's
"continue_tail_cap_file()"; exit the main loop if it's
"finish_tail_cap_file()".
svn path=/trunk/; revision=2095
make it easier to use grep to find all references to it without getting
a lot of false hits and to check, after allocating the memory chunk for
"frame_data" structures, that the allocation succeeded.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=2092
(the ip_tcp_options stuff is still non-tvbuff until I convert ip and tcp).
Add preliminary fix for Linux ISDN ippp devices (similar watch was posted
to ethereal-users, but did not use tvbuffs).
Change packet-raw.c to call capture_ppp()/dissect_ppp() in the case
where the frame starts with FF:03. We had been calling
capture_ip()/dissect_ip() at byte offset 4, but I think this is for
historical reasons of packet-raw.c and packet-ip.c existing before
packet-ppp.c.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=1998
"capture()" should ensure that it's closed before returning, but
it was only getting closed by "wtap_dump_close()" on success, so
close the raw FD on failure (no "wtap_dump" stream is opened on
failure, so we just close the raw FD);
in a "update the display as packets arrive" capture, we should
close the FD in the parent as soon as the fork is done, before
even testing whether the fork succeeded (and we might as well do
the same with the write side of the sync pipe).
svn path=/trunk/; revision=1988
there's no need to keep it around in memory - when the frame data is
read in when handing a frame, read in the information, if any, necessary
to reconstruct the frame header, and reconstruct it. This saves some
memory.
This requires that the seek-and-read function be implemented inside
Wiretap, and that the Wiretap handle remain open even after we've
finished reading the file sequentially.
This also points out that we can't really do X.25-over-Ethernet
correctly, as we don't know where the direction (DTE->DCE or DCE->DTE)
flag is stored; it's not clear how the Ethernet type 0x0805 for X.25
Layer 3 is supposed to be handled in any case. We eliminate
X.25-over-Ethernet support (until we find out what we're supposed to
do).
svn path=/trunk/; revision=1975
child process send to the parent a message indicating why it failed, so
that the parent can report that, and then exit.
If the attempt to create the child process to run Ethereal fails, pop up
a dialog box indicating that this happened.
Change the fork code a bit, to make it easier to substitute, on Win32
systems, code that does a "CreateProcess()" for the small chunk of code
that does the fork and exec.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=1910
properly handle ASCII vs. Unicode in the list of interfaces;
initialize Winsock before starting a capture, so that the code
in the Win32 libpcap to get the IP address and netmask by
translating the host name to an IP address works.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=1737
routine to be called every time a new capture file is opened instead of
calling it in read_cap_file() and do_capture().
svn path=/trunk/; revision=1651
This function is used to re-initialize the hash table used by the X.25
dissector to record the upper layer protocol used by each VC. The hash
table should be re-initialized each time we read / start a new capture.
I moved the definition of the function from packet.h to packet-x25.h, and
added calls to reinit_x25_hashtable() in read_cap_file (file.c) and
do_capture (capture.c).
svn path=/trunk/; revision=1644
This change allows you to add a new packet-*.c file and not cause a
recompilation of everything that #include's packet.h
Add the plugin_api.[ch] files ot the plugins/Makefile.am packaging list.
Add #define YY_NO_UNPUT 1 to the lex source so that the yyunput symbol
is not defined, squelching a compiler complaint when compiling the generated
C file.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=1637
timeval" (if, say, it's a "struct bpf_timeval", with member sizes wired
to 32 bits, as it appears to be in SuSE 6.3 and will, I think, be in the
0.5 release of libpcap), copy the members of that field to the "ts"
field of the Wiretap per-packet header (which also lets us make it not a
"struct timeval" as well).
svn path=/trunk/; revision=1572
whether we're building a protocol tree or not.
Make "dissect_eth()" use "BYTES_ARE_IN_FRAME()" to see if we have a full
Ethernet header - it can be called with a non-zero offset, if Ethernet
frames are encapsulated inside other frames (e.g., ATM LANE).
Make capture routines take an "offset" argument if the corresponding
dissect routine takes one (for symmetry, and for Cisco ISL or any other
protocol that encapsulates Ethernet or Token-Ring frames inside other
frames).
Pass the frame lengths to capture routines via the "pi" structure,
rather than as an in-line argument, so that they can macros such as
"BYTES_ARE_IN_FRAME()" the way the corresponding dissect routines do.
Make capture routines update "pi.len" and "pi.captured_len" the same way
the corresponding diseect routines do, if the capture routines then call
other capture routines.
Make "capture_vlan()" count as "other" frames that are too short, the
way other capture routines do.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=1525
update their libpcap probably isn't going to scale - the increasing
frequency with which "Ethereal hangs when I try to capture packets"
shows up on "ethereal-dev" suggests that, unless and until a libpcap
with the "select()" in it becomes ubiquitous on Linux, that'll be the
source of a constant support burden - so we'll just put the "select()"
in Ethereal if it's being built for Linux.
(Putting it in for platforms where the read timeout argument to
"pcap_open_live()" works adds an extra useless system call at best and,
at worst, could make Ethereal not work - "select()" doesn't work on
"/dev/bpf" devices on FreeBSD 3.3, at least, unless you're in "immediate
mode", and, whilst "immediate mode" would make Ethereal respond more
quickly when packets arrive, it might cause Ethereal to respond too
quickly, doing reads for every new packet rather than waiting for
multiple packets to arrive and reading them all with one "read()", which
appears to be at least part of the intent of the read timeout on
"/dev/bpf" devices in BSD.)
svn path=/trunk/; revision=1451
of routines to enable and disable various sets of menu items; call only
those routines, not routines to enable or disable particular menu items,
from files in the top-level directory, as other UIs may not refer to
menu items with path strings of the sort used in GTK+, and as this
buries knowledge of the menu items available in "gtk/menu.c" rather than
requiring stuff outside of "gtk/menu.c" to know what menu items exist.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=1410
into "gtk/ui_util.c", and move the declarations of those UI utilities
out of "util.h" into "ui_util.h". (The header file is in the top-level
directory, rather than the "gtk" directory, because it declares
window-system-independent interfaces to routines with
window-system-dependent implementations.)
Add to "gtk/ui_util.c" a routine to set the window and icon title.
Use that routine to make the title of an Ethereal top-level window be
{filename} - Ethereal
if there's a capture open, and have "{filename}" be "<capture>" if it's
a temporary capture file.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=1255
packets that are currently being displayed from that capture.
Centralize the code to control whether "File:Save" and "File:Save As"
are enabled (and *always* have "File:Save As" enabled if you have a
capture; "File:Save" is enabled only if you have a live capture you've
not yet saved, although it does the same thing as "File:Save As").
Have the "save_file" member of a "capture_file" structure represent
*only* the file currently being *written* to by a capture, and, if there
is no capture currently in progress, have it be NULL; the name of the
file currently being *displayed" is in the "filename" member, and an
"is_tempfile" member indicates whether it's a temporary file for a live
capture or not.
Have "close_cap_file()" delete the current capture file if it's a
temporary capture file that hasn't been saved (in its entirety - saving
selected frames doesn't count). Do the same (if there *is* a current
capture file) when exiting.
The "Ready to load or capture" message is the only statusbar message in
the "main" context; "close_cap_file()" should never pop it, it should
only pop whatever message exists in the "file" context, and thus has no
need to take, as an argument, the context for the message it should pop.
Update the man page to reflect the new behavior of "File:Save" and
"File:Save As", and to reflect recent changes to "Display:Match Selected".
svn path=/trunk/; revision=1170
"capture.c", along with the other code that deals with the sync pipe.
Close the sync pipe, and get rid of the temporary capture file, on
errors.
Split "tail_cap_file()" into routines to set up to read from the capture
file, to read a specified number of packets from it when told to do so
by the child process, and to read the rest of the capture file and
finish up the capture, to provide the code in "capture.c" the hooks it
needs.
Have a common routine to set the status bar to report the file name and
number of dropped packets, to use both when reading in a capture file in
its entirety all at once and when done with a "read it while the capture
is writing to it" live capture.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=1137
we put up a special error, just use "wtap_strerror()" to generate the
error message - it'll handle both "errno" errors and Wiretap-specific
errors.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=1108
from "globals.h" to "capture.h".
Only "capture.c" needs to include <pcap.h>; move the include of <pcap.h>
from "capture.h" to "capture.c".
We no longer need any DLT_ defines (that's handled inside Wiretap);
remove the defines of DLT_ from "capture.h".
svn path=/trunk/; revision=753
file to which to write the capture; if it's NULL, create a temporary
file and use that.
Have "-w" set a local variable, which starts out null, and, for "-k"
captures, call "do_capture()" and pass it that local variable as an
argument; this lets you do "-k" without "-w", which makes it use a
temporary file for the capture.
This means "run_capture()" no longer serves a useful purpose, as its
only caller is "do_capture()"; swallow it into "do_capture()".
svn path=/trunk/; revision=748
capture is done; make it do so, and don't bother passing it a "-Q" flag
to tell it to do so.
"capture()" is called in two places; in one place, it's in a child
process, and it shouldn't read in the capture file. Move the reading of
the capture file out of "capture()" itself to the place where we
*should* read in the capture file after it returns. Also, have it
return an indication of whether it succeeded or failed, so we know
whether we should read in the capture file.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=747
"quit_after_cap", and "capture_child" from "gtk/main.c" to "capture.c",
so that the definitions don't have to be duplicated in "main.c" for
other UIs if, as, and when we do versions of Ethereal with other UIs.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=746
process for a sync mode or fork mode capture.
Have that flag control whether we do things that *only* the parent or
*only* the child should do, rather than basing it solely on the setting
of "sync_mode" or "fork_mode" (or, in the case of stuff done in the
child process either in sync mode or fork mode, rather than basing it on
the setting of those flags at all).
Split "do_capture()" into a "run_capture()" routine that starts a
capture (possibly by forking off and execing a child process, if we're
supposed to do sync mode or fork mode captures), and that assumes the
file to which the capture is to write has already been opened and that
"cf.save_file_fd" is the file descriptor for that file, and a
"do_capture()" routine that creates a temporary file, getting an FD for
it, and calls "run_capture()".
Use "run_capture()", rather than "capture()", for "-k" captures, so that
it'll do the capture in a child process if "-S" or "-F" was specified
("do_capture()" won't do because "-k" captures should write to the file
specified by the "-w" flag, not some random temporary file).
For child process captures, however, just use "capture()" - the child
process shouldn't itself fork off a child if we're in sync or fork mode,
and should just write to the file whose file descriptor was specified by
the "-W" flag on the command line.
All this allows you to do "ethereal -S -w <file> -i <interface> -k" to
start a sync mode capture from the command line.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=740
popped up the top-level window (so that it looks like a capture
started from "Capture/Start");
initialized the colors (so that we don't dump core when reading
in the capture file);
popped up any message box for failure to read the preferences
file.
This means we start the capture in "main()", rather than in the realize
callback for the main window, so get rid of that callback.
If we're a child process that's just capturing to a file for our parent
to read, however, we shouldn't pop up the top-level window, because
that's our parent's job; when running that child, set its "argv[0]" to a
special name, so that
1) it shows up in a "ps" with a special name;
2) we don't have to invent Yet Another Flag to say "you're the
child".
(We may want to use the name to turn on *all* behaviors that the capture
child, and only the capture child, should exhibit.)
If "-w" and "-k" were both specified, attempt to open the file specified
by "-w" and, if that succeeds, set "cf.save_file_fd" to refer to it, so
that "-w" plus "-k" works again, rather than popping up a "The file to
which the capture would be saved ... could not be opened: Bad file
descriptor." message box.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=739
us, at that point, a character with the 8th bit set) complaint about a
"char" array subscript in an "isdigit()" call by making the character
unsigned.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=724
current capture file if it's a temporary file, out of paranoia (so that
we don't get into a state where we have a capture file open but unlinked
- it's probably harmless to be in that state, as the file will remain
around until close, modulo NFS fun, and we may never be in that state
for very long, but I'd rather have it obviously stated in the code).
Remove the close in "capture()", and put one before the other call to
"capture()", in "main_realize_cb()" (is that call necessary, e.g. if you
pass "-r <filename>" *and* "-k", for some perverse reason, as
command-line arguments?).
If "cf.save_file" is non-null, free it before setting it, regardless of
whether it refers to a temporary file name or not.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=712
list of packets in real time" in the "Capture/Start" dialog box,
"ethereal -F" won't work - you get your choice of non-forked capture or
"-S".
Don't have "fork_mode" track "sync_mode"; instead, in those places where
we check for "fork_mode", check for "sync_mode" as well.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=711
child will nuke that file before we get to open the capture in
"tail_cap_file()" - assuming we do, because the capture may not start.
If we fail while writing to, or closing, a capture file we've opened for
writing, don't treat that as a capture error, as we may have saved at
least some packets to the capture file (that's the way it worked before
my recent checkins).
svn path=/trunk/; revision=710
and to fork off and run a separate copy of "ethereal" for "-S" and "-F"
captures or just call "capture()" otherwise, out of "gtk/capture_dlg.c"
and into a routine in "capture.c".
If the attempt to create said temporary capture file fails, pop up a
dialog box and don't do the capture.
Have the child capture process send a message upstream after it either
successfully starts the capture and syncs out the header of the capture
file, or fails to start the capture; the message indicates whether it
succeeded or failed, and, if it failed, includes a failure message.
This:
avoids the use of a signal, and thus means we don't have to
worry about whether to capture the signal, or whether to start
or stop capturing depending on whether this particular capture
is in sync mode or not;
lets us pop up the message box for the error in the parent
process if we're in sync mode, rather than doing it in the
child, which didn't work well.
Add a check button to the Capture/Start dialog box, so that we can
control, for each capture, whether it's to be done in sync mode or not.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=708
now in "gtk/capture_dlg.c" - so it doesn't need to include
<sys/sockio.h> on, for example, Solaris...
...but "gtk/capture_dlg.c" does need to include it.
"gtk/capture_dlg.c" also may need to include "snprintf.h", as it uses
"snprintf()".
svn path=/trunk/; revision=655
box interfaces we can't open; this filters out loopback interfaces on
e.g. Solaris (which you can't get at with a DLPI device, so you can't
capture traffic on them), and also means we don't report *any*
interfaces if you don't have permission to open any (which means you
don't have permission to capture packets).
If we don't find any interfaces, pop up a message box saying so.
Free up the interface "ioctl" buffer, and close the socket we were
using, before returning from "get_interface_list()".
If "get_interface_list()" returns a null pointer (meaning it failed),
don't pop up the "capture" dialog box.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=634
"FDDI with the MAC addresses bit-swapped"; whether the MAC addresses are
bit-swapped is a property of the machine on which the capture was taken,
not of the machine on which the capture is being read - right now, none
of the capture file formats we read indicate whether FDDI MAC addresses
are bit-swapped, but this does let us treat non-"libpcap" captures as
being bit-swapped or not bit-swapped independent of the machine on which
they're being read (and of the machine on which they were captured, but
I have the impression they're bit-swapped on most platforms), and allows
us to, if, as, and when we implement packet capture in Wiretap, mark
packets in a capture file written in Wiretap-native format based on the
machine on which they are captured (assuming the rule "Ultrix, Alpha,
and BSD/OS are the only platforms that don't bit-swap", or some other
compile-time rule, gets the right answer, or that some platform has
drivers that can tell us whether the addresses are bit-swapped).
(NOTE: if, for any of the capture file formats used only on one
platform, FDDI MAC addresses aren't bit-swapped, the code to read that
capture file format should be fixed to flag them as not bit-swapped.)
Use the encapsulation type to decide whether to bit-swap addresses in
"dissect_fddi()".
svn path=/trunk/; revision=557
Get rid of WTAP_ENCAP_NONE; replace it with WTAP_ENCAP_UNKNOWN, which
means "I can't handle that file, it's using an encapsulation I don't
support".
Check for encapsulations we don't support, and return an error (as is
already done in "libpcap.c").
Check for too-large packet sizes, and return an error (as is already
done in "libpcap.c").
Print unsigned quantities in Wiretap messages with "%u", not "%d".
svn path=/trunk/; revision=544
and in different capture files; throw in some heuristics to try to
figure out whether the 4-byte header is:
1) PPP-over-HDLC (some version of ISDN4BSD?);
2) big-endian AF_ value (BSD on big-endian platforms);
3) little-endian AF_ value (BSD on little-endian platforms);
4) two octets of 0 followed by an Ethernet type (Linux, at least
on little-endian platforms, as mutated by "libpcap").
Make a separate Wiretap encapsulation type, WTAP_ENCAP_NULL,
corresponding to DLT_NULL.
Have the PPP code dissect the frame if it's PPP-over-HDLC, and have
"ethertype()" dissect the Ethernet type and the rest of the packet if
it's a Linux-style header; dissect it ourselves only if it's an AF_
value.
Have Wiretap impose a maximum packet size of 65535 bytes, so that it
fails more gracefully when handed a corrupt "libpcap" capture file
(other capture file formats with more than a 16-bit capture length
field, if any, will have that check added later), and put that size in
"wtap.h" and have Ethereal use it as its notion of a maximum packet
size.
Have Ethereal put up a "this file appears to be damaged or corrupt"
message box if Wiretap returns a WTAP_ERR_BAD_RECORD error when opening
or reading a capture file.
Include loopback interfaces in the list of interfaces offered by the
"Capture" dialog box, but put them at the end of the list so that it
doesn't default to a loopback interface unless there are no other
interfaces. Also, don't require that an interface in the list have an
IP address associated with it, and only put one entry in the list for a
given interface (SIOCGIFCONF returns one entry per interface *address*,
not per *interface* - and even if you were to use only IP addresses, an
interface could conceivably have more than one IP address).
Exclusively use Wiretap encapsulation types internally, even when
capturing; don't use DLT_ types.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=540
return 1 on success, -1 if they got an error, and 0 if the file isn't of
the type that file is checking for, and supply an error code if they
return -1; have "wtap_open_offline()" use that error code. Also, have
the per-capture-file-type open routines treat errors accessing the file
as errors, and return -1, rather than just returning 0 so that we try
another file type.
Have the per-capture-file-type read routines "wtap_loop()" calls return
-1 and supply an error code on error (and not, as they did in some
cases, call "g_error()" and abort), and have "wtap_loop()", if the read
routine returned an error, return FALSE (and pass an error-code-pointer
argument onto the read routines, so they fill it in), and return TRUE on
success.
Add some new error codes for them to return.
Now that "wtap_loop()" can return a success/failure indication and an
error code, in "read_cap_file()" put up a message box if we get an error
reading the file, and return the error code.
Handle the additional errors we can get when opening a capture file.
If the attempt to open a capture file succeeds, but the attempt to read
it fails, don't treat that as a complete failure - we may have managed
to read some of the capture file, and we should display what we managed
to read.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=516
can't translate the encapsulation type, it should return an
encapsulation type; we add a new one, WTAP_ENCAP_UNKNOWN. and have it
return that.
Have "capture()" handle "wtap_pcap_encap_to_wtap_encap()" returning that
encapsulation type (if it happens, we need to add a new Wiretap
encapsulation type to handle the new "libpcap" encapsulation type).
svn path=/trunk/; revision=513
for errors when closing a file to which we've written packets (we don't
bother checking if we're giving up on a capture).
Add some more error checks in Wiretap.
Make a single list of all Wiretap error codes, giving them all different
values (some can be returned by more than one routine, so they shouldn't
be per-routine).
svn path=/trunk/; revision=510
write them in "libpcap" format, but the mechanism can have other formats
added.
When creating the temporary file for a capture, use "create_tempfile()",
to close a security hole opened by the fact that "tempnam()" creates a
temporary file, but doesn't open it, and we open the file with the name
it gives us - somebody could remove the file and plant a link to some
file, and, if as may well be the case when Ethereal is capturing
packets, it's running as "root", that means we write a capture on top of
that file.... (The aforementioned changes to Wiretap let you open a
capture file for writing given an file descriptor, "fdopen()"-style,
which this change requires.)
svn path=/trunk/; revision=509
that means it destroys any read filter we had, so we don't need to
destroy it in "capture()" after "open_cap_file()" succeeds.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=498
want to read the next file with the same filter that you used on the
last file.
In the "File/Open" dialog box, parse the read filter before trying to
open the file, and if the parse fails, leave the dialog box up so the
user still has the filter and file name around and can try to fix the
problem.
Keep the compiled read filter attached to the "capture_file" structure,
so you don't have to reparse it on a "File/Reload".
svn path=/trunk/; revision=497
it's called after "open_cap_file()" has been called, and is always
passed the file name passed to "open_cap_file()", and that file name is
stored as "cf->filename", so "read_cap_file()" can just use
"cf->filename" as the pathname of the file.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=494
The former, which used to be called by "load_cap_file()", now just opens
the file and, if the open succeeds, closes any capture file we
previously had open, reinitializes any protocols that need
reinitialization, and saves information about the new capture file in
the "capture_file" structure to which it was passed a pointer. The
latter reads the file already opened by "read_cap_file()".
For "File/Open", call "open_cap_file()" before dismissing the file
selection box; if it fails, "open_cap_file()" will have popped up a
message box complaining about it - just return, leaving the file
selection box open so the user can, after dismissing the message box,
either try again with a different file name, or dismiss the file
selection box. (Other file selection boxes should be made to work the
same way.) If "open_cap_file()" succeeds, dismiss the file selection
box, and read the capture file in.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=492
- when in a live capture mode no packet is received
during a timeout, the displayer process is notified
about any remaining captured packets. Note that this
fix works on Linux only with a patched libpcap.
- remove unnecessary time() call and sync_time
loop_data field.
Thanks to John McDermott for his help during fixing
and testing.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=464
the "Open File" dialog box (the "Open File" dialog box equivalent of the
"-R" flag). Have "load_cap_file()" take the filter expression as an
argument, and make the global "rfilter" into a member of a
"capture_file" structure.
When reading a temporary capture file after a live capture, don't apply
any filter.
Move the code that pops up error boxes on file opens when reading a
capture file back to "load_cap_file()"; it also pops up error boxes if
the filter expression can't be parsed.
Don't enable "File/Save" or "File/Save As..." if an attempt to read a
capture file fails - if there was already an open capture file, it was
closed by "load_cap_file()", so we no longer have an open file to save.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=460
call to pcap_dump_open. This allows us to control the readability of the
temporary trace file, and avoid a race condition in which a user could
open the trace file after the pcap_dump_open() call and the subsequent
chmod() call.
Thanks to Jeorg for pointing for pointing out the race condition.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=421
read the trace. We chmod() after pcap creates the file, but before it actually
writes data there. Thanks to Frederic Peters <fpeters@multimania.com>,
the Debian maintainer of Ethereal, for pointing this out.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=413
- read only the real number of packets that have been written
by the child process. That's avoid incomplete packet read.
- special timeout handling no more necessary and the whole
real time capture and display behavior is much more
satisfying with this patch.
- wiretap modified to allow the reading of 'count' packets
with wtap_loop.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=398
you have a capture.
Leave the job of enabling and disabling menu items that make sense only
if you have a capture (except for "File/Save" and "File/Save As...", for
now) up to "load_cap_file()", "close_cap_file()", and the like - don't
scatter that stuff throughout the code.
Disable "File/Print Packet" if no packet is selected; enable it only if
a packet is selected.
If there's a selected packet, and a display filter is run:
if the selected packet passed the filter, re-select it;
if the selected packet didn't pass the filter, un-select it.
If we've opened a live "pcap" capture, but can't do the capture because
we can't get the netmask info, or can't parse the capture filter string,
or can't install the filter, close the live capture and the dump and
delete the dump file.
If we failed to open a live "pcap" capture, don't try to read the
capture file - it doesn't exist.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=384
capture to a file or printer. This should eventually get the ability to
print either all the packets or only the packets selected by the display
filter, and possibly also the ability to print only packets M through N.
Get rid of "cur" member of "capture_file" structure; nobody used it.
There's no need to pass a pointer to a "dialog_button" variable to
"simple_dialog()" for the error boxes displayed if a file copy or move
fails; that dialog box is just a message box and has only an "OK"
button.
Put the declaration of "prefs" into "prefs.h".
svn path=/trunk/; revision=378
(this assumes that "libpcap" writes out the header as soon as that
happens, which is the case for "libpcap" 0.4), we sync it out (to make
sure said header is in the file), and signal the parent process, so that
it opens the capture file and updates its windows to indicate that the
capture is in progress.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=371
display filter code, which uses features in GLIB-1.2.x), I removed
the vestigial code supporting old 1.0.x and 1.1.x GTK+ versions.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=360
doesn't link with libpcap, so no packet captures can be made. The
"--disable-pcap" option has been added to the configure script. Docs
have been updated. And the string buffer size in the simple_dialog()
has been doubled so that Johan's e-mail address in the "About" dialogue
window doesn't get chopped off.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=351
NetMon statistic packets for now. We might fix that problem with wiretap,
either filtering out those packets, and/or providing the summary
information through a new wiretap API.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=326
why I had to swap fields (data = w) in some of the callback functions when
I added support for gtk+-1.1. Because of the use of gtk_signal_connect_object,
the wrong value was being sent to the callback function. We were just lucky
that with gtk+-1.0 it worked.
gtk_signal_connect_object is for use with callbacks that take one argument.
gtk_signal_connect is for use with callbacks that take two arguments.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=324
is the same as "Tools/Capture", and "Display" has an "Options" item,
which pops up a dialog box to let you change the "default" time-stamp
column display format on the fly (the "default" is what the "-t"
command-line option sets), and have the display change when you do that.
Made infrastructure changes to make the immediate display update work.
Removed some unused functions, declared some functions used only in the
file in which they're defined "static", and removed some unnecessary
#includes.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=317
influence came from
http://developer.apple.com/techpubs/mac/HIGuidelines/HIGuidelines-232.html
which has a section on dialog box and alert box messages. However,
we're largely dealing with technoids, not with The Rest Of Us, so I
didn't go as far as one perhaps should.)
Unfortunately, it looks like it's a bit more work to arrange that, if
you give a bad file name to the "-r" flag, the dialog box pop up only
*after* the main window pops up - it has the annoying habit of popping
up *before* the main window pops up, and sometimes getting *obscured* by
it, when I do that. The removal of the dialog box stuff from
"load_cap_file()" was intended to facilitate that work. (It might also
be nice if, when an open from the "File/Open" menu item fails, we keep
the file selection box open, and give the user a chance to correct
typos, choose another file name, etc.)
svn path=/trunk/; revision=310
of the packet count combo box; there's no need to do so (we don't
remember the string, just its value when converted to a number), and, as
we don't free what "g_strdup()" returns, and don't remember it to save
it later, we leak memory.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=302
dialog box, put "0 (Infinite)" first, so that we default to that rather
than to the number of packets in the last capture we read.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=300
a random name chosen by tempnam(), unknown to the user. If the user decides to save that
trace, he then uses File | Save to save it to a file. File | Save As lets him make a copy
of his named trace file as well. I also updated my e-mail address in the various credit
locations.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=242
wiretap and gtk+-1.1.x. I also added an #include to util.c to keep
it from complaining about a lack of a definition of vsnprintf when
compiling with gtk+-1.1.x.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=136
Tests for GTK versions are done during compilation, not during "./configure".
The big problems have been taken care of in this patch (functional change
in the packet clist and conversion of menu_factory to item_factory), but
plenty of smaller problems with dialogue boxes abound. I have fixed
a small problem with file_open*(), but have left 2 comments in just in case
I'm not going about this the right way. Can someone verify?
svn path=/trunk/; revision=127
macro (modeled after similar macros provided with "autoconf") to check
whether "struct sockaddr" has an "sa_len" member, and defines or
undefines "HAVE_SA_LEN" appropriately. Use it instead of
"AC_LBL_SOCKADDR_SA_LEN", and use "HAVE_SA_LEN" instead of
"HAVE_SOCKADDR_SA_LEN".
svn path=/trunk/; revision=96
forgot that CVS, unlike Perforce, doesn't let you edit the list of files
it gives you in the editor and cause those files *not* to be committed,
it requires you to specify the files to be committed if you only want
some files committed.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=92
That requires that, in the packet-reading loop, we pass to the callback
routine the offset in the file of a packet's data, because we can no
longer compute that offset by subtracting the size of the captured
packet data from the offset in the file after the data was read -
"snoop" may stick padding in after the packet data to align packet
headers on 4-byte boundaries.
Doing that required that we arrange that we do that for "libpcap"
capture files as well; the cleanest way to do that was to write our own
code for reading "libpcap" capture files, rather than using the
"libpcap" code to do it.
Make "wtap_dispatch_cb()" and "pcap_dispatch_cb()" static to "file.c",
as they're not used elsewhere.
If we're using wiretap, don't define in "file.h" stuff used only when
we're not using wiretap.
Update the wiretap README to reflect Gilbert's and my recent changes.
Clean up some memory leaks in "wiretap/lanalyzer.c" and
"wiretap/ngsniffer.c", where the capture-file-format-specific data
wasn't freed if the open failed.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=91
1) renaming "snprintf.h" to "snprintf-imp.h" (it contains stuff
used by the "snprintf()" *implementation*, but not stuff it
*exports*);
2) creating a new "snprintf.h" to declare "vsnprintf()" and
"snprintf()";
3) removing an unused variable;
4) fixing a call to "add_item_to_tree()" to handle the
possibility of "ntohl()" returning a "long" rather than an
"int".
svn path=/trunk/; revision=47
- Separated display and capture filters; rearranged some of the look and feel
- Lots of other miscellaneous fixes and updates
svn path=/trunk/; revision=38
window. Added basic counter (%) hooks for all currently supported base protocols.
OSPF Counter added as an example.
All of this has mainly cosmetic purposes.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=34
generalizes the column printing code, adds a "frame" tree item to
the tree view, and fixes a bunch of miscellaneous coding bugs.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=31