common parts to common.nsh. Creating an installer now requires two
NSIS runs:
- uninstaller.nsi, which creates an installer (uninstall_installer.exe)
that only writes uninstall.exe to ../../wireshark-gtk2.
- wireshark.nsi, which bundles uninstall.exe along with the rest of
our installation files.
If we ever get around to signing our executables this will let us sign
all of them. It also cleans up the .nsi file contents a bit.
Instead of keeping separate list of file extensions, manage them from
a single macro. Print the extensions we register / deregister in the
detail pane.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=43236
keys. Sort the keys by name. Calculate the installation size after all
of the files have been installed and add that in the "EstimatedSize"
key. Fix the display icon. Add a hint about our target platform. Add
version information.
We now look like a grown-up application in the Programs and Features
control panel.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=41914
Alcatel (now Alcatel-Lucent) buy Xylan in 1999...
And now Attributs RADIUS is used in Alcatel-Lucent Omniswitch Product.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=41474
Cisco and Vodafone Diameter AVP:s
I have axtracted the relevant vendor AVP:s and separated them out in Vendor specific xml files.
Part of https://bugs.wireshark.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=5972
svn path=/trunk/; revision=37627
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
New dissector (plugin) to support decode of the EPCglobal Low-Level Reader
protocol (see llrp.org for more information). This dissector has passed fuzz
testing.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=33088
Add tools/textify.sh, which makes a Notepad-clickable copy of a text
file. Use it for COPYING, NEWS, README, README.windows, and help/*.txt.
Remove tools/unix2dos.pl and use Cygwin's u2d instead.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=32440
(real and simulated) BMW cars for all kinds of gadget communication.
My plugin only dissects the high level infrastructure and not any particular
messages. It uses a heuristic dissector to detect INTERLINK packets.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=32202