wtap_file_read_expected_bytes() from an open routine - open routines are
supposed to return -1 on error, 0 if the file doesn't appear to be a
file of the specified type, or 1 if the file does appear to be a file of
the specified type, but those macros will cause the caller to return
FALSE on errors (so that, even if there's an I/O error, it reports "the
file isn't a file of the specified type" rather than "we got an error
trying to read the file").
When doing reads in an open routine before we've concluded that the file
is probably of the right type, return 0, rather than -1, if we get
WTAP_ERR_SHORT_READ - if we don't have enough data to check whether a
file is of a given type, we should keep trying other types, not give up.
For reads done *after* we've concluded the file is probably of the right
type, if a read doesn't return the number of bytes we asked for, but
returns an error of 0, return WTAP_ERR_SHORT_READ - the file is
apparently cut short.
For NetMon and NetXRay/Windows Sniffer files, use a #define for the
magic number size, and use that for both magic numbers.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=46803
which could use lseek() and were thus expensive due to system call
overhead. To avoid making a system call for every packet on a
sequential read, we maintained a data_offset field in the wtap structure
for sequential reads.
It's now a routine that just returns information from the FILE_T data
structure, so it's cheap. Use it, rather than maintaining the data_offset
field.
Readers for some file formats need to maintain file offset themselves;
have them do so in their private data structures.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=42423
by Wiretap, to indicate whether certain fields in that structure
actually have data in them.
Use the "time stamp present" flag to omit showing time stamp information
for packets (and "packets") that don't have time stamps; don't bother
working very hard to "fake" a time stamp for data files.
Use the "interface ID present" flag to omit the interface ID for packets
that don't have an interface ID.
We don't use the "captured length, separate from packet length, present"
flag to omit the captured length; that flag might be present but equal
to the packet length, and if you want to know if a packet was cut short
by a snapshot length, comparing the values would be the way to do that.
More work is needed to have wiretap/pcapng.c properly report the flags,
e.g. reporting no time stamp being present for a Simple Packet Block.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=41185
same.
Add to wiretap/pcap-common.c a routine to fill in the pseudo-header for
ATM (by looking at the VPI, VCI, and packet data, and guessing) and
Ethernet (setting the FCS length appropriately). Use it for both pcap
and pcap-ng files.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=38840
by the gunzipping code. Have it also supply a err_info string, and
report it. Have file_error() supply an err_info string.
Put "the file" - or, for WTAP_ERR_DECOMPRESS, "the compressed file", to
suggest a decompression error - into the rawshark and tshark errors,
along the lines of what other programs print.
Fix a case in the Netscaler code where we weren't fetching the error
code on a read failure.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=36748
file_read(buf, bsize, count, file) macro is compilant with fread
function and takes elements count+ size of each element, however to make
it compilant with gzread() it always returns number of bytes.
In wiretap file_read() this is not really used, file_read is called
either with bsize set to 1 or count to 1.
Attached patch remove bsize argument from macro.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=36491
wtap-int.h, and change the unions of pointers to those private data
structures into just void *'s.
Have the generic wtap close routine free up the private data, rather
than the type-specific close routine, just as the wtap_dumper close
routine does for its private data. Get rid of close routines that don't
do anything any more.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=32015
Use G_GINT64_CONSTANT() to make a 64-bit integral constant; not all
compilers we use support LL as a suffix for that (MSVC++ 6, for one).
svn path=/trunk/; revision=22580
static to the module.
Add the older(?) ID tag for MPEG audio.
Just use the ID at the beginning to identify MPEG audio files; don't
check the file any further.
If the read of the magic number doesn't work, get the error, and, if
there is no error (i.e., it's a short read), just return 0 (meaning "no
error, but this isn't that type of file).
Similarly, if the magic number doesn't match, just return 0, so other
types of file are tried.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=21192