Consistently speak of "UNIX-compatible systems" when comparing UN*Xes
and Windows, and, the first time we mention "UNIX-compatible systems" in
a section or a list item, enumerate the not-dead-or-moribund ones.
(HP-UX is deemed moribund given that Itanium processors are no longer
being manufactured and HPE are apparently not porting HP-UX to x86-64,
choosing instead to run HP-UX Itanium applications in a compatibility
environment under Linux on x86-64.)
For the -D option, don't bother mentioning ifconfig -a or ip link show,
as there's no reason not to use -D if you want to know what you can
caputre on - for one thing, -D may list devices *other* than the network
interfaces listed by ifconfig -a or ip link show. In addition, don't
speak of code testing whether the interface can be opened, as recent
versions of libpcap don't check that, and neither do any of the programs
in the Wireshark release. (This was done so that, if there's an
itnerface that shows up in the enumeration but that can't be opened,
it'll be offered to the user, and they'll get a message if they try to
capture on it, indicating either that they need to somehow get the
necessary permissions or should report a bug.)
For the -i option, don't mention ifconfig -a or ip link show, as the
user should, again, use -D.
Give more detail when describing files and directories under the global
or personal preferences directory, calling out macOS specially for the
global preferences directory, as it's in the app bundle, and taking into
account that Wireshark might be installed under /usr rather than
/usr/local (for example, if it's installed from a package that's part of
a Linux distribution).
Replace the "Overrides XXX' description of some environment variables
with a more verbose description similar to what's used for other
environment variables.
Add docs/diagnostic-options.adoc, which is a snippet that documents our
various --log-* options. Include it in the dumpcap, rawshark, and tshark
man pages.
Make the ws_log_print_usage output more consistent.
Repeated words were found with:
egrep "(\b[a-zA-Z]+) +\1\b" . -Ir
and then manually reviewed.
Non-displayed strings (e.g., in comments)
were also corrected, to ease future review.
Move our attributes.adoc includes to the very top of each man page.
Older versions of Asciidoctor complain if it's not at the top. and
additionally generate <file>.man instead of <file>.<section> if we don't
explictly supply an output file.
Remove pod2adoc.py since it's no longer needed. Add versions to the
Wireshark, TShark, and Dumpcap man pages. Use definition lists in the
TShark glossary descriptions. Other minor fixes.
Convert doc/*.pod to Asciidoctor. This:
* Means we use the same markup for our man pages, the guides, and
release notes.
* Lets us add versions to our man pages.
* Gives us more formatting options, e.g. AsciiDoc supports `commands`,
nested lists and makes it easy to include version information. The
manpage backend doesn't seem to support tables very well,
unfortunately.
Convert our CMake configuration to produce *roff and html man pages
using Asciidoctor. Add a "manarg" block macro which makes our synopses
wrap correctly.
Similar to the release notes, guides, and FAQ, if Asciidoctor isn't
found the man pages won't be generated or installed.
Move Asciidoctor to the list of package build dependencies in various
places.
This commit includes the conversion script (pod2adoc.py), which will be
removed later.
Line count sanity check:
Man page .pod .adoc
androiddump 260 280
asn2deb 93 105
capinfos 401 471
captype 54 55
ciscodump 241 269
dftest 42 42
dpauxmon 153 169
dumpcap 464 534
editcap 528 583
etwdump 136 156
extcap 157 181
idl2deb 91 103
idl2wrs 120 100
mergecap 206 207
mmdbresolve 75 75
randpkt 107 111
randpktdump 158 184
rawshark 558 610
reordercap 76 78
sdjournal 145 157
sshdump 272 302
text2pcap 274 312
tshark 2135 2360
udpdump 133 151
wireshark-filter 486 479
wireshark 2967 3420