0. Abstract Wireshark's user interface is showing its age. While GTK+ is wonderful on Linux and BSD its low-tier status on Windows and even-lower-tier status on OS X makes it hard to deliver a good product to users on those platforms. The Qt port is an attempt at an updated UI which will better serve our users and let us add features more easily. 1. Getting up and running The Qt interface for Wireshark has been compiled and tested on Mac OS X 10.8 (XCode LLVM/clang), Windows 7 x86 (Visual C++ 2010), and Ubuntu 12.04 (gcc). Compilation via Qt Creator and via the command line compilation using QMake and make or nmake should work. There are several ways of building qtshark: 1) Qt Creator + CMake: Open the top-level CMakeLists.txt within Qt Creator. It should ask you to choose a build location. Do so. It should then ask you to run CMake. Fill in any desired build arguments (e.g. "-D CMAKE_BUILD_TYPE:STRING=Debug" or "-D ENABLE_GTK3:BOOL=OFF") and click the "Run CMake" button. When that completes select "Build → Open Build and Run Kit Selector..." and make sure wireshark is selected. 2) CMake: Qt (BUILD_wireshark) is enabled by default. Use the "cmake" command to configure a normal out-of-tree or in-tree build, e.g. mkdir cmakebuild cd cmakebuild cmake make Note that CMake builds an application bundle (Wireshark.app) on Mac OS X by default. Use the option "-DENABLE_APPLICATION_BUNDLE=OFF" to create a traditional UNIX/POSIX build. 3) Autotools: Qt (--with-qt) is enabled by default. 4) Qt Creator + QtShark.pro: NOTE: The bulk of Wireshark isn't a qmake project and the ui/qt directory is loosely coupled with the rest of the codebase. When the CMake environment matures to a sufficient state QtShark.pro will probably be removed. Work is in progress on this.) 1.1 Prerequisites Before compiling you need the Qt SDK and Qt Creator. 1.1.1 OS X Download the latest Qt Library + Qt Creator (currently 5.3) from http://qt-project.org/downloads/ and install it. For a more native look and feel you should also install Qt Mac Extras: git clone http://qt.gitorious.org/qt/qtmacextras.git cd qtmacextras /path/to/qt5/qmake qtmacextras.pro make make -n install # Make sure install output looks sensible make install This may or may not work for you; see https://bugreports.qt-project.org/browse/QTBUG-32594 1.1.2 Windows The default Qt SDK libraries are built using MinGW, which isn't supported for Wireshark. Instead of downloading the Qt SDK all-in-one package, download the Qt Libraries package from http://qt-project.org/downloads/ that matches your compiler (VS 2010 or VS 2012) and Qt Creator for Windows. Settings in config.nmake are passed to the Qt environment via ui/qt/config.pri. This file should be created automatically when you compile Wireshark in the top-level source directory. You can create it by hand by running "nmake -f Makefile.nmake ui\qt\config.pri". Qt Creator can be used to compile and run Wireshark. Alternatively qmake and nmake at the cmd line can be used. The Windows Qt version of Wireshark will be compiled and linked with essentially the same options as that used when building the Gtk version of Wireshark. 1.1.2.1 Qt Creator Before compiling in Qt Creator select "Projects" in the left toolbar, select "Build Settings" and do the following: - In "Edit build configuration" make sure the "Release" build is selected. (The "Debug" build won't work unless Wireshark is recompiled to link with a "debug" the "debug" C runtime library (using /MDd). See ui\qt\QtShark.pro for details). - Make sure "Qt version" matches your version of Visual Studio. - Make sure "Tool chain" matches your Visual C++ version. If you require plugin support select "Run Settings" and add "WIRESHARK_RUN_FROM_BUILD_DIRECTORY=1" to the Run Environment. XXX: (WMeier): I've not had too much satisfaction using the "native Windows debugger" (CDB ?) accessed via Qt Creator. (In fact, a web search turns up some fairly negative comments about the debugger. I've successfully (and pretty easily) been able to use the Visual Studio debugger; See below under "Command Line". ToDo: Investigate "Qt Visual Studio AddIn": http://developer.qt.nokia.com/wiki/QtVSAddin#6112edd2e39a1695c242723d5c764aae 1.1.2.2 Command Line - Setup environment: c:\qt\4.8.0\bin\qtvars.bat [vsvars] ;;; optional 'vsvars' to also setup VC env vars - [Create and] Switch to a working dir to be used for .obj files, etc for Wireshark-qt compilation - Use qmake to create Windows Makefile (based upon info in ui\qt\QtShark.pro and config.pri) qmake -o Makefile.nmake ..\..\ui\qt\QtShark.pro ;; (Only needs to be run once; ;; nmake -f Makefile.nmake will redo qmake if any ;; dependendencies (e.g., QtShark.pro) change. - Compile & Build nmake -f Makefile.nmake ;; qtshark.exe + all DLL's will be in \wireshark-qt-debug - Run: \wireshark-qt-debug - Debug (with Visual Studio debugger) Start Visual Studio; File ! Open ! Project/Solution ! ...//wireshark-qt-debug/qtshark.exe (Using Solution Explorer ! Properties ! Environment to add PATH=C:\Qt\4.8.0\bin;%PATH% will pobably be required). ... Debug in the usual manner 1.1.3 Linux Install the Qt libraries and Qt Creator via your package manager or from http://qt-project.org/downloads/. On Debian and Ubuntu the "qt-sdk" (and qttools5-dev when use Qt5) meta-package should provide everything you need. Build the top-level directory using CMake (see section "Using cmake" above). As an alternative do an in-tree build without QT and then inside ui/qt/ do "qtcreate QtShark.pro". 1.2 Other tools GammaRay lets you inspect the internals of a running Qt application similar to Spy++ on Windows. http://www.kdab.com/kdab-products/gammaray/ 2. Going forward DO NOT simply port things over. Much of the GTK+ interface reflects historical UI conventions and API restrictions which are either no longer relevant or have been superseded. Every feature, window, and element should be re-thought. When porting a feature, consider the following: - Workflow. Excessive navigation and gratuitous dialogs should be avoided or reduced. For example, the two GTK+ flow graph dialogs have been combined into one in Qt. Many alert dialogs have been replaced with status bar messages. - Feedback. Most of the Qt dialogs provide a "hint" area near the bottom which shows useful information. For example, the "Follow Stream" dialog shows the packet corresponding to the text under the mouse. The profile management dialog shows a clickable path to the current profile. 2.1 Coding guidelines 2.1.1 Name conventions Most of the code in the ui/qt directory uses three APIs: Qt (which uses InterCapConvention), GLib (which uses underscore_convention), and the Wireshark API (which also uses underscore_convention). As a general rule Wireshark's Qt code uses InterCapConvention for class names, interCapConvention for methods, and underscore_convention for variables, with a trailing underscore for member variables. 2.1.2 Class layout Dialogs that work with capture file information shouldn't close just because the capture file closes. I.e. they should receive the setCaptureFile signal and react accordingly. In most cases you should handle the changeEvent in order to catch QEvent::LanguageChange. 2.1.3 Strings If you're using GLib string functions or plain old C character array idioms in Qt-only code you're probably doing something wrong. QStrings are generally *much* safer and easier to use. They also make translations eaiser. If you need to pass strings between Qt and GLib you can use qstring_strdup gchar_free_to_qstring, which are defined in ui/qt/qt_ui_utils.h. 2.1.4 Mixing C and C++ Sometimes we have to call C++ functions from one of Wireshark's C callbacks and pass C++ objects to or from C. The C++ FAQ describes how to do this safely: http://www.parashift.com/c++-faq/mixing-c-and-cpp.html 2.2 Changes - The display filter entry has been significantly reworked. - The welcome screen has been reworked. The interface list includes sparklines - "Go to packet" pops up a text entry in the main window instead of a separate dialog. - Preferences are complete, and are arguably more useful than the GTK+ version. An "Advanced" preference pane exists, which lets you edit everything. They use the proper menu placement and keyboard shortcut on OS X. - Some dialogs (file sets, profiles, and UATs) provide a link to filesystem paths where appropriate. 3. Translations (i18n) 3.1 Make translation Qt makes translating the Wireshark UI into different languages easy. - Add your translation (ui/qt/wireshark_XX.ts) in ui/qt/Wireshark.pro, ui/qt/i18n.qrc, ui/qt/Makefile.common and ui/qt/CMakeLists.txt - Please add flag (image) for your language in images/languages/XX.svg and image/languages/languages.qrc - Run "lupdate ui/qt/Wireshark.pro" to generate/update your translation file. or "lupdate ui/qt -ts ui/qt/wireshark_XX.ts" for specified translation - Translate with Qt Linguist (in console: "linguist ui/qt/wireshark_XX.ts") - Run "lrelease Wireshark.pro" or "lrelease ui/qt/wireshark_XX.ts -qm ui/qt/wireshark_XX.qm" to create/update wireshark_XX.qm file. - Push your translation to Gerrit for review ("git push"). Alternatively you can only put your QM and flag files in "languages" directory in Wireshark user configuration directory (~/.wireshark/languages/ on unix) More information about Qt Linguist http://qt-project.org/doc/qt-4.8/linguist-manual.html 3.2 Developing - Please avoid tr() in code, try add any strings in *.ui files; tr() on manually created object (like QMenu) are not automatically retranslated, so you must add a couple of code to manually translate them NOTE: if your object life is short, so any time when your component needs to be shown it is (re)created then it is ok to have tr() in code - For creating submenu in context menu please follow solution from ui/qt/proto_tree.cpp - Some new windows need also to override changeEvent() and do retranslateUi() like summary_dialog.[ch] does