diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'epan/dissectors/packet-ajp13.c')
-rw-r--r-- | epan/dissectors/packet-ajp13.c | 16 |
1 files changed, 8 insertions, 8 deletions
diff --git a/epan/dissectors/packet-ajp13.c b/epan/dissectors/packet-ajp13.c index cfa603b347..cbaa742be0 100644 --- a/epan/dissectors/packet-ajp13.c +++ b/epan/dissectors/packet-ajp13.c @@ -4,8 +4,8 @@ * * $Id$ * - * Ethereal - Network traffic analyzer - * By Gerald Combs <gerald@ethereal.com> + * Wireshark - Network traffic analyzer + * By Gerald Combs <gerald@wireshark.org> * Copyright 1998 Gerald Combs * * This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or @@ -45,7 +45,7 @@ * You need to be looking at: jk/doc/AJP13.html in the * jakarta-tomcat-connectors repository. * - * If you're an ethereal dissector guru, then you can skip the rest of + * If you're an wireshark dissector guru, then you can skip the rest of * this. I'm writing it all down because I've written 3 dissectors so * far and every time I've forgotten it all and had to re-learn it * from scratch. Not this time, damnit. @@ -83,9 +83,9 @@ * order. Users don't normally care, because the low-level kernel * networking code takes care of reassembling them properly. But we're * looking at raw network packets, aren't we? The stuff on the - * wire. Ethereal has been getting better and better at helping + * wire. Wireshark has been getting better and better at helping * dissectors with this. I'm a little fuzzy on the details, but my - * uderstanding is that ethereal now contains a fairly substantial + * uderstanding is that wireshark now contains a fairly substantial * user-space TCP/IP stack so it can re-assemble the data. But I might * be wrong. Since AJP13 is going to be used either on the loopback * interface or on a LAN, it isn't likely to be a big issues anyway. @@ -97,12 +97,12 @@ * obviously possible, but a royal pain. During the "phase one" * in-order pass you have to keep track of a bunch of offsets and * store which PDU goes with which TCP segment. Luckly, recent - * (0.9.4+) versions of ethereal provide the "tcp_dissect_pdus()" + * (0.9.4+) versions of wireshark provide the "tcp_dissect_pdus()" * function that takes care of much of the work. See the comments in * packet-tcp.c, the example code in packet-dns.c, or check the * ethereal-dev archives for details. * - * 3) Ethereal isn't guaranteed to see all the data. I'm a little + * 3) Wireshark isn't guaranteed to see all the data. I'm a little * unclear on all the possible failure modes, but it comes down to: a) * Not your fault: it's an imperfect world, we're eavesdroppers, and * stuff happens. We might totally miss packets or get garbled @@ -630,7 +630,7 @@ display_req_forward(tvbuff_t *tvb, packet_info *pinfo, -/* main dissector function. ethereal calls it for segments in both +/* main dissector function. wireshark calls it for segments in both * directions. */ static void |