Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Files | Lines |
|
doesn't know about, and eliminate the check in "dissect_fddi()" where we
check if its return value was NULL and, if so, print "Unknown frame
type".
svn path=/trunk/; revision=644
|
|
is passed to col_add_str, which is then passed to strncpy, which, at least
in glibc 2.1, doesn't like NULL pointers passed to it in lieu of empty
strings.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=643
|
|
In the summary display for FDDI frames, make the protocol FDDI and the
info field the description of the frame control field (which will be
overridden by other protocols, if the frame is an async LLC frame).
svn path=/trunk/; revision=558
|
|
"FDDI with the MAC addresses bit-swapped"; whether the MAC addresses are
bit-swapped is a property of the machine on which the capture was taken,
not of the machine on which the capture is being read - right now, none
of the capture file formats we read indicate whether FDDI MAC addresses
are bit-swapped, but this does let us treat non-"libpcap" captures as
being bit-swapped or not bit-swapped independent of the machine on which
they're being read (and of the machine on which they were captured, but
I have the impression they're bit-swapped on most platforms), and allows
us to, if, as, and when we implement packet capture in Wiretap, mark
packets in a capture file written in Wiretap-native format based on the
machine on which they are captured (assuming the rule "Ultrix, Alpha,
and BSD/OS are the only platforms that don't bit-swap", or some other
compile-time rule, gets the right answer, or that some platform has
drivers that can tell us whether the addresses are bit-swapped).
(NOTE: if, for any of the capture file formats used only on one
platform, FDDI MAC addresses aren't bit-swapped, the code to read that
capture file format should be fixed to flag them as not bit-swapped.)
Use the encapsulation type to decide whether to bit-swap addresses in
"dissect_fddi()".
svn path=/trunk/; revision=557
|
|
don't need to.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=554
|
|
as it standed depends on your lex being flex, but that only matters if you're
a developer. The distribution will include the dfilter-scanner.c file, so
that if the user doesn't modify dfilter-scanner.l, he won't need flex to
re-create the *.c file.
The new lex scanner gives me better syntax checking for ether addresses. I
thought I could get by using GScanner, but it simply wasn't powerful enough.
All operands have English-like abbreviations and C-like syntax:
and, && ; or, || ; eq, == ; ne, != ; , etc.
I removed the ETHER_VENDOR type in favor of letting the user use the [x:y]
notation: ether.src[0:3] == 0:6:29 instead of ether.srcvendor == 00:06:29
I implemented the IPXNET field type; it had been there before, but was
not implemented. I chose to make it use integer values rather than byte
ranges, since an IPX Network is 4 bytes. So a display filter looks like this:
ipx.srcnet == 0xc0a82c00
rather than this:
ipx.srcnet == c0:a8:2c:00
I can supposrt the byte-range type IPXNET in the future, very trivially.
I still have more work to do on the parser though. It needs to check ranges
when extracting byte ranges ([x:y]) from packets. And I need to get rid
of those reduce/reduce errors from yacc!
svn path=/trunk/; revision=414
|
|
allowing users to filter on the existence of these protocols. I also
added packet-clip.c to the Nmake makefile.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=402
|
|
suggestion, this new method using a static array should use less memory
and be faster. It also has a nice side-effect of making the source-code
more readble, IMHO.
Changed the print routines to look for protocol proto_data instead of
looking at the text label as they did before, hoping that the data hex
dump field item starts with "Data (".
Added the -G keyword to ethereal to make it dump a glossary of display
filter keywords to stdout and exit. This data is then formatted with
the doc/dfilter2pod perl program to pod format, which is combined
with doc/ethereal.pod.template to create doc/ethereal.pod, from which
the ethereal manpage is created. This way we can keep the manpage up-to-date
with a list of fields that can be filtered on.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=364
|
|
the registration functions in packet-fddi.c and packet-eth.c to this new
registration method.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=346
|
|
mechanism that is built into ethereal. Wiretap is now used to read all
file formats. Libpcap is used only for capturing.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=342
|
|
reference the protocol tree with struct proto_tree and struct proto_item
objects. That way, the packet decoding source code file can be used with
non-gtk packet decoders, like a curses-based ethereal, e.g. I also re-arranged
some of the information in packet.h to more appropriate places (like other
packet-*.[ch] files).
svn path=/trunk/; revision=223
|
|
FDDI header is highlighted in the hex dump.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=207
|
|
update the packet counts and percentages in the dialog box popped up
during a capture, even for non-Ethernet captures.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=184
|
|
* Added check_col(), add_col_str() and add_col_fmt() to replace references
to ft->win_info.
* Added column prefs handling code.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=97
|
|
we no longer include <pcap.h>.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=84
|
|
because it is still in its infancy, but it can be compiled in optionally.
The library exists in its own subdirectory ethereal/wiretap. This patch also
edits all the packet-*.c files to remove the #include <pcap.h> line which is
unnecessary in these files. In the ethereal code, file.c is the most heavily
modified with #ifdef WITH_WIRETAP lines for the optional library.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=82
|
|
systems on which you don't bit-swap them taken from "tcpdump"; the list
may not be complete.)
svn path=/trunk/; revision=48
|
|
detail display; that's now in the "frame" detail display.
svn path=/trunk/; revision=46
|
|
svn path=/trunk/; revision=43
|
|
svn path=/trunk/; revision=37
|
|
* FDDI support (Laurent, Guy)
svn path=/trunk/; revision=36
|