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Add WTAP_TSPREC_ values for the new precisions, and rename the 1/10
second and 1/100 second values to match the style used for the new ones,
with additional WTAP_TSPREC_DSEC and WTAP_TSPREC_CSEC defines for
backwards compatibility. Switch to those new ones in existing files.
For NetMon, use WTAP_TSPREC_100_NSEC for the 2.3 version of the file
format and WTAP_TSPREC_USEC for previous 2.x versions. Get rid of code
that would have handled 3.x and later formats, as 1) those formats were
never created, 2) the code that was there wouldn't have worked if the
format were different enough, and 3) we didn't support them when reading
in any case.
Regenerate the introspection enums.
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For writing capture files, increment `wdh->bytes_dumped` within
`wtap_dump_file_write()` so the caller doesn't have to manually track
it. Fixes the most common case of writing a file in sequence, leaving
the code clearer.
A small number of file formats effectively leave the header blank, write
the packets, then seek back up to the header to fill it in. In such
cases, save `wdh->bytes_dumped` before filling in the header and restore
it once done, so the value doesn't double-count the size of the header.
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That indicates that it's a *per-file* encapsulation, not just some
unspecified type of encapsulation such as per-packet or per-interface.
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It has a per-file encapsulation, so fail if an attempt is made to write
a packet with a different encapsulation, just as we do with other
formats that have a per-file encapsulation, such as libpcap.
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The is_v2 argument to netmon_dump_open() is a Boolean, with FALSE
meaning "not v2" and TRUE meaning "v2", not a version number. Don't
pass a version number, as that causes both v1 and v2 to be treated as
v2.
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Use macros from inttypes.h.
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Without that, you could add a comment to a record in a file format the
reading code for which doesn't allocate blocks, but the comment doesn't
get saved, as there's no block in which to save the comment option.
This simplifies some code paths, as we're either using the record's
modified block or we're using the block as read from the file, there's
no third possibility.
If we attempt to read a record, and we get an error, and a block was
allocated for the record, unreference it, so the individual file readers
don't have to worry about it.
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All the NetMon reading code does is initialize the pseudo-header; the
bulk of the work is done in the dissector. Give the dissector its own
pseudo-header structure, and do the initialization there.
That's the way other packet formats in which the 802.11 radio metadata
is a header at the beginning of the packet data, such as radiotap, work.
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It only registers one file type/subtype, so rename it to
wtap_register_file_type_subtype().
That will also force plugins to be recompiled; that will produce compile
errors for some plugins that didn't change to match the new contents of
the file_type_subtype_info structure.
Also check to make sure that the registered file type/subtype supports
at least one type of block; a file type/subtype that doesn't return
*any* blocks and doesn't permit *any* block types to be written is not
very useful. That should also catch most if not all other plugins that
didn't change to match the new contents of the file_type_subtype_info
structure.
Don't make errors registering a file type/subtype fatal; just complain,
don't register the bogus file type/subtype, and drive on.
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Instead of a "supports name resolution" Boolean and bitflags for types of
comments supported, provide a list of block types that the file
type/subtype supports, with each block type having a list of options
supported. Indicate whether "supported" means "one instance" or
"multiple instances".
"Supports" doesn't just mean "can be written", it also means "could be
read".
Rename WTAP_BLOCK_IF_DESCRIPTION to WTAP_BLOCK_IF_ID_AND_INFO, to
indicate that it provides, in addition to information about the
interface, an ID (implicitly, in pcapng files, by its ordinal number)
that is associated with every packet in the file. Emphasize that in
comments - just because your capture file format can list the interfaces
on which a capture was done, that doesn't mean it supports this; it
doesn't do so if the file doesn't indicate, for every packet, on which
of those interfaces it was captured (I'm looking at *you*, Microsoft
Network Monitor...).
Use APIs to query that information to do what the "does this file
type/subtype support name resolution information", "does this file
type/subtype support all of these comment types", and "does this file
type/subtype support - and require - interface IDs" APIs did.
Provide backwards compatibility for Lua.
This allows us to eliminate the WTAP_FILE_TYPE_SUBTYPE_ values for IBM's
iptrace; do so.
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Provide a wiretap routine to get an array of all savable file
type/subtypes, sorted with pcap and pcapng at the top, followed by the
other types, sorted either by the name or the description.
Use that routine to list options for the -F flag for various commands
Rename wtap_get_savable_file_types_subtypes() to
wtap_get_savable_file_types_subtypes_for_file(), to indicate that it
provides an array of all file type/subtypes in which a given file can be
saved. Have it sort all types, other than the default type/subtype and,
if there is one, the "other" type (both of which are put at the top), by
the name or the description.
Don't allow wtap_register_file_type_subtypes() to override any existing
registrations; have them always register a new type. In that routine,
if there are any emply slots in the table, due to an entry being
unregistered, use it rather than allocating a new slot.
Don't allow unregistration of built-in types.
Rename the "dump open table" to the "file type/subtype table", as it has
entries for all types/subtypes, even if we can't write them.
Initialize that table in a routine that pre-allocates the GArray before
filling it with built-in types/subtypes, so it doesn't keep getting
reallocated.
Get rid of wtap_num_file_types_subtypes - it's just a copy of the size
of the GArray.
Don't have wtap_file_type_subtype_description() crash if handed an
file type/subtype that isn't a valid array index - just return NULL, as
we do with wtap_file_type_subtype_name().
In wtap_name_to_file_type_subtype(), don't use WTAP_FILE_TYPE_SUBTYPE_
names for the backwards-compatibility names - map those names to the
current names, and then look them up. This reduces the number of
uses of hardwired WTAP_FILE_TYPE_SUBTYPE_ values.
Clean up the type of wtap_module_count - it has no need to be a gulong.
Have built-in wiretap file handlers register names to be used for their
file type/subtypes, rather than building the table in init.lua.
Add a new Lua C function get_wtap_filetypes() to construct the
wtap_filetypes table, based on the registered names, and use it in
init.lua.
Add a #define WSLUA_INTERNAL_FUNCTION to register functions intended
only for internal use in init.lua, so they can be made available from
Lua without being documented.
Get rid of WTAP_NUM_FILE_TYPES_SUBTYPES - most code has no need to use
it, as it can just request arrays of types, and the space of
type/subtype codes can be sparse due to registration in any case, so
code has to be careful using it.
wtap_get_num_file_types_subtypes() is no longer used, so remove it. It
returns the number of elements in the file type/subtype array, which is
not necessarily the name of known file type/subtypes, as there may have
been some deregistered types, and those types do *not* get removed from
the array, they just get cleared so that they're available for future
allocation (we don't want the indices of any registered types to changes
if another type is deregistered, as those indicates are the type/subtype
values, so we can't shrink the array).
Clean up white space and remove some comments that shouldn't have been
added.
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Remove most of the built-in file types from the table in
wiretap/file_access.c and, instead, have the file types register
themselves, using wtap_register_file_type_subtypes().
This reduces the source code changes needed to add a new file type from
three (add the handler, add the file type to the table in file_access.c,
add a #define for the file type in wiretap/wtap.h) to one (add the
handler). (It also requires adding the handler's source file to
wiretap/CMakeLists.txt, but that's required in both cases.)
A few remain because the WTAP_FILE_TYPE_SUBTYPE_ #define is used
elsewhere; that needs to be fixed.
Fix the wiretap/CMakefile.txt file to scan k12text.l, as that now
contains a registration routine. In the process, avoid scanning files
that don't implement a file type and won't ever have a registration
routine.
Add a Lua routine to fetch the total number of file types; we use that
in some code to construct the wtap_filetypes table, which we need to do
in order to continue to have all the values that used to come from the
WTAP_FILE_TYPE_SUBTYPE_ types.
While we're at it, add modelines to a file that lacked them.
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Adds a pre-commit hook for detecting and replacing
occurrences of `g_malloc()` and `wmem_alloc()` with
`g_new()` and `wmem_new()`, to improve the
readability of Wireshark's code, and
occurrences of
`g_malloc(sizeof(struct myobj) * foo)`
with
`g_new(struct myobj, foo)`
to prevent integer overflows
Also fixes all existing occurrences across
the codebase.
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That way, users won't just see "You got an internal error", the details
will be given, so they can report them in a bug.
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Microsoft Network Monitor lets you capture on an 802.11 adapter either
in monitor mode or in non-monitor mode; frames captured in non-monitor
mode may have the Protected bit set in the 802.11 header, but are
decrypted and don't incclude encryption information, and may have the
A-MSDU Present flag set in the QoS Control field, but have just a
regular frame payload, not a sequence of A-MSDUs, in the payload field.
Dissect those frames correctly.
Bug: 16758
Change-Id: I42b7e9ce52faa80222692403fa7276c039644343
Reviewed-on: https://code.wireshark.org/review/38082
Petri-Dish: Guy Harris <gharris@sonic.net>
Tested-by: Petri Dish Buildbot
Reviewed-by: Guy Harris <gharris@sonic.net>
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Microsoft reshuffled their documentation - almost all of it moved from
msdn.microsoft.com to docs.microsoft.com. Some blogs moved to
devblogs.microsoft.com; the comments *didn't* move, so in one case we go
to the Wayback Machine - the link isn't dead, but it formats horribly,
at least on my browser, but the archived version formats OK.
Use the Wayback Machine for some URLs, and update others.
Update the sections for MS-ADTS.
Point to the HTML versions of some RFCs and I-Ds.
Change-Id: I344b20f880de63f1ae2a4e3f9ff98af78a7fe139
Reviewed-on: https://code.wireshark.org/review/34101
Reviewed-by: Guy Harris <guy@alum.mit.edu>
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Change all wireshark.org URLs to use https.
Fix some broken links while we're at it.
Change-Id: I161bf8eeca43b8027605acea666032da86f5ea1c
Reviewed-on: https://code.wireshark.org/review/34089
Reviewed-by: Guy Harris <guy@alum.mit.edu>
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That makes it - and the routines that implement it - work more like the
seek-read routine.
Change-Id: I0cace2d0e4c9ebfc21ac98fd1af1ec70f60a240d
Reviewed-on: https://code.wireshark.org/review/32727
Petri-Dish: Guy Harris <guy@alum.mit.edu>
Tested-by: Petri Dish Buildbot
Reviewed-by: Guy Harris <guy@alum.mit.edu>
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That makes it a bit clearer that we don't need to initialize it to zero
before the loop.
This fixes a Dead Store (Dead assignement/Dead increment) Warning found
by Clang.
Change-Id: Iabfc4b47a3c6300814492c37ccfb321afd0c54ea
Reviewed-on: https://code.wireshark.org/review/28374
Petri-Dish: Guy Harris <guy@alum.mit.edu>
Reviewed-by: Guy Harris <guy@alum.mit.edu>
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Extract it into title_length before checking it, and then check the
value of title_length.
Change-Id: I7f2c334dbce5eeaa12cd5d8bb8e289852fd15c4f
Reviewed-on: https://code.wireshark.org/review/28282
Reviewed-by: Guy Harris <guy@alum.mit.edu>
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The number being compared against is the amount of data *remaining* in
the comment information, not the *size* of the comment information.
And it's unsigned, so format it with %u.
Change-Id: I5f02302ad4acbc3b27655ff5518e6e56d464020d
Reviewed-on: https://code.wireshark.org/review/28280
Reviewed-by: Guy Harris <guy@alum.mit.edu>
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Fix indentation, and note that the comment "description" (contents) are
RTF (as opposed to plain text).
Change-Id: I668a08c06e39a32318454d2ee73933083c5cb516
Reviewed-on: https://code.wireshark.org/review/28279
Reviewed-by: Guy Harris <guy@alum.mit.edu>
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utf_16_to_utf_8() just ignores the extra octet.
Change-Id: I7bf003b674e5d9b0fb0265b0e8c6c142107084e3
Reviewed-on: https://code.wireshark.org/review/28277
Reviewed-by: Guy Harris <guy@alum.mit.edu>
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Change-Id: I6a3db704c9046ff696820ce157423c5867c2c2e8
Reviewed-on: https://code.wireshark.org/review/28275
Reviewed-by: Guy Harris <guy@alum.mit.edu>
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Pathnames are not limited to 260 characters in recent versions of
Windows; boost the limit to handle up to 32767 UTF-16 octet pairs worth
of path.
The pathname is in UTF-16-encoded Unicode; convert it to UTF-8 for our
internal use.
Bug: 14876
Change-Id: I4ef19fd47c7dbdd74dcaf31a7a80f432d57dbb0d
Reviewed-on: https://code.wireshark.org/review/28273
Petri-Dish: Guy Harris <guy@alum.mit.edu>
Tested-by: Petri Dish Buildbot
Reviewed-by: Guy Harris <guy@alum.mit.edu>
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Get rid of CMake's TestBigEndian and Autotools' AC_C_BIGENDIAN checks in
favor of G_BYTE_ORDER. We use G_BYTE_ORDER elsewhere and TestBigEndian
is noticeably slow on Windows.
Change-Id: Idc1326294db9cbee8f6b6b11c2028fc4d19acbf0
Reviewed-on: https://code.wireshark.org/review/26462
Petri-Dish: Gerald Combs <gerald@wireshark.org>
Tested-by: Petri Dish Buildbot
Reviewed-by: Gerald Combs <gerald@wireshark.org>
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Separate the stuff that any record could have from the stuff that only
particular record types have; put the latter into a union, and put all
that into a wtap_rec structure.
Add some record-type checks as necessary.
Change-Id: Id6b3486858f826fce4b096c59231f463e44bfaa2
Reviewed-on: https://code.wireshark.org/review/25696
Reviewed-by: Guy Harris <guy@alum.mit.edu>
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The first is deprecated, as per https://spdx.org/licenses/.
Change-Id: I8e21e1d32d09b8b94b93a2dc9fbdde5ffeba6bed
Reviewed-on: https://code.wireshark.org/review/25661
Petri-Dish: Anders Broman <a.broman58@gmail.com>
Petri-Dish: Dario Lombardo <lomato@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Anders Broman <a.broman58@gmail.com>
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This avoids an illegal pointer to free() on error.
Bug: 14397
Change-Id: Id6e535141c7a3ee7b3d1822875b571e2199a5387
Reviewed-on: https://code.wireshark.org/review/25660
Reviewed-by: Stig Bjørlykke <stig@bjorlykke.org>
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Change-Id: I28436e003ce7fe31d53e6663f3cc7aca00845e4b
Reviewed-on: https://code.wireshark.org/review/25392
Petri-Dish: Dario Lombardo <lomato@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Alexis La Goutte <alexis.lagoutte@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Gerald Combs <gerald@wireshark.org>
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At one point, I remember a discussion resulting in the official name of
the next-generation replacement for pcap format being changed to
"pcapng", with no hyphen.
Make Wireshark reflect that.
Change-Id: Ie66fb13a0fe3a8682143106dab601952e9154e2a
Reviewed-on: https://code.wireshark.org/review/25214
Reviewed-by: Guy Harris <guy@alum.mit.edu>
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That allows a parallel typedef of ws_in4_addr for guint32.
Change-Id: I03b230247065e0e3840eb87635315a8e523ef562
Reviewed-on: https://code.wireshark.org/review/24073
Reviewed-by: Guy Harris <guy@alum.mit.edu>
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NetMon apparently didn't zero out the file header, so those fields have
random values in pre-2.2.
Change-Id: I3aeede6ab273d57ca937a5e18e67223fb4ed18da
Reviewed-on: https://code.wireshark.org/review/23666
Reviewed-by: Guy Harris <guy@alum.mit.edu>
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There may be some amount of bogosity involved but initialize the
variables and add a default case to prevent the noise and the build
from breaking with -Werror.
Change-Id: I20432ea74a1e5edc28be75a97077c9aa7bc87a35
Reviewed-on: https://code.wireshark.org/review/23426
Petri-Dish: João Valverde <j@v6e.pt>
Tested-by: Petri Dish Buildbot <buildbot-no-reply@wireshark.org>
Reviewed-by: João Valverde <j@v6e.pt>
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It's just a WTAP_ENCAP_IEEE_802_11
Change-Id: I7369fac06a7d63812bb7ce7b3c16b9fe606f544c
Reviewed-on: https://code.wireshark.org/review/23418
Petri-Dish: Michael Mann <mmann78@netscape.net>
Reviewed-by: Michael Mann <mmann78@netscape.net>
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Change-Id: I85fd990781a47e738c22bff0218aabdc04122e15
Reviewed-on: https://code.wireshark.org/review/23403
Reviewed-by: Michael Mann <mmann78@netscape.net>
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Normally a .cap file contains a network type that when masked with 0xFFF
will convert to a pcap LINKTYPE_ value. However, Microsoft Analyzer
used 0xE080-0xE08A for their own purposes within a .cap file.
Add support for the WPFCapture formats and give a "not supported" error
message to the few left unsupported.
Bug: 10556
Change-Id: I321a75ce769fdec75bdc6b595936c25932950a97
Reviewed-on: https://code.wireshark.org/review/23386
Petri-Dish: Michael Mann <mmann78@netscape.net>
Tested-by: Petri Dish Buildbot <buildbot-no-reply@wireshark.org>
Reviewed-by: Michael Mann <mmann78@netscape.net>
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Bug: 4221
Change-Id: I59aff777c364af1a064e1e99ea9ac6692a4cedfa
Reviewed-on: https://code.wireshark.org/review/23333
Reviewed-by: Michael Mann <mmann78@netscape.net>
Petri-Dish: Michael Mann <mmann78@netscape.net>
Tested-by: Petri Dish Buildbot <buildbot-no-reply@wireshark.org>
Reviewed-by: Alexis La Goutte <alexis.lagoutte@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Anders Broman <a.broman58@gmail.com>
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There isn't a place at the moment that uses it, but prepare
that use by parsing out the process info table and placing
it the netmon private data.
Bug: 4224
Ping-Bug: 1184
Change-Id: I6186b3dce0333042357089d8517c8b47b5ff7f70
Reviewed-on: https://code.wireshark.org/review/23316
Reviewed-by: Michael Mann <mmann78@netscape.net>
Petri-Dish: Michael Mann <mmann78@netscape.net>
Tested-by: Petri Dish Buildbot <buildbot-no-reply@wireshark.org>
Reviewed-by: Anders Broman <a.broman58@gmail.com>
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The NetMon wiretap reads the title and description comment fields from a
NetMon file and saves it in the wiretap private structure. Then when
it's time to make a frame, the comment fields are added to a NetMon
pseudoheader with a new WTAP ENCAP type, with the potential for netmon
pseudoheader to contain pseudoheader data from "base" wiretap. Then the
netmon_header dissector displays the comment fields and passes any "base"
wiretap pseudoheader data when calling the wtap_encap dissector table
that the frame dissector normally calls.
Bug: 4225
Change-Id: I8f772bc9494364c98434c78b61eb5a64012ff3b9
Reviewed-on: https://code.wireshark.org/review/23210
Petri-Dish: Michael Mann <mmann78@netscape.net>
Tested-by: Petri Dish Buildbot <buildbot-no-reply@wireshark.org>
Reviewed-by: Anders Broman <a.broman58@gmail.com>
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Assigned a WTAP_ENCAP value (WTAP_ENCAP_NETMON_NET_NETEVENT) for the
dissection of Event Tracing records inside a NetworkMonitor file.
Ping-Bug: 6520
Ping-Bug: 6694
Change-Id: Ib100f3779095842e78f9b7741e80258aa866d818
Reviewed-on: https://code.wireshark.org/review/23278
Petri-Dish: Michael Mann <mmann78@netscape.net>
Tested-by: Petri Dish Buildbot <buildbot-no-reply@wireshark.org>
Reviewed-by: Michael Mann <mmann78@netscape.net>
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Use WTAP_MAX_PACKET_SIZE_STANDARD, set to 256KB, for everything except
for D-Bus captures. Use WTAP_MAX_PACKET_SIZE_DBUS, set to 128MB, for
them, because that's the largest possible D-Bus message size. See
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=100220
for an example of the problems caused by limiting the snapshot length to
256KB for D-Bus.
Have a snapshot length of 0 in a capture_file structure mean "there is
no snapshot length for the file"; we don't need the has_snap field in
that case, a value of 0 mean "no, we don't have a snapshot length".
In dumpcap, start out with a pipe buffer size of 2KB, and grow it as
necessary. When checking for a too-big packet from a pipe, check
against the appropriate maximum - 128MB for DLT_DBUS, 256KB for
everything else.
Change-Id: Ib2ce7a0cf37b971fbc0318024fd011e18add8b20
Reviewed-on: https://code.wireshark.org/review/21952
Petri-Dish: Guy Harris <guy@alum.mit.edu>
Tested-by: Petri Dish Buildbot <buildbot-no-reply@wireshark.org>
Reviewed-by: Guy Harris <guy@alum.mit.edu>
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Done for performance improvements.
This could probably be done in checkAPIs.pl, but this was just
a quick manual check with grepping.
Change-Id: I91ff102cb528bb00fa2f65489de53890e7e46f2d
Reviewed-on: https://code.wireshark.org/review/15751
Reviewed-by: Michael Mann <mmann78@netscape.net>
Petri-Dish: Michael Mann <mmann78@netscape.net>
Tested-by: Petri Dish Buildbot <buildbot-no-reply@wireshark.org>
Reviewed-by: Jaap Keuter <jaap.keuter@xs4all.nl>
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The use of a flag field here is aesthetically unpleasing when the flags
are referred to frequently. Convert these into bitfield entries.
Change-Id: I6f47e31558439dfd343ec7f856d04480366a1237
Reviewed-on: https://code.wireshark.org/review/12511
Petri-Dish: Alexis La Goutte <alexis.lagoutte@gmail.com>
Tested-by: Petri Dish Buildbot <buildbot-no-reply@wireshark.org>
Reviewed-by: Guy Harris <guy@alum.mit.edu>
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It doesn't actually *close* any handle, so it's best called a "finish"
routine rather than a "close" routine.
In libwiretap modules, don't bother setting the finish routine pointer
to null - it's already initialized to null (it's probably best not to
require modules to set it).
Change-Id: I19554f3fb826db495f17b36600ae36222cbc21b0
Reviewed-on: https://code.wireshark.org/review/11659
Reviewed-by: Guy Harris <guy@alum.mit.edu>
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Have a field that holds the PHY type but nothing else. Have
a union with structures holding PHY-type-specific information, as a
bunch of attributes are PHY-specific.
If we have a channel and band, but don't have the frequency, attempt to
calculate the frequency, and add that to the radio information if we
succeed. If we have the frequency, but don't have the channel, attempt
to calculate the channel, and add that to the radio information if we
succeed.
Handle FHSS information, 11a "half/quarter-clocked" and turbo
information, 11g normal vs. Super G, additional 11n and 11ac
information, and the "short preamble" flag for 11b and 11g.
Add a PHY type for 11 legacy DSSS and detect it if possible.
Clean up the AVS dissector - make all fields wlancap. fields (if you
want generic fields, use the wlan_radio. fields).
Set more fields when writing out Commview Wi-Fi files.
Change-Id: I691ac59f5e9e1a23779b56a65124049914b72e69
Reviewed-on: https://code.wireshark.org/review/9146
Reviewed-by: Guy Harris <guy@alum.mit.edu>
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Have dissectors of various forms of radio information headers in the
packets fill in a struct ieee_802_11_phdr with radio information as
appropriate, and call the "802.11 radio information" dissector rather
than the raw 802.11 dissector.
This means that the radio information can be found in a
protocol-independent and encapsulation-independent form when you're
looking at the packet; that information can be presented in a form
somewhat easier to read than the raw metadata header format.
It also enables having a single "radio information" tap that allows
statistics to handle all different sorts of radio information
encapsulation.
In addition, it lets us clean up some of the arguments passed to the
common 802.11 dissector routine, by having it pull that information from
the struct ieee_802_11_phdr.
Ensure that the right structure gets passed to that routine, and that
all the appropriate parts of that structure are filled in.
Rename the 802.11 radio protocol to "wlan_radio", rather than just
"radio", as it's 802.11-specific. Give all its fields "wlan_radio."
names rather than "wlan." names.
Change-Id: I78d79afece0ce0cf5fc17293c1e29596413b31c8
Reviewed-on: https://code.wireshark.org/review/8992
Reviewed-by: Guy Harris <guy@alum.mit.edu>
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We had several copies of that code; put it into a filetime_to_nstime()
routine in wsutil, and call that common routine instead.
Change-Id: I1eb5579c36c129ff8d23f9212285ab3f63be0f43
Reviewed-on: https://code.wireshark.org/review/8142
Reviewed-by: Guy Harris <guy@alum.mit.edu>
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dissection
Specifically: Management/Control frames saved by Microsoft Netmon (3.4?)
with "IEEE 802.11 plus Network Monitor radio header" encapsulation
may or may not be saved with an FCS.
See Bug 11105.
Fix: Use "check fcs" preference to specify whether Management & Control
frames have an fcs for this encapsulation.
Change-Id: Ibd0be7b4765c2df2b959cb2234aeed027266246b
Reviewed-on: https://code.wireshark.org/review/7939
Reviewed-by: Alexis La Goutte <alexis.lagoutte@gmail.com>
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