On 2011-12-21 11:00, Reinhold Kainhofer wrote:
> On 20/12/2011
17:12, Reinhold Kainhofer wrote:
>
>> On 20/12/2011 16:36, Jaap Keuter
wrote:
>>
>>> Just for my information, is this the crux of your
location independance?
>>>
>>> find_package(Wireshark)
>>>
include_directories (${WIRESHARK_INCLUDE_DIRS})
>> Yes, the
cmake/FindWireshark.cmake file (which is executed with the find_package)
locates the libwireshark.so library and the wireshark headers (e.g.
/usr/include/wireshark).
>
> BTW, I just realized that by default
wireshark does not install any headers (but installs the wireshark.so
library). Ubuntu manually installs the following headers with the
libwireshark-dev package (the rule to install those files is only in
debian/rules):
> color.h
> config.h
> register.h
> epan/*.h
>
epan/crypt/*.h
> epan/dfilter/*.h
> epan/dissectors/*.h
>
epan/ftypes/*.h
>
> Is there a particular reason that's speaking
against installing those header files (which would make plugin
development much easier, since you don't need to modify the wireshark
source tree -- or even have it available)?
>
> Cheers,
> Reinhold
Hi,
Well, it was never intended to have libwireshark as a separate
library. Now it's somewhat strong armed into the limelight, and it
shows.
The Debian packager (Balint) did a good job for Debian, but it
is/was not a goal in itself.
Thanks,
Jaap
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