Hi Graham,

Le 16 avr. 2017 15:35, "Graham Bloice" <[email protected]> a
écrit :

Has there been any progress on building and testing libxml2 using OpenSUSE?


No as I was waiting for a confirmation that we would follow this path and
decide to add the dependency on the library.


On 5 April 2017 at 17:52, Graham Bloice <[email protected]> wrote:

>
>
> On 5 April 2017 at 14:48, Pascal Quantin <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>> Hi Ahmad and Graham,
>>
>> 2017-04-05 15:38 GMT+02:00 Graham Bloice <[email protected]>:
>>
>>>
>>>
>>> On 5 April 2017 at 14:11, Ahmad Fatoum <[email protected]> wrote:
>>>
>>>> Hello everyone,
>>>>
>>>> I was advised on Gerrit to post this issue here as to garner wider
>>>> input.
>>>>
>>>> This concerns proposed Change-Id I13c0a2f408fb5c21bad7ab3d7971e
>>>> 0fa8ed7d783 [1] intending to add libxml2 as optional dependency to
>>>> Wireshark.
>>>>
>>>> I am currently preparing to submit upstream, changes I did to the EPL
>>>> v2 dissector (packet-epl.c).
>>>>
>>>> A significant change is the ability to optionally read in user-supplied
>>>> XML device descriptions and to extract type/description/mapping information
>>>> for aiding the dissection. See this previous submission of mine to the
>>>> mailing list: https://www.wireshark.org/lists/wireshark-dev/201701/m
>>>> sg00154.html
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> Seeing as there also has been interest for libxml2 support in
>>>> dissectors in the past:
>>>>
>>>> https://www.wireshark.org/lists/wireshark-dev/201005/msg00108.html
>>>>
>>>> https://ask.wireshark.org/questions/36063/using-libxml2-in-m
>>>> y-own-dissector
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> I think, it would be a good idea to have this as optional dependency as
>>>> Glib's GMarkup may be inadequate or inconvenient for parsing actual XML.
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> Looking forward to your feedback.
>>>>
>>>> Best regards,
>>>> Ahmad Fatoum
>>>>
>>>> [1] https://code.wireshark.org/review/#/c/20912/
>>>>
>>> Thanks for the post,
>>>
>>> 1.  Where will the Windows binaries come from and are these supported
>>> long term?  The  libXml2 downloads page indicates another site provides
>>> Windows binaries [1].  The binaries at that site in the 64 bit directory
>>> seem to be the most recent and are labelled as libXml2-2.9.3 [2].  The
>>> current release of libXml2 is 2.9.4 which has a number of security fixes
>>> among other bug fixes and enhancements [3] so it would appear that the
>>> Windows binaries are not being maintained.
>>>
>>
>> I suggest to use the binaries provided by openSUSE: they provide win32
>> and win64 variants for libxml2 2.9.0 and we are already using their
>> packages for several third party libraries. If it is really required to
>> take the latest version, I can probbly give it a try (I already did this in
>> the past to package a newer version than the one from openSUSE).
>>
>
> That sounds good, I think for a new package we should use the latest
> available to ensure we pick up all known security issues. LibXml2 2.9.4 was
> released in May last year and 2.9.0 in Sep 2012.  I realise I'm attempting
> to volunteer you for this task Pacal ;-)
>
>
>>
>>> 2.  According to the diagram at [1], libXml2 depends on iconv and zlib.
>>> We currently build our own zlib, will that be suitable for the libXml2
>>> dependency?  What will be the source of the iconv binary (iconv-1.14 is
>>> available in the same download area as libXml2 [2])?
>>>
>>
>> Same thing: we can use the ones provided by openSUSE (we already have
>> those dependencies for other packages).
>>
>
> iconv doesn't seem to be in the latest Wireshark builds (2.3.x). I think
> iconv was required for GTK, regardless it seems that libXml2 requires it.
> We will need to check that the OpenSUSE libXml2 is happy with our
> built-from-source zlib.
>
>
>>
>>>
>>> 3. The readme.txt in the download area ([2]) has some "interesting" text:
>>>
>>> These are experimental 64bit binaries. For completeness, 32bit binaries
>>> built using the same method are also included.
>>>
>>> The libraries in these packages are made using GCC (MinGW) toolchain. It is
>>> presently not possible to use these libraries with any recent version of the
>>> Microsoft Visual C compiler because of conflicting C-runtimes. To help you
>>> resist the temptation, the import libraries (.LIB) are not provided at all.
>>> If you need these libraries in an environment which mandates the use of the
>>> Microsoft toolchain, you will have to build them from source yourself.
>>>
>>> and inspection of the download shows this is true, so it appears that
>>> we'll need to rebuild to obtain the import .lib file.
>>>
>>
>> As part of the process of integrating openSUSE libraries, we are
>> generating the .lib file and adding it in the package we upload on our
>> server, so it should be OK.
>>
>>
>>> 4. Microsoft have a Visual Studio porting effort underway called vcpkg
>>> [4], that does include libXml2, but unfortunately is only for VS2015 or
>>> later.  If we move to VS2015 for main releases (post 2.4 release) then this
>>> may be a viable source for libXml2 and other packages we use.  It might be
>>> possible to use this to build VS2013 libXml2.
>>>
>>> 5.  Are there any manufacturers or tools that produce XML device
>>> description files for the EPL dissector such that choosing XML as the input
>>> format is the most sensible choice, or would another format be just as
>>> applicable?
>>>
>>
>> I agree XML can be painful, so this is a good question ;)
>>
>>
>>>
>>>
>>> [1]: https://www.zlatkovic.com/libxml.en.html
>>> [2]: ftp://ftp.zlatkovic.com/libxml/64bit/
>>> [3]: http://xmlsoft.org/news.html
>>> [4]: https://github.com/Microsoft/vcpkg
>>>
>>> --
>>> Graham Bloice
>>>
>>>
>
> --
> Graham Bloice
>



-- 
Graham Bloice
Software Developer
Trihedral UK Limited

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