>Stephen Fisher <st...@stephen-fisher.com> 02/16/11 11:57 AM >>> >> . On Tue, Feb 15, 2011 at 07:57:09PM +0100, Andreas wrote: >> This might be easy. If all .obj files that are linked in the directory >> epan you can do >> >> cd epan >> dumpbin /symbols *.obj | find /v "UNDEF" | find "External"
> sfisher@shadow:/usr/local/src/wireshark>cd epan > sfisher@shadow:/usr/local/src/wireshark/epan>dumpbin /symbols *.obj | > find /v "UNDEF" | find "External" > dumpbin: No match. > find: /v: No such file or directory > find: UNDEF: No such file or directory > find: External: No such file or directory > > Was that for use on a Linux system? I run FreeBSD. Wireshark is meant > to compile on many types of Unix. I think "find" in this context is the Window's "find.exe" (typically located C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM32). This is Microsoft's implementation of grep.... > C:\>find /? > Searches for a text string in a file or files. > > FIND [/V] [/C] [/N] [/I] [/OFF[LINE]] "string" [[drive:][path]filename[ ...]] > > /V Displays all lines NOT containing the specified string. > /C Displays only the count of lines containing the string. > /N Displays line numbers with the displayed lines. > /I Ignores the case of characters when searching for the string. > /OFF[LINE] Do not skip files with offline attribute set. > "string" Specifies the text string to find. > [drive:][path]filename > Specifies a file or files to search. > > If a path is not specified, FIND searches the text typed at the prompt > or piped from another command. > > C:\> Best regards, Jim Y. ___________________________________________________________________________ Sent via: Wireshark-dev mailing list <wireshark-dev@wireshark.org> Archives: http://www.wireshark.org/lists/wireshark-dev Unsubscribe: https://wireshark.org/mailman/options/wireshark-dev mailto:wireshark-dev-requ...@wireshark.org?subject=unsubscribe