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Diffstat (limited to 'firmware/microblaze/lwip/lwip-1.3.1/doc')
-rw-r--r-- | firmware/microblaze/lwip/lwip-1.3.1/doc/FILES | 6 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | firmware/microblaze/lwip/lwip-1.3.1/doc/contrib.txt | 63 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | firmware/microblaze/lwip/lwip-1.3.1/doc/rawapi.txt | 478 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | firmware/microblaze/lwip/lwip-1.3.1/doc/savannah.txt | 135 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | firmware/microblaze/lwip/lwip-1.3.1/doc/snmp_agent.txt | 181 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | firmware/microblaze/lwip/lwip-1.3.1/doc/sys_arch.txt | 228 |
6 files changed, 1091 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/firmware/microblaze/lwip/lwip-1.3.1/doc/FILES b/firmware/microblaze/lwip/lwip-1.3.1/doc/FILES new file mode 100644 index 000000000..05d356f4f --- /dev/null +++ b/firmware/microblaze/lwip/lwip-1.3.1/doc/FILES @@ -0,0 +1,6 @@ +savannah.txt - How to obtain the current development source code. +contrib.txt - How to contribute to lwIP as a developer. +rawapi.txt - The documentation for the core API of lwIP. + Also provides an overview about the other APIs and multithreading. +snmp_agent.txt - The documentation for the lwIP SNMP agent. +sys_arch.txt - The documentation for a system abstraction layer of lwIP. diff --git a/firmware/microblaze/lwip/lwip-1.3.1/doc/contrib.txt b/firmware/microblaze/lwip/lwip-1.3.1/doc/contrib.txt new file mode 100644 index 000000000..39596fca3 --- /dev/null +++ b/firmware/microblaze/lwip/lwip-1.3.1/doc/contrib.txt @@ -0,0 +1,63 @@ +1 Introduction + +This document describes some guidelines for people participating +in lwIP development. + +2 How to contribute to lwIP + +Here is a short list of suggestions to anybody working with lwIP and +trying to contribute bug reports, fixes, enhancements, platform ports etc. +First of all as you may already know lwIP is a volunteer project so feedback +to fixes or questions might often come late. Hopefully the bug and patch tracking +features of Savannah help us not lose users' input. + +2.1 Source code style: + +1. do not use tabs. +2. indentation is two spaces per level (i.e. per tab). +3. end debug messages with a trailing newline (\n). +4. one space between keyword and opening bracket. +5. no space between function and opening bracket. +6. one space and no newline before opening curly braces of a block. +7. closing curly brace on a single line. +8. spaces surrounding assignment and comparisons. +9. don't initialize static and/or global variables to zero, the compiler takes care of that. +10. use current source code style as further reference. + +2.2 Source code documentation style: + +1. JavaDoc compliant and Doxygen compatible. +2. Function documentation above functions in .c files, not .h files. + (This forces you to synchronize documentation and implementation.) +3. Use current documentation style as further reference. + +2.3 Bug reports and patches: + +1. Make sure you are reporting bugs or send patches against the latest + sources. (From the latest release and/or the current CVS sources.) +2. If you think you found a bug make sure it's not already filed in the + bugtracker at Savannah. +3. If you have a fix put the patch on Savannah. If it is a patch that affects + both core and arch specific stuff please separate them so that the core can + be applied separately while leaving the other patch 'open'. The prefered way + is to NOT touch archs you can't test and let maintainers take care of them. + This is a good way to see if they are used at all - the same goes for unix + netifs except tapif. +4. Do not file a bug and post a fix to it to the patch area. Either a bug report + or a patch will be enough. + If you correct an existing bug then attach the patch to the bug rather than creating a new entry in the patch area. +5. Trivial patches (compiler warning, indentation and spelling fixes or anything obvious which takes a line or two) + can go to the lwip-users list. This is still the fastest way of interaction and the list is not so crowded + as to allow for loss of fixes. Putting bugs on Savannah and subsequently closing them is too much an overhead + for reporting a compiler warning fix. +6. Patches should be specific to a single change or to related changes.Do not mix bugfixes with spelling and other + trivial fixes unless the bugfix is trivial too.Do not reorganize code and rename identifiers in the same patch you + change behaviour if not necessary.A patch is easier to read and understand if it's to the point and short than + if it's not to the point and long :) so the chances for it to be applied are greater. + +2.4 Platform porters: + +1. If you have ported lwIP to a platform (an OS, a uC/processor or a combination of these) and + you think it could benefit others[1] you might want discuss this on the mailing list. You + can also ask for CVS access to submit and maintain your port in the contrib CVS module. +
\ No newline at end of file diff --git a/firmware/microblaze/lwip/lwip-1.3.1/doc/rawapi.txt b/firmware/microblaze/lwip/lwip-1.3.1/doc/rawapi.txt new file mode 100644 index 000000000..8eec6e786 --- /dev/null +++ b/firmware/microblaze/lwip/lwip-1.3.1/doc/rawapi.txt @@ -0,0 +1,478 @@ +Raw TCP/IP interface for lwIP + +Authors: Adam Dunkels, Leon Woestenberg, Christiaan Simons + +lwIP provides three Application Program's Interfaces (APIs) for programs +to use for communication with the TCP/IP code: +* low-level "core" / "callback" or "raw" API. +* higher-level "sequential" API. +* BSD-style socket API. + +The sequential API provides a way for ordinary, sequential, programs +to use the lwIP stack. It is quite similar to the BSD socket API. The +model of execution is based on the blocking open-read-write-close +paradigm. Since the TCP/IP stack is event based by nature, the TCP/IP +code and the application program must reside in different execution +contexts (threads). + +The socket API is a compatibility API for existing applications, +currently it is built on top of the sequential API. It is meant to +provide all functions needed to run socket API applications running +on other platforms (e.g. unix / windows etc.). However, due to limitations +in the specification of this API, there might be incompatibilities +that require small modifications of existing programs. + +** Threading + +lwIP started targeting single-threaded environments. When adding multi- +threading support, instead of making the core thread-safe, another +approach was chosen: there is one main thread running the lwIP core +(also known as the "tcpip_thread"). The raw API may only be used from +this thread! Application threads using the sequential- or socket API +communicate with this main thread through message passing. + + As such, the list of functions that may be called from + other threads or an ISR is very limited! Only functions + from these API header files are thread-safe: + - api.h + - netbuf.h + - netdb.h + - netifapi.h + - sockets.h + - sys.h + + Additionaly, memory (de-)allocation functions may be + called from multiple threads (not ISR!) with NO_SYS=0 + since they are protected by SYS_LIGHTWEIGHT_PROT and/or + semaphores. + + Only since 1.3.0, if SYS_LIGHTWEIGHT_PROT is set to 1 + and LWIP_ALLOW_MEM_FREE_FROM_OTHER_CONTEXT is set to 1, + pbuf_free() may also be called from another thread or + an ISR (since only then, mem_free - for PBUF_RAM - may + be called from an ISR: otherwise, the HEAP is only + protected by semaphores). + + +** The remainder of this document discusses the "raw" API. ** + +The raw TCP/IP interface allows the application program to integrate +better with the TCP/IP code. Program execution is event based by +having callback functions being called from within the TCP/IP +code. The TCP/IP code and the application program both run in the same +thread. The sequential API has a much higher overhead and is not very +well suited for small systems since it forces a multithreaded paradigm +on the application. + +The raw TCP/IP interface is not only faster in terms of code execution +time but is also less memory intensive. The drawback is that program +development is somewhat harder and application programs written for +the raw TCP/IP interface are more difficult to understand. Still, this +is the preferred way of writing applications that should be small in +code size and memory usage. + +Both APIs can be used simultaneously by different application +programs. In fact, the sequential API is implemented as an application +program using the raw TCP/IP interface. + +--- Callbacks + +Program execution is driven by callbacks. Each callback is an ordinary +C function that is called from within the TCP/IP code. Every callback +function is passed the current TCP or UDP connection state as an +argument. Also, in order to be able to keep program specific state, +the callback functions are called with a program specified argument +that is independent of the TCP/IP state. + +The function for setting the application connection state is: + +- void tcp_arg(struct tcp_pcb *pcb, void *arg) + + Specifies the program specific state that should be passed to all + other callback functions. The "pcb" argument is the current TCP + connection control block, and the "arg" argument is the argument + that will be passed to the callbacks. + + +--- TCP connection setup + +The functions used for setting up connections is similar to that of +the sequential API and of the BSD socket API. A new TCP connection +identifier (i.e., a protocol control block - PCB) is created with the +tcp_new() function. This PCB can then be either set to listen for new +incoming connections or be explicitly connected to another host. + +- struct tcp_pcb *tcp_new(void) + + Creates a new connection identifier (PCB). If memory is not + available for creating the new pcb, NULL is returned. + +- err_t tcp_bind(struct tcp_pcb *pcb, struct ip_addr *ipaddr, + u16_t port) + + Binds the pcb to a local IP address and port number. The IP address + can be specified as IP_ADDR_ANY in order to bind the connection to + all local IP addresses. + + If another connection is bound to the same port, the function will + return ERR_USE, otherwise ERR_OK is returned. + +- struct tcp_pcb *tcp_listen(struct tcp_pcb *pcb) + + Commands a pcb to start listening for incoming connections. When an + incoming connection is accepted, the function specified with the + tcp_accept() function will be called. The pcb will have to be bound + to a local port with the tcp_bind() function. + + The tcp_listen() function returns a new connection identifier, and + the one passed as an argument to the function will be + deallocated. The reason for this behavior is that less memory is + needed for a connection that is listening, so tcp_listen() will + reclaim the memory needed for the original connection and allocate a + new smaller memory block for the listening connection. + + tcp_listen() may return NULL if no memory was available for the + listening connection. If so, the memory associated with the pcb + passed as an argument to tcp_listen() will not be deallocated. + +- struct tcp_pcb *tcp_listen_with_backlog(struct tcp_pcb *pcb, u8_t backlog) + + Same as tcp_listen, but limits the number of outstanding connections + in the listen queue to the value specified by the backlog argument. + To use it, your need to set TCP_LISTEN_BACKLOG=1 in your lwipopts.h. + +- void tcp_accepted(struct tcp_pcb *pcb) + + Inform lwIP that an incoming connection has been accepted. This would + usually be called from the accept callback. This allows lwIP to perform + housekeeping tasks, such as allowing further incoming connections to be + queued in the listen backlog. + +- void tcp_accept(struct tcp_pcb *pcb, + err_t (* accept)(void *arg, struct tcp_pcb *newpcb, + err_t err)) + + Specified the callback function that should be called when a new + connection arrives on a listening connection. + +- err_t tcp_connect(struct tcp_pcb *pcb, struct ip_addr *ipaddr, + u16_t port, err_t (* connected)(void *arg, + struct tcp_pcb *tpcb, + err_t err)); + + Sets up the pcb to connect to the remote host and sends the + initial SYN segment which opens the connection. + + The tcp_connect() function returns immediately; it does not wait for + the connection to be properly setup. Instead, it will call the + function specified as the fourth argument (the "connected" argument) + when the connection is established. If the connection could not be + properly established, either because the other host refused the + connection or because the other host didn't answer, the "err" + callback function of this pcb (registered with tcp_err, see below) + will be called. + + The tcp_connect() function can return ERR_MEM if no memory is + available for enqueueing the SYN segment. If the SYN indeed was + enqueued successfully, the tcp_connect() function returns ERR_OK. + + +--- Sending TCP data + +TCP data is sent by enqueueing the data with a call to +tcp_write(). When the data is successfully transmitted to the remote +host, the application will be notified with a call to a specified +callback function. + +- err_t tcp_write(struct tcp_pcb *pcb, void *dataptr, u16_t len, + u8_t copy) + + Enqueues the data pointed to by the argument dataptr. The length of + the data is passed as the len parameter. The copy argument is either + 0 or 1 and indicates whether the new memory should be allocated for + the data to be copied into. If the argument is 0, no new memory + should be allocated and the data should only be referenced by + pointer. + + The tcp_write() function will fail and return ERR_MEM if the length + of the data exceeds the current send buffer size or if the length of + the queue of outgoing segment is larger than the upper limit defined + in lwipopts.h. The number of bytes available in the output queue can + be retrieved with the tcp_sndbuf() function. + + The proper way to use this function is to call the function with at + most tcp_sndbuf() bytes of data. If the function returns ERR_MEM, + the application should wait until some of the currently enqueued + data has been successfully received by the other host and try again. + +- void tcp_sent(struct tcp_pcb *pcb, + err_t (* sent)(void *arg, struct tcp_pcb *tpcb, + u16_t len)) + + Specifies the callback function that should be called when data has + successfully been received (i.e., acknowledged) by the remote + host. The len argument passed to the callback function gives the + amount bytes that was acknowledged by the last acknowledgment. + + +--- Receiving TCP data + +TCP data reception is callback based - an application specified +callback function is called when new data arrives. When the +application has taken the data, it has to call the tcp_recved() +function to indicate that TCP can advertise increase the receive +window. + +- void tcp_recv(struct tcp_pcb *pcb, + err_t (* recv)(void *arg, struct tcp_pcb *tpcb, + struct pbuf *p, err_t err)) + + Sets the callback function that will be called when new data + arrives. The callback function will be passed a NULL pbuf to + indicate that the remote host has closed the connection. If + there are no errors and the callback function is to return + ERR_OK, then it must free the pbuf. Otherwise, it must not + free the pbuf so that lwIP core code can store it. + +- void tcp_recved(struct tcp_pcb *pcb, u16_t len) + + Must be called when the application has received the data. The len + argument indicates the length of the received data. + + +--- Application polling + +When a connection is idle (i.e., no data is either transmitted or +received), lwIP will repeatedly poll the application by calling a +specified callback function. This can be used either as a watchdog +timer for killing connections that have stayed idle for too long, or +as a method of waiting for memory to become available. For instance, +if a call to tcp_write() has failed because memory wasn't available, +the application may use the polling functionality to call tcp_write() +again when the connection has been idle for a while. + +- void tcp_poll(struct tcp_pcb *pcb, u8_t interval, + err_t (* poll)(void *arg, struct tcp_pcb *tpcb)) + + Specifies the polling interval and the callback function that should + be called to poll the application. The interval is specified in + number of TCP coarse grained timer shots, which typically occurs + twice a second. An interval of 10 means that the application would + be polled every 5 seconds. + + +--- Closing and aborting connections + +- err_t tcp_close(struct tcp_pcb *pcb) + + Closes the connection. The function may return ERR_MEM if no memory + was available for closing the connection. If so, the application + should wait and try again either by using the acknowledgment + callback or the polling functionality. If the close succeeds, the + function returns ERR_OK. + + The pcb is deallocated by the TCP code after a call to tcp_close(). + +- void tcp_abort(struct tcp_pcb *pcb) + + Aborts the connection by sending a RST (reset) segment to the remote + host. The pcb is deallocated. This function never fails. + +If a connection is aborted because of an error, the application is +alerted of this event by the err callback. Errors that might abort a +connection are when there is a shortage of memory. The callback +function to be called is set using the tcp_err() function. + +- void tcp_err(struct tcp_pcb *pcb, void (* err)(void *arg, + err_t err)) + + The error callback function does not get the pcb passed to it as a + parameter since the pcb may already have been deallocated. + + +--- Lower layer TCP interface + +TCP provides a simple interface to the lower layers of the +system. During system initialization, the function tcp_init() has +to be called before any other TCP function is called. When the system +is running, the two timer functions tcp_fasttmr() and tcp_slowtmr() +must be called with regular intervals. The tcp_fasttmr() should be +called every TCP_FAST_INTERVAL milliseconds (defined in tcp.h) and +tcp_slowtmr() should be called every TCP_SLOW_INTERVAL milliseconds. + + +--- UDP interface + +The UDP interface is similar to that of TCP, but due to the lower +level of complexity of UDP, the interface is significantly simpler. + +- struct udp_pcb *udp_new(void) + + Creates a new UDP pcb which can be used for UDP communication. The + pcb is not active until it has either been bound to a local address + or connected to a remote address. + +- void udp_remove(struct udp_pcb *pcb) + + Removes and deallocates the pcb. + +- err_t udp_bind(struct udp_pcb *pcb, struct ip_addr *ipaddr, + u16_t port) + + Binds the pcb to a local address. The IP-address argument "ipaddr" + can be IP_ADDR_ANY to indicate that it should listen to any local IP + address. The function currently always return ERR_OK. + +- err_t udp_connect(struct udp_pcb *pcb, struct ip_addr *ipaddr, + u16_t port) + + Sets the remote end of the pcb. This function does not generate any + network traffic, but only set the remote address of the pcb. + +- err_t udp_disconnect(struct udp_pcb *pcb) + + Remove the remote end of the pcb. This function does not generate + any network traffic, but only removes the remote address of the pcb. + +- err_t udp_send(struct udp_pcb *pcb, struct pbuf *p) + + Sends the pbuf p. The pbuf is not deallocated. + +- void udp_recv(struct udp_pcb *pcb, + void (* recv)(void *arg, struct udp_pcb *upcb, + struct pbuf *p, + struct ip_addr *addr, + u16_t port), + void *recv_arg) + + Specifies a callback function that should be called when a UDP + datagram is received. + + +--- System initalization + +A truly complete and generic sequence for initializing the lwip stack +cannot be given because it depends on the build configuration (lwipopts.h) +and additional initializations for your runtime environment (e.g. timers). + +We can give you some idea on how to proceed when using the raw API. +We assume a configuration using a single Ethernet netif and the +UDP and TCP transport layers, IPv4 and the DHCP client. + +Call these functions in the order of appearance: + +- stats_init() + + Clears the structure where runtime statistics are gathered. + +- sys_init() + + Not of much use since we set the NO_SYS 1 option in lwipopts.h, + to be called for easy configuration changes. + +- mem_init() + + Initializes the dynamic memory heap defined by MEM_SIZE. + +- memp_init() + + Initializes the memory pools defined by MEMP_NUM_x. + +- pbuf_init() + + Initializes the pbuf memory pool defined by PBUF_POOL_SIZE. + +- etharp_init() + + Initializes the ARP table and queue. + Note: you must call etharp_tmr at a ARP_TMR_INTERVAL (5 seconds) regular interval + after this initialization. + +- ip_init() + + Doesn't do much, it should be called to handle future changes. + +- udp_init() + + Clears the UDP PCB list. + +- tcp_init() + + Clears the TCP PCB list and clears some internal TCP timers. + Note: you must call tcp_fasttmr() and tcp_slowtmr() at the + predefined regular intervals after this initialization. + +- netif_add(struct netif *netif, struct ip_addr *ipaddr, + struct ip_addr *netmask, struct ip_addr *gw, + void *state, err_t (* init)(struct netif *netif), + err_t (* input)(struct pbuf *p, struct netif *netif)) + + Adds your network interface to the netif_list. Allocate a struct + netif and pass a pointer to this structure as the first argument. + Give pointers to cleared ip_addr structures when using DHCP, + or fill them with sane numbers otherwise. The state pointer may be NULL. + + The init function pointer must point to a initialization function for + your ethernet netif interface. The following code illustrates it's use. + + err_t netif_if_init(struct netif *netif) + { + u8_t i; + + for(i = 0; i < ETHARP_HWADDR_LEN; i++) netif->hwaddr[i] = some_eth_addr[i]; + init_my_eth_device(); + return ERR_OK; + } + + For ethernet drivers, the input function pointer must point to the lwip + function ethernet_input() declared in "netif/etharp.h". Other drivers + must use ip_input() declared in "lwip/ip.h". + +- netif_set_default(struct netif *netif) + + Registers the default network interface. + +- netif_set_up(struct netif *netif) + + When the netif is fully configured this function must be called. + +- dhcp_start(struct netif *netif) + + Creates a new DHCP client for this interface on the first call. + Note: you must call dhcp_fine_tmr() and dhcp_coarse_tmr() at + the predefined regular intervals after starting the client. + + You can peek in the netif->dhcp struct for the actual DHCP status. + + +--- Optimalization hints + +The first thing you want to optimize is the lwip_standard_checksum() +routine from src/core/inet.c. You can override this standard +function with the #define LWIP_CHKSUM <your_checksum_routine>. + +There are C examples given in inet.c or you might want to +craft an assembly function for this. RFC1071 is a good +introduction to this subject. + +Other significant improvements can be made by supplying +assembly or inline replacements for htons() and htonl() +if you're using a little-endian architecture. +#define LWIP_PLATFORM_BYTESWAP 1 +#define LWIP_PLATFORM_HTONS(x) <your_htons> +#define LWIP_PLATFORM_HTONL(x) <your_htonl> + +Check your network interface driver if it reads at +a higher speed than the maximum wire-speed. If the +hardware isn't serviced frequently and fast enough +buffer overflows are likely to occur. + +E.g. when using the cs8900 driver, call cs8900if_service(ethif) +as frequently as possible. When using an RTOS let the cs8900 interrupt +wake a high priority task that services your driver using a binary +semaphore or event flag. Some drivers might allow additional tuning +to match your application and network. + +For a production release it is recommended to set LWIP_STATS to 0. +Note that speed performance isn't influenced much by simply setting +high values to the memory options. diff --git a/firmware/microblaze/lwip/lwip-1.3.1/doc/savannah.txt b/firmware/microblaze/lwip/lwip-1.3.1/doc/savannah.txt new file mode 100644 index 000000000..409905b10 --- /dev/null +++ b/firmware/microblaze/lwip/lwip-1.3.1/doc/savannah.txt @@ -0,0 +1,135 @@ +Daily Use Guide for using Savannah for lwIP + +Table of Contents: + +1 - Obtaining lwIP from the CVS repository +2 - Committers/developers CVS access using SSH (to be written) +3 - Merging from DEVEL branch to main trunk (stable branch) +4 - How to release lwIP + + + +1 Obtaining lwIP from the CVS repository +---------------------------------------- + +To perform an anonymous CVS checkout of the main trunk (this is where +bug fixes and incremental enhancements occur), do this: + +cvs -z3 -d:pserver:anonymous@cvs.sv.gnu.org:/sources/lwip checkout lwip + +Or, obtain a stable branch (updated with bug fixes only) as follows: +cvs -z3 -d:pserver:anonymous@cvs.sv.gnu.org:/sources/lwip checkout \ + -r STABLE-0_7 -d lwip-0.7 lwip + +Or, obtain a specific (fixed) release as follows: +cvs -z3 -d:pserver:anonymous@cvs.sv.gnu.org:/sources/lwip checkout \ + -r STABLE-0_7_0 -d lwip-0.7.0 lwip + +3 Committers/developers CVS access using SSH +-------------------------------------------- + +The Savannah server uses SSH (Secure Shell) protocol 2 authentication and encryption. +As such, CVS commits to the server occur through a SSH tunnel for project members. +To create a SSH2 key pair in UNIX-like environments, do this: + +ssh-keygen -t dsa + +Under Windows, a recommended SSH client is "PuTTY", freely available with good +documentation and a graphic user interface. Use its key generator. + +Now paste the id_dsa.pub contents into your Savannah account public key list. Wait +a while so that Savannah can update its configuration (This can take minutes). + +Try to login using SSH: + +ssh -v your_login@cvs.sv.gnu.org + +If it tells you: + +Authenticating with public key "your_key_name"... +Server refused to allocate pty + +then you could login; Savannah refuses to give you a shell - which is OK, as we +are allowed to use SSH for CVS only. Now, you should be able to do this: + +export CVS_RSH=ssh +cvs -z3 -d:ext:your_login@cvs.sv.gnu.org:/sources/lwip co lwip + +after which you can edit your local files with bug fixes or new features and +commit them. Make sure you know what you are doing when using CVS to make +changes on the repository. If in doubt, ask on the lwip-members mailing list. + +(If SSH asks about authenticity of the host, you can check the key + fingerprint against http://savannah.nongnu.org/cvs/?group=lwip) + + +3 Merging from DEVEL branch to main trunk (stable) +-------------------------------------------------- + +Merging is a delicate process in CVS and requires the +following disciplined steps in order to prevent conflicts +in the future. Conflicts can be hard to solve! + +Merging from branch A to branch B requires that the A branch +has a tag indicating the previous merger. This tag is called +'merged_from_A_to_B'. After merging, the tag is moved in the +A branch to remember this merger for future merge actions. + +IMPORTANT: AFTER COMMITTING A SUCCESFUL MERGE IN THE +REPOSITORY, THE TAG MUST BE SET ON THE SOURCE BRANCH OF THE +MERGE ACTION (REPLACING EXISTING TAGS WITH THE SAME NAME). + +Merge all changes in DEVEL since our last merge to main: + +In the working copy of the main trunk: +cvs update -P -jmerged_from_DEVEL_to_main -jDEVEL + +(This will apply the changes between 'merged_from_DEVEL_to_main' +and 'DEVEL' to your work set of files) + +We can now commit the merge result. +cvs commit -R -m "Merged from DEVEL to main." + +If this worked out OK, we now move the tag in the DEVEL branch +to this merge point, so we can use this point for future merges: + +cvs rtag -F -r DEVEL merged_from_DEVEL_to_main lwip + +4 How to release lwIP +--------------------- + +First, checkout a clean copy of the branch to be released. Tag this set with +tag name "STABLE-0_6_3". (I use release number 0.6.3 throughout this example). + +Login CVS using pserver authentication, then export a clean copy of the +tagged tree. Export is similar to a checkout, except that the CVS metadata +is not created locally. + +export CVS_RSH=ssh +cvs -z3 -d:pserver:anonymous@cvs.sv.gnu.org:/sources/lwip checkout \ + -r STABLE-0_6_3 -d lwip-0.6.3 lwip + +Archive this directory using tar, gzip'd, bzip2'd and zip'd. + +tar czvf lwip-0.6.3.tar.gz lwip-0.6.3 +tar cjvf lwip-0.6.3.tar.bz2 lwip-0.6.3 +zip -r lwip-0.6.3.zip lwip-0.6.3 + +Now, sign the archives with a detached GPG binary signature as follows: + +gpg -b lwip-0.6.3.tar.gz +gpg -b lwip-0.6.3.tar.bz2 +gpg -b lwip-0.6.3.zip + +Upload these files using anonymous FTP: +ncftp ftp://savannah.gnu.org/incoming/savannah/lwip + +ncftp>mput *0.6.3.* + +Additionally, you may post a news item on Savannah, like this: + +A new 0.6.3 release is now available here: +http://savannah.nongnu.org/files/?group=lwip&highlight=0.6.3 + +You will have to submit this via the user News interface, then approve +this via the Administrator News interface.
\ No newline at end of file diff --git a/firmware/microblaze/lwip/lwip-1.3.1/doc/snmp_agent.txt b/firmware/microblaze/lwip/lwip-1.3.1/doc/snmp_agent.txt new file mode 100644 index 000000000..9b58616a6 --- /dev/null +++ b/firmware/microblaze/lwip/lwip-1.3.1/doc/snmp_agent.txt @@ -0,0 +1,181 @@ +SNMPv1 agent for lwIP + +Author: Christiaan Simons + +This is a brief introduction how to use and configure the SNMP agent. +Note the agent uses the raw-API UDP interface so you may also want to +read rawapi.txt to gain a better understanding of the SNMP message handling. + +0 Agent Capabilities +==================== + +SNMPv1 per RFC1157 + This is an old(er) standard but is still widely supported. + For SNMPv2c and v3 have a greater complexity and need many + more lines of code. IMHO this breaks the idea of "lightweight IP". + + Note the S in SNMP stands for "Simple". Note that "Simple" is + relative. SNMP is simple compared to the complex ISO network + management protocols CMIP (Common Management Information Protocol) + and CMOT (CMip Over Tcp). + +MIB II per RFC1213 + The standard lwIP stack management information base. + This is a required MIB, so this is always enabled. + When builing lwIP without TCP, the mib-2.tcp group is omitted. + The groups EGP, CMOT and transmission are disabled by default. + + Most mib-2 objects are not writable except: + sysName, sysLocation, sysContact, snmpEnableAuthenTraps. + Writing to or changing the ARP and IP address and route + tables is not possible. + + Note lwIP has a very limited notion of IP routing. It currently + doen't have a route table and doesn't have a notion of the U,G,H flags. + Instead lwIP uses the interface list with only one default interface + acting as a single gateway interface (G) for the default route. + + The agent returns a "virtual table" with the default route 0.0.0.0 + for the default interface and network routes (no H) for each + network interface in the netif_list. + All routes are considered to be up (U). + +Loading additional MIBs + MIBs can only be added in compile-time, not in run-time. + There is no MIB compiler thus additional MIBs must be hand coded. + +Large SNMP message support + The packet decoding and encoding routines are designed + to use pbuf-chains. Larger payloads then the minimum + SNMP requirement of 484 octets are supported if the + PBUF_POOL_SIZE and IP_REASS_BUFSIZE are set to match your + local requirement. + +1 Building the Agent +==================== + +First of all you'll need to add the following define +to your local lwipopts.h: + +#define LWIP_SNMP 1 + +and add the source files in lwip/src/core/snmp +and some snmp headers in lwip/src/include/lwip to your makefile. + +Note you'll might need to adapt you network driver to update +the mib2 variables for your interface. + +2 Running the Agent +=================== + +The following function calls must be made in your program to +actually get the SNMP agent running. + +Before starting the agent you should supply pointers +to non-volatile memory for sysContact, sysLocation, +and snmpEnableAuthenTraps. You can do this by calling + +snmp_set_syscontact() +snmp_set_syslocation() +snmp_set_snmpenableauthentraps() + +Additionally you may want to set + +snmp_set_sysdescr() +snmp_set_sysobjid() (if you have a private MIB) +snmp_set_sysname() + +Also before starting the agent you need to setup +one or more trap destinations using these calls: + +snmp_trap_dst_enable(); +snmp_trap_dst_ip_set(); + +In the lwIP initialisation sequence call snmp_init() just after +the call to udp_init(). + +Exactly every 10 msec the SNMP uptime timestamp must be updated with +snmp_inc_sysuptime(). You should call this from a timer interrupt +or a timer signal handler depending on your runtime environment. + +An alternative way to update the SNMP uptime timestamp is to do a call like +snmp_add_sysuptime(100) each 1000ms (which is bigger "step", but call to +a lower frequency). Another one is to not call snmp_inc_sysuptime() or +snmp_add_sysuptime(), and to define the SNMP_GET_SYSUPTIME(sysuptime) macro. +This one is undefined by default in mib2.c. SNMP_GET_SYSUPTIME is called inside +snmp_get_sysuptime(u32_t *value), and enable to change "sysuptime" value only +when it's queried (any function which need "sysuptime" have to call +snmp_get_sysuptime). + + +3 Private MIBs +============== + +If want to extend the agent with your own private MIB you'll need to +add the following define to your local lwipopts.h: + +#define SNMP_PRIVATE_MIB 1 + +You must provide the private_mib.h and associated files yourself. +Note we don't have a "MIB compiler" that generates C source from a MIB, +so you're required to do some serious coding if you enable this! + +Note the lwIP enterprise ID (26381) is assigned to the lwIP project, +ALL OBJECT IDENTIFIERS LIVING UNDER THIS ID ARE ASSIGNED BY THE lwIP +MAINTAINERS! + +If you need to create your own private MIB you'll need +to apply for your own enterprise ID with IANA: http://www.iana.org/numbers.html + +You can set it by passing a struct snmp_obj_id to the agent +using snmp_set_sysobjid(&my_object_id), just before snmp_init(). + +Note the object identifiers for thes MIB-2 and your private MIB +tree must be kept in sorted ascending (lexicographical) order. +This to ensure correct getnext operation. + +An example for a private MIB is part of the "minimal Unix" project: +contrib/ports/unix/proj/minimal/lwip_prvmib.c + +The next chapter gives a more detailed description of the +MIB-2 tree and the optional private MIB. + +4 The Gory Details +================== + +4.0 Object identifiers and the MIB tree. + +We have three distinct parts for all object identifiers: + +The prefix + .iso.org.dod.internet + +the middle part + .mgmt.mib-2.ip.ipNetToMediaTable.ipNetToMediaEntry.ipNetToMediaPhysAddress + +and the index part + .1.192.168.0.1 + +Objects located above the .internet hierarchy aren't supported. +Currently only the .mgmt sub-tree is available and +when the SNMP_PRIVATE_MIB is enabled the .private tree +becomes available too. + +Object identifiers from incoming requests are checked +for a matching prefix, middle part and index part +or are expanded(*) for GetNext requests with short +or inexisting names in the request. +(* we call this "expansion" but this also +resembles the "auto-completion" operation) + +The middle part is usually located in ROM (const) +to preserve precious RAM on small microcontrollers. +However RAM location is possible for an dynamically +changing private tree. + +The index part is handled by functions which in +turn use dynamically allocated index trees from RAM. +These trees are updated by e.g. the etharp code +when new entries are made or removed form the ARP cache. + +/** @todo more gory details */ diff --git a/firmware/microblaze/lwip/lwip-1.3.1/doc/sys_arch.txt b/firmware/microblaze/lwip/lwip-1.3.1/doc/sys_arch.txt new file mode 100644 index 000000000..66310a91e --- /dev/null +++ b/firmware/microblaze/lwip/lwip-1.3.1/doc/sys_arch.txt @@ -0,0 +1,228 @@ +sys_arch interface for lwIP 0.6++ + +Author: Adam Dunkels + +The operating system emulation layer provides a common interface +between the lwIP code and the underlying operating system kernel. The +general idea is that porting lwIP to new architectures requires only +small changes to a few header files and a new sys_arch +implementation. It is also possible to do a sys_arch implementation +that does not rely on any underlying operating system. + +The sys_arch provides semaphores and mailboxes to lwIP. For the full +lwIP functionality, multiple threads support can be implemented in the +sys_arch, but this is not required for the basic lwIP +functionality. Previous versions of lwIP required the sys_arch to +implement timer scheduling as well but as of lwIP 0.5 this is +implemented in a higher layer. + +In addition to the source file providing the functionality of sys_arch, +the OS emulation layer must provide several header files defining +macros used throughout lwip. The files required and the macros they +must define are listed below the sys_arch description. + +Semaphores can be either counting or binary - lwIP works with both +kinds. Mailboxes are used for message passing and can be implemented +either as a queue which allows multiple messages to be posted to a +mailbox, or as a rendez-vous point where only one message can be +posted at a time. lwIP works with both kinds, but the former type will +be more efficient. A message in a mailbox is just a pointer, nothing +more. + +Semaphores are represented by the type "sys_sem_t" which is typedef'd +in the sys_arch.h file. Mailboxes are equivalently represented by the +type "sys_mbox_t". lwIP does not place any restrictions on how +sys_sem_t or sys_mbox_t are represented internally. + +The following functions must be implemented by the sys_arch: + +- void sys_init(void) + + Is called to initialize the sys_arch layer. + +- sys_sem_t sys_sem_new(u8_t count) + + Creates and returns a new semaphore. The "count" argument specifies + the initial state of the semaphore. + +- void sys_sem_free(sys_sem_t sem) + + Deallocates a semaphore. + +- void sys_sem_signal(sys_sem_t sem) + + Signals a semaphore. + +- u32_t sys_arch_sem_wait(sys_sem_t sem, u32_t timeout) + + Blocks the thread while waiting for the semaphore to be + signaled. If the "timeout" argument is non-zero, the thread should + only be blocked for the specified time (measured in + milliseconds). If the "timeout" argument is zero, the thread should be + blocked until the semaphore is signalled. + + If the timeout argument is non-zero, the return value is the number of + milliseconds spent waiting for the semaphore to be signaled. If the + semaphore wasn't signaled within the specified time, the return value is + SYS_ARCH_TIMEOUT. If the thread didn't have to wait for the semaphore + (i.e., it was already signaled), the function may return zero. + + Notice that lwIP implements a function with a similar name, + sys_sem_wait(), that uses the sys_arch_sem_wait() function. + +- sys_mbox_t sys_mbox_new(int size) + + Creates an empty mailbox for maximum "size" elements. Elements stored + in mailboxes are pointers. You have to define macros "_MBOX_SIZE" + in your lwipopts.h, or ignore this parameter in your implementation + and use a default size. + +- void sys_mbox_free(sys_mbox_t mbox) + + Deallocates a mailbox. If there are messages still present in the + mailbox when the mailbox is deallocated, it is an indication of a + programming error in lwIP and the developer should be notified. + +- void sys_mbox_post(sys_mbox_t mbox, void *msg) + + Posts the "msg" to the mailbox. This function have to block until + the "msg" is really posted. + +- err_t sys_mbox_trypost(sys_mbox_t mbox, void *msg) + + Try to post the "msg" to the mailbox. Returns ERR_MEM if this one + is full, else, ERR_OK if the "msg" is posted. + +- u32_t sys_arch_mbox_fetch(sys_mbox_t mbox, void **msg, u32_t timeout) + + Blocks the thread until a message arrives in the mailbox, but does + not block the thread longer than "timeout" milliseconds (similar to + the sys_arch_sem_wait() function). If "timeout" is 0, the thread should + be blocked until a message arrives. The "msg" argument is a result + parameter that is set by the function (i.e., by doing "*msg = + ptr"). The "msg" parameter maybe NULL to indicate that the message + should be dropped. + + The return values are the same as for the sys_arch_sem_wait() function: + Number of milliseconds spent waiting or SYS_ARCH_TIMEOUT if there was a + timeout. + + Note that a function with a similar name, sys_mbox_fetch(), is + implemented by lwIP. + +- u32_t sys_arch_mbox_tryfetch(sys_mbox_t mbox, void **msg) + + This is similar to sys_arch_mbox_fetch, however if a message is not + present in the mailbox, it immediately returns with the code + SYS_MBOX_EMPTY. On success 0 is returned. + + To allow for efficient implementations, this can be defined as a + function-like macro in sys_arch.h instead of a normal function. For + example, a naive implementation could be: + #define sys_arch_mbox_tryfetch(mbox,msg) \ + sys_arch_mbox_fetch(mbox,msg,1) + although this would introduce unnecessary delays. + +- struct sys_timeouts *sys_arch_timeouts(void) + + Returns a pointer to the per-thread sys_timeouts structure. In lwIP, + each thread has a list of timeouts which is repressented as a linked + list of sys_timeout structures. The sys_timeouts structure holds a + pointer to a linked list of timeouts. This function is called by + the lwIP timeout scheduler and must not return a NULL value. + + In a single thread sys_arch implementation, this function will + simply return a pointer to a global sys_timeouts variable stored in + the sys_arch module. + +If threads are supported by the underlying operating system and if +such functionality is needed in lwIP, the following function will have +to be implemented as well: + +- sys_thread_t sys_thread_new(char *name, void (* thread)(void *arg), void *arg, int stacksize, int prio) + + Starts a new thread named "name" with priority "prio" that will begin its + execution in the function "thread()". The "arg" argument will be passed as an + argument to the thread() function. The stack size to used for this thread is + the "stacksize" parameter. The id of the new thread is returned. Both the id + and the priority are system dependent. + +- sys_prot_t sys_arch_protect(void) + + This optional function does a "fast" critical region protection and returns + the previous protection level. This function is only called during very short + critical regions. An embedded system which supports ISR-based drivers might + want to implement this function by disabling interrupts. Task-based systems + might want to implement this by using a mutex or disabling tasking. This + function should support recursive calls from the same task or interrupt. In + other words, sys_arch_protect() could be called while already protected. In + that case the return value indicates that it is already protected. + + sys_arch_protect() is only required if your port is supporting an operating + system. + +- void sys_arch_unprotect(sys_prot_t pval) + + This optional function does a "fast" set of critical region protection to the + value specified by pval. See the documentation for sys_arch_protect() for + more information. This function is only required if your port is supporting + an operating system. + +Note: + +Be carefull with using mem_malloc() in sys_arch. When malloc() refers to +mem_malloc() you can run into a circular function call problem. In mem.c +mem_init() tries to allcate a semaphore using mem_malloc, which of course +can't be performed when sys_arch uses mem_malloc. + +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- +Additional files required for the "OS support" emulation layer: +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- + +cc.h - Architecture environment, some compiler specific, some + environment specific (probably should move env stuff + to sys_arch.h.) + + Typedefs for the types used by lwip - + u8_t, s8_t, u16_t, s16_t, u32_t, s32_t, mem_ptr_t + + Compiler hints for packing lwip's structures - + PACK_STRUCT_FIELD(x) + PACK_STRUCT_STRUCT + PACK_STRUCT_BEGIN + PACK_STRUCT_END + + Platform specific diagnostic output - + LWIP_PLATFORM_DIAG(x) - non-fatal, print a message. + LWIP_PLATFORM_ASSERT(x) - fatal, print message and abandon execution. + Portability defines for printf formatters: + U16_F, S16_F, X16_F, U32_F, S32_F, X32_F, SZT_F + + "lightweight" synchronization mechanisms - + SYS_ARCH_DECL_PROTECT(x) - declare a protection state variable. + SYS_ARCH_PROTECT(x) - enter protection mode. + SYS_ARCH_UNPROTECT(x) - leave protection mode. + + If the compiler does not provide memset() this file must include a + definition of it, or include a file which defines it. + + This file must either include a system-local <errno.h> which defines + the standard *nix error codes, or it should #define LWIP_PROVIDE_ERRNO + to make lwip/arch.h define the codes which are used throughout. + + +perf.h - Architecture specific performance measurement. + Measurement calls made throughout lwip, these can be defined to nothing. + PERF_START - start measuring something. + PERF_STOP(x) - stop measuring something, and record the result. + +sys_arch.h - Tied to sys_arch.c + + Arch dependent types for the following objects: + sys_sem_t, sys_mbox_t, sys_thread_t, + And, optionally: + sys_prot_t + + Defines to set vars of sys_mbox_t and sys_sem_t to NULL. + SYS_MBOX_NULL NULL + SYS_SEM_NULL NULL |