osd-contiki/examples/webserver-ipv6-raven/README

44 lines
2.3 KiB
Text
Raw Normal View History

2008-10-15 00:04:16 +02:00
This example features a simple webserver running on top of the IPv6
contiki stack. It differs from the generic webserver6 example in order
to store the web pages in avr flash memory.
2008-10-15 00:04:16 +02:00
The perl script /tools/makefsdata converts the default web content from
/platform/avr-raven/apps/raven-webserver/httpd-fs/*.* into the c source file
/platform/avr-raven/apps/raven-webserver/httpd-fsdata.c.
This file is not deleted in a $make clean so that a rebuild can be done without
perl in the toolchain (e.g. from a Windows cmd window). If any web file is
changed the dependencies will attempt to update httpd-fsdata.c. If perl
is not present, touching httpd-fsdata.c will give it a newer modification date
and allow the build to continue.
2009-07-24 01:51:36 +02:00
Two alternate web contents Huginn and Muninn are included in this directory.
2009-07-24 01:51:36 +02:00
Use e.g. $make WEBDIR=Huginn to generate a webserver6-huginn.elf file.
The ipv6 address suffix and server names are specified in the makefsdata.h file.
$make COFFEE_FILES=1 or 3 uses a static coffee file system in eeprom or program
flash memory. Files can not be created, but existing files can be rewritten
using http POST via upload.html. When switching coffee types a $make clean
should be done to ensure all c source is on the same page (ahem).
-->This is under development and rewrites are not working yet.
Future plans are for $make COFFEE_FILES=2 or 4 for a full coffee file system.
2011-02-07 19:37:43 +01:00
A bare $make will use the avr-raven platform. Alternate compatible platforms can
be specified, e.g. $make TARGET=avr-atmega128rfa1. In that case the webserver
source and content located in that platform directory will be used.
webserver6.elf is always generated. It is copied to e.g. webserver6-avr-raven.elf
or webserver6-avr-atmega128rfa1.elf depending on the platform. If alternate
web content is specified the output file will be named accordingly, e.g.
$make WEBDIR=huginn
(builds webserver6.elf and webserver6-huginn-avr-raven.elf)
$make WEBDIR=muninn TARGET=avr-atmega128rfa1
(builds webserver6.elf and webserver6-muninn-avr-atmega128rfa1.elf)
$make clean affects only the specified target and webdir:
$make clean WEBDIR=huginn TARGET=avr-atmega128rfa1
deletes the avr-atmega128rfa1 objects and webserver6-huginn-avr-atmega128rfa1.elf
$make clean
deletes the avr-raven objects and webserver6-avr-raven.elf