functions for converting between host and network byte order. These
names are the de facto standard names for this functionality because
of the original BSD TCP/IP implementation. But they cause problems for
uIP/Contiki: some platforms define these names themselves (Mac OS,
most notably), causing compilation problems for Contiki on those
platforms.
This commit changes all htons to uip_htons instead. Same goes for
htonl, ntohs, and ntohl. All-caps versions as well.
- Made sure that the "low level" keystroke events are only handled if no dialog is displayed.
- Changed anonymous to 'anonymous'.
- Added option to run in fullscreen windowless mode by replacing in that scenario the dialogs with windows.
Both apps/webbrowser and apps/webserver contain a http-strings.c. It seems unclear to me if the original intention was to have them identical (but then they should have been factored out in the first place) or if they were only very similiar by chance.
Anyway, currently webserver/http-strings.c is a clean superset of webbrowser/http-strings.c so if a project has both HTTP server and client parts it is desirable to use the webserver variant. In the case of apps/shell this can be archived by adding webserver *before* webbrowser to the APPS variable.
This seems like a hack to me - but the whole shell build qualifies as hack, doesn't it ;-)
out power data for all incoming and outgoing packets (which causes
problems when there is much traffic), the power data for the packets
is instead logged and periodically printed out in aggregated form.
This is especially useful for the cc65-based targets as it ain't possible there to "just change into the wwwroot directory and start the webserver using its pathname".
allows a program to register an 8-bit service ID that gets
disseminated to the entire network, as long as a servreg-hack daemon
is running on all neighbors. Other nodes can look up the service ID to
figure out what nodes in the network offer this service.
This is officially labeled as a "hack" so that we don't get too comfy
with it; this hack is not the future of service discovery and
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