Commit graph

9 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Enrico Joerns 85b494c16b [doc] Give files a common structure by placing license first (partial)
Followed by doxyen file and group tags.
This patch is only a first attempt to make provide a clean structure,
many more files require rework, too.
2014-11-10 23:54:49 +01:00
Adam Dunkels 5f3fe7f7c7 Updated include paths for the moved files under net/ 2014-01-26 23:20:23 +01:00
Adam Dunkels 944537fccf Removed all old RCS tags in the Contiki source tree. Those RCS tags are not used any more, as we are now using git to manage the Contiki source tree 2012-10-26 15:54:49 +02:00
Nicholas J Humfrey efab964451 Converted u8_t to uint8_t and u16_t to uint16_t in the apps directory. 2012-02-21 08:33:25 -05:00
Adam Dunkels 2cbec29a42 Explicitly initialize module if it wasn't initialized before the first registration 2011-08-29 21:59:08 +02:00
Adam Dunkels 6699f6a6f6 To avoid ambiguity, address should be explicitly set by caller, not automatically by the module. 2011-08-29 21:56:49 +02:00
adamdunkels 5585d72c86 A simple but substantial change: uIP used the htons()/HTONS() macro
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.
2010-10-19 18:29:03 +00:00
adamdunkels f8437ad545 Periodically increase sequence number to avoid active registrations being garbage collected in neighbors 2010-06-15 19:32:29 +00:00
adamdunkels 5dc55f0a1b A quick and dirty service registry daemon hack. The servreg-hack
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
advertisement in Contiki.
2010-06-15 19:00:28 +00:00