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README

      1 INTRODUCTION
      2 
      3 lwIP is a small independent implementation of the TCP/IP protocol
      4 suite that has been developed by Adam Dunkels at the Computer and
      5 Networks Architectures (CNA) lab at the Swedish Institute of Computer
      6 Science (SICS).
      7 
      8 The focus of the lwIP TCP/IP implementation is to reduce the RAM usage
      9 while still having a full scale TCP. This making lwIP suitable for use
     10 in embedded systems with tens of kilobytes of free RAM and room for
     11 around 40 kilobytes of code ROM.
     12 
     13 FEATURES
     14 
     15   * IP (Internet Protocol) including packet forwarding over multiple network
     16     interfaces
     17   * ICMP (Internet Control Message Protocol) for network maintenance and debugging
     18   * IGMP (Internet Group Management Protocol) for multicast traffic management
     19   * UDP (User Datagram Protocol) including experimental UDP-lite extensions
     20   * TCP (Transmission Control Protocol) with congestion control, RTT estimation
     21     and fast recovery/fast retransmit
     22   * Specialized raw/native API for enhanced performance
     23   * Optional Berkeley-like socket API
     24   * DNS (Domain names resolver)
     25   * SNMP (Simple Network Management Protocol)
     26   * DHCP (Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol)
     27   * AUTOIP (for IPv4, conform with RFC 3927)
     28   * PPP (Point-to-Point Protocol)
     29   * ARP (Address Resolution Protocol) for Ethernet
     30 
     31 LICENSE
     32 
     33 lwIP is freely available under a BSD license.
     34 
     35 DEVELOPMENT
     36 
     37 lwIP has grown into an excellent TCP/IP stack for embedded devices,
     38 and developers using the stack often submit bug fixes, improvements,
     39 and additions to the stack to further increase its usefulness.
     40 
     41 Development of lwIP is hosted on Savannah, a central point for
     42 software development, maintenance and distribution. Everyone can
     43 help improve lwIP by use of Savannah's interface, CVS and the
     44 mailing list. A core team of developers will commit changes to the
     45 CVS source tree.
     46 
     47 The lwIP TCP/IP stack is maintained in the 'lwip' CVS module and
     48 contributions (such as platform ports) are in the 'contrib' module.
     49 
     50 See doc/savannah.txt for details on CVS server access for users and
     51 developers.
     52 
     53 Last night's CVS tar ball can be downloaded from:
     54   http://savannah.gnu.org/cvs.backups/lwip.tar.gz [CHANGED - NEEDS FIXING]
     55 
     56 The current CVS trees are web-browsable:
     57   http://savannah.nongnu.org/cgi-bin/viewcvs/lwip/lwip/
     58   http://savannah.nongnu.org/cgi-bin/viewcvs/lwip/contrib/
     59 
     60 Submit patches and bugs via the lwIP project page:
     61   http://savannah.nongnu.org/projects/lwip/
     62 
     63 
     64 DOCUMENTATION
     65 
     66 The original out-dated homepage of lwIP and Adam Dunkels' papers on
     67 lwIP are at the official lwIP home page:
     68   http://www.sics.se/~adam/lwip/
     69 
     70 Self documentation of the source code is regularly extracted from the
     71 current CVS sources and is available from this web page:
     72   http://www.nongnu.org/lwip/
     73 
     74 There is now a constantly growin wiki about lwIP at
     75   http://lwip.wikia.com/wiki/LwIP_Wiki
     76 
     77 Also, there are mailing lists you can subscribe at
     78   http://savannah.nongnu.org/mail/?group=lwip
     79 plus searchable archives:
     80   http://lists.nongnu.org/archive/html/lwip-users/
     81   http://lists.nongnu.org/archive/html/lwip-devel/
     82 
     83 Reading Adam's papers, the files in docs/, browsing the source code
     84 documentation and browsing the mailing list archives is a good way to
     85 become familiar with the design of lwIP.
     86 
     87 Adam Dunkels <adam (a] sics.se>
     88 Leon Woestenberg <leon.woestenberg (a] gmx.net>
     89 
     90