nes-proj/core/net/uipopt.h
Vincent Brillault b0907f0344 Cleaning old .h :
- Delete unimplemented function and unused structures
- Remove misleading configuration options
- Transfer some comments from 6lowmac to framer-802154
(doc/uip6-doc.txt should be cleaned as well)
2011-07-11 13:20:30 +02:00

684 lines
18 KiB
C

/**
* \addtogroup uip
* @{
*/
/**
* \defgroup uipopt Configuration options for uIP
* @{
*
* uIP is configured using the per-project configuration file
* "uipopt.h". This file contains all compile-time options for uIP and
* should be tweaked to match each specific project. The uIP
* distribution contains a documented example "uipopt.h" that can be
* copied and modified for each project.
*
* \note Contiki does not use the uipopt.h file to configure uIP, but
* uses a per-port uip-conf.h file that should be edited instead.
*/
/**
* \file
* Configuration options for uIP.
* \author Adam Dunkels <adam@dunkels.com>
*
* This file is used for tweaking various configuration options for
* uIP. You should make a copy of this file into one of your project's
* directories instead of editing this example "uipopt.h" file that
* comes with the uIP distribution.
*/
/*
* Copyright (c) 2001-2003, Adam Dunkels.
* All rights reserved.
*
* Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
* modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
* are met:
* 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
* notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
* 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
* notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
* documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
* 3. The name of the author may not be used to endorse or promote
* products derived from this software without specific prior
* written permission.
*
* THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE AUTHOR ``AS IS'' AND ANY EXPRESS
* OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED
* WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE
* ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR BE LIABLE FOR ANY
* DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL
* DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE
* GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS
* INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY,
* WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING
* NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS
* SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
*
* This file is part of the uIP TCP/IP stack.
*
* $Id: uipopt.h,v 1.14 2010/12/24 00:39:04 dak664 Exp $
*
*/
#ifndef __UIPOPT_H__
#define __UIPOPT_H__
#ifndef UIP_LITTLE_ENDIAN
#define UIP_LITTLE_ENDIAN 3412
#endif /* UIP_LITTLE_ENDIAN */
#ifndef UIP_BIG_ENDIAN
#define UIP_BIG_ENDIAN 1234
#endif /* UIP_BIG_ENDIAN */
#include "contiki-conf.h"
/*------------------------------------------------------------------------------*/
/**
* \defgroup uipoptstaticconf Static configuration options
* @{
*
* These configuration options can be used for setting the IP address
* settings statically, but only if UIP_FIXEDADDR is set to 1. The
* configuration options for a specific node includes IP address,
* netmask and default router as well as the Ethernet address. The
* netmask, default router and Ethernet address are applicable only
* if uIP should be run over Ethernet.
*
* This options are meaningful only for the IPv4 code.
*
* All of these should be changed to suit your project.
*/
/**
* Determines if uIP should use a fixed IP address or not.
*
* If uIP should use a fixed IP address, the settings are set in the
* uipopt.h file. If not, the macros uip_sethostaddr(),
* uip_setdraddr() and uip_setnetmask() should be used instead.
*
* \hideinitializer
*/
#define UIP_FIXEDADDR 0
/**
* Ping IP address assignment.
*
* uIP uses a "ping" packets for setting its own IP address if this
* option is set. If so, uIP will start with an empty IP address and
* the destination IP address of the first incoming "ping" (ICMP echo)
* packet will be used for setting the hosts IP address.
*
* \note This works only if UIP_FIXEDADDR is 0.
*
* \hideinitializer
*/
#ifdef UIP_CONF_PINGADDRCONF
#define UIP_PINGADDRCONF (UIP_CONF_PINGADDRCONF)
#else /* UIP_CONF_PINGADDRCONF */
#define UIP_PINGADDRCONF 0
#endif /* UIP_CONF_PINGADDRCONF */
/**
* Specifies if the uIP ARP module should be compiled with a fixed
* Ethernet MAC address or not.
*
* If this configuration option is 0, the macro uip_setethaddr() can
* be used to specify the Ethernet address at run-time.
*
* \hideinitializer
*/
#define UIP_FIXEDETHADDR 0
/** @} */
/*------------------------------------------------------------------------------*/
/**
* \defgroup uipoptip IP configuration options
* @{
*
*/
/**
* The IP TTL (time to live) of IP packets sent by uIP.
*
* This should normally not be changed.
*/
#define UIP_TTL 64
/**
* The maximum time an IP fragment should wait in the reassembly
* buffer before it is dropped.
*
*/
#define UIP_REASS_MAXAGE 60 /*60s*/
/**
* Turn on support for IP packet reassembly.
*
* uIP supports reassembly of fragmented IP packets. This features
* requires an additional amount of RAM to hold the reassembly buffer
* and the reassembly code size is approximately 700 bytes. The
* reassembly buffer is of the same size as the uip_buf buffer
* (configured by UIP_BUFSIZE).
*
* \note IP packet reassembly is not heavily tested.
*
* \hideinitializer
*/
#ifdef UIP_CONF_REASSEMBLY
#define UIP_REASSEMBLY (UIP_CONF_REASSEMBLY)
#else /* UIP_CONF_REASSEMBLY */
#define UIP_REASSEMBLY 0
#endif /* UIP_CONF_REASSEMBLY */
/** @} */
/*------------------------------------------------------------------------------*/
/**
* \defgroup uipoptipv6 IPv6 configuration options
* @{
*
*/
/** The maximum transmission unit at the IP Layer*/
#define UIP_LINK_MTU 1280
#ifndef UIP_CONF_IPV6
/** Do we use IPv6 or not (default: no) */
#define UIP_CONF_IPV6 0
#endif
#ifndef UIP_CONF_IPV6_QUEUE_PKT
/** Do we do per %neighbor queuing during address resolution (default: no) */
#define UIP_CONF_IPV6_QUEUE_PKT 0
#endif
#ifndef UIP_CONF_IPV6_CHECKS
/** Do we do IPv6 consistency checks (highly recommended, default: yes) */
#define UIP_CONF_IPV6_CHECKS 1
#endif
#ifndef UIP_CONF_IPV6_REASSEMBLY
/** Do we do IPv6 fragmentation (default: no) */
#define UIP_CONF_IPV6_REASSEMBLY 0
#endif
#ifndef UIP_CONF_NETIF_MAX_ADDRESSES
/** Default number of IPv6 addresses associated to the node's interface */
#define UIP_CONF_NETIF_MAX_ADDRESSES 3
#endif
#ifndef UIP_CONF_DS6_PREFIX_NBU
/** Default number of IPv6 prefixes associated to the node's interface */
#define UIP_CONF_DS6_PREFIX_NBU 2
#endif
#ifndef UIP_CONF_DS6_NBR_NBU
/** Default number of neighbors that can be stored in the %neighbor cache */
#define UIP_CONF_DS6_NBR_NBU 4
#endif
#ifndef UIP_CONF_DS6_DEFRT_NBU
/** Minimum number of default routers */
#define UIP_CONF_DS6_DEFRT_NBU 2
#endif
/** @} */
/*------------------------------------------------------------------------------*/
/**
* \defgroup uipoptudp UDP configuration options
* @{
*
* \note The UDP support in uIP is still not entirely complete; there
* is no support for sending or receiving broadcast or multicast
* packets, but it works well enough to support a number of vital
* applications such as DNS queries, though
*/
/**
* Toggles whether UDP support should be compiled in or not.
*
* \hideinitializer
*/
#ifdef UIP_CONF_UDP
#define UIP_UDP UIP_CONF_UDP
#else /* UIP_CONF_UDP */
#define UIP_UDP 1
#endif /* UIP_CONF_UDP */
/**
* Toggles if UDP checksums should be used or not.
*
* \note Support for UDP checksums is currently not included in uIP,
* so this option has no function.
*
* \hideinitializer
*/
#ifdef UIP_CONF_UDP_CHECKSUMS
#define UIP_UDP_CHECKSUMS (UIP_CONF_UDP_CHECKSUMS)
#else
#define UIP_UDP_CHECKSUMS (UIP_CONF_IPV6)
#endif
/**
* The maximum amount of concurrent UDP connections.
*
* \hideinitializer
*/
#ifdef UIP_CONF_UDP_CONNS
#define UIP_UDP_CONNS (UIP_CONF_UDP_CONNS)
#else /* UIP_CONF_UDP_CONNS */
#define UIP_UDP_CONNS 10
#endif /* UIP_CONF_UDP_CONNS */
/**
* The name of the function that should be called when UDP datagrams arrive.
*
* \hideinitializer
*/
/** @} */
/*------------------------------------------------------------------------------*/
/**
* \defgroup uipopttcp TCP configuration options
* @{
*/
/**
* Toggles whether UDP support should be compiled in or not.
*
* \hideinitializer
*/
#ifdef UIP_CONF_TCP
#define UIP_TCP (UIP_CONF_TCP)
#else /* UIP_CONF_UDP */
#define UIP_TCP 1
#endif /* UIP_CONF_UDP */
/**
* Determines if support for opening connections from uIP should be
* compiled in.
*
* If the applications that are running on top of uIP for this project
* do not need to open outgoing TCP connections, this configuration
* option can be turned off to reduce the code size of uIP.
*
* \hideinitializer
*/
#ifndef UIP_CONF_ACTIVE_OPEN
#define UIP_ACTIVE_OPEN 1
#else /* UIP_CONF_ACTIVE_OPEN */
#define UIP_ACTIVE_OPEN (UIP_CONF_ACTIVE_OPEN)
#endif /* UIP_CONF_ACTIVE_OPEN */
/**
* The maximum number of simultaneously open TCP connections.
*
* Since the TCP connections are statically allocated, turning this
* configuration knob down results in less RAM used. Each TCP
* connection requires approximately 30 bytes of memory.
*
* \hideinitializer
*/
#ifndef UIP_CONF_MAX_CONNECTIONS
#define UIP_CONNS 10
#else /* UIP_CONF_MAX_CONNECTIONS */
#define UIP_CONNS (UIP_CONF_MAX_CONNECTIONS)
#endif /* UIP_CONF_MAX_CONNECTIONS */
/**
* The maximum number of simultaneously listening TCP ports.
*
* Each listening TCP port requires 2 bytes of memory.
*
* \hideinitializer
*/
#ifndef UIP_CONF_MAX_LISTENPORTS
#define UIP_LISTENPORTS 20
#else /* UIP_CONF_MAX_LISTENPORTS */
#define UIP_LISTENPORTS (UIP_CONF_MAX_LISTENPORTS)
#endif /* UIP_CONF_MAX_LISTENPORTS */
/**
* Determines if support for TCP urgent data notification should be
* compiled in.
*
* Urgent data (out-of-band data) is a rarely used TCP feature that
* very seldom would be required.
*
* \hideinitializer
*/
#define UIP_URGDATA 0
/**
* The initial retransmission timeout counted in timer pulses.
*
* This should not be changed.
*/
#define UIP_RTO 3
/**
* The maximum number of times a segment should be retransmitted
* before the connection should be aborted.
*
* This should not be changed.
*/
#define UIP_MAXRTX 8
/**
* The maximum number of times a SYN segment should be retransmitted
* before a connection request should be deemed to have been
* unsuccessful.
*
* This should not need to be changed.
*/
#define UIP_MAXSYNRTX 5
/**
* The TCP maximum segment size.
*
* This is should not be to set to more than
* UIP_BUFSIZE - UIP_LLH_LEN - UIP_TCPIP_HLEN.
*/
#ifdef UIP_CONF_TCP_MSS
#define UIP_TCP_MSS (UIP_CONF_TCP_MSS)
#else
#define UIP_TCP_MSS (UIP_BUFSIZE - UIP_LLH_LEN - UIP_TCPIP_HLEN)
#endif
/**
* The size of the advertised receiver's window.
*
* Should be set low (i.e., to the size of the uip_buf buffer) if the
* application is slow to process incoming data, or high (32768 bytes)
* if the application processes data quickly.
*
* \hideinitializer
*/
#ifndef UIP_CONF_RECEIVE_WINDOW
#define UIP_RECEIVE_WINDOW (UIP_TCP_MSS)
#else
#define UIP_RECEIVE_WINDOW (UIP_CONF_RECEIVE_WINDOW)
#endif
/**
* How long a connection should stay in the TIME_WAIT state.
*
* This can be reduced for faster entry into power saving modes.
*/
#ifndef UIP_CONF_WAIT_TIMEOUT
#define UIP_TIME_WAIT_TIMEOUT 120
#else
#define UIP_TIME_WAIT_TIMEOUT UIP_CONF_WAIT_TIMEOUT
#endif
/** @} */
/*------------------------------------------------------------------------------*/
/**
* \defgroup uipoptarp ARP configuration options
* @{
*/
/**
* The size of the ARP table.
*
* This option should be set to a larger value if this uIP node will
* have many connections from the local network.
*
* \hideinitializer
*/
#ifdef UIP_CONF_ARPTAB_SIZE
#define UIP_ARPTAB_SIZE (UIP_CONF_ARPTAB_SIZE)
#else
#define UIP_ARPTAB_SIZE 8
#endif
/**
* The maximum age of ARP table entries measured in 10ths of seconds.
*
* An UIP_ARP_MAXAGE of 120 corresponds to 20 minutes (BSD
* default).
*/
#define UIP_ARP_MAXAGE 120
/** @} */
/*------------------------------------------------------------------------------*/
/**
* \defgroup uipoptmac layer 2 options (for ipv6)
* @{
*/
#define UIP_DEFAULT_PREFIX_LEN 64
/** @} */
/*------------------------------------------------------------------------------*/
/**
* \defgroup uipoptsics 6lowpan options (for ipv6)
* @{
*/
/**
* Timeout for packet reassembly at the 6lowpan layer
* (should be < 60s)
*/
#ifdef SICSLOWPAN_CONF_MAXAGE
#define SICSLOWPAN_REASS_MAXAGE (SICSLOWPAN_CONF_MAXAGE)
#else
#define SICSLOWPAN_REASS_MAXAGE 20
#endif
/**
* Do we compress the IP header or not (default: no)
*/
#ifndef SICSLOWPAN_CONF_COMPRESSION
#define SICSLOWPAN_CONF_COMPRESSION 0
#endif
/**
* If we use IPHC compression, how many address contexts do we support
*/
#ifndef SICSLOWPAN_CONF_MAX_ADDR_CONTEXTS
#define SICSLOWPAN_CONF_MAX_ADDR_CONTEXTS 1
#endif
/**
* Do we support 6lowpan fragmentation
*/
#ifndef SICSLOWPAN_CONF_FRAG
#define SICSLOWPAN_CONF_FRAG 0
#endif
/** @} */
/*------------------------------------------------------------------------------*/
/**
* \defgroup uipoptgeneral General configuration options
* @{
*/
/**
* The size of the uIP packet buffer.
*
* The uIP packet buffer should not be smaller than 60 bytes, and does
* not need to be larger than 1514 bytes. Lower size results in lower
* TCP throughput, larger size results in higher TCP throughput.
*
* \hideinitializer
*/
#ifndef UIP_CONF_BUFFER_SIZE
#define UIP_BUFSIZE (UIP_LINK_MTU + UIP_LLH_LEN)
#else /* UIP_CONF_BUFFER_SIZE */
#define UIP_BUFSIZE (UIP_CONF_BUFFER_SIZE)
#endif /* UIP_CONF_BUFFER_SIZE */
/**
* Determines if statistics support should be compiled in.
*
* The statistics is useful for debugging and to show the user.
*
* \hideinitializer
*/
#ifndef UIP_CONF_STATISTICS
#define UIP_STATISTICS 0
#else /* UIP_CONF_STATISTICS */
#define UIP_STATISTICS (UIP_CONF_STATISTICS)
#endif /* UIP_CONF_STATISTICS */
/**
* Determines if logging of certain events should be compiled in.
*
* This is useful mostly for debugging. The function uip_log()
* must be implemented to suit the architecture of the project, if
* logging is turned on.
*
* \hideinitializer
*/
#ifndef UIP_CONF_LOGGING
#define UIP_LOGGING 0
#else /* UIP_CONF_LOGGING */
#define UIP_LOGGING (UIP_CONF_LOGGING)
#endif /* UIP_CONF_LOGGING */
/**
* Broadcast support.
*
* This flag configures IP broadcast support. This is useful only
* together with UDP.
*
* \hideinitializer
*
*/
#ifndef UIP_CONF_BROADCAST
#define UIP_BROADCAST 0
#else /* UIP_CONF_BROADCAST */
#define UIP_BROADCAST (UIP_CONF_BROADCAST)
#endif /* UIP_CONF_BROADCAST */
/**
* Print out a uIP log message.
*
* This function must be implemented by the module that uses uIP, and
* is called by uIP whenever a log message is generated.
*/
void uip_log(char *msg);
/**
* The link level header length.
*
* This is the offset into the uip_buf where the IP header can be
* found. For Ethernet, this should be set to 14. For SLIP, this
* should be set to 0.
*
* \note we probably won't use this constant for other link layers than
* ethernet as they have variable header length (this is due to variable
* number and type of address fields and to optional security features)
* E.g.: 802.15.4 -> 2 + (1/2*4/8) + 0/5/6/10/14
* 802.11 -> 4 + (6*3/4) + 2
* \hideinitializer
*/
#ifdef UIP_CONF_LLH_LEN
#define UIP_LLH_LEN (UIP_CONF_LLH_LEN)
#else /* UIP_LLH_LEN */
#define UIP_LLH_LEN 14
#endif /* UIP_CONF_LLH_LEN */
/** @} */
/*------------------------------------------------------------------------------*/
/**
* \defgroup uipoptcpu CPU architecture configuration
* @{
*
* The CPU architecture configuration is where the endianess of the
* CPU on which uIP is to be run is specified. Most CPUs today are
* little endian, and the most notable exception are the Motorolas
* which are big endian. The BYTE_ORDER macro should be changed to
* reflect the CPU architecture on which uIP is to be run.
*/
/**
* The byte order of the CPU architecture on which uIP is to be run.
*
* This option can be either UIP_BIG_ENDIAN (Motorola byte order) or
* UIP_LITTLE_ENDIAN (Intel byte order).
*
* \hideinitializer
*/
#ifdef UIP_CONF_BYTE_ORDER
#define UIP_BYTE_ORDER (UIP_CONF_BYTE_ORDER)
#else /* UIP_CONF_BYTE_ORDER */
#define UIP_BYTE_ORDER (UIP_LITTLE_ENDIAN)
#endif /* UIP_CONF_BYTE_ORDER */
/** @} */
/*------------------------------------------------------------------------------*/
/**
* \defgroup uipoptapp Application specific configurations
* @{
*
* An uIP application is implemented using a single application
* function that is called by uIP whenever a TCP/IP event occurs. The
* name of this function must be registered with uIP at compile time
* using the UIP_APPCALL definition.
*
* uIP applications can store the application state within the
* uip_conn structure by specifying the type of the application
* structure by typedef:ing the type uip_tcp_appstate_t and uip_udp_appstate_t.
*
* The file containing the definitions must be included in the
* uipopt.h file.
*
* The following example illustrates how this can look.
\code
void httpd_appcall(void);
#define UIP_APPCALL httpd_appcall
struct httpd_state {
u8_t state;
u16_t count;
char *dataptr;
char *script;
};
typedef struct httpd_state uip_tcp_appstate_t
\endcode
*/
/**
* \var #define UIP_APPCALL
*
* The name of the application function that uIP should call in
* response to TCP/IP events.
*
*/
/**
* \var typedef uip_tcp_appstate_t
*
* The type of the application state that is to be stored in the
* uip_conn structure. This usually is typedef:ed to a struct holding
* application state information.
*/
/**
* \var typedef uip_udp_appstate_t
*
* The type of the application state that is to be stored in the
* uip_conn structure. This usually is typedef:ed to a struct holding
* application state information.
*/
/** @} */
#endif /* __UIPOPT_H__ */
/** @} */
/** @} */