Actually, the author used the word 'advanced'
('sophisticated' was my paraphrasing) - and my interpretation was that he
was referring to throughput, primarily - specifically referencing zero-copy
and checksum bypass features...
Hasn't that very topic come up recently with
regard to lwIP?? ;-)
Cool! I'd like to see an independent comparision of lwIP
vs. a more "sophisticated" stack, though!
As I am not a native speaker,
what exactly do you think they meant with 'sophisticated'? I think we also
have some clever ideas in our stack ;-) OK, we might have to work a little
to get it fast and real stable. And I'm biased, too (of
course)...
-----Originalnachricht-----
Von:
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An:
Mailing list for lwIP users
Gesendet: 14.05.2007 19:24
Betreff: RE:
[lwip-users] DHCP - getting address works but not
responding
All,
For those that might be interested, the
cover feature of this month's
Embedded Systems Design magazine ("Put a
Configurable 32-bit Processor
in Your FPGA", N. Sundaramoothy, E.S.D.
May 2007) mentions lwIP as the
sole example of a stack for use with a
'lite' Ethernet subsystem in the
titular
application.
Unfortunately, the author recommends a more
sophisticated stack if a
higher throughput is required... personally I
think lwIP could still fit
the bill, but hey, I might be biased.
;)
Congrats and thanks again to everyone who has contributed and
supported
the lwIP project - it's good to see acknowlegement in an
accepted
industry publication such as E.S.D.!
-
Jim
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