| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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This split the initialization of the flow manager into an init part
and a start part. This avoids the usage of data structures that have
not been properly initialized yet.
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This lets the routing component listen to RIB events. It listens to
/fsdb which is populated with FSOs. The graph that is kept within the
routing component is updated depending on the event that was received.
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This adds a graph structure which will be updated by routing when it
is notified about a new RIB event. The routing can then use this graph
as input for calculating the shortest path to a destination.
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This makes the routing component create a Flow State Database
(FSDB). An FSDB contains Flow State Objects (FSOs). An FSO is created
when a neighbor is added, it is deleted when a neighbor is removed and
its QoS is updated when a neighbor's QoS changes.
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Our mailserver was migrated from intec.ugent.be to the central
ugent.be emailserver. This PR updates the header files to reflect this
change as well. Some header files were also homogenized if the
parameters within the functions were badly aligned.
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This refactors the different Application Entities of the normal
IPCP. They all listen to and use the connection manager to establish
new application connections.
This commit also adds a neighbors struct to the normal IPCP. It
contains neighbor structs that contain application
connection. Notifiers can be registered in case a neighbor changes
(added, removed, QoS changed).
The flow manager has an instance of this neighbors struct and listens
to these events to update its flow set. The routing component also
listens to these events so that it can update the FSDB if needed. The
flow manager now also creates the PFF instances and the routing
instances per QoS cube.
The RIB manager also uses this an instance of the neighbors struct and
listens to neighbor events as well.
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