commit | fb50d3891ba2d91cfafd1efe1aa34fe0856992d8 | [log] [tgz] |
---|---|---|
author | Dan Talayco <dan.talayco@bigswitch.com> | Mon Aug 05 16:00:17 2013 -0700 |
committer | Dan Talayco <dan.talayco@bigswitch.com> | Mon Aug 05 16:00:17 2013 -0700 |
tree | 6c2a9b7156c92acc935161ed7e8f2a29ca20c7d6 | |
parent | 0af7a45b8fb33190cc3af95c6626f3506874e1f0 [diff] |
Mask values in a match according to its masks A step towards match canonicalization. When generating a match structure, clear the bits outside of those indicated by the masks. Changes to test code to make consistent. For 1.0, need only worry about IPv4 addrs. Otherwise, use a simple loop to iterative over bytes in the match.
LoxiGen is a tool that generates OpenFlow protocol libraries for a number of languages. It is composed of a frontend that parses wire protocol descriptions and a backend for each supported language (currently C and Python, with Java on the way).
You can run LoxiGen directly from the repository. There's no need to install it, and it has no dependencies beyond Python 2.6+.
To generate the libraries for all languages:
make
To generate the library for a single language:
make c
The currently supported languages are c
and python
.
The generated libraries will be under the loxi_output
directory. This can be changed with the LOXI_OUTPUT_DIR
environment variable when using the Makefile.
Each generated library comes with its own set of documentation in the standard format for that language. Please see that documentation for more details on using the generated libraries.
Please fork the repository on GitHub and send us a pull request. You might also be interested in the INTERNALS file which has notes about how LoxiGen works.