lwip/contrib/ports/unix
Erik Ekman ecab77654a ports/unix/check: Ignore error from fail_* macros
Usage of fail_if/fail_unless macros with a message results in a
warning with the latest version of check (0.15.2+) and GCC.

Ignore this specific error (since warnings are treated as errors) for now.

Example failure:

In file included from ../../../../src/../test/unit/lwip_check.h:7,
                 from ../../../../src/../test/unit/lwip_unittests.c:1:
../../../../src/../test/unit/lwip_unittests.c: In function ‘lwip_check_ensure_no_alloc’:
../../../../src/../test/unit/lwip_unittests.c:55:7: error: too many arguments for format [-Werror=format-extra-args]
   55 |       "mem heap still has %d bytes allocated", lwip_stats.mem.used);
      |       ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2021-01-13 21:48:03 +01:00
..
check ports/unix/check: Ignore error from fail_* macros 2021-01-13 21:48:03 +01:00
example_app
lib Fix-more-typos-using-codespell 2020-02-15 21:45:53 +01:00
port PPP: Change data argument in sio_write to const 2020-12-03 09:47:00 +01:00
Common.mk
Filelists.cmake
README Fix typos using codespell 2020-02-15 21:45:41 +01:00
setup-tapif

This port contains infrastructure and examples for running lwIP on Unix-like
operating systems (Linux, OpenBSD, cygwin). Much of this is targeted towards
testing lwIP applications.

* port/sys_arch.c, port/perf.c, port/include/arch/: Generic platform porting,
  for both states of NO_SYS. (Mapping debugging to printf, providing 
  sys_now & co from the system time etc.)

* check: Runs the unit tests shipped with main lwIP on the Unix port.

* port/netif, port/include/netif: Various network interface implementations and
  their helpers, some explicitly for Unix infrastructure, some generic (but most
  useful on an easy to debug system):

  * fifo: Helper for sio

  * list: Helper for unixif

  * pcapif: Network interface that replays packages from a PCAP dump file, and
    discards packages sent out from it

  * sio: Mapping Unix character devices to lwIP's sio mechanisms

  * tapif: Network interface that is mapped to a tap interface (Unix user
    space layer 2 network device). Uses lwIP threads.