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XORP: eXtensible Open Router Platform 1. Overview =========== XORP is an open networking platform that supports OSPF, RIP, BGP, OLSR, VRRP, PIM, IGMP (Multicast) and other routing protocols. Most protocols support IPv4 and IPv6 where applicable. It is known to work on various Linux distributions and flavors of BSD. XORP started life as a project at the ICSI Center for Open Networking (ICON) at the International Computer Science Institute in Berkeley, California, USA, and spent some time with the team at XORP, Inc. It is now maintained and improved on a volunteer basis by a core of long-term XORP developers and some newer contributors. XORP's primary goal is to be an open platform for networking protocol implementations and an alternative to proprietary and closed networking products in the marketplace today. XORP design philosophy is: * modularity * extensibility * performance * robustness This is achieved by carefully separating functionalities into independent modules, and by providing an API for each module. XORP divides into two subsystems. The higher-level ("user-level") subsystem consists of the routing protocols. The lower-level ("kernel") manages the forwarding path, and provides APIs for the higher-level to access. User-level XORP uses multi-process architecture with one process per routing protocol, and a novel inter-process communication mechanism called XRL (XORP Resource Locator). The lower-level subsystem can use traditional UNIX kernel forwarding, or Click modular router. The modularity and independency of the lower-level from the user-level subsystem allows for its easily replacement with other solutions including high-end hardware-based forwarding engines. For more information about XORP high-level design see the following paper available from http://www.xorp.org/ : "XORP: An Open Platform for Network Research", HotNets-I 2002 Workshop. 2. Status ========= This is XORP Release 1.8.6-WIP Supported platforms: * DragonFlyBSD * FreeBSD * NetBSD * OpenBSD * Mac OS X ??? * Linux (x86-32, x86-64, Sparc) * Windows (via mingw cross-compile) See xorp/BUILD_NOTES for OS-specific details, compilation information, etc. Development platform: * Linux and FreeBSD Other platforms can also be used for development, perhaps with a bit of effort. Ask on the xorp-hackers mailing list if your preferred platform is not currently supported. See xorp/ERRATA for the list of known problems. Currently, XORP implements the following protocols: * RIP and RIPng: - RFC 2453 (RIP version 2) - RFC 2082 (RIP-2 MD5 Authentication) - RFC 2080 (RIPng for IPv6) * BGP4: - RFC 4271 (A Border Gateway Protocol 4 (BGP-4)) - RFC 3392 (Capabilities Advertisement with BGP-4) - RFC 4760 (Multiprotocol Extensions for BGP-4) - RFC 2545 (Use of BGP-4 Multiprotocol Extensions for IPv6 Inter-Domain Routing) - RFC 1997 (BGP Communities Attribute) - RFC 2796 (BGP Route Reflection - An Alternative to Full Mesh IBGP) - RFC 3065 (Autonomous System Confederations for BGP) - RFC 2439 (BGP Route Flap Damping) - RFC 4893 (BGP Support for Four-octet AS Number Space) - RFC 1657 (Definitions of Managed Objects for the Fourth Version of the Border Gateway Protocol (BGP-4) using SMIv2) * OSPFv2: - RFC 2328 (OSPF Version 2) - RFC 3101 (The OSPF Not-So-Stubby Area (NSSA) Option) * OSPFv3: - draft-ietf-ospf-ospfv3-update-14.txt (OSPF for IPv6) * PIM-SM: - draft-ietf-pim-sm-v2-new-11.{ps,txt} - draft-ietf-pim-sm-bsr-03.{ps,txt} * IGMP v1, v2, and v3: - RFC 2236 (Internet Group Management Protocol, Version 2) - RFC 3376 (Internet Group Management Protocol, Version 3) * MLD v1 and v2: - RFC 2710 (Multicast Listener Discovery (MLD) for IPv6) - RFC 3810 (Multicast Listener Discovery Version 2 (MLDv2) for IPv6) * VRRP v2: - RFC 3768 (Virtual Router Redundancy Protocol (VRRP)) For description of the changes in each release, see ${XORP}/RELEASE_NOTES. 3. Compilation, configuration and startup ========================================= To compile XORP, you must have a recent version of scons and g++ compiler toolset installed. cd xorp scons scons install For help on scons and available compile options: scons --help You may also wish to try this script to create a tar.gz install package: ./lf_pkg.bash In general, configuration and startup of the various XORP processes are normally meant to happen via the router manager (rtrmgr), so please refer first to the XORP online documentation linked from: http://www.xorp.org 4. Code structure and documentation =================================== The content of some important directories is listed below: * xorp/bgp : BGP implementation. * xorp/cli : CLI (Command-Line Interface) library. It is used by the Router Manager (rtrmgr), and by some of the multicast code (the multicast-specific part of fea, mld6igmp, pim). * docs : XORP user documentation. Note that much of this is now on the wiki linked from www.xorp.org. The latex based documentation is deprecated. * xorp/etc : Various XORP-related files (e.g., configuration, templates). * xorp/fea : Forwarding Engine Abstraction. The FEA implements the interface between XORP and the underlying forwarding engine (e.g., the UNIX kernel). It is used both for unicast and multicast. Note that the multicast-specific documentation is in ${XORP}/docs/mfea. * xorp/fib2mrib : Forwarding Information Base to the Multicast Routing Information Base route propagator. It uses the FEA to obtain the FIB information from the underlying system, and propagates it to the MRIB, so it can be used by multicast routing protocols such as PIM-SM. Typically, it is needed only if the unicast routing protocols run within XORP do not inject routes in the MRIB. * xorp/libcomm : Communication socket library. * xorp/libfeaclient : Library that is useful to clients of the FEA. * xorp/libproto : Abstract protocol library. Used by the following modules/directories: cli, fea, mld6igmp, ospf, pim. * xorp/libxipc : XRL (XORP Resource Locator) library and XRL-related programs. * xorp/libxorp : XORP library that contains various basic functionalities such as IP addresses, IP subnets, etc. * xorp/mld6igmp : Multicast Listen Discovery/Internet Group Management Protocol (MLD/IGMP) implementation. * xorp/mrt : Various multicast-related code. Used by the following modules/directories: fea, mld6igmp, pim. * xorp/ospf : Open Shortest Path First implementation. * xorp/policy : Policy-related library. * xorp/pim : Protocol Independent Multicast - Sparse Mode (PIM-SM) implementation. * xorp/rib : Routing Information Base. It is used to store the routing information from various protocols. * xorp/rip: Routing Information Protocol implementation. * xorp/rtrmgr : Router Manager. It is used to manage and configure all XORP components. * xorp/static_routes : Static routes management. It is used to configure static routes. * xorp/vrrp : Virtual Router Redundancy Protocol implementation. * xorp/xrl : XRL (XORP Resource Locator) interface. The directories listed below contain third-party contributed code which is distributed with each XORP source release: * xorp/contrib : various contributed code. * olsr : RFC 3626 Optimized Link State Routing implementation. Generously funded by CenGen, Inc. (Does not compile in 1.7, but will work in 1.8) * mld6igmp_lite : Implementation of the Lightweight IGMPv3/MLDv2 protocols: - draft-ietf-mboned-lightweight-igmpv3-mldv2-02.txt The directories listed below contain various information that are of limited interest, or are not relevant to the current release: * devnotes : various notes for the XORP core members. * utils : Various XORP-related utilities. 5. Authors & Contributors ========== * Ben Greear (Current Project Manager) * Pierre Lepropre (Documentation) The old core team consisted of: * Fred Bauer * Andrea Bittau * Javier Cardona * Atanu Ghosh * Adam Greenhalgh * Mark Handley * Orion Hodson * Eddie Kohler * Pavlin Radoslavov * Luigi Rizzo * Bruce M. Simpson * Marko Zec 6. Acknowledgments ================== * Sponsors (in chronological order, oldest first): - AT&T funding (through ICIR) - Intel Corporation - NSF grant (ANI-0129541). The following acknowledgment and disclaimer applies for the NSF support: This material is based upon work supported by the National Science Foundation under Grant No. 0129541. Any opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this material are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Science Foundation. - Microsoft - Vyatta - CenGen - Candela Technologies (Sponsors Ben Greear) - RUN at University of Liege (hosts & supports the documentation wiki) * Martin C. Shepherd for the libtecla library (used by the CLI). 8. Additional information ========================= * WWW: http://www.xorp.org/ * Source code and binary distribution access: http://github.com/greearb/xorp.ct * XORP Bugzilla database and bug reports: http://www.xorp.org/bugzilla * XORP users mailing list: [email protected] This list is for general XORP discussion. To subscribe, send email to [email protected] with the word "subscribe" (no quotes!) in the subject or the body of the email. For more subscription options, send the command "help" instead, or use the following URL: http://mailman.ICSI.Berkeley.edu/mailman/listinfo/xorp-users * XORP hackers mailing list: [email protected] This list is for XORP development discussion. To subscribe, send email to [email protected] with the word "subscribe" (no quotes!) in the subject or the body of the email. For more subscription options, send the command "help" instead, or use the following URL: http://mailman.ICSI.Berkeley.edu/mailman/listinfo/xorp-hackers
ath10k-ct
Stand-alone ath10k driver based on Candela Technologies Linux kernel.hostap-ct
Fork of hostap: git://w1.fi/srv/git/hostap.gitlanforge-scripts
Scripts and other open-source tools to be used with the LANforge software suite.ScryMUD
ScryMUD, from back when the web was 19200vocal-ct
Candela Technologies fork of the old VOCAL SIP project.iw-ct
Fork of the 'iw' wireless tools: http://git.sipsolutions.net/iw.gitdhcp-ct
Modified version of DHCP from Fedora 14.linux-ct-5.10
Candela 5.10 Linux kerelnfs-utils-ct
Candela branch of nfs-utilslinux-ct-5.4
Linux 5.4 with Candela Technologies patches applied.linux-ct-4.0
Candela Technologies 4.0 kernellinux-ct-4.16
Candela Technologies modified Linux kernel based on upstream 4.16 kernel.libnl-ct
Fork of libnl project: git://git.infradead.org/users/tgr/libnl.gitlibnftnl-ct
Clone of netfilter's libnftnl: git://git.netfilter.org/libnftnlwireless-regdb-ct
Clone of wireless-regdb (git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/sforshee/wireless-regdb.git)jfreechart-fse-ct
Candela Technologies fork of JFreeChart-FSE repository.linux-ct-6.7
Candela 6.6 linux kernelhackrf-ct
CT instance of hackrflinux-ct-5.8
Candela Technologies 5.8 Linux Kernelopenwrt-ct
Fork of OpenWRT that integrates LANforge network testing software.libpcap-ct
Clone of https://github.com/the-tcpdump-group/libpcap.gitvconfig
802.1q linux vlan config tool.iproute2-ct
Clone of iproute2 with a few improvements, from: git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/shemminger/iproute2.gitperl-5.23-3-ct
Perl 5.23.3 with fixes for Android.linux-ct-5.2
Linux 5.2 with Candela Technologies patches applied.linux-ct-6.9
Candela Linux kernel based on 6.8openwrt-5.13-ct
openwrt using 5.13-ct backports packagelinux-ct-5.17
Candela linux kernel 5.17linux-ct-6.4
Candela Linux kernel based on 6.4 upstream kernel.linux-ct-4.13
Candela Technologies 4.13 Linux Kernellibmodbus-ct
Clone of https://github.com/stephane/libmodbus.gitjmathplot-ct
Fork of jmathplot, with some build fixes.linux-ct-6.10
iputils-ct
Candela fork of iputils project.Love Open Source and this site? Check out how you can help us