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Review changes incorporated
Change-Id: Ia04b62144a0d3643095b518db538c7eb5137c048
Signed-off-by: Tibor Sirovatka <tsirovat@cisco.com>
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Added jclass reference caching and updated JNI version to 1.8
Change-Id: Ie8dbbd4b91b90bf9e4e9a6148313e46056b0d67e
Signed-off-by: Marek Gradzki <mgradzki@cisco.com>
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Change-Id: Ibca8fc8c1962ca36d91898c1523afb2df6dfdc49
Signed-off-by: Maros Marsalek <mmarsale@cisco.com>
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These specific methods remove the need for casting on client
side code while using generic send method
Change-Id: Ic0240359333831b676a7d205f63ac1c3f3f8af4c
Signed-off-by: Maros Marsalek <mmarsale@cisco.com>
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Added comments generation for C and Java files.
Change-Id: Ifb670a5592eb871bfe68804f0a8d8f9b5b14f00a
Signed-off-by: Marek Gradzki <mgradzki@cisco.com>
Signed-off-by: Ed Warnicke <eaw@cisco.com>
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The old japi has two main drawbacks:
* it is not fully generated (requres manual coding for
every new api call that returns data other thanstatus code)
* it is not asynchronous from Java perspective (requires
active wait loops - big overhead due to JNI boundary being
crossed lots of times).
The new api is lightweight (fully generated except for connect,
disconenct and ping) and truly asynchronous (uses callbacks,
utilities that offer java.util.concurrent.Future interface
are also provided).
Change-Id: I531080ef651e8a74f19210490c71d161221ab600
Signed-off-by: Marek Gradzki <mgradzki@cisco.com>
Signed-off-by: Maros Marsalek <mmarsale@cisco.com>
Signed-off-by: Ed Warnicke <eaw@cisco.com>
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Refactors the VXLAN node to work with both IPv4 and IPv6 transports.
There is a discussion thread for this change at
https://lists.fd.io/pipermail/vpp-dev/2016-March/000279.html
Note that this changes the binary configuration API to support both
address families; each address uses the same memory for either address
type and a flag to indicate which is in use. This also includes changes
to the Java API to support both address families.
The CLI and VAT syntax remains unchanged; the code detects whether an
IPv4 or an IPv6 address was given.
Configuration examples:
IPv4 CLI: create vxlan tunnel src 192.168.1.1 dst 192.168.1.2
vni 10 encap-vrf-id 0 decap-next l2
IPv6 CLI: create vxlan tunnel src 2620:124:9000::1 dst 2620:124:9000::2
vni 16 encap-vrf-id 0 decap-next l2
IPv4 VAT: vxlan_add_del_tunnel src 192.168.1.1 dst 192.168.1.2
vni 10 encap-vrf-id 0 decap-next l2
IPv6 VAT: vxlan_add_del_tunnel src 2620:124:9000::1 dst 2620:124:9000::2
vni 16 encap-vrf-id 0 decap-next l2
TODO: The encap path is not as optimal as it could be.
Change-Id: I87be8bf0501e0c9cd7e401be4542bb599f1b6e47
Signed-off-by: Chris Luke <chrisy@flirble.org>
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Change-Id: I1e39970bc6ded9e6da64385b2289321ba43bebfd
Signed-off-by: Ole Troan <ot@cisco.com>
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Change-Id: Ia504ccdac1deac20f20cf7fb76f78b2d8c505474
Signed-off-by: Damjan Marion <damarion@cisco.com>
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Change-Id: I7a4bc4678fea723c35bbeac1b893c5c52235aa67
Signed-off-by: Damjan Marion <damarion@cisco.com>
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Change-Id: I6bc656caf22e284233e27f9e003f11502f306c11
Signed-off-by: Ole Troan <ot@cisco.com>
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only VPP to caller was supported.)
Change-Id: Id660caeb780f3b26cc091467291463980f485178
Signed-off-by: Ole Troan <ot@cisco.com>
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Change-Id: I22cb443c4bd0bf298abb6f06e8e4ca65a44a2854
Signed-off-by: Damjan Marion <damarion@cisco.com>
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See: https://wiki.fd.io/view/VPP/Python_API
Change-Id: If135fc32208c7031787e1935b399d930e0e1ea1f
Signed-off-by: Ole Troan <ot@cisco.com>
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