UIP (micro IP)
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The uIP[1] is an open source TCP/IP stack capable of being used with tiny 8- and 16-bit microcontrollers. It was initially developed by Adam Dunkels of the "Networked Embedded Systems" group at the Swedish Institute of Computer Science, licensed under a BSD style license, and further developed by a wide group of developers.
uIP is widely used in the embedded systems industry and has been ported to several platforms[2][3][4], including DSP platforms[5].
In October 2008, Cisco, Atmel, and SICS announced a fully compliant IPv6 extension to uIP, called uIPv6[6].
[edit] See also
[edit] References
- ^ uIP main page
- ^ Maxim IC Application Note 4205, Using the uIP Stack to Network a MAXQ Microcontroller, Zach Metzinger
- ^ Cyan Technology Application Note 57, uIP V1.0 TCP/IP Stack for eCOG1k and eCOG1X
- ^ Adam Dunkel's uIP on the Olimex EasyWeb2 and LPC-E2124, Paul Curtis
- ^ Drew Barnett and Anthony J. Massa, Inside the uIP Stack, Dr Dobbs Journal, February 2005
- ^ Cisco, Atmel and the Swedish Institute of Computer Science (SICS) Collaborate to Support a Future Where Any Device Can Be Connected to the Internet
[edit] External links
- uIP main page
- uIP license - BSD-style
- uIP port for AVR microcontrollers
- uIP-based Webserver using OpenRISC-embedded SoC
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