On 09/22/12 01:35, Dave Taht wrote: > Yes, getting cero (and openwrt) built right the first time is hard!
As mentioned in a previous message, having an obvious "canonical" meta repo would give the rest of us something to focus on. If I go to https://github.com/dtaht it's not obvious where to start unless I (or misc newbie) click around on the various cerowrt* projects or go off site via googling for further directions. Bufferbloat is an academic ideal whereas cerowrt is the actual implementation that is of most interest to me, so I can eventually get a handle on the deeper understanding of all the neat tools and concepts (hands on first, rtfm later). As a newbie, something like https://github.com/cerowrt and a https://github.com/cerowrt/build project would make for the most intuitive starting points but just https://github.com/dtaht/cerowrt would be the next most obvious... even if it's only a documentation project with a single README.md > Regardless pls send along your github ids, and I'll add you. markc -> https://github.com/markc _______________________________________________ Cerowrt-devel mailing list [email protected] https://lists.bufferbloat.net/listinfo/cerowrt-devel
