ODP is a framework rather than an environment, meaning that applications
are free to make use of other system APIs as they see fit.  So an ODP
thread (or process) could make direct use of LInux APIs if it chose to.
It's up to individual applications to decide the design tradeoffs that are
appropriate to them.

On Sat, May 16, 2015 at 6:37 PM, Kury Nicolas <[email protected]
> wrote:

>  Hi
>
>
>  I have a question about the document "OpenDataPlane Introduction and
> Overview".
>
>
>  Page 8, there is written:
>
>
>  *ODP applications can run in **parallel with full Linux user processes
> that implement control and/or management plane **functions as these
> typically do not have the critical performance and latency requirements of
> the*
> *data plane and can more fully benefit from the full Linux API feature
> set.*
>
>
>  What does it mean exactly ? A ODP application can use the Linux ARP
> table or the Link-State Database​ of a OSPF process ? How do we do that
> with ODP ?
>
>
>  Thank you
> Nicolas
>
>
>
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