I'm actually working on a Controller/Driver implemented in Java. Still, implementing C extensions for Python, in my opinion, is a simpler approach.
On 9 April 2014 03:49, Murphy McCauley <murphy.mccau...@gmail.com> wrote: > Sure, it's just the libfluid_experiment branch of the main fork: > http://noxrepo.org/git/pox/tree/libfluid_experiment > > It's definitely very much an experiment. ;) For starters, I was only > messing with 1.0 and while I used libfluid to read off the wire, the > responses are still generated with POX's OpenFlow library. I just thought > it was worth experimenting to get a sense of what would be involved. If > you guys are interested in doing much more work on this, we should talk! > > -- Murphy > > On Apr 8, 2014, at 5:34 PM, Christian Esteve Rothenberg < > chest...@dca.fee.unicamp.br> wrote: > > Thanks Murphy, > > one of my students working with POX wants to give a try and hopefullly > contribute to these efforts, can you share the pointers to that POX > branch. We can only say positive things about prototypiing with POX -- > giving it clean and effective OF1.3 support would be a neat upgrade > beneficial to all parties :) > > -Christian > > > > On Mon, Mar 24, 2014 at 10:17 PM, Murphy McCauley < > murphy.mccau...@gmail.com> wrote: > > > Congratulations. > > There's now POX branch that's been quickly hacked up to (sort of) use > libfluid's Python bindings. It also includes a minor patch for one of the > swig .i files. > > -- Murphy > > On Mar 22, 2014, at 5:08 AM, Christian Esteve Rothenberg < > chest...@dca.fee.unicamp.br> wrote: > > Dear OpenFlow fellows, > > in case you are not aware about the public release of the winner > implementation of the OpenFlow driver competition ( > https://www.opennetworking.org/competition) here is the pointer to the > github repository: > > http://opennetworkingfoundation.github.io/libfluid/ > > libluid may be interesting to developers of both OpenFlow switches and > controllers. It features support of OpenFlow 1.0 and 1.3, high performance, > bindings to Python and Java, easy port to different hardware architectures, > etc. > > We welcome users and developers interested in building an open community > to maintain libfluid as a useful, multi-purpose OpenFlow library to develop > switch agents and controller implementations. > > -Christian (on behalf of the libfluid team) > _______________________________________________ > openflow-discuss mailing list > openflow-discuss@lists.stanford.edu > https://mailman.stanford.edu/mailman/listinfo/openflow-discuss > > -- > Christian > > > > > > -- > Christia > > > > _______________________________________________ > openflow-discuss mailing list > openflow-discuss@lists.stanford.edu > https://mailman.stanford.edu/mailman/listinfo/openflow-discuss > > -- Carlos Miguel Ferreira Researcher at Telecommunications Institute Aveiro - Portugal Work E-mail - c...@av.it.pt Skype & GTalk -> carlosmf...@gmail.com LinkedIn -> http://www.linkedin.com/in/carlosmferreira
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