Thanks Marcus and Murphy for making it cristal clear

> I'm sorry, are you talking about branches dart, carp, betta, agler?
> http://www.noxrepo.org/pox/versionsdownloads/

Yep, I was. But I haven't made my homework looking around Pox website,
sorry. I always just
access GitHub repo - for tracking changes - and follow this mailing list :)
Now I'll starting also referring 'blog' posts on noxrepo.org main page.

Thanks!

-- 
Att
Lucas Brasilino
MSc Student @ Federal University of Pernambuco (UFPE)
twitter: @lucas_brasilino


2014-02-19 14:55 GMT-03:00 Marcus Sandri <mww...@gmail.com>:
> I'm sorry, are you talking about branches dart, carp, betta, agler?
> http://www.noxrepo.org/pox/versionsdownloads/
>
> POX is a Open source project and it has continuous design by Murphy Mc and
> others contributors. There's 4 currently branches and as far as I know, all
> of them is renewed when it has a group of fixed-bugs, new components or new
> component versions.
>
> From "agler" (fall 2012) to "dart"(Spring 2014) many things has been changed
> and created. There's more components to forwarding (see at pox/forwarding).
> Some bugs were fixed such as supporting loop topologies in some POX
> components.
> It was introduced a component which allows hypervisor  (l2_flowvisor) and a
> lot components in pox/misc, such as fullpayload.py, which allows you do DPI.
>
>
> Cheers,
> Marcus Sandri.
>
>
> 2014-02-19 13:13 GMT-03:00 Lucas Brasilino <lr...@cin.ufpe.br>:
>
>> Hi!
>>
>> Can anybody explain in a few words what each Pox branch is designed for ?
>>
>> Seems that Pox releases are based on branches, not on tagging. Is that
>> right ?
>>
>> --
>> Att
>> Lucas Brasilino
>> MSc Student @ Federal University of Pernambuco (UFPE)
>> twitter: @lucas_brasilino
>
>

Reply via email to