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path: root/src/libsystemd-network/lldp-port.c
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2016-02-20sd-lldp: drop "port" objectLennart Poettering
Let's just keep the few parts we actually need of it in the main sd_lldp object, so that we can simplify things quite a bit. While we are at it, remove ifname and mac fields which we make no use of whatsoever.
2016-02-10tree-wide: remove Emacs lines from all filesDaniel Mack
This should be handled fine now by .dir-locals.el, so need to carry that stuff in every file.
2015-11-16tree-wide: sort includesThomas Hindoe Paaboel Andersen
Sort the includes accoding to the new coding style.
2015-10-27util-lib: split out allocation calls into alloc-util.[ch]Lennart Poettering
2015-10-02lldp: move lldp_receive_packet() to lldp-internal.cBeniamino Galvani
In order to implement tests for the LLDP state machine, we need to mock lldp_network_bind_raw_socket(). Move the other function lldp_receive_packet() to another file so that we can replace the first function with a custom one and keep the second one.
2015-09-30tree-wide: remove a number of invocations of strerror() and replace by %mLennart Poettering
Let's clean up our tree a bit, and reduce invocations of the thread-unsafe strerror() by replacing it with printf()'s %m specifier.
2014-12-19sd-lldp: minor header cleanupTom Gundersen
* (potentially) public headers must reside in src/systemd/ (not in src/libsystemd*) * some private (not prefixed with sd_) functions moved from sd-lldp.h to lldp-internal.h * introduce lldp-util.h for the cleanup macro, as these should not be public * rename the cleanup macro, we always name them _cleanup_foo_, never _cleanup_sd_foo_ * mark some function arguments as 'const'
2014-12-19networkd: Introduce Link Layer Discovery Protocol (LLDP)Susant Sahani
This patch introduces LLDP support to networkd. it implements the receiver side of the protocol. The Link Layer Discovery Protocol (LLDP) is an industry-standard, vendor-neutral method to allow networked devices to advertise capabilities, identity, and other information onto a LAN. The Layer 2 protocol, detailed in IEEE 802.1AB-2005.LLDP allows network devices that operate at the lower layers of a protocol stack (such as Layer 2 bridges and switches) to learn some of the capabilities and characteristics of LAN devices available to higher layer protocols.