1<html> 2<head><title>lwIP - A Lightweight TCP/IP Stack</title></head> 3<body bgcolor="white" text="black"> 4 5 <table width="100%"> 6 <tr valign="top"><td width="80"> 7 <a href="http://www.sics.se/"><img src="/img/sics.gif" 8 border="0" alt="SICS logo" title="SICS logo"></a> 9 </td><td width="500"> 10 <h1>lwIP - A Lightweight TCP/IP Stack</h1> 11 <p> 12 The web page you are watching was served by a simple web 13 server running on top of the lightweight TCP/IP stack <a 14 href="http://www.sics.se/~adam/lwip/">lwIP</a>. 15 </p> 16 <p> 17 lwIP is an open source implementation of the TCP/IP 18 protocol suite that was originally written by <a 19 href="http://www.sics.se/~adam/lwip/">Adam Dunkels 20 of the Swedish Institute of Computer Science</a> but now is 21 being actively developed by a team of developers 22 distributed world-wide. Since it's release, lwIP has 23 spurred a lot of interest and has been ported to several 24 platforms and operating systems. lwIP can be used either 25 with or without an underlying OS. 26 </p> 27 <p> 28 The focus of the lwIP TCP/IP implementation is to reduce 29 the RAM usage while still having a full scale TCP. This 30 makes lwIP suitable for use in embedded systems with tens 31 of kilobytes of free RAM and room for around 40 kilobytes 32 of code ROM. 33 </p> 34 <p> 35 More information about lwIP can be found at the lwIP 36 homepage at <a 37 href="http://savannah.nongnu.org/projects/lwip/">http://savannah.nongnu.org/projects/lwip/</a> 38 or at the lwIP wiki at <a 39 href="http://lwip.wikia.com/">http://lwip.wikia.com/</a>. 40 </p> 41 </td><td> 42 43 </td></tr> 44 </table> 45</body> 46</html> 47 48