/*! \file arp.h \brief ARP Protocol Library. */
//*****************************************************************************
//
// File Name : 'arp.h'
// Title : ARP Protocol Library
// Author : Pascal Stang
// Created : 9/7/2004
// Revised : 7/3/2005
// Version : 0.1
// Target MCU : Atmel AVR series
// Editor Tabs : 4
//
/// \ingroup network
/// \defgroup arp ARP Protocol Library (arp.c)
/// \code #include "net/arp.h" \endcode
/// \par Description
/// To send anything over ethernet (or most any other physical network)
/// a packet must be addressed to a physical network node address, often
/// called a MAC/hardware/ethernet address. This MAC address identifies
/// a specific interface (like the ethernet card in your computer) on the
/// network.
/// ARP (Address Resolution Protocol) assists in mapping IP addresses to
/// the MAC addresses required to actually get data to its destination.
/// In other words, an IP address is not enough to send information over
/// ethernet. You need the MAC address of the network interface/card that
/// "owns" that IP address. ARP maintains a table mapping IP addresses to
/// MAC addresses. This table can be filled by both listening to
/// traffic on the network, as well as making specific ARP requests if
/// an IP<->MAC mapping is not in the table.
///
/// \note This code is currently below version 1.0, and therefore is considered
/// to be lacking in some functionality or documentation, or may not be fully
/// tested. Nonetheless, you can expect most functions to work.
///
// This code is distributed under the GNU Public License
// which can be found at http://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl.txt
//*****************************************************************************
//@{
#ifndef ARP_H
#define ARP_H
#include "global.h"
#include "net.h"
#ifndef ARP_TABLE_SIZE
#define ARP_TABLE_SIZE 8
#endif
#ifndef ARP_CACHE_TIME_TO_LIVE
#define ARP_CACHE_TIME_TO_LIVE 100
#endif
//#define ARP_DEBUG_PRINT
/*! Initialize ARP system.
Clears ARP table and prepares it for use. This is typically done
once at program initialization. */
void arpInit(void);
/*! Set IP and Ethernet hardware/MAC address.
This must be done before valid replies can be generated for ARP
requests. Typically done once at program initialization. */
void arpSetAddress(struct netEthAddr* myeth, uint32_t myip);
/*! Processes incoming ARP packets.
This function is to be called when an ARP type packet has arrived
over the network. If the packet type is an ARP request for us,
an ARP reply will be generated and sent. */
void arpArpIn(unsigned int len, struct netEthArpHeader* packet);
/*! Process incoming IP packets to harvest IP<->MAC relationships.
This function should be called when IP packets are received over the
network. It does nothing more than harvest the IP<->MAC address
relationships from the ethernet and IP header of the packet. The
packet is not changed nor processed. Nothing is sent on the network.
Use of this command is not required, but it is a good way to
automatically fill the ARP table with information about nodes that are
active on the network.
\warning On very busy or heavily populated netorks, this can quickly
fill the ARP table with unnecessary entries, and/or cause some CPU load.
*/
void arpIpIn(struct netEthIpHeader* packet);
/*! Process outgoing IP packet to fill in ethernet header information.
To be sent on a network, an IP packet must have the correct ethernet
header information appended to the front. This function will fill
in this information.
A physical destination IP address argument is needed to support
sending to a gateway (i.e. when a packet is destined for a node that
is not on this network, IP addressing is as usual, but we phyiscally
send the packet to the gateway's ethernet address/interface).
\warning Technically, if an IP<->MAC address mapping is not in the
ARP table, then the IP packet should be held while an ARP request is
made, and the reply received. However, in single-threaded ram-limited
embedded systems, such a holdup is unacceptable. This function instead
sends the packet as an ethernet broadcast if a mapping cannot be found.
\todo Send the packet broadcast AND send an ARP request, if a mapping
is not found.
*/
void arpIpOut(struct netEthIpHeader* packet, uint32_t phyDstIp);
/*! Periodic ARP cache maintenance.
This function is to be called once per second and will slowly
expire old ARP cache entries. */
void arpTimer(void);
/*! Check if this IP address is present in the ARP cache. Internal function.
If IP address is found, function returns index of entry. If not found,
returns -1. */
int arpMatchIp(uint32_t ipaddr);
//! Print diagnotic information about ARP packet.
void arpPrintHeader(struct netArpHeader* packet);
//! Print diagnotic information about ARP cache.
void arpPrintTable(void);
#endif
//@}
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