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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	  <h1><!--#HellWorl--></h1>
12	  <p>
13	    The web page you are watching was served by a simple web
14	    server running on top of the lightweight TCP/IP stack <a
15	    href="http://www.sics.se/~adam/lwip/">lwIP</a>.
16	  </p>
17	  <p>
18	    This page is here to test SSI, so here is a counter as
19	    an example of content changing for every request:
20	    "<!--#counter-->"
21	  </p>
22	  <p>
23	    And here is an example of a tag result buffer return in
24	    multiple parts: "<!--#MultPart-->"
25	  </p>
26	  <p>
27	    To test LWIP_HTTPD_CGI_SSI, here are the CGI parameters:
28	    <!--#CgiParam-->
29	  </p>
30	  <p>
31	    lwIP is an open source implementation of the TCP/IP
32	    protocol suite that was originally written by <a
33	    href="http://www.sics.se/~adam/lwip/">Adam Dunkels
34	    of the Swedish Institute of Computer Science</a> but now is
35	    being actively developed by a team of developers
36	    distributed world-wide. Since it's release, lwIP has
37	    spurred a lot of interest and has been ported to several
38	    platforms and operating systems. lwIP can be used either
39	    with or without an underlying OS.
40	  </p>
41	  <p>
42	  <p>
43	    lwIP is an open source implementation of the TCP/IP
44	    protocol suite that was originally written by <a
45	    href="http://www.sics.se/~adam/lwip/">Adam Dunkels
46	    of the Swedish Institute of Computer Science</a> but now is
47	    being actively developed by a team of developers
48	    distributed world-wide. Since it's release, lwIP has
49	    spurred a lot of interest and has been ported to several
50	    platforms and operating systems. lwIP can be used either
51	    with or without an underlying OS.
52	  </p>
53	  <p>
54	    lwIP is an open source implementation of the TCP/IP
55	    protocol suite that was originally written by <a
56	    href="http://www.sics.se/~adam/lwip/">Adam Dunkels
57	    of the Swedish Institute of Computer Science</a> but now is
58	    being actively developed by a team of developers
59	    distributed world-wide. Since it's release, lwIP has
60	    spurred a lot of interest and has been ported to several
61	    platforms and operating systems. lwIP can be used either
62	    with or without an underlying OS.
63	  </p>
64	  <p>
65	    lwIP is an open source implementation of the TCP/IP
66	    protocol suite that was originally written by <a
67	    href="http://www.sics.se/~adam/lwip/">Adam Dunkels
68	    of the Swedish Institute of Computer Science</a> but now is
69	    being actively developed by a team of developers
70	    distributed world-wide. Since it's release, lwIP has
71	    spurred a lot of interest and has been ported to several
72	    platforms and operating systems. lwIP can be used either
73	    with or without an underlying OS.
74	  </p>
75	  <p>
76	    lwIP is an open source implementation of the TCP/IP
77	    protocol suite that was originally written by <a
78	    href="http://www.sics.se/~adam/lwip/">Adam Dunkels
79	    of the Swedish Institute of Computer Science</a> but now is
80	    being actively developed by a team of developers
81	    distributed world-wide. Since it's release, lwIP has
82	    spurred a lot of interest and has been ported to several
83	    platforms and operating systems. lwIP can be used either
84	    with or without an underlying OS.
85	  </p>
86	  <p>
87	    lwIP is an open source implementation of the TCP/IP
88	    protocol suite that was originally written by <a
89	    href="http://www.sics.se/~adam/lwip/">Adam Dunkels
90	    of the Swedish Institute of Computer Science</a> but now is
91	    being actively developed by a team of developers
92	    distributed world-wide. Since it's release, lwIP has
93	    spurred a lot of interest and has been ported to several
94	    platforms and operating systems. lwIP can be used either
95	    with or without an underlying OS.
96	  </p>
97	  <p>
98	    lwIP is an open source implementation of the TCP/IP
99	    protocol suite that was originally written by <a
100	    href="http://www.sics.se/~adam/lwip/">Adam Dunkels
101	    of the Swedish Institute of Computer Science</a> but now is
102	    being actively developed by a team of developers
103	    distributed world-wide. Since it's release, lwIP has
104	    spurred a lot of interest and has been ported to several
105	    platforms and operating systems. lwIP can be used either
106	    with or without an underlying OS.
107	  </p>
108	  <p>
109	    lwIP is an open source implementation of the TCP/IP
110	    protocol suite that was originally written by <a
111	    href="http://www.sics.se/~adam/lwip/">Adam Dunkels
112	    of the Swedish Institute of Computer Science</a> but now is
113	    being actively developed by a team of developers
114	    distributed world-wide. Since it's release, lwIP has
115	    spurred a lot of interest and has been ported to several
116	    platforms and operating systems. lwIP can be used either
117	    with or without an underlying OS.
118	  </p>
119	  <p>
120	    lwIP is an open source implementation of the TCP/IP
121	    protocol suite that was originally written by <a
122	    href="http://www.sics.se/~adam/lwip/">Adam Dunkels
123	    of the Swedish Institute of Computer Science</a> but now is
124	    being actively developed by a team of developers
125	    distributed world-wide. Since it's release, lwIP has
126	    spurred a lot of interest and has been ported to several
127	    platforms and operating systems. lwIP can be used either
128	    with or without an underlying OS.
129	  </p>
130	  <p>
131	    lwIP is an open source implementation of the TCP/IP
132	    protocol suite that was originally written by <a
133	    href="http://www.sics.se/~adam/lwip/">Adam Dunkels
134	    of the Swedish Institute of Computer Science</a> but now is
135	    being actively developed by a team of developers
136	    distributed world-wide. Since it's release, lwIP has
137	    spurred a lot of interest and has been ported to several
138	    platforms and operating systems. lwIP can be used either
139	    with or without an underlying OS.
140	  </p>
141	  <p>
142	    lwIP is an open source implementation of the TCP/IP
143	    protocol suite that was originally written by <a
144	    href="http://www.sics.se/~adam/lwip/">Adam Dunkels
145	    of the Swedish Institute of Computer Science</a> but now is
146	    being actively developed by a team of developers
147	    distributed world-wide. Since it's release, lwIP has
148	    spurred a lot of interest and has been ported to several
149	    platforms and operating systems. lwIP can be used either
150	    with or without an underlying OS.
151	  </p>
152	  <p>
153	    lwIP is an open source implementation of the TCP/IP
154	    protocol suite that was originally written by <a
155	    href="http://www.sics.se/~adam/lwip/">Adam Dunkels
156	    of the Swedish Institute of Computer Science</a> but now is
157	    being actively developed by a team of developers
158	    distributed world-wide. Since it's release, lwIP has
159	    spurred a lot of interest and has been ported to several
160	    platforms and operating systems. lwIP can be used either
161	    with or without an underlying OS.
162	  </p>
163	  <p>
164	    lwIP is an open source implementation of the TCP/IP
165	    protocol suite that was originally written by <a
166	    href="http://www.sics.se/~adam/lwip/">Adam Dunkels
167	    of the Swedish Institute of Computer Science</a> but now is
168	    being actively developed by a team of developers
169	    distributed world-wide. Since it's release, lwIP has
170	    spurred a lot of interest and has been ported to several
171	    platforms and operating systems. lwIP can be used either
172	    with or without an underlying OS.
173	  </p>
174	  <p>
175	    lwIP is an open source implementation of the TCP/IP
176	    protocol suite that was originally written by <a
177	    href="http://www.sics.se/~adam/lwip/">Adam Dunkels
178	    of the Swedish Institute of Computer Science</a> but now is
179	    being actively developed by a team of developers
180	    distributed world-wide. Since it's release, lwIP has
181	    spurred a lot of interest and has been ported to several
182	    platforms and operating systems. lwIP can be used either
183	    with or without an underlying OS.
184	  </p>
185	  <p>
186	    lwIP is an open source implementation of the TCP/IP
187	    protocol suite that was originally written by <a
188	    href="http://www.sics.se/~adam/lwip/">Adam Dunkels
189	    of the Swedish Institute of Computer Science</a> but now is
190	    being actively developed by a team of developers
191	    distributed world-wide. Since it's release, lwIP has
192	    spurred a lot of interest and has been ported to several
193	    platforms and operating systems. lwIP can be used either
194	    with or without an underlying OS.
195	  </p>
196	  <p>
197	    lwIP is an open source implementation of the TCP/IP
198	    protocol suite that was originally written by <a
199	    href="http://www.sics.se/~adam/lwip/">Adam Dunkels
200	    of the Swedish Institute of Computer Science</a> but now is
201	    being actively developed by a team of developers
202	    distributed world-wide. Since it's release, lwIP has
203	    spurred a lot of interest and has been ported to several
204	    platforms and operating systems. lwIP can be used either
205	    with or without an underlying OS.
206	  </p>
207	  <p>
208	    lwIP is an open source implementation of the TCP/IP
209	    protocol suite that was originally written by <a
210	    href="http://www.sics.se/~adam/lwip/">Adam Dunkels
211	    of the Swedish Institute of Computer Science</a> but now is
212	    being actively developed by a team of developers
213	    distributed world-wide. Since it's release, lwIP has
214	    spurred a lot of interest and has been ported to several
215	    platforms and operating systems. lwIP can be used either
216	    with or without an underlying OS.
217	  </p>
218	  <p>
219	    lwIP is an open source implementation of the TCP/IP
220	    protocol suite that was originally written by <a
221	    href="http://www.sics.se/~adam/lwip/">Adam Dunkels
222	    of the Swedish Institute of Computer Science</a> but now is
223	    being actively developed by a team of developers
224	    distributed world-wide. Since it's release, lwIP has
225	    spurred a lot of interest and has been ported to several
226	    platforms and operating systems. lwIP can be used either
227	    with or without an underlying OS.
228	  </p>
229	  <p>
230	    lwIP is an open source implementation of the TCP/IP
231	    protocol suite that was originally written by <a
232	    href="http://www.sics.se/~adam/lwip/">Adam Dunkels
233	    of the Swedish Institute of Computer Science</a> but now is
234	    being actively developed by a team of developers
235	    distributed world-wide. Since it's release, lwIP has
236	    spurred a lot of interest and has been ported to several
237	    platforms and operating systems. lwIP can be used either
238	    with or without an underlying OS.
239	  </p>
240	  <p>
241	    lwIP is an open source implementation of the TCP/IP
242	    protocol suite that was originally written by <a
243	    href="http://www.sics.se/~adam/lwip/">Adam Dunkels
244	    of the Swedish Institute of Computer Science</a> but now is
245	    being actively developed by a team of developers
246	    distributed world-wide. Since it's release, lwIP has
247	    spurred a lot of interest and has been ported to several
248	    platforms and operating systems. lwIP can be used either
249	    with or without an underlying OS.
250	  </p>
251	  <p>
252	    lwIP is an open source implementation of the TCP/IP
253	    protocol suite that was originally written by <a
254	    href="http://www.sics.se/~adam/lwip/">Adam Dunkels
255	    of the Swedish Institute of Computer Science</a> but now is
256	    being actively developed by a team of developers
257	    distributed world-wide. Since it's release, lwIP has
258	    spurred a lot of interest and has been ported to several
259	    platforms and operating systems. lwIP can be used either
260	    with or without an underlying OS.
261	  </p>
262	  <p>
263	    lwIP is an open source implementation of the TCP/IP
264	    protocol suite that was originally written by <a
265	    href="http://www.sics.se/~adam/lwip/">Adam Dunkels
266	    of the Swedish Institute of Computer Science</a> but now is
267	    being actively developed by a team of developers
268	    distributed world-wide. Since it's release, lwIP has
269	    spurred a lot of interest and has been ported to several
270	    platforms and operating systems. lwIP can be used either
271	    with or without an underlying OS.
272	  </p>
273	  <p>
274	    lwIP is an open source implementation of the TCP/IP
275	    protocol suite that was originally written by <a
276	    href="http://www.sics.se/~adam/lwip/">Adam Dunkels
277	    of the Swedish Institute of Computer Science</a> but now is
278	    being actively developed by a team of developers
279	    distributed world-wide. Since it's release, lwIP has
280	    spurred a lot of interest and has been ported to several
281	    platforms and operating systems. lwIP can be used either
282	    with or without an underlying OS.
283	  </p>
284	  <p>
285	    lwIP is an open source implementation of the TCP/IP
286	    protocol suite that was originally written by <a
287	    href="http://www.sics.se/~adam/lwip/">Adam Dunkels
288	    of the Swedish Institute of Computer Science</a> but now is
289	    being actively developed by a team of developers
290	    distributed world-wide. Since it's release, lwIP has
291	    spurred a lot of interest and has been ported to several
292	    platforms and operating systems. lwIP can be used either
293	    with or without an underlying OS.
294	  </p>
295	  <p>
296	    The focus of the lwIP TCP/IP implementation is to reduce
297	    the RAM usage while still having a full scale TCP. This
298	    makes lwIP suitable for use in embedded systems with tens
299	    of kilobytes of free RAM and room for around 40 kilobytes
300	    of code ROM.
301	  </p>
302	  <p>
303	    More information about lwIP can be found at the lwIP
304	    homepage at <a
305	    href="http://savannah.nongnu.org/projects/lwip/">http://savannah.nongnu.org/projects/lwip/</a>
306	    or at the lwIP wiki at <a
307	    href="http://lwip.wikia.com/">http://lwip.wikia.com/</a>.
308	  </p>
309	</td><td>
310	  &nbsp;
311	</td></tr>
312      </table>
313</body>
314</html>
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