babeld 1.12.1-1 source package in Ubuntu

Changelog

babeld (1.12.1-1) unstable; urgency=medium

  [ Ondřej Nový ]
  * d/copyright: Use https protocol in Format field.

  [ Benda Xu ]
  * New upstream release. (Closes: #1010610)

  [ Daniel Gröber ]
  * Use the system BLAKE2 library.

 -- Benda Xu <email address hidden>  Sun, 09 Oct 2022 21:39:47 +0800

Upload details

Uploaded by:
Stéphane Glondu
Uploaded to:
Sid
Original maintainer:
Stéphane Glondu
Architectures:
any
Section:
net
Urgency:
Medium Urgency

See full publishing history Publishing

Series Pocket Published Component Section
Noble release universe net
Mantic release universe net
Lunar release universe net

Downloads

File Size SHA-256 Checksum
babeld_1.12.1-1.dsc 2.1 KiB f9ad49927ece0dee6dbd8a7186bf22909d50a2865e5320f0aa58e35a58015b48
babeld_1.12.1.orig.tar.xz 732.4 KiB 3fc7a99aa3c7a4472a1cf7d13b03d44d268e812c3ff3bf3f08273fc4273eb097
babeld_1.12.1.orig.tar.xz.asc 488 bytes f31f041508d562bbda22b0b856b12d7c3ea5ab0dc30ad8d584633f41d7ddeee7
babeld_1.12.1-1.debian.tar.xz 13.4 KiB 004c13095655819a4a16e0a1777a91e3e00ce002c27c11e34c9702fdf940a5a0

Available diffs

No changes file available.

Binary packages built by this source

babeld: loop-free distance-vector routing protocol

 Babel is a distance-vector routing protocol for IPv6 and IPv4 with
 fast convergence properties, described in RFC 6126. It was designed
 to be robust and efficient on both wireless mesh networks and
 classical wired networks. Babel has extremely modest memory and CPU
 requirements. Unlike most routing protocols, which route either IPv4
 or IPv6 but not both at the same time, Babel is a hybrid IPv6 and
 IPv4 protocol: a single update packet can carry both IPv6 and IPv4
 routes (this is similar to how multi-protocol BGP works). This makes
 Babel particularly efficient on dual (IPv6 and IPv4) networks. This
 implementation also includes a radio frequency-aware variant of
 Babel.
 .
 Babel has the following features:
  * it is a distance-vector protocol;
  * it is a proactive protocol, but with adaptative (reactive)
    features;
  * it senses link quality for computing route metrics using a variant
    of the ETX algorithm;
  * it uses a feasibility condition that guarantees the absence of
    loops (the feasibility condition is taken from EIGRP and is
    somewhat less strict than the one in AODV);
  * it uses sequence numbers to make old routes feasible again (like
    DSDV and AODV, but unlike EIGRP);
  * it speeds up convergence by reactively requesting a new sequence
    number (like AODV, and to a certain extent EIGRP, but unlike
    DSDV);
  * it allows redistributed external routes to be injected into the
    routing domain at multiple points (like EIGRP, but unlike DSDV and
    AODV).

babeld-dbgsym: debug symbols for babeld