commit | 02f30b58dda50014ec7d94caed496d282efea547 | [log] [tgz] |
---|---|---|
author | Andy Bavier <acb@cs.princeton.edu> | Fri May 27 10:40:43 2016 -0400 |
committer | Andy Bavier <acb@cs.princeton.edu> | Fri May 27 10:40:43 2016 -0400 |
tree | 24493e616556886536f29a30a5ca3d0fb0899808 | |
parent | 68d447a890ee77e1e93d7ae211a078c42f2f0aa2 [diff] |
For development
For a general introduction to XOS and how it is used in CORD, see http://guide.xosproject.org. The "Developer Guide" at that URL is especially helpful, although it isn't perfectly sync'ed with master. Additional design notes, presentations, and other collateral are also available at http://xosproject.org and http://opencord.org.
The best way to get started is to look at the collection of canned configurations in xos/configurations/
. The cord
configuration in that directory corresponds to our current CORD development environment, and the README.md
you'll find there will help you get started.
Source tree layout: