Removed comments about workings of the old neighbor cache which are

(1) obsolete and (2) replaced by the progdoc.
This commit is contained in:
Martin Mares 2000-06-01 16:17:29 +00:00
parent 1f495723c3
commit cf318e3cd3

View file

@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
/*
* BIRD Internet Routing Daemon -- Network Interfaces
*
* (c) 1998--1999 Martin Mares <mj@ucw.cz>
* (c) 1998--2000 Martin Mares <mj@ucw.cz>
*
* Can be freely distributed and used under the terms of the GNU GPL.
*/
@ -81,17 +81,7 @@ void if_feed_baby(struct proto *);
struct iface *if_find_by_index(unsigned);
struct iface *if_find_by_name(char *);
/*
* Neighbor Cache. We hold (direct neighbor, protocol) pairs we've seen
* along with pointer to protocol-specific data.
*
* The primary goal of this cache is to quickly validate all incoming
* packets if their have been sent by our neighbors and to notify
* protocols about lost neighbors when an interface goes down.
*
* Anyway, it can also contain `sticky' entries for currently unreachable
* addresses which cause notification when the address becomes a neighbor.
*/
/* The Neighbor Cache */
typedef struct neighbor {
node n; /* Node in global neighbor list */
@ -107,12 +97,6 @@ typedef struct neighbor {
#define NEF_STICKY 1
/*
* Find neighbor or return NULL if it doesn't exist.
* If you specify flags == NEF_STICKY, a sticky entry is created if the
* address is not a neighbor, but NULL can still be returned if the address
* given is invalid.
*/
neighbor *neigh_find(struct proto *, ip_addr *, unsigned flags);
static inline int neigh_connected_to(struct proto *p, ip_addr *a, struct iface *i)