Mercurial > hg > freeDiameter
view INSTALL @ 1505:b382cbd1a710
Add 3GPP TS 29.217 V15.1.0 (2019-09)
Add AVPs:
- Aggregated-Congestion-Info, Grouped, code 4000, section 5.3.2
- Aggregated-RUCI-Report, Grouped, code 4001, section 5.3.3
- Congestion-Level-Definition, Grouped, code 4002, section 5.3.4
- Congestion-Level-Range, Unsigned32, code 4003, section 5.3.5
- Congestion-Level-Set-Id, Unsigned32, code 4004, section 5.3.6
- Congestion-Level-Value, Unsigned32, code 4005, section 5.3.7
- Congestion-Location-Id, Grouped, code 4006, section 5.3.8
- Conditional-Restriction, Unsigned32, code 4007, section 5.3.9
- eNodeB-Id, OctetString, code 4008, section 5.3.10
- IMSI-List, OctetString, code 4009, section 5.3.11
- RCAF-Id, DiameterIdentity, code 4010, section 5.3.12
- Reporting-Restriction, Unsigned32, code 4011, section 5.3.13
- RUCI-Action, Unsigned32, code 4012, section 5.3.14
- Extended-eNodeB-Id, OctetString, code 4013, section 5.3.15
author | Luke Mewburn <luke@mewburn.net> |
---|---|
date | Fri, 03 Apr 2020 17:01:16 +1100 |
parents | e457e7ac3a6d |
children |
line wrap: on
line source
This package uses CMake (cmake.org) as building system. You'll need the cmake tool in order to generate the Makefiles for your platform. You can also select which extensions must be built with cmake. After the initial cmake configuration, you will need several tools such as make, a C compiler (tested mostly with gcc), flex (> 2.5.4), bison, ... You may retrieve the source package in several ways: - as a pre-packaged version for your platform. Check the website for supported platforms. - as a tarball containing the source. - directly from the repository using Mercurial tool: hg clone http://www.freediameter.net/hg/freeDiameter In order to update later: hg pull -u Building in a separate directory is recommended: # mkdir build # cd build # cmake ../ # make You can pass options to instruct cmake about which components to compile on the command-line. You can also use a CMake front-end (for example ccmake or cmake-gui). If your cmake installation is recent, the edit_cache target is a good help as well: # mkdir build # cd build # cmake ../ # make help # make edit_cache # make You can disable the unit tests by doing: # cmake -DBUILD_TESTING:BOOL=OFF ../ # make When the tests are enabled, you can run them with: # make test See the INSTALL.* files for additional platform-specific information. Note that the most up-to-date INSTALL file is the Ubuntu one. You may want to read there in addition to your own platform file.