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[lwip-users] LwIP 1.3.1 - Using tcp_write() outside of 'raw api' callbac


From: Brian McFarland
Subject: [lwip-users] LwIP 1.3.1 - Using tcp_write() outside of 'raw api' callback context?
Date: Fri, 18 Nov 2011 10:18:26 -0500

 

I am trying to use the raw API with NO_SYS = 1, and SYS_LIGHTWEIGHT_PROT = 1 on a light-weight RTOS.  In the design I am attempting, there are two tasks:  The network task, which processes incoming packets (after being notified by an ETH ISR) and calls the *_tmr() functions periodically.  The second task handles time consuming requests (disk or uart I/O for example).

 

Is it safe to use tcp_write(), tcp_output(), etc from task #2 in this scenario?  So for example, in a connection being serviced by the network task in the tcp_recv() callback, I get a request to read a file from external memory.  I hand that request off to a queue.  When task 2 has nothing to do, it picks up that request, and reads the file into RAM and in then calls tcp_write().   Do I need to put the tcp_write() call in a critical section that blocks the network task from running?   Or would it be safer/better to have queues going both ways to where the network task main loop checks for pending calls to tcp_write()?  I know this kind of thing could be accomplished in the tcp_poll() callback, but then there’s a worst case latency of 500ms between when data is ready to send and when it actually gets sent.


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