REL-1.6.0
21 September 2014, Berkeley, CA, USA.
The OpenWSN team is excited to announce the release of OpenWSN 1.6.0.
Highlights
- OpenSim, a emulation environment where firmware is run directly on your computer.
- Introduction of a web interface to the OpenVisualizer and addition of a slick design.
- implementation of draft-ietf-6tisch-minimal-02.
- implementation of draft-wang-6tisch-6top-sublayer-01.
- implementation of draft-dujovne-6tisch-on-the-fly-03.
- implementation of draft-thubert-6man-flow-label-for-rpl-03.
- porting to the IoT-LAB platform on the WSN430 board.
- reorganization of the http://openwsn.berkeley.edu/ wiki pages.
- Doxygen- and Sphinx-based documentation and nightly publication at http://openwsn-berkeley.github.io/.
- nightly builds and tests are run on the following continuous integration solutions:
- http://builder.openwsn.org/, running Jenkins-CI
- https://travis-ci.org/, running in the cloud
- https://landscape.io/
- many minor fixes in the firmware and hardware.
Download
The release is composed of two parts:
- the firmware, which runs on the motes: https://github.com/openwsn-berkeley/openwsn-fw/releases/tag/REL-1.6.0
- the software, which runs on your computer: https://github.com/openwsn-berkeley/openwsn-sw/releases/tag/REL-1.6.0
Hardware Platforms
OpenWSN 1.6.0 is ported to the following hardware platforms
OpenMoteCC2538
TelosB
GINA
WSN430v13b
WSB430v14
Z1
OpenMoteSTM
SAM R21 Xplained Pro
IoT-LAB_M3
Agilefox
Toolchains
The following toolchains are supported:
gcc
mpsgcc
armgcc
IAR Embedded Workbench for ARM
IAR Embedded Workbench for MSP430
Bug Reports
Report bugs at https://openwsn.atlassian.net/.
About
The goal of the OpenWSN project is to provide open-source implementations of a complete protocol stack based on Internet of Things standards, on a variety of software and hardware platforms.
This implementation can then help academia and industry verify the applicability of these standards to the Internet of Things, for those networks to become truly ubiquitous.
The OpenWSN community is composed of Internet of Things and open-source enthusiasts all around the world. Participation is free and open to all. Questions, documentation, bug reports and source code are available through http://openwsn.berkeley.edu.