Network Simulator - ns-3: Difference between revisions
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Please keep in mind our flag when we compile, regarding debug <code>NS3_LOG_ENABLE</code>. | Please keep in mind our flag when we compile, regarding debug <code>NS3_LOG_ENABLE</code>. | ||
[[Category:Applications]] |
Revision as of 20:19, 24 April 2024
This is for discrete-event network simulator ns-3.
Developing with ns-3
ns-3 heavily relies on way for running simulations (examples, tutorials, etc.), but we can start developing using a simple Makefile and a shell.nix. We will use hello-simulator.cc for this example.
First create a shell.nix
, with the requirements to compile our simulation.
with import <nixpkgs> {};
mkShell {
nativeBuildInputs = [
llvmPackages_latest.clang
pkg-config
];
buildInputs = [ ns-3 ];
}
Then we can create our Makefile
, do note the LIBS argument, which is the modules required (not all are build by default, might have to override some settings in ns-3).
# the compiler: gcc for C program, define as g++ for C++
CC = clang++
DEBUG=-DNS3_LOG_ENABLE
LIBS = libns3-dev-core-debug
# compiler flags:
# -g adds debugging information to the executable file
# -Wall turns on most, but not all, compiler warnings
CFLAGS = -g -Wall -Wextra $(shell pkg-config --cflags $(LIBS))
LDFLAGS=$(shell pkg-config --libs $(LIBS))
# the build target executable:
TARGET = hello-simulator
all: $(TARGET)
$(TARGET): $(TARGET).cc
$(CC) $(DEBUG) $(CFLAGS) $(LDFLAGS) -o $(TARGET) $(TARGET).cc
clean:
$(RM) $(TARGET)
Then just place hello-simulator.cc
in the same directory as the other files, then run the following commands.
$ nix-shell $ make $ ./hello-simulator
Please keep in mind our flag when we compile, regarding debug NS3_LOG_ENABLE
.