3 | | Trac is a '''minimalistic''' approach to '''web-based''' management of |
4 | | '''software projects'''. Its goal is to simplify effective tracking and handling of software issues, enhancements and overall progress. |
5 | | |
6 | | All aspects of Trac have been designed with the single goal to |
7 | | '''help developers write great software''' while '''staying out of the way''' |
8 | | and imposing as little as possible on a team's established process and |
9 | | culture. |
10 | | |
11 | | As all Wiki pages, this page is editable, this means that you can |
12 | | modify the contents of this page simply by using your |
13 | | web-browser. Simply click on the "Edit this page" link at the bottom |
14 | | of the page. WikiFormatting will give you a detailed description of |
15 | | available Wiki formatting commands. |
16 | | |
17 | | "[wiki:TracAdmin trac-admin] ''yourenvdir'' initenv" created |
18 | | a new Trac environment, containing a default set of wiki pages and some sample |
19 | | data. This newly created environment also contains |
20 | | [wiki:TracGuide documentation] to help you get started with your project. |
21 | | |
22 | | You can use [wiki:TracAdmin trac-admin] to configure |
23 | | [http://trac.edgewall.com/ Trac] to better fit your project, especially in |
24 | | regard to ''components'', ''versions'' and ''milestones''. |
| 3 | ORBIT is a two-tier laboratory emulator/field trial network testbed designed to achieve reproducibility of experimentation, while also supporting evaluation of protocols and applications in real-world settings. |
29 | | Enjoy! [[BR]] |
30 | | ''The Trac Team'' |
| 7 | |
| 8 | |
| 9 | The laboratory-based wireless network emulator uses a novel approach involving a large two-dimensional grid of 400 802.11x radio nodes which can be dynamically interconnected into specified topologies with reproducible wireless channel models. |
| 10 | |
| 11 | Once the basic protocol or application concepts have been validated on the lab emulator platform, users can migrate their experiments to the field trial network which provides a configurable mix of both high-speed cellular (3G) and 802.11x wireless access in a real-world setting. |
| 12 | |
| 13 | Orbit is seeded by a $5.45M/4yr grant from the NSF under the Networking Research Testbeds (NRT) program. The project is a collaborative effort between several university research groups in the NY/NJ region: Rutgers, Columbia, and Princeton, along with industrial partners Lucent Bell Labs, IBM Research and Thomson. Orbit is being developed and operated by WINLAB, Rutgers University. |
| 14 | |
| 15 | The testbed will be available for remote or on-site access by other research groups nationally. Additional research partners and testbed equipment/software contributors are actively sought from both industry and academia. |
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