Difference between revisions of "Agilla Tutorial Lesson 1: Installation"

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cp Example\ Makefile.Agilla Makefile.Agilla
 
cp Example\ Makefile.Agilla Makefile.Agilla
 
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See $TOSROOT/contrib/wustl/apps/Agilla/README for details on how to customize this file.
  
 
== Downloading Pre-Packaged Versions of Agilla ==
 
== Downloading Pre-Packaged Versions of Agilla ==

Revision as of 06:50, 10 December 2007

The following instructions assume you have a working version of TinyOS installed on your machine.

Step 1: Download

Download the tarball of Agilla's source code from here.

Step 2: Extract

Extract the files using the commands below. By default, the files go under $TOSROOT. On a Windows XP/Cygwin system, $TOSROOT is by default /opt/tinyos-1.x. On a Linux or OSX machine, $TOSROOT is wherever you have installed TinyOS 1.x.

mv Agilla*.tar.gz $TOSROOT
cd $TOSROOT
tar zxvf Agilla*.tar.gz 

Once you have extracted the tarball, Agilla's source code will be located in three directories:

  • $TOSROOT/contrib/wustl/apps/Agilla: Agilla's firmware
  • $TOSROOT/contrib/wustl/tools/java: Agilla's Agent Injector Application
  • $TOSROOT/contrib/wustl/apps/AgillaAgents: Example Mobile Agents.

Step 3: Create Makefile.Agilla

Create a file called "Makefile.Agilla" that contains local settings in $TOSROOT/contrib/wustl/apps/Agilla. To do this, you can simply copy the example file that comes with Agilla.

cd $TOSROOT/contrib/wustl/apps/Agilla
cp Example\ Makefile.Agilla Makefile.Agilla

See $TOSROOT/contrib/wustl/apps/Agilla/README for details on how to customize this file.

Downloading Pre-Packaged Versions of Agilla

Click here to download a tarball containing Agilla's source code. Once you have downloaded it, you need to extract the source code. By default, the tarball should be extracted to /opt/tinyos-1.x.


Downloading Agilla via CVS

The latest version of Agilla can be downloaded using CVS. It is available through the TinyOS CVS repository located on Sourceforge. Instructions for accessing TinyOS's CVS repository are available here. Checkout module tinyos-1.x/contrib/wustl using the following command:

$ cvs -d:pserver:anonymous@tinyos.cvs.sourceforge.net:/cvsroot/tinyos login $ cvs -z3 -d:pserver:anonymous@tinyos.cvs.sourceforge.net:/cvsroot/tinyos co \

 -P tinyos-1.x/contrib/wustl

If you are TinyOS developer, you can download it using:

$ export CVS_RSH=ssh $ cvs -z3 -d:ext:developername@tinyos.cvs.sourceforge.net:/cvsroot/tinyos co \

 -P tinyos-1.x/contrib/wustl

See Tutorial 1 for more details on how to install Agilla.

Demo Releases

   * IPSN SPOTS 2005 - NesC, Java

Remote Injection using RMI

RMI is used to remotely inject agents into the sensor network. To do this, you need to install this java policy file in /opt/tinyos-1.x/contrib/wustl/tools/java. See the tutorial on how to remote inject agents via RMI.

Useful Text Editing Tools

For Windows users, I recommend using TextPad to edit NesC and Mobile Agent files. Here are the color-syntax configurations for NesC and Agilla Agent files:

   * NesC
   * Mobile Agent

Install them in <Program Files>\TextPad 4\system. If you are using Linux, I recommend gEdit. Here are the syntax files:

   * NesC
   * Mobile Agent

Install them in /usr/share/gtksourceview-1.0/language-specs/