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Device profile: Inventel gateway and access point devices
2003-04-01
Inventel (Paris, France) has recently introduced several Linux-based gateway, router, and access point products for the SOHO (small office / home office) and consumer markets, including the DW-B-200 wireless access point and the DVW-250 residential gateway for voice and data communications.
The DW-B-200 access point (pictured at left) is said to combine the functions of an ADSL modem, router, firewall, and the two most popular wireless technologies -- 802.11b and Bluetooth.A built-in webserver facilitates remote management of the device, firmware updates, and opens up the possibility for other web- and Internet-based capabilities. Additionally, Inventel intends to encourage development of various third-party applications that run on the device's internal Linux-based operating system, to implement functions such as authentication, billing, security, and more. According to its data sheet, key functions implemented by the DW-B-200 include . . .
What's inside?Inventel's gateway, router, and access point products are based on either ARM or MIPS processors, and have memory resources that consist of 16MB of SDRAM and 4MB of nonvolatile Flash memory. Wireless interfaces, including 802.11b and Bluetooth, are added by means of an externally accessable PC Card slot. In addition to the embedded Linux operating system based on the 2.4 Linux kernel, other open source software embedded in the Inventel devices includes a thttpd webserver, dhcp client and server, ppp client and server, ftp client, and the BusyBox utility suite. Why Linux? Key reasons Inventel selected Linux as the embedded operating system for these gatewall, router, and access point devices were the availability of Linux source code, plus the extensive support Linux provides for multiple processor architectures, according to Inventel software developer Xavier Debreuil. Rather than going with a commercially available embedded Linux toolkit, the company opted to develop the required Linux-based embedded operating system using internal resources. "We are very glad to have [used embedded Linux], and would do it again," Debreuil noted. Debreuil sees a bright future for embedded Linux in his crystal ball. "With ARM and MIPS cores being used in most new embedded processors for our market, Linux will be the embedded operating system solution, since it includes most of the functions needed to run a router," he predicted.
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