Files
spore/include
Patrick Balsiger 554c6ff38d refactor: reorganize project structure with modern C++ namespace organization
- Restructure include/ and src/ directories with logical grouping
- Move core components to spore/core/ (NodeContext, NetworkManager, TaskManager, ClusterManager, ApiServer)
- Move services to spore/services/ (NodeService, NetworkService, ClusterService, TaskService)
- Move types to spore/types/ (NodeInfo, ApiTypes, Config)
- Move internal components to spore/internal/ (Globals)
- Update all #include statements to use new namespace paths
- Update platformio.ini build filters for all environments
- Update all example files to use new include paths
- Maintain backward compatibility for public API
- Improve code organization, maintainability, and scalability

This reorganization follows modern C++ project structure patterns and provides
clear separation between public API, internal implementation, and utilities.
All examples compile successfully with the new structure.
2025-09-13 21:30:07 +02:00
..
2025-08-21 15:54:05 +02:00

This directory is intended for project header files.

A header file is a file containing C declarations and macro definitions
to be shared between several project source files. You request the use of a
header file in your project source file (C, C++, etc) located in `src` folder
by including it, with the C preprocessing directive `#include'.

```src/main.c

#include "header.h"

int main (void)
{
 ...
}
```

Including a header file produces the same results as copying the header file
into each source file that needs it. Such copying would be time-consuming
and error-prone. With a header file, the related declarations appear
in only one place. If they need to be changed, they can be changed in one
place, and programs that include the header file will automatically use the
new version when next recompiled. The header file eliminates the labor of
finding and changing all the copies as well as the risk that a failure to
find one copy will result in inconsistencies within a program.

In C, the convention is to give header files names that end with `.h'.

Read more about using header files in official GCC documentation:

* Include Syntax
* Include Operation
* Once-Only Headers
* Computed Includes

https://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/cpp/Header-Files.html