-/** @mainpage
- *
- * @section Introduction
- *
- * The libevent API provides a mechanism to execute a callback function when a
- * specific event occurs on a file descriptor or after a timeout has been
- * reached. Furthermore, libevent also support callbacks due to signals or
- * regular timeouts.
- *
- * libevent is meant to replace the event loop found in event driven network
- * servers. An application just needs to call dispatcher::dispatch() and then
- * add or remove events dynamically without having to change the event loop.
- *
- * Currently, libevent supports /dev/poll, kqueue(2), select(2), poll(2) and
- * epoll(4). It also has experimental support for real-time signals. The
- * internal event mechanism is completely independent of the exposed event API,
- * and a simple update of libevent can provide new functionality without having
- * to redesign the applications. As a result, Libevent allows for portable
- * application development and provides the most scalable event notification
- * mechanism available on an operating system. Libevent should compile on Linux,
- * *BSD, Mac OS X, Solaris and Windows.
- *
- * This is a simple, direct, one-header inline C++ wrapper for libevent.
- * It's designed to be as close to use to libevent without compromising modern
- * C++ programming techniques and efficiency (since all implementation is
- * trivial and inline, theoretically, it imposes no overhead at all).
- *
- *
- * @section Usage
- *
- * The best way to explain how this works is by examples. TODO
- *
- * @author Leandro Lucarella <llucarella@integratech.com.ar>
- * @version 0.1
- * @par License
- * This program is under the BOLA license (see
- * http://auriga.wearlab.de/~alb/bola/)
- *
- */
-
-