Motsognir is a robust, reliable and easy to install open-source gopher server
for Unix-like systems (Linux, BSD, and anything else POSIX-compliant).
The Motsognir gopher server is meant to be used for small projects (like home
servers), but should scale well on bigger architectures as well. All the
configuration is done via a single configuration file, which has very
reasonable defaults. That makes Motsognir easily maintainable, and allows the
administrator to have a full knowledge of what features are allowed/enabled on
the server. Motsognir supports server-side CGI applications and PHP scripts, is
plainly compatible with UTF-8 filesystems, and is entirely written in ANSI C
without external dependencies.
This Cisco IPPhone module was created to provide a simple convenient
method to display Cisco IP Phone objects and gather input from a Cisco
7940 or 7960 IP Phone. This module supports all known Cisco XML objects
for 7940 and 7960 phones. Knowledge of Cisco XML syntax is not a
requirement.
This Perl module gives the ability to use simple PERL objects to display XML
on the IP Phone unlike to Cisco Software Development Kit (SDK) which uses
Microsoft IIS Server, ASP's, JSP's, Javascript, COM Objects, and requires
knowledge of XML syntax.
This module is an implementation of the BGP-4 inter-domain routing
protocol. It encapsulates all of the functionality needed to establish
and maintain a BGP peering session and exchange routing update
information with the peer. It aims to provide a simple API to the BGP
protocol for the purposes of automation, logging, monitoring, testing,
and similar tasks using the power and flexibility of perl. The module
does not implement the functionality of a RIB (Routing Information Base)
nor does it modify the kernel routing table of the host system.
However, such operations could be implemented using the API provided by
the module.
Net::Daemon is an abstract base class for implementing portable server
applications in a very simple way. The module is designed for Perl 5.005
and threads, but can work with fork() and Perl 5.004.
The Net::Daemon class offers methods for the most common tasks a daemon
needs: Starting up, logging, accepting clients, authorization,
restricting its own environment for security and doing the true work.
You only have to override those methods that aren't appropriate for you,
but typically inheriting will safe you a lot of work anyways.
This is a simple but fast pure Perl module for determining whether a given IP
address is in a given set of IP subnets. It's iterative, and it doesn't use any
fancy tries, but because it uses simple bitwise operations on strings it's still
very fast.
All documented functions are exported by default.
Subnets have to be given in "address/mask" or "address/length" (CIDR) format.
The Socket and Socket6 modules are used to normalise addresses, which means that
any of the address formats supported by inet_aton and inet_pton can be used with
Net::Subnet.
Opal is a full-featured voip library that supports a variety of protocols and
multi-media fornats. Features include:
* Low latency RTP stack designed specifically for real-time multimedia
* Full featured H.323, SIP and IAX2 protocol stacks
* Audio codecs including G.711, GSM06.10, Speex and iLBC.
* Video codecs including H.261 and H.263
* Run-time loadable codec interface for proprietary or codecs such as G.729,
H.263, H.264 and MPEG4
* Completely Open Source using the commercially friendly MPL 1.1 license
Through the use of a platform isolation library called PTLIB, Opal can run on
tiny embedded systems or multi-processor servers.
BTW: OPAL is an acronym for Open Phone Abstraction Library, but that is not
really important :)
This is a server daemon, port scanner and (optionally) clients for FSP, the File
Service Protocol.
FSP is lightweight and connectionless. It is typically used for offering files
to "anonymous" visitors over a congested link. It uses UDP rather than TCP
sockets. A service contact port (well-known port) for FSP has not been assigned
by IANA (per RFC 1700). See <URL:http://www.faqs.org/faqs/fsp-faq/> for an
overview.
To use fspd, you must copy the fspd.conf.sample file, normally installed in
/usr/local/etc/, to fspd.conf and edit it.
You can run fspd from inetd or stand-alone.
The Samba suite is a set of programs which run under the FreeBSD
operating system. These programs deliver most of the important
functionality of a Microsoft Lan Manager server. That is, they support
remote access to FreeBSD filespace and FreeBSD printers from Lan Manager
compatible clients. In practical terms, this means that such clients can
connect to and use FreeBSD filespace as if it was a local disk drive, or
FreeBSD printers as if they were local printers.
Some of the most popular Lan Manager compatible clients include Lan
Manager itself, Windows for Workgroups, OS/2 and Windows NT.
XML-RPC is an extensible mechanism allowing a computer to offer a limited set
of services which can be accessed from anywhere in the net.
XML-RPC uses common and easy to learn internet standards like XML. and HTTP.
ulxmlrpcpp is a library to perform such calls in an object oriented approach
implemented in C++. It is intended to have simple interfaces and to be easy to
learn. But it shall still be fully compliant to the standards and safe in it's
use.
Unison is a file-synchronization tool for Unix and Windows. It allows two
replicas of a collection of files and directories to be stored on different
hosts (or different disks on the same host), modified separately, and then
brought up to date by propagating the changes in each replica to the other.
Unison shares a number of features with tools such as configuration
management packages (CVS, PRCS, etc.) distributed filesystems (Coda, etc.)
uni-directional mirroring utilities (rsync, etc.) and other synchronizers
(Intellisync, Reconcile, etc).