Oinkmaster is simple Perl script released under the BSD license to help you
update your Snort 1.9+ rules and comment out the unwanted ones after each
update. It will tell you exactly what had changed since the last update,
hence giving you good control of your rules.
This module is very similar to Sam Tregar's HTML::Template module
but works much faster and contains extra functionality.
The CTPP2 template language dialect contains 10 operators: <TMPL_var>,
<TMPL_if>, <TMPL_elsif>, <TMPL_else>, <TMPL_unless>, <TMPL_loop>,
<TMPL_foreach>, <TMPL_udf>, <TMPL_include> and <TMPL_comment>.
This module is yet another parser and tree-builder for HTML documents. It is
designed to make extraction and modification of HTML documents simplistic. The
API allows for easy custom additions to the document being parsed, and allows
very specific tag, text, and comment extraction.
This utility can be used to test performance of storage devices.
First, one need to generate file with I/O operations:
# set mediasize=`diskinfo /dev/<device> | awk '{print $3}'`
# set sectorsize=`diskinfo /dev/<device> | awk '{print $2}'`
# raidtest genfile -s $mediasize -S $sectorsize -n 50000
It will generate test which contains 50000 I/O requests with random
size and random offset. Size is a multiple of sectorsize, but less than or
equal to 128kB (maxium size of I/O request). I/O request type (READ or WRITE)
is random as well.
All test data are stored in 'raidtest.data' file in current working directory.
To run test, one should type:
# raidtest test -d /dev/<device> -n 10
This command will read test data from 'raidtest.data' file, run 10 processes
which will be used to send requests to the given device in parallel.
When test is finished you will see statistics:
Bytes per second: <x>
Requests per second: <y>
If you compare performance of two storage devices, use the same data file!
usage: raidtest genfile [-frw] <-s mediasize> [-S sectorsize] <-n nrequests> [file]
raidtest test [-Rrw] <-d device> [-n processes] [file]
where:
-d device path to tested device
-f if raidtest.data file or specified file already exists,
remove it and create new one
-n nrequests number of requests to generate
-n processes number of processes to run
-r generate/run only READ requests
-R generate random data for write requests
-s size of destination device
-S sector size of destination device
-w generate/run only WRITE requests
file path to the data file instead of default 'raidtest.data'
[from README.decode]:
This package contains extra decoding functions.
SquirrelMail decoding functions are used to display and convert messages
encoded in different character sets. Extra decoding library provides support
of some complex Eastern character sets and some rarely used Apple character
sets. Current release supports Big5, Windows-874 (cp874, Thai), Windows-949
(UHC, Korean), EUC-CN, EUC-JP, EUC-KR, EUC-TW, GB18030, GB2312, ISO-2022-CN,
ISO-2022-JP, ISO-2022-JP-2, ISO-2022-KR, Shift_JIS and various x-mac-*
character sets.
Extra decoding library can be used in SquirrelMail 1.4.4 or newer. It depends
on sq_is8bit() function. In order to optimize decoding of Eastern character
sets, PHP installation needs recode (http://www.php.net/recode) or iconv
(http://www.php.net/iconv) support. Some decoding functions can use mbstring
functions present in php 4.3.0. Mbstring decoding needs sq_mb_list_encodings()
function from SquirrelMail 1.5.1 or 1.4.6.
Some decoding code that be activated only when $aggressive_decoding variable
is set to true. This variable should be enabled only on smaller systems, that
don't call aggressive decoding functions very often. Turning on
$aggressive_decoding variable by default in packaged SquirrelMail versions is
not recommended.
Development tools and base libraries for linux_base-f10. Required by
some Linux applications such as Matlab, which allows the user to integrate
custom C, C++, and Fortran code via the MEX compiler.
`tnftp' (formerly lukemftp) is what many users affectionately call the enhanced
ftp client in NetBSD.
The enhancements over the standard ftp client in 4.4BSD include:
* command-line editing within ftp
* command-line fetching of URLS, including support for:
- http proxies (c.f: $http_proxy, $ftp_proxy)
- authentication
* context sensitive command and filename completion
* dynamic progress bar
* IPv6 support (from the WIDE project)
* modification time preservation
* paging of local and remote files, and of directory listings
(c.f: `lpage', `page', `pdir')
* passive mode support, with fallback to active mode
* `set option' override of ftp environment variables
* socks4/socks5 support
* TIS Firewall Toolkit gate ftp proxy support (c.f: `gate')
* transfer-rate throttling (c.f: `-T', `rate')
This icon theme uses Faenza and Faience icon themes by ~Tiheum and
some icons customized for MATE by Rowen Stipe.
Also, there are some icons from Mint-X-F and Faenza-Fresh icon packs.
This port contains ten types of distributions supplementing
those built into R: Inverse Gauss, Kruskal-Wallis,
Kendall's Tau, Friedman's chi squared, Spearman's rho,
maximum F ratio, the Pearson product moment correlation
coefficient, Johnson distributions, normal scores and
generalized hypergeometric distributions. In addition,
two random number generators of George Marsaglia are
included.
The port is supplemented by an R benchmark based upon the
work of Grosjean, Steinhaus, et al.
WebDAV server protocol compliance test suite.
Tests include:
- OPTIONS for DAV: header
- PUT, GET with byte comparison
- MKCOL
- DELETE (collections, non-collections)
- COPY, MOVE using combinations of:
o overwrite t/f
o destination exists/doesn't exist
o collection/non-collection
- Property manipulation and querying:
o set, delete, replace properties
o persist dead props across COPY
o namespace handling
- Locking
o attempts to modify locked resource (as lock owner, not owner)
o shared/exclusive locks, lock discovery
usage: litmus <url> <username> <password>