The DICT Protocol, described in RFC 2229 is a TCP transaction based
query/response protocol that allows a client to access dictionary definitions
from a set of natural language dictionary databases. While RFC 2229 is a
finished document, we plan to clarify and enhance the protocol definition as we
gain more experience with large dictionary database servers. By default, the
DICT protocol uses TCP port 2628.
empty - run applications under pseudo-terminal (PTY) sessions and replace
TCL/Expect with a simple tool.
A set of startup scripts that interact with the virtual machine environment.
A GObject-based API for handling resource discovery and announcement over SSDP.
GUPnP-AV is a collection of helpers for building AV (audio/video) applications
using GUPnP.
GUPnP-UI provides a collection of simple GTK+ widgets on top of GUPnP.
Honeyd is a small daemon that creates virtual hosts on a network. The
hosts can be configured to run arbitrary services, and their TCP
personality can be adapted so that they appear to be running certain
versions of operating systems. Honeyd enables a single host to claim
multiple addresses - I have tested up to 65536 - on a LAN for network
simulation.
A library which exposes zero-copy sendfile functionality in a portable
way. If a platform does not support sendfile, a fallback implementation
in haskell is provided. Currently supported platforms: Windows 2000+
(Native), Linux 2.6+ (Native), FreeBSD (Native), OS-X 10.5+ (Native),
Everything else (Portable Haskell code).
Iffinder is a tool for discover IP interfaces which belong to same
router.
This release includes a Java implementation of beep core RFC 3080 and
beep mapping for TCP RFC 3081.