Python module for the libnet packet construction library
Get things from one computer to another, safely.
This is version 6.1 of Rdist from USC. It is based on rdist from
4.3BSD (classic). It includes all fixes for all bugs known to the
CSRG Berkeley folks. It has been running at USC and numerous other
sites for some time now on a wide variety of platforms.
This version of rdist is not directly compatible with rdist
distributed with 4.3BSD and subsequent vendor releases, but does
indirectly provide full backward compatibility.
This version of rdist does not need to be setuid "root" at all. Rdist
now uses the rsh(1c) [remote command] program to make connections to
remote hosts, instead of making the connection directly. This
eliminates the need to be run as "root". Many thanks to Chris
Siebenmann <cks@utcc.utoronto.ca> and John DiMarco
<jdd@cdf.toronto.edu> who came up with an rsh version of rcmd() that
makes this possible.
HexInject is a very versatile packet injector and sniffer, that provide a
command-line framework for raw network access.
It's designed to work together with others command-line utilities, and for this
reason it facilitates the creation of powerful shell scripts capable of reading,
intercepting and modifying network traffic in a transparent manner.
This program is a simple tool for recording VNC sessions. Make no mistake: it
is hacked together and very ugly. But it does the job.
Rsync-bpc is a customized version of rsync that is used as part of BackupPC,
an open source backup system.
The main change to rsync is adding a shim layer that emulates the system calls
for accessing the file system so that rsync can directly read/write files in
BackupPC's format.
Rsync-bpc is fully line-compatible with vanilla rsync, so it can talk to rsync
servers and clients.
Rsync-bpc serves no purpose outside of BackupPC.
Service Location Protocol is an IETF standards track protocol that provides a
framework to allow networking applications to discover the existence, location,
and configuration of networked services in enterprise networks.
Quagga is a routing software suite, providing implementations of
OSPFv2, OSPFv3, RIP v1 and v2, RIPv3, BGPv4 and experemental ISIS
for Unix platforms, particularly FreeBSD and Linux and also NetBSD,
to mention a few. Quagga is a fork of GNU Zebra which was developed
by KunihiroIshiguro. The Quagga tree aims to build a more involved
community around Quagga than the current centralised model of GNU Zebra.
QuiteRSS is a open-source cross-platform RSS/Atom news feeds reader.
This is a C-language AMQP client library for use with AMQP servers
speaking protocol versions 0-8 and 0-9-1. This port only speaks the
0-9-1 protocol version, for 0-8 use net/rabbitmq-c.