Self-contained, easy-setup, fast-start in-memory Chef server
for testing and solo setup purposes
Event::RPC supports you in developing Event based networking client/server
applications with transparent object/method access from the client to the
server. Network communication is optionally encrypted using IO::Socket::SSL.
Several event loop managers are supported due to an extensible API. Currently
Event, Glib and AnyEvent are implemented. The latter lets you use nearly every
event loop implementation available for Perl. AnyEvent was invented after
Event::RPC was created and thus Event::RPC started using it's own abstraction
model.
Subsonic instantly transports your media to any HTTP connected device
regardless of bitrate. You can stream to multiple players simultaneously.
Subsonic is designed to handle very large music collections. By using
transcoder plug-ins, Subsonic supports on-the-fly conversion and streaming
of virtually any audio format, including MP3, OGG, WMA, FLAC, APE and more.
mod_rivet brings together the full power of the Tcl programming language
and the Apache HTTP server. You can use Tcl to manage Apache, respond to
requests for web pages and much more.
mod_rivet gives you a persistent Tcl interpreter embedded in your web
server. This lets you avoid the overhead of starting an external interpreter
and avoids the penalty of Tcl start-up time, giving you super-fast
dynamic content.
As you'd expect from the Tcl community, there are hundreds of modules
written for mod_rivet, everything from persistent database connections, to
templating sytems, to complete XML content delivery systems. Web sites like
FlightAware use mod_rivet.
Citrix(R) Presentation Server(TM) runs on Microsoft(R) Windows Server(TM) and
UNIX(R) operating systems, and extends the base Windows Terminal Services
platform by enhancing the end-user experience as well as increasing
manageability, compatibility, security and scalability to address
business-critical environments.
This port includes the Citrix(R) Receiver(TM) software which allows connecting
to Citrix(R) Presentation Server(TM).
You will need to create the directory ${LINUXBASE}/dev or risk crashing your
system.
If your Citrix server does not have one of the supplied root-certificates, you
can copy the certificate to /usr/ports/distfiles and add the following line to
your /etc/make.conf:
ICA_CERTS=mycert.crt
It will then automatically be installed and removed with the normal FreeBSD
package tools.
This module implements an Object-Oriented interface to a POP3 server. It is
based on RFC1939.
This module permit to check if a mail server runs as an open relay.
Net::OpenID::Common - Libraries shared between Net::OpenID::Consumer
and Net::OpenID::Server
An Apache 2 module to provide authentication via an IMAP mail server.
Twisted Names is both a domain name server as well as a client resolver
library. Twisted Names comes with an "out of the box" nameserver which can
read most BIND-syntax zone files as well as a simple Python-based
configuration format. Twisted Names can act as an authoritative server,
perform zone transfers from a master to act as a secondary, act as a caching
nameserver, or any combination of these. Twisted Names' client resolver
library provides functions to query for all commonly used record types as
well as a replacement for the blocking gethostbyname() function provided by
the Python stdlib socket module.
Twisted Names is available under the MIT Free Software licence.