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.
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.
Rdesktop is an open source client for Windows NT/2000/2003 Terminal Server,
capable of natively speaking its Remote Desktop Protocol (RDP) in
order to present the user's Windows desktop. Unlike Citrix ICA, no server
extensions are required.
Remmina is a remote desktop client written in GTK+, aiming to be useful for
system administrators and travellers, who need to work with lots of remote
computers in front of either large monitors or tiny netbooks. Remmina supports
multiple network protocols in an integrated and consistant user interface.
Remmina is a remote desktop client written in GTK+, aiming to be useful for
system administrators and travellers, who need to work with lots of remote
computers in front of either large monitors or tiny netbooks. Remmina supports
multiple network protocols in an integrated and consistant user interface.
The Remmina main program:
* A pure GTK+ 2.0 application!
* Maintain a list of remote desktop files, organized by groups
* Make quick connections by directly putting in the server name
* Remote desktops with higher resolutions are scrollable/scalable in both
window and fullscreen mode
* Viewport fullscreen mode: remote desktop automatically scrolls when the
mouse moves over the screen edge.
* Floating toolbar in fullscreen mode, allows you to switch between modes,
toggle keyboard grabbing, minimize, etc.
* Tabbed interface, optionally managed by groups
* Supported network protocols: RDP, NX, Telepathy, VNC, XDMCP, SSH, Avahi
The Sippy RTPproxy is a high-performance software proxy for RTP streams that
can work together with SIP Express Router (SER), OpenSER or Sippy B2BUA or
any other SIP proxy or SIP B2BUA capable of rewriting SDP bodies in SIP
messages that it relays.
The main purpose of RTPproxy is to make the communication between SIP user
agents behind NAT(s) (Network Address Translator) possible. Several cases
exists when direct end-to-end communication is not possible and RTP streams
have to be relayed through another host. The RTPproxy can be used to setup
such a relaying host.
Originally created for handling NAT scenarious it can also act as a generic
media relay as well as gateway RTP sessions between IPv4 and IPv6 networks.
It can also perform number of additional functions, including call recording,
playing pre-encoded announcements, real-time stream copying and RTP payload
reframing.
With the exponential growth of the Internet, a central Whois database that
provides host and network information of systems connected to the Internet,
and electronic mail (email) addresses of the users of those systems has
proven to be very inefficient. The sheer size and effort needed to maintain
a centralized database necessitates an alternate, decentralized approach to
storing and retrieving this information.
RWhois is a Directory Services protocol which extends and enhances the Whois
concept in a hierarchical and scaleable fashion. It focuses on the
distribution of "network objects"--the data representing Internet resources
or people--and uses the inherently hierarchical nature of these network
objects (domain names, Internet Protocol (IP) networks, email addresses) to
more accurately discover the requested information.
RWhois synthesizes concepts from other, established Internet protocols to
create a more useful way to find resources across the Internet. The RWhois
protocol and architecture derive a great deal of structure from the Domain
Name System (DNS) [RFC 1034] and borrow directory service concepts from
other directory service efforts, primarily [X.500]. The protocol is also
influenced by earlier established Internet protocols, such as the Simple
Mail Transport Protocol (SMTP) [RFC 821] for response codes.
This is the set of shared libraries from the Samba port. It lets other
programs to utilize various aspects of the SMB protocol.
This is a tool to query NetBIOS names and map them to IP addresses
in a network using NetBIOS over TCP/IP queries from the Samba port.