Drawterm(8) is not a Plan 9 program. It is a program that users of
non-Plan 9 systems can use to establish graphical cpu(1) connections with
Plan 9 CPU servers. Just as a real Plan 9 terminal does, drawterm serves
its local name space as well as some devices (the keyboard, mouse, and
screen) to a remote CPU server, which mounts this name space on /mnt/term
and starts a shell. Typically, either explicitly or via the profile, one
uses the shell to start rio(1).
gogoc is gogoCLIENT, which is needed to connect to Freenet6 tunnel.
Freenet6 Tunnel is an IPv6 access service which enables thousands of people
from all over the world to experience the best solution for a smooth and
incremental deployment of IPv6. Freenet6 Tunnel users can get IPv6 connectivity
from anywhere, including from behind any NAT device or from outside of their
home network.
Gutenfetch - A small program capable of listing and fetching various
free electronic texts available from Project Gutenberg. It is light
and intended to be combined with other tools.
H.323 Plus (or, "H323plus") is a multi-platform H323 Video Conferencing
library formerly known as OpenH323. The new name was chosen to reflect
the fact that the open source H.323 project now contains even
more more functionality than ever before.
This installs Daisuke Aoyama's isboot kernel module, which allows
booting FreeBSD directly from an iSCSI root disk. If your BIOS
supports iSCSI you may configure your target settings in the BIOS
and boot directly. If not, you may PXE boot using software that
contains iSCSI support such as iPXE. The module reads the iSCSI
Boot Firmware Table (IBFT) to configure the network and re-attach
the volume once the kernel begins execution.
FreeRDP is a free implementation of the Remote Desktop Protocol (RDP),
released under the Apache license. Enjoy the freedom of using your
software wherever you want, the way you want it, in a world where
interoperability can finally liberate your computing experience.
NetSED is small and handful utility designed to alter the contents of packets
forwarded through your network in real time. It is really useful for network
hackers in the following applications:
* Black-box protocol auditing -- if there are two or more proprietary
boxes communicating over undocumented protocol (by enforcing changes
in ongoing transmissions, you will be able to verify that tested
application is secure);
* Fuzz-alike experiments, integrity tests -- whenever you want to test
stability of the application and see how it ensures data integrity;
* Other common applications -- fooling other people, content filtering,
etc. etc. -- choose whatever you want to.
From the website:
The olsr.org OLSR daemon is an implementation of the Optimized Link
State Routing protocol. OLSR is a routing protocol for mobile ad-hoc
networks. The protocol is pro-active, table driven and utilizes a
technique called multipoint relaying for message flooding.
OpenBSC is a minimalistic implementation of the GSM Network, with
particular emphasis on the functionality typically provided by the BSC,
MSC, HLR, VLR and SMSC.
OpenGGSN is an implementation of the Gateway GPRS Support Node element
in the GPRS core network.
OpenGGSN was developed in 2002 to 2004 by Mondru AB and was abandoned
for some years before adopted by the Osmocom project.