libcidr is a library that provides a number of functions to input, output,
manipulate, compare, multilate, and otherwise play with, IP addresses and
netblocks.
It supports both IPv4 and IPv6, and provides sufficiently diverse functions
to be useful for everything from log processes to network client and server
programs. It parses addresses in a wide variety of common formats. It also
provides a plethora of options for formatting them on the output as well.
It can compare them in various ways and give you some useful statistics
about the netblocks in which they reside.
This is a library provide easier to write robust applications.
libedit provides command line editing functionality. Both emacs and vi key
bindings are supported. Note that the base system also includes libedit, but
this port is generally more current.
Libeio is a full-featured asynchronous I/O library for C, modelled in
similar style and spirit as libev.
Features include: asynchronous read, write, open, close, stat, unlink,
fdatasync, mknod, readdir etc. (basically the full POSIX API), sendfile
(native on Solaris, Linux, HP-UX, FreeBSD, emulated everywhere else),
read-ahead (emulated where not available). It is fully event-library
agnostic and can easily be integrated into any event-library (or used
standalone, even in polling mode).
Libconfig is a simple library for manipulating structured configuration
files. The file format is more compact and more readable than XML. And
unlike XML, it is type-aware, so it is not necessary to do string
parsing in application code.
Libconfig is very compact -- just 25K for the stripped C shared library
(one-fifth the size of the expat XML parser library) and 39K for the
stripped C++ shared library. This makes it well-suited for
memory-constrained systems like handheld devices.
The library includes bindings for both the C and C++ languages. It works
on POSIX-compliant UNIX systems (GNU/Linux, Mac OS X, Solaris, FreeBSD)
and Windows (2000, XP and later).
This is the LIBEPP-NICBR C++ library that partially implements the
Extensible Provisioning Protocol (EPP), as described in the Internet
Drafts RFC3730bis to RFC3734bis and RFC3735.
RFC3731bis - EPP Domain Name Mapping - was implemented with hosts as
attributes of the Domain Object.
In order to conform to the .BR model, extensions to the EPP Domain Name
and Contact Mapping were made (draft-neves-epp-brdomain and
draft-neves-epp-brorg), supported since version 0.2. The documentation
for these extensions is available at EPP References [1].
[1]
http://registro.br/epp/rfc-EN.html
Libcwd is a thread-safe, full-featured debugging support library
for C++ developers. It includes ostream-based debug output with
custom debug channels and devices, powerful memory allocation
debugging support, as well as run-time support for printing source
file:line number information and demangled type names.
Lightweight C library that eases the writing of UNIX daemons
GCC, the GNU Compiler Collection supporting C and C++ for targetting crossbuilding.
Privman is a library that makes it easy for programs to use privilege
separation, a technique that prevents the leak or misuse of privilege
from applications that must run with some elevated permissions. The
Privman library simplifies the otherwise complex task of separating
the application, protecting the system from compromise if an error in
the application logic is found.
Applications that use the Privman library split into two halves, the
half that performs valid privileged operations, and the half that
contains the application's logic. The library uses configuration files
to provide fine-grained access control for the privileged operations,
limiting exposure in even of an attack against the application. When
the application is compromised, the attacker gains only the privileges
of an unprivileged user and the specific privileges granted to the
application by the application's Privman configuration file.