Vertex is an implementation of the Q2Q protocol (sort of like P2P, but one
better). There are a few moving parts in Vertex:
* PTCP: a protocol which is nearly identical to TCP, but which runs over
UDP. This lets Q2Q penetrate most NAT configurations.
* JUICE ([JU]ice [I]s [C]oncurrent [E]vents): a very simple but immensely
flexible protocol which forms the basis of the high-level aspects of Q2Q
* vertex: a command line tool which exposes a few features useful in many
situations (such as registration and authentication)
The Q2Q network has some decentralized features (there is no one server or
company which can control all Q2Q addresses) and features of centralization
(addresses beneath a particular domain are issued by a server for that domain;
once issued, some activities require the server to be contacted again, while
others do not). Vertex includes an identity server capable of hosting Q2Q
addresses.
The ISC Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol Distribution provides a
freely redistributable reference implementation of all aspects of the
DHCP protocol, through a suite of DHCP tools:
* A DHCP server
* A DHCP client
* A DHCP relay agent (this port)
The ISC Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol Distribution provides a
freely redistributable reference implementation of all aspects of the
DHCP protocol, through a suite of DHCP tools:
* A DHCP server
* A DHCP client (this port)
* A DHCP relay agent
MLVPN allow to bond your internet links to increase bandwidth, secure your
internet connection by actively monitoring your links and removing the faulty
ones, without loosing your TCP connections and secure your internet connection
to the aggregation server using cryptography.
The ldap2pw utility synchronizes a local user database with an LDAP
directory. It is intended for systems where NSS modules cannot be
used or access to the LDAP server is intermittent.
Net::LDAP is an LDAP support library written in pure Ruby. It supports most
LDAP client features and a subset of server features as well.
* Standards-based (going for RFC 4511)
* Portable: 100% Ruby
A Ruby library for verifying and serving OpenID identities.
Ruby OpenID makes it easy to add OpenID authentication to your web
applications.
This library is a port of the Python OpenID library, and features:
* API for verifying OpenID identities (OpenID::Consumer)
* API for serving OpenID identities (OpenID::Server)
* Consumer and server support for extensions, including simple registration
* Yadis 1.0 and OpenID 1.0 service discovery, including server fallback
* Does not depend on underlying web framework
* Multiple storage implementations (Filesystem, SQL)
* Comprehensive test suite
* Example code to help you get started, including:
o WEBrick based consumer
o Ruby on rails based server
o OpenIDLoginGenerator for quickly creating a rails app that uses OpenID
for authentication
o ActiveRecord adapter for using an SQL store in rails
Gup, the Group Update Program is a Unix mail-server that lets a remote
site change their newsgroups subscription without requiring the
intervention of the news administrator at the feed site.
Share printers from your computer with ChromeOS and Android devices, using the
Cloud Print Connector. The Connector is a purpose-built system process. It can
share hundreds of printers on a powerful server, or one printer on a Raspberry
Pi.
Rmonitor is a client-server application for monitoring a couple of (or even
more) remote hosts. It prints gathered system statistics on a standard
terminal display or within an xterm window; using one line for each host
monitored.