2ping is a bi-directional ping utility. It uses 3-way pings (akin to TCP SYN,
SYN/ACK, ACK) and after-the-fact state comparison between a 2ping listener and a
2ping client to determine which direction packet loss occurs.
The UniFi Controller allows you to manage Wireless, Routing & Switching,
VoIP and Video of Ubiquiti Networks.
bgpq3 is a lightweight access-list/prefix-list/as-path access-list generator
for Cisco and Juniper routers.
This program is a mostly complete re-implementation of bgpq (net-mgmt/bgpq),
with next major advantages:
- much faster, especially for large as-sets.
- supports ipv6 both at transport level and in prefix/access-lists generation.
- supports asn32 in both asdot and asplain notation, also supports
"transition" as23456 generation instead of asn32.
However, bgpq3 can not be used as a full replacement of bgpq, because:
- "more specific" prefix filtering is not implemented (and not planned).
- GateD prefix-filters generation is not implemented (and not planned).
- Cisco standard access-lists generation is not implemented (and not planned).
- formatted output is not supported (yet?).
bsnmp-jails is a module for bsnmpd which allows you to measure statistics
about jails on your system. Counters are available for network traffic,
CPU time used, process and thread counts, and disk utilization.
LICENSE: BSD
Braa is a tool for making SNMP queries. It is able to query
hundreds or thousands of hosts simultaneously, while being
completely single-threaded. It does not need any SNMP
libraries, as it is equipped with its own SNMP engine. However,
it's good to have a complete SNMP package including
"snmptranslate" installed somewhere, because for speed reasons,
there is no ASN.1 parser in Braa, and all the SNMP OIDs need to
be specified numerically.
bsnmp-regex is a module for bsnmpd which allows creation of counters from log
files, program output or other text data. The counters use regular expressions
to count the number of matches, or parse out specific text/numbers. The
resulting data can then be queried or graphed with the usual SNMP tools.
EtherPEG was a program that sniffed for JPEGs passing by on the AirPort
networks at MacHack, and showed them on the huge screen to shame people
into a) turning the 802.11 encryption on, or b) reducing amount of pr0n
they download at weirdo Mac conventions. DRIFTNET can do the same for
*your* office, and make an attractive desktop accessory to boot. The
program promiscuously sniffs and decodes any JPEG downloaded by anyone
on your LAN, displaying it in an attractive, ever changing mosaic of
fluffy kittens, oversized navigation buttons, and blurred images of Big
Brother Elizabeth fiddling. It's UNIX only. Your sysadmin is undoubtedly
running it already. So stop that. Now.
DHCDROP - utility for tracing and neutralizing(blocking) fake DHCP
servers in Ethernet. Supports various modes. Theres possibility
to set outgoing MAC addresses and optional settings in generated
DHCP requests. Supports legal DHCP servers list. One can run it
in interactive mode under users control or fully automatic mode for
start up from script.
RackMonkey is a web-based tool for managing racks of equipment
such as web servers, video encoders, routers and storage devices.
Using a simple interface you can keep track of what's where,
which OS it runs, when it was purchased, who it belongs and what
it's used for.
This package is a port of TAMU's extract program from NetLogger to look
at flow data instead of netlogger data. Blame Larry for it's faults, not
TAMU. Blame me for the FreeBSD port, not Larry :-)
If you don't already have a good guess what this program does and what
data it is looking for, the odds are that it isn't going to be of much
help to you. This program only works on Cisco flow data as captured
with Mark Fullmer's flowtools package. If you don't have that, get that
first, then look at this program.
In order for this to compile you will need flowtools from Mark
Fullmer's (net-mgmt/flow-tools port).