This is the sectok tool from citi.umich.edu. Originally targeted
for OpenBSD. This is a quick port of the basic application; it relies
upon the libsectok library for ISO 7816 Smart Card device communication.
The OpenVPN Auth-LDAP Plugin implements username/password authentication via
LDAP for OpenVPN 2.x. It also includes some integration with the OpenBSD
packet filter, supporting adding and removing VPN clients from PF tables.
TinyCA is a simple graphical userinterface written in Perl/Tk to manage a
small CA (Certification Authority).
Currently TinyCA supports the following features:
* unlimited number of CAs
* support for creating and managing SubCAs
* Creation and Revocation of x509 - S/MIME certificates
* PKCS#10 Requests can be imported and signed
* RSA and DSA keys can be generated and used
* Servercertificates
o Certificates can be exported as: PEM, DER, TXT and PKCS#12
o Certificates may be used with e.g. Apache, Postfix, OpenLDAP,
Cyrus and FreeS/WAN
* Clientcertificates
o Certificates can be exported as: PEM, DER, TXT and PKCS#12
o Certificates may be used with e.g. Netscape, Konqueror, Opera,
Internet Explorer, Outlook (Express) and FreeS/WAN
* Certificate Revocation List
o CRLs can be exported as: PEM, DER and TXT
VPNC - Client for Cisco 3000 VPN Concentrator, IOS and PIX
Vpnc is a VPN client for the Cisco 3000 VPN Concentrator, creating a
IPSec-like connection as a tunneling network device for the local
system. The created connection is presented as a tunneling network
device to the local system. The daemon runs entirely in userspace.
This is GNU Bash. Bash is the GNU Project's Bourne Again SHell,
a complete implementation of the POSIX.2 shell spec, but also
with interactive command line editing, job control on architectures
that support it, csh-like features such as history substitution and
brace expansion, and a slew of other features.
Generate bash completion functions or perl scripts to dynamically provide
completion for an application.
CDargs heavily enhances the navigation of the common Unix file-system
inside the shell. It plugs into the shell built-in cd-command (via a shell
function or an alias) and thus adds bookmarks and a browser to it. It
enables you to move to a very distant place in the file-system with just
a few keystrokes.
cdf means "colorized df". The main features of cdf are:
* customazable color schemes
* eye-friendly capacity bars
* most of such utils needs some 3rd party libraries, python interpreter
and so on, while cdf written in pure C
Unix provides the standard du utility, which scans your disk and tells you which
directories contain the largest amounts of data. That can help you narrow your
search to the things most worth deleting.
However, that only tells you what's big. What you really want to know is what's
too big. By itself, du won't let you distinguish between data that's big because
you're doing something that needs it to be big, and data that's big because you
unpacked it once and forgot about it.
Most Unix file systems, in their default mode, helpfully record when a file was
last accessed. Not just when it was written or modified, but when it was even
read. So if you generated a large amount of data years ago, forgot to clean it
up, and have never used it since, then it ought in principle to be possible to
use those last-access time stamps to tell the difference between that and a
large amount of data you're still using regularly.
agedu is a program which does this. It does basically the same sort of disk scan
as du, but it also records the last-access times of everything it scans. Then it
builds an index that lets it efficiently generate reports giving a summary of
the results for each subdirectory, and then it produces those reports on demand.
cdircmp is a simple utility that compares two directories, displays the
differences, and allows you to select items to copy.