If you have an AT&T Wireless, Bell Canada/Bell Mobility, Cellular One,
Cingular, Cricket, Sprint PCS, SkyTel, or T-Mobile cell phone or pager, and you
want the ability to send SMS messages to it via a command-line utility, this is
what you need. All this program requires is a computer with a baseline Perl 5.x
installation and web access. NO EXTRA PERL MODULES REQUIRED!
How does it work?
SendSMS connects to your service provider's web page and pretends to submit a
form to their 'Instant Messaging' web page. Currently, AT&T Wireless, Bell
Canada/Bell Mobility, Cellular One, Cingular, Cricket, SkyTel, Sprint PCS, and
T-Mobile are supported. Users are encouraged to modify the provided templates to
add support for any providers who are currently unsupported.
Other Service Providers
If you are interested in supporting another service provider please try to
modify sendSMS on your own. It is not hard at all. Instructions and examples are
included in the code, and if you're familiar with the site you're porting to, it
takes about 15 minutes. If you get sendSMS working with any other providers' web
sites, please email Paul Kreiner [deacon at thedeacon.org] and/or the port
maintainer a patch so it can be added to the next release.
This is the TIC+ heartbeart client for the public dynamic-IPv4
IPv6 tunnel beta test from the SixXS tunnel service provider.
Aims:
- To listen on a local UNIX socket and tunnel any incoming connections and
traffic to a (remote) IP address/port
What it does:
- Tunnels all traffic between a (remote) address/port and a local UNIX socket
- Does NOT use fork() (single process model)
- Does use O_NONBLOCK , should be no case of blocking
What it doesn't do (yet):
- Doesn't limit number of concurrent connections
VNC Reflector is a specialized VNC server which acts as a proxy sitting
between real VNC server (a host) and a number of VNC clients. It was
designed to work efficiently with large number of clients.
sslh accepts HTTPS, SSH, OpenVPN, tinc and XMPP connections on the same port.
This makes it possible to connect to any of these servers on port 443 while
still serving HTTPS on that port.
tcptraceroute is a traceroute implementation using TCP packets.
The more traditional traceroute(8) sends out either UDP or ICMP ECHO
packets with a TTL of one, and increments the TTL until the destination
has been reached. By printing the gateways that generate ICMP time
exceeded messages along the way, it is able to determine the path
packets are taking to reach the destination.
The problem is that with the widespread use of firewalls on the modern
Internet, many of the packets that traceroute(8) sends out end up being
filtered, making it impossible to completely trace the path to the
destination. However, in many cases, these firewalls will permit inbound
TCP packets to specific ports that hosts sitting behind the firewall are
listening for connections on. By sending out TCP SYN packets instead of
UDP or ICMP ECHO packets, tcptraceroute is able to bypass the most
common firewall filters.
A set of two tools to URL encode and URL decode any stream of data, either
from the command line or from standard input.
See RFC 1738, section 2.2, for an eplanation of URL encoding.
Wackamole is an application that helps with making a cluster highly
available.
It manages a number of virtual IPs, that should be available to the
outside world at all times. Wackamole ensures that a single machine
within a cluster is listening on each virtual IP address that Wackamole
manages. If it discovers that any particular machine within the cluster
are not alive, it will almost immediately ensure that other machines
acquire their public IPs. At no time will more than one machine listen
on any virtual IP.
Wackamole also works toward achieving a balanced distribution of the
numbered IPs on the machine within the cluster it manages.
widentd is a small ident/RFC1413 deamon which provides a fixed (and fake)
auth reply, regardless of the IP/port pair quoted.
It's intended use is on firewalls, and NAT machines - where you may
want to simply syphon off auth-requests from, for example, IRC servers.
Author: Dirk-Willem van Gulik / dirkx@webweaving.org
Xrdesktop2 is a GTK2-Perl frontend for Rdesktop, which allows for the
saving, and editing of session configurations.
Xrdesktop2's intent is to handle Rdesktop's available commandline options,
by presenting them in a [Perl/GTK2] GUI. Xrdesktop2 currently handles most
any of the options you're likely to be interested in. Future versions will
undoubtedly add more.